What's the first thing you'd search for with a sufficiently powerful telescope? Sign up for free at Brilliant, and the first 200 of you get 20% off the annual subscription: brilliant.org/Sciencephile/
my poor boy... the science that floats around this video.... is something you should not follow... that is if you actually want to understad hownature works ... pick up a physics book... any physics book will teach you 100000000x times more than this channel :DDDDD
amazes me that the deep field image from hubble was taken over 11 days , and webb,s was 12.5 hours , the diference is insane in both time and resolution :)
And we were promised with many more insane telescope after Web. I'm so happy we could see all of it in our lifetime, let's just hope they won't delay too much haha.
@@RGC_animation very unlikly , china and the russians wont stop funding space , and defence 101 , never hand over the high ground , besides , 25 billion $ is nothing compared to the trillion or close to it the US spends anualy of there military
That's because this channel is meant to provide you with science news and surface level understanding of singular topics. School on the other hand tries to make you genuinely understand the basics of scientific subjects. You can't really compare these things.
Thanks for sharing with us the knowledge and showing us those unimaginable projects and their purposes. I only knew them on wiki, but only basic info 👍🏻🙂
I'm honestly honored to be living in this era. People my age (22) will be able to see these things take place, and watch as the images are beamed back. Every single image from JWST has given me goosebumps, I can only imagine the beautiful nebulas, galaxies and other bodies in space that are waiting to be observed!
I love how basic the concept is for telescopes. I used my phone to expose it for 10 seconds and covered the sides of the phone on a tripod. And using the zoom, it's kinda like the same concept.
@@DaCheeseIsEpicSubToHim it will probably break in a week since nasa incompetent, its already starting to break because somehow for some fucking reason they didnt acount for objects bigger than a grain of sand hitting the telescope.
'The first signs of intelligent life will probably be viewed through a telescope looking billions of light years away, far into the past with no immediate way of contacting them'. Man, sounds just like my love life. Too far away and always looking into the past of what could've been.
You explained the redshift effect by the light (EM wave) losing its energy over time causing its frequency to drop. I must disagree. The redshift (as far as I understand it correctly) is caused by the expansion of the universe. The space itself is stretching, thus making the wavelength longer (frequency drop). The energy drop may only cause the amplitude of the wave to decrease (making the light dimmer)
Yeah exactly. Had to scroll for a moment to find your comment. Idk why haven't more people noticed. Btw, another cause is relativistic redshift i.e. objects moving apart from each other.
It’s a leap to think that the period between the creation of the V2 Rocket up until to today is technically considered to be the dawn of space exploration.
It seems like a long time to us, but if you think about it Humans are a scary species. In the grand time scale of the universe, human existance is but an atom, and we have galloped through só much discovery, inovation, Tecnology and absorbed so much information about our suroundings. We are the nightmare fuel for alien races. Like small mamalian vicious nanobots, biologically wired to reproduce and adapt and thrive to even the most defying and adverse conditions.. And are very sus to subdue and enslave other lifeforms..And we are just starting to poke at AI Imagine the alien predator conforting mini predator baby, crying, having nightmares about hibrid cyborg stubborn monkies that are sneaky, decieving, cruel, primal, warmongering, unpredictable, erratic that invent augmented arteficial inteligence, and are playing god with other lifeform genomes and their own genetics with the ultimate goal to populate the entire cosmos while simultaneously flirting to nuke their own kin... Homo Sapiens -> Homo Deus
@@xavierxavier166wow okay dude, we are not that special, any lnteligent species can do this and maybe even better if they don't have as many pointless wars as us.
@@darklex5150 We are very much special. We are the only known sentient life in the universe, and have created scientific advancements matched by nothing else. We may be small in comparison to the size of the universe, yet only we have the capacity to observe the cosmos.
I am so excited for all of this. Even if these exact projects don’t happen I’m sure the next telescope we put in space will give us even more information about this place we live in.
