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I have a request if you have the time for it.. According to some Science TH-camrs, the data from the Webb Telescope shows that Dark Matter has been a mistake and they say that Modified Newtonian Dynamics appears to be the correct theory. I'm looking forward to hearing your take on this. Also, Ground News doesn't work very well for Europeans because most of the websites block access from Europe. They simply don't want to comply with the laws in Europe, so they block all traffic from Europe.
Are they taking into consideration that there was probably some dark energy and matter from the beginning of the universe and then there was dark matter, energy coming off of the singularities of black holes?
The ancient CRT monitors had one major advantage - they were big enough and warm enough that the cats would curl up to sleep on top of them, and they couldn't knock them over.
Cats like learning too, they don't have to be looking at you, they hear all, and cats do experiments on gravity, that's why they'll push things off the shelf and slap other things off
Personally i suspect its more to do with UAP and Visitations by Alien Overwatch fcuking with us! Did you have a bad nights sleep, lost time and dont know where it went? Time to setup cctv to try to catch them out.
Yes! We were also thinking of the missing sock problem. We could use the half-life of socks (and biros) to measure the density of primordial black holes.
I'm so tired of people saying: "don't bring politics into..."... if you haven't already realized it, Govt controls every aspect of your life. Whether you like it or not. Who's in Govt matters because your life matters
If you are a human being, you are political, and you are a part of your government, whether you like it or not. The decisions you make have consequences. You can't win, you can't break even, and you can't stop playing the game.
Only in America, the rest of us couldn't give a flying f*** about it. Unless of course when the USA renage on NATO, then the U.S.A. returns to become "the great Satan" once more.
Only political obsessed turds say things like this. Every single day of my life every single day, the vast majority of that day is not controlled in any way shape or form by politics. But keep thinking and believing this Absolute nonsense that’s destroying our country from the inside out. Tribal is tribal does sort of like stupid is as stupid does.
All of science is built on ifs. We don't generate certainty, only likely conclusions that can be built upon by more science. (If that conclusion is true, then this conclusion, which depends on that conclusion, is probably true.) An inconvenient piece of evidence can cause the whole house of cards to fall. But then we get to build a new one!
Ok so a paper was recently released describing black holes inner workings. It postulates that matter is broken down to dissolution, which then creates dark energy. If you can imagine how the forces inside the atom work, now pop those "bubbles" and what are you left with. This destruction of forces down to the quark level or beyond, will release a massive amount of energy. It's a fascinating dive into what happens to matter inside black holes and possibly might explain dark energy.
My critical thinking expands to skeptical. My thinking has been for a while now that a confined neutron plus energy equals strange matter, add more energy, bottom matter, still more and the matter is so dense then physics betrays me. A peer review would give my theory a little credibility but not make it fact.
@@noelstarchild "A peer review would give my theory a little credibility but not make it fact." Have you ever wondered why no one credible is actually willing to peer review your takes
Hubble, imo, should be indefinitely maintained until we can (1) fund a true replacement and (2) bring it back to Earth. It is just too important of an observatory-and too accessible-to let it decay like another piece of space junk. Hubble not only unlocked countless scientific breakthroughs; it brough the public back into space in a way we haven't seen since the Apollo program. It truly belongs in a museum.
Deorbiting such a big, heavy object in a controlled descent wourd be a nightmare. I believe it'd be easier and cheaper to give it a final push into an orbit that's beyond geosynchronous. That way it'll stay there for hundreds, if not thousands of years, serving as a powerful beacon, a monument to the ingenuity to our species
@@JosePineda-cy6om A couple of days ago we saw roughly 10 times that mass deorbit in a controlled descent. Hubble will fit in the Starship payload bay with room to spare and is about a third of the mass it's designed to handle.
Congratulations on 750,000! 3/4 of a million! You are one of my favorite science communicators and my favorite astrophysics communicator! Absolutely deserve all the subscriptions!
My heart is broken about what could happen to curtail the research over the next years, and I know those who will do all we can to help. There needs to be an international effort that the US will return to as soon as we can - 🖖 Thank you Dr. Becky for the videos! They will be so valuable over the next couple years!
You need to start thinking about putting telescopes into SpaceX Starship and take advantage of the reduced cost of mass to orbit that booster reuse gifts to science. Get your mind past the politics and your lack of control over Starlink.
"Is there a conflict of interest?" Yeah. Yeah, I'll just stop you there. Yes. All the conflicts of interest. And not a single one of them being the public interest.
@@jeffreygrant817the war has been pre-antagonized. putin _started_ the war by invading a country. the point is to not reward oligarchs that want to steal land through military means
@@chaosmarklar Wrong. Tesla doesn't receive any government funding and has supported the end of any tax credits for electric vehicles as they are unnecessary. Tesla is in a better financial position than the rest of the automotive industry. SpaceX won all the government contracts that they are part of through a competitive bidding process and are either uniquely able to provide the service or the cheapest in the commercial space industry by a wide margin. SpaceX and Tesla are the most consequential organisations for the future of humanity in this century and therefore removing any roadblocks to their missions is very much in the public interest. Elon Musk was not just put in the Whitehouse, he is heading a new voluntary government consultancy organisation along with Vivek Ramaswamy.
