@meh you say it’s nonsense yet you say “god” bless you”, literal common sense… do you let them tell you how the world is or do you go out there & find out?
@meh are you serious right now? your level of ignorance is incredible… you do realize schools, even this scientist himself have plenty of content on TH-cam… use the computer don’t let it use you
@Coach Levi from that witless rationale, you should not listen to anything from anybody because you simply don't have knowledge in those respective fields
@Coach Levi Talking crap about scientists while using a mobile phone that wouldnt even be remotely possible with out scientists. It's just too ironic. I love it.
I love when you have someone (like Gadi Schwartz) that is so excited and interested in the topic doing the interview. So much better than canned questions.
@@centuryfiles9558hi how universe can be 13 billion years or so, Universe is eternal but always changing( creation,sustenance, destruction - repeat) is our galaxy 13 B years? That could be possible , but this beginless and endless cosmos? How ? Please explain me here .
I feel incredibly lucky to be alive to witness the photos we’ve seen from JWT, I’ve almost teared up at a few from sheer awe. We live in an incredible universe, I don’t even know what else to say at this point. The James Webb Telescope is worth 1,000,000,000x (even much, much more)what it cost to build and I can’t wait to see what else it reveals. Many deep thanks to the team of people that conceptualized and built this telescope from start to finish, it’s a precious gift to humanity.
I've always thought it was weird when people yell at their TV during sporting events. Then I woke up in the middle of the night to watch JWT launch. I was screaming "GO!!!" and "YOU CAN DO IT!!!" while crying tears of joy. I can now understand. We are lucky mofos to be able to see this. Game Changer. ✨⭐
The only thing to say is that we are a sad story. Why? Because we are the only beings "aware" of our own selves and the universe that made us and yet, we can't live forever to traverse the massive universe - to see all of it's mysteries and exist to see it's infinite expansion to where entropy becomes 0.
MORE OF THIS PLEASE !! More science and discovery. The world is full of people therefore there will always be conflict / intrigue etc... but scientific discovery transcends time and culture. It's like a beacon that reminds us about the best things in life.
@harvardsmithdeangelo6905 you talk about fantasy, science itself is a fantasy my friend. Science exists here only on Earth, within the human civilization and it's gonna be like that until we find some intelligent life out there. The word 'Science' itself is created of languages we wrote.
@harvardsmithdeangelo6905 I don't know, we cannot exactly understand how intelligent life can and would exist in the universe. One possibility ive always thought is intelligent life exists but he'll they're so intelligent that they don't even care if life exists anywhere else or not.
I love that Kaku can talk about aliens all the time and he's still so respected. We're getting closer to a world where people can actually have discussions.
Pilots, including military pilots, are starting to talk openly now about their experiences. Scientists are now starting to do serious research and aren’t dismissing it out of hand too. Things are definitely changing.
@@keirfarnum6811 Yup i personally think the testemony from the pilots and former ministry of defense for not just US, but UK AND canada as well are huge and cant be ignored. Whether its a mass government conspiracy (where they get top officials to claim ufos for some sort of fear mongering) or its the real deal, i think we outta be able to seriously discuss these topics within the next decade or so. We can only hope, though.
It's about time we've given religion it's time in the sun as ridiculous as they are it's time to start thinking in a more realistic and in depth manner than just sky wizards did it.
I don't think we are capable of putting an age on the universe yet. This telescope is absolutely priceless for the amount of information it will provide to us. The first handful of images redefined our understanding of space around us and this is just a stepping stone in technological advancement.
I find these startling discoveries mind boggling. In the billions of planets, stars and galaxies, we can't be the only little planet that happens to be occupied by sentient beings.
That's what I'm saying with all those other planets and galaxies out their there is no way we're alone in the galaxy we just don't have the technology to explore them yet
@Visitation - of Jesus The Christ Your ideology is irrelevant to reality. Human development and history is much, much vaster than 6000 years. We can literally track the age of objects and artifacts. The timeline of basic development cannot support your theory.
