Starliner return: "No crew but no more issues with thrusters either" - Nope, one of the 12 thruster used to orient it during atmospheric re-entry failed to ignite. Which is likely a different issue but i's still "thrusters". And that's only one of the two issues Starliner encountered during the return (there was also a navigation system "glitch" when everything went blank, then came back). I think either of these would have been enough to show that NASA did the right thing in taking no risks. So Boeing and NASA has even more work to fix than they knew before they tried returning it.
Boeing can't make an air plane stay in the air, not sure why we would trust them to get a craft into space. Does not surprise me that they have these problems.
Idk man if I were one of those astronauts, and it were up to me, I think I would have 100% hopped on that shuttle and took the risk. Bugs be damned if it gets me home, it gets me home. Rather than spend another 5 months in space.
I ALWAYS love how you explain things so succinctly and efficiently in both layman and professional terms. I wish I had considered astrophysics when I was young, because I love it as a 57 year old man.
I couldn't sleep last night, so I went out early this morning (4am-ish) and checked out Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and the Pleiades with my binoculars. It was cool and quiet outside, and I love the night sky. It calmed my frustration from not being able to sleep. Astronomy can definitely ease what ails you!!! And I can't wait to see the comet!! Fingers crossed it's a great show!! Thank you, Dr. Becky!!! 🔭🌃🌠☄
I know manmade satellites aren't the same as seeing planets, meteors etc, but just watching a dot of light as it crosses the sky is weirdly relaxing for me too, if I'm ever outside on a clear night I'll usually take a few minutes to look up until I see one pass over, it never takes very long anymore.
@@TheBrianRaglandChannelor, perhaps we could call it "Which witch with the swiss watch was wearing which wristwatch"" and then we'd be able to say "that tongue-twisting tell-tale tail track... of that comet"
As usual, not to be missed! Your explanation of the flybys was beautifully illustrated and gave a real sense of how cool these maneuvers are for space navigation.
On that annular eclipse: The moon will be FARTHER from the earth when this eclipse happens, making it relatively smaller. The moon currently is close to its perigee at full moon, close to it's apogee at new moon, which is the phase relevant for solar eclipses.
It's fascinating how little we understand whilst being able to look back so far into the history of the universe. Imagine a alien species looking out into the universe billions of years from now and hardly seeing anything. It will be so much more difficult for them to draw any conclusions without all that data. It makes me wonder. Do we live in the perfect moment in time to be able to look back to the beginning and if we evolved a little later, JWST wouldn't see these galaxies?
Yes, good info - except one thing... She said that the moon would be *closer* to earth when annular eclipse is happening, but it should be farther away.
No alien life is interfering with your desk today. Thank you for the video. If the weather is good, I will go out for the next few nights to observe what I can.
My! Approaching late youth I still remember the impossibility of the 3-body problem. Nice to see that navigating the solar system is becoming routine. Kudos to the ESA Flight planners.
your content is EXCELLENT AS USUAL ...HOWEVER(!)... your background "set" IS KILLER! you are now THE HOLLYWOOD VERSION (vision?) of what an astrophysicist's home-office looks like! 👍☺
I wonder if every time you hear os say "spectra", the whole spectra explanation plays in your head. Love your stuff Dr. B. Thanks for all your hard work with these videos.
She often calls the spectra the 'rainbow', but that's not a good description, since we can only see the visible light in a rainbow, but a spectrograph detects much more than visible light, such as infrared, etc, etc.
As always, a most informative video! However, I've grown quite fond of the OUT TAKES 💯😹😹😹😹 I truly admire the whole... self-deprecating nature of your presentation, sooooooo endearing! 💯🙏👍✌️🤟🤙♥️😸
I drive a truck at night so I've been lucky to see many meteor showers. I've also seen two meteor explode in the sky. One in northern Idaho was so bright is lite the whole sky up.
i think the 'double' thing here is the use of the moon and earth in conjunction. usually multiple GAs are only planetary during egress. in other words, a subtle indication of better maths and faster computers with better software.
