Breakthrough for Exomoon Hunting

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

Комментарии • 996

  • @CoolWorldsLab
    @CoolWorldsLab  4 года назад +172

    Many of you have asked don’t we already know exomoons must be out there based on their abundance in the solar system? To some degree yes but there are many unusual aspects of the solar system so moons could be far rarer in other systems potentially. But moons would be fascinating diverse objects potentially hosting life and so we really want to be able to study these fascinating worlds. Obviously a necessary first step in their study is their detection!

    • @DrMackSplackem
      @DrMackSplackem 4 года назад +5

      For sure, and if the story of exoplanet detections has taught us anything, it's that the earliest confirmations will be the behemoths that have no current solar system equivalent. On the other hand, this type of detection bias can't be used as the basis of a rational argument for 'rare Earth' or 'rare Sol' hypotheses.

    • @margu4u
      @margu4u 4 года назад +3

      Thank you for this fascinating content ! 👍
      ...is there a way to support you with single donation/s too? (paypal?)
      A question: is it possible to "see" exomoons (visual light) some day? Maybe at least in the near solar systems? (with eELT?) ...or in infrared with JWST?
      (or do we have to wait until breakthrough starshot?)
      Great work, hope you can continue...

    • @DrFuture84
      @DrFuture84 4 года назад +1

      I read about researchers in the Netherlands finding exo planets around red dwarves with radio telescopes by detecting their aurora. It made me wonder if a similar method couldn't be used on large known exo planets to detect possible moons that might interact like Io and Jupiter.

    • @DrMackSplackem
      @DrMackSplackem 4 года назад +1

      @@DrFuture84 That sounds really sketchy, but I'm no expert on Aurorae. If true, this would have huge implications for nailing down the habitability index of planets in flare-prone M-dwarf systems. Do you remember where you read that?

    • @DrMackSplackem
      @DrMackSplackem 4 года назад +4

      @@margu4u I hate to tell you this and I realize your query is not aimed in my direction, but I have both bad and good news for you, anyhow.
      Breakthrough Starshot will remain hypothetical for a very long time and likely forever. However, your other queries I view in a far more optimistic lens. Oh hell yes, we will absolutely image exoplanetary bodies in the next 1/4 century. And yes, as this is a game of repetitions, their moons will likely not escape our notice, either.
      Have you watched Launch Pad Astronomy's video on the solar gravitational lens? He describes a feasible imaging solution I'd never even thought of, and it kind of blew my mind.

  • @Exen88
    @Exen88 4 года назад +472

    Story telling from a passionate and dedicated scientist is what we need more often.

    • @mrmcbeardy9268
      @mrmcbeardy9268 3 года назад +3

      @Trevor Chase you really should consider doing this 😊🙏 A world with more of this sharing of passion can only be a beautiful thing. We don't need any more famous celebrity singers and "reality tv" personalities... We need empassioned, visionaries sharing their minds, to empower and empassion others to pursue their passions whatever they may be. I commend you for even considering this idea, and i sincerely hope you do. Namaste ✌

    • @AntonioGarcia-wn7ut
      @AntonioGarcia-wn7ut 3 года назад +5

      @Trevor Chase I am subscribing to you. I’m not a smart person. But I am smart enough to know I need to support the smart people in what they do so we can advance as a species

    • @danthemanx999
      @danthemanx999 3 года назад +1

      I've subbed as well. The content will find us there. All the best.

    • @pythonxz
      @pythonxz 3 года назад

      Carl Sagan was a legend for this.

    • @darger3
      @darger3 2 года назад

      Exactly.

  • @LEDewey_MD
    @LEDewey_MD 4 года назад +94

    I remember there was a time when the search for exoplanets wasn't taken seriously, that it was assumed it would be too difficult to detect them. I believe it took decades just to get Kepler telescope approved! You could find countless examples where a scientist had an idea, but no one took it seriously until decades later. For example, Alfred Wegener tried to convince others of continental drift, and was ridiculed in his lifetime. True discovery is never easy. More power to you!

