In earth, there are lifeforms what dont need any oxygen But the common in every life in earth is the water is crucial for them The rules of physic is the same in the universe, so possibly every lifeforms outside of earth too need water
There are some other compounds that could potentially be used as a solvent instead of water (liquid methane, for instance), but it is in fact only a faint possibility, since water is pretty unique as for its chemical properties.
For all we know life, as it exists on earth, may be the rarest type of life in the universe. Life elsewhere could be so radically different that we may not even recognize it as life. We keep looking for something like what we are used to here. The chances are that life elsewhere in the universe will be very, very different to what most expect.
So trees are not life, just some random generated biome structure? You seem a bit confused, my friend: it is true that different complex life form might have some analogies (= similar attributes, for example: arms to climb/swing), but here we are not talking about macroscopic attributes, but more about chemistry, I think. In fact, in order to be "unrecognizable", other life forms would need to have a completely different chemical composition and metabolism. Then again, despite this being possible, the more you study chemistry and biology, the more you understand how some particular compounds do possess very distinct if not unique characteristics that makes them the best candidates for developing self-sustaining and sel-reproducing machineries (life forms) (for example: water, carbon...).
Reece B thanks for the reply. Well no one really knows. I agree there could be similar forms and structures in other life forms, depending again on their chemistry: beings that take their energy from stellar radiation ("sun") aka "plants" would possibly evolve some forms that resemble trees or other kinds of stemmed plants on earth in order to compete for light. With the right conditions of gravity and atmospheric pressure, flying beings would likely develop some wing-structures. Life in the water would most probably evolve different types of swimming appendages and so on and so forth. But in case of very different conditions on an alien world (chemistry, gravity, light...), then life forms there would probably evolve some pretty unique adaptations that we hardly see on earth, if at all. Anyway, if you look through all the different life forms that exist and existed on earth throughout the million of years you can find an incredible amount of variation but also some recurring structures that evolved several times in different groups and in different ages to fullfil the same or similar function. So, I don't really know what I want to say, maybe just that some forms are more likely, but at the end of the story, pretty much everything is possible.
Life on Venus and Mars doesn’t have to be complex. With enough time, the life would be able to evolve to the harsh conditions to make their way up or down to the surface.
I wonder if complex life forms would be possible in the atmosphere of a gas planet. I imagine bird-like creatures with huge wings that spend their whole life floating in an atmosphere layer that has the right pressure and temperature, even sleeping and reproducing while flying and eating from floating balloon plants.
That's right I have studied it . If a gas giant is at the right temperature has an ozone layer and right pressure it could be habitable with lifeforms just like the ones you mentioned
There could be life out there thats evolved to withstand extreme heat and gravity etc. This is life AS WE KNOW IT. And face it, we know next to nothing about the universe. And you totally deserve more subscribers. Youre one of the few people I click the bell on. :D
Wel, the engineers who built the perseverance rover put all their bacteria from their hands all over the rover, so technically there is bacteria from earth that has existed in mars
@@EricVLWrestling They wore protective gear. So there is no way for it to contaminate mars. if it would be contaminated they would terminate it before launch.
I'd say the best chances for life in the solar system would be: 0. Earth (Obv) 1. Europa 2. Encaeledus 3. Triton 4. Other Icy Moons of Gas Giants With Subsurface Liquid Water 5. Pluto 6. Charon 7. Titan 8. Mars 9. Random Comets 10. Ceres 11. Random Asteroids 12. Uranus/Neptune 13. Jupiter/Saturn 14. Earth's Moon 15. Mercury 16. Venus 17. Literal Empty Space 18. The Sun
such a vast and empty void of darkness and death in every direction surrounding our own perfect blue bubble, not a single sign of life in what stretches out before us forever, what we can observe is beautiful and terrifying, if only from our own orb of absolute beauty and balance beyond words, a cycle of creation as old as life itself, that we have managed to disrupt in just 100 years
Dreksler your videos are the reason why I study space, you have gave me this valuable information that I want to do some explanations but we'll see. Thanks.
