***VOYAGER 1 SOURCE***: solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/voyager-1/in-depth/ Quote: "if we define our solar system as the Sun and everything that primarily orbits the Sun, Voyager 1 will remain within the confines of the solar system until it emerges from the Oort cloud in another 14,000 to 28,000 years". Also interesting AMA with the scientists and engineers that actually worked on the Voyager craft: www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/1m9wke/were_scientists_and_engineers_on_nasas_voyager/ "It's a very fine point and many people don't realize the Oort cloud is in interstellar space AND it's considered part of the solar system. We knew many media would make the error and we tried to make it clear in interviews. And you're right -- none of our materials say we've exited the solar system". - NASAJPL, OP of the AMA.
I was about to say, I thought that voyager 1 is technically the first man made thing to go interstellar right? Even though it is only in the oort cloud.
people seem to be liking this one, will be doing more space videos for sure :) I also have a longer space fact video - th-cam.com/video/OMQzQ5VW888/w-d-xo.html (focusing on shorts for now though since youtube only push shorts for new channels atm)
@@Lloyd-Smith hi it'd be better if you give more info like the first one, I wanna know which region of space has that much water rather than just knowing that there's a region of space that has a lot of water
@@f2pain383 I always put all the sources in the description. Evidently nobody reads that though, so will pin them in the comments from now on. The water is surrounding a quasar 12 billion light years away^^
That why I believe there was life in mars before and something happen that made that carter because that kind of peak doesn't form simply by how our mountain are formed on Earth.
@@jimmylim5015 gravity exists everywhere, the reason objects in space “float” is because they are all falling, but since there is no air to create drag, gravity affects all objects the same regardless of mass, so 2 objects falling at the same velocity would not be moving at all relative to each other, technically the Earth is falling around the sun, it just has so much sideways velocity (and there’s no air to remove it) that it “misses” the sun as it constantly falls towards it
Fun fact: Voyager 1 launched in 1977, (46 years) traveling roughly 38 thousand miles an hour, the farthest man made object humans have. Yet light would catch it in just 22 hours.
@@professorx3060 Everything is mostly relative. Yes, light actually is "slow" relative to the vast Universe, but to our little planet Earth, light "cruises" pretty fast.
Fun Fact: The Sun has no fire on it. Fire needs oxygen to form, since there is no oxygen in space, fire can't form. It may look like fire, but it is actually plasma.
Sun probably has oxygen atoms, but probably not oxygen gas, and probably not hydrogen gas. Fire requires air (O2), fuel (that can be a lot of things), and heat (that is removing heat faster than something can oxidize). Oxidation, which is what we know as fire, probably doesnt happen in, or on stars. Yes, we observe plasma, and yes oxygen is in the sun. I think its so hot and dense, you have a soup of elements that cannot form bonds, and are smashed together with photons, electrons, and neutrons taking millions of years to reach the surface, or maybe never at all.
Olympus Mons is an interesting mountain. It's the tallest in the solar system, but if one was to walk up the mountain they would find it rather easy to do. It gradually builds up elevation but the incline has no effect. A person could walk all the way up without feeling that they ever left the ground.
@@OneBiasedOpinion there's crazy dust storms on Mars most of the time reducing visibility to a few feet and the highest winds are recorded to be about 60 mph which can easily sent you flying due to reduced gravity (of course the higher you get the less it affects you because Mars atmosphere is very thin), lack of oxygen? Mars doesn't have a breathable atmosphere to begin with you would have to climb it using a pressurised suit that could keep you both warm enough and with enough oxygen, did y'all ever took into account the fact that it's on Mars and not on Earth?
@@Demons972 I know there’s little to no oxygen on Mars. Hence my _very sarcastic_ remark about the lack thereof would not be helpful in climbing that mountain.
@@NineSeptims our grand children might have vacations on Mars some day in their lifetime. Idk if humans will ever see another galaxy though. The milky way is far too massive.
Voyager has been traveling for years at a high speed and it's still has gotten nowhere lol that's crazy. It's hard to wrap your head around how big space actually is
@@levilively8643 Voyager has NOT left the solar system yet. They entered Interstellar space, meaning they exited the heliopause, which is the suns magnetic influence. The space weather changes there, the particle densities are different and the radiation too is different. This is still WAY inside the solar system though. The oort cloud stretches up to 1ly from the sun, and that will take alot of time to pass through.
@@MrMegaMetroid NASA has stated that the Voyager 1 space craft exited the Solar System on August 25, 2012. I believe that the estimate of the size of the Solar System of 22 light hours, which is about 159 Astronomical Units, is a reasonable estimate
No you guys didn't get it it means it takes 28k thousands of years for it to exit *OUR* Solar system And traveling to the closest Solar system like ours will take us 80k thousands of years to Reach it
@@abhishekgorle8068 in order for the voyager to go outside the milky way our Galaxy it will take millions if not billions and trillions of years before it do so
They are beyond the orbit of Pluto, but that is still very, VERY far from outside the solar system. They still have to go through the Oort Cloud, which stretches up to halfway between the sun and Alpha Centauri, or roughly 2.1 lightyears away.
I agree that we're stuck in ego and hate. But humans are more rare than everything in space...more rare than diamonds, more rare than gold, more rare than black holes, more rare than galaxies. We are definitely something, something incredible.
Fun fact: the deeper you get into Jupiter, the higher the pressure gets, so eventually it gets so high to the point that the gas turns into liquid and forms an ocean of hydrogen and Helium. So basically, Jupiter has the largest ocean in the solar system.
Fact: it is impossible for a man to get an erection in deep space. The pressure that pushes on his gland will keep the blood from entering the cavity. This is a known fact in the medical world. That's why you've never, ever heard of an astronaut whacking off.