Omigosh your kitty in the background is being too cuuuute! ^^ Perseids is my favorite meteor shower too, but I'm still so sad the moon is gonna outshine the Geminids shower :( Not like I can see it well regardless since I live in the city. Thank you Dr. Becky as always for putting in the time and energy and knowledge into these videos! I always look forward to your posts! This one about dark energy being coupled with black holes was a bit dizzying but still fascinating. I need to rewatch though I think to fully absorb lol
So, from what I remember about Gaussian surfaces is that they can be used to explain the inverse-square law, the one we use to describe gravitation in our solar system, within galaxies, and between galaxies. These surfaces are also used to mathematically describe magnetic fields. As I recall from E & M which I took many decades ago, magnetic materials (not just magnetized ones) can affect the shape of magnetic fields. What if massive objects affected gravitational fields analogously? I mean, what if they did it in a way that was subtly different than the one Einstein's general relativity describes? How can we be certain that a massive object in the gravitaional field of another object does not affect the field in a way that is analogous to magnetic materials in magnetic fields? So, for example, lots of stars in a galaxy could change the gravitational "permeability" of space, flatten the Gaussian surface perpendicular to the field lines, and cause gravitational acceleration to decrease at an amount different from the inverse square law. I wonder, do small galaxies seem to have more missing mass, or large ones? If it's the latter, then I think this might be a helpful idea to contemplate.
Hi! Thanks so much for your content Dr Becky! Knowing just about nothing about astrophysics and coming from a background in optics I'm curious to know if One could think of light traveling through a region of space that had some concentration of primordial black holes as passing through a scattering medium. And therefore having the wavelength of the light increase. And, if so, one could think of that region as having an index of a fraction greater than one. Thanks again. I'm really grateful for your content.
This was such a good episode, I just love the little things you can learn and yes much is often beyond me but that doesn't detract in any way from my enjoyment Thanks a Lot.
Wow. That DESI discussion was an example of you'al pulling the public towards the professional's understanding. Nice job. But, I'll have to watch this video a couple of times.
Great video. I sent it to my gransons (7 & 11). They are genius children who I have been sending physics vidoes to since they were 3 and 7. I love physics.
You're unironically correct actually. Elon Musk doesn't need any additional funding and isn't interested in it. If anything he'll catalyze an increase of budget for NASA.
Becky, I love your teapot constellation! Any chance we could now have a contemporary map of the night sky now to make it easier to explain what is currently happening to a much wider audience? 🤩🤩🤣🤣🤣
As much as I like looking up at the stars and other celestial entities, laying on the ground is a no-go where I live. I am in South East Arizona. And if you lay on the ground here you get to lay with scorpions, rattlesnakes, tarantulas, and other buggies. I know it sounds like a Monty Python skit. The site I go viewing at (Bortle 1/2) has a couple of snake sticks so you can move the rattlesnakes away from the scope pads and into the brush.
Is there a point where the study of black holes reaches a limit since we can never truly know what's inside them? It feels like an insurmountable problem, as the best we can achieve are mathematical inferences about what might be happening. On top of that, we have dark matter and dark energy-phenomena we can't directly see or detect-and black holes, where we can't say with absolute certainty what's going on internally. How do you maintain your sanity while studying such elusive mysteries?
I think black holes are dark matter stars that thru some mysterious fusion process creates dark energy. It's a similar process to regular stars we all see easily - except lots of dark antimatter and negative signs in the math. I'm not scientist just a fan with a poets understanding of your content. I wouldn't have clue on how to prove these ideas: but, it's fun to think about.
When they put the bowling ball on a trampoline to illustrate how mass warpes spacetime, notice that the surface of the trampoline increases. Just saying....
Around the ball, yes, but less so as you get further out. What it *doesn't* do is cause the entire trampoline to grow to the size of a house, and then just keep on going! =:o}
Like I said the other time, I find the "black holes as dark energy" idea really unconvincing from a *theoretical* perspective. Because Alan Guth already studied the behavior of what amounted to a black hole full of dark energy back in the 80s, and it doesn't do that. It looks like a normal black hole from the outside, and *inside*, it explodes into a new baby universe (yes, it's bigger on the inside, but not as well-behaved as a TARDIS), but we can't see that happening. This idea that exterior cosmology should somehow be coupled to what goes on inside the event horizon even though we can't see it... it doesn't make sense to me.
Could the quantum warp inside a black hole really create a pocket universe, and, if so, at what order of magnitude would time be flowing more slowly than in the parent universe?
But the "exterior cosmology" is undoubtly coupled to what goes on inside the event horizon. Or are you saying that all of the gravitational effect comes only from the matter not yet passed beyond event horizon?
@@tkermi In general relativity, with a black hole that collapses from infalling matter, that's actually true. You can trace the external geometry causally back to the infalling matter before it fell in. Of course these are *primordial* black holes they're talking about, so there's no infalling matter and the past timelines presumably go back to some initial condition of the universe. But there still isn't any causal effect from stuff happening inside the event horizon. Only the black hole's mass, charge and spin ought to remain (and those are all determined ultimately by initial conditions).
@MattMcIrvin There are other competing theories to that. For example one presented on YT video "What is a white hole? - with Carlo Rovelli". Hawking radiation being a major factor on them.
Could we get a video explaining the interstellar tunnel system and the recent discovery of a local tunnel in our solar system? Sounds very cool and reading articles about it doesnt do it justice. :)
There is no "tunnel system". Astronomers found a structure of gas in a shape resembling a hollow tube that in no way shortens the distance to anywhere else.
