Scientists are doing great in science that affects our planet and our people. As far as phenomens 13.9 billion years ago and hundreds of light years away, they are entitled to b wrong. "Wrongness" is a vital element of the scientific process where eventually 4 wrongs can highlight a right. We can never rocket up to stuff s thousand light years away so the JWST allows conjecture. That's as far as we can go.
I'm so glad I found your channel through one of the interviews. Love everything about this from the tour, the writing, the visuals and the infectious enthusiasm and humour. Thank you to you and your team!
When Uranus has the faintest ring around it...😍 In all seriousness though, the amount of detail that JWST is capable of us mindbogglingly incredible- especially when you look at the pictures Hubble initially took that JWST reimaged and compare them side by side. Never fails to leave me feeling absolutely flabbergasted.
Fraser, your dedication to responding to every comment is truly commendable! It's rare to see this level of engagement, and it blows my mind just like the vastness of space! Your videos are always outstanding and incredibly informative. Keep up the fantastic work!
An exceptional video. Great selection of the facts and images, an interesting and a quite deep coverage of the phenomena described. Just stumbled upon your channel, and got glued to it. One more happy subscriber :) Cheers!
great show and this knowledgable editor explaining things simply, efficiently and talking to us like we're smart. best show ive seen in a long time..... bravo my good man, bravo
after spending years watching my dedicated two other space channels I've come across yours. and hesitant as I was as I usually am when checking new material out, you ended up being mature informative and from what I could tell correct about what you are saying. thank you good sir I know I have something else to waste my time. subscription added
@@frasercain I could tell, because i follow a few astrophysicists and the sensationalism was absent from this video. There is soo much misinformation out there, and I didnt hear it from you. Iykyk. Thanks for your hard work.
This is the most amazing review. I think this is the best perspective of distance, learnings and captivation for future knowledge. I have always wondered about the distances and relationships of objects and wow you set it up for easy consumption. You rock!
I have to say, the footage of the Cassiopea A 34:30, and its sheer size and heat is mind blowing. 😍 What a time to be alive in order to experience such incredible footage One can only imagine the incredible tech that will be around in 100 years
You are a god damn saint. Not the ones proclaimed by so many. YOU. You sir are an actual saint. Thank you for putting this much effort into it and providing such an amazing video for free. This is one of the greatest service to humanity.
Thank you, my friend, well put together episode, love how u broke it down by distance, simple and effective approach! : )) I am thinking of taking an image of your kind, smart, smiling face and making THAT my new wallpaper :)) Best of luck, i b back for more videos, sir!
In regards to the tidally-locked exoplanets, the ones that have an atmosphere and high wind speeds might be able to quite efficiently redistribute heat across to its 'dark side'. I'm fascinated and excited for what future astronomers will learn about such worlds! I find the 'terminator' regions of these 'eyeball worlds' particularly fascinating. If any of these distant world's has formed life, it's tempting to think of the terminator regions like that of the intertidal regions of our oceans. These regions could foster the transition of lifeforms evolved for one habitat to the habitat on the 'other side' via the moderating medium of the terminator. I wouldn't be surprised if the 'eyeball' of some of these planets included 'crumbly debris' forming a very real and visible geological barrier around the 'eye'. My reason for thinking this is after considering the vast heat that region endures, but with such close proximity to the 'bitter cold' of the shade causing chronic fracturing of rock, causing ongoing strain. In short, like a desert on steroids.
Yeah, it was thought that the tidally locked worlds would only have a tiny region that's habitable, but with that atmospheric circulation it's probably habitable across the entire day side.
Yes! What an excellent way to present these discoveries of Webb. Too many presenters jump around gushing about one exciting discovery to another as though the data and analysis are developed that way. There's a method and long term battle plan for how this amazing tool is used by scientists.
Really great video; I watch a lot of space news channels, and I'd missed a few of those events, and got a much better perspective on others. Thank you.
It is baffling and amazing that we can plot the locations and size of all these things given that we are not looking at them as they are, but as they were based on light that has been traveling for so so long. It's truly amazing.