@@tommasomaruffi1306 News Update: earths new Andros telescope was destroyed today, experts believe a fox in a small spaceship fired multiple laser blasts causing the satellite to explode 🤣
We are getting closer to the discovery of extraterrestrial life. But considering the fact that we are pretty much at the beginning of the universe, those chances are still slim
You cannot claim progress toward a goal with an unknown end. Yet you can still make progress towards goals you wish to meet, perhaps you shall never get there as there is nothing there to get. Or perhaps you will, and sooner than you expect.
i have a very powerful relationship with JW. i became extremely, critically ill during 2016. my 5 year survival rate was 55% if the virus attacking me didn’t deactivate itself, so i basically accepted that i was terminal, and wouldn’t see JW. but… yknow i’m still here. i got up early to watch it launch, and in that moment i discovered a new emotion. every single picture it produces reminds me that i really am living my second lease on life, even if it’s boring or terrifying. i am so happy and astounded to exist at the same time in history as this behemoth
fyi: the virus was ebv. in rare instances it does not deactivate itself, and will continue to attack its host. the prognosis for this is very poor, a small japanese study producing a rate of 55%. by … some reason mine decided it was done attacking me, which i’m thankful for but my god nobody tells u what happens when u exceed your lifespan
This video has got me thinking what would happen if we where to look backwards Before the galaxy was created and maybe even see alien races that lived billions of years before us
um, you know the reason we see "in the past" is because light speed is limited, that means that the fastest speed in the universe still takes time to get to us, we can see stuff in the past of the milky way but not more then like, 40k years ago
Fun fact: Focusing on seeing light in the infra-red spectrum is like listening to a song with multiple walls between you and the speakers. The lower frequencies of the bass can pass through the walls better than the higher frequency, higher energy sounds which get absorbed into those walls. With light, the colorful visible light is those high frequency sounds and they get absorbed by dust clouds rather than building walls.
I am curious, how did they manage to pinpoint the precise location of the galaxy cluster that small? What mechanism did they use to orient the telescope?
For the JWST image it was recapturing an image taken by Hubble. I’m not sure how the telescope itself adjusts. But I know all of the individual mirrors can twist in all directions with 1/10.000th the thickness of a hair
Just think, the first alien civilization humans observe with telescopes will have likely already gone extinct eons ago, leaving only their light phantom behind.
i used to watch this channel couple of years ago but lost it somehow...now suddenly i remembered about the channel but i didnt remember the name..i only remembered "Hello mortals" and something ending with "phile the AI"...so i searched "phile the AI" and found this channel again lol...so many old memories come alive right now..you were my main source of information back then.
Don't listen to these people, no one thought that we would have smart phones with more processing power than yesterdays super computers. Physical limits are just that, something to be broken - like the law. Criminals tends to have a higher quality of life than regular workers. But only as long as you don't get caught, so you better stay smart and sharp. Just like the knife you need when robbing people to improve your bank. Don't use the bank though, make it your own - quick in and out within 2 minutes and you're set for life. Now start your drug empire using that income, see if you don't cease every opurtunity life won't bring you happiness and people will step on you. These people are just haters trying to devolve the world around them to put it at the same level as their own personal hells.
Ah yes Sciencephile never fails. Oh man I laugh 2 times on this video and learned the new telescopes that will be released, and also I learned what is the difference from Huble and JWST, thank you Sciencephile I really needed to understand and finally I did it. Only you man. SUPPORT THE SKYNET
On one hand, I’m happy that I’m young enough to see all the new discoveries that James Webb will offer. On the other hand, I feel like this is just the beginning and I’m so old that I’ll never be able to see what future technology has to offer. Hopefully humanity can put stupid and meaningless problems to the side such as war and disagreements to focus on exploration and curiosity….
Because we can't actually make it bigger now - the full-sized Luvoir is slated for SLS Block 2, which means a far larger cargo fairing than anything that exists today.
