James Webb Space Telescope Launch and Deployment

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии •

  • @jaapongeveer6203
    @jaapongeveer6203 6 лет назад +1076

    I'm 66, if I live to see pix from the beginning of time, I'll die happy.

  • @sunUK20
    @sunUK20 3 года назад +200

    Who's here after the launch?
    A marvellous masterpiece indeed!!
    Thanks to all humanity👍👍

    • @cubertmiso
      @cubertmiso 3 года назад +4

      Thanks for all involved.
      Not only the thousands in the team, I mean thanks for the whole interconnected web of human economy.

    • @vikkikay4502
      @vikkikay4502 3 года назад +1

      It's so well orchestrated .
      It's like watching 👀 a ballet in space.❤

    • @TheMattmattmoo
      @TheMattmattmoo 3 года назад +2

      Watching the 11 days after launch mirror deployments that happened today is awesome.

    • @giedriusandriulionis2807
      @giedriusandriulionis2807 2 года назад +3

      And who's here after the first pictures were released? Amazing stuff

  • @tomriddle1195
    @tomriddle1195 5 лет назад +301

    This video really deserves a 1B view. Respect to the scientists and engineers working on this project.

    • @hijgghkgkgiy8226
      @hijgghkgkgiy8226 4 года назад +4

      No

    • @ShutTheMuckUp
      @ShutTheMuckUp 4 года назад +3

      This video deserves nothing...which is what this telescope will amount to.

    • @probegt75
      @probegt75 4 года назад +26

      Brainless idiots are too busy watching the kardashian's and cardi b videos than learning about the universe and the nature of reality.

    • @LShaver947
      @LShaver947 4 года назад +9

      @@probegt75 welcome to the 21st century

    • @ThomasJr
      @ThomasJr 3 года назад +3

      @@probegt75 NOBOdy is obligated to share your passions and interests. if they like the K's, it's their problem, and also right. Nobody can force me to like things and I can't force nobody to like things

  • @BenJammins
    @BenJammins 3 года назад +66

    It's crazy this video was back in 2017 and so much has changed between and the launch yesterday

    • @dudeimstoned5141
      @dudeimstoned5141 3 года назад

      Yep

    • @tuanhuynguyen8756
      @tuanhuynguyen8756 3 года назад +1

      What are the differences, can you give more information>

    • @Denafalt
      @Denafalt 3 года назад

      @Dissident Aggressor I never did! :O

    • @obear1
      @obear1 19 дней назад

      and today?
      almost incredible.

  • @johnnie135
    @johnnie135 8 лет назад +585

    The origami folding of this instrument scares the hell out of me. I can't wait to see the very first image that this telescope will deliver.

    • @SaltborneHeathen
      @SaltborneHeathen 8 лет назад +49

      I'm going to be so nervous about the sun shade membranes getting snagged on something

    • @johnnie135
      @johnnie135 8 лет назад +41

      Stephen Bates You and me both. This 8.8 billion dollar mission is worth every cent. Congratulations to every person involved with JWST.

    • @SaltborneHeathen
      @SaltborneHeathen 8 лет назад +25

      Johnnie absolutely worth every cent. I can't wait for it to have a closer look at Trappist-1 and some of the Kepler exoplanets

    • @johnnie135
      @johnnie135 8 лет назад +26

      Stephen Bates No your sights are too narrow! Ha ha, think big man!! Right up to the cosmological Dark Age!! (Hopefully after spending 8.8 billion dollars we can finally put all religions in the garbage can.)

    • @johnnie135
      @johnnie135 8 лет назад +13

      MrGoodkat You must be my brother from another mother! How is it that you have my own philosophy? Oh I get it, you have an independent, critical thinking, non-brainwashed, educated brain that seeks empirical truth that can be duplicated in theory and practice by anyone capable of understanding that physics is universal and denominations of religions are merely regional at best. I guess after reading that, you'll think I'm your brother as well. Later bro, I'm going to my astronomy class in 30 minutes from now.

  • @XBoY4869
    @XBoY4869 8 лет назад +2900

    Please don't screw this up

    • @quatermass8
      @quatermass8 7 лет назад +67

      Too for away to keep maintaining it like Hubble. Yes, good luck with this.

    • @suemcculloch9188
      @suemcculloch9188 7 лет назад +5

      +Sukram Sukram make u rite .
      too far away to maintain it. .......
      only ifit goes wrong.
      hope not.
      what will they do if it needs fixing?
      thats 12 to 13 days getting to it for starters.xxxx
      cant wait.

    • @suemcculloch9188
      @suemcculloch9188 7 лет назад +1

      +Sukram Sukram make u rite .
      too far away to maintain it. .......
      only ifit goes wrong.
      hope not.
      what will they do if it needs fixing?
      thats 12 to 13 days getting to it for starters.xxxx
      cant wait.

    • @bradfordjhart
      @bradfordjhart 7 лет назад +15

      LOL Saleem Says, i was thinking that the whole time i was watching this.

    • @georgeborgesperez
      @georgeborgesperez 7 лет назад +8

      Seeing all about NGC I am so proud of being part of this team.

  • @enioni716
    @enioni716 4 года назад +329

    Just praying that everything goes right. The pictures we will recieve will be ofcourse gorgeous.

    • @enioni716
      @enioni716 4 года назад +1

      @Jim Harol yea lets hope their work becomes a great success

    • @aswzen
      @aswzen 4 года назад

      imagine this rocket bringing the most expensive telescope ever made...

    • @alvinfriesen4918
      @alvinfriesen4918 4 года назад +8

      Imagine a explosion on the launch

    • @enioni716
      @enioni716 4 года назад +7

      @@alvinfriesen4918 lol. you are evil

    • @Codduct
      @Codduct 3 года назад +2

      @@alvinfriesen4918 lmaooo

  • @NaesNavillus
    @NaesNavillus 3 года назад +71

    Can't freaking wait!!! I've been waiting for this since I was 16 and I'm almost 30 years old now!! Here's to a flawless mission 🙏🏻🤞🏻

    • @cyberpunkchloe9
      @cyberpunkchloe9 3 года назад +1

      It is finally gonna Launch :-D

    • @purvivb
      @purvivb 3 года назад

      @中村奈々🙄😂

    • @jurestormchaser5382
      @jurestormchaser5382 3 года назад +1

      I remember when they started talking about it (as the NGST) - 25 years ago ... :S

    • @strongcool
      @strongcool 3 года назад

      Nice

    • @koraysoydal6695
      @koraysoydal6695 3 года назад

      Aynı yaştayız ve bende ilk duyduğumda 16 yaşımdaydım. :)

  • @Gypsydanger1
    @Gypsydanger1 8 лет назад +173

    Oh man. That thing is intricate AF. Wish you guys luck!

