It’s not. Andromeda is 2+ million LY away. The arcres of this image is not precise enough to resolve many individual stars in that galaxy. Any properly formed actual stars you see in this image, belong to the Milky Way. The overwhelming majority of “dots” in this image, is chromatic noise. Source: I’m an astrophotographer
@@NakanakaSubsChannel James has videos on his profile of his astro work. Distant galaxies present themselves as blurry elongated/elliptical dots, not well-formed dots.
@@abhijeetsahoo1767 lights need time to reach earth from big distances for example light from sun needs 8 minutes so what you see when looking at the sun is basically the sun form 8 minutes ago if we apply this to galaxy so far thats lights need Centuries to reach us then the actually see them from the past not the present moment sorry for bad explanation or English
@@abhijeetsahoo1767 Andromeda is millions of light years away from the earth, which means it took millions of years for light to travel from andromeda to the earth...which means we will be looking at andromeda from millions of years ago...
Saying wow is greatly overestimating. Space is BIG! If you want the andromeda to crash to the milky way, to travel sll that distance it would take around 4,000,000,000 years. 400km/s is nothing for space.
The beauty of the space is incredible. It's so well structured and mysterious. Everything is well-placed and follow gravity rules. I am in love of this infinite view.
@@redditusi dont like association with atheists because of their hostility towards others to "convert" them. i think anyone who starts to understand how universe works would automatically realize there's no need for a god for it to work. hence... but the label "atheist" has lots of dirt associated with it. so no respect for the label. but do respect those who have realized.
Pumbaa: Hey, Timon, ever wonder what those sparkly dots are up there? Timon: Pumbaa, I don’t wonder, I know. Pumbaa: Oh. What are they? Timon: They’re fireflies. Fireflies that, uh… got stuck up on that big bluish-black thing. Pumbaa: Oh, gee. I always thought they were balls of gas burning billions of miles away. Timon: Pumbaa, with you, everything’s gas. - The Lion King
Pullo: what are they, stars? Vorenus: stars? Holes in the celestial spheres. Holes through which the light of the heavens shines. Pullo: how big are these holes? Vorenus: they're big. They only seem small to us because they're hundreds of miles above. Pullo: big enough for a man to climb through? Vorenus: I suppose. A man would never be able to get up there in the first place. Pullo: why not? Vorenus: How? Pullo: he could... hold on to a giant bird. Vorenus: **scoffs** it doesn't work like that. Pullo: why not? Vorenus: it's philosophy. Hard to explain.
For completion purposes, you can see the large companion galaxies of the main galaxy. M110 is the galaxy disappearing at bottom centre at 0:26, and M32 is the slightly smaller but much brighter one disappearing just below left centre at 0:30. Finally, the large star cloud disappearing at the bottom right corner at0:35 is designated NGC 206. All of the other hundreds of clusters and nebulae you can see later on do not have NGC designations.
Imagine when it is close enough that an amateur telescope at maximum magnification could see details of the Andromeda Galaxy. Also in the night sky that would be freaky, like seriously, it would be like another moon in the sky. Weird to think about.
You can see it with an amateur telescope.. you can see it with binoculars. It’s just dim. The problem isn’t how zoomed in you need to be, it’s how dark the sky’s you’ll need.
It's too selfish of us to think that we are the only sentient beings in the universe. My theory is, we are just too far apart from each other. And since space continues to expand in a rapid pace, the more less likely we could meet with other intelligent beings.
Fun fact, there is millions of planets in just a few hundred starts, there are trillions of stars in galaxies, and on top of that there are more galaxies in the universe than there are grains of sand on earth.
Yeah that's Messier 110 (bottom right), a dwarf satellite elliptical Galaxy of Andromeda, and the other one is called Messier 32 (top left), an elliptical Galaxy which is currently interacting with Andromeda
Does she have an Orion-like constellation here in the Milky Way? Beautiful and intriguing image of our twin, who I suspect harbors life on one of her millions of planets around so many billions of stars. Fascinating!.
Its very unlikely from my perspective. The universe is not made like it was made artificially, nebulae sre gas and dust sattered all around that area, there are SOOO many possible combinations, i feel andromeda does not have an orion-like nebula
The thing that gets me is that the dots in the sky those stars are farther apart then we can even comprehend but they look so close to each other It is amazing what the universe can hold
Just imagine how much life there must on Andromeda. The sheer scale of the galaxy with trillions of stars and even more planets. Imagine how many exoplanets would be found in there. Gosh it makes me sad that our generation will never know.