Dude, it took us like 3 decades just to get the god damned JWST built, launched, and in service...so why are you worried about what the next telescope is already? We haven't even been able to push the boundaries of this scope yet! Actually, I'd really like to see a comically large telescope (I'm talking a scope with a reflective surface the size of the moon) shot out into the other Lagrange point with a handful of Bezos' giant cockrockets 😂
To be fair one of the difficulties was ensuring the advancement in newer technologies could work out well especially because in many cases even if it could work it may not have gotten past a safety check or they were worried about a simulation. Now that the technology has been beyond that a bit more, further telescopes that utilize this technology can be launched quicker such as luvoir
I thought that. But if a blue photon emitted from a distant galaxy becomes an infrared photon by the time it gets here, what happens to the excess energy that it has lost (conservation of energy and all that)?
The only reason I'd ever want to live forever is to see what we discover long after I'd normally be gone. We're at the very dawn of becoming a space faring species, and I'm going to be too old soon to really enjoy that.
What's the first thing you'd search for with a sufficiently powerful telescope?
Sign up for free at Brilliant, and the first 200 of you get 20% off the annual subscription: brilliant.org/Sciencephile/
Happiness
Hi
cool, now where do i get 21% off
Help me
Prolly life
It’s really exciting to think of the mysteries that could be solved with these telescopes. I’m glad I’m young enough to see what will happen.
I feel the same
What if we die in an accident
@@roshanmarandi5466 wrong channel ;)
@@CosmicShieldMaiden ???
@@roshanmarandi5466 the overlord ai
This is unironically the best science channel i've ever stumbled upon
This is so fucking true mainly because almost every one of his videos puts me into an existential crisis
@@Crosbie85 XD
Or is it?
*Vsauce theme plays*
@@Crosbie85 HELLO MORTALS
my poor boy... the science that floats around this video.... is something you should not follow... that is if you actually want to understad hownature works ... pick up a physics book... any physics book will teach you 100000000x times more than this channel :DDDDD
amazes me that the deep field image from hubble was taken over 11 days , and webb,s was 12.5 hours , the diference is insane in both time and resolution :)
And we were promised with many more insane telescope after Web. I'm so happy we could see all of it in our lifetime, let's just hope they won't delay too much haha.
@@SpedRockt LUVOIR boi supremacy
@@fandroid6491 nah ngrst supremacy!
Until the US stops NASA's funding and dumps it all into their useless military.
@@RGC_animation very unlikly , china and the russians wont stop funding space , and defence 101 , never hand over the high ground , besides , 25 billion $ is nothing compared to the trillion or close to it the US spends anualy of there military
The way Sciencephilia mixes Science and Memes is more understandable than the entirety of any school's teaching method
That's because this channel is meant to provide you with science news and surface level understanding of singular topics. School on the other hand tries to make you genuinely understand the basics of scientific subjects. You can't really compare these things.
@@maikv750man you're in a wrong school ..
School don't teach
@@user2005_8. You say "School don't teach" but do you actually try to learn it?
@@Zorisura What do you think he's doing around this video/channel if not learning?
@@ir2001 watching entertainment that has varying degrees of information alongside it
Thanks for sharing with us the knowledge and showing us those unimaginable projects and their purposes. I only knew them on wiki, but only basic info 👍🏻🙂
Thanks for your kind donetion 🌼
@@gekkkoincroe detonation*
@@versusVSversus. *detention
@@gekkkoincroe dont nation*
@@gekkkoincroe donut*
I'm honestly honored to be living in this era. People my age (22) will be able to see these things take place, and watch as the images are beamed back. Every single image from JWST has given me goosebumps, I can only imagine the beautiful nebulas, galaxies and other bodies in space that are waiting to be observed!
Yes, this era is special.
You watched the dawn of the internet and many other advanced technologies.
I am about 10 years younger and will knowing about the human advancements! :-D
Born too early to explore the universe. Born too late to explore the Earth.