    • @arbitrage2141
      @arbitrage2141 7 лет назад +4

      gypsydanger I get the slight sense maybe they are being a bit too ambitious with this... but then, its fucking nasa. If I only knew half of the actual process for half of their missions, I think Id say everything they've done is too ambitious.

    • @Rayden440
      @Rayden440 7 лет назад +3

      I would argue that NASA is not being ambitious enough. During the Apollo missions, only two Saturn V rockets were tested in unmanned flights, the third launch of the Saturn V rocket was manned (Apollo 7). There was an engine failure on the second unmanned launch, but they decided to go ahead with Apollo 7 without an additional unmanned launch to test their improvements/changes (incredibly ballsy). The Space Race era of NASA is filled with ambition and determination to catch up and overtake the Soviets because the USSR was way ahead of the USA for most of the Space Race.
      After going to the moon a few times, public support and government funding for NASA dwindled. They had a choice between going to Mars and building the Space Shuttle. As you probably know, they chose the shuttle and humans never left low earth orbit ever again :(

    • @kevinagee111
      @kevinagee111 7 лет назад

      thank you

    • @RoyChartier
      @RoyChartier 7 лет назад +2

      The 3rd launch of the Saturn V was Apollo 8.

  • @mjproebstle
    @mjproebstle 5 лет назад +467

    cant wait!! my cousin is an engineer on the team 😊

    • @Crazyman1212
      @Crazyman1212 4 года назад +21

      I just hope the debt caused by Covid-19 does not wipe out this project.

    • @mjproebstle
      @mjproebstle 4 года назад +13

      HXT De jwst is currently under going testing in a clean room facility in redondo beach, california

    • @paulgrech4210
      @paulgrech4210 4 года назад +1

      Yeaaah.., maybe tell her to consider not adding that to her resume.
      (I'm g'na x my fingers y'don't mind humorous replies (?) as the 'net can bite)
      Go James Web.
      Please. GO!

    • @paulgrech4210
      @paulgrech4210 4 года назад

      @HXT De don't think they got as far as deciding that yet.

    • @gooeydewys5151
      @gooeydewys5151 4 года назад +3

      money money money money money money MONEY

  • @valsainking
    @valsainking 2 года назад +35

    I got tears in my eyes just from watching this. Truly a humbling undertaking. God bless all the scientists who endeavored for years to make this epic project a reality.

    • @dallassegno
      @dallassegno Год назад +2

      for a very well made cartoon

    • @SaneGuyFr
      @SaneGuyFr Год назад

      ​@@dallassegnoIt's not a cartoon though....

    • @lonnkon
      @lonnkon Год назад

      where is the real video?
      and never mention god again u pagan sh1t

    • @NPC420x
      @NPC420x Год назад

      Why does everything that has to do with space seem like it consists animation or renders only? Epecially the shots of Earth from space. It would be fascinating to see the earth in all its glory with the stars sparkling in the background.

    • @SaneGuyFr
      @SaneGuyFr Год назад

      @@NPC420x There are millions of earth photos

  • @ramilarbiol5577
    @ramilarbiol5577 3 года назад +43

    This presentation is very accurate for 4 years after uploading. Kudos to You and to the Engineers, Scientists and Mathematicians.

    • @craigbmm4675
      @craigbmm4675 2 года назад +1

      indeed .. truely amazing feat of engineering . the images are mind bogglin

  • @SaltborneHeathen
    @SaltborneHeathen 8 лет назад +175

    I am going to be on the edge of my seat while this deploys

    • @ffggddss
      @ffggddss 7 лет назад +11

      I guarantee you *won't* be alone!!! Just consider the team that put all this together! "Sweating bullets" might be more apt for them.

    • @exionem
      @exionem 7 лет назад +3

      This will be like watching a Final World Cup Soccer game for me! I´ll be biting my nails!

    • @Shawntawnproductions
      @Shawntawnproductions 7 лет назад +2

      Was thinking the same thing!! And just imagine...a particle the size of a grain of sand hitting the exposed telescope in just the right place would ruin it all...I’m afraid something will go wrong but I’m praying nothing does!

    • @bigsnugga
      @bigsnugga 6 лет назад

      Stephen Bates I would be in the floor or just flying

    • @Legio__X
      @Legio__X 6 лет назад

      Stephen Bates 6 months from launch until the JWST even gets first light. Hope you have a comfy seat! But yea I’m with you I can’t wait to see it’s version of Hubble’s deep field.

  • @goddamn4012
    @goddamn4012 3 года назад +45

    If this process works fully, those engineers need to be give some really big medals and have to be made heroes. Engineers are modest and let their work do the talking so the public takes them for granted. The public has to be made to acknowledge their efforts..

    • @exospaceman8209
      @exospaceman8209 3 года назад +1

      it did its fully deployed

    • @cromulom2223
      @cromulom2223 3 года назад

      @@exospaceman8209 not fully yet, im pretty sure

  • @locutusdborg126
    @locutusdborg126 8 лет назад +200

    A stunning achievement of mankind. This will open our eyes to the universe in unprecedented fashion. This is our purpose, to explore the universe.

    • @David-zy1lr
      @David-zy1lr 7 лет назад +3

      That is actually really inspiring!

    • @smasher123ism
      @smasher123ism 7 лет назад +2

      Agreed. Explore, Develop, Colonize, Revolutionize. Isn’t space already intriguing and we can make many cool sci fi technologies maybe real one day.

    • @joshuatraffanstedt2695
      @joshuatraffanstedt2695 7 лет назад +2

      Locutus D'Borg we make our own purpose. Exploration is a exciting prospect for our species. We've done it ever since our ancestors crawled out of trees and started walking upright. But the universe isn't life friendly at all. So far as we know, the only place friendly for human life is a very small portion of Earth. I doubt if theres any planet anywhere close that wouldn't require a space suit and oxygen tanks.

    • @davidthomas9190
      @davidthomas9190 7 лет назад +1

      Locutus D'Borg i believe we were created by the universe so it could observe itself 🤔

    • @llewellynhaye2831
      @llewellynhaye2831 7 лет назад

      We are the "fingers on the hands of God" for which we are an inseparable part of God and creation.. Our absolute purpose is to compliment what's already been created with our eternal creative energy, until we create eternal life and the heaven as we've imagined; all imagination is of thy God be it good or bad; religion is blind..We are forever an inseparable part of God destined to be Gods of our great destiny...In the mind of a supreme being, the earth is inferior to one's absolute creation and purpose into being..God you have bless us with the courage to never fear our inalienable rights to all in creation and our destiny of absolute greatness...We are like no other life..we are Mankind!