  • @randomguyonyoutube8466
    @randomguyonyoutube8466 4 года назад +292

    This channel is going to be even bigger over the next few years.. High quality content with expertise demonstrated. Funding can also come from private investors, hoping things continue to go from strength to strength

    • @CoolWorldsLab
      @CoolWorldsLab  4 года назад +32

      Thanks Yardley 🙏

    • @salis-salis
      @salis-salis 4 года назад +10

      The channel has endless expansion potential. Just like the universe.

  • @TheBroccoliFox
    @TheBroccoliFox 4 года назад +7

    Humans can be so terrible. I'm glad you didn't let those people discourage you. It takes a huge amount of energy to push forward, especially when you have little or no support. Your videos are amazing. Thank you for all your effort.

  • @exoplanets
    @exoplanets 4 года назад +297

    Nice. I wish someone finds a habitable exomoon soon!

    • @CoolWorldsLab
      @CoolWorldsLab  4 года назад +85

      Well it won't happen unless we start investing!

    • @glasshalf3839
      @glasshalf3839 4 года назад +11

      @@CoolWorldsLab why do you believe kids are still taught in school that the planets revolve around the Sun and not the barycenter?

    • @rreagan007
      @rreagan007 4 года назад +33

      @@glasshalf3839 Well, the barycenter of a sun and a planet is very often inside the sun anyway.

    • @glasshalf3839
      @glasshalf3839 4 года назад +6

      @@rreagan007The sun travels around it as well... What is the important bit and what is not here?

    • @Southwest_923WR
      @Southwest_923WR 4 года назад +11

      @@glasshalf3839 I work with 25-35 year olds nighty, and just found out NONE can tell time, or write cursive, or know THE NAMES OF ANY PLANETS EXCEPT MARS! There NOT being taught NOTHING. FIVE couldn't dived 5 Into 20, I kid you not, He, she,she and another he said, " iown know, that's old math"!
      SMDHOL!
      AMERICA,S FUTURE IN SPACE IS FUCKED!
      SORRY, MY OPINION!

  • @rt9648
    @rt9648 4 года назад +12

    When you let the beat drop at 30:35, revealing that half of exomoons have a Pttv value between two and four, I felt the beauty of it! And then the followup that only 1% of planetary Pttv values would land in the exomoon range...that was the mic drop.
    This is a truly innovative way of discovering likely exomoons by meeting only one criterion, rather than meeting two criteria which tend to fight each other. Amazing!

    • @CoolWorldsLab
      @CoolWorldsLab  4 года назад +3

      Thanks I’m very excited too!

    • @GiuseppeSan
      @GiuseppeSan Год назад

      Agree completely, brilliant work, and explained in a way I can understand despite no training in this field! Great science communication aided further by genuine passion and excitement.

  • @onilevi
    @onilevi 3 года назад +2

    man, i understood maybe 20% of this calculation/explanation, but your passion came through so hard, I am rooting for you and the exomoon research!!!!!!!! its so exciting to listen to your videos, i love space so much!!

  • @dutenait824
    @dutenait824 4 года назад +24

    One of the best stories I heard in a long time, I'm so happy that you could follow your passion thru all that.
    This makes me quite sad that I didn't manage to be part of the science World, well I'm dissapointed in me every day, but this hit harder.
    I am impressed that you could stay strong against the people that laughed at the work your are passionate about, I can't even walk into a class room with people that just sit and wait till class starts.

  • @cliffhoelzer6895
    @cliffhoelzer6895 3 года назад +1

    Keep on going moon guy!!! Your dream will come true!!! It makes perfect sense based on our own solar system that Jupiter like planets will have dozens of exomoons!!! It took 80 years for exoplanets to gain popularity!! Love your tenacity.. it is how things get done...wisdom from a 67 year old still kid at heart and loving the possibilities in our universe!!

  • @thefourmoodgroups2589
    @thefourmoodgroups2589 4 года назад +98

    This is one of my favorite videos of yours (and that's saying something!). I really enjoyed hearing about the trajectory of your career. Thank you for sharing! :)

  • @CC-uz1qb
    @CC-uz1qb 2 года назад +1

    You are so inspirational. Pushing through something when others thought you were barking up the wrong tree. Wish I had this stick-with-it-ness. Also, what a great story teller you are.