I can never understand but ever since I first heard of the andramada galaxy in school it has been stuck in my head. It's like it has a perminate place in the back of my mind. That was over 17 years ago.
Andromeda galaxy has 2x more stars than Milky way. Oh and! Did you know our galaxy was named "Milky way" because stars look like drops of milk in our sky.
Food for thought for number-crunching enthusiasts and thought-experimentists: let's say you're Superman and can fly at several times the speed of light, and you fancy flying to Andromeda. This video represents your top speed and field-of-view (about 160°). So the first image for argument's sake is your view from the Earth. Then you fly towards Andromeda and within 50 seconds (as in the video) you're within visual distance of its largest stars, with your field-of-view it means you're comfortably now within the Andromeda Galaxy. So you needed 50 seconds to travel 2.5m light years. Let's round up to a minute for ease of rough calculation. Because you're Superman, you're able to maintain top speed for as long as you like. So if you want to travel the diameter of the observable universe (estimated at almost 100b light years due to cosmic expansion) without stopping, you'd still need circa 160,000 minutes. That's around 4 months. You're travelling a light-year in a tiny fraction of a second, at your top speed you can fly 50,000 light years in a single second: about half the diameter of the entire Milky Way galaxy: so a mere two seconds to go from one end of a typically-sized galaxy to the other. 4 months to do the diameter of the observable (emphasis on observable) universe, without stopping to marvel at stuff, just letting it scroll by at the speed of this video's zoom. Sounds doable! I'll take two tickets, please. ps - the speed at which galaxies travel through space are about a thousandth of the speed of light so don't make much of a dent to our rough calculation here.
At about 15-20 seconds, on the far right, if you know *exactly* where to look, you can see NGCs 185 (easily) and 147 (quite difficult). These are small companion galaxies of the Andromeda galaxy.
Spihk heart bust!? Can you use Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's Roomies Ghnavel Feces to spihk heartbust all all time mates internet friends for all people in store where an Object was Purchased in order for someone to Point the Same object at Bozeman Hotmail Recipient while Bozeman Hotmail Recipient was a student at Bain Server!?
Hubble does not posses a zoom function. Also, the stars we see in Andromeda are still unresolved objects. The supermassive black hole in our galaxy is dark, tiny and hidden behind dust and gas.
@Jesus is Love The supermassive black hole at the centre of the galaxy, as well as its second nucleus, the cluster of stars around the black hole. Do I need to explain what a fucking black hole is now?
@Jesus is Love So the devil is a giant dark ball with a singularity in the centre and a coat of an event horizon that once is passed, no light and matter can escape? The devil is not a black hole, dude, and the devil isn’t real. Neither is God, or Jesus, and my words don’t affect anything. Black holes are points in Space where no light or matter escapes. The singularity is the centre-point of the Black Hole, matter collapses into a point of infinite density. Next is the Event Horizon. The Event Horizon is the black part of the black hole, where once crossed, nothing will ever escape, no matter what it does. No matter what direction it goes in, it will always be pulled into the centre. The Photon Sphere, this is the point in Space where gravity is so strong that it forces photons to travel in orbits. The Relativistic jets are points of the accretion disk, mostly made up of gas and dust. It forms jets of radiation and particles being shot out from the poles of the black hole almost at light speed, these jets could extend for thousands of light years through the vacuum of Space. The accretion disk is the disk around the black hole, made of gas and dust superheated and travelling at increased speeds, the accretion disk is made of matter that may fall into the black hole, and if not, it will be forced into the jets mentioned beforehand. This disk produces electromagnetic radiation that we pick up later on. To finish is the innermost stable orbit, the point around the black hole where objects can orbit safely around it. Black holes bend light and the fabric of Space-Time incredibly, it will bend light to show even what is behind the black hole. An example of this bending of light is the black hole from the movie, Interstellar, the black hole, Gargantua, bends the light of the accretion disk to show around the object and around the top and bottom. From the poles of the black hole, the accretion disk will only appear around the black hole, however from the front, back or sides, the disk will have its light bent to show around it. This is not the devil, so explain that
it doesn't matter how much you zoom in, we still see it the way it was 2.5 million years ago. so not a time machine but rather zooming to see how it was in the past.