  • @dariomadeit5262
    @dariomadeit5262 3 года назад +9

    Visiting this video today to say we finally did it. The moment I’ve been waiting for since I was 10 is finally here. I’m 21 now and the James Webb Space Telescope launched yesterday 🙏🏼

    • @robneff7084
      @robneff7084 3 года назад +1

      Ah, a youngster. Yes, these things take time, a lot of time. I was your age when Hubble launched and we were so excited, then found out the mirror didn't focus properly, and the scientists and engineers had to scramble to figure out a fix.

  • @ggi5658
    @ggi5658 6 лет назад +488

    It all seems so complicated and fragile. The telescope with all of its parts, the mission, the entire thing. I hope it all comes out just as planned because this is gonna be really big. Best of luck to all involved.

    • @AriahFN
      @AriahFN 5 лет назад +11

      It’s a lot of science, hard work, and true passion.

    • @erikbakker1531
      @erikbakker1531 5 лет назад +9

      Northrop and Grumman. I trust those people. And also the Ariane V has a very good record. Its engineers from manufacturer Airbus learnt a great deal from two failed launches and three partial failures, all in the beginning of the project. Since then 82 consecutive launches have been successful. I think it will all work out just fine. 🙂👍

    • @nitinpandey5753
      @nitinpandey5753 3 года назад +2

      @@ate7714 yes it did and opened the way to think about planets next to it. As they've found liquid metal in its core.

    • @camplethargic8
      @camplethargic8 3 года назад +5

      There's no way this is going to work flawlessly. Sorry folks.

    • @user-zb8tq5pr4x
      @user-zb8tq5pr4x 3 года назад +12

      @@camplethargic8 Thanks, by the way, what science professional exactly are you? Oh right, you're just some random clueless bum. We'll really cherish your input

  • @RU-zm7wj
    @RU-zm7wj 5 лет назад +155

    This is magnificent, but so many operations have to perfectly happen to deploy it...so many. Let's cross our collective fingers and pray for this to come off. It will open up our universe, like nothing else.

    • @MaestroCipher
      @MaestroCipher 3 года назад +3

      The team have completed comprehensive testing scenarios, I pretty confident - all will work as it should.

    • @justtelescopic5187
      @justtelescopic5187 3 года назад +1

      @@MaestroCipher Definitely!

    • @camplethargic8
      @camplethargic8 3 года назад +1

      Yes, praying for good outcomes has an excellent track record.

    • @frankcross2558
      @frankcross2558 3 года назад +3

      Did you see what had to happen to "land" the Mars Rover? I have every confidence...they truly deserve to siucceed.

    • @r2out
      @r2out 3 года назад +1

      Oh yes, I fully realize what kind of expertise it took to land the Perseverance rover on Mars; it was pretty impressive!
      Since they have that expertise, I have full confidence that they can achieve success in project as well.
      I would be really interested to know how many "points of failure" that the Mars 2020 mission had to achieve its mission successfully, that would be interesting to compare with the James Webb telescope mission.

  • @akarimsiddiqui7572
    @akarimsiddiqui7572 8 лет назад +148

    Thanks for the beautiful and detailed documentary.

    • @kevinagee111
      @kevinagee111 7 лет назад

      youre welcome

    • @jackiesingleton2351
      @jackiesingleton2351 6 лет назад +1

      This isn't a documentary so much as corporate propaganda made by the manufacturer of the telescope, Northrop Grumman, to keep that sweet sweet congressional funding pouring in. I really hope they get this done, it is already $9 billion over its original budget of $1 billion U.S. So 10 times what they said it would cost, but they have NASA by the short hairs on this and know they can basically delay as long as they want and keep raking in $$$ because now it is far too late to pull funding, too big to fail. IF they get it all to work I will be massively impressed, but there are a lot of things that can go wrong. Before this video I had no idea how complicated the deployment is going to be. Good luck NASA... P

    • @publicmail2
      @publicmail2 6 лет назад

      Narrated by the short bald guy who broke his thumbs on Seinfeld.

  • @gandigooglegandigoogle7202
    @gandigooglegandigoogle7202 3 года назад +4

    the launch of the James Webb telescope by the French team in French Guiana was so precise that Naza communicated that the telescope would have years of life more than what had been planned ... indeed the propellant on board in the telescope which was intended to periodically readjust the position of the telescope in space, was saved, because it was not used to correct the trajectory! a huge success for Ariane and this French team. Naza is happy, ESA is happy ... i'm so happy !!

  • @dylanaguilar6545
    @dylanaguilar6545 4 года назад +626

    Damn even after it finnnaly gets in space we still gotta wait 160 days to see if everything went as planned, that’s gunna kill me

    • @karlkarlsson9126
      @karlkarlsson9126 3 года назад +22

      Not so bad, that's less then 6 months, it will go quick, and it will be interesting to follow all the steps to it's destination.

    • @lighted2327
      @lighted2327 3 года назад +1

      2/5 of a year

    • @AOE5578
      @AOE5578 3 года назад

      @@karlkarlsson9126 is it already in orbit?

    • @karlkarlsson9126
      @karlkarlsson9126 3 года назад

      @@AOE5578 Not yet unfortunately

    • @lincolnlog5977
      @lincolnlog5977 3 года назад +3

      @@AOE5578 No it got delayed... AGAIN

  • @theColJessep
    @theColJessep 7 лет назад +54

    Beautiful animation with a great level of detail. I love how the fairings wobble after being ejected.
    Best of luck with the launch and assembly.

    • @paulsaid1365
      @paulsaid1365 6 лет назад

      Shame we have to wait so long after so many delays

    • @cherryjain61
      @cherryjain61 3 года назад

      @@paulsaid1365 ohh

  • @rickintexas1584
    @rickintexas1584 5 лет назад +153

    What an amazing machine. I can’t wait to see what discoveries it yields. Congratulations to everyone involved in this project.

    • @100canadianmaplestirup8
      @100canadianmaplestirup8 3 года назад

      fact check; thats not a machine its CGI

    • @rickintexas1584
      @rickintexas1584 3 года назад +7

      @@100canadianmaplestirup8 yes, we know that. But the real machine will launch some time in the next year. I had the chance to see the JWST in California shortly before covid started.