Dr. Becky. Wishing you and cat and kin and kind, all the best this holiday season. Its about this time of year that I usually fall into an infinite black hole so I know they do exist. Thanks for all your great postings of knowledge expanding videos...
So the expansion of universe makes black holes grow and the growth of the black holes makes the universe expand? Isn't that a perfect perpetuum mobile?
Regarding shipping humans past LEO: It's not worth even going to the moon unless the plan is mapped out to a point where earth could quit supporting the colony without the colony having any concerns about their long term, many generational, survival. You could presumably build, launch, land and operate a few dozen Curiosity/Perseverance type rovers for years for what it would take to put a less than dozen humans in one location for less than a year.
for going past the moon, definitely. Lunar resources are much more fuel efficient for doing anything large scale in low earth orbit than lifting metal, water, and propellant from earth, so that's one reasonable economic case that could support importing difficult-to-manufacture durable goods long term since it's not actually that far. There's also a decent chance of finding easy-to-access rare earth deposits on the lunar surface that you could mine very simply and that's high value enough to consider shipping back to earth, though I admit that one is a little more out there, and depends a lot on the difficulty of setting up or restarting viable mines on earth that don't poison the water table.
@@thamiordragonheart8682 even for lunar mining, I'd question if it's cheaper to ship humans or robots. Other than dealing with equipment breakage and the like, I don't see anything humans would be doing that wouldn't be remotely operated, even if the operator is only in a pressurized rover 10m away.
No. The cost of space transportation into orbit and beyond is going to get orders of magnitude cheaper with rapidly fully reusable rockets and in-orbit refuelling of spacecraft. It will be far cheaper and far quicker to send humans to collect samples to return to Earth or build infrastructure for future missions compared to building custom-made portable space-hardened robotic laboratories. Proper space exploration requires sending humans or humanoid robots to the moon and beyond, and bringing back samples to be analysed by labs on Earth. Human space exploration is what is going to get the general public interested in space missions enough to increase the NASA budget. NASA should cancel the SLS program and spend that money on extending space telescope operations.
@@MrAlRats FWIW I'm not saying shipping human to deep space shouldn't be done. I'm only saying that shipping them their _just to do science_ is a waste of money, that you could get more science done with less lost blood and wealth by other means. No matter what happens to launch costs, it will almost always be the case that for the same launch cost you can get more science done on Mars if you don't need to pack along enough life support to keep a human alive for 15+ months, and the delta-V for the return trip. Sure, custom made rovers are expensive, but that simply suggests they should be mass produced. I'm not finding exact number, but it looks like it would be reasonable to put about a dozen big rovers on Mars at a verity of sites with a single Starship transfer. Likely more if you consider the Startship expendable. Each of those could reasonably be expected to do science for 10-20 years at a different sites. The same launch capacity as a manned mission would give you maybe a year at one site. For manned missions to beat unmanned on cost, you basically have to assume a permanent mission with immigrants rather than visitors, with people who will be born, live, retire and die of old age on Mars. And if that's the plan, then failing to plain for them to be resource independent of earth would be unethical and an eventual death sentence. And if the only reason to to put human there is as a marketing ploy without which you don't get funding, then that sounds to me like an argument that there isn't a good reason to do the mission at all.
You would think it was a black hole video, but it was me, ANOTHER EPISODE OF THE CRISIS IN COSMOLOGY 😂🍿 I have a small physics course in my computer science degree and my professor has gladly included some stuff about black holes and astrophysics in general in it (I mean, guess from which department he comes from...), so it's always nice to be updated on the current research thanks to you. I wish I had someone like you as a calculus tutor honestly, really... Thanks for your videos.
cosmological coupling is one of the most exciting ideas ive heard in years! so glad i caught this update, youtube decided not to show it to ke in my subscription box.
How cool would it be if it turns out there is a equivalence relationship between energy and spacetime, and black holes are converting energy directly into spacetime. We'd literally be made out of the fabric of the universe itself.
I'm confused about pictures showing black holes. I think of it as a black ball with the event horizon formed as a donut shap of mass rotatiog around it. Like😮 the rings around Saturn . But when people try to represent the donut from different angles, part or the donut is squashed out to one side. Like the donut has a fat area or the donut is not all in the same plane. I hope this makes some sense. Can you explain why they look like this? Thanks, MIke
OK, the black ball is actually the event horizon; the donut around it is the accretion disk (i.e. all the matter that's spiralling around until it finally falls in, a bit like water spiralling around a plug-hole). The reason why one side of the accretion disk looks folded upward/downward/sideways, is because that's the side that's further away from us. The light that reaches us from there hasn't come in a straight line: It got bent around the back hole before getting far enough away to straighten out. (The light from in front is also slightly bent, but not as much, because it didn't have to come past the black hole to reach us.) So in reality, the disk *is* flat (which you would see if you saw it edge-on), but if you're seeing it an angle (which will usually be the case) you'll see the far side sticking out as if it's been bent round closer to the front. If you want to see what's really just beside the black hole - where the back of the ring seems to be - you actually have to look slightly further away from it.
My first question on the black holes growth coupled to dark energy idea: what the mechanism of this coupling is (if it exists)? second: what prediction can be made to definitively test the idea?
If black-holes grow from vacuum energy, what effect does that have on excluding primordial black-holes based on the missing observations of them evaporating?