If youtube was in existence in Andromeda a video would say the Milky Way is 2.5 million light years away and our galaxy will collide with the Milky Way in 4 billion years😂😂
In around 3 billion years Andromeda will collide with the Milky Way, so I guess if you eat a lot of vegetables and stuff you'll probably be able to see it lol
@@Fingernamedkid7 What's more amazing is that you can see these objects for yourself, and Andromeda is a naked eye object if you're in a dark enough location on a moonless night. Get some porro prism binoculars and you will be at the sky for hours.
Meanwhile in some exoplanet in Andromeda: "Zooming in on the Milky Way Galaxy"
Probably they named the Milky Way andromeda 😂😂😂
They might have named our galaxy differently
@@speedycrowd8708 yeah why are you saying might of course they did
MİLKY WAY SOLAR SEYSREM SUN
No they might have changed our galaxies name
There MUST be life near some of these shiny dots.
no doubt about it and civilzations we could only imagine, millions of them rising and falling amongst the stars.
Nooe
Maybe it's an unifying experience for all intelligent life to gaze at the night sky and ask themselves: "Are we really alone?"
Yummy Yuns and they could be zooming in on the milky way
Brian loves Lord Jesus Christ
There are trillions of civilisations.
Crazy to think each of those dots of light is a star and in reality all those stars are actually probably a few light years apart from each other.
About 4 light years apart on average. Would take about 45 million years to drive between them.
Breathtakingly amazing!!
It’s not. Andromeda is 2+ million LY away. The arcres of this image is not precise enough to resolve many individual stars in that galaxy. Any properly formed actual stars you see in this image, belong to the Milky Way.
The overwhelming majority of “dots” in this image, is chromatic noise.
Source: I’m an astrophotographer
SubhanAllahi WabiHamdihi
Sorry to burst your bubble, some of those dots aren’t stars, they’re galaxies.
@@NakanakaSubsChannel James has videos on his profile of his astro work.
Distant galaxies present themselves as blurry elongated/elliptical dots, not well-formed dots.
It's mind-blowing to consider that each galaxy contains billions of stars. Incomprehensible.
M31 (Andromeda Galaxy) is estimated to have a trillion stars, the Milky Way a paltry quarter trillion.
IC 1101 is estimated to have 100 trillion stars!
And there are more galaxies in the entire universe than grains of sand on Earth. Let that sink in
@@vishalbhat8602 Actually, it's more stars in the universe than grains of sand on earth. But I see what you're getting at here. : D
@@moistmike4150 That's the observable Universe, which is only a small part of the whole universe my friend
So we can actually see the stars in Andromeda??? The stars in another galaxy??? Mindblowing :O
Wow looking at someone's poster hanging on the wall. CGI just like NASA. And all of the space cadet agencies.
@@fernandovalencia3542 LOL - this from the all-satellites-are-fake idiot
@@theseabast6515 you get attention lol
Duality dude haha nice respone
Totally mind blowing!
Imagine what Copernicus would have given to see this?
Art Donovan
You idiot!
@@redblade8160
huh?
...his head
I get it 😂😂😂😂
@@redblade8160 ??? Thanks, friend-o
I think people forget that looking at something that far away is basically looking through a time machine. 😅
Can you please explain?
@@abhijeetsahoo1767 lights need time to reach earth from big distances for example light from sun needs 8 minutes so what you see when looking at the sun is basically the sun form 8 minutes ago if we apply this to galaxy so far thats lights need Centuries to reach us then the actually see them from the past not the present moment sorry for bad explanation or English
@@abhijeetsahoo1767 Andromeda is millions of light years away from the earth, which means it took millions of years for light to travel from andromeda to the earth...which means we will be looking at andromeda from millions of years ago...
@Jeet Pratap Singh Rajput this is.just mind blowing....
It is the andromeda from 28 million years ago
Ahh home I really miss it there😥
Major plot twist 😂
go home alien
Dxcay was the imposter lol
Stop being weird in a bad way.
Incarnated E.T.?