Hi, i have enjoyed a lot of your content, thanks for the uploads. Unrelated to this video though, i decided to check out your website and on the first line of the research section there is a simple spelling error. The word fellow, you have spelled felllow and it stood out to me right away. Just letting you know in case you hadn't realised 😊. Best of luck 👍
Your tell-tale tail made me remember two songs, Edgar Allen Poe's famous 'Telly Talley Heart', and a song from Texas around 1968 about the first artificial heart 'Achey DeBakey Heart'. I hope you don't find this song a bit heartless, like the Wilson sisters did, Thunderthud said it was 'dead on a rival', Lennon-McCartney told me it had no beat, we had a bit of a skiffle over that.
Increase in efficiency of star formation, this means galaxies form faster at high z. Implies also that galaxies grow faster than their SMBH. This is consistent with what we found in QSOs: Cutiva-Alvarez et al. 2023, MNRAS, 521, 3058.
It never ceases to amaze me how many people forgot or failed to learn grade school biology about how the human eyes adjust to the dark. I remember being taught that at least 5 different times going through grade school. Your iris adjusting and that chemical your body produces to make seeing in low light conditions better. Did they stop teaching that in school or what?? Repetition for emphasis is my best solution that I can think of. The stars have their own light. Flood lights in your yard don’t help. As several well-meaning friends tried to do. We can try.
I am IN IT for additional spectra of those early, massive galaxies. Whatever clues about early star formation we can get, I gobble it up. Also, what do we have to do to get a video with you only speaking with a Geordie accent? HAHA.
So the most distant galaxies aren't more mature than we predicted they're just brighter... Due to black holes. Suggesting that our previous predictions hadn't taken into consideration the existence of black holes. That is a curious way to say that we still don't know what's going on with those earliest galaxies but... we're pretty sure the problem is somewhere in our math.
I'm pretty sure that Dr Becky has mentioned in the many Crisis in Cosmology explanations that we haven't been sure of the composition of galaxies that aren't immediately near us. The JWST will give us more data points, but for now we can only assume
I read somewhere that the systems set up to track objects that enter the areas between us and the moon put out an automatic alert saying an unknown metallic object was passing through the area at high speed. After a few moments of concern they realised it was there own JUICE space probe 😊
My wife's late parents used to live, in an isolated village, with a really dark sky. A new family moved in, to the village of ten houses, and got the local council to put street lighting in (so that when their guests, who had to park their cars on the single lane village road, didn't step in puddles).
Love your videos so much !!! Seriously you make astrophysics so interesting!! Matt from PBS space time is awesome also but he gets really technical and some people who aren’t physics savvy might not understand ! But I still love his channel !
2:28 so I just had a thought about Crescent moon phases each cycle. The going from a New Moon to a Full Moon and back to a New Moon again would make to Crescent Moons or Toe Nail Moons each cycle. The first after the New Moon would be the Waxing Crescent Moon or the Right Toe Nail Moon(as the "toe nail" would be on the right side of the moon) or the Waning Crescent Moon or the Left Toe Nail Moon (as the "toe nail" would be on the left side of the moon). Dr. Becky, Which would be your favorite one of the two the right or left Toe Nail Moon and do you like my idea?
Starliner crew: “Us? Stay in space? For many weeks? Well, I guess if we HAVE to _pleasedon’tfixitpleasedon’tfixitpleasedon’tfixit_ gotta be safe and all _pleasedon’tfixit_ we’ll make do.”
This may be a stupid question... In the early universe, the average density of space would have been higher- more matter per cubic whatever. So would that mean it was actually easier for really massive, luminous stars to form, as soon as it was cool enough for hydrogen to exist?
Yes, she probably misspoke. But it makes sense that we have an annular eclipse and a super moon two weeks apart, as the super-full-moon has to occur when the moon is closest to earth, so the new moon two weeks later has to occur when it is farthest from earth. And as solar eclipses only happen on a new moon it will be annular under these circumstances.
Yeh, Becky must have misspoke. At first I thought "No, the supermoon and the annular eclipse must be 3 weeks apart, because if the moon's orbit is an oval then opposite ends of the orbit (2 weeks apart) should both be distant from earth. But you're right, the supermoon is 2 weeks after. For those wondering, google just confirmed it's because Earth isn't at the centre of the oval, it's over at one end, so there is a single near point and a single far point per orbit.
