LISA | The Biggest Space Mission Ever

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2024
  • The Lisa mission will be really cool, I look at all the reasons why.
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    The European Space Agency Mission LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antennae) will launch in 2034 and will revolutionize the way we do astronomy. With a 2.5 million kilometre arm length it will be able to see kinds of gravitational waves that are impossible to see using Earth based detectors. Cool things it will see are collisions of super-massive black holes, orbiting white dwarf stars and measurements that will calibrate distance measures like sephid variable stars and supernovae, and it will be a new independent way of measuring the Hubble constant.
    #gravitationalwaves #space #DomainOfScience
    Thanks to the European Space Agency for letting me use their videos. More info about the cool work ESA are doing here: www.esa.int/ESA
    Thumbnail image credit: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center www.nasa.gov/goddard
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Комментарии • 186

  • @EuropeanSpaceAgency
    @EuropeanSpaceAgency 4 года назад +245

    We are so looking forward to expand our knowledge of the universe with LISA! 😃
    Great video Dominic! Thank you very much for putting it together! 🙏

    • @teemuleppa3347
      @teemuleppa3347 4 года назад +33

      gotta be honest...never thought i'd see a comment on YT made by ESA

    • @somanathdash8143
      @somanathdash8143 4 года назад +5

      Such peaceful comment.....
      Black wholes are made up of dark energy....

    • @thomasedavis
      @thomasedavis 2 года назад

      @@somanathdash8143 Yeah... no.

  • @nikhildev4490
    @nikhildev4490 3 года назад +24

    For students from UPSC exam: the answer is 'Evolved Lisa'.
    Lisa pathfinder: a 2015 mission to study feasibility for evolved lisa, 2034.
    LIGO: Underground
    Evolved Lisa: In space
    Lisa pathfinder: study feasibility for Evolved Lisa.
    Its "EVOLVED" probably because antecedents like space time curvature, ligo, lisa-pathfinder etc

  • @liamcolvin5875
    @liamcolvin5875 4 года назад +40

    Your donut of knowledge is still my laptop background 🤩🤩

  • @delve_
    @delve_ 4 года назад +117

    "2034 is a long time in the future"
    You say that as if 2005 is a long time in the past.

    • @domainofscience
      @domainofscience  4 года назад +29

      Whoa! 🤯

    • @delve_
      @delve_ 4 года назад +12

      I know, right?

      Though, I realized I got the parallel wrong. 2034 is 15 years from now, and I meant to go 15 years into the past, but I accidentally went 14 years into the past to 2005.
      2004 would've been 15 years ago and not 2005. Oops.

    • @mitseraffej5812
      @mitseraffej5812 4 года назад +4

      delve . Problem is 2004 I was alive and in 2034 I have a good chance of being dead. Even if I’m alive will I have the cognitive ability to appreciate what is discovered. Never mind I’ll just waste the next 5 or 10 years of my life working.

    • @delve_
      @delve_ 4 года назад

      +Mit Seraffej
      Why do you think you'll be dead by 2034?

    • @mitseraffej5812
      @mitseraffej5812 4 года назад +7

      delve .Because I’ll be 74. About the life expectancy in my country. I was not quite 9 when Apollo 11 landed on the moon. It was so exciting. I think it was in the early morning where I lived and I think we listened to it live on the radio. In my country TV was only introduced 4 years earlier. Once again mankind lost its way after that.

  • @goomba2727
    @goomba2727 4 года назад +73

    You’re the best science Channel I’ve ever seen

    • @koungmeng
      @koungmeng 4 года назад +5

      how about Vsauce, Veritasium, TedEd, SmarterEveryday, ASAPScience, MinutePhysics ... ?

    • @goomba2727
      @goomba2727 4 года назад

      They’re all second

    • @goomba2727
      @goomba2727 4 года назад

      Plus he creates informative posters

    • @domainofscience
      @domainofscience  4 года назад +16

      @@koungmeng and so many more, Kurzgesagt, 3blue1brown, Physics Girl, Looking Glass Universe, Kurtis Baute, Real Engineering, PBS Spacetime, Deep Look, Minute Earth, Primer, Trace Dominguez, It's Okay To Be Smart, all of Brady Haran's channels, Hank Green's channels, blimey the list goes on! We are pretty spoiled for good science content.