VIDEO REQUEST: A video about the observations that suggest that it's possible for a star of a certain mass to become a black hole without going through the super nova process please Becky.
Dr. Becky “the papers are reviewed blind, so we don’t know the authors”… I guarantee we all know whose paper it is when it says “I will analyze the collected light in search of EXO moons” 😅🤭
One way this could be tested is through lensing observations of black holes to deduce if there is a significant change in their mass over the difference in redshift that is present due to the lensing
32:05 supposedly someone once said that you can fit two points with a line, 3 points with a quadratic, an elephant with a cubic, and make the elephant's tail wag with quintric. You can fit an elephant with a wagging tail through the uncertainties of the DESI data.
no kidding about the brightness of Jupiter. I stepped out my front door this morning, noticed a bright " star" in the western sky. Thought it was Venus for a moment. Then I remembered I saw Venus the evening before shortly after dusk.
Go to ground.news/drbecky to stay fully informed with the latest Space and Science news. Save 50% off the Vantage plan through my link for unlimited access this month only. - AD
Acquired, purchased and diving in...
I have a request if you have the time for it.. According to some Science TH-camrs, the data from the Webb Telescope shows that Dark Matter has been a mistake and they say that Modified Newtonian Dynamics appears to be the correct theory. I'm looking forward to hearing your take on this.
Also, Ground News doesn't work very well for Europeans because most of the websites block access from Europe. They simply don't want to comply with the laws in Europe, so they block all traffic from Europe.
@@kataseiko Be sceptical of 99% of what you see on TH-cam. There are a lot of problems with MOND last I read so I doubt that's changed.
Could you talk about the new JWT data potentionally proving Dark Matter doesn't exist and it's data agreeing with MOND?
Are they taking into consideration that there was probably some dark energy and matter from the beginning of the universe and then there was dark matter, energy coming off of the singularities of black holes?
The ancient CRT monitors had one major advantage - they were big enough and warm enough that the cats would curl up to sleep on top of them, and they couldn't knock them over.
And they have an after glow like objects falling into a black hole (without the red shift)
You need a CRT to play old games like Duck Hunt and Hogan's Alley. The Zapper won't work with LED screens.
@@essaboselin5252 I remember someone saying something about hertz refresh rates not mattering on CRT ones, but I don't know the validity of that.
yes, but they would also pee into them because the hot PCB in early monitors (and other electronics) released a smell similar to urine.
@@MetalkattLight pen needs the raster scan to pinpoint position.
@24:13 "Pressure pushing down on you..."
Wasn't that part of research released by Bowie, Mercury and collaborators c. 1981? 🎶
V. Ice ripped of their paper and tried to pass it off as his own research 😂
ba na na na na na na
brian may of queen is also an astrophysicist
@@SpaceFrogFromOuterSpaceright, a pithy title like “Ice, Ice, baby” doesn’t make up for such blatant academic malpractice
[NODS] As frequently cited by Sabine Hossenfelder. =:o}
As much as I hang on your every word during these, when Pippin is in the background anything you are saying becomes white noise 😄
Dang. I fell for that, too.
I could not skip the ad. 😊🐈🐱
oooh a night sky news, i love- CAT. THERES A CAT. OH MY GOD CAT
What is that person doing on a CAT video?
CAT: there she goes again - bashing the camera around! 😼
Skipping ad bit--oh, kitty! I can't skip the kitty!
❤
@@Metalkatt Pippin the kitten is going to get sponsors all on her own at this rate. :3
@@Nethershaw I figured that cat would be named “Quasar,” or “Sagittarius A*,” or some-such thing.
I propose a new paper, "Cats And Their Effect On The Success Of Science Communicators"!
wait, was there a science communicator in this cat video? 😋
Cats like learning too, they don't have to be looking at you, they hear all, and cats do experiments on gravity, that's why they'll push things off the shelf and slap other things off
Having a Cat-TV youtube video on that monitor would definitely skew the results :)
I realy want to read it :)
"Cats and their effect on the expansion of the universe (because they make everything fall outside)"
Primordial black holes are the cause of missing socks in the dryer.
Personally i suspect its more to do with UAP and Visitations by Alien Overwatch fcuking with us! Did you have a bad nights sleep, lost time and dont know where it went? Time to setup cctv to try to catch them out.
Yes! We were also thinking of the missing sock problem. We could use the half-life of socks (and biros) to measure the density of primordial black holes.
I think Primordial Black Holes are what the Cat was looking for! You don't need fancy detectors, you just need a cat!
I'm so tired of people saying: "don't bring politics into..."... if you haven't already realized it, Govt controls every aspect of your life. Whether you like it or not. Who's in Govt matters because your life matters
If you are a human being, you are political, and you are a part of your government, whether you like it or not. The decisions you make have consequences. You can't win, you can't break even, and you can't stop playing the game.
Only in America, the rest of us couldn't give a flying f*** about it. Unless of course when the USA renage on NATO, then the U.S.A. returns to become "the great Satan" once more.
People who want to ignore “politics” are privileged enough that most decisions do not affect them.
"I don't do politics" th-cam.com/video/zruGBWLk9s8/w-d-xo.html
Only political obsessed turds say things like this. Every single day of my life every single day, the vast majority of that day is not controlled in any way shape or form by politics. But keep thinking and believing this Absolute nonsense that’s destroying our country from the inside out. Tribal is tribal does sort of like stupid is as stupid does.
I love when your cat makes cameo appearances in your videos, such a pretty kitty.