What she said is correct and what you're saying is correct... the new moon 🌚 happens when the moon and sun are on the same side of the earth... the annular eclipse happens when the new moon's penumbra crosses the earth. 2 weeks later, the moon will be full, the distance from the earth will be close, so it'll be a super moon...
Strictly speaking, the day and night are equal length not on the equinox, but on the equilux, which is a few days later (or earlier, in the spring). That's because the Sun's leading edge (at sunrise) or trailing edge (at sunset) is above the horizon for longer than the centre of the Sun. There are also some refraction effects due to Earth's atmosphere. All of this means on the equinox, the daytime is about 12 hours and 10 minutes long. There's also an interesting effect in December where although December 21st is the 'shortest day', for me in Manchester the earliest sunset is 15:49 on December 9th-17th and by December 21st, sunset is at 15:51. The day is only getting shorter during (some of) that time because sunrise continues to get later by up to a minute more than sunset. I'm not actually sure of the reason why that is the case but it makes me happy on December 9th knowing I've already reached the earliest sunset, as darker evenings affect my mood much more than darker mornings do. (I can't claim to be a scientist since dropping out of a Physics with Astronomy degree in semester 4, so some or all of the above may be wrong, I've been as accurate as possible!)
I would not conclude too quickly when dealing with a variable, mass, which is directly linked to one of the biggest current unsolved problems in physics: dark matter, and what its final form will be, and all its final properties. Great video! :)
Keep in mind that DM has not been measured. What has been measured is the amount of DM required for the standard model to be right. There is no observational evidence that DM actually exists, in any amount.
@williamschlosser yes, more to my point, I was talking about the observation labelled "dark matter" in relation specifically to the mass variable. This was in the context of the video, where Becky talks about how massive or not a galaxy is in the distant past can be a problem for current models. Us not understanding the current full picture of how mass and light interact, necessitating the introduction of a dark matter variable, is reason enough for me to be skeptical of any mystery concerning mass. My point is, it can easily be we don't understand gravity. Or light. Or mass. And should be cautious in concluding.
I'm kind of impressed that there have been so few people connecting the trouble with Starliner's thrusters with Boeing's trouble with doors flying off their more earthbound aircraft. Maybe it's too easy.
I have been dying to see this video this week. Everyone else is talking about the new photos of black holes from JWST. I only trust Dr Becky to post the truth of the matter.
Agree with that view point. The only other channel I watch is epic spaceman but that is more for trying to understand the scale of things. He does an amazing job with video effects to display the true scale of things. Well worth a watch but certainly isn’t a scientist so still come here for my science fix
@@jasonGamesMaster Same here. Since I started watching those channels, I often have those clickbaity videos showing up in my feed. It actually surprises me how annoyed I get when I see a line like "Voyager saw this and turned around" (yup, that was in there).
@@JeeVeeHaych lol. Yeah, for sure. I've also seen a bunch like "voyager leaves the solar system and scientists are SHOCKED by what it found!" or whatever, lol. Any more I just click the little dots and tell the algorithm I'm not interested lol
...and the truth of the energy! \o/ Ahem. Anyway, puns aside, yes, it's wonderful to have Dr. Becky not sensationalizing the heck out of everything so we can just get INFO and an overview of the questions and results of late.
Am I missing the link for the comet's best viewing conditions in my area? I see the eclipse (not going to enjoy it here), but I would love to see the comet!
Big bang theorie is missing 95 percent of the parameters in the model (dark matter / dark energy). It surprises me that so many scientists are happy to explain that they might have missed something. They are not missing something, they are missing out on a lot.