Astronomy is such a strange science. You can't run the Universe multiple times to do different experiments, you can only observe what happened. But can you imagine if historians could look into the past just by being farther from a dig site?
Just a note. When you search the JWST database, it is listed as HH 211, not 221. "Chapter - A Very Young Star" Thanks for all the content you do (video, podcasts, all of it)
12:15 to 16:00 (esp 15:40 - 16:00) is a brilliantly explained concise example of why never to believe the media hype. It's vital to understand all perspectives when the evidence for 1 is not 100%.
We hear a lot about black holes. Can you talk about white holes? Also saw something about grey holes? And a rare "green hole"? I really hope you see this comment! Love your videos!
I've talked about white holes in the past. Unfortunately, they're just a mathematical concept, what if you turn a number negative in the black hole mathematics. It doesn't mean they actually exist.
First of all this is a great video Fraser! I find it really interesting that they used the near cam (NIRCam) to find the most distance galaxy + I find it really interesting the most distance galaxy is bigger than 1 pixel (at the moment).
Thanks a lot, I'm glad you enjoyed it. The galaxies are bigger than a pixel, but they're very faint requiring a long exposure to get the spectroscopic data.
Something I have been thinking about was Earth and it's Floods! Also we are looking at Mars and if there was anything lived on it? Also if it had Water on it ? As stated above the Earth and how it got it's water . I was wondering if it was possible for Water to come from Mars though space and land on earth? Maybe that would explain why we had a big Flood with all the water coming down from 40 days ? Thanks for your time and video! Great job! Jim
I just watched a video about "colonizing mars" Well, like its been said "if its been thought of, it will be tried or done." Well Mr Cain I do appreciate keep us updated concerning "WHAT'S OUT THERE".Thank you.
such a great video, thanks Fraser! i was wondering about the z number... i read that it has no upper limit but how come? if it's an indicator of he speed the object is moving that can't be infinite, no?
Wouldn't that be so cool to do that for a job and be able to experience yourself in doing so. Be able to discover new stunning insights first. Sharing your fascinating facts that will someday make a big difference if we make it that far. Just cant wait for the bridge. I would love to do a wood carving of one of the telescopes finest images. carve it right into my floor.
What if we pointed jwst at a supernova like the crab nebula as it’s happening. What do you think it would look like? If ancient astronomers had a jwst what do you think a freshly imploded Crab Nebula would look like?
Something that close, it would be absolute incredible, although, Hubble would probably be better for that since it's so bright right after the supernova. Webb looks cool things.
It is refreshing to see a video on JWST images that does NOT use the words TERRIFTING and SHOCKING.
The only things shocking and terrifying is how wrong our scientists have been.
Scientists are doing great in science that affects our planet and our people. As far as phenomens 13.9 billion years ago and hundreds of light years away, they are entitled to b wrong. "Wrongness" is a vital element of the scientific process where eventually 4 wrongs can highlight a right.
We can never rocket up to stuff s thousand light years away so the JWST allows conjecture. That's as far as we can go.
They're mostly AI videos
😂😂😂
Before I finish the intro, just got say I love that you decided to put them in order of distance! So cool!
Yeah, I was trying to figure out a way to organize them and I realized that the different categories mostly didn't overlap in distance.
Agreed! Ladder up!
⭐️
Back around 1965, age 9, I first saw a (b&w) photo of the Horsehead Nebula. Goosebumps upon goosebumps of awe.
I'm so glad I found your channel through one of the interviews. Love everything about this from the tour, the writing, the visuals and the infectious enthusiasm and humour. Thank you to you and your team!
Thanks a lot, I'm glad you enjoyed it. :-).
This is madness! Thank you so very much for being the guide for this and putting it all together in one place! It is truly special!
No problem, we did it last year, so it just made sense to do it again. :-)
Indeed
When Uranus has the faintest ring around it...😍
In all seriousness though, the amount of detail that JWST is capable of us mindbogglingly incredible- especially when you look at the pictures Hubble initially took that JWST reimaged and compare them side by side. Never fails to leave me feeling absolutely flabbergasted.
And we're still just two years into this.
I've been so looking forward to this video and you didn't disappoint. Thanks for all your hard work, Fraser. :)
Glad you enjoyed it!