Another fact: they managed to get another photo of a black hole, which is Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole in the center of our own Milky Way galaxy.
@@HappyMatt12345 No. It’s actually pretty cool how they took this image. Instead of one telescope, this was a joint effort by dozens of observatory-sized telescopes, all spanning across the globes’ surface, which work in tandem to comprise an Earth-sized telescope. By combining their observation capabilities, they were able to get an image of something so unbelievably far away from us - which even then is already so pixelated. It’s a joint effort called Event Horizon. Look it up for their info and a more detailed explanation.
Atoms are the basic building blocks of matter. Comprising a nucleus of protons and neutrons, surrounded by electrons in orbit, they form elements. These microscopic particles interact to create molecules and substances, governing the properties and behaviors of all materials in the universe.
The funny thing about taking 80k years to reach the next solar system is that by the time we get there humans would have developed faster space travel. Putting us in a predicament
Another fact: Olympus mons doesn't stop growing as every time it erupts (its a shield volcano sp it erupts from the sides not top) It freezes and grows wider and a bit taller. Also isn't it active right now or no?
@@Lloyd-Smith I would look that up to double check it, before accepting it as a fact.... As far as I know, Mars does not now have any active geology, such as techtonic plates, or anything else that could send lava to the surface. Remember, those channels and riverbeds have been there for so long, that all the land that was here on Earth at that time has since been subjunced back into the mantle, melted down and recycled. There is no ground on Earth as old as the ancient regions of Mars. Three or four Billion years is a long time, if the geology there was dynamic enough that it _could_ destroy those ancient river beds with volcanic activity, then it would have done so by now. In my opinion.
Facts are facts but technically Olympus mons isn't the biggest when you measure from the center of the planet. In fact chilli's mountain range is double any other mountain in the system. Science is amazing learn new things every day.
Voyager 1 has been in interstellar space since 2012. The Heliopause is the cutoff of the Sun's direct presence meaning solar winds and the boundary of its magnetosphere. At this boundary the solar winds' presence is overwhelmed by interstellar plasma. Gravitational influence from the Sun extends to the edge of the universe (it's just really weak there) so the boundary of where the Sun's gravity is not affecting celestial bodies or causing things to orbit has not been used as a boundary for "interstellar space" in traditional views. Now considering gravity, the argument of where the solar system ends is much more pertinent. Oort cloud objects are in the solar system as they orbit the Sun. However, they come from interstellar space, enter the Heliopause then leave the Heliopause and enter interstellar space again.
I just imagine people from the other galaxy be like: ‘There might be other people in this Universe because one of our neighbouring galaxy is milky way’
@@orenofficial4410 I think it has. At least mostly. The debris from our sun stretches a third of the way to Proxima Centauri, So the issue may depend on where you draw the line.
imagine some day we figure out, that just like we figured out there is a microscopic world operating all around us at all times,that all these galaxies are just like the neutrons and electrons in an atom and the universe is the atom??
Wait until you hear about Graham's number (if you haven't already). A number so big that it can't physically be written down, the universe is simply too small to contain it :)
what would be the point of sending 12 people on a 28000 year journey. And that is just leaving the solar system, it has to get to another one and get inside it. By the time they got anywhere we would have colonized it with the tech coming in the next 27000 years. When we can travel to the moon in a day we will be ready to explore space, and then only our solar system for a long time.
@@streamofconsciousness5826 not to mention we have no clue if there’s any promising planets in said system, it would be a pretty big waste of time and money to send astronauts on a 28,000 year long mission just to land on some barren rock and not find anything, if humans were really desperate enough to embark on a mission THAT long, we’d have to 100% know that there’s a planet that can support Earth life just as well, if not better than Earth can (very unlikely as we evolved specifically to survive on Earth and nowhere else)
Don’t bother spending time on this very new channel. The person that runs it has admitted to placing deliberate misinformation/mistakes in the narrative in order to stimulate the algorithm placing the channel far higher in the rankings than it deserves - every comment helps in this regard, showing the dodgy behaviour of a typical middle school child. Here’s a screenshot of a recent reply. It is so sad that anyone is ok cheating the system. Comments Highlighted reply Factoyd • 1 day ago (edited) I didn't mess it up & pronounced it perfectly! /s It's a good job I did to be honest, it's doing wonders for the algorithm with everyone commenting & complaining! ~ UP & 41% 0 S Q Lord Ronin, The Compassionate • 1 second ago @Factoyd it would appear that both my wife (a doctor/oncologist/palliative care consultant) and I, were taught differently to yourself? Is it possible that it's just another example of Americanisation of "foreign" languages and words that causes such confusion? I cannot recall any astronomers/scientists ever pronouncing it as CEN-TURI instead of CEN-TAU-RI / CEN-TOR-I. Whilst you might feel quite smug in using deliberate deception in order to justify comments and corrections, I’m surprised you would admit it! Are you so lacking in confidence that you fear for your channel’s deceptive practices that you need to life/obfuscate the evidence? That you would admit to doing such an underhand method of increasing your channel's score is beyond pathetic but very understandable for someone that hasn't finished middle school yet.
EHT(Event Horizon Telescope) actually took picture of the black hole Sagittarius A(black hole at the centre of milky way) and took another picture of M87(Messier 87) galaxy. Both of them are not combined.