  • @piotrwielopolski8381
    @piotrwielopolski8381 4 года назад +24

    David, I am just amazed about your perseverance. Love the ways you expose your problems and solutions.... very clever :)

  • @thehumbledeveloper4427
    @thehumbledeveloper4427 3 года назад +1

    I am currently studying my PhD looking into artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms, I feel my research is no where near to how profound and incredibly difficult as yours was but your story invokes hope, it shows that passion will always pave the way to greatness and will always serve to fuel progress.

  • @gourabde3268
    @gourabde3268 4 года назад +108

    This channel along with PBS Space Time and Sabine Hossenfelder's channel has to be the best in-depth science channel on youtube

    • @timelord8888
      @timelord8888 4 года назад +2

      100%!!!!

    • @BozoBear1
      @BozoBear1 4 года назад +15

      This channel is in a whole other level though. As close to cutting edge science as we can get on RUclips.

    • @gourabde3268
      @gourabde3268 4 года назад +4

      @@BozoBear1 Yeah, much more indepth, first time I have seen in a RUclips channel where someone explains the research paper that they have published

    • @Username-wm9vu
      @Username-wm9vu 4 года назад +13

      watch john michael godier

    • @gourabde3268
      @gourabde3268 4 года назад +1

      @@Username-wm9vu thanks, i will check his channel

  • @KuyaJayTV12
    @KuyaJayTV12 4 года назад +1

    I'm sorry I know all these science stuff is amusing but this, your story, your courage and dedication is equally or probably beyond inspiring!

  • @TheUrbanAstronomer
    @TheUrbanAstronomer 4 года назад +16

    It is such a privilege to listen to this kind of research straight from you. You had my attention till the very end, fascinating to listen to your story and your journey down the path less taken, Prof. Kipping.

  • @UsurpersAndAssassins
    @UsurpersAndAssassins 3 года назад +2

    Oh man, I love this stuff. Thanks for being so inspirational. I published my first novel, because your videos gave me the confidence.

  • @jamesholland5761
    @jamesholland5761 4 года назад +9

    Once again you have managed to explain something to someone who knows nothing about the physics involved. But you managed to put it in laymen terms. Thank you, and you have my support! I'm ordering a shirt today! I wish you nothing but the best! People like yourself continues to give me hope for humanity! You never give up!

  • @mafan-_-
    @mafan-_- 3 года назад +1

    Watched this to help me go to sleep, and ended up more awake and wanting to find exomoons. Love this channel more and more with each upload, keep up the good work!

  • @flaviog.7628
    @flaviog.7628 4 года назад +11

    You only fail when you give up.
    You are an inspiration to us all, thank you!

  • @Mike-be7uk
    @Mike-be7uk 4 года назад +2

    Thomas Edison: Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration. I believe you are the personification of this sentiment, Professor Kipping,- and in doing so you present the inspiration needed for others to pursue their understanding of wonders of the universe. Thank you for making these great videos.

  • @jasonplant5432
    @jasonplant5432 4 года назад +4

    Wow! I just watched this whole episode and believe it or not I COMPREHEND a lot of the information being delivered.
    Thank you cool worlds.

  • @jonasrosengren9093
    @jonasrosengren9093 4 года назад +1

    I love your story. The passion and determination is what brings our society forward.

  • @colineckstrand271
    @colineckstrand271 4 года назад +22

    I so admire your perseverance, passion and willingness to share your discoveries, thank you!!

  • @SClerckx
    @SClerckx 4 года назад +2

    I just want to say, THANK YOU. Thank you for all these videos and your incredible work on this exciting subject in the face of adversity. You are a huge inspiration to me and I will always look up to you. Thank you.

  • @anastasioskampaktsis6340
    @anastasioskampaktsis6340 4 года назад +8

    This is really exciting and inspiring. I hope exomoons will soon become a thing and that they will begin getting discovered in the dozens and then we would witness new wonders which we will owe to people like you and your team!

  • @slayercake1
    @slayercake1 4 года назад

    I can't State enough how grateful I am for all that you do. Your trials and tribulations give me great hope. You are one of many scientific fields that I follow and hold dear to my heart. If it wasn't for people like you I wouldn't have much to live for, so for that I thank you from the bottom of my heart. :)

  • @grav-x1430
    @grav-x1430 4 года назад +12

    Undersampling.. You had me grasp my breath there. This is exciting!