That was a mega episode, I missed a few of these stories and it's so great to see them all together. What a great watch, thanks!
You wouldn't believe how many we left out. There was so much coverage last year.
That's excellent, I'll go through the newsletter, can't get enough. Thanks!
Now the cycle continues as we work on Year 3.
Those images when you go from Hubble to JWST are absolutely mind blowing. Great presentation as always Mr. Cain.
Terrific job. You could market this for NASA TV
Hah, they're free to use it if they like.
Fraser, your dedication to responding to every comment is truly commendable! It's rare to see this level of engagement, and it blows my mind just like the vastness of space! Your videos are always outstanding and incredibly informative. Keep up the fantastic work!
this is a neat way of presenting it, cheers m8!
Yeah, I was trying to think of a way to put it all in a comprehensible way.
Every single image is our new wallpaper. 😂
Exactly. You'll need more computers with more wallpapers.
@@frasercainare 3 enough? With rotating images 😂🎉🎉🎉
@@frasercain Time to spend my life savings on buying new monitors to display all the beautiful space pictures.
Literally epic! Thank you! Bravo Fraser and team!
Thanks a lot! It was a lot of work but it turned out great.
An exceptional video. Great selection of the facts and images, an interesting and a quite deep coverage of the phenomena described. Just stumbled upon your channel, and got glued to it. One more happy subscriber :) Cheers!
i can not believe how amazing video you created and only 120k views!!! you deserve millions, love and respect from Turkiye
I like that you can say "We just don't know". We need more of that.
great show and this knowledgable editor explaining things simply, efficiently and talking to us like we're smart. best show ive seen in a long time..... bravo my good man, bravo
This is a great summary of JWST year #2 Mr. Frasier! I have a feeling I'll be watching this episode again..😊
That's great, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Amazing video! Lots of great info organised by distance. Great work!
after spending years watching my dedicated two other space channels I've come across yours. and hesitant as I was as I usually am when checking new material out, you ended up being mature informative and from what I could tell correct about what you are saying. thank you good sir I know I have something else to waste my time. subscription added
Thanks a lot, I'm glad you're enjoying it. I think the difference is all the interviews so I'm getting the details directly from the scientists.
Mature-ish
Mature adjacent.
@@frasercain mature compliant
@@frasercain I could tell, because i follow a few astrophysicists and the sensationalism was absent from this video. There is soo much misinformation out there, and I didnt hear it from you. Iykyk. Thanks for your hard work.
This was awesome. Thanks for putting it together.
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Phenomenal video. Love the formatting and all the production value. Thank you!!!!!! :)
AMAZING video - gosh I remember going to bed every night listening to multiple eps of you and Pamela G via astronomy cast. Always been a fan.
This is the most amazing review. I think this is the best perspective of distance, learnings and captivation for future knowledge. I have always wondered about the distances and relationships of objects and wow you set it up for easy consumption. You rock!
Oh great, I'm glad that worked for you.
What a great video! What an amazing time to be alive. Thanks so much for this great content. You just earned a new sub!!
Brilliant as always
Thanks a lot, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
I remember waiting for it's first images
Hah, same. Two years later.
Fraser, that was by far and away the clearest explanation of DMS yet. Nice.
Great video thank you Fraser.
Thanks a lot, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
What a great retrospective of another year of scientific discoveries from JWST! You deserve much more followers!
I have to say, the footage of the Cassiopea A 34:30, and its sheer size and heat is mind blowing. 😍
What a time to be alive in order to experience such incredible footage
One can only imagine the incredible tech that will be around in 100 years
This is the worst these images will ever look. :-)
You are a god damn saint. Not the ones proclaimed by so many. YOU. You sir are an actual saint. Thank you for putting this much effort into it and providing such an amazing video for free. This is one of the greatest service to humanity.
Thanks for the time you took to put this together. I am amazed at what JWST has done already and look forward to many more discoveries.
So cool! Thanks for the update. Can't wait to see more!
what a wonderful channel
Thanks a lot, glad you enjoyed it.