Me, too! Hi cat!
And such a happy kitteh, too! :)
I love the sass of counting "if"s
I kept thinking "And IF you can find them, maybe you can hire the A-Team". 😊
All of science is built on ifs. We don't generate certainty, only likely conclusions that can be built upon by more science. (If that conclusion is true, then this conclusion, which depends on that conclusion, is probably true.) An inconvenient piece of evidence can cause the whole house of cards to fall. But then we get to build a new one!
"interesting" ... such an optimistic word for such circumstances
@@jeffreygrant817ah just copy pasting this comment to different threads. bit much?
@ not really, I rather enjoy challenging the paradigm
Ok so a paper was recently released describing black holes inner workings. It postulates that matter is broken down to dissolution, which then creates dark energy. If you can imagine how the forces inside the atom work, now pop those "bubbles" and what are you left with. This destruction of forces down to the quark level or beyond, will release a massive amount of energy. It's a fascinating dive into what happens to matter inside black holes and possibly might explain dark energy.
My critical thinking expands to skeptical. My thinking has been for a while now that a confined neutron plus energy equals strange matter, add more energy, bottom matter, still more and the matter is so dense then physics betrays me.
A peer review would give my theory a little credibility but not make it fact.
@@noelstarchild "A peer review would give my theory a little credibility but not make it fact."
Have you ever wondered why no one credible is actually willing to peer review your takes
Hubble, imo, should be indefinitely maintained until we can (1) fund a true replacement and (2) bring it back to Earth. It is just too important of an observatory-and too accessible-to let it decay like another piece of space junk. Hubble not only unlocked countless scientific breakthroughs; it brough the public back into space in a way we haven't seen since the Apollo program.
It truly belongs in a museum.
1, agree, 2, if return to earth will divert funding from other researches, space or not, I'd prefer just giving it a proper send off in space.
Agreed. As doctor Jones would say, it belongs in a museum.
@iamjohndeleon You forget about the amount of resources it could generate from tickets to see it in a museum.
Deorbiting such a big, heavy object in a controlled descent wourd be a nightmare. I believe it'd be easier and cheaper to give it a final push into an orbit that's beyond geosynchronous. That way it'll stay there for hundreds, if not thousands of years, serving as a powerful beacon, a monument to the ingenuity to our species
@@JosePineda-cy6om A couple of days ago we saw roughly 10 times that mass deorbit in a controlled descent. Hubble will fit in the Starship payload bay with room to spare and is about a third of the mass it's designed to handle.
Thankyou for your content Doc, you’ve revitalised a love of the cosmos in me that’s been dormant for decades, keep that passion coming!
Congratulations on 750,000! 3/4 of a million!
You are one of my favorite science communicators and my favorite astrophysics communicator! Absolutely deserve all the subscriptions!
Spider cat, spider cat. Doing things that a spider cat can.
More Cat Bloopers please!
Cats aren't bloopers. We need a blooper section _and_ a cat section!
My heart is broken about what could happen to curtail the research over the next years, and I know those who will do all we can to help. There needs to be an international effort that the US will return to as soon as we can - 🖖 Thank you Dr. Becky for the videos! They will be so valuable over the next couple years!
You need to start thinking about putting telescopes into SpaceX Starship and take advantage of the reduced cost of mass to orbit that booster reuse gifts to science. Get your mind past the politics and your lack of control over Starlink.
24:10 Pressure? Pushing down on me? Pushing down on you? No man asked for...
Negative pressure. Pushing up off me. Pushing up off you. Actually a quite few men and women asked for (most astrophysicists mainly)
(Freddy) Mercury is now orbiting in my head....
"Is there a conflict of interest?" Yeah. Yeah, I'll just stop you there. Yes. All the conflicts of interest. And not a single one of them being the public interest.
Elon wouldn't be known if not for his government funded tesla and space x
Theres rumours of sls getting canceled tho, which would free up a ton of the budget
@Metalkatt conflict of interest, Elon's space x and tesla get the most government funding and contracts and was just put in the Whitehouse
@@jeffreygrant817the war has been pre-antagonized. putin _started_ the war by invading a country. the point is to not reward oligarchs that want to steal land through military means
@@chaosmarklar Wrong. Tesla doesn't receive any government funding and has supported the end of any tax credits for electric vehicles as they are unnecessary. Tesla is in a better financial position than the rest of the automotive industry. SpaceX won all the government contracts that they are part of through a competitive bidding process and are either uniquely able to provide the service or the cheapest in the commercial space industry by a wide margin. SpaceX and Tesla are the most consequential organisations for the future of humanity in this century and therefore removing any roadblocks to their missions is very much in the public interest. Elon Musk was not just put in the Whitehouse, he is heading a new voluntary government consultancy organisation along with Vivek Ramaswamy.
I agree with your NASA budgeting concerns. Politics does matter sadly.
Thank you, Dr. Becky.
Omigosh your kitty in the background is being too cuuuute! ^^ Perseids is my favorite meteor shower too, but I'm still so sad the moon is gonna outshine the Geminids shower :( Not like I can see it well regardless since I live in the city. Thank you Dr. Becky as always for putting in the time and energy and knowledge into these videos! I always look forward to your posts! This one about dark energy being coupled with black holes was a bit dizzying but still fascinating. I need to rewatch though I think to fully absorb lol
I wanted to focus on the video, but I can only see the kitten playing with the screen 😹
Outstanding as usual! Best astrophysics channel out there.