Born just in time to uncover the secrets of the universe.
I love how basic the concept is for telescopes.
I used my phone to expose it for 10 seconds and covered the sides of the phone on a tripod. And using the zoom, it's kinda like the same concept.
How do I expose for longer?
@@SomeName_AlsoHandlesSucc many phone camera apps have a pro mode or advanced settings that let you adjust shutter speed and other things
@@D1G1TS420 Thanks :)
they should try exposing it for a week
@@DaCheeseIsEpicSubToHim it will probably break in a week since nasa incompetent, its already starting to break because somehow for some fucking reason they didnt acount for objects bigger than a grain of sand hitting the telescope.
I'm very excited to see what the future holds for space exploration in our lifetime. Also very curious to see where our technology will go from here.
I am the 69th like to you comment. Now give me $10
It will take more than 200 years for us to do actual space exploration. We are limited by photons and matter.
As a gen z’er I think I would see pretty wild tech
We won't be able to do any space exploration until we solve climate change
@@TylerSolvestri i think i will be alive enough for me to see humanity atleast concure our moon and the closest planets to us (except merucry)
When the world needed him most, he came back
we all need a sciencephile the ai in our lives 🙏
@@beastybacon199 too long 😩
He wasn't even gone for a month
I’m not scared of death I’m scared of the events I won’t be able to see because I’m dead
I love stuff like this, now do one on fluid dynamics
Thanks!
'The first signs of intelligent life will probably be viewed through a telescope looking billions of light years away, far into the past with no immediate way of contacting them'.
Man, sounds just like my love life. Too far away and always looking into the past of what could've been.
🫂🫂🫂
Damn, stay strong bro, it will come to you when the time is right.
You explained the redshift effect by the light (EM wave) losing its energy over time causing its frequency to drop. I must disagree. The redshift (as far as I understand it correctly) is caused by the expansion of the universe. The space itself is stretching, thus making the wavelength longer (frequency drop). The energy drop may only cause the amplitude of the wave to decrease (making the light dimmer)
Yeah exactly. Had to scroll for a moment to find your comment. Idk why haven't more people noticed. Btw, another cause is relativistic redshift i.e. objects moving apart from each other.
True
But the expansion of the universe causes energy loss of light after all, so in a way, it was right and just oversimplified, wasn't it?
@@leont.17 He described that "light traveling through space" is enough to decrease it's frequency which just isnt true
But frequency = energy and not the amplitude
Well, to be fair, you can tell the Ring Nebula is a binary star system from the second little white dot in the Hubble Image.
of course webb telescope is pretty much just making shits more visible, which is cool I guess
@@kakyoindonut3213 Which means even more shit that can barely be seen is now visible
@@kakyoindonut3213 and revealing things that hubble just couldn’t see at all in a fraction of the time it took hubble to do
It’s a leap to think that the period between the creation of the V2 Rocket up until to today is technically considered to be the dawn of space exploration.
Why is it a leap?
It seems like a long time to us, but if you think about it
Humans are a scary species. In the grand time scale of the universe, human existance is but an atom, and we have galloped through só much discovery, inovation, Tecnology and absorbed so much information about our suroundings. We are the nightmare fuel for alien races. Like small mamalian vicious nanobots, biologically wired to reproduce and adapt and thrive to even the most defying and adverse conditions..
And are very sus to subdue and enslave other lifeforms..And we are just starting to poke at AI
Imagine the alien predator conforting mini predator baby, crying, having nightmares about hibrid cyborg stubborn monkies that are sneaky, decieving, cruel, primal, warmongering, unpredictable, erratic that invent augmented arteficial inteligence, and are playing god with other lifeform genomes and their own genetics with the ultimate goal to populate the entire cosmos while simultaneously flirting to nuke their own kin...
Homo Sapiens -> Homo Deus
@@xavierxavier166wow okay dude, we are not that special, any lnteligent species can do this and maybe even better if they don't have as many pointless wars as us.