Of coarse the early universe can grow giant galaxies right at the start. There is so much more material close to them to gather. Much the same as its easier to find a mate in a highrise apartment complex than in your mansion. Youre not gonna find a mate in your mansion cause there aint nobody there while there are thousands of people in an apartment complex. With galaxies, The bigger you are, the more stuff your going to collect. It all seems so perfectly simple to me
Hi Dr. Becky, just wanted to ask: Where's the nova in the Corona Borealis constellation at?^^ Wasn't it supposed to be here by autumn? Did I miss it, or is the star just not as punctual as expected? :P Have a good one (:
hello dr becky, may i ask a good application to use for finding out exact times certain stars/planets will be at certain points in the sky, i live in the UK but the area is covered in housing so unfortunatly i can only observe things that are quite high in the sky
I love how Dr. Becky gets so excited over astronomical events. It shows the passion for her career.
Actually, Starliner did have a few issues during return. 1 failed thruster, and a GNC glitch.
Starliner return: "No crew but no more issues with thrusters either" - Nope, one of the 12 thruster used to orient it during atmospheric re-entry failed to ignite. Which is likely a different issue but i's still "thrusters". And that's only one of the two issues Starliner encountered during the return (there was also a navigation system "glitch" when everything went blank, then came back). I think either of these would have been enough to show that NASA did the right thing in taking no risks. So Boeing and NASA has even more work to fix than they knew before they tried returning it.
Boeing can't make an air plane stay in the air, not sure why we would trust them to get a craft into space. Does not surprise me that they have these problems.
I think they would have made the right decision even if absolutely no issues happened with the starliner on reentry.
Idk man if I were one of those astronauts, and it were up to me, I think I would have 100% hopped on that shuttle and took the risk. Bugs be damned if it gets me home, it gets me home. Rather than spend another 5 months in space.
@@airplaneB3N They were more than happy to get a longer stay in space. It’s the dream job.
@@Carl-Sargent And all the health risks and complications that may come with the extended stay? I'm not so sure about that.
I ALWAYS love how you explain things so succinctly and efficiently in both layman and professional terms. I wish I had considered astrophysics when I was young, because I love it as a 57 year old man.
I couldn't sleep last night, so I went out early this morning (4am-ish) and checked out Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and the Pleiades with my binoculars. It was cool and quiet outside, and I love the night sky. It calmed my frustration from not being able to sleep. Astronomy can definitely ease what ails you!!! And I can't wait to see the comet!! Fingers crossed it's a great show!! Thank you, Dr. Becky!!! 🔭🌃🌠☄
I know manmade satellites aren't the same as seeing planets, meteors etc, but just watching a dot of light as it crosses the sky is weirdly relaxing for me too, if I'm ever outside on a clear night I'll usually take a few minutes to look up until I see one pass over, it never takes very long anymore.
"after Starliner's first *crewed* test flight" my ears heard as "after Starliner's first *crude* test flight"...
Not wrong
That’s the deal with homophones baby
I like the image
"Yeah, we just whacked it up there, gave it some welly on the thrusters, fooled about a bit to see what would happen "
Exactly, the phrase she should have used was "manned flight"
"that tell-tale tail... of that comet" 😂❤
🤣😂😅
.........If it was an "old wives" tale........ I guess it would be called the "that tell-tale tail-tale... of that comet" ha ha ha.
7:45
@@TheBrianRaglandChannelor, perhaps we could call it "Which witch with the swiss watch was wearing which wristwatch"" and then we'd be able to say "that tongue-twisting tell-tale tail track... of that comet"
we weren't half as fun tho 🤣
Hehe bought a small telescope, picked a bright star and it turned out to be Saturn. It’s by far my favorite planet.
I literally just had the thought of buying a cheap telescope one second before reading this. 😄
I had exactly the same experience! Saturn is soooo beautiful ❤
As usual, not to be missed! Your explanation of the flybys was beautifully illustrated and gave a real sense of how cool these maneuvers are for space navigation.
I've not seen a meteor shower for many decades. The light polution is horrific round here.
Thanks for introducing me to Planet Wild. Fell in love with the Little Owl and signed up!
The senders of the WOW signal had their funding cut.
That could be.
"Wow" signal translation.
"So long and thanks for all the fish."