    • @aronchangepfp6643
      @aronchangepfp6643 3 года назад +2

      @@rickintexas1584 it will launch 2 days from now

    • @Acervorochagames
      @Acervorochagames 3 года назад

      Thank Gregory L. Robinson

    • @PHILLIPS8822
      @PHILLIPS8822 3 года назад

      For 10 billion dollars, it should be

  • @xSkorpa
    @xSkorpa 3 года назад +14

    So pumped we are getting closer to this launch date!

  • @parapsychologist5402
    @parapsychologist5402 5 лет назад +121

    I hope I'm around when the first pictures come back.

    • @keep
      @keep 5 лет назад +2

      Why won't you be?

    • @andreisilva9809
      @andreisilva9809 5 лет назад

      Qwero os apetrechos Andrei CP 89066389 n,591 Blumenau Santa Catarina Brasil

    • @charlessmith6412
      @charlessmith6412 5 лет назад +11

      Ram. JR: I don't know about Reno Raines, but my reason for saying the same thing as he did is that I am 76 years old, and I hope I'm still alive when they manage to get it in orbit and hopefully succeed. But old age and it's complications could prevent me from seeing it. So "I hope I'm around when the first pictures come back" is something I would say too.

    • @CardZed
      @CardZed 5 лет назад +4

      @@charlessmith6412 well, you will probrably be there. As society grows older and older, the average person lives more.
      You are probrably (if you take care) gonna live to atleast 89-95.
      Even with that you can live more and more. Hope the best for you :).

    • @charlessmith6412
      @charlessmith6412 5 лет назад +5

      CardZ: Thanks. I hope you're right. Best wishes to you, also.

  • @fallensoul9262
    @fallensoul9262 5 лет назад +89

    Cant wait to see a picture of Proxima B.

    • @KickinAss1000
      @KickinAss1000 5 лет назад +13

      @Eros it's not a selfie if the telescope takes it m8...not that you will ever read this you must have wrote that comment billions of years ago... programmed it to match the data and wave lengths necessary to be captured by the server as they've stretched throughout the known universe only for the server to attempt to send you a notification that I replied to you... but alas... the inferred waves will leave that signal corrupted even if you were there to see it billions of years when this reaches you

    • @dirtylittle5percent876
      @dirtylittle5percent876 4 года назад

      @@KickinAss1000 lol.😳

    • @hidebehind6
      @hidebehind6 3 года назад +1

      @@KickinAss1000 huh, they just got Proxitube, not RUclips, proxitube can send messages to youtube at speed that faster than light speed for 1900 times, one parsec in second, so

  • @matthewrobson6042
    @matthewrobson6042 8 лет назад +352

    Good luck to all involved. My the force of luck be with you

    • @adamromero
      @adamromero 7 лет назад +24

      and also with you

    • @tim19962
      @tim19962 7 лет назад +3

      esa doesnt do luck it wil work

    • @moonzestate
      @moonzestate 7 лет назад +4

      Steven perdue sometimes "skills" are not enough, sometimes we need luck because humans are not perfect... :-)

    • @carlsagan7452
      @carlsagan7452 6 лет назад

      I cannot wait. There's going to be a lot of nail biting days. Once it is in orbit with all instruments successfully deployed and functioning I will finally be relaxed. So what like a year after launch? Ha ha ha

    • @illuminat121
      @illuminat121 6 лет назад

      I have bad luck so I won't give it:)

  • @joeyhilliard5323
    @joeyhilliard5323 4 года назад +6

    It makes me emotional thinking about how far we have come as a species, and how much further we will go. Truly astonishing what people are capable of.

  • @covenantsoul8027
    @covenantsoul8027 5 лет назад +415

    I hope that if an engineer says, "Wait a sec...there's some ice forming on the O-ring of the booster rocket" - they'll listen to him.

    • @TheAbdi9312
      @TheAbdi9312 4 года назад +21

      @@iconsumedmt1350 dont belittle people who live way harder lives than u do buddy

    • @carlcarlton328
      @carlcarlton328 4 года назад

      @Johan Jacobs nobody mentioned liquid oxygen.

    • @wanderer3861
      @wanderer3861 4 года назад +6

      Johan Jacobs the original coment was about challenger disaster,it happened because of the failed o ring which is at the srb, and the srb does not contain liquid fuel.

    • @wanderer3861
      @wanderer3861 4 года назад +2

      Johan Jacobs and the original comment that mentioned ice was formed at the o ring was because the low temperature at the area not because of the liquid oxygen .

    • @user-sw2lg1hv9t
      @user-sw2lg1hv9t 4 года назад +1

      " They " won't be there because it is not the same team in charge.

  • @monty0289
    @monty0289 5 лет назад +114

    Amazing to think what we've achieved in the few hundred years we've had modern science. Imagine where we'll be in another 500. For all our many flaws, we are an amazing species

    • @lm1584
      @lm1584 5 лет назад +8

      we will have SUVs with quicker responding heated seats - unfortunately thats the reality of our species the last 50 years, no major innovations in transportation for eg.
      We now travel (in the air) slowed on average than we did in the 1960s. All aircraft have slowed down.

    • @gnappibr
      @gnappibr 5 лет назад +4

      I only will agree with you when we put a submersible in Europa's ocean.

    • @monty0289
      @monty0289 5 лет назад +1

      @@gnappibr that will probably happen, might take 50 or 60 years but it will happen

    • @DonVigaDeFierro
      @DonVigaDeFierro 5 лет назад +4

      Givr it 20 years, and the world will be unrecognizable as the world 200 years ago is from now.
      Our duty is to not kill ourselves before we reach that point.

    • @jacobjorgenson9285
      @jacobjorgenson9285 4 года назад +3

      Imagine what we could've done if we didn't build guns?
      The 2008 US economic bailout was more money that the entire NASA lifetime budget up to that date.

  • @andydacus78
    @andydacus78 8 лет назад +297

    super excited. can't wait.

    • @liquidphilosopher1816
      @liquidphilosopher1816 6 лет назад

      yeah can't wait for the "edited" pics sent by nasa

    • @jenison6619
      @jenison6619 6 лет назад +5

      Dude these are not your regular DSLR images that you can post on Instagram. Infrared light caught needs to be edited in order for you to understand it.

    • @danjones9007
      @danjones9007 6 лет назад

      You’ll have to wait. Too bad none of us will live long enough to see it.

    • @raybilverstone2066
      @raybilverstone2066 6 лет назад +1

      Andy D well we’ve waited all these years maybe in the 2030s it will be ready to go up into space yeah right they keep talking about it but never do anything about it I’m still waiting for it to go up😂😂.