I often troll ppl but not you. Lol Your videos are really really good. They are informative and interesting as well as thought provoking. Great work Sir!
Uranus And Neptune Are Kinda Both Ice And Gas Giant To Be Honest why are like a billion of my comments written Like This? It hurts my eyes looking at it. Also Uranus is a ice giant. I probably added they are both ice giant and gas because my 1st grade level humour made me want to make a Uranus joke but i didn't want to seem like I was. I don't even know tf I'm saying right now I'm just ranting
@@CN-wt2bj Without that planet's "odd" name, there would be only half the jokes in Asstronomy!! They'd probably be about assteroids or something else! ;D lol
Carl Segan theorized about organisms that could live in the atmospheres of gas planets such as Jupiter, he described creatures that could be several kilometers in size and remain aloft though heating the hydrogen in their bodies.
What if that atmosphere is habitable for them? What if they can live in any hot or cold weather? What if they don't need oxyzen? What if we can't see them with our eyes or any equipment humans have invented till now?
I would never doubt the chance if life on hell..... “Life finds a way” There has never been a complete extinction of earth before... only most life destroyed and in some cases only complex destroyed.
There might be ice-like creatures on mercury, Cloud-like creatures on Venus, Rock creatures on Mars, Gas creatures on jupiter and etc... Each of them is living in differents condition and breathing different kind of gas.
I always watch your videos before I go to bed. Your voice, the content and the music makes me feel peaceful and puts me to sleep. Your videos are awesome. With love from India!
Earth's scientist: We can not be able to land on Neptune, it's too dangerous. Neptune's scientist: We can not be able to land on Earth, it's too dangerous.
You can't fly through gas giants because 1. they have so much pressure and radiation inside that no robots would even be able to get 1% of the way to the center, and 2. this pressure causes hydrogen to be liquid in the center of the planet. The gas giants hold together because of gravity. They are planets because they match the definition of planets: 1. they are round, 2. they have no debris like asteroids in their neighborhood, 3. they orbit the Sun, 4. they are way too small to kickstart fusion in their nucleus, so they are not weak stars, not even close
Mercy Peters: 1) You can't fly through a gas planet because it has a solid core 8:25 2) they are no planets, they are gas planets. GBE Smokes: 3) Jupiter could only be a sun if it had much more mass IIRC
what if there was really life in venus and mars but it ended, the universe is a big mystery crazy to think that life in venus existed way before us but they did not advance did not make it to another planet and just met their end.
There are also many moons, especially around Jupiter and Saturn, where life could develop. Also, liquid water is not the only way for life to emerge. It's possible that there are organisms which evolved differently.
Liquid water is an essential requirement for life on Earth because it functions as a solvent. It is capable of dissolving substances and enabling key chemical reactions in animal, plant and microbial cells. If water isn’t needed that would completely destroy all of our theories, which is why it’s most likely that water Is needed
Dear Derksler! I just subsribed to your videos in 2017,but since then I watched all of them on average like 4 times! I really like them and keep up the good work! Plus I don't know if you do videos abaut other solar sytems, but it would be verry interesting to see a longer video of the HD10180 sytem, coz it really looks like ours!
I live on earth and survive for like ever by doing absolutely nothing XD Oh also did you know the population here is more than 7 BILLION Fake Martians This is you guys 👽 ❌ 🙂✅
I am glad that you included Pluto as a planet. It was always considered a planet in the science books when I was in school back in the '90s, and should have never been removed. Not only is it the furthest planet from our Sun and is all alone way out there, but to remove it from its planet status just makes it worse.
Astrobiology is my favourite topic. My channel is all about it. I'm sharing this video on my astrobiology Facebook group. A fascinating video, with some thoughtful and reasonable speculations!