Technically the event horizon telescope is more than one telescope spread out all over the globe because you’d basically need an earth sized telescope to see an object that big that far away so that was the next best thing
Don’t bother spending time on this very new channel. The person that runs it has admitted to placing deliberate misinformation/mistakes in the narrative in order to stimulate the algorithm placing the channel far higher in the rankings than it deserves - every comment helps in this regard, showing the dodgy behaviour of a typical middle school child. Comments Highlighted reply Factoyd • 1 day ago (edited) I didn't mess it up & pronounced it perfectly! /s It's a good job I did to be honest, it's doing wonders for the algorithm with everyone commenting & complaining ;) ~ UP & 41% 0 S Q Lord Ronin, The Compassionate • 1 second ago @Factoyd it would appear that both my wife (a doctor/oncologist/palliative care consultant) and I, were taught differently to yourself? Is it possible that it's just another example of Americanisation of "foreign" languages and words that causes such confusion? I cannot recall any astronomers/scientists ever pronouncing it as CENTURI instead of CEN-TAU-RI / CEN-TOR-1. Whilst you might feel quite smug in using deliberate deception in order to justify comments and corrections, I’m surprised you would admit it! Are you so lacking in confidence that you fear for your channel’s deceptive practices that you need to life/obfuscate the evidence? That you would admit to doing such an underhand method of increasing your channel's score is beyond pathetic but very understandable for someone that hasn't finished middle school yet.
@@darkmatter1152 exactly everybody seems to think Proxima b is habitable even though it’s less than 1/6th the distance Mercury is from the Sun, from Proxima Centauri, sure it MAY have liquid water, but red dwarfs are notorious for having enormous solar flares relative to their actual size, so unless it has a SUPER thick atmosphere (like Venus) that planet would get bombarded with so much deadly radiation, even though it’s a red dwarf, the planet would still receive way more ultraviolet, x-rays, and gamma rays than earth does
You could only travel through space as energy so you would need two gateways at the starting and end point so you can only teleport to a point where you already have a gateway where you get converted from energy into mass.
That is not necessarily correct, it depends of other conditions, for example in the Dead Sea there is almost no life because there is too much salt so it does not have the necessary conditions to support life.
Mate water is literally everywhere in the universe, you cant go anywhere without encountering insane amounts of water. Even in our solar system most bodies have water on them. Earth has water, theres water on the moon, on mars, on asteroids, alot of jupiters and saturns moons are almost entirely made of water, pluto has water on them....
solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/voyager-1/in-depth --- NASA's own website states "The Oort Cloud is the most distant region in our solar system" & "if we define our solar system as the Sun and everything that primarily orbits the Sun, Voyager 1 will remain within the confines of the solar system until it emerges from the Oort cloud in another 14,000 to 28,000 years".
@@zecprgva1322 Even if we don't have direct evidence, the maths still say that it is highly likely that it exists. This may not sound like enough proof, but that is actually also how Neptune was discovered. Neptune (at that time at least) was too far away to see with telescopes, but by studying the orbit of Uranus, we could predict that there has to be a planet beyond that. The same is currently happening with the hypothetical planet 9.
Every day it makes me so sad that I was born in a time like this. I’d do anything to go to a time in human history in which going to a planet in another galaxy for a weekend vacation was just a normal thing to do.
A beautiful fact mentioned in the Qur'an about water that water came from space. One of the signs that Qur'an is the book from Allah. And We sent down water from the heaven in proper quantity, and we made Earth is dwelling, and We are Able to take it away. [Quran 23.18]
I’m so intrigued just by how vast and big this “universe” really is … and if we could zoom tf out and see it in its entirety just what exactly what would we be looking at.. I wish we had the technology to do such.
Actually, although it is true that Olympus Mons is the tallest volcano, it is not the tallest mountain. The tallest mountain in the solar system is known as Rheasilvia, on the asteroid/protoplanet Vesta. It's roughly 100m taller than Olympus Mons.
Call me crazy but I firmly believe when we achieve the technology to reach Proxima Centauri I think we will come across some sort of sentient life wether it be humanoid or an animal of some sort it could be a groundbreaking discovery so honestly I’m all about the idea but like he said it would take a long time to reach it and we would need really advanced technology so I might never see the day but at least I can dream of what’s possible there
Voyager 1 was reported to have left the solar system a couple years ago. It's already left, it might leave in 28,000 years, who can say? As far as leaving the solar system, Voyager 1 (and 2) have left the "planetary" portion of the solar system but they have yet to clear the vast oort cloud. Perhaps the given definition of the solar system includes this distance? Strange to contemplate that the distance to the nearest star is only ~4-5x the extent of the solar system... Assuming similar extents from other stars, ITS extent is 4-5x the size of its solar system. That said, proxima centaury is "only" ~14,000 years away.😮
To simplify whether Voyager has crossed our solar system or not.... These systems are intertwined i.e. they share areas which they define as "theirs". So simply if the voyager were to "almost" exit our solar system, it'll already be halfway in the other one.
Am I the only one who is fascinated by the things that we know that are out there in the universe . I just can’t imagine how different life could be at the other side of the universe
That Water Region in universe is mentioned in our Religion Books ... The Third Avatar Of Lord Vishnu .. The Varaha Avatar Saves Earth From the Ocean .. And it is written in our books Million Years Ago ...
Science is best navigated with fact and reality, rather than fiction and fantasy. I enjoyed this healthy dose of fact and reality, even though it will undoubtedly "trigger" or otherwise "threaten" the intellectually delicate minds of faithful fans of fiction and fantasy.
Yup. And people think the solution is electric cars and solar panels. More digging and polluting for finite metals that break down after a short period of time. We're quite screwed on our current trend.
Imagine all that water collecting together into some kind of planet of water or uniform body…a whole mini universe of just a dark abyss of water, you could swim millions of miles and never find an escape or Worser…who knows what might be living in that dark space of water .
***VOYAGER 1 SOURCE***: solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/voyager-1/in-depth/
Quote: "if we define our solar system as the Sun and everything that primarily orbits the Sun, Voyager 1 will remain within the confines of the solar system until it emerges from the Oort cloud in another 14,000 to 28,000 years".