  • @koosbaker6744
    @koosbaker6744 3 года назад +1

    Quality RUclips content at its finest.
    I am both bewildered and astonished by how much can be learnt from transits I wish I could donate more.

  • @TheTrueReiniat
    @TheTrueReiniat 4 года назад +100

    I admire your resolve.

  • @adamcash9960
    @adamcash9960 3 года назад

    It’s people like you David that push our human understanding forward. It’s inspiring and wonderful to listen to. You are the moon man and that’s the best compliment you could receive as you push forward where they follow. Long May it continue.

  • @MG-er6dm
    @MG-er6dm 4 года назад +39

    Our "Cool Worlds" host is a game changer. Give it time, the world will come to see. 😃

  • @andreareitan
    @andreareitan 4 года назад +1

    I'm a 41-year-old single mom working on a Bachelor of Science in general studies, and hearing how you pressed on in spite of obstacles really helps me keep going. I had wanted to get into astronomy, but that didn't work out. I struggle with math and physics, so I've shifted to more down-to-earth studies (geology) where my strengths lie. I'm always inspired when I hear stories like yours. Thanks for sharing!

  • @birzhanalimbekov37
    @birzhanalimbekov37 4 года назад +7

    Congrats Dr. Kipping! Admire you, your efforts, passion and work! Fascinating encouragement!

    • @Victoria-b9r1x
      @Victoria-b9r1x 3 года назад

      I know very little about physics. Astronomy is fascinating and Dr. David Kipping is a treasure. I'm hooked! Ronald...... Orlando

  • @ar-visions
    @ar-visions 3 года назад

    David is a very comforting fellow.. I used to listen to Segan's voice while working. I can see myself doing the same here. Yet another thoughtful genius to watch and listen to. The production quality is superb.

  • @kshiray
    @kshiray 4 года назад +46

    Fantastic content! Cutting-edge astrophysics explained intuitively and with inspiring life lessons.

    • @reubennichols644
      @reubennichols644 2 года назад

      -
      - " " " . . . A N D . . .
      . . . with inspiring life lessons . " " "
      -
      The Cool W -- episode about
      canals on mars . . . highlights
      your viewpoint . . . very - well .
      -

  • @matthewstuart2054
    @matthewstuart2054 4 года назад

    I love channels like this, made by passionate people within the industry...has the combination of the enthusiasm that you find in channels reporting on the subject, along with the credibility and deeper knowledge of the expert in the area.

  • @nealramsey4439
    @nealramsey4439 4 года назад +101

    They laughed at the exoplanet hunters too. They aren't laughing now huh

    • @Baigle1
      @Baigle1 4 года назад +6

      They're all hanging out on reddit and discord now, the little shits.

    • @nakdad
      @nakdad 4 года назад +1

      @PMP well stated

    • @josephonthetools9942
      @josephonthetools9942 3 года назад +1

      @@Baigle1 and wall st got rekt!

  • @qzbnyv
    @qzbnyv 4 года назад +1

    I think the Dr. Becky subscription is what brought your RUclips channel into my recommendations. I love it. I wish you all the success in detecting the first exomoons. It’s insane to me that the science of detecting them depends on crowd funding, of all things, and scientists being willing to sacrifice career prospects by taking this underfunded and narrower path. Hopefully we get to look back and say it was worth it for you :)
    I do worry that by you having to be here on RUclips it blurs the line for actual science with the many many crank science or fringe science videos (e.g. flat earthers, plasma cosmology / electoplasmic universe theories) for people who don’t know better.

    • @qzbnyv
      @qzbnyv 4 года назад +1

      Just reached the end of the video. That was a really elegant solution you found through modelling.

  • @code0de0
    @code0de0 4 года назад +1

    As a RUclips addict, I have to say most of these scientific/educational videos I watch, I kind of glaze over and not pay too much attention to but there’s something about this channel (specifically identified in this video) that draws my undivided attention. I love what you guys are doing! Please keep the amazing content coming!