    • @i_am_ergo
      @i_am_ergo 4 года назад

      ​@@domainofscience Kurzgesagt, hell yeah!

  • @pathtoknowledge6847
    @pathtoknowledge6847 4 года назад +1

    The best channel & a wonderful human being I've stumbled upon on RUclips Thank you ❤🙏

  • @EeekItsSnek
    @EeekItsSnek 2 года назад +1

    I first saw you from Vertasium on the Doom map video and I've since been hooked. You are so amazing at communicating science. I have never had in interest in quantum mechanics until your videos, and now I can't stop watching your videos. You are so smart and so good at explaining how things function in a way better than most science communicators. Thanks for being you :)

  • @TheScienceBiome
    @TheScienceBiome 4 года назад +18

    Love the thumbnail!

    • @domainofscience
      @domainofscience  4 года назад +5

      Thanks so much! Full credit to the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center who made the full simulation of colliding black holes. There is a link to their video in my description.

    • @TheScienceBiome
      @TheScienceBiome 4 года назад

      Domain of Science I’ll definitely check the link out. Its a such a cool simulation.

  • @arnavmishra2155
    @arnavmishra2155 4 года назад +1

    Again A great video Sir!!

  • @yuhgdhg2768
    @yuhgdhg2768 2 года назад +1

    Outstanding effort

  • @will2see
    @will2see 3 года назад +4

    I think it will be much more revolutionary than the HST... After all, HST is just a telescope but in space. But LISA? Lisa is a completely different beast! It is not a different league. It's a completely different sport!

  • @lisarobinson5999
    @lisarobinson5999 Год назад

    Thanks for such a cool explanation here. Love you all LISA

  • @parkershaw8529
    @parkershaw8529 4 года назад +8

    We have neutrino detectors before gravitational detectors. So, our knowledge was NOT just from light.

  • @kumarayush4934
    @kumarayush4934 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for the video it is very informative☺️

  • @lisamcdonaldq6677
    @lisamcdonaldq6677 Год назад

    THANK YOU FROM LISA

  • @suvampoddar4443
    @suvampoddar4443 4 года назад

    Great Job bro!!!!!

  • @metalabratory8234
    @metalabratory8234 3 года назад +1

    Crazy. 10 years ago, I did a practicum at the Alber Einstein Institute in Hannover under supervision of Dr. Aufmuth, where we were able to look at and participate in some laser testing for Lisa. Back then I did not really understand the value of this project. It's incredible to see it coming closer to getting out there. Loving it. Now I am an Artificial Intelligence engineer and sometimes think about where I would be, if I had actually chosen a physics career. I'm really happy to be alive during such exiting times. Can't wait the hear the first heart beats of the universe.

  • @supriyachowdekar3231
    @supriyachowdekar3231 4 года назад +6

    Both The thumbnail and the video are amazing 😍👍👍

    • @domainofscience
      @domainofscience  4 года назад +2

      Thanks! You are very kind! Full credit to the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center who made the full simulation of colliding black holes. There is a link to their video in my description.

  • @SnifferRiffle
    @SnifferRiffle 8 месяцев назад

    I remember first hearing about this on an episode of Nova back in 2004.

  • @alexrodriguez4500
    @alexrodriguez4500 4 года назад +1

    I Loved LIGO and now LISA!

  • @HugeRademaker
    @HugeRademaker 4 года назад

    Another absolutely brilliant video! Thanks as big as the observable universe and beyond 👍🏼
    Sadly my home is too small to put up more framed posters...

  • @TheTastyPancake
    @TheTastyPancake 4 года назад

    Awesome!

  • @i_am_ergo
    @i_am_ergo 4 года назад +48

    When you mentioned that LISA was a joint ESA/NASA project, it brought a tiny tear to my eye.
    These are glimpses of humanity of the future: no nations, no religions, no other forms of stupid tribalism - just a unified species deeply fascinated with the universe and life.

    • @Sandwich13455
      @Sandwich13455 4 года назад +5

      Rootless and uninspired, is exactly how the ruling tribe want the masses,and promises of science based utopias, is how they'll fool the masses into giving up they're freedoms!

    • @i_am_ergo
      @i_am_ergo 4 года назад +2

      @@Sandwich13455 You high, bro?