Also interesting AMA with the scientists and engineers that actually worked on the Voyager craft: www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/1m9wke/were_scientists_and_engineers_on_nasas_voyager/
"It's a very fine point and many people don't realize the Oort cloud is in interstellar space AND it's considered part of the solar system. We knew many media would make the error and we tried to make it clear in interviews. And you're right -- none of our materials say we've exited the solar system". - NASAJPL, OP of the AMA.
The black hole picture is fake.
@@Only_God_Is_Allah_SWT No it's not.
I was about to say, I thought that voyager 1 is technically the first man made thing to go interstellar right? Even though it is only in the oort cloud.
@@Only_God_Is_Allah_SWT Source: I’ve been there
Then why scientists are saying voyager 1 has entered the Stellar space leaving the atmosphere of our solar system
Don't let nestle touch that water
lmao
💀
Lol 💀
raising awareness in the least likely places. that's good stuff right there.
lol 💀
This is something I'd watch for hours
people seem to be liking this one, will be doing more space videos for sure :) I also have a longer space fact video - th-cam.com/video/OMQzQ5VW888/w-d-xo.html (focusing on shorts for now though since youtube only push shorts for new channels atm)
@@Lloyd-Smith I'll give it a watch mate, thanks
@@SnakierElm62 0lpplllllol0l0lplplllplplll0ll0l0lpl0lll0l0l
llpppl
@@Lloyd-Smith hi it'd be better if you give more info like the first one, I wanna know which region of space has that much water rather than just knowing that there's a region of space that has a lot of water
@@f2pain383 I always put all the sources in the description. Evidently nobody reads that though, so will pin them in the comments from now on. The water is surrounding a quasar 12 billion light years away^^
the scary thing about Olympus mons is that its so tall its sticking out of mars you’ll legit be in space if you climb to the top of that thing
Just jump up and see what happens at the top
@@jimmylim5015 just because there’s no atmosphere, does not mean there is no gravity
@@bow2fsm that would be a hyperbole cause I already know that
That why I believe there was life in mars before and something happen that made that carter because that kind of peak doesn't form simply by how our mountain are formed on Earth.
@@jimmylim5015 gravity exists everywhere, the reason objects in space “float” is because they are all falling, but since there is no air to create drag, gravity affects all objects the same regardless of mass, so 2 objects falling at the same velocity would not be moving at all relative to each other, technically the Earth is falling around the sun, it just has so much sideways velocity (and there’s no air to remove it) that it “misses” the sun as it constantly falls towards it
Fun fact: Voyager 1 launched in 1977, (46 years) traveling roughly 38 thousand miles an hour, the farthest man made object humans have. Yet light would catch it in just 22 hours.
22 hours and 3 minutes 😂, but that's crazy.
And even the speed of light sometimes feels slow.
With that being said it would take 2.5 million LIGHT YEARS to get to andromeda the nearest galaxy. Space is insane to think about
Didn’t they cut it off?
@@professorx3060 Everything is mostly relative. Yes, light actually is "slow" relative to the vast Universe, but to our little planet Earth, light "cruises" pretty fast.
Fun fact: Pluto hasn't completed a single orbit of the sun since it's discovery in 1930. It will complete one orbit in 2178.
That’s pretty cool. Thanks for sharing.
Factz
What about the 9th planet that after Pluto that nobody found yet
That's crazy
Oh dang I’ll be dead asf 💀
Fun Fact: The Sun has no fire on it. Fire needs oxygen to form, since there is no oxygen in space, fire can't form. It may look like fire, but it is actually plasma.
The Sun has oxygen and there is oxygen in the space also
@@lucianog5430Your mom didn't have enough oxygen at birth
Sun probably has oxygen atoms, but probably not oxygen gas, and probably not hydrogen gas. Fire requires air (O2), fuel (that can be a lot of things), and heat (that is removing heat faster than something can oxidize). Oxidation, which is what we know as fire, probably doesnt happen in, or on stars. Yes, we observe plasma, and yes oxygen is in the sun. I think its so hot and dense, you have a soup of elements that cannot form bonds, and are smashed together with photons, electrons, and neutrons taking millions of years to reach the surface, or maybe never at all.
Biggest clown argument@@lucianog5430
and yet there is No fire coming from the sun. NDT said near the same thing, it's not actual fire.
Proxima Centauri is the star, the closest system is Alpha Centauri
true
Thank you!
Lost in space
@@robinsingh0019 ?
@@publicstaticvoid1010 Netflix series "lost in space" based on alfa centauri
Olympus Mons is an interesting mountain. It's the tallest in the solar system, but if one was to walk up the mountain they would find it rather easy to do. It gradually builds up elevation but the incline has no effect. A person could walk all the way up without feeling that they ever left the ground.
The lack of severe weather patterns helps too. The temperature and lack of oxygen… not so much.
You don't usually leave the ground when walking up a mountain.
@@OneBiasedOpinion there's crazy dust storms on Mars most of the time reducing visibility to a few feet and the highest winds are recorded to be about 60 mph which can easily sent you flying due to reduced gravity (of course the higher you get the less it affects you because Mars atmosphere is very thin), lack of oxygen? Mars doesn't have a breathable atmosphere to begin with you would have to climb it using a pressurised suit that could keep you both warm enough and with enough oxygen, did y'all ever took into account the fact that it's on Mars and not on Earth?
@@Demons972 I know there’s little to no oxygen on Mars. Hence my _very sarcastic_ remark about the lack thereof would not be helpful in climbing that mountain.
@@Demons972The atmosphere is so thin it would not blow you over. It's like 1% as dense as ours.