  • @nv5214
    @nv5214 4 года назад +9

    So sorry I can’t help because I just managed to get myself out of homelessness, but I freaking love what you do, hope you will continue doing this for the next 10 years🙌🏾👌🏾

  • @cardinal8200
    @cardinal8200 3 года назад

    One thing I really like about this RUclips channel compared to many other education entertainment channels is that this channel includes many primary research pieces and not just secondary. Fun to see first hand stuff

  • @palfers1
    @palfers1 4 года назад +21

    Time and again we discover that going back to basics (Nyquist in this case) yields valuable insights. It's that Einsteinian childlike curiosity that mines the real gold.

  • @ProgressiveEconomicsSupporter
    @ProgressiveEconomicsSupporter 3 года назад

    Your choice was right! You are better and finally succesful if you follow your heart! Your great ability of speaking in your videos helps a lot as well!

  • @robfoster8228
    @robfoster8228 4 года назад +8

    Inspired, I tend to think being known as the moon guy is quite an accolade, good luck with the hunt.

  • @metametodo
    @metametodo 4 года назад

    I love how powerful it is tracing back your steps, reviewing your own work and knowledge, how it can have an effect in such world changing insights. It somehow makes me feel proud and inspired. I think it is magnificent the work of a scientist.

  • @GrouchyHaggis
    @GrouchyHaggis 4 года назад +13

    Truly an amazing underdog story and I'm so glad you persevered with it. Your work is absolutely amazing and I look forward to hearing updates to this.
    Thank you for sharing your story Prof. Kipping and of course, good luck in your continued hunt for answers of the universe.

  • @amrendrasingh7140
    @amrendrasingh7140 4 года назад +1

    You countered under sampling with over sampling aka. simulating the distribution of the ttv corridor to come up with a constant confidence interval for different underlying distribution. This is really beautiful and tells us something much deeper about the equation that no matter what the underlying distribution the truth lies in that small cute interval. ❤️❤️❤️ This is pure genius. 🙏🙏

  • @kpp_
    @kpp_ 4 года назад +31

    Hey David, how did you optimize your software? I can see your github is a bit outdated. Maybe we can rewrite some critical parts to make it work faster?

    • @lollakasfamilianimi3246
      @lollakasfamilianimi3246 4 года назад +9

      that is a great idea, I am sure some help from actual IT people would be welcomed

    • @carsonstevens7280
      @carsonstevens7280 3 года назад +3

      I would also like to volunteer for something like this. I see big potential for introducing Neural Nets and Unsupervised Learning techniques to discover new patterns. You should link to some of your datasets to let people play around with them! Also, fantastic video! Love to see someone so passionate about their work that it makes it truly engaging and entertaining for others to listen to.

  • @quantumbender5840
    @quantumbender5840 3 года назад

    These videos are the reason why I’m going back to school and pursue my dream of becoming an astronomer. One could only imagine all the limitless possibilities in the vacuum of space, and being able to live in a time where science and technology is exponentially improving, I would be a fool not to join in on the adventure. Thank you, David. Keep up the stellar work, you never know how many people will be inspired to do the same!

  • @jeffin8029
    @jeffin8029 4 года назад +82

    You will be literally called the father of exomoon research.

    • @FuriousImp
      @FuriousImp 4 года назад +2

      Just like Geoff Marcy is likewise for exoplanets :)

  • @DarrenNugent-md4kd
    @DarrenNugent-md4kd Год назад

    A truly dedicated scientist who deserves the best of outcomes in his field and inspires others to make it through dedication and belief in one's self

  • @causticmedia3621
    @causticmedia3621 4 года назад +4

    I appreciate your confidence and determination. Rock on!!

  • @devopssimon
    @devopssimon 4 года назад +1

    Well done, you must be thrilled with all the hard work you have put in. Just remember the work you have done so far has already changed science forever, everything else is a bonus. I'm sure with your enthusiasm and tenacity you're going to make so many more discoveries. Please continue keeping us up to date regularly, it makes me feel involved. Thank you.

  • @Mnimosa
    @Mnimosa 4 года назад +6

    I got lost in a noisy thread, sorry to repeat: Moments like this make me grateful to be alive at this point in history. To commemorate, allow me to paraphrase the most famous haiku ever :
    An old moon. Far away
    a mind watching its seasons
    Silent no longer

    • @availanila
      @availanila 4 года назад

      I know that noisy thread! 😂 That came out of nowhere.
      I do think it's good to be alive in this period, we are at the cusps of great final era discoveries and it's exciting.