Kaku is a joy to listen to even if I don't agree with everything he says. He is great at simplifying confusing topics into small bite size portions that everyone can understand
@@junacebedo888 perfect time to jump in the field with all the discoveries JWST has found. A lot of books are no longer valid in theory and have to be rewritten
The scientist, fantastic and smart dude. Something I DON’T see often tho, a reporter on a main news channel genuinely interested in the topic and really grasping what’s being talked about
Even IF there’s other life out there, we’re too far apart to ever detect one another. It would take us 78,000 years to travel to our nearest star. You could find a civilization from 1 million light years away with insanely powerful tech and at the speed of light, it would take us 1 million years to get there. That’s beyond unfathomable.
I remember amending a lecture in the early 70s by a physics professor who was "proving" that black holes do not exist. So the very nature of science is that it can be subject to change.
@Visitation - of Jesus The Christ Please focus on the point you said the one who is above time and nature, you'll be able to understand the days are not literal... Even we have Biblical examples and if we research, the science aligns with Bible in the order of creation to some extent.. So i would suggest to please study Bible... Thank you
There is an estimated 100 billion planets in our galaxy. Our TINY galaxy compared to others with more planets. There is an estimated 200 billion galaxies in the universe. I suspect these estimates are not even close to the amount that exists. Then when you think about the possibility of different universes...
I love how Kaku is basically the only name to appear whenever there’s something to discuss about space lol watched him in several documentaries over the years and he’s still relevant haha
@@SchoolRumble4ever22 There are others other than Kaku or Tyson. Still, Kaku is one of my favorites, Tyson not so much... he gets too chummy with anti-science folks, and it's a waste of his time and reduces his credibility. And as for others, I love seeing Michelle Thaller, Paul Sutter or Laura Danley. Andrea Ghez is also awesome and a Nobel Prize winner, but I don't recall if she ever got invited in some news show to talk about something. And I'm sure there are many other scientists I love to hear speaking that I can't recall their name now!
I would love to meet him in person and shake his hand. Would be a dream come true. Always love talking to other highly intelligent people. Hard to find in my town
What a time to live in. Watching this really feels like how I watched Interstellar for the first time. Amazing, think about all the lives that can be saved.
This is amazing, thank you to everyone involved in the realisation of this new telescope, I'm so grateful! New information will continue to flow from this project and I can't wait to see what happens next.
im sorry but its so cool to see the news reporter get so excited about this; it makes me just as excited haha. also mr. kaku is very good with analogies. i love explanations through analogies and examples, so it helped grasp an understanding of the theories. i respect that. thank you.
I have a question for you. If you and I stood on the street and you asked "what's the speed limit?" And I said it is "25", then said "no its 35" and then said "no its 45." Exactly what point would you say "just admit that you don't know."
I love science. A never ending spectacle of unwarranted certainty. The age of the universe is 13.8 +/-0.2 billion years. But is now thought to be much older !! LOL.
It's amazing that there are some people that don't believe that God created the Universe. They always say they trust science, yet science is constantly changing. So weird.
I am so happy to be in this time frame of history, seeing all these beautiful galaxy’s an of our universe , thank god for giving the very intelligent people the knowledge to make such technology to allow us to see all his wonders
Yeah its Homosapiens who have evolved over 230,000 years that provided this , not any god , you should keep the made up and the scientific apart because to claim a god is to deny the scientific principle , you have belief or a book to follow , there are no souls nor miracles and no gods in science because it is an attempt to explain the natural world without resorting to the supernatural , as there has never been any evidence for a god to exist the scientist/rational honest thinker would conclude the claims to date must be false and when we looked we found that yes they don't hold with scientific fact .
But I also feel good being in an era where we aren’t completely reliant on tech and can just live our life without it in an organic manner . Maybe 100 years from now things are not like this at all which kind of scares me.
The universe cannot be infinite because the laws of thermodynamics don't allow for that. Even alternative models to the Big Bang theory like the string theory, multiverse, pre-Big Bang cosmologies, inflationary scenarios, semiclassical models, closed time-like curves, ekpyrotic cyclic models, oscillating theories and loop quantum gravity models are all proven to require a beginning of space-time (BGV-theorem). An infinite universe would also contradict logic itself (as shown by mathematicians like David Hilbert), and without logic we couldn't do science in the first place.