Comfortable or Earth like temperature and pressure doesn't equal possibility of life necessarily. What matters here is conditions that could allow for abiogenesis to happen. If panspermia is possible, then the only way I imagine the gas giants could have life is if some asteroid containing microorganisms from Earth, Venus or Mars (if these last 2 ever had life) fell on Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus or Neptune, and then they somehow survived and thrived, which is unlikely to say the least When life emerged on Earth, both the temperatures and pressures were not hospitable at all for today's life, the pressures were somewhat Venus-like, tens or a hundred times higher than today, and the temperatures were also very high anywhere in between 50 to even 200°C (since with pressure the boiling point of water increases) It's uncertain how or where life emerged exactly, but it could have been from hydrothermal vents in the ocean floor or, from geothermal fields inland, or near the beaches, mud pits... No one knows for sure. Point being, they only planets that have or likely HAD all of those conditions at the same time are Venus, Earth or Mars, though Venus is not a sure thing and it easily could have just been like it is now from the very beginning... And Mars could also have been more of an ice planet instead of a water planet, and the river beds could be glaciers, or they might have been of liquid CO2 instead of H2O which might not be a good solvent for life... Point being, it's way more complex and complicated than you suggest in the video, objects such as Mercury and the gas giants probably just can't have life unless, as I said, panspermia is possible and extremophile life was transferred from Earth to the poles of Mercury where there's ice and there might be liquid water... That said, if life DID originate in hydrothermal vents, there's almost no doubt that objects such as Europa, Titan, Enceladus, Pluto, etc. 100% have at least unicellular life, but if not, then Earth is alone and the only chance of surviving extraterrestrial life in our solar system would be Mars.
This is why they end every question with "life as we know it". I would say there is a better chance of finding life that lives differently from us than to find life that lives identically to us.
Now that I think of it, maybe the odds of cells or some form of them forming is very low. Like what are the odds that all the atoms somehow make cells, the chances are very low. But there might be some phenomenon that makes it happen.
Great! As always. May be a Worry in the Future when the first Astronaut (Explorer) finds these and they turn out to be Deadly to Humans if exposed???? Maybe do a story on that..... Keep up the Good Work.
It is interesting that, despite being further from the sun, Venus (the hottest planet in the Solar System) is still hotter than Mercury because of its dense atmosphere.
They say outside Earth there are uninhabitable places. Uninhabitable for Earth life like but life can be in an infinite ways not only as we know. Our planet is alive hosting life in its way, the Universe itself is alive, allowing all sorts of life to be prosperous. Till recently we had no clue about microscopic life and look like we refuse to see the macroscopic life in universe and other forms of life beyond our perception and reach.
I believe that simple chemistry will make prokaryotic life on any planet that has areas where water is liquid. But the jump to eukaryotic life will be much more difficult. On earth, it took earth at least 2 billion years of being a stable planet with oceans to make eukaryotes. And it seemed to require it to be an oxygen world, which involves photosynthesis. Which means that pretty much, none of these planets can get to eukaryotes, not even Europa. Now, titan might make life of different chemistry, and that is a whole new ball park.
I thought it's already been proven that life can exist in extreme conditions? If so then why do they only seem to focus on the goldy locks zone in searching for life?
maybe life evolves on different planets different ways, maybe those forms of life dont need water or oxygen
Sonourious Sonourious dude evolution is real
In earth, there are lifeforms what dont need any oxygen
But the common in every life in earth is the water is crucial for them
The rules of physic is the same in the universe, so possibly every lifeforms outside of earth too need water
Same thats what I thought
Thats my point
There are some other compounds that could potentially be used as a solvent instead of water (liquid methane, for instance), but it is in fact only a faint possibility, since water is pretty unique as for its chemical properties.
For all we know life, as it exists on earth, may be the rarest type of life in the universe. Life elsewhere could be so radically different that we may not even recognize it as life. We keep looking for something like what we are used to here. The chances are that life elsewhere in the universe will be very, very different to what most expect.