  • @TheDisabledGamersChannel
    @TheDisabledGamersChannel 4 года назад

    Your videos are like a special treat you get every once in a while where you hate to have to wait to get it but once you get it you remember how magnificent the treat is and how the wait was oh so worth it, seriously, these are my absolute favorite Space videos and Space channel, from the narration, to the video production.....TOP SHELF CONTENT ! ! ! !, thank you for your hard work and effort in these videos for all of us, just know your work is deeply appreciated very much.

  • @kaizorro03
    @kaizorro03 4 года назад +5

    You are an inspiration, I wish you the moon detection you are craving for.

  • @iRONMATH_INDUS
    @iRONMATH_INDUS Месяц назад

    I’m not a physicist yet, but very quickly realized that they are one most mentally tough people ever. Pursuing what most won’t understand is common place. Glad you stuck to your passions!

  • @MrBendybruce
    @MrBendybruce 4 года назад +9

    Very excited for you David. You are an inspiration.

  • @icolky5272
    @icolky5272 3 года назад

    I wish I had your strength, ability and dedication. Please do t ever lose what you have. I speak as someone who's made a mess of so much of his life and now looks back on the potential I once had and hate that I can't go back to myself in my late teens and early 20s and not make the mistakes that lead me down a road that took me to places in my late 20s that have left me now probably never able to follow my passions. I try my best to concentrate on smaller things and seeing what great things others have done to make me happy but there's a,ways that wish of what could have been. It's better to regret what you did than what you didn't and that's so true. I'd heard your name long before I discovered this channel and physics, space, futurism, ExO planet hunting and Astro biology are just things i spend hours trying to learn about while I do nothing important with my day time so well done to you, keep going. Don't ever let people laughing at that moon guy discourage you. You're an inspiration to the next generation and people who spend their days looking back at what could have been a like. Great channel by the way. If I ever do anything with myself you'll be receiving whatever donations I can manage. Regards and keep going. Till then subbed and will be watching every video you release 👍

  • @raffaelepiccini3405
    @raffaelepiccini3405 4 года назад +3

    That's awesome David! Your research is fascinating and I am so glad you share it with us in such an entrataining format! I am starting a research career in AI(and maybe computational neuroscience) but I almost feel like I should have gone for astronomy, it just sound so interesting and mesmerising

  • @daveholland5130
    @daveholland5130 3 года назад

    I can’t find the words to describe how much I love the videos this channel produces. I listen to them every night, and end up listening to them so late into the night I usually fall asleep listening to them! I can say that I still awoke being able to explain TTV
    and TDV to my husband 😀😂🤣 Please keep reporting your findings and theories; they’re so interesting and engaging. You definitely have an audience that is SUPER excited by your work.

  • @charliecrome207
    @charliecrome207 4 года назад +7

    This channel is so underappreciated!

    • @sergiodario58able
      @sergiodario58able 4 года назад

      I don't think it is mate...There are a lot of us followers, who are hooked to this young and briliant astronomers, and the ranks are growing all the time bigger and bigger.

  • @stanislavsukhinin4026
    @stanislavsukhinin4026 4 года назад

    I love how a wild combination of passion, mathematics, computational models, number crunching power and abbreviations end up in brute-forcing the crap out of this undersampling by the means of oversamling it in a model.
    My paradox is that many of your videos are rather therapeutic and have got nothing to do with science for me. I can just listen, submerge and enjoy even if half of those things go above my head at a closer look. This one, however, is also very inspiring. Good on you David. Never give up your dream!

  • @davidmiles329
    @davidmiles329 4 года назад +39

    It is truly amazing how one "moon guy" could restore my faith in humanity.

  • @sigh7973
    @sigh7973 4 года назад +1

    It's an amazing time to be alive. If greats like Newton and Einstein had RUclips channels would they be as compelling, as entertaining, as informative, and as charismatic as Dr. Kipping? Unlikely. Thank you, Cool Worlds team!