I've liked astronomy since i was a kid, and as an adult your channel has helped me reignite it. thank yoU!
Evening Dr Becky. A pleasure to see you this evening!
So, from what I remember about Gaussian surfaces is that they can be used to explain the inverse-square law, the one we use to describe gravitation in our solar system, within galaxies, and between galaxies. These surfaces are also used to mathematically describe magnetic fields. As I recall from E & M which I took many decades ago, magnetic materials (not just magnetized ones) can affect the shape of magnetic fields. What if massive objects affected gravitational fields analogously? I mean, what if they did it in a way that was subtly different than the one Einstein's general relativity describes? How can we be certain that a massive object in the gravitaional field of another object does not affect the field in a way that is analogous to magnetic materials in magnetic fields? So, for example, lots of stars in a galaxy could change the gravitational "permeability" of space, flatten the Gaussian surface perpendicular to the field lines, and cause gravitational acceleration to decrease at an amount different from the inverse square law. I wonder, do small galaxies seem to have more missing mass, or large ones? If it's the latter, then I think this might be a helpful idea to contemplate.
This sounds close to Modified Newtonian Dynamics (mond) - another fairly popular theory to explain the observations.
❤ i love watching Dr. Becky before bed especially when she geeks out on Space 🚀
I heard nothing in the first 20 seconds.
All I knew was cat.
Hi! Thanks so much for your content Dr Becky!
Knowing just about nothing about astrophysics and coming from a background in optics I'm curious to know if One could think of light traveling through a region of space that had some concentration of primordial black holes as passing through a scattering medium. And therefore having the wavelength of the light increase. And, if so, one could think of that region as having an index of a fraction greater than one.
Thanks again. I'm really grateful for your content.
Pretty sure David Kipping has his eye to the glass on JWST as we speak. Can’t wait to see what his findings are.
Cant wait to see the results of his current observations
Sorry Dr. Becky, I didn’t get what you said. I was watching the cat.
Nice to see your co host is back with you this week. Love cat she can come any time has long has you can do the show. Have a good week.
That cat has some serious floof!
When can we expect Astrophysicist Cat merch? 😊
Surely you mean, "I can has" astro-cat merch?
This was such a good episode, I just love the little things you can learn and yes much is often beyond me but that doesn't detract in any way from my enjoyment Thanks a Lot.
I was thinking earlier today that Jupiter was looking particularly bright, I guess that's why
24:01 Excellent description. Thanks for the knowledge 🕊️
Cat appears to be trying to alert you to a problem with the displayed data?
CAT! That's why I upvoted your video in 3 seconds 😸
Wow. That DESI discussion was an example of you'al pulling the public towards the professional's understanding.
Nice job. But, I'll have to watch this video a couple of times.
Great video. I sent it to my gransons (7 & 11). They are genius children who I have been sending physics vidoes to since they were 3 and 7. I love physics.
I love Night Sky News! Thanks Dr. Becky!
Very interesting stuff as always. I definitely don’t understand the black holes as dark energy concept. I mean, I sort of do but not really.
Thanks for the *GREAT* video, Dr. Becky!!
Science _is_ politics. There is nothing more political than the scientific pursuit of true knowledge. Never stop pushing.
Just because you do not take an interest in politics doesn't mean politics won't take an interest in you. - Pericles about 2500 years go.
Jupiter has been so bright lately! Blows my mind every year
Don’t worry too much about conflicts of interest - it's almost certain that the new US administration won’t. At all.
😂😂😂
@@jeffreygrant817 Sure thing Ivan
@@Soken50 okay sheep
You're unironically correct actually. Elon Musk doesn't need any additional funding and isn't interested in it. If anything he'll catalyze an increase of budget for NASA.
@@ErgzaySpaceX is a contractor for NASA which means he gets funding from them almost by definition
Becky, I love your teapot constellation! Any chance we could now have a contemporary map of the night sky now to make it easier to explain what is currently happening to a much wider audience? 🤩🤩🤣🤣🤣
I find the new hypothesis that gravity can a limited range and the primordial black holes very interesting.
The Gemini meteor showers is my favorite.
When you get goosebumps at the line "... supermassive black holes are my area of expertise...". 😁
I always enjoy your Cat Sky News videos. 😻
"Conflict of interests" is not something that matters in most countries anymore sadly
As much as I like looking up at the stars and other celestial entities, laying on the ground is a no-go where I live. I am in South East Arizona. And if you lay on the ground here you get to lay with scorpions, rattlesnakes, tarantulas, and other buggies. I know it sounds like a Monty Python skit. The site I go viewing at (Bortle 1/2) has a couple of snake sticks so you can move the rattlesnakes away from the scope pads and into the brush.
Is there a point where the study of black holes reaches a limit since we can never truly know what's inside them? It feels like an insurmountable problem, as the best we can achieve are mathematical inferences about what might be happening. On top of that, we have dark matter and dark energy-phenomena we can't directly see or detect-and black holes, where we can't say with absolute certainty what's going on internally. How do you maintain your sanity while studying such elusive mysteries?
I think black holes are dark matter stars that thru some mysterious fusion process creates dark energy. It's a similar process to regular stars we all see easily - except lots of dark antimatter and negative signs in the math. I'm not scientist just a fan with a poets understanding of your content. I wouldn't have clue on how to prove these ideas: but, it's fun to think about.