    • @AG-vu3rk
      @AG-vu3rk 5 лет назад

      At this rate 🥴🥴

  • @Wriggs74
    @Wriggs74 4 года назад +6

    This is the one I have been anticipating for so long. I look forward to its launch.

  • @NathanFree84
    @NathanFree84 7 лет назад +805

    So all the flat earthers think that the thousands of people that put this together, along with every other satellite launch (Programmers, installers, techs, engineers, linemen ect) are all dumber than them or are in on the conspiracy..... They are missing out on this amazing and wondrous achievement and they crap on humanity by calling it fake.

    • @miguelcervantes4705
      @miguelcervantes4705 7 лет назад +64

      I know, right?! I often hear them say, "Well, that's all just computer generated animations, they're lying to you!" lmao!

    • @kevinpitt2203
      @kevinpitt2203 7 лет назад +68

      Nathan... Their loss. Stupid is, as stupid does.

    • @NathanFree84
      @NathanFree84 7 лет назад +25

      sfhang no groups of idiots, got it....? Perhaps they don't all agree on all subjects,but they agree the earth is flat and that is how I am choosing to group them.

    • @ptenthus
      @ptenthus 7 лет назад +31

      Átomo Don’t forget trolls. I think there have to be a few that just get a kick out of getting people to try to counter their ‘arguments’.

    • @kevinpitt2203
      @kevinpitt2203 7 лет назад +10

      Atomo - there is another group, the wilfully ignorant and stupid. I would put them in there.

  • @alexingman6725
    @alexingman6725 7 лет назад +27

    Words cannot express how excited I am about this!

  • @Stinkys8050
    @Stinkys8050 8 лет назад +405

    I hope no Kerbals were injured in the production of this video.

  • @marinagoldberg9563
    @marinagoldberg9563 3 года назад +10

    This is truly amazing. The team of engineers and scientists have created something that is uber human. You are all true Rockstars, thank you! The world will learn and benefit so much from what you have developed over the last decade. Congratulations to all of you. Can't wait to see the pictures of the early stage universe.

  • @ViperEye
    @ViperEye 7 лет назад +63

    So almost a month of "please don't fail" deployment terror... Got it.

    • @nerdzy8454
      @nerdzy8454 6 лет назад +1

      It's just like the 7 minutes of terror, but longer.

    • @ax2bxc
      @ax2bxc 6 лет назад +10

      no, 160 days

    • @tonymind308
      @tonymind308 5 лет назад

      In - 290c +200c temperature range ;)

    • @badactor3440
      @badactor3440 5 лет назад +1

      More like 5 months

  • @Wild4o
    @Wild4o 5 лет назад +18

    This project is madness! Can't wait for the launch!

  • @bundz_
    @bundz_ 4 года назад +38

    I just love how the moon stops spinning around earth and watches the James Webb Space Telescope flies away while building up it's body

  • @aoikumina
    @aoikumina Год назад +1

    I remember watching this as a 13 years old kid,
    the idea of james webb how fascinating and fantasy like it is, and now it's a reality and discovering so many things already after it's deployment!!, no words can express how happy i am❤ im looking forward to all the fascinating discoveries it will teach us

  • @retynaretyna7520
    @retynaretyna7520 8 лет назад +516

    Good luck NASA

    • @911gpd
      @911gpd 7 лет назад +23

      *ESA
      The launcher is Ariane, a French/European rocket.

    • @cikicar
      @cikicar 7 лет назад

      ariana not nasa

    • @sameerahmed-ql8xd
      @sameerahmed-ql8xd 7 лет назад +10

      NASA made the telescope though

    • @jucelinodacunhadesousa5870
      @jucelinodacunhadesousa5870 7 лет назад

      ŕ4

    • @Bellthorian
      @Bellthorian 7 лет назад +16

      Wrong, NASA doesn't make anything. Northrup Grummen made the telescope.

  • @iamafkama5139
    @iamafkama5139 5 лет назад +36

    Can't wait till my great great grandkids get to see this thing finally launch

  • @whittyjd
    @whittyjd 4 года назад +5

    I remember joining a “save the James Webb Space Teleacope” group back in 2010. Hard to believe 10 years have passed. Let’s hope it goes ahead in Oct 2021.

    • @parnikkapore
      @parnikkapore 3 года назад +1

      Aaand it successfully launched on Christmas 2021!

  • @arora_for_life
    @arora_for_life 3 года назад +10

    What a wonderful example of brilliant engineering.. WOW

  • @maryellen1290
    @maryellen1290 5 лет назад +42

    I got to see this telescope under construction! I visited nasa, it was awesome! I learned so much.

    • @highpointsights
      @highpointsights 3 года назад +1

      where was the facility you visited? I think I'm jealous!!

    • @phantommedia9964
      @phantommedia9964 3 года назад

      @@highpointsights It's in Northrop Grumman facility in Redondo Beach, the tall building on the corner of Space Park Dr. and Redondo Beach Ave

  • @berghwilliam
    @berghwilliam 6 лет назад +77

    NASA: We made it! Now we just have to wait for the first picture.
    Sun: *Sneezes*
    NASA: 😰

  • @megaraph5551
    @megaraph5551 6 лет назад +194

    Just hope it doesn't have a mirror problem like what happened to Hubble

    • @darkhoodchief
      @darkhoodchief 5 лет назад +13

      It has adjustable mirrors

    • @nazimhassan2951
      @nazimhassan2951 5 лет назад

      @@darkhoodchief But it takes time to fix.

    • @darkhoodchief
      @darkhoodchief 5 лет назад +2

      @@nazimhassan2951 I think NASA has bigger problems to consider than trying to conserve time.

    • @nazimhassan2951
      @nazimhassan2951 5 лет назад

      @@darkhoodchief I think nasa is becoming cult for space projects rather than trying to help them...is not it?

    • @darkhoodchief
      @darkhoodchief 5 лет назад +3

      @@nazimhassan2951 I don't think you even know what JWST is for

  • @AngryAuditor
    @AngryAuditor 2 года назад +2

    If you came back in July 2022 to watch where it all began, you are a LEGEND.

  • @lzditalia
    @lzditalia 3 года назад +10

    Wow just amazing the amount of work this endeavor took! Congratulations to everyone involved in this project! Godspeed!