  • @omadaw
    @omadaw 4 года назад +8

    You a certainly and inspiration and a true genius. You make us more intelligent every time I listen to your beautiful delivery os knowledge.

  • @fabian2970
    @fabian2970 4 года назад

    I'm glad you decided to take your own path. More people should follow their dreams... you inspire people.

  • @Jay-zq7fx
    @Jay-zq7fx 4 года назад +52

    "a little math and a lot of coffee"
    ah yes, physics my friends

  • @richardcranium6081
    @richardcranium6081 3 года назад +1

    As a sci fi writer (albeit not a successful one yet) I am very interested in exomoons as I have mentioned some in some of my stories. I appreciate your research.

  • @Scorpiove
    @Scorpiove 4 года назад +5

    This is very exciting, Good Luck! Success is out there, I know you will find it. The statistics are there.

  • @amberwalsh2712
    @amberwalsh2712 4 года назад +1

    just loves hearing your story and your struggles, it is such an inspiration to not give up on your dreams

  • @sparkyuiop
    @sparkyuiop 4 года назад +20

    I just discovered this channel and this guy is really good.

  • @joshuagharis9017
    @joshuagharis9017 2 года назад

    Your passion is infectious, I'm a simple photographer, lol, yet you've invigorated my childhood interest in science. Keep on David.

  • @therockybutteguitarslideco2390
    @therockybutteguitarslideco2390 4 года назад +4

    A wonderful story of dedication! Inspiring! Thank you for sharing it and may your funding come full and fast.

  • @ProximaCentauri88
    @ProximaCentauri88 4 года назад

    I am not rich but me not skipping ads hopefully helps your funding. You are amazingly inspiring man. I am in awe that I am actually following a pioneer in the middle of his career! You're the moon guy and we are your subsatellites following your journey. Giddy! Oooh Goosebumps

  • @danskarate997
    @danskarate997 4 года назад +6

    Well done David and keep up the good work, you find those moons because one day the next habitable planet... Well it might be a moon. 👍🌎🌙

  • @HarlanHarvey76
    @HarlanHarvey76 4 года назад

    I don't understand allot of what you're saying but i still listen to every word and can't help but to be excited for you!

  • @networkimprov
    @networkimprov 4 года назад +22

    I'm sure you're familiar with the SETI@home project. Would it be feasible to create similar software to seek exomoon candidates in Internet-accessible datasets?

    • @davesutton9624
      @davesutton9624 3 года назад

      Great idea Liam. I would lend my CPU to this project any time.

    • @tonyhawk123
      @tonyhawk123 3 года назад

      I havent put Seti@Home on my computer for many many years, as cool as it is. I'd chip in too if it was for something like exomoon hunting. Great idea.

    • @desperado3236
      @desperado3236 3 года назад

      I personally think seti is kind of a waste of time given our limited technology. Meti is better but still runs into the same problems. A small, limited and very slow reach.
      Until we find a better way of transmitting as well as listening for information and signals.

  • @gitu1
    @gitu1 4 года назад +1

    David, you are such an inspiration, making the Universe look so beautiful, intriguing and yet knowable!! This would be like the momentous finding of 1995 when the 1st hot-Jupiter was discovered. And that name 'moon guy' sounds so cool !!

  • @ButterHaus420
    @ButterHaus420 4 года назад +3

    Awesome work m8, people like you are the real rock stars, the world just doesn't realize it yet.

  • @mattikake9859
    @mattikake9859 4 года назад

    You are the people who forward humanity. I salute you sir!

  • @huib1965
    @huib1965 4 года назад +14

    Amazing story. What a dedication. Good luck om your endeavours!

  • @lucidonoccasion5012
    @lucidonoccasion5012 Год назад

    As much as I would like to, I'm not gonna offer any platitudes since I'm sure that's the last thing you want to hear. However, it sure will be great one day when I can tell people that I used to watch RUclips videos made by the world leading Exomoon expert. Oh and by the way, those videos were some of the best insights into cosmology that I've ever seen. Keep at it my friend. The fruits of your labor cannot be guaranteed, but the harvest is impossible without the work you've put in.