@@darklex5150 We are very much special. We are the only known sentient life in the universe, and have created scientific advancements matched by nothing else. We may be small in comparison to the size of the universe, yet only we have the capacity to observe the cosmos.
@@Charles-xp2md that's... the dumbest comment i've ever read.
I love this telescope. 5:14 had me dead
He makes learning fun
You know a day is a good day when it's a sciencephile uploads day. Sciencephile simply just never disappoints.
i really appreciate your work, this is the number 1 best channel on youtube
I am so excited for all of this. Even if these exact projects don’t happen I’m sure the next telescope we put in space will give us even more information about this place we live in.
Man last time you uploaded it wasn't a month ago wow! I was binge watching your videos few hours ago before you posted this one
I love how each new telescope we make looks more and more like a starfox boss lol
Prepare for the next telescope, a big head with disembodied hands that wants to kill foxes
@@tommasomaruffi1306 News Update: earths new Andros telescope was destroyed today, experts believe a fox in a small spaceship fired multiple laser blasts causing the satellite to explode 🤣
@@oligould8575 ok you got me for a second there XD
We are getting closer to the discovery of extraterrestrial life. But considering the fact that we are pretty much at the beginning of the universe, those chances are still slim
But considering the vastness of this universe. The slim chances could be a common thing.
we still haven't explored that much of the universe, advanced life will still be a pain to find even by the end of the 21's century
You cannot claim progress toward a goal with an unknown end. Yet you can still make progress towards goals you wish to meet, perhaps you shall never get there as there is nothing there to get. Or perhaps you will, and sooner than you expect.
i have a very powerful relationship with JW. i became extremely, critically ill during 2016. my 5 year survival rate was 55% if the virus attacking me didn’t deactivate itself, so i basically accepted that i was terminal, and wouldn’t see JW. but… yknow i’m still here. i got up early to watch it launch, and in that moment i discovered a new emotion. every single picture it produces reminds me that i really am living my second lease on life, even if it’s boring or terrifying. i am so happy and astounded to exist at the same time in history as this behemoth
fyi: the virus was ebv. in rare instances it does not deactivate itself, and will continue to attack its host. the prognosis for this is very poor, a small japanese study producing a rate of 55%. by … some reason mine decided it was done attacking me, which i’m thankful for but my god nobody tells u what happens when u exceed your lifespan
That's so nice to hear! I'm glad you recovered and manage to see these wonders bloom
"Hello mortals!" never gets old.
Finally new video ,this guy's video makes me smart and laugh at the same time
Just made my night with this upload :D
lemme guess, Asian time-zone?
Thanks as always! Have no idea how to help since I'm from the ph and I still don't have debit or credit card. But hope this channel continues to grow
The Raindrop Prelude. Thanks Chopin!
The "Fahrenburgers🇺🇲" got me laughing 🤣
Awesome video as always 👍
Very educational 😃
Hearing you say deepfried is something i never knew i needed
5:15 can't believe they got charlie to take the pictures of the universe for us.
"-370 Degrees Foreign Burgers" best channel ever
This video has got me thinking what would happen if we where to look backwards Before the galaxy was created and maybe even see alien races that lived billions of years before us
um, you know the reason we see "in the past" is because light speed is limited, that means that the fastest speed in the universe still takes time to get to us, we can see stuff in the past of the milky way but not more then like, 40k years ago
@@teiull9388 true that
All hail to the mighty AI
5:42
I love your unit of Fahrenburger 😅
🇺🇲🍔
This is my favorite TH-camr by far
Keep it up mr.sciencephile 👍
bro that sponsor transition is so smooth
i love Chopin in the background
Maybe using gravitational lensing of our sun as aperture could also be some hypothetical satellite telescope
You'll need to cover all the sun's rays and all the cosmic interferences like solar flares, but interesting idea tho
No real advantage you orbit the sun so you can "see" behind it half the year
@@bobbysnobby no like we set small probe or satellite far far away from solar system
Much appreciated for the music mentioned ♥️
My country winning 3 medals and a sciencphile video. This day couldn't be any better.