On Alien planet : "Zooming on Milky Way, our nearest neighbor"
More like "glipglop bleep blorb bleeorp galaxy"
@@ToxynCorvin8008 Relieved to learn the galaxy word is the same across the Universe, at least is a beginning for communication.
@@geologiats523 it's a loan word
@@ToxynCorvin8008 i'll do you one better: "kjdk j asncn m saic jisazcnma dajklsa skajdl"
That isn’t their closest galaxy, it’s their closest non-satellite galaxy
Its crazy to think how this is hurdling toward us at over 400 km/s. Wow
Yet is seems stationary
What's actually crazy is how fast the video is zooming in, literally 0.0000000001 seconds of zooming in is how far you will travel in life
@@LShaver947 Thanks for the existential dread, lol
Saying wow is greatly overestimating. Space is BIG! If you want the andromeda to crash to the milky way, to travel sll that distance it would take around 4,000,000,000 years. 400km/s is nothing for space.
@@LShaver947 what ?
Astonishing how tranquil and beautiful it is.
This is exactly what I see when I rub my eyes !
God level
🤣🤣
😂😂
😂😂
😂😂😂😂
Can not WAIT for the images we’ll be graced with from the James Webb telescope
Yo mama? More like joe mama
have they launched it yet?
@@mofleh177 not yet
@@mofleh177 Hopefully by Christmas I think?
@@murph_mustela It was delayed many times, hopefully it goes through this time.
The beauty of the space is incredible. It's so well structured and mysterious. Everything is well-placed and follow gravity rules. I am in love of this infinite view.
No space is not well structured. its randomly placed
@@VIKASHSINGH-hf3kt typical atheist
@@Mohi_H03 athiests uncovered most of what we know of the universe, show some respect
@@redditusi dont like association with atheists because of their hostility towards others to "convert" them.
i think anyone who starts to understand how universe works would automatically realize there's no need for a god for it to work. hence...
but the label "atheist" has lots of dirt associated with it. so no respect for the label. but do respect those who have realized.
@@Mohi_H03 nah don't bring religion, he's clearly just dumb
Look at the amount of stars there is in Andromeda!!!!
Approximately 60,70 billion
There is 400 billion in our galaxy and andromeda is way bigger.
And just think, to travel from one of those tiny dots to the next closest one would take lifetimes!!
Nerd comment
Those stars might be galaxies lol
N we are fighting here for small small pieces of land!!
habitable land, its rarer than you think
Totally makes sense, though. It's not 2 pieces of molecular hydrogen per cubic kilometer we're fighting for.
Best comment 👍👍👍👍
Exactly,when we have the whole universe for us
@@kashutosh9132 Do you want humanity to conquer half of the universe?
Still can't believe we are all probably going to miss the collision of Andromeda with the milky way man still can't believe
If you could time jump one way to the future to view it, would you?
sup2069 no it would take millions of years
Probably?
@@kian5374 4 billions actually according to naza
@@donaldbiden5755 to time travel
When I die I want my spirit to rome space at million times the speed of light.
😍
That's not gonna happen lol
I need to go lie down... My brain hurts
Pumbaa: Hey, Timon, ever wonder what those sparkly dots are up there?
Timon: Pumbaa, I don’t wonder, I know.
Pumbaa: Oh. What are they?
Timon: They’re fireflies. Fireflies that, uh… got stuck up on that big bluish-black thing.
Pumbaa: Oh, gee. I always thought they were balls of gas burning billions of miles away.
Timon: Pumbaa, with you, everything’s gas.
- The Lion King
Pullo: what are they, stars?
Vorenus: stars? Holes in the celestial spheres. Holes through which the light of the heavens shines.
Pullo: how big are these holes?
Vorenus: they're big. They only seem small to us because they're hundreds of miles above.
Pullo: big enough for a man to climb through?
Vorenus: I suppose. A man would never be able to get up there in the first place.
Pullo: why not?
Vorenus: How?
Pullo: he could... hold on to a giant bird.
Vorenus: **scoffs** it doesn't work like that.
Pullo: why not?
Vorenus: it's philosophy. Hard to explain.
The fact that this light of andromeda galaxy was emitted 2.5million years ago
Over 2 million light years away !
We are seeing her as she was two million years ago !
yeah but the galaxy doesnt change visually.
Milky way Galaxy: calm
Andromeda Galaxy : approaching
Milky way Galaxy: aye bro watch yo jet.....