Fantastic, really enjoyed this summary of discoveries and you do a great job explaining. Thx Fraser
Amazing work. Very informative and well structured 👍
I appreciate you putting this together for those of us too busy in life to otherwise normally keep up with their progress
It was pretty overwhelming to look at how many stories came out just in the last year.
Thank you, my friend, well put together episode, love how u broke it down by distance, simple and effective approach! : )) I am thinking of taking an image of your kind, smart, smiling face and making THAT my new wallpaper :)) Best of luck, i b back for more videos, sir!
Amazing summary Fraser, thank you for this!
Glad you enjoyed it!
10/10 video, sharing with everyone I know
Thanks a lot!
a-ma-zing!!👍🏼 don't even know wich one to pick as wallpaper, they're all phenomenal 💯
fantastic video thankfully your hard work Fraser.
❤❤❤
In regards to the tidally-locked exoplanets, the ones that have an atmosphere and high wind speeds might be able to quite efficiently redistribute heat across to its 'dark side'.
I'm fascinated and excited for what future astronomers will learn about such worlds!
I find the 'terminator' regions of these 'eyeball worlds' particularly fascinating. If any of these distant world's has formed life, it's tempting to think of the terminator regions like that of the intertidal regions of our oceans. These regions could foster the transition of lifeforms evolved for one habitat to the habitat on the 'other side' via the moderating medium of the terminator.
I wouldn't be surprised if the 'eyeball' of some of these planets included 'crumbly debris' forming a very real and visible geological barrier around the 'eye'. My reason for thinking this is after considering the vast heat that region endures, but with such close proximity to the 'bitter cold' of the shade causing chronic fracturing of rock, causing ongoing strain. In short, like a desert on steroids.
Yeah, it was thought that the tidally locked worlds would only have a tiny region that's habitable, but with that atmospheric circulation it's probably habitable across the entire day side.
What a comprehensive video... thanks for making this.
One of your best videos to date! Well done!
Yay! Thank you!
Awesome and brilliantly novel graphics Frasier. Really outstanding collection. Well done and many thanks.
Anton really pulled out all the stops with his editing job.
OMG what great pics will overload my comp with the glory of the cosmos!!!!! and more to come
More computers, more wallpapers.
Yes! What an excellent way to present these discoveries of Webb. Too many presenters jump around gushing about one exciting discovery to another as though the data and analysis are developed that way. There's a method and long term battle plan for how this amazing tool is used by scientists.
Really great video; I watch a lot of space news channels, and I'd missed a few of those events, and got a much better perspective on others. Thank you.
Yeah, it's pretty overwhelming to see how much news came out just this year.
Thanks for a wonderful summary. I loved the overview rather than piece meal that we got before!
No problem, there was so much news this year.
It is baffling and amazing that we can plot the locations and size of all these things given that we are not looking at them as they are, but as they were based on light that has been traveling for so so long. It's truly amazing.
Astronomy is such a strange science. You can't run the Universe multiple times to do different experiments, you can only observe what happened. But can you imagine if historians could look into the past just by being farther from a dig site?
@frasercain that's a good way to put it thanks
dopest astronomy info I've ever consumed.... luv your channel
Uranus has always seemed so boring to me, but those pics are soooooooo awesome. 👏 and you did a fantastic job! thanks for doing this!!
Thanks a lot, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
The ratio of black holes to their galaxies being different in the early cosmos is interesting!
What a year 😊 Great video as always
Yeah, it's hard to believe we're already two years in with JWST.
Just a note. When you search the JWST database, it is listed as HH 211, not 221. "Chapter - A Very Young Star"
Thanks for all the content you do (video, podcasts, all of it)
12:15 to 16:00 (esp 15:40 - 16:00) is a brilliantly explained concise example of why never to believe the media hype. It's vital to understand all perspectives when the evidence for 1 is not 100%.
We should always be patient and skeptical until enough evidence arrives.
@@frasercain Precisely! Thank you for all the great content! My favourite astro-tuber.
Aww, thanks. :-)
Did we just find Battlestar Galacticas "Algae Planet"? Lol Absolutely love your content thank you for breaking all this down for the layman!
Or a lava planet, or a mini-neptune. :-) I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Great segment, thanks for your work!