I thought it was “Send more Chuck Berry”
"It's so sad that it had to come to this, we tried to warn you but oh dear"
The only good thing from the movie was that song
Aliens were like hurry shut that dam thing off! The humans almost spotted us 😀
Or,maybe, a more advanced civilisation than us spotted it as well? …..”Dark Forest😢”
All your Cryptocurrency are belong to us now, hehehe.
Thanks Becky, watching your videos is so informative, keep them coming.
Doctor Becky..yet another superb video...thank you!
Hello Dr. Becky, I saw you in a documentary on Italian TV!
Thanks for all the info, dr. Becky! 😊
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Thanks, Becky.
Great bloopers 😂. Oh, and the episode was fantastic, too 😜
On that annular eclipse: The moon will be FARTHER from the earth when this eclipse happens, making it relatively smaller. The moon currently is close to its perigee at full moon, close to it's apogee at new moon, which is the phase relevant for solar eclipses.
It's fascinating how little we understand whilst being able to look back so far into the history of the universe.
Imagine a alien species looking out into the universe billions of years from now and hardly seeing anything. It will be so much more difficult for them to draw any conclusions without all that data.
It makes me wonder. Do we live in the perfect moment in time to be able to look back to the beginning and if we evolved a little later, JWST wouldn't see these galaxies?
Thanks for the cheery update!
The Highlands would be awesome for star-gazing
Thanks for the informations !
Yes, good info - except one thing... She said that the moon would be *closer* to earth when annular eclipse is happening, but it should be farther away.
No alien life is interfering with your desk today. Thank you for the video. If the weather is good, I will go out for the next few nights to observe what I can.
I live in central Stockholm but I have a big park right where I live where I often can see the Perseid meteor shower.
Great video as usual, by the way it probably was late 90s when I watched Contact at the movies or i'm older than I thought ;)
🤩I really love your videos...... just so you know. I look forward to them every month. Cheers. From Crestview, Florida. USA.....👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
So glad to see your videos pop up🥳
yeaaahhh!!! My monthly astronomical pill
We appreciate it, thank you very much for continuing to teach us! The best on RUclips!
🥰🥰🥰
🌃🌃
take with a warm drink and a biscuit of your choice 😸
Always informative, entertaining and mind boggling! 😮😊❤
Great show, as always. Such a wonderful communicator!!!
Another excellent video. Thanks for posting.
omg i remember dr becky from sixty symbols....i'm so olddd!! i had no idea she had her own channel now. subscribed
thanks for the news dr becky
i love to watch daytime full moons like i saw this morning in usa like you like the toenail moon :)
The great philosopher Yogi Berra said it best -- "It gets late early out there"
😂😂😂😂😂. Yogi Berra knows what's what.😂😂
Hi Becky. Any chance of showing what stars/planets for the southern hemisphere? I’m in Aussie. Thanks mate. Col
What about selection bias? A bigger galaxy is brighter and therefore more likely to be visible.
We love you, Dr. Becky! ♥️🪐✨
Thanks for the Babe reference at the end. That will do indeed. 😊
i hope we have a cat in this one
Schrödinger’s cat?
Apparently comets are like cats, lol. Does that count?
@@jasonGamesMaster seems to be the case
Maybe the US presidential campaign scared the cat off. 😂
meow meows 😺
My! Approaching late youth I still remember the impossibility of the 3-body problem. Nice to see that navigating the solar system is becoming routine. Kudos to the ESA Flight planners.
your content is EXCELLENT AS USUAL ...HOWEVER(!)... your background "set" IS KILLER! you are now THE HOLLYWOOD VERSION (vision?) of what an astrophysicist's home-office looks like! 👍☺
Unfortunately she didn’t obey the RUclipsr rule and the shelf is not a KALAX from IKEA.
I wonder if every time you hear os say "spectra", the whole spectra explanation plays in your head. Love your stuff Dr. B. Thanks for all your hard work with these videos.
She often calls the spectra the 'rainbow', but that's not a good description, since we can only see the visible light in a rainbow, but a spectrograph detects much more than visible light, such as infrared, etc, etc.
Wow signal also featured in the new Netflix series 3 Body Problem.
Actually, it was a compressed copy of _To Serve Man,_ the galactically famous cookbook.