  • @andromeda121
    @andromeda121 4 года назад +13

    This is such amazing work Dr. Kipping, keep up the good work

  • @jasongannon7676
    @jasongannon7676 4 года назад

    Your work is amazing. You are adding to are understanding of the universe both in what you discover and don't discover. Never let doubts slow your progress, life is to short for that.

  • @schotelmi2058
    @schotelmi2058 4 года назад +8

    I could listen to you for hours when you talk about the cooler moon worlds. I think everybody hangs on your lips when you give a lecture.

  • @marcingruchota
    @marcingruchota 3 года назад

    David thank you for this Cool Worlds episode, but not only about explaining on the main topic, but also for your story. As long as we keep trying there is a chance. I will put that on my wall to remind myself avout it every day. Bless you.

  • @jrt818
    @jrt818 4 года назад +7

    "When you come to the fork in the road, take it." -- Yogi Berra

  • @emnakobbi2020
    @emnakobbi2020 3 года назад

    I don't understand very much the content but I feel your passion, I was ( since my childhood) and still amazed by the universe but I unfortunately cannot understand every thing. This channel is amazing.

  • @emzywillrich7243
    @emzywillrich7243 4 года назад +3

    Congratulations Professor on your Eureka moment! I hope it will lead to you winning the Nobel Prize.

  • @peterway7867
    @peterway7867 4 года назад

    There was a time, not that long ago, when searching for exoplanets was difficult and frustrating. But today we know of hundreds, and know that they are very common. Our own solar system is proof that moons are even more common that planets.
    The cosmos is teeming with moons. Your efforts will be rewarded. In a scale that will leave you astounded.

  • @charak100able
    @charak100able 2 года назад +4

    "get a serious job, like hunting exo planets instead of exomoons" has a realy humorous aspect for a brick layer or a roofer or anybody else outside the astro community 😂

  • @joi0316
    @joi0316 3 года назад +1

    I love listening to this. Thank you for sharing your amazing story. Warms my heart and I hope you find the courage and purpose to keep doing what you love ❤️

  • @ThinklikeTesla
    @ThinklikeTesla 4 года назад +3

    What fraction of stars happen to have planets orbiting in a plane that lets us observe transits from Earth?

    • @CoolWorldsLab
      @CoolWorldsLab  4 года назад +2

      It depends on the planet’s separation and the stars radius, and equals the latter divided by the former. It’s around 0.5% for the Earth and as high as 10% for hot Jupiters.

    • @ThinklikeTesla
      @ThinklikeTesla 4 года назад

      @@CoolWorldsLab I'm so fascinated by this. Are exoplanetary ecliptics basically randomly aligned in the galaxy, or do they tend to certain distributions of orientation? (and is that even something we can tell at this point??)

    • @Rickbearcat
      @Rickbearcat 3 года назад

      @@ThinklikeTesla ...I would like to think that for a spiral galaxy like our own, or like Andromeda, the angular momentum of the disk galaxy represents the chance that there is a more likely outcome for other solar systems to appear edge on to us. I'd also like to think that gas clouds that became solar systems gained their angular momentum from the plane that the galaxy exhibits. So, less random alignment and more structured with the parent galaxy.

  • @HidroPig
    @HidroPig 4 года назад

    I'll be honest, i don't care that much about exomoons, but your enthusiasm is such an inspiration! Awesome work! Hope you find all those exomoons out there!

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid 4 года назад +4

    Wait, wait, wait... since when can you see temporal aliasing effects with your naked eyes without a stroboscopic light? Your eyes don't sample light at fixed intervals. They continuously integrate light intensity over time which leads to blur but no aliasing.

    • @bottlekruiser
      @bottlekruiser 3 года назад +2

      I was looking for this comment

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid 3 года назад +1

      @@bottlekruiser you and nobody else though it seems. Well, two other people.

  • @garyseaman6105
    @garyseaman6105 4 года назад +2

    You're an amazing guy. Thank you so much for starting this. I'm confident you will see you dream come true.

  • @takeResistance
    @takeResistance 4 года назад +3

    Absolutely awsome finding!
    I have a question about the planet-moon separation assumptions. You tested four different distributions, however i think one of the most common distributions (Gaussian distribution) was not among them. Is there a specific reason for that? What would the TTV distribution look like with this assumption?