    • @Sandwich13455
      @Sandwich13455 4 года назад

      @@i_am_ergo slightly

    • @a1r592
      @a1r592 4 года назад +3

      You do understand that scientific advancements are often made through asking philosophical questions, brought forth by these 'stupid' cultures and nations? You're describing a world in which everyone is basically the same 😐

    • @i_am_ergo
      @i_am_ergo 4 года назад +2

      ​@@a1r592 One, tribalism is by definition more destructive than constructive as it divides people into groups and pits them against each other for no reason. Two, you don't need ancient irrational values to ask questions like, "How does the physical world operate? Is quazi-eternal youth possible? How do we beat the speed of light and escape the Solar system/local group?" You don't need this old stupidity to ask the question "Why?" either, because the question is self-evident, and the answers cultures give are all rooted in ignorance and false.
      As for your last statement, we ARE the same. We ARE born equal.

  • @Tondadrd
    @Tondadrd 4 года назад

    Very cool, putting 2034 into my calendar.

  • @cornellwaters9089
    @cornellwaters9089 2 года назад

    👷 Thank You!

  • @baticadavinci3984
    @baticadavinci3984 4 года назад

    MORE VIDEOS PLEASE!!!

  • @moneyl6594
    @moneyl6594 4 года назад

    I wish it would launch sooner, this is awesome

  • @asgharalidahri2095
    @asgharalidahri2095 4 года назад

    This is Awesome

  • @David-di5bo
    @David-di5bo 4 года назад

    This is so exciting! Ahhh why do we have to wait 15 YEARS!!

  • @JohnDlugosz
    @JohnDlugosz 4 года назад +2

    That sounds a lot like the "drag free orbit" pioneered by Gravity Probe B. I wish you had elaborated on that. You ought to look into it for a future video.

  • @Kript1
    @Kript1 4 года назад +2

    I do not understand, but very interesting!

  • @MuhammadBesharat7
    @MuhammadBesharat7 Год назад

    Awesome br😎ther

  • @kitsouk1
    @kitsouk1 4 года назад

    Totally for, and looking forward to, I hope, LISA, however 15 years is a generation of Astrophysicists / Astronomers away. Love the update and enthusiasm, but I'm looking forward to the new neutrino detector prototype, using dual phase liquid and gas forms of argon, and it's happening now! Love your channel.

  • @Sandwich13455
    @Sandwich13455 4 года назад +1

    Since subbing a month ago ,this is my first notification! Dammit you tube (shakes fist ).

  • @adilsiddique6822
    @adilsiddique6822 3 года назад +2

    UPSC 2020 Asked about LISA

  • @Rrrr45569
    @Rrrr45569 4 года назад +1

    What program/application do you use for animating?

  • @isbestlizard
    @isbestlizard 4 года назад

    wow we REALLY need this mission to work.. literally if it doesn't.. we got to build it again until it does :O

  • @lewiszim
    @lewiszim 4 года назад

    We're going to see what's beyond it! We're going to see what's beyond the CMB!

  • @esra_erimez
    @esra_erimez 4 года назад +1

    Why would we not be able to "see" past the edge of the observable universe? Gravity waves are not light and therefore not constrained to the speed of light, hence would it not make sense that we would be able to detect past it?

  • @ExodiumTM
    @ExodiumTM 3 года назад

    How are the LIGO and VIRGO detectors able to differentiate which gravitational waves come from outer space and which ones are just interferences from the outside (for example, as you said, a truck passing by, etc.)?

  • @Squidward1314
    @Squidward1314 3 года назад

    What I don’t understand: The thing these GW detectors measure is the distance the laser travels (to 1/1000 of a proton diameter). Don’t they then have to then also make sure that the distance of the three satellites and their relative movement to each other is at least that certain? How can you make such fine corrections with thrusters?

  • @ZappaBlues
    @ZappaBlues 4 года назад +1

    2034. 50/50 I will still be around by then, even if all goes well for next 15 years. :(

  • @chrisbrown1241
    @chrisbrown1241 4 года назад

    Well, yes I do like watching scientific research which would show hope; it's what we all need. Replies welcomed.