Watch yo jet bro!
Watch yo jet!
Collides*
Ok, that was a good one lmao
For completion purposes, you can see the large companion galaxies of the main galaxy. M110 is the galaxy disappearing at bottom centre at 0:26, and M32 is the slightly smaller but much brighter one disappearing just below left centre at 0:30. Finally, the large star cloud disappearing at the bottom right corner at0:35 is designated NGC 206. All of the other hundreds of clusters and nebulae you can see later on do not have NGC designations.
I've seen this video some 100 times.. yet I don't get bored of it!
My eyes feel like I'm zooming in even after the video finished. o.O
Me da mucha tristeza saber que nunca podré viajar a conocer el universo entero, enserio me hace sentir mucha pena, difícil de explicar.
La verdad que sí es una pena.
No es para tanto, después de todo son solamente Universos y nada más 😈
Y por eso me compré el no mans sky xd
Imagine when it is close enough that an amateur telescope at maximum magnification could see details of the Andromeda Galaxy. Also in the night sky that would be freaky, like seriously, it would be like another moon in the sky. Weird to think about.
in 1-3 billion years we will be able to see it with the naked eye in a clear night
@@hskaihujsncoshvks I don't think humanity will exist after 1-3 billion years
In 3 billion years there'll be only fire in our skies due the Sun expansion in its Red Giant phase. If the very Earth still exists.
You can see it with an amateur telescope.. you can see it with binoculars. It’s just dim. The problem isn’t how zoomed in you need to be, it’s how dark the sky’s you’ll need.
The Andromeda galaxy is already larger than the Moon. Its just too dim for human eyes to see its entirety
Unfortunately we are limited by our telescopes..how cool would it be if we could visit these places in our dreams while we sleep and see whats there
Amazing. We can zoom in so close, and capture such fine detail that we see individual stars in another galaxy!
And in the 21st century still some humans think we are all alone in this chaos...
We are not alone. We have God and the angels.
And in the 21st century some humans still think this is all chaos...
@@LMike2004 Ridiculous
@@harrysmith1070 Read the Bible and decide for yourself.
@@LMike2004 Why would I waste my time on that.
First you think the quality of the picture isnt that good but then you realise all those small pixels are actually stars
Imagine if we discover life in another galaxy?
It's there,,just too far away for us to ever find. There is civilisations in our own galaxy, we just don't have the technology to reach them.
It's too selfish of us to think that we are the only sentient beings in the universe. My theory is, we are just too far apart from each other. And since space continues to expand in a rapid pace, the more less likely we could meet with other intelligent beings.
@@paologonzalez8766 PENALDO VS MISSI - WHO'S FUNNIER?....I MEAN, BETTER?
Imagine if life in another galaxy discovers us?
@Okurka i hope they come in peace. 😁
Fun fact, there is millions of planets in just a few hundred starts, there are trillions of stars in galaxies, and on top of that there are more galaxies in the universe than there are grains of sand on earth.
This photo was taken by hubble space telescope
I don’t think a lot of people noticed this but when you were zooming into it I saw another galaxy that was not the Milky Way
Yeah that's Messier 110 (bottom right), a dwarf satellite elliptical Galaxy of Andromeda, and the other one is called Messier 32 (top left), an elliptical Galaxy which is currently interacting with Andromeda
It's simply amazing this can even be done.
Right, CGI has come far.
@@Okurka. and yet andromeda can also be seen with eyes despite it supposedly being "cgi"
Yeah im sure life is more common than we think. It just has to be
Does she have an Orion-like constellation here in the Milky Way? Beautiful and intriguing image of our twin, who I suspect harbors life on one of her millions of planets around so many billions of stars. Fascinating!.
Its very unlikely from my perspective. The universe is not made like it was made artificially, nebulae sre gas and dust sattered all around that area, there are SOOO many possible combinations, i feel andromeda does not have an orion-like nebula
The thing that gets me is that the dots in the sky those stars are farther apart then we can even comprehend but they look so close to each other
It is amazing what the universe can hold
I cant be the only one sometimes being terrified when I look at galaxy videos.
You shouldn’t be terrified... you should be excited.
How tf are you terrified?
Just imagine how much life there must on Andromeda. The sheer scale of the galaxy with trillions of stars and even more planets. Imagine how many exoplanets would be found in there. Gosh it makes me sad that our generation will never know.