Thank you, keep working.
Good self-catch on the "vernal equinox".
Still, nowhere as bad as when someone called it the "vertical equinox" !!
Another cool video Dr. Becky. Considering the content of the Bloopers section, I was waiting for you to say that space was hard but words are harder 😊
One hour ago I saw a bright star below Auriga, and now from this I know it was Jupiter 😊
One nice thing here in Australia is we get a great view of mercury. And I mean it is really impressive . Amazing
"Juice eye view of the moon" HAHAHAHA! Nice!
As always, a most informative video!
However, I've grown quite fond of the
OUT TAKES 💯😹😹😹😹
I truly admire the whole...
self-deprecating nature of
your presentation,
sooooooo endearing!
💯🙏👍✌️🤟🤙♥️😸
I drive a truck at night so I've been lucky to see many meteor showers. I've also seen two meteor explode in the sky. One in northern Idaho was so bright is lite the whole sky up.
Don’t forget, both Voyagers did multiple flybys for gravity assists
i think the 'double' thing here is the use of the moon and earth in conjunction. usually multiple GAs are only planetary during egress.
in other words, a subtle indication of better maths and faster computers with better software.
@@humansustainability First consecutive double flyby perhaps?
@@Pistolsatsean They are all consecutive when you do one right after the other :)
Voyagers also were assisted out of the planetary plane.
Night Sky New is the best!
WOW they're going to let us know more about it now🎉
Hi, i have enjoyed a lot of your content, thanks for the uploads. Unrelated to this video though, i decided to check out your website and on the first line of the research section there is a simple spelling error. The word fellow, you have spelled felllow and it stood out to me right away. Just letting you know in case you hadn't realised 😊. Best of luck 👍
The bloopers cracked me up.
from argentina, and it IS the vernal equinox here!
Your tell-tale tail made me remember two songs, Edgar Allen Poe's famous 'Telly Talley Heart', and a song from Texas around 1968 about the first artificial heart 'Achey DeBakey Heart'. I hope you don't find this song a bit heartless, like the Wilson sisters did, Thunderthud said it was 'dead on a rival', Lennon-McCartney told me it had no beat, we had a bit of a skiffle over that.
"Comets are like..." what the s***?! That has to be the best joke I've heard this year.
Starliner did have a new thruster issue during EDL.
Dear Dr. Becky: Longer nights good thing; unfortunately, in some places (like the NW US) this also means more nights with total overcast...
No cat but marvellous content as always :)
Increase in efficiency of star formation, this means galaxies form faster at high z. Implies also that galaxies grow faster than their SMBH. This is consistent with what we found in QSOs: Cutiva-Alvarez et al. 2023, MNRAS, 521, 3058.
It never ceases to amaze me how many people forgot or failed to learn grade school biology about how the human eyes adjust to the dark. I remember being taught that at least 5 different times going through grade school. Your iris adjusting and that chemical your body produces to make seeing in low light conditions better. Did they stop teaching that in school or what?? Repetition for emphasis is my best solution that I can think of.
The stars have their own light. Flood lights in your yard don’t help. As several well-meaning friends tried to do. We can try.
I am IN IT for additional spectra of those early, massive galaxies. Whatever clues about early star formation we can get, I gobble it up.
Also, what do we have to do to get a video with you only speaking with a Geordie accent? HAHA.
So the most distant galaxies aren't more mature than we predicted they're just brighter... Due to black holes. Suggesting that our previous predictions hadn't taken into consideration the existence of black holes. That is a curious way to say that we still don't know what's going on with those earliest galaxies but... we're pretty sure the problem is somewhere in our math.
Thanks for the clarification
By "math", do you mean our supposed "best model of the universe"?
I'm pretty sure that Dr Becky has mentioned in the many Crisis in Cosmology explanations that we haven't been sure of the composition of galaxies that aren't immediately near us. The JWST will give us more data points, but for now we can only assume
I read somewhere that the systems set up to track objects that enter the areas between us and the moon put out an automatic alert saying an unknown metallic object was passing through the area at high speed. After a few moments of concern they realised it was there own JUICE space probe 😊
So the signal that looks like a hydrogen cloud is a hydrogen cloud. WOW!!!