  • @BeatBoxBudda
    @BeatBoxBudda 3 года назад

    Damn this is sweet as

  • @adithya2482
    @adithya2482 3 года назад

    This concept was asked in UPSC exam 2020

  • @leonardoabreu6232
    @leonardoabreu6232 4 года назад +1

    please make the map of astronomy

  • @alytyler219
    @alytyler219 4 года назад

    Procrastinating doing my cosmology homework with this video. I’m such a nerd

  • @GregoryCarnegie
    @GregoryCarnegie 4 года назад

    What would it take to obtain a picture of the cosmic gravitational background?

  • @will2see
    @will2see 3 года назад

    0:51 - You forgot about the neutrino astronomy (and other non-electromagnetic astronomy).

  • @Vanamonde
    @Vanamonde 10 месяцев назад

    How will the mictothrusters refuel and what about micrometeroites and dust and stuff causing false readings on the lasers?

  • @Arakis0
    @Arakis0 4 года назад

    Big yup

  • @kunalsaini2126
    @kunalsaini2126 4 года назад +8

    I understand 50%,but like your vedio 💯%

  • @auto514
    @auto514 4 года назад +9

    0:51 RIP neutrinos. We definitely learned about the sun from neutrinos. They confirmed estimates of the rate of nuclear fusion in the core.

    • @kitsouk1
      @kitsouk1 4 года назад +2

      www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/dune-scientists-see-particle-tracks-with-dual-phase-technology Neutrinos are not quite done for yet.

  • @IM-wc5eh
    @IM-wc5eh 4 года назад

    A map video please!!!

  • @SixStringHarmonies
    @SixStringHarmonies 3 месяца назад

    It's official - LISA will be built.
    ESA just published the commission. Now need to find someone to build it.

  • @pierreabbat6157
    @pierreabbat6157 4 года назад

    Do we hear or see gravitational waves? I think it's more like hearing; the waves detected by LIGO are in the audio frequency range, and it takes at least two detectors to get any idea where they came from. But dolphins, bats, and the telescope that imaged Pōwehi make the dichotomy fuzzy.

    • @philipm3173
      @philipm3173 Год назад

      Neither they are incredibly subtle. Imperceivable by any organism.

  • @mounsterchef
    @mounsterchef 4 года назад

    It will be sitting at one of those Lagrange points, right?

  • @testrabbit
    @testrabbit 3 года назад

    vote out everyone that doesn't want this as close to the initial 2015 projection for project launch as possible... worldwide vote them out!

  • @johntibaldi9496
    @johntibaldi9496 4 года назад

    You should make a map of philosophy!

  • @yash1152
    @yash1152 4 года назад

    7:15 the stupid me not knowing what hubble telescope did be like.... uhmmm, ohkayyy!!

  • @sileightynz5274
    @sileightynz5274 3 года назад

    Will we need 2 Lisa's?

  • @MICKEYISLOWD
    @MICKEYISLOWD Год назад

    It sounds like LISA is the most exiting study ever and comparable to James Web. If it gives us a new picture with new physics then that's great but to se an infant universe then Wow!

  • @widget3672
    @widget3672 4 года назад

    James Webb all over again?! And here I was thinking I might have to settle down for the science finally due THIS decade!

  • @samihahamdy7734
    @samihahamdy7734 2 года назад

    where will it be located?

  • @EnraEnerato
    @EnraEnerato 4 года назад

    Question I see that LISA is made of 3 Satelites, wouldn't 4 be better, especially if they'd be organized in a tetraeder positioning? Is 3 sats enough? Why is 3 enough?

  • @Norman_Lazarevich
    @Norman_Lazarevich 4 года назад

    #DomainOfScience.
    Can you make a map of Economics and map of Accounting.

  • @subculturenz
    @subculturenz 4 года назад +1

    I'm just here for the dreamy professor.

  • @36nibs
    @36nibs 2 года назад +1

    My dumb ass seen this and forgot and i thought they had already launched it but i could only find the ground observatory

  • @slashhashdash
    @slashhashdash 3 года назад

    Please make a video about DESI! They just got some results out.

  • @larryscott3982
    @larryscott3982 4 года назад

    Are gravity waves Doppler shifted?
    Will LIGO and LISA still be online in 2034?

  • @in_neerajpandey
    @in_neerajpandey 3 года назад +1

    Has it's name been announced as 'evolved lisa'?
    And is it related to Pathfinder Lisa?

    • @shivanipandey3019
      @shivanipandey3019 3 года назад

      Upsc been really pathetic to candidates

    • @swetakumari4747
      @swetakumari4747 3 года назад

      @@shivanipandey3019 you must be preparing for UPSC ,did you get question related to it right ,and how did you do in prelims .