  • @davidthomas9190
    @davidthomas9190 7 лет назад +184

    I have an idea for a reality tv show, lets get all the flat earthers together on a big boat and send them off to find the edge of our flat planet 😆

    • @stargazer8in174
      @stargazer8in174 6 лет назад +9

      David Thomas I have tried several times to ask them to do just that. Without intelligence they must rely on conditioned response to avoid danger. Instinct only guides them in life and prevents them from actually proving what they were bred to believe.

    • @Billy_Darley
      @Billy_Darley 6 лет назад +7

      ive discussed the topic with them loonies before. energy efficiency is too much for their pea brains to grasp.

    • @monkeypants6764
      @monkeypants6764 5 лет назад +1

      David Thomas they cannot comprehend the overall complexity of our spheric earth

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 5 лет назад +2

      @David Thomas: and call it of course The Ship of Fools.

    • @madezra64
      @madezra64 5 лет назад +3

      @@Billy_Darley I wouldn't be able to do that. I would fucking kill myself from the ionizing stupidity destroying my brain cells...

  • @rashidthamidur
    @rashidthamidur 4 года назад +17

    Space makes me appreciate life even more!

  • @robharding4028
    @robharding4028 3 года назад +5

    What a wonderful example of man's ingenuity ! The Technology is mind blowing !!

  • @SebastianSanchez65
    @SebastianSanchez65 7 лет назад +481

    One of the greatest feats of mankind, please NASA don’t screw it up using imperial units 😅

    • @Jameson1776
      @Jameson1776 7 лет назад +9

      Sebastian Sanchez the ESA is launching it on an Ariane 5 so its not on NASA just mostly built and funded by NASA

    • @jamesmcinnis5184
      @jamesmcinnis5184 7 лет назад

      Sebastian Sanchez RIP

    • @conmanthegreatest8392
      @conmanthegreatest8392 7 лет назад +2

      You have to for the rest

    • @maloflory
      @maloflory 6 лет назад +17

      Jameson 1776 I think he was referring to the Mars Climate Orbiter, which crashed on Mars because it was coded to use metric units but received imperial ones (flew on a way lower orbit than it was supposed to, atmosphere made the rest)

    • @-_Nuke_-
      @-_Nuke_- 6 лет назад

      xD

  • @albertrodriguez6539
    @albertrodriguez6539 5 лет назад +92

    anyone seeing this at the end of July 2019 and Webb Telescope still seating unfinished at NASA ?

    • @runePV
      @runePV 5 лет назад +1

      august 11 2019 : belgium... launch that thing (it can fail as well 6 years from now then right now.. it's always gonna be 50 pct luck imo)

    • @runePV
      @runePV 5 лет назад

      @Progressive Nice ... stunning tech and i'm as a belgian supporting the american progressives lol . have a nice day

    • @chasepedigo
      @chasepedigo 5 лет назад +1

      @@runePV At this point I'd assume we have a way better than 50 % success rate.

    • @billdevine1270
      @billdevine1270 5 лет назад +8

      Well NASA was busy doing Islamic outreach for 8 years.

    • @SabbaticusRex
      @SabbaticusRex 5 лет назад +9

      @@billdevine1270 Not all in vain, though -- the James Webb will now shield itself from the sun by donning a full body burka and peering at the universe through a tiny eye slit. It will also shut itself off five times a day for prayer. Very progressive !

  • @camiysebas
    @camiysebas 3 года назад +5

    How amazing that this is happening right now, good luck to the JWST!!

  • @justinhorst
    @justinhorst 3 года назад +2

    3....2.....1....Lift off. Well done! Hopefully everything works fine. We will see in the coming days!!! Astonishing!!!

  • @Llerrah508
    @Llerrah508 5 лет назад +9

    I have been waiting for years, wish i was on the team! Such amazing discoveries await.

  • @ricocapili35
    @ricocapili35 5 лет назад +5

    YESSS !!! Go humans, this is the greatest eyeglass ever made. Praying all works as planned, thank you for all who pay and worked tirelessly...

    • @sageminentjunky5197
      @sageminentjunky5197 4 года назад +1

      All who pay?
      I paid for this stupid thing and every other good tax paying american citizen.

    • @fantin298
      @fantin298 4 года назад

      sageminentjunky 51 definitely worth it, your money will contribute to make incredible discoveries that will make humanity evolve

  • @reluctantme5183
    @reluctantme5183 3 года назад +4

    As we get closer to launching the James Webb Space Telescope ... I give thanks for all at Northrop Grumman & throughout the world who are involved with the scientists/technicians/engineers plus thousands more! Amazing and scary this launch and deployment is to be. Science is so important and furthering mankind's knowledge of space and the universe is accentual for us as a species ...

  • @tamannaghosh6820
    @tamannaghosh6820 3 года назад +2

    Years of hardwork will pay back soon. Have a healthy space journey JWST. Hope you will find many unknown secrets of this universe.

  • @kwbucek56
    @kwbucek56 7 лет назад +4

    Wow.. a lot of steps in this deployment and an awful lot can go wrong during this whole process.. good luck guys... your gonna need it !!

  • @peterlaanguila6089
    @peterlaanguila6089 7 лет назад +84

    mid 2000s: ISS would be the most complex space creation ever made.
    Webb: hold my beer.

  • @pikminlord343
    @pikminlord343 8 лет назад +95

    a great investment

  • @Rahmenno
    @Rahmenno 3 года назад +2

    I hope when I come back to this video it will have left this planet and open its eyes safely and for the next decade we will be able to see the marvels of space in a matter of months good luck JWST

  • @lepermunna
    @lepermunna 5 лет назад +22

    kudos to the animators for including the fairing wobble post-separation!

  • @syntaxed2
    @syntaxed2 6 лет назад +5

    Havent been this excited since 2004 (rover mars landings).
    This telescope is going to be absolutely EPIC.

    • @clydeellzey508
      @clydeellzey508 5 лет назад

      If the thing ever ever ever gets deployed!!!! Damnit i been anxiously waiting freaking 10 damn years!!!!!!!!!

  • @josephyang4997
    @josephyang4997 7 лет назад +50

    Really hope that the launch goes well and it doesn't just blow up on the launchpad.

    • @iletyoucallmestevesy
      @iletyoucallmestevesy 6 лет назад +13

      Pretty sure certain people would kill themselves if they watched that happen

    • @jemuelmongado5030
      @jemuelmongado5030 6 лет назад +6

      The Ariane 5 has had a history of blowing up. I just hope Arianespace will do their best not to repeat it in the most expensive and important undertaking they will ever commit.

    • @annoyingbstard9407
      @annoyingbstard9407 6 лет назад +2

      It's French. What can go wrong?