Graeme Lastname yes
The closest planet that has oxygen to our solar system is 4 light years away.
So trees are not life, just some random generated biome structure? You seem a bit confused, my friend: it is true that different complex life form might have some analogies (= similar attributes, for example: arms to climb/swing), but here we are not talking about macroscopic attributes, but more about chemistry, I think.
In fact, in order to be "unrecognizable", other life forms would need to have a completely different chemical composition and metabolism.
Then again, despite this being possible, the more you study chemistry and biology, the more you understand how some particular compounds do possess very distinct if not unique characteristics that makes them the best candidates for developing self-sustaining and sel-reproducing machineries (life forms) (for example: water, carbon...).
CapitanOdisseo dude cmon quit being cryptic, you know what people want to find when they look for life, that’s advanced niggas with brains
Reece B thanks for the reply.
Well no one really knows. I agree there could be similar forms and structures in other life forms, depending again on their chemistry: beings that take their energy from stellar radiation ("sun") aka "plants" would possibly evolve some forms that resemble trees or other kinds of stemmed plants on earth in order to compete for light. With the right conditions of gravity and atmospheric pressure, flying beings would likely develop some wing-structures. Life in the water would most probably evolve different types of swimming appendages and so on and so forth.
But in case of very different conditions on an alien world (chemistry, gravity, light...), then life forms there would probably evolve some pretty unique adaptations that we hardly see on earth, if at all.
Anyway, if you look through all the different life forms that exist and existed on earth throughout the million of years you can find an incredible amount of variation but also some recurring structures that evolved several times in different groups and in different ages to fullfil the same or similar function.
So, I don't really know what I want to say, maybe just that some forms are more likely, but at the end of the story, pretty much everything is possible.
I believe there's life on most planets, not everything needs the same conditions to live.
AlexTheGreatMC Yeah, life adapts and evolves in different environments.
I have been waiting for someone to point that out :P
AlexTheGreatMC ikr
I believe that life is not as rare as people say it is, I think that one in every 10 systems has life.
Same
Meanwhile on Venus....
Scientist: There might be life on Earth!
Crowd: But how?
Scientist: Water!
Crowd: **people cheering**
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
there is water on Venus. in the clouds.
Venusian imaginary researcher: but how can live develop without sulphuric acid? Every form of life uses an acid in his chemicals! Water is poisonous!
Venusian Skeptic: "How the fuck can life exist on earth with so few clouds and such low pressure? They would be too fragile to exist!"
😂😂
Life on Venus and Mars doesn’t have to be complex. With enough time, the life would be able to evolve to the harsh conditions to make their way up or down to the surface.
Life adapted in ways we can’t imagine
Jasmine Bear, I mean we can have an idea. We understand evolution and cell theory enough to make some accurate guesses.
BMAN488877
"Scientists" aren't a thing. Science = repeatable observations. Everything else is philosophy. Philosophy is not science.
BMAN488877 sillicon based life is possible but it is really really hard
Oli Freakin Davis yes
Oli Freakin Davis nice words
I wonder if complex life forms would be possible in the atmosphere of a gas planet. I imagine bird-like creatures with huge wings that spend their whole life floating in an atmosphere layer that has the right pressure and temperature, even sleeping and reproducing while flying and eating from floating balloon plants.
What if There are floating islands on sea like clouds?
@@moustachio05 like avatar-
That's right I have studied it . If a gas giant is at the right temperature has an ozone layer and right pressure it could be habitable with lifeforms just like the ones you mentioned
Carl Segan theorized about such organisms!
There could be life out there thats evolved to withstand extreme heat and gravity etc. This is life AS WE KNOW IT. And face it, we know next to nothing about the universe.