    • @shivanaraboina0
      @shivanaraboina0 3 года назад

      @@swetakumari4747 is lisa and eLisa same?

  • @Featinwe
    @Featinwe 4 года назад

    You said that sapce is much more calm than on Earth but that's not true at all... what about solar wind and deep cosmic radiation? How will LISA counterpart those forces to stay in precise position (I assume precision level must be on subatomic level).

  • @YazhShah
    @YazhShah 4 года назад

    light can actually travel trough a black hole

  • @mikhailfranco
    @mikhailfranco 2 года назад

    Why just a triangle
    not a tetrahedron?

  • @davidcampos1463
    @davidcampos1463 4 года назад

    Will it be able to tell if gravity came late to the party known as the "Big Bang?"

  • @PorchPotatoMike
    @PorchPotatoMike 3 года назад

    2034: the same year the James Webb telescope will finally launch.

  • @pas33pas
    @pas33pas 2 года назад

    5:54 is PathFinder, not LISA? PathFinder have accelerometers parallel, LISA not

  • @prashantghimire8187
    @prashantghimire8187 4 года назад

    2034, haaaa i wonder for how long its going to be delayed till

  • @Andres-cb2gt
    @Andres-cb2gt 3 года назад

    why it takes so long till 2034 to be launch? :(

  • @testrabbit
    @testrabbit 3 года назад

    whatever happened to the we can get to the moon by the end of this decade attitude? We can get to the edge of the observeable universe for effs sake!😎

  • @Julia68yt
    @Julia68yt 4 года назад +1

    Lisa, eh? Talk about Weird Science ....

  • @ashfakalam3553
    @ashfakalam3553 3 года назад +1

    Upsc prelims 2020

  • @nikhildev4490
    @nikhildev4490 3 года назад

    This video is of Evolved LISA or LISA.
    LISA pathfinder is LISA pathfinder and not LISA.

  • @RaphyLive
    @RaphyLive 4 года назад

    so expanding space-time has no effect on gravitational wave? Unlike light getting redshifted.

    • @connorschultz380
      @connorschultz380 4 года назад

      Maybe it dose? We don't really know much about gravitational waves, we have much more experience with light

    • @aleksandersuur9475
      @aleksandersuur9475 4 года назад

      Of course it does, it behaves exactly like light in this way, that's why it can be used to independently verify Hubble's constant.

    • @connorschultz380
      @connorschultz380 4 года назад

      @@aleksandersuur9475 what evidence do we have of this?

    • @aleksandersuur9475
      @aleksandersuur9475 4 года назад

      @@connorschultz380 If anyone has tried to experimentally verify it, I don't know about it. It might be more complicated than simply correlating distance from event luminosity to distance from measured redshift, the assumption that it does redshift must be written in pretty deep so just doing that might not tell you much.
      But the reason we knew to look for gravitational waves to begin with is because general relativity predicted they must exist and described what they are and how they behave. And yes, according to GR they must blue and redshift like everything else.
      Redshift is not just a light thing, it's a geometry thing, it doesn't apply to just light, it applies to everything. All particles including photons and gravitational waves too.
      I guess LISA will verify this experimentally when it will be used to independently calculate Hubble's constant, if there is no redshift in gravitational waves then it's not going to work and come up with value of zero. I very much doubt there will be any surprises of that nature

  • @alexanderhugestrand
    @alexanderhugestrand 4 года назад

    Something is fishy about detection of gravitational waves. We measure length by observing matter, using light.
    The assumption here is that matter is stretched and compressed, but the wavelength of light is not. Why? Isn't light residing in space?
    Also, a completely equivalent view is that space is unaffected, while the wavelength of the laser beam changes. My guess is that this is the electrical engineer's preferred interpretation.
    Why is the former favorized over the other?

    • @aleksandersuur9475
      @aleksandersuur9475 4 года назад +1

      "The assumption here is that matter is stretched and compressed, but the wavelength of light is not"
      You are completely misunderstanding something, there is no such assumption and nobody is measuring compression or stretching of matter. That's not how you detect gravitational waves with an interferometer, this is how you do it en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LIGO#/media/File:Gravitational_wave_observatory_principle.svg

  • @mukesh4169
    @mukesh4169 4 года назад

    Unless we start spending wayyyy more on space exploration we won't be able to launch this by 2034..... how sad is that. We're completely capable of doing something that we aren't.