SPONSERS note! When AstroCat is in the background, I DO NOT fast forward throught your information! Thank you! 🥰
Thank you so much for explaining things so understandably. I really enjoy your videos.
When they put the bowling ball on a trampoline to illustrate how mass warpes spacetime, notice that the surface of the trampoline increases. Just saying....
Around the ball, yes, but less so as you get further out. What it *doesn't* do is cause the entire trampoline to grow to the size of a house, and then just keep on going! =:o}
Great video as always Dr Becky! Always enjoy your videos and learn a great deal. Cheers from USA, 5/5!
Like I said the other time, I find the "black holes as dark energy" idea really unconvincing from a *theoretical* perspective. Because Alan Guth already studied the behavior of what amounted to a black hole full of dark energy back in the 80s, and it doesn't do that. It looks like a normal black hole from the outside, and *inside*, it explodes into a new baby universe (yes, it's bigger on the inside, but not as well-behaved as a TARDIS), but we can't see that happening. This idea that exterior cosmology should somehow be coupled to what goes on inside the event horizon even though we can't see it... it doesn't make sense to me.
When I was younger I had the thought that dark matter could be burnt out black holes, but their gravity and hawkings radiation kinda proves that wrong
Could the quantum warp inside a black hole really create a pocket universe, and, if so, at what order of magnitude would time be flowing more slowly than in the parent universe?
But the "exterior cosmology" is undoubtly coupled to what goes on inside the event horizon. Or are you saying that all of the gravitational effect comes only from the matter not yet passed beyond event horizon?
@@tkermi In general relativity, with a black hole that collapses from infalling matter, that's actually true. You can trace the external geometry causally back to the infalling matter before it fell in. Of course these are *primordial* black holes they're talking about, so there's no infalling matter and the past timelines presumably go back to some initial condition of the universe. But there still isn't any causal effect from stuff happening inside the event horizon. Only the black hole's mass, charge and spin ought to remain (and those are all determined ultimately by initial conditions).
@MattMcIrvin There are other competing theories to that. For example one presented on YT video "What is a white hole? - with Carlo Rovelli". Hawking radiation being a major factor on them.
Could we get a video explaining the interstellar tunnel system and the recent discovery of a local tunnel in our solar system? Sounds very cool and reading articles about it doesnt do it justice. :)
There is no "tunnel system".
Astronomers found a structure of gas in a shape resembling a hollow tube that in no way shortens the distance to anywhere else.
@dcquence Thats not what I inferred. I just found it interesting.
Dr. Becky. Wishing you and cat and kin and kind, all the best this holiday season. Its about this time of year that I usually fall into an infinite black hole so I know they do exist. Thanks for all your great postings of knowledge expanding videos...
So the expansion of universe makes black holes grow and the growth of the black holes makes the universe expand? Isn't that a perfect perpetuum mobile?
Great, second half, of the vid as usual! Thanks
Regarding shipping humans past LEO: It's not worth even going to the moon unless the plan is mapped out to a point where earth could quit supporting the colony without the colony having any concerns about their long term, many generational, survival.
You could presumably build, launch, land and operate a few dozen Curiosity/Perseverance type rovers for years for what it would take to put a less than dozen humans in one location for less than a year.
for going past the moon, definitely.
Lunar resources are much more fuel efficient for doing anything large scale in low earth orbit than lifting metal, water, and propellant from earth, so that's one reasonable economic case that could support importing difficult-to-manufacture durable goods long term since it's not actually that far.
There's also a decent chance of finding easy-to-access rare earth deposits on the lunar surface that you could mine very simply and that's high value enough to consider shipping back to earth, though I admit that one is a little more out there, and depends a lot on the difficulty of setting up or restarting viable mines on earth that don't poison the water table.
@@thamiordragonheart8682 even for lunar mining, I'd question if it's cheaper to ship humans or robots. Other than dealing with equipment breakage and the like, I don't see anything humans would be doing that wouldn't be remotely operated, even if the operator is only in a pressurized rover 10m away.
No. The cost of space transportation into orbit and beyond is going to get orders of magnitude cheaper with rapidly fully reusable rockets and in-orbit refuelling of spacecraft. It will be far cheaper and far quicker to send humans to collect samples to return to Earth or build infrastructure for future missions compared to building custom-made portable space-hardened robotic laboratories. Proper space exploration requires sending humans or humanoid robots to the moon and beyond, and bringing back samples to be analysed by labs on Earth. Human space exploration is what is going to get the general public interested in space missions enough to increase the NASA budget. NASA should cancel the SLS program and spend that money on extending space telescope operations.
@@MrAlRats Too bad "rapidly fully reusable rockets and in-orbit refuelling of spacecraft" is still science fiction.
@@MrAlRats FWIW I'm not saying shipping human to deep space shouldn't be done. I'm only saying that shipping them their _just to do science_ is a waste of money, that you could get more science done with less lost blood and wealth by other means.
No matter what happens to launch costs, it will almost always be the case that for the same launch cost you can get more science done on Mars if you don't need to pack along enough life support to keep a human alive for 15+ months, and the delta-V for the return trip.
Sure, custom made rovers are expensive, but that simply suggests they should be mass produced. I'm not finding exact number, but it looks like it would be reasonable to put about a dozen big rovers on Mars at a verity of sites with a single Starship transfer. Likely more if you consider the Startship expendable. Each of those could reasonably be expected to do science for 10-20 years at a different sites. The same launch capacity as a manned mission would give you maybe a year at one site.