And you totally deserve more subscribers. Youre one of the few people I click the bell on. :D
could there be life on a hell planet like Venus that is adapted to these conditions, but then would be destroyed if put on Earth?
arte0021 most likely
The OreFossil395 FOSSILNATION special lungs? Lungs?! There cant be complex life forms on that hellhole
Our planet Earth was as Venus is today, when the planets was formed.
Is life, as we know it, awaiting to be formed at Venus?
ive been saying stuff like this for years great minds think alike
Chris Vibeswell great minds? Stfu who do you think you are?
Jesus your videos are good. I learn like 3 times as much here than i did in school. Dont stop your dream.
Since school think this is unimportant, but it is. If there is other life out there, we could gain loads of intelligence about our universe
Dream to go to Proxima Centuary in his lifetime
Only three times as much here? Must have been a pretty good school, for nowadays! ;D
I am obsessed with alien life.
Kool
Hello Chris
Go raid area 51
I'm obsessed with my life!! :D LOL
@@idgaf1241 ok boomer
Mars has life. It has bacteria
Oh, i was talking about the chocolate bar
The milky way has life
@@zeropomegranates9976 meteors have life
@@Steelexel chicken have life lol
Wel, the engineers who built the perseverance rover put all their bacteria from their hands all over the rover, so technically there is bacteria from earth that has existed in mars
@@EricVLWrestling They wore protective gear. So there is no way for it to contaminate mars. if it would be contaminated they would terminate it before launch.
People in 1970: We’ll have flying cars in the future!
Me in 2019: 7:31 hehe
We already fucking have flying cars
The_emerald ZG
What the fuck kinda shit you on LOL-
Haha funny🅱enis
Beanis
@@brookemcb those flying cars do exist actually lol
Martians: "The Earth is so hot it melts mercury. That's a metal."
who could make a love story for jupiter and saturn?
Goran Prvulovic uranus
Or Mars, found pornography on his internet history.
"Mars" cheeky basterd looked up porn of himself
Jupiter saturn mars and jupiter got jealous...
@@jameso2610 2 jupiters
QDawg 24 I must’ve been dumb a year ago
Dreksler I love your work! you deserve way more subscribers!
very interesting video and nice editing, good job!
I'd say the best chances for life in the solar system would be:
0. Earth (Obv)
1. Europa
2. Encaeledus
3. Triton
4. Other Icy Moons of Gas Giants With Subsurface Liquid Water
5. Pluto
6. Charon
7. Titan
8. Mars
9. Random Comets
10. Ceres
11. Random Asteroids
12. Uranus/Neptune
13. Jupiter/Saturn
14. Earth's Moon
15. Mercury
16. Venus
17. Literal Empty Space
18. The Sun
I AM PROUD TO BE SUBSCRIBED TO THIS FUTURE DIAMOND BUTTON HOLDER
such a vast and empty void of darkness and death in every direction surrounding our own perfect blue bubble, not a single sign of life in what stretches out before us forever, what we can observe is beautiful and terrifying, if only from our own orb of absolute beauty and balance beyond words, a cycle of creation as old as life itself, that we have managed to disrupt in just 100 years
Dreksler your videos are the reason why I study space, you have gave me this valuable information that I want to do some explanations but we'll see. Thanks.
"...with a surface temperature that can melt lead. Which is a metal."
I love it, lol.
Keep up the great work!
Mercury is a metal. ;)
Great video I learn so much from you keep up the good work
DarKshAdoW Gaming i see you watched the vid already
MESSI!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
DarKshAdoW Gaming A WILD GUESS....are you Indian?(or pakistani,bhutani..etc.?)
Matthew M q. Vdvcccccfcvvv
sames
I often troll ppl but not you. Lol Your videos are really really good. They are informative and interesting as well as thought provoking. Great work Sir!
Correction: Jupiter and Saturn are gas giants and Uranus and Neptune are ice giants.