My wife's late parents used to live, in an isolated village, with a really dark sky. A new family moved in, to the village of ten houses, and got the local council to put street lighting in (so that when their guests, who had to park their cars on the single lane village road, didn't step in puddles).
Love your videos so much !!! Seriously you make astrophysics so interesting!! Matt from PBS space time is awesome also but he gets really technical and some people who aren’t physics savvy might not understand ! But I still love his channel !
Thank you for the videos. Why do you always publish the Night Sky News towards the end of the month and not in the beginning of the month?
2:28 so I just had a thought about Crescent moon phases each cycle. The going from a New Moon to a Full Moon and back to a New Moon again would make to Crescent Moons or Toe Nail Moons each cycle. The first after the New Moon would be the Waxing Crescent Moon or the Right Toe Nail Moon(as the "toe nail" would be on the right side of the moon) or the Waning Crescent Moon or the Left Toe Nail Moon (as the "toe nail" would be on the left side of the moon). Dr. Becky, Which would be your favorite one of the two the right or left Toe Nail Moon and do you like my idea?
I always enjoy these segments. ❤️👏🏻
Starliner crew: “Us? Stay in space? For many weeks? Well, I guess if we HAVE to _pleasedon’tfixitpleasedon’tfixitpleasedon’tfixit_ gotta be safe and all _pleasedon’tfixit_ we’ll make do.”
This may be a stupid question...
In the early universe, the average density of space would have been higher- more matter per cubic whatever.
So would that mean it was actually easier for really massive, luminous stars to form, as soon as it was cool enough for hydrogen to exist?
From an amateur point of view, seems reasonable.
Saw your review of Contact. Very enjoyable. You should do Interstellar which is a very good interpretation of the science.
Can you do a follow-up about the Chandra X Ray observatory? Was its funding restored?
Sweet it's a great time for looking up
Where is link for where to look for the comet tsuchshan depending on location? Please?
Have you discussed Palomar 5 on your channel before? I read there are several black holes in this stream of stars.
Isn't a solar eclipse annular when the Moon is FARTHER from the Earth?
My thought too. Apogee I would say indeed.
Yeah I think that was a little flub
Yes, she probably misspoke. But it makes sense that we have an annular eclipse and a super moon two weeks apart, as the super-full-moon has to occur when the moon is closest to earth, so the new moon two weeks later has to occur when it is farthest from earth. And as solar eclipses only happen on a new moon it will be annular under these circumstances.
Yeh, Becky must have misspoke. At first I thought "No, the supermoon and the annular eclipse must be 3 weeks apart, because if the moon's orbit is an oval then opposite ends of the orbit (2 weeks apart) should both be distant from earth. But you're right, the supermoon is 2 weeks after. For those wondering, google just confirmed it's because Earth isn't at the centre of the oval, it's over at one end, so there is a single near point and a single far point per orbit.
What she said is correct and what you're saying is correct...
the new moon 🌚 happens when the moon and sun are on the same side of the earth... the annular eclipse happens when the new moon's penumbra crosses the earth.
2 weeks later, the moon will be full, the distance from the earth will be close, so it'll be a super moon...
Strictly speaking, the day and night are equal length not on the equinox, but on the equilux, which is a few days later (or earlier, in the spring). That's because the Sun's leading edge (at sunrise) or trailing edge (at sunset) is above the horizon for longer than the centre of the Sun. There are also some refraction effects due to Earth's atmosphere. All of this means on the equinox, the daytime is about 12 hours and 10 minutes long.
There's also an interesting effect in December where although December 21st is the 'shortest day', for me in Manchester the earliest sunset is 15:49 on December 9th-17th and by December 21st, sunset is at 15:51. The day is only getting shorter during (some of) that time because sunrise continues to get later by up to a minute more than sunset. I'm not actually sure of the reason why that is the case but it makes me happy on December 9th knowing I've already reached the earliest sunset, as darker evenings affect my mood much more than darker mornings do.