For manned missions to beat unmanned on cost, you basically have to assume a permanent mission with immigrants rather than visitors, with people who will be born, live, retire and die of old age on Mars. And if that's the plan, then failing to plain for them to be resource independent of earth would be unethical and an eventual death sentence.
And if the only reason to to put human there is as a marketing ploy without which you don't get funding, then that sounds to me like an argument that there isn't a good reason to do the mission at all.
Just finished both of your books. Loved them, thank you for writing them in a language those of us with one brain cell can understand! Great read!
Me,my telescope and a star and nothing in-between just a bit of space-time ..can't beat it !
Thank You, Dr Becky
You would think it was a black hole video, but it was me, ANOTHER EPISODE OF THE CRISIS IN COSMOLOGY 😂🍿
I have a small physics course in my computer science degree and my professor has gladly included some stuff about black holes and astrophysics in general in it (I mean, guess from which department he comes from...), so it's always nice to be updated on the current research thanks to you.
I wish I had someone like you as a calculus tutor honestly, really...
Thanks for your videos.
The "If Count" cracked me up....
Please do a video on Quantized Inertia...since you did one on MOND, I think it would be great content. Thanks!
cosmological coupling is one of the most exciting ideas ive heard in years! so glad i caught this update, youtube decided not to show it to ke in my subscription box.
How cool would it be if it turns out there is a equivalence relationship between energy and spacetime, and black holes are converting energy directly into spacetime. We'd literally be made out of the fabric of the universe itself.
There is no such relationship.
So cool!!! I have been looking at Jupiter everyday. It’s so cool. I can’t believe it’s that bright!!!
28:24 Oh. So, from Heat Death to Big Rip?
Huh, didn't expect that xD
Cats, because you're tired of having nice things.
Cats are nice.
@@ravenmad9225 I agree, and so would the cat currently lying on my lap and incessantly clawing my belly.
"If ifs and buts were candies and nuts, we would all have a merry Christmas." -Sheldon, TBBT
I'm confused about pictures showing black holes. I think of it as a black ball with the event horizon formed as a donut shap of mass rotatiog around it. Like😮 the rings around Saturn . But when people try to represent the donut from different angles, part or the donut is squashed out to one side. Like the donut has a fat area or the donut is not all in the same plane. I hope this makes some sense. Can you explain why they look like this? Thanks, MIke
OK, the black ball is actually the event horizon; the donut around it is the accretion disk (i.e. all the matter that's spiralling around until it finally falls in, a bit like water spiralling around a plug-hole).
The reason why one side of the accretion disk looks folded upward/downward/sideways, is because that's the side that's further away from us. The light that reaches us from there hasn't come in a straight line: It got bent around the back hole before getting far enough away to straighten out. (The light from in front is also slightly bent, but not as much, because it didn't have to come past the black hole to reach us.)
So in reality, the disk *is* flat (which you would see if you saw it edge-on), but if you're seeing it an angle (which will usually be the case) you'll see the far side sticking out as if it's been bent round closer to the front. If you want to see what's really just beside the black hole - where the back of the ring seems to be - you actually have to look slightly further away from it.
What about the 5+ sigma result that black holes can form from the condensation of gas clouds and not only from star collapse?
We need to make a second JWST, as well as the replacement to Hubble.
Better start now. _Maybe_ it’ll launch by the end of the century.
I suggest ESA should finally step up to the challenge, roll up their sleeves, get the budget and finally take a leading role in such endeavor
The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will have some overlap with Hubble.
My first question on the black holes growth coupled to dark energy idea: what the mechanism of this coupling is (if it exists)? second: what prediction can be made to definitively test the idea?
If black-holes grow from vacuum energy, what effect does that have on excluding primordial black-holes based on the missing observations of them evaporating?
Lately here in the SF Bay Area, I've seen Jupiter, Uranus, and Venus, all in one evening!
VIDEO REQUEST:
A video about the observations that suggest that it's possible for a star of a certain mass to become a black hole without going through the super nova process please Becky.
Ive thought this since we started talking about it!
Dr. Becky “the papers are reviewed blind, so we don’t know the authors”…
I guarantee we all know whose paper it is when it says “I will analyze the collected light in search of EXO moons” 😅🤭
You and the cats are so cute!
One way this could be tested is through lensing observations of black holes to deduce if there is a significant change in their mass over the difference in redshift that is present due to the lensing
Great show 🇨🇦
32:05 supposedly someone once said that you can fit two points with a line, 3 points with a quadratic, an elephant with a cubic, and make the elephant's tail wag with quintric. You can fit an elephant with a wagging tail through the uncertainties of the DESI data.
no kidding about the brightness of Jupiter. I stepped out my front door this morning, noticed a bright " star" in the western sky. Thought it was Venus for a moment. Then I remembered I saw Venus the evening before shortly after dusk.
When we start seeing those DART meteors, I wonder if we'll call them the "Anthropids"
The question "if theres a conflict of interest" with regards to Musk put it much nicer and more carefully than i would have.
Wow, that was a smooth transition into the ad lol.
The struggles of being a cat during winter 🤣
I’m not sure who the star of this channel is anymore, Dr Becky or her beautiful cat 😅
Good to know. Thank you.
Very good video, cheers from brazil