I always love learning about space . It’s so beautifully chaotic yet majestic . Just knowing that at anytime , an unexplained phenomena could erase us from existence in the blink of an eye is blissful .
@@KaiserBlade 🙄 asteroids zipping through space , suns exploding, black wholes swallowing things , rouge planets crashing , other planets with magma spewing or gas giants like Jupiter with storms the size of our planet . How is that not chaotic !?
Mr. Kaku is awesome! Celebrating possible new evidence and entertaining new theorys. Other people and institutions dismiss and ignore... trying to make new info fit into old theorys
Has anyone considered the possibility that perhaps with the big bang happening and it being early that the galaxies simply formed faster back then? Our understanding of the universe kinda comes from how things work now, but things may have worked quite differently in the early universe. Of course I think there's some important context missing here too. Our observable universe in 13.7 billion years old, but we have no real way of knowing if we see the actual origin point, or just the oldest/farthest point backwards we can see. The universe could be 20 billion years old or more in totality and we just can't see the stuff passed 13.7 because light can't travel fast enough from those places to reach us ever expansion has just spread things too far for that now.
Like the guy said above the 13.8 billion number is not based on how far back we can see. Though there is a limit to how far back we can see and that's called "Recombination" which is approximately 370,000 years after the big bang. Before then, like you stated, the universe worked differently and was too dense and hot to form matter for light to reflect off of so matter was sort of "transparent" to light and its impossible to observe light earlier than that point in time
I may add, the laws of physics have never changed and even if they did at some point it was either at the moment of or “before” the big bang if that’s even possible. We can use the laws of physics to very accurately measure the age of the universe several different ways, and I’ve heard the big bang referred to as the point in time where our current understanding of physics break down i.e. our calculations and formulas give conflicting answers where they didn’t before.
@@vimax3858 these things you mention aren’t “laws” of physics. i’m sure you’re aware of this as well, but hubbles constant is a value that continually changes as we get closer and closer to the true age of the universe. and it isn’t even that big of a change, we are talking thousandth decimal places. i should so say the same applies to the speed of light. we know it’s approximate speed, 299,792,458 m/s, but mathematicians and physicists are refining whether or not it is 299,792,458.13467 or 299,792,458.13466. this is the degree of change you speak of. also we haven’t “observed” their change. we refine the values we assign to them, so we are changing them. the speed of light is a constant. our best guess right now is close enough to the real answer we can use it like it’s the actual value.
I love how they show a "fact sheet" and the two main points are prefaced "believed to be", meaning these are not facts, but guesses and theory presented as facts
@@thomasweir2834 103billion should be a trillion dollar budget when all things considered i.e. pollution. Costs big money to drive that car you driving and even bigger cost to a rapidly aging earth.
@@frankcastle5737 sure there are things funded more... But 103 billion is not an underfunded industry. There are big names in astronomy and physics and I'd be willing to bet they get about as much done as their labor force can uphold. More money won't send more people to graduate school
Sounds like he’s alluding to the theoretical Black hole stars of the early universe. Not often mentioned is that our method of measuring distance at these extremes might not be as accurate as we first imagined.
My guess is that, whilst the Universe probably is still about 13.7 billion years old, these giant early galaxies found by JWST probably formed much faster than what we currently understand about the rate of galaxy formation. The Universe 500 million years after the big bang was probably very different from the Universe we occupy now, or was, say several billion to 5, 6 billion years ago.
Yea, it's more likey those galaxies just formed faster. Remember, 85% of our universe is potentially dark matter and we have almost no idea what it is. Could be the culprit.
@@jasonhildebrand1574 So why don't these early galaxies look chaotic? That's the whole point of these observations, these early galaxies are looking surprisingly mature.
-The universe may be older than we thought. -Humans may be older than we thought. -Civilizations may go back further than we always believed. -Advanced technology may go back further than we always believed. -Earth may be older than we thought. *It seems we may have got the ages of things and time, figured out all wrong.