(I can't claim to be a scientist since dropping out of a Physics with Astronomy degree in semester 4, so some or all of the above may be wrong, I've been as accurate as possible!)
I would not conclude too quickly when dealing with a variable, mass, which is directly linked to one of the biggest current unsolved problems in physics: dark matter, and what its final form will be, and all its final properties. Great video! :)
Keep in mind that DM has not been measured. What has been measured is the amount of DM required for the standard model to be right. There is no observational evidence that DM actually exists, in any amount.
@williamschlosser yes, more to my point, I was talking about the observation labelled "dark matter" in relation specifically to the mass variable. This was in the context of the video, where Becky talks about how massive or not a galaxy is in the distant past can be a problem for current models. Us not understanding the current full picture of how mass and light interact, necessitating the introduction of a dark matter variable, is reason enough for me to be skeptical of any mystery concerning mass. My point is, it can easily be we don't understand gravity. Or light. Or mass. And should be cautious in concluding.
Cloudy tonight
Good to see your cat again 😂
I'm kind of impressed that there have been so few people connecting the trouble with Starliner's thrusters with Boeing's trouble with doors flying off their more earthbound aircraft. Maybe it's too easy.
I have been dying to see this video this week. Everyone else is talking about the new photos of black holes from JWST. I only trust Dr Becky to post the truth of the matter.
Pretty much. Only her and SpaceTime for me. I've not found anyone else who sticks to the science and doesn't get into clickbait sensationalism
Agree with that view point. The only other channel I watch is epic spaceman but that is more for trying to understand the scale of things. He does an amazing job with video effects to display the true scale of things. Well worth a watch but certainly isn’t a scientist so still come here for my science fix
@@jasonGamesMaster Same here. Since I started watching those channels, I often have those clickbaity videos showing up in my feed. It actually surprises me how annoyed I get when I see a line like "Voyager saw this and turned around" (yup, that was in there).
@@JeeVeeHaych lol. Yeah, for sure. I've also seen a bunch like "voyager leaves the solar system and scientists are SHOCKED by what it found!" or whatever, lol. Any more I just click the little dots and tell the algorithm I'm not interested lol
...and the truth of the energy! \o/
Ahem. Anyway, puns aside, yes, it's wonderful to have Dr. Becky not sensationalizing the heck out of everything so we can just get INFO and an overview of the questions and results of late.
Hopefully The Polaris Dawn mission will get a mention in the next Night sky news.
03:03 BA DEE YAA, Say that you’ll Remember, Ba Dee YAA, Dancing in September, NEVER WAS A CLOUDY DAY!!!!
Am I missing the link for the comet's best viewing conditions in my area? I see the eclipse (not going to enjoy it here), but I would love to see the comet!
Big bang theorie is missing 95 percent of the parameters in the model (dark matter / dark energy). It surprises me that so many scientists are happy to explain that they might have missed something. They are not missing something, they are missing out on a lot.
Of coarse the early universe can grow giant galaxies right at the start. There is so much more material close to them to gather. Much the same as its easier to find a mate in a highrise apartment complex than in your mansion. Youre not gonna find a mate in your mansion cause there aint nobody there while there are thousands of people in an apartment complex. With galaxies, The bigger you are, the more stuff your going to collect. It all seems so perfectly simple to me
So what became of the Corona Borealis nova? Have we been stood up?
no mention of the temporary moon can you cover this I would love to know if it will be visible by eye in the UK and how/when to see it :D please :D
Whoa! Many people have made naked eye observations of the planet Uranus, including me last Winter.
Hi Dr. Becky, just wanted to ask: Where's the nova in the Corona Borealis constellation at?^^ Wasn't it supposed to be here by autumn? Did I miss it, or is the star just not as punctual as expected? :P
Have a good one (:
Thank you Becky 🙏💋
hello dr becky, may i ask a good application to use for finding out exact times certain stars/planets will be at certain points in the sky, i live in the UK but the area is covered in housing so unfortunatly i can only observe things that are quite high in the sky
When are we going to see the nova? I was promised a nova this summer. Summer only has a few days left, and so far I've been very disappointed.