There must be a life in this universe
_ Krushna gawande
Just think, all those tiny dots are stars and they are light years apart from each other… we are so small it’s crazy
Fun fact: most if not all of the big and brighter stars are foreground stars from the milky way, not m31.
All we have is this blue ball. Our existence starts and ends with this isolated paradise.
Awesome, thank you for this video.
Last transmission from commander Bowman:
“MY GOD, IT’S FULL OF STARS.”
This video is faster than lightspeed.
Thought it was going to zoom into the eye of a 3cm long alien insect.
Or a zoom in an alien car license plate
love this
The background music is magnifies whatever feelings it gives
Here take this
10x💊 This is a anti flat earth pill to fight flat earthers
Thanks
I can never understand but ever since I first heard of the andramada galaxy in school it has been stuck in my head. It's like it has a perminate place in the back of my mind. That was over 17 years ago.
It's like it's stuck in the place that controls the spelling of words.
At 0:11, that is the large ragged spiral galaxy M33 disappearing just below left centre.
Imagine how many telescope are pointing towards us right now from andro
It's really big!
We NEED more of this stuff!
That zoom though damn
To think that Andromeda may have been destroyed, but if it did we wouldn't know until millions of years later is just mind blowing
I'm crying 😭
kim jisoo why
Don’t be sad ☹️
@@Solid_Snake99 mm sometime it’s so beautiful and you really want to see it man
I want this lens in my phone's camera
this how far our parents needed to go to school
Thanks for zooming me 😊.
The Andromeda galaxy is a neighboring galaxy that is close to the Milky Way galaxy but if you can, can you do the next video for the Spiral Galaxy?
@Mr. T Yes indeed nothing but it's just a call not a name 😅
imagine that someone also watching us from andromeda
Andromeda galaxy has 2x more stars than Milky way.
Oh and! Did you know our galaxy was named "Milky way" because stars look like drops of milk in our sky.
What About Andromeda galaxy
How Great Thou Art.
Food for thought for number-crunching enthusiasts and thought-experimentists: let's say you're Superman and can fly at several times the speed of light, and you fancy flying to Andromeda. This video represents your top speed and field-of-view (about 160°). So the first image for argument's sake is your view from the Earth. Then you fly towards Andromeda and within 50 seconds (as in the video) you're within visual distance of its largest stars, with your field-of-view it means you're comfortably now within the Andromeda Galaxy. So you needed 50 seconds to travel 2.5m light years. Let's round up to a minute for ease of rough calculation.
Because you're Superman, you're able to maintain top speed for as long as you like. So if you want to travel the diameter of the observable universe (estimated at almost 100b light years due to cosmic expansion) without stopping, you'd still need circa 160,000 minutes. That's around 4 months. You're travelling a light-year in a tiny fraction of a second, at your top speed you can fly 50,000 light years in a single second: about half the diameter of the entire Milky Way galaxy: so a mere two seconds to go from one end of a typically-sized galaxy to the other. 4 months to do the diameter of the observable (emphasis on observable) universe, without stopping to marvel at stuff, just letting it scroll by at the speed of this video's zoom.
Sounds doable! I'll take two tickets, please.
ps - the speed at which galaxies travel through space are about a thousandth of the speed of light so don't make much of a dent to our rough calculation here.
beautiful
You can’t say this is not beautiful.
What's the name of the background music? The video is cool too!
Megat 48 I
LOL
Darude - sandstorm
Pls I need someone to answer this
@ChoirGuyYT link???
At about 15-20 seconds, on the far right, if you know *exactly* where to look, you can see NGCs 185 (easily) and 147 (quite difficult). These are small companion galaxies of the Andromeda galaxy.
Great video
Spihk heart bust!? Can you use Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's Roomies Ghnavel Feces to spihk heartbust all all time mates internet friends for all people in store where an Object was Purchased in order for someone to Point the Same object at Bozeman Hotmail Recipient while Bozeman Hotmail Recipient was a student at Bain Server!?
Someone in that galaxy is doing the same things we're doing.
Its crazy when i think of .and how old the light 2.5 Million LY
If we can zoom in onto Andromeda, why not the black hole in the center of our galaxy? It's closer.