That's the best part of science; finding out things that you never knew or thought could/would be possible. I love that we only have predictive theories of how galaxies formed relatively soon after the big bang and the JWST is making us question those theories. But, as Michio said, it could be a "cosmic illusion" due to gravitational lensing so, we need more photos plz! lol I cannot wait.
@@Timmycoo Indeed. They misunderstand the scientific method. Or the times when scientists were trying to do one thing, fail at that, but discover some other thing that ends up being useful at a something completely different.
first thing i wanted so bad when this thing went up was to look all the way back. it's great that they didn't make us wait years and are publicly releasing them so soon, it's awesome.
Great new article. Keep up the good work . I didn't think Jame Webb telescope would reveal these mind-blowing relevations so quickly. Every pixel of light reveals more of the true nature of the universe and our place on this tiny insignificant blue speck called Earth .
The young earth/ universe creationists are HAPPY that JWST has been created. 13 billion years is way too much. That age will never explain why a cosmic noon galaxy is as massive as the Milky way.
....... that new information or data can shamed scientists. Age of the universe is now in question. Let us hope that cosmologists would not be so narrow minded to listen to universe is just thousands of years old.
What is insanely mind-blowing more than understanding the age of the universe...is that light can travel and exist that LONG! Let alone REACH us. Imagine all the light that's lost. There's infinite unknowns.
You can learn a lot on TH-cam about what light is and about other scientific topics, it’s absolutely fascinating. Light is a particle called photon and it can’t get “lost” unless it meets an atom that absorbs it.
@@abc33155 I wasn’t joking. I just chimed in because I thought what ya said was interesting. Idk who hurt you or if you were bullied as a kid to respond in such a way
I’ll be honest, it’s refreshing to hear Michio Kaku’s take on what’s going on with these new discoveries. Tyson has been approaching these new discoveries in his own way, like refusing to believe the Big Bang may have not happened. Until we know more about what’s being discovered today we can’t truly cement what we’ve previously come to understand about the early stages of the universe. A quote from Tyson which seems ironic to me now is “One must be content with the questions themselves.”
Well yes this should be a common sense. Humans should HUMBLE themselves and understand that THEY DONT UNDERSTAND. We are a spec of dust....so there is something way bigger and more intelligent to say the least. Let’s keep discovering, but let’s also be humble in our learning. ❤
the universe always has been and always will be. there is no big bang lol. it's like a long donut shape recycling matter into new things. there are no physical limits only temporal.
JWST has proved Prof Kaku wrong. Hope he would be humble enough to say that the bible is correct (again) that the universe is just thousand of years old.
@@BertGraef did you miss the other images, genius? And of course the furthest objects in the universe we can image are going to be grainy. Duh. What's fabulous is seeing them at all.
Kinda figured that our understanding of the universe was flawed. Especially since both Einstein and Stephen Hawkins both said their findings aren't absolute and, in the future will be proven wrong.
Pretty crazy that if you have the lens you can look deep enough into the cosmos you will see the earliest entities that existed and then the amount of distance between that object to our earth is mind boggling
I'm a firm believer we're not alone why are so many people astonished by the fact when we learn something we don't know they're sounding like they're scared of it .
Why do galaxies have a massive black hole at their centers? My intuition tells me it has something to do with new star formation. They are the wombs of the galaxies. Or not.
Those two should be humble enough to say that 13 billion years universe age is WRONG. Universe might be just thousands of years old like what the bible said.
I’m sure there will be another sometime in the future when humanity hears, we used to think there were five distinct layers and now we have come to a new and better understanding.
We'll probably get a relatively compelte understanding in the coming decades. There is a limited depth to the Earth, so no room for new layers once we mapped out all of it.