Uranus And Neptune Are Kinda Both Ice And Gas Giant To Be Honest
why are like a billion of my comments written Like This? It hurts my eyes looking at it. Also Uranus is a ice giant. I probably added they are both ice giant and gas because my 1st grade level humour made me want to make a Uranus joke but i didn't want to seem like I was. I don't even know tf I'm saying right now I'm just ranting
Do Not Look At My Channel they have cores so there is technically a surface
@@missilluminated1 Uranus is definitely a gas giant lol
@@CN-wt2bj Without that planet's "odd" name, there would be only half the jokes in Asstronomy!! They'd probably be about assteroids or something else! ;D lol
Chilling in bed and watching these videos is the greatest thing you could do.
Carl Segan theorized about organisms that could live in the atmospheres of gas planets such as Jupiter, he described creatures that could be several kilometers in size and remain aloft though heating the hydrogen in their bodies.
What if that atmosphere is habitable for them? What if they can live in any hot or cold weather? What if they don't need oxyzen? What if we can't see them with our eyes or any equipment humans have invented till now?
I would never doubt the chance if life on hell.....
“Life finds a way”
There has never been a complete extinction of earth before... only most life destroyed and in some cases only complex destroyed.
Stellar Labs The astral belt used to be like a super earth, until if got destroyed by what I am assuming was A.I
@@BurningEagle12 wtf
There might be ice-like creatures on mercury, Cloud-like creatures on Venus, Rock creatures on Mars, Gas creatures on jupiter and etc... Each of them is living in differents condition and breathing different kind of gas.
I always watch your videos before I go to bed. Your voice, the content and the music makes me feel peaceful and puts me to sleep. Your videos are awesome. With love from India!
Thank you, everything is fine, you created a masterpiece
Earth's scientist: We can not be able to land on Neptune, it's too dangerous.
Neptune's scientist: We can not be able to land on Earth, it's too dangerous.
I found and subscribed to your channel yesterday and I'm hooked on your videos, I've watched almost all of them! Great work
I learn more from you then I learn from My Teacher or even Classes
Can you fly through the gas giants??? And if they are made out of gas how do they stay together? Why are they planets??
You can't fly through gas giants because 1. they have so much pressure and radiation inside that no robots would even be able to get 1% of the way to the center, and 2. this pressure causes hydrogen to be liquid in the center of the planet. The gas giants hold together because of gravity. They are planets because they match the definition of planets: 1. they are round, 2. they have no debris like asteroids in their neighborhood, 3. they orbit the Sun, 4. they are way too small to kickstart fusion in their nucleus, so they are not weak stars, not even close
karolak kolo thank yoooou
@@karolakkolo123 always thought Jupiter was a star in the making...most solar systems are binary or more..we might be heading there
Mercy Peters:
1) You can't fly through a gas planet because it has a solid core 8:25
2) they are no planets, they are gas planets.
GBE Smokes:
3) Jupiter could only be a sun if it had much more mass IIRC
@@abmo32 Gas giants are still planets but mostly containing gases like hydrogen or methane.
what if there was really life in venus and mars but it ended, the universe is a big mystery crazy to think that life in venus existed way before us but they did not advance did not make it to another planet and just met their end.
Venus does have life but there organisms sadly
This is the best channel . Learned so much from you 👌
Ur vids r so good! High quality content and frequent vids! Very interesting dreksler😊
The space is more interesting than a possible life on other planets... unless they have the exact copy of the current us out there...
Can you make more videos plsssss?
They are so goooooooooood!
What if Earth is an experiment by ancient super intelligent aliens?
There are also many moons, especially around Jupiter and Saturn, where life could develop. Also, liquid water is not the only way for life to emerge. It's possible that there are organisms which evolved differently.
Another interesting video. As always very interesting. Thanks for the upload...
Astronomy youtuber. You should have 500’000 subs. I’ll keep supporting
Well technically there is life on Mars..
If we count the bacteria left on the perseverance rover from earth..
Does not mean any life creature outside our world need water and sun to live. Maybe they need something else to live. We just dont know.