  • @regualtorybodyexam
    @regualtorybodyexam 3 года назад

    This is lisa pathfinder or evolved lisa

    • @nikhildev4490
      @nikhildev4490 3 года назад

      U guys have been fooled by that upsc test. They made up that option 'evolved lisa' to fool the students. It puts pressure on you. It's a classic trick to confuse MCQ test takers.

    • @regualtorybodyexam
      @regualtorybodyexam 3 года назад

      @@nikhildev4490 I was not fooled. May be others were. I selected right option

    • @nikhildev4490
      @nikhildev4490 3 года назад

      @@regualtorybodyexam Its seems that the answer to that question is 'evolved lisa' which will be launched in 2034. Lisa pathfinder was a 2015 mission to study feasibility for the evolved lisa project.

  • @AliHSyed
    @AliHSyed 4 года назад +2

    I'm 25, I'll 39 when this launches 😳

  • @jovanovicoliver
    @jovanovicoliver 4 года назад

    This is some expensive mission, hope it is not the waste of money.
    These masses inside the crafts will differ with altitude it could lead to some confusion.

  • @SciDOCMBC
    @SciDOCMBC 4 года назад +2

    and there's a test facility in Germany where they invented all the technology for the American an Italian interferometers

  • @aleksandersuur9475
    @aleksandersuur9475 4 года назад +1

    Yeah, supercool and everything. But what I would like to know is why the bloody hell does it take 15 more years to launch LISA when Pathfinder exceeded expectations already 4 years ago?
    Cost of spaceflight is not a factor if you compare it to stretching a major project decades longer than it needs to be. Building the hardware and launching it are marginal costs compared to keeping teams of top grade engineers and scientists on payroll for decades. Hardware only costs the man hours put into it, so you better use these manhours efficiently, I don't see that happening on a two decade long project.

  • @zertilus
    @zertilus 4 года назад +1

    5:08 I want to throw up just hearing that, just think of how creepy and powerful the assembly of that information will be, how unreal and how much it's going to show us..

  • @cnacma
    @cnacma 4 года назад

    This guy is super cute.

  • @Chris-op7yt
    @Chris-op7yt 4 года назад

    what's the climate forecast for 2034? i think LISA will be last thing on our minds.

  • @paullasmith4975
    @paullasmith4975 4 года назад

    I can hardly wait for the gravitational detector space launch thing. Then maybe we can make our own black holes for some reason, maybe it might be like tossing a handful of pennies into a spinning air plane propeller in slow motion.

  • @kesitabi2117
    @kesitabi2117 2 года назад

    james webb ?? , lisa is bigger than hubble revolution

  • @unknownfromkashmir
    @unknownfromkashmir 3 года назад +1

    Who is here froM IAS prelims 2020 ?

  • @jaspalraina220
    @jaspalraina220 4 года назад

    Hi, a few doubts if i may;
    1)U said that LISA will have an arm length of 2.5millon km's. How far away is it going to be placed frm earth & will it be in solar orbit?
    2)Although, as u mentioned that there are multiple events i.e.(sneeze, passing truck, siesmic vibrations )which can hamper the accuracy of LIGO, the very fact that it succesfully measured a vibration 10,000th of a proton(as mentioned) from a source 300million light yrs away says that it IS accurate AND sturdy enough....On the same lines, as LISA (3 spacecraft moving in tandem) will be in space with a 2.5 million km arm length, there will be many more factors affecting its accuracy(Self technicalities, cosmic impacts, radiation pressure & various unknowns as space). How do they propose to overcome these known & unknown factors.... Read expense-effort-multiple unknowns-Unable to rectify if affected......Still i guess thise r smart people & will work out something, what with the amnt of knowledge to be gained & new physics developed...Thk u.

  • @YassinAbbadi
    @YassinAbbadi 4 года назад +2

    You never ask for like and subscribe..
    How you can do this to us?

  • @itisitisntit
    @itisitisntit 4 года назад +1

    wow great video, i'm really looking forward to 2034 now because that's also the year my restraining order on Ellen Degeneres is lifted. i just cant wait to give her a massive hug and call her dad.