@@Ruzzky_Bly4t you don’t think new technology that you can’t imagine now will be able to discern layers within layers? Sure it’s not getting any deeper, but five years ago scientists thought they had it figure out at four layers. Now they can differentiate another layer. Fifty years from now they might realize it’s like looking at brocolli crowns. There might be fifty discerning layers when you have tools to see more details
@@Ruzzky_Bly4t in 1676 when the microscope was used to see cells, no one had any concept or organelles. THEN when they were…. They had no concept or mitochondria and genes. THEN they had no concept of base pairs. When scientists broke down the atom into protons, neutrons and electrons. They thought well now we have it figured. But then quarks, neutrinos, dark matter. We don’t know what we don’t know and can’t see until the tools evolve beyond current imagination.
@genuine impulse I just don't see how the composition of the Earth comes anywhere near the complexity of cells or atoms. I'm sure we will learn new details about it in the future, but I don't think we will go far beyond our current number of distinct layers. What would be the cause of such complexity? I think once we can identify the composition of the Earth all the way to the center, there will be limited room for new discoveries.
@@Ruzzky_Bly4t i don't why are you certain about that. AFAI can tell, sub-layers could exist within these layers. These sub-layers might be able to tell us how the earth is formed before it became "livable", or if there are other things that could have 'lived' even before the perceived "livable" eras that we currently know. Which in turn could help us understand how other planets behave/look from a different perspective.
I just want to say beyond this interesting news, I really appreciate the passion of the interviewer in this video. Glad to see someone who really cares!
Came to say this.. just a few pics and hundreds of years of science needs to be re-written but we’re SO certain there’s no God and all this came from nothing…
@@SQUISHBUBBLE yep. Given enough time, everything is “possible”. But the precision of even so much as a peptide requires such a large number for the chance of that to happen. Then add to it the billions of billions cells to make single being. I mean, not only does each tiny atom need to exist, it needs to exist near all the other types of atoms and none of the others with the exact reaction to make a compound and then for those compounds to be near all the other compounds and no others to make a, well, anything. And then for that to happen in a way that spins and moves and tilts so perfectly and so precisely. For all that to happen at ‘random’ 🙃 To keep believing all that happened at random so hard that everything else must be based on that first and any contrary discoveries are rejected… well, it sounds like a lot of absurd assumptions just to try and be contrary to the Genesis account.
How can 'black holes' look like these "super galaxies?" Personally, I suspect we are putting our own artificial constraints on how old and big the universe is?
WonkyPedia: "The age of the universe based on the best fit to Planck 2018 data alone is 13.787±0.020 billion years." Now we find it's a couple of billion more.
Michio kaku is a beautiful man. I shook his hand once 10yrs or so ago when he came to speak at my college. Listen to his appearances on Joe rogan experience it's wonderful. Also when Neil degrasse tyson was on
We know the earliest stars (Population III) were much more massive than any stars that exist today, so perhaps there is a reason extremely massive galaxies could have existed then but not now.
We’re lucky to be living in times where this technology is possible.
@drwllcemakes you wonder if anything is real anymore 😂
Wow these 3 previous comments that cannot comprehend science; ignorant in other words
@meh you say it’s nonsense yet you say “god” bless you”, literal common sense… do you let them tell you how the world is or do you go out there & find out?
@@patsmith36 wow, science has been saying this is all true, you’re already on TH-cam … that search bar isn’t far
@meh are you serious right now? your level of ignorance is incredible… you do realize schools, even this scientist himself have plenty of content on TH-cam… use the computer don’t let it use you
Note: Dr. Kaku does not get upset when his theories on the universe and all within do not pan out as fact. He is a gem of a physicist.
He is literally laughing lol.
right because we just call up black holes or dark matter and call it quits. lol. no need to talk about magnetic fields, and toroidal structure.
@Coach Levi they can’t know everything, they’re not god. But they know better than you and I 😂
@Coach Levi from that witless rationale, you should not listen to anything from anybody because you simply don't have knowledge in those respective fields
@Coach Levi Talking crap about scientists while using a mobile phone that wouldnt even be remotely possible with out scientists. It's just too ironic. I love it.
I love when you have someone (like Gadi Schwartz) that is so excited and interested in the topic doing the interview. So much better than canned questions.
definitively a smart guy
Kaku is an OG
great point!
That’s what i was thinking!!