I’m so glad I ended up watching your videos, it’s gotten me into physics so much
0:16 DEEP FRIED
edit: thx for 10 likes
the sound looks tasty....
Lol
I didn’t know you two where here
*DEEPFRIED*
lol
The exiting and delivery has really grown on this channel. I’ve been around since the beginning. Although I do miss the memes a bit.
Fun fact: Focusing on seeing light in the infra-red spectrum is like listening to a song with multiple walls between you and the speakers. The lower frequencies of the bass can pass through the walls better than the higher frequency, higher energy sounds which get absorbed into those walls. With light, the colorful visible light is those high frequency sounds and they get absorbed by dust clouds rather than building walls.
Well said
It's always a nice day when Sciencephile comes back from his monthly coma
4:03 At least I'm curious, so that makes me kinda impressive
this is sick dude
Cool!!! Both the video and the projects it's about - also love the Fahrenburgers 😂
loved that the most replayed part is *after* the sponsor segment
I am curious, how did they manage to pinpoint the precise location of the galaxy cluster that small? What mechanism did they use to orient the telescope?
For the JWST image it was recapturing an image taken by Hubble. I’m not sure how the telescope itself adjusts. But I know all of the individual mirrors can twist in all directions with 1/10.000th the thickness of a hair
That and probably reaction wheels and rcs
This channel needs an award
Euclid ?
Yeah, as if, we all know what that means.
It's just an Apollyon class object.
I see you SCP
Born too early to explore the universe
Born too late to explore the universe
9:05 imagine living on another planet and seeing something like that floating about, would you be scared?
Y e s
fantastic video 🎉
5:04 couldn't agree more
I most spit out my milk at "Fahrenburgers" with the temperature inlaid with the American flag and I wasnt even drinking any milk.
AI has progressed so much in the past years that this channel actually being run completely by an AI isn’t even far from possible at all.
This is so exciting! Thanks for the video, I enjoyed it a lot!!
Just think, the first alien civilization humans observe with telescopes will have likely already gone extinct eons ago, leaving only their light phantom behind.
For whom it might interest, the piano soundtrack is Chopin - Raindrop (Prelude)
I love those imperial system jokes 🤣🤣
8:02
*Great idea*
It’s only fair that the telescope dedicated to studying one of the most mysterious things in the universe (dark energy) is named Euclid
might seem meaningless but thanks sciencephile, your vids make my day better whenever i watch em
the government spending tax money on the future of humanity rather than their own yachts? shocking.
Yeah ik right
i used to watch this channel couple of years ago but lost it somehow...now suddenly i remembered about the channel but i didnt remember the name..i only remembered "Hello mortals" and something ending with "phile the AI"...so i searched "phile the AI" and found this channel again lol...so many old memories come alive right now..you were my main source of information back then.
When will we be able to have a telescope that could zoom in like a microscope to see atoms, and even electrons ?
I doesn't work that way. The wavelenght of light isn't small enough to see stuff as small as atoms or electrons
Never
@@gabrielcoelho2346 Said it better than I could've.
Don't listen to these people, no one thought that we would have smart phones with more processing power than yesterdays super computers. Physical limits are just that, something to be broken - like the law. Criminals tends to have a higher quality of life than regular workers. But only as long as you don't get caught, so you better stay smart and sharp. Just like the knife you need when robbing people to improve your bank. Don't use the bank though, make it your own - quick in and out within 2 minutes and you're set for life. Now start your drug empire using that income, see if you don't cease every opurtunity life won't bring you happiness and people will step on you. These people are just haters trying to devolve the world around them to put it at the same level as their own personal hells.
@@oonmm how'd you go from smart phones to starting a drug empire?