    • @cosmicandrew50
      @cosmicandrew50 5 лет назад +5

      @@jemuelmongado5030 Ariane 5 is statistically one of the most reliable launchers ever built. They had one catastrophic failure due to a simple stupid coding error, NASA simply picked the most reliable rocket they could.

    • @jemuelmongado5030
      @jemuelmongado5030 5 лет назад +4

      @@cosmicandrew50 Yeah since I've written my comment I've searched more about the Ariane V. Its track record is amazing, that one failure becomes easy to overlook.

  • @shekharss674
    @shekharss674 2 года назад +2

    James web send its first image while adjusting it's mirrors, it's mind blowing. Looking forward to explore the universe once it is fully functional.

  • @shawnwebb5786
    @shawnwebb5786 6 лет назад +10

    I'm honored name after my older brother..rest well my brother

  • @destiny_02
    @destiny_02 3 года назад +10

    Who's watching this after the actual launch ?

  • @kuuro_7712
    @kuuro_7712 3 года назад +4

    A video from 4 years ago detailing the historic events unfolding before us today

  • @nusskernmische
    @nusskernmische 3 года назад +2

    its freaking epic and the launch was too! this is the only glimpse of hope i have left for humanity

  • @deku4463
    @deku4463 3 года назад +3

    Le monde entier doit participer au financement d'un projet, on doit remercier toutes les équipes qui ont participé au projet pour le bonheur que va nous procurer ce télescope. J'ai hâte de voir les résultats

  • @getmad3013
    @getmad3013 4 года назад +9

    Astronomers : We are going to launch James Webb Telescope in 2020
    Corona Virus : Hold on !

    • @suvechhabose7586
      @suvechhabose7586 4 года назад +2

      Don't remind me ..
      My heart kinda broke when i heard it got pushed back to march 2021.
      Many people who thought they are going to witness this , died because of Covid.
      Many people don't even have an idea what is JWST and they are alive.
      We are nothing without ideas.

    • @AuthenticGadzooks
      @AuthenticGadzooks 3 года назад +1

      You should be grateful it didn't launch in 2020. 2020 is not the year.

    • @camerondeatcher9668
      @camerondeatcher9668 3 года назад +1

      Oct 2021

    • @uqailisyraf4206
      @uqailisyraf4206 3 года назад +1

      @@camerondeatcher9668 Dec 2021

  • @johnmagar7759
    @johnmagar7759 7 лет назад +23

    I am excited and cant wait. I hope this wont be trouble like the hubble

    • @bubblinbrownsugar616
      @bubblinbrownsugar616 7 лет назад +9

      They can't afford to have it be trouble like Hubble. At least you could have sent a crew to fix Hubble. Like he said in the video, this will be a game changer. The stakes are unbelievably high with this thing.

    • @WildPhotoShooter
      @WildPhotoShooter 7 лет назад

      They have learned a lot from building the Hubble , they won't make the mirror mistake.

    • @bekanav
      @bekanav 7 лет назад +1

      Well, this one is much more difficult construction. Getting that folded thing straight and collimated is enormous challenge. There is many chances to optical mistakes.
      As a project I see this very suspicious, so many phases and critical components. Say there is 100 things having 99% reliability, then failure results 63% of probability. Success rates for rocket launches are about 95 - 98%

    • @arbitrage2141
      @arbitrage2141 7 лет назад

      bekanav 5% chance for rocket/launch failure is ENORMOUS...needs to be like .01-.1%

    • @bekanav
      @bekanav 7 лет назад

      _____iBeg_____ Of course failure rate should be lower than it is, but so far it has been 2-5 failures/100 launches.

  • @AaronBoone-x6c
    @AaronBoone-x6c Месяц назад

    Came back to watch this. I just wanted a happy cry. Truly the most unbelievable thing achieved by people. Hard to explain how emotional this entire project makes me. I can't imagine how this impacted the thousands of truly prodigal experts who spent over a decade, or ten thousand years worth of man-hours collectively to achieve this succinct dream of hope and wonder. Humans can do such truly beautiful things, but only when we work together and put greed to the side. I want to meet an engineer one day who worked on this and give them the biggest hug. It would be like meeting a rockstar.
    We may never do anything nearly as audacious as this, and we may never again achieve such a truly major achievement similar to James Webb. It only worked out because Americans and other agencies started it in when citizens still believed in science and technology, rather than today where they want subsidized billionaires and corporations.

    • @Celestial.132
      @Celestial.132 21 день назад +1

      wait for just over two years (fingers crossed) and nasa will launch the Nancy Grace Roman space telescope

  • @lardenfriund5639
    @lardenfriund5639 4 года назад +41

    I’m gonna tell my grandkids in the future that we back then we actually thought this was going to launch in a year or two

    • @marcocasati6953
      @marcocasati6953 4 года назад

      And work

    • @n.o.v.a605
      @n.o.v.a605 4 года назад +1

      31st October 2021

    • @nouser129
      @nouser129 3 года назад

      Yeah, it was supposed to launch in 2018.

    • @DamienThorn999
      @DamienThorn999 3 года назад

      @@nouser129 I think you mean 2007.

    • @williamgriffin6912
      @williamgriffin6912 3 года назад

      IF IT HADNT BEEN FOR CHINA AND CORONAVIRUS PANDEMICS
      IT MITE HAV BEEN EARLIER ??

  • @henryswanson5939
    @henryswanson5939 7 лет назад +4

    Amazing. I cannot wait. I looked at flights to French Guiana because I'd love to see the launch. But it is super expensive so I hope they stream it so I can watch from home.

  • @johnhanek167
    @johnhanek167 5 лет назад +34

    First rate graphics and as interesting to watch as sci-fi!

  • @lopmazuwinabd.rahman7454
    @lopmazuwinabd.rahman7454 3 года назад +1

    May this nasa james webb space telescope will succeed inthe launching day and into his final destination to make us proud and get the perfect image of our universe that been long fascinating mankind,welldone all scientist all over the world for the work that to make it all happen

  • @henryobrien2340
    @henryobrien2340 3 года назад +3

    This miracle has the power to read the edge of a 1€ coin placed on the moon and the accuracy to map the heat signature of a bumblebee sitting next to the coin. Such brilliant scientists and engineers. My spectacles have trouble helping me read this as I type :0

  • @tombowen9861
    @tombowen9861 5 лет назад +4

    Ditto on previous comments. You've got truly amazing engineers, but dang. This is so bananas complex and delicate.