Hubble does not posses a zoom function. Also, the stars we see in Andromeda are still unresolved objects. The supermassive black hole in our galaxy is dark, tiny and hidden behind dust and gas.
@Jesus is Love The supermassive black hole at the centre of the galaxy, as well as its second nucleus, the cluster of stars around the black hole. Do I need to explain what a fucking black hole is now?
@Jesus is Love So the devil is a giant dark ball with a singularity in the centre and a coat of an event horizon that once is passed, no light and matter can escape? The devil is not a black hole, dude, and the devil isn’t real. Neither is God, or Jesus, and my words don’t affect anything. Black holes are points in Space where no light or matter escapes.
The singularity is the centre-point of the Black Hole, matter collapses into a point of infinite density. Next is the Event Horizon. The Event Horizon is the black part of the black hole, where once crossed, nothing will ever escape, no matter what it does. No matter what direction it goes in, it will always be pulled into the centre. The Photon Sphere, this is the point in Space where gravity is so strong that it forces photons to travel in orbits. The Relativistic jets are points of the accretion disk, mostly made up of gas and dust. It forms jets of radiation and particles being shot out from the poles of the black hole almost at light speed, these jets could extend for thousands of light years through the vacuum of Space. The accretion disk is the disk around the black hole, made of gas and dust superheated and travelling at increased speeds, the accretion disk is made of matter that may fall into the black hole, and if not, it will be forced into the jets mentioned beforehand. This disk produces electromagnetic radiation that we pick up later on. To finish is the innermost stable orbit, the point around the black hole where objects can orbit safely around it. Black holes bend light and the fabric of Space-Time incredibly, it will bend light to show even what is behind the black hole. An example of this bending of light is the black hole from the movie, Interstellar, the black hole, Gargantua, bends the light of the accretion disk to show around the object and around the top and bottom. From the poles of the black hole, the accretion disk will only appear around the black hole, however from the front, back or sides, the disk will have its light bent to show around it. This is not the devil, so explain that
@His love frees any. religion ≠ science
@@HubbleESA oo there is gas and dust une the galaxy
it doesn't matter how much you zoom in, we still see it the way it was 2.5 million years ago. so not a time machine but rather zooming to see how it was in the past.
Just Imagine if there was a human in Andromeda galaxy looking at the Milky Way
Perfect! More of this please
Is there a way to get the title of the track please ?
Hubble is very beautiful
IMAGINE how many beautiful E.T. men must not live in the countless planetary systems throughout the Andromeda galaxy haha
If youtube was in existence in Andromeda a video would say the Milky Way is 2.5 million light years away and our galaxy will collide with the Milky Way in 4 billion years😂😂
Amazing
@Xnator Teamer Hey quasi-stellar object
We all will see this universe when we died
Yes, I hope the whole universe
와 정말 경이롭다 ㅠㅡㅠ
우주의 비밀을 빨리 파헤쳐 보고 싶다
Crazy to think we’re looking at the andromeda galaxy as it was 2 million years ago…
Song: Movetwo Eso-Cast two
What seems SO REAL!
is just but a dream".
And Thy Shall Awake in the end.. .
When we reach ther?
In around 3 billion years Andromeda will collide with the Milky Way, so I guess if you eat a lot of vegetables and stuff you'll probably be able to see it lol
@@BarBQChips lol
Milky way galaxy - TH-cam
Andromeda galaxy - BouTube
PainWinTube
0:39 Who are all thought it is kong 🦍
Imagine how fast this would be moving
my life is just... it brokes my brain! error.............................
Love this channel thank you TH-cam for this recommendation
Makes me feel like a kid again, thinking about what could be out there
@@Fingernamedkid7 What's more amazing is that you can see these objects for yourself, and Andromeda is a naked eye object if you're in a dark enough location on a moonless night. Get some porro prism binoculars and you will be at the sky for hours.
Awesome is my God...
There are an awful lot of stars there and complete radio silence. Most unsettling.
0:49 are each of those “dots” spread entirely on the screen stars? I think so but I just want to be sure
Mr Kakarot yes. They are
Incomprehensible to just see a beautiful swirl in space with a naked eye.
Are those big shining bulbs Red ,blue ,Yellow super giants and Hyper giants?
I think those are stars in our own galaxy in the foreground, just overlapping