Jesus, the Chopin fills my mind with Halo imagery
Appealing yet jarring
I still don’t think any telescope will be able to see the birth of queen Elizabeth
I love how Luvoir is just scientists thinking "lets just do that all again but make it way fucking bigger"
3:00 it's because of the expansion of universe as far as I remember reading. (Refer Doppler Effect)
Great video! It's making me excited for what's to come instead of doom scrolling and having an existential crisis every day lmao
A lot of random weird sounds in this one, and sometimes just on the left speaker.
Awesome vid as always.
Ah yes Sciencephile never fails. Oh man I laugh 2 times on this video and learned the new telescopes that will be released, and also I learned what is the difference from Huble and JWST, thank you Sciencephile I really needed to understand and finally I did it. Only you man. SUPPORT THE SKYNET
LOVE YOU SCIENCEPHILE THE AI
7:22 That kind of looks like a Minecraft helmet lol
On one hand, I’m happy that I’m young enough to see all the new discoveries that James Webb will offer. On the other hand, I feel like this is just the beginning and I’m so old that I’ll never be able to see what future technology has to offer. Hopefully humanity can put stupid and meaningless problems to the side such as war and disagreements to focus on exploration and curiosity….
Yep, "too late to explore the world, too early to explore the universe" :/
@@tommasomaruffi1306 You can explore the ocean right now, get to it.
So, hypothetically, if we put a giant mirror far away into space, could we use a telescope to look into earthʼs past?
Nope
Technically, but you need to be fast and it's useless as you need to be faster than light to see the actual past before the giant mirror launched.
The classiest line ever " Hello Mortals " 🙂
5:26 what app did you use?
Universe sandbox probably
@@redekamNOPE, but I don't know
Sciencephile's heavy comprehension of both science and memes makes me believe that this is one of the best science channels ever.
Skynet is always here to anwser our questions…..
They know somthing we dont….
Thx😊, this makes James-Webb: extra fresh, honey-cone cool!🍯🐝
maybe im dumb but why do they have to make it bigger in 10 years when they can make it bigger now
It's because money + our technology is limited and now we can't make it bigger without getting problems.
Because we can't actually make it bigger now - the full-sized Luvoir is slated for SLS Block 2, which means a far larger cargo fairing than anything that exists today.
loving this channel
Amazing content and The edits 🤌🤌🤌
Dude, it took us like 3 decades just to get the god damned JWST built, launched, and in service...so why are you worried about what the next telescope is already? We haven't even been able to push the boundaries of this scope yet!
Actually, I'd really like to see a comically large telescope (I'm talking a scope with a reflective surface the size of the moon) shot out into the other Lagrange point with a handful of Bezos' giant cockrockets 😂
To be fair one of the difficulties was ensuring the advancement in newer technologies could work out well especially because in many cases even if it could work it may not have gotten past a safety check or they were worried about a simulation. Now that the technology has been beyond that a bit more, further telescopes that utilize this technology can be launched quicker such as luvoir
That would be hilarious😂
Love your video and your cannel, just a small correction. Light does not lose energy as it travels. It becomes red shifted as space expands. :)
I thought that. But if a blue photon emitted from a distant galaxy becomes an infrared photon by the time it gets here, what happens to the excess energy that it has lost (conservation of energy and all that)?
Fahrenburgers... nice.
"there are ONLY 5100 exoplanets" just freaking killed me
0:29 my birthday
Happy (late) birthday
@@tommasomaruffi1306 thx
Happy late or early birthday
is this the channel's best video release up until now? Yes
🤖 DEEP FRIED 🤖
Yes
Who
The only reason I'd ever want to live forever is to see what we discover long after I'd normally be gone. We're at the very dawn of becoming a space faring species, and I'm going to be too old soon to really enjoy that.
D E E P F R I E D
wanna say that the voice of sciencephile is slowly getting more and more like a human, like see his old videos and compare that to this one