    • @one4life672
      @one4life672 4 года назад

      Yes, though the space side of NG (the former TRW in Redondo Beach, CA) which contributed the "core" Spacecraft Element has always taken on "one of a kind" projects...and the NASA/STScI telescope and other JWST partners have also accomplished amazing things, right? :-) Will cross my fingers and pray for success next year!

  • @louicoleman2910
    @louicoleman2910 7 лет назад +41

    Good old Northrop and their payload adaptors. Tbh Zuma is probably still in space.

    • @riccards
      @riccards 6 лет назад +1

      Loui Coleman what is Zuma?

    • @daddydonut1732
      @daddydonut1732 6 лет назад +7

      Nosty GamerLV a military satellite that was “lost” in space

    • @HMan2828
      @HMan2828 6 лет назад +7

      It wasn't lost, it was a top secret satellite, so clearly if they had put on paper the exact payload detach time someone could have calculated its position after launch and looked at it. They just pretended they lost it and passed it as a big conspiracy, like they did with aliens in the 50's... Left SpaceX to have to just say their launch went as expected on their end, and blamed it on the company that made the adapter, a company that just happens to be a gigantic military industrial corporation with top secret clearance and all the money they could ever want from the US military...

    • @riccards
      @riccards 6 лет назад +2

      Daddy Donut oh i know about i just forgot about zuma launched by SpaceX Falcon 9 nd it is in space they are making fake news about zuma that they lost it

    • @xx6aesthetic9xx47
      @xx6aesthetic9xx47 6 лет назад +1

      Guys, what if Zuma doesn't exist and they just pranked the conspiracy theorists.

  • @snowaIker
    @snowaIker 3 года назад +1

    What an astonishing achievement. Good luck JWST, good luck human kind. From a former astronomer, a PhD in Astronomy.

  • @Timmyval123
    @Timmyval123 7 лет назад +45

    I hope you got the mirrors right this time

    • @neocort4513
      @neocort4513 7 лет назад

      L2, yes, This time NASA never get change to send people up there and fix it.

  • @vuinhnho7816
    @vuinhnho7816 3 года назад +3

    Phải chờ thêm 6 tháng nữa mới có thể chiêm ngưỡng tuyệt phẩm của James Webb tuy hơi lâu nhưng cũng phải chấp nhận thôi , rượu ngon thì phải để lâu , món ngon cũng phải ướp lâu mới lên mùi

  • @raven_of_zoso455
    @raven_of_zoso455 6 лет назад +8

    Beautiful video! Finally something exciting to look forward to in the near future. It will be fun to see what James Webb will discover! I'm positive that the launch and the rest of the process will go without failure.

  • @Tiagomottadmello
    @Tiagomottadmello 3 года назад +2

    🇺🇲 🇨🇦 🇨🇰 TODAY !!! 12/25/2021. JAMES WEBB JUST LIFTED OFF TOWARDS ITS JOURNEY. It's astonishing how the real event happend, in its every single details, exactly how this vídeo mentioned, 4 years earlier... (except for the cloudy skyies on the real event). I have always said : Northrop Grummam crew are alliens !!!!
    Amazing explanatory vídeo, by the way ! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @marcdb1412
    @marcdb1412 4 года назад +3

    Still one year to go. Can't wait any longer. Thank you.

  • @NoPulseForRussians
    @NoPulseForRussians 8 лет назад +23

    now we just need a way to speed up time to the moment of it's very first data return download and the public sharing of that data ;)

    • @origamiscienceguy6658
      @origamiscienceguy6658 7 лет назад +2

      Shady unfortunately, this isn't lethal space program. (no time warp :(

    • @origamiscienceguy6658
      @origamiscienceguy6658 7 лет назад +2

      *kerbal space program.
      Auto-correct.

    • @zoeys_512
      @zoeys_512 7 лет назад

      taylor sims I think "lethal space program" is a valid secondary name for KSP :P

    • @Eric12886
      @Eric12886 6 лет назад

      They barley ever share the findings with us

    • @NoPulseForRussians
      @NoPulseForRussians 3 года назад

      @@Eric12886 Webb will be an all open source data bank for all findings.

  • @machina_aeterna
    @machina_aeterna 5 лет назад +4

    Wow. what an amazing design. The engineers and designers did an amazing job.

  • @harshamesta
    @harshamesta 3 года назад +2

    This video is one of best video on RUclips about james webb telescope. This video is well detailed information. I watched this video 4 year ago. I'm waiting this moment from that date. The time is over.

    • @nitinpandey5753
      @nitinpandey5753 3 года назад +1

      Hoping for all good and success for this mission.🙏

  • @Astrostevo
    @Astrostevo 7 лет назад +6

    Superb clip of a marvellous telescope to be - so intricate and amazing. Cheering you on and wishing you all the best.

  • @darshshinde
    @darshshinde 3 года назад +3

    Best of luck for this mission to be success. So many moving gears here! It's mind boggling to realize how everything has to work precisely for it to work well. And it's orbit being way beyond moon means servicing mission like Hubble won't be even possible

  • @evelynh.4088
    @evelynh.4088 4 года назад +21

    Telescope: Finally ready to take space pictures
    Astroid: Hello there

  • @aggelosn.6846
    @aggelosn.6846 3 года назад

    There are very few moments in the history of science where you know that you will explore something new, beforehand, guaranteed. After a few months humanity will have so much additional knowledge thanks to that magnificent tool

  • @shadowwalker2145
    @shadowwalker2145 5 лет назад +7

    I literally can't wait for this to happen 💙 this will be answering a lot of questions ✨✨✨

    • @tuskbedro
      @tuskbedro 5 лет назад

      Yes you can,... No it wont,... The earth is flat,...

    • @DonVigaDeFierro
      @DonVigaDeFierro 5 лет назад +1

      @@tuskbedro Yeah. NASA is hiding the TRUTH!! Half of our taxes go to FEEDING THE GIANT TURTLE THAT HOLDS EARTH ON ITS BACK!!

  • @crispinjulius5032
    @crispinjulius5032 4 года назад +27

    “From 3 years ago...” We’ll be seeing the same videos in 27 years.

    • @NiliMoto
      @NiliMoto 4 года назад

      Well launch is currently scheduled for march 2021 so im hopeful.

  • @ezekielmajor5511
    @ezekielmajor5511 5 лет назад +4

    I can't wait. Get this thing up there!

  • @Finchmeister88
    @Finchmeister88 3 года назад +2

    Another milestone in space exploration...
    .
    .
    .
    .
    If everything goes as planned!
    I am so hyped for this!