You really gotta crush my interstellar traveling dreams like that
No its possible we can make much faster spacecraft and with life extension we can just chill.
we are working on it
@@user-zs8eg4mu8t thank you
@@NineSeptims our grand children might have vacations on Mars some day in their lifetime. Idk if humans will ever see another galaxy though. The milky way is far too massive.
Hey bro, let's invent smth
"Why do wanna become an astronaut?"
*Because I want to discover things humanity is not able to*
Why I want to study neuroscience
Cause the answers are right inside our brain
The brain has a direct connection with the universe
Voyager has been traveling for years at a high speed and it's still has gotten nowhere lol that's crazy. It's hard to wrap your head around how big space actually is
Facts 💯
It's left our solar system, I'm not sure what he means when he says it would take 28,000 years to exit the solar system
@@levilively8643 yea I know but it's still relatively close for the speed and time it's been traveling.
@@levilively8643 Voyager has NOT left the solar system yet. They entered Interstellar space, meaning they exited the heliopause, which is the suns magnetic influence. The space weather changes there, the particle densities are different and the radiation too is different.
This is still WAY inside the solar system though. The oort cloud stretches up to 1ly from the sun, and that will take alot of time to pass through.
@@MrMegaMetroid NASA has stated that the Voyager 1 space craft exited the Solar System on August 25, 2012. I believe that the estimate of the size of the Solar System of 22 light hours, which is about 159 Astronomical Units, is a reasonable estimate
Voyager 1 and 2 are both outside of our solar system. Does that mean I am ... 28k years old?
That’s what I thought. That’s why I came to the comments
I guess it takes 28K years to travel to exit or milkyway
No you guys didn't get it it means it takes 28k thousands of years for it to exit *OUR* Solar system
And traveling to the closest Solar system like ours will take us 80k thousands of years to Reach it
@@abhishekgorle8068 in order for the voyager to go outside the milky way our Galaxy it will take millions if not billions and trillions of years before it do so
They are beyond the orbit of Pluto, but that is still very, VERY far from outside the solar system. They still have to go through the Oort Cloud, which stretches up to halfway between the sun and Alpha Centauri, or roughly 2.1 lightyears away.
And here we humans are stuck in jealousy, hate and ego as if we are something.
We need God!
I agree that we're stuck in ego and hate. But humans are more rare than everything in space...more rare than diamonds, more rare than gold, more rare than black holes, more rare than galaxies. We are definitely something, something incredible.
@@BearLovesAlland we kill eachother,ironic
Simply mind boggling!
Space time is crazy. Extreme distances and things that travel at Extreme speeds
Fun fact: the deeper you get into Jupiter, the higher the pressure gets, so eventually it gets so high to the point that the gas turns into liquid and forms an ocean of hydrogen and Helium. So basically, Jupiter has the largest ocean in the solar system.
I just recently learned this about a yr ago
Fact: it is impossible for a man to get an erection in deep space. The pressure that pushes on his gland will keep the blood from entering the cavity. This is a known fact in the medical world. That's why you've never, ever heard of an astronaut whacking off.
I didnt know it was pressure, I always thought it was just temperature. wow
as if you or anyone else would know. are yall really so smart that you've lost your common sense
@@robbiehiatt9966 did someone spit in your coffee this morning? Calm down, and that’s a true fact. Go research it if you don’t believe me.
6 year old Me being told that the sun will blow up in 4billion years:😟
No it will turn into two a red giant and in golf the earth in 4.5billion years💀
@@tanyavega4969 then turn into a white dwarf and fade away
And as children before, we were all worried 💀
4 year old me after knowing that a mega asteroid hit earth
65 million years ago: 😮😢
10 year old me knowing that an asteroid *might* hit earth in 2029: 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀🤯🤯🤯☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️
Another fact: they managed to get another photo of a black hole, which is Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole in the center of our own Milky Way galaxy.
Was that the James Webb telescope?
@@HappyMatt12345 No. It’s actually pretty cool how they took this image. Instead of one telescope, this was a joint effort by dozens of observatory-sized telescopes, all spanning across the globes’ surface, which work in tandem to comprise an Earth-sized telescope. By combining their observation capabilities, they were able to get an image of something so unbelievably far away from us - which even then is already so pixelated. It’s a joint effort called Event Horizon. Look it up for their info and a more detailed explanation.
Atoms are the basic building blocks of matter. Comprising a nucleus of protons and neutrons, surrounded by electrons in orbit, they form elements. These microscopic particles interact to create molecules and substances, governing the properties and behaviors of all materials in the universe.
Voyager left our solar system and into interstellar space like 10 years ago
Another fun fact: you can tune a piano but you can't tuna fish. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I like to eat tuna fish but not piano so this was only half as funny
I don't understand the joke
@@viktorpettersson9975 ok
@@tango1k ok
King kai: 🥴😖🤣🤣🤣
I’d like to hear a little bit more about that region of space that contains all that water😮
links in the description^^ it surrounds a quasar, 12 billion light years away
@Jeff -66 You really thought there's liquid water floating in space somewhere?
This universe is terrifying
It's fake. Bible says, there's just a figment acting between earth and heaven.
Yet Fascinating
GODs creation he’s definitely an artist !
@@therealmontiecarlo but where is he?
@@therealmontiecarlo Which god? There's thousands of god myths.
Cooles Video. Amazing!
That’s so beyond me yet so fascinating
The funny thing about taking 80k years to reach the next solar system is that by the time we get there humans would have developed faster space travel. Putting us in a predicament
I will NOT believe
Another fact: Olympus mons doesn't stop growing as every time it erupts (its a shield volcano sp it erupts from the sides not top) It freezes and grows wider and a bit taller. Also isn't it active right now or no?
Nice, I didn't know that^^ cheers :) Can't find a definitive answer to whether it is active or not though, most seem to suggest it could be.