Amir Amjad brother we aren't searching aliens we are searching for planet that are habitable for us
Liquid water is an essential requirement for life on Earth because it functions as a solvent. It is capable of dissolving substances and enabling key chemical reactions in animal, plant and microbial cells. If water isn’t needed that would completely destroy all of our theories, which is why it’s most likely that water Is needed
Another nice video much loved❤
Earth only , But there a lot of planet is habitable and have liquid water. There may have Life
Dear Derksler! I just subsribed to your videos in 2017,but since then I watched all of them on average like 4 times! I really like them and keep up the good work! Plus I don't know if you do videos abaut other solar sytems, but it would be verry interesting to see a longer video of the HD10180 sytem, coz it really looks like ours!
What about the moons in our solar system?
Best channel ever
What about Earth?
WE ALREADY KNOW THERE'S NOT LIFE ON EARTH HUH NO?O SORRY NVM WE KNOW THERE'S LIFE ON EARTH
On Earth you will die in a nanosecond
You can only survive for about 70-80 short years due to gravity
I live on earth and survive for like ever by doing absolutely nothing XD
Oh also did you know the population here is more than 7 BILLION
Fake Martians
This is you guys
👽 ❌
🙂✅
Wait what I'm from Trappist 1
That was a nice imaginative work of SciFi-esque speculation.
There are bacteria on some of our spacecrafts
Ganymede is the largest moon in the solar system. What if it was ours?
Hyperion
We'll have a really big moon
That was a suggestion
+Hyperion
Depending on the distance, waves would really screw us up.
I am glad that you included Pluto as a planet. It was always considered a planet in the science books when I was in school back in the '90s, and should have never been removed. Not only is it the furthest planet from our Sun and is all alone way out there, but to remove it from its planet status just makes it worse.
It not a planet lmao
@@billywoodruff7173 It is now
For Pluto to be a planet we have to include the other dwarf planets. Do you want that?
The music is so relaxing.
Ummm that wasn't every planet in the solar system? PLEASE TELL ME THERE'S GONNA BE ANOTHER VIDEO ON THE REST!
Justin Carnes I mean to be fair there’s not really many theories as to how life can form in the outer planets
You earned a new subscriber! :)
I did the same
You need to make a movie or a documentary you have great insight you may be from out of this world 🤙🏿
u r the best dreksler ..i always watch your videos. my favourite was the intestellar light behaviour you posted. ;)))
i bet most people thought mars would have the highest chance for evolved life but the real answer was pluto
Astrobiology is my favourite topic. My channel is all about it. I'm sharing this video on my astrobiology Facebook group. A fascinating video, with some thoughtful and reasonable speculations!
Best channel !!! LOVE YOU :)
Great video. Thanks DA.
Thats soo interesting
This is the best video I've ever seen and I'm so happy 😊
I love this channel so much.
Comfortable or Earth like temperature and pressure doesn't equal possibility of life necessarily. What matters here is conditions that could allow for abiogenesis to happen.
If panspermia is possible, then the only way I imagine the gas giants could have life is if some asteroid containing microorganisms from Earth, Venus or Mars (if these last 2 ever had life) fell on Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus or Neptune, and then they somehow survived and thrived, which is unlikely to say the least
When life emerged on Earth, both the temperatures and pressures were not hospitable at all for today's life, the pressures were somewhat Venus-like, tens or a hundred times higher than today, and the temperatures were also very high anywhere in between 50 to even 200°C (since with pressure the boiling point of water increases)
It's uncertain how or where life emerged exactly, but it could have been from hydrothermal vents in the ocean floor or, from geothermal fields inland, or near the beaches, mud pits... No one knows for sure.
Point being, they only planets that have or likely HAD all of those conditions at the same time are Venus, Earth or Mars, though Venus is not a sure thing and it easily could have just been like it is now from the very beginning... And Mars could also have been more of an ice planet instead of a water planet, and the river beds could be glaciers, or they might have been of liquid CO2 instead of H2O which might not be a good solvent for life...