@@centuryfiles9558hi how universe can be 13 billion years or so,
Universe is eternal but always changing( creation,sustenance, destruction - repeat) is our galaxy 13 B years? That could be possible , but this beginless and endless cosmos? How ? Please explain me here .
I feel incredibly lucky to be alive to witness the photos we’ve seen from JWT, I’ve almost teared up at a few from sheer awe. We live in an incredible universe, I don’t even know what else to say at this point. The James Webb Telescope is worth 1,000,000,000x (even much, much more)what it cost to build and I can’t wait to see what else it reveals. Many deep thanks to the team of people that conceptualized and built this telescope from start to finish, it’s a precious gift to humanity.
I've always thought it was weird when people yell at their TV during sporting events.
Then I woke up in the middle of the night to watch JWT launch.
I was screaming "GO!!!" and "YOU CAN DO IT!!!" while crying tears of joy.
I can now understand.
We are lucky mofos to be able to see this.
Game Changer. ✨⭐
Hear hear!
@@PM-rm7nr i set two alarms and still slept thru the launch. Luckily it was a perfect burn !
The only thing to say is that we are a sad story. Why? Because we are the only beings "aware" of our own selves and the universe that made us and yet, we can't live forever to traverse the massive universe - to see all of it's mysteries and exist to see it's infinite expansion to where entropy becomes 0.
Those images are drawings
MORE OF THIS PLEASE !! More science and discovery. The world is full of people therefore there will always be conflict / intrigue etc... but scientific discovery transcends time and culture. It's like a beacon that reminds us about the best things in life.
scientific discovery is always being retconned so it must not transcend time and culture
@harvard smith deangelo it probably doesn't but it makes you happier at least
@harvardsmithdeangelo6905 you talk about fantasy, science itself is a fantasy my friend. Science exists here only on Earth, within the human civilization and it's gonna be like that until we find some intelligent life out there. The word 'Science' itself is created of languages we wrote.
@harvardsmithdeangelo6905 I don't know, we cannot exactly understand how intelligent life can and would exist in the universe. One possibility ive always thought is intelligent life exists but he'll they're so intelligent that they don't even care if life exists anywhere else or not.
@harvardsmithdeangelo6905what bro
michio kaku is such a joy to listen to! He radiates delight and joy in every interview. Great segment!
His books are fantastic too.
The problem with predicting earthquakes, is not to save lives anymore but the complete opposite.
I love that Kaku can talk about aliens all the time and he's still so respected. We're getting closer to a world where people can actually have discussions.
Pilots, including military pilots, are starting to talk openly now about their experiences. Scientists are now starting to do serious research and aren’t dismissing it out of hand too. Things are definitely changing.
@@keirfarnum6811 Yup i personally think the testemony from the pilots and former ministry of defense for not just US, but UK AND canada as well are huge and cant be ignored.
Whether its a mass government conspiracy (where they get top officials to claim ufos for some sort of fear mongering) or its the real deal, i think we outta be able to seriously discuss these topics within the next decade or so. We can only hope, though.
It's about time we've given religion it's time in the sun as ridiculous as they are it's time to start thinking in a more realistic and in depth manner than just sky wizards did it.
Respected 🤣
Agreed!
I don't think we are capable of putting an age on the universe yet. This telescope is absolutely priceless for the amount of information it will provide to us. The first handful of images redefined our understanding of space around us and this is just a stepping stone in technological advancement.
“There could be a Nobel prize, waiting for you!” this guy is a true gem to our lifetime
He's a liar, those images are fake
@@sophiafakevirus-ro8cc 😂😂😂
@@RG3FC333 there really is a telescope sending messages from a million miles away? That's impossible. It's all mind control.
@Leo What is God?
@@sophiafakevirus-ro8cc Sorry for your traumatizing experience. :v
Did someone hurt you so bad you have trust issue? :v
I find these startling discoveries mind boggling. In the billions of planets, stars and galaxies, we can't be the only little planet that happens to be occupied by sentient beings.