@@Lloyd-Smith I would look that up to double check it, before accepting it as a fact....
As far as I know, Mars does not now have any active geology, such as techtonic plates, or anything else that could send lava to the surface.
Remember, those channels and riverbeds have been there for so long, that all the land that was here on Earth at that time has since been subjunced back into the mantle, melted down and recycled.
There is no ground on Earth as old as the ancient regions of Mars.
Three or four Billion years is a long time, if the geology there was dynamic enough that it _could_ destroy those ancient river beds with volcanic activity, then it would have done so by now.
In my opinion.
I remember reading something about 2 years ago about how they found some evidence that it could still be active but it's very weak
Good question. My first reaction says no.
Facts are facts but technically Olympus mons isn't the biggest when you measure from the center of the planet. In fact chilli's mountain range is double any other mountain in the system. Science is amazing learn new things every day.
Our Solar System takes 225 to 250 years to orbit the Milky way at 140 miles a second. 😳 Wrap your head around that one. 🤯
Do you mean 225-250 million years?
225-250 Million
Funnly🎉🎉😊🎉
it's in millions , so last time we were at same place , Dinosaurs were just in their early days.
250 million years
Voyager 1 has been in interstellar space since 2012. The Heliopause is the cutoff of the Sun's direct presence meaning solar winds and the boundary of its magnetosphere. At this boundary the solar winds' presence is overwhelmed by interstellar plasma.
Gravitational influence from the Sun extends to the edge of the universe (it's just really weak there) so the boundary of where the Sun's gravity is not affecting celestial bodies or causing things to orbit has not been used as a boundary for "interstellar space" in traditional views.
Now considering gravity, the argument of where the solar system ends is much more pertinent. Oort cloud objects are in the solar system as they orbit the Sun. However, they come from interstellar space, enter the Heliopause then leave the Heliopause and enter interstellar space again.
Fun fact: if we learn how to effectively use solar sails we could get to Proxima Centauri in around 20 years
I don't think we will develop it in next 100 years.
Doubt that solar sails can give such speed, at least realistically
Another fact: if Olympus mods were to be on earth and you some how made it to the top you would reach space
I think im not sure
Not quite^^ depending who you ask, space is either 62 or 50 miles away vertically. Still pretty high up though :)
@@Lloyd-Smith oh alright my bad. Thanks for the correction I appreciate:)
You're welcome :)
Earth is bigger then mars same with the atmosphere
It’s unfathomable how vast it is out there. Those spacecraft are going tens of thousands of miles every hour and yet have so far to go.
Thanks for the information ✌️
make more videos i like you videos really it is very informative
cheers :)
@@Lloyd-Smith ✌️❤️
I just imagine people from the other galaxy be like:
‘There might be other people in this Universe because one of our neighbouring galaxy is milky way’
They wouldn't call it the milky way though. That would be cool if they somehow did
@@ManOfPillowDoom I think it’s just a joke
The voyager one currently is in interstellar Space
It hasn't cross our solar system yet
Since it's in interstellar space, it has exited the solar system.
@@NJgateway no it has not exited our solar system it needs to cross the oart cloud
@@orenofficial4410 I think it has.
At least mostly.
The debris from our sun stretches a third of the way to Proxima Centauri,
So the issue may depend on where you draw the line.
The oort cloud is a huge ice circle around the solar system and is technically part of the Sun's orbit. So, Voyager 1&2 have to cross the Oort Cloud
There’s a region of space that contains trillions of pints of beer-not kidding, it is a vast cloud of alcohol molecules…
Oh, I haven't heard of that one. I know of the massive cloud of methyl alcohol though^^
I heard of that place....didn't Garth Brooks do a song about that? Something about "down at the Oasis?"
“Alcohol is discovered in space”
10 minutes later: Ireland starts a space program
@@bezklavikaszekminmespukzk9961 and don't forget England
@@philippmuller-litz401or germany
**Africans drooling**
“Actually we wuz water kingdom in space”
😂😂😂😂
imagine some day we figure out, that just like we figured out there is a microscopic world operating all around us at all times,that all these galaxies are just like the neutrons and electrons in an atom and the universe is the atom??
Can't wrap my mind around the size of the universe - 😯
Humans can’t quite comprehend the concept of infinity.
Wait until you hear about Graham's number (if you haven't already). A number so big that it can't physically be written down, the universe is simply too small to contain it :)
Observable is 97 billion light-years but it's endless.
@@nickh2053 not infinite
Olympus Mons is actually poking out of Mars’s atmosphere, so if u were to hike it, u would actually hike into space
There are concepts that would cut the travel time way down but still very very very far
[Badlands Chugs had entered the chat] LOL
28000 years???
Damn we could use the ricochet effect used by the voyager and put the astronauts to stasis sleep while covering that much distance😲
what would be the point of sending 12 people on a 28000 year journey. And that is just leaving the solar system, it has to get to another one and get inside it.
By the time they got anywhere we would have colonized it with the tech coming in the next 27000 years.
When we can travel to the moon in a day we will be ready to explore space, and then only our solar system for a long time.
@@streamofconsciousness5826 not to mention we have no clue if there’s any promising planets in said system, it would be a pretty big waste of time and money to send astronauts on a 28,000 year long mission just to land on some barren rock and not find anything, if humans were really desperate enough to embark on a mission THAT long, we’d have to 100% know that there’s a planet that can support Earth life just as well, if not better than Earth can (very unlikely as we evolved specifically to survive on Earth and nowhere else)
And there are still people on our tiny planet that believe THEY are the center of the universe. 😂
Oh you know my ex too?
U mean like Putin lmao
Well, technically we are in the center because since there is no actual center, everything is at the center of the universe!
@@PlanetaryGuineaPigmore like the other way round
Obsessed 😍🤟
Very good information.