Point being, it's way more complex and complicated than you suggest in the video, objects such as Mercury and the gas giants probably just can't have life unless, as I said, panspermia is possible and extremophile life was transferred from Earth to the poles of Mercury where there's ice and there might be liquid water...
That said, if life DID originate in hydrothermal vents, there's almost no doubt that objects such as Europa, Titan, Enceladus, Pluto, etc. 100% have at least unicellular life, but if not, then Earth is alone and the only chance of surviving extraterrestrial life in our solar system would be Mars.
This is why they end every question with "life as we know it". I would say there is a better chance of finding life that lives differently from us than to find life that lives identically to us.
Now that I think of it, maybe the odds of cells or some form of them forming is very low. Like what are the odds that all the atoms somehow make cells, the chances are very low. But there might be some phenomenon that makes it happen.
Different life forms can live almost everywhere just because a planet may not have intelligent life doesn't mean there isn't any at all we never know
Hi! Derskler your videos were used by some scientists I am so happy for it
Great! As always. May be a Worry in the Future when the first Astronaut (Explorer) finds these and they turn out to be Deadly to Humans if exposed???? Maybe do a story on that..... Keep up the Good Work.
Love your channel 💖
Awesome video
Every planet in the Solar System looks like hell world, there's no way life can be on there
Dreksler Astral: W A T E R
You forgot titan, one of the moons of Jupiter. It has a thicker atmosphere than earth but sadly no oxygen. It also has liquid methane lakes
Moon of Saturn actually
Yay I'm in the list!
I think that every complex living creature need water,well not all of them but water is crucial for them.
*cough* the great filter theory disproves this whole video
I wish this dude was my science teacher.
This was uploaded on my bday ironic that this video is about life to
If Pluto somehow got shot inwards towards earth and was the 4th instead of mars being there, I think Pluto would have been a ball of water lmao
the univere itself is a dynamic organism, which is very much alive, and evolving, as is everything in it.
What if planets themselves where alive? No ok my bad
I mean you're not wrong
Odličan Video!
It is interesting that, despite being further from the sun, Venus (the hottest planet in the Solar System) is still hotter than Mercury because of its dense atmosphere.
They say outside Earth there are uninhabitable places. Uninhabitable for Earth life like but life can be in an infinite ways not only as we know.
Our planet is alive hosting life in its way, the Universe itself is alive, allowing all sorts of life to be prosperous.
Till recently we had no clue about microscopic life and look like we refuse to see the macroscopic life in universe and other forms of life beyond our perception and reach.
I believe that simple chemistry will make prokaryotic life on any planet that has areas where water is liquid. But the jump to eukaryotic life will be much more difficult. On earth, it took earth at least 2 billion years of being a stable planet with oceans to make eukaryotes. And it seemed to require it to be an oxygen world, which involves photosynthesis. Which means that pretty much, none of these planets can get to eukaryotes, not even Europa. Now, titan might make life of different chemistry, and that is a whole new ball park.
The reason he did not did “Earth”
It’s cause we all know there is sign of life
I thought it's already been proven that life can exist in extreme conditions? If so then why do they only seem to focus on the goldy locks zone in searching for life?
I'm Happy that Mars Again WIll be Like Before,With water etc and we would give Earth A Little Break for a few years
The planets are inhabitable for us not for every possible creature in the universe
Do one about moons. Like our moon and some of Jupiter's moons etc. not all obviously just the ones that are most likely to hold life
nice vid. pls make more like this.
Is it wrong that I'm only subscribed to you to listen to your voice or something
Read thy name and thou will find the answer thy be seeking.
Great video, very interesting
2:06 I cant believe what life in complete darkness would be like
Mercury bacteria: i cant see *bump* *crash* *smash*