Spectacular universe spectacular presentation. You are one of the brightest stars in my universe.
We hear a lot about black holes. Can you talk about white holes? Also saw something about grey holes? And a rare "green hole"? I really hope you see this comment! Love your videos!
I've talked about white holes in the past. Unfortunately, they're just a mathematical concept, what if you turn a number negative in the black hole mathematics. It doesn't mean they actually exist.
@@frasercain ok ill search for it, thanks!
Dang it powerful
It's an amazing telescope.
One of man's greatest inventions
This channel needs 5 million subs
Thanks for the upload. Heck of an edit
First of all this is a great video Fraser!
I find it really interesting that they used the near cam (NIRCam) to find the most distance galaxy + I find it really interesting the most distance galaxy is bigger than 1 pixel (at the moment).
Thanks a lot, I'm glad you enjoyed it. The galaxies are bigger than a pixel, but they're very faint requiring a long exposure to get the spectroscopic data.
Something I have been thinking about was Earth and it's Floods! Also we are looking at Mars and if there was anything lived on it? Also if it had Water on it ? As stated above the Earth and how it got it's water . I was wondering if it was possible for Water to come from Mars though space and land on earth? Maybe that would explain why we had a big Flood with all the water coming down from 40 days ? Thanks for your time and video! Great job! Jim
such a captivating presentation, the images from JWST are beautiful
Thanks a lot, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
This is properly good.
(Properly good is atleast an order of magnitude greater than just good. Maybe two)
Thanks a lot, I'm doubly glad you enjoyed it.
I just watched a video about "colonizing mars" Well, like its been said "if its been thought of, it will be tried or done." Well Mr Cain I do appreciate keep us updated concerning "WHAT'S OUT THERE".Thank you.
Awesome! Thank you for the video.
5:00 That is so freaking cool!
😎
Thanks Fraser -- brilliant stuff!
Amazing work!
Great analysis, thx a lot !
No problem, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Great show, had to rewind the last one several times and still not clear, but love the show/
37:40 Love it, we've come along way
Amazing video, thank you very much
Just fantastic. I Loved it! Thanks a lot.
It's all amazing, crazy how much information is coming out from JWST? I'm just sad that there are all animations.
Many of the pictures in this video are the real images from Webb. We identify the ones which aren't as "Animations" but the rest are real.
Love your work, @frasercain!
Thank you! This was wonderful.
"Taking pictures of URanus is quite complicated..." Indeed it is.
Ey, sorry for grade school joke here but... it is what it is.
such a great video, thanks Fraser! i was wondering about the z number... i read that it has no upper limit but how come? if it's an indicator of he speed the object is moving that can't be infinite, no?
The upper limit is the cosmic microwave background, which is Z=1000
@@frasercain oh wow thank you!
Oops, 1100. lambda.gsfc.nasa.gov/education/graphic_history/microwaves.html
@@frasercain this is why you're my favorite science communicator, not many would take the time & effort to come back with a follow up haha. cool:)
This is incredible stuff thank you.
this video is so high quality
Great stuff...
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Wouldn't that be so cool to do that for a job and be able to experience yourself in doing so. Be able to discover new stunning insights first. Sharing your fascinating facts that will someday make a big difference if we make it that far. Just cant wait for the bridge. I would love to do a wood carving of one of the telescopes finest images. carve it right into my floor.
This was awesome.
I'm really glad you enjoyed it. We had a lot of fun working on it.
Its one hell of a light show 🤩
Completely mind blowing 🤯
My wallpaper has changed 15x this episode.
Well done, sir.
I am starting to realize just how unique Earth is. Were Earth like conditions common, we would almost certainly found an analog of Earth by now.
Love ur stuff Man thx
yeah lmao the hubble images have been my desktop background for more than a decade
Thank you Fraser.
What if we pointed jwst at a supernova like the crab nebula as it’s happening. What do you think it would look like? If ancient astronomers had a jwst what do you think a freshly imploded Crab Nebula would look like?
Something that close, it would be absolute incredible, although, Hubble would probably be better for that since it's so bright right after the supernova. Webb looks cool things.