Fun fact: the mountain on Mars is actually a volcano
Fun fact: Volcanoes are also considered as mountains
@@HowdyJ.Marston right 😂😂
Fun fact: ur mom is bigger than the mountain
And that volcano is not really violent, but a very gentle giant
Don’t bother spending time on this very new channel. The person that runs it has admitted to placing deliberate misinformation/mistakes in the narrative in order to stimulate the algorithm placing the channel far higher in the rankings than it deserves - every comment helps in this regard, showing the dodgy behaviour of a typical middle school child.
Here’s a screenshot of a recent reply. It is so sad that anyone is ok cheating the system.
Comments
Highlighted reply
Factoyd • 1 day ago (edited)
I didn't mess it up & pronounced it perfectly! /s It's a good job I did to be honest, it's doing wonders for the algorithm with everyone commenting & complaining!
~ UP & 41% 0
S Q
Lord Ronin, The Compassionate • 1 second ago
@Factoyd it would appear that both my wife (a doctor/oncologist/palliative care consultant) and I, were taught differently to yourself? Is it possible that it's just another example of Americanisation of "foreign" languages and words that causes such confusion? I cannot recall any astronomers/scientists ever pronouncing it as CEN-TURI instead of CEN-TAU-RI / CEN-TOR-I.
Whilst you might feel quite smug in using deliberate deception in order to justify comments and corrections, I’m surprised you would admit it! Are you so lacking in confidence that you fear for your channel’s deceptive practices that you need to life/obfuscate the evidence?
That you would admit to doing such an underhand method of increasing your channel's score is beyond pathetic but very understandable for someone that hasn't finished middle school yet.
I suggest you to use Interstellar theme as it would be relatable and it would also fit your heartwarming sound:)
He does in some shorts
@@ManOfPillowDoom this was my first video;)
Hmm good idea, that theme is brilliant! Not sure about copyright though^^
Space Facts #2: th-cam.com/users/shortswl0kAv34UH8
The black hole images are all fake.
Stop deceiving people.
EHT(Event Horizon Telescope) actually took picture of the black hole Sagittarius A(black hole at the centre of milky way) and took another picture of M87(Messier 87) galaxy. Both of them are not combined.
Technically the event horizon telescope is more than one telescope spread out all over the globe because you’d basically need an earth sized telescope to see an object that big that far away so that was the next best thing
Proxima Centauri is the name of the star no? Alpha centauri is the name of the system
Yes it's a trinary star system with planets but zero life. Imagine the radiation they put out and gravitational pull.
Don’t bother spending time on this very new channel. The person that runs it has admitted to placing deliberate misinformation/mistakes in the narrative in order to stimulate the algorithm placing the channel far higher in the rankings than it deserves - every comment helps in this regard, showing the dodgy behaviour of a typical middle school child.
Comments
Highlighted reply
Factoyd • 1 day ago (edited)
I didn't mess it up & pronounced it perfectly! /s It's a good job I did to be honest, it's doing wonders for the algorithm with everyone commenting & complaining ;)
~ UP & 41% 0
S Q
Lord Ronin, The Compassionate • 1 second ago
@Factoyd it would appear that both my wife (a doctor/oncologist/palliative care consultant) and I, were taught differently to yourself? Is it possible that it's just another example of Americanisation of "foreign" languages and words that causes such confusion? I cannot recall any astronomers/scientists ever pronouncing it as CENTURI instead of CEN-TAU-RI / CEN-TOR-1.
Whilst you might feel quite smug in using deliberate deception in order to justify comments and corrections, I’m surprised you would admit it! Are you so lacking in confidence that you fear for your channel’s deceptive practices that you need to life/obfuscate the evidence?
That you would admit to doing such an underhand method of increasing your channel's score is beyond pathetic but very understandable for someone that hasn't finished middle school yet.
@@darkmatter1152 exactly everybody seems to think Proxima b is habitable even though it’s less than 1/6th the distance Mercury is from the Sun, from Proxima Centauri, sure it MAY have liquid water, but red dwarfs are notorious for having enormous solar flares relative to their actual size, so unless it has a SUPER thick atmosphere (like Venus) that planet would get bombarded with so much deadly radiation, even though it’s a red dwarf, the planet would still receive way more ultraviolet, x-rays, and gamma rays than earth does
I F***ing love science.
Where is that region thought
12 billion light years away, surrounding a quasar^^ (info is in the description - now I've fixed the link)
@@Lloyd-Smith uh ok i didn't see the description thanks
@@Lloyd-Smith great content too keep it up
@@happyeclipse3255 no worries :)
@@happyeclipse3255 cheers mate :)
Unmatch this facts 🔥🔥
Space is rrrreeeeaaaallllllyyyyyy fascinating
Some day, men might develop a portal to travel through the universe without needing 80,000 years to get there. 😅
You could only travel through space as energy so you would need two gateways at the starting and end point so you can only teleport to a point where you already have a gateway where you get converted from energy into mass.
And some day a monkey might fly out your...
as long there's water...there's life
This isn’t 100% true, but it isn’t 100% false, it depends on the water really
@@vkampf. As long as there's water... there's life... probably.
There you go, the statement is 100% true, and 0% false.
That is not necessarily correct, it depends of other conditions, for example in the Dead Sea there is almost no life because there is too much salt so it does not have the necessary conditions to support life.
Mate water is literally everywhere in the universe, you cant go anywhere without encountering insane amounts of water. Even in our solar system most bodies have water on them. Earth has water, theres water on the moon, on mars, on asteroids, alot of jupiters and saturns moons are almost entirely made of water, pluto has water on them....
इसकी शुरवात से वारह अवतार याद आ गया ।
Yes
“Using technology currently available”
*Shows space shuttle*
Great explanations
voyager 1 and 2 have already left our solar system...
solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/voyager-1/in-depth --- NASA's own website states "The Oort Cloud is the most distant region in our solar system" & "if we define our solar system as the Sun and everything that primarily orbits the Sun, Voyager 1 will remain within the confines of the solar system until it emerges from the Oort cloud in another 14,000 to 28,000 years".
No it's still within our solar system
@@Lloyd-Smith Oort Cloud is a hypothetical place. It was never really proven it even exists
@@orenofficial4410 no way
@@zecprgva1322 Even if we don't have direct evidence, the maths still say that it is highly likely that it exists. This may not sound like enough proof, but that is actually also how Neptune was discovered. Neptune (at that time at least) was too far away to see with telescopes, but by studying the orbit of Uranus, we could predict that there has to be a planet beyond that. The same is currently happening with the hypothetical planet 9.
How cool is it ... just imagine someone in the parallel universe talking about thousands of years to reach to Milky Way..
Proxima centauri be like: 80,000 saal ki doori h 80,000 ki ,Tera poora fuel jaiga isme
Every day it makes me so sad that I was born in a time like this. I’d do anything to go to a time in human history in which going to a planet in another galaxy for a weekend vacation was just a normal thing to do.
80,000 years seriously?? This is TH-cam at its best
Fun fact about Proxima centauri, it has 3 planets: one about the size of Mars, one about the size of Earth, and one about the size of Neptune!
I have never felt so small in my life
A beautiful fact mentioned in the Qur'an about water that water came from space. One of the signs that Qur'an is the book from Allah.
And We sent down water from the heaven in proper quantity, and we made Earth is dwelling, and We are Able to take it away.
[Quran 23.18]
trust in comets and asteroids, not false immortal dudes
@@philippmuller-litz401 no proof that immortal dudes don't exist out there, but Allah is a pagan moon god
Subhanallah
Multiple telescopes worked together to take that picture of a black hole.
SPACE IS INFINITE
Fun fact voyager one is actually 22 light hours away by now
I’m so intrigued just by how vast and big this “universe” really is … and if we could zoom tf out and see it in its entirety just what exactly what would we be looking at.. I wish we had the technology to do such.
There is so much information in this one short ♥️
Supposedly nuclear blasting behind a space shuttle would make the trip to P Centauri about 70 years
Actually, although it is true that Olympus Mons is the tallest volcano, it is not the tallest mountain. The tallest mountain in the solar system is known as Rheasilvia, on the asteroid/protoplanet Vesta. It's roughly 100m taller than Olympus Mons.
Call me crazy but I firmly believe when we achieve the technology to reach Proxima Centauri I think we will come across some sort of sentient life wether it be humanoid or an animal of some sort it could be a groundbreaking discovery so honestly I’m all about the idea but like he said it would take a long time to reach it and we would need really advanced technology so I might never see the day but at least I can dream of what’s possible there
Nostalgia from the Space Shuttle in this video! ❤
Voyager 1 was reported to have left the solar system a couple years ago.
It's already left, it might leave in 28,000 years, who can say?
As far as leaving the solar system, Voyager 1 (and 2) have left the "planetary" portion of the solar system but they have yet to clear the vast oort cloud. Perhaps the given definition of the solar system includes this distance?
Strange to contemplate that the distance to the nearest star is only ~4-5x the extent of the solar system...
Assuming similar extents from other stars, ITS extent is 4-5x the size of its solar system.
That said, proxima centaury is "only" ~14,000 years away.😮
Mind blowing video
cheers mate :)
@@Lloyd-Smith Expert physicists and astronomers have debunked these black hole images long ago.
They are all fake.
Are you kidding me voyager1 has left our solar system
Not according to the people that actually worked on the craft. Read the pinned comment^^
OMG HE REPLIED
I'm so happy that my algorithm shows me these videos now.
And again.
"There is a region in space that contains 140 trillion times as much water than there is in earth's oceans" The way you worded it broke my head
To simplify whether Voyager has crossed our solar system or not....
These systems are intertwined i.e. they share areas which they define as "theirs".
So simply if the voyager were to "almost" exit our solar system, it'll already be halfway in the other one.
Clip editor: How random you want information about the space in this clip to be?
Person with idea to create this clip: Yes
Us: *The closest system to us is Proxima Centauri*
Factoyd: *The closest system to us is Proxima Cenchuri*
Yes I liked my own comment.
Science is so cool!
Am I the only one who is fascinated by the things that we know that are out there in the universe . I just can’t imagine how different life could be at the other side of the universe
That Water Region in universe is mentioned in our Religion Books ... The Third Avatar Of Lord Vishnu .. The Varaha Avatar Saves Earth From the Ocean .. And it is written in our books Million Years Ago ...
Science is best navigated with fact and reality, rather than fiction and fantasy. I enjoyed this healthy dose of fact and reality, even though it will undoubtedly "trigger" or otherwise "threaten" the intellectually delicate minds of faithful fans of fiction and fantasy.
All love and balanced just right down here
The clostest star is 4.25 light years away
The Sun: Bruh
obviously it excludes our own sun...
Cool. Also did you know the fastest moving star in the milky way is the star with the biggest planet.
So far on the TH-cam algorithms, I am loving Chef tips and outer space😊
And *CATS* 😽
Well, it looks like we're going to be here for a while.
Yup. And people think the solution is electric cars and solar panels. More digging and polluting for finite metals that break down after a short period of time.
We're quite screwed on our current trend.
Where do yall get these numbers from
Space incredible
Imagine all that water collecting together into some kind of planet of water or uniform body…a whole mini universe of just a dark abyss of water, you could swim millions of miles and never find an escape or Worser…who knows what might be living in that dark space of water .