That's what I'm saying with all those other planets and galaxies out their there is no way we're alone in the galaxy we just don't have the technology to explore them yet
We could be tho
Why not ?
@Visitation - of Jesus The Christ ok man
@Visitation - of Jesus The Christ Your ideology is irrelevant to reality. Human development and history is much, much vaster than 6000 years. We can literally track the age of objects and artifacts. The timeline of basic development cannot support your theory.
Kaku is a joy to listen to even if I don't agree with everything he says. He is great at simplifying confusing topics into small bite size portions that everyone can understand
Well said.
A real juxtaposition to other astrophysicists. Not naming any Neil Names.
You don't agree with everything he says what that even means are you saying that you are even bigger Scientist than Mr. Kaku .
And you can tell how passionate he is about things
This dude basically said he is smarter than michio kaku lmfao
I absolutely love this field of study it never fails to awe and stun me
JWST embarrassed cosmologists.
@@junacebedo888 perfect time to jump in the field with all the discoveries JWST has found. A lot of books are no longer valid in theory and have to be rewritten
the more u know the more u realize how little u know
The more that I know, the more I digress.
Sounds like back in 1928 Edwin Hubble may have misplaced a decimal point.
"True wisdom comes from knowing that you know nothing." Socrates
All I know is that I know nothing.
The scientist, fantastic and smart dude. Something I DON’T see often tho, a reporter on a main news channel genuinely interested in the topic and really grasping what’s being talked about
Even IF there’s other life out there, we’re too far apart to ever detect one another. It would take us 78,000 years to travel to our nearest star. You could find a civilization from 1 million light years away with insanely powerful tech and at the speed of light, it would take us 1 million years to get there. That’s beyond unfathomable.
Your opinion is based only on what you think exists. It is unknown what we don't know.
All you need is a Stargate duhhh.....
@@LaCajunWash exactly, Chris!
@@LaCajunWash bro don’t be opening our world up to the wraith and goa’uld!!
@@malachijames7616 _waves vaguely towards Egypt_ I think that ship has sailed...
I remember amending a lecture in the early 70s by a physics professor who was "proving" that black holes do not exist. So the very nature of science is that it can be subject to change.
@Paul Thomas Read the year again buddy. In fact it was in 71.
The smartest thing you can say to a question you don't understand is "I don't know" but it doesn't mean you can't figure it out.
Every image gives a new perspective, incredible
No wonder we Iove twitter
@Visitation - of Jesus The Christ Please don't defame God... Please study Bible and research. Research Bible
@Visitation - of Jesus The Christ Do you believe the universe was built in 6000 years...
@Visitation - of Jesus The Christ Please focus on the point you said the one who is above time and nature, you'll be able to understand the days are not literal... Even we have Biblical examples and if we research, the science aligns with Bible in the order of creation to some extent.. So i would suggest to please study Bible... Thank you
@Visitation - of Jesus The Christ May i know where it states 24 hours?
We humans are like hillbillies who have no idea how big a city is cuz we've only seen a town.
Go James!!!! This is amazing!!!
And compare everything to our sister
Hillbilly’s know what a city looks like. It would make since you compared it to a tribesmen finding out a what a city is.
@@RoxasLopez "make since" or make sense? 😉
@katthefantastic Why are you so defensive lmao
Or city people who don’t know what a mountain looks like because they’ve never been outside of their concrete shell.
God is incredible. Brings tears to my eyes, the magnitude of the beauty of life.
❤
You got asked a question.
Yeah we don't understand how "time" works at all. This is incredible.
@@adaster98 Lol exactly. What we "know" is constantly being revised, which is as it should be.
Time is just something we made up to try to satisfy are own understanding of things.
How Can We See 46.1 Billion Light-Years Away In A 13.8 Billion Year Old Universe ?
th-cam.com/video/sleZx0r-_wI/w-d-xo.html
..
@@JCL1023 That's true for all theoretical physics. The guesses that "stick" are those not proven false, at least for the moment...
The present consensus--since Einstein--is that space and time are two manifestations of the same thing--gravity.
"As the area of our knowledge grows, so, too, does the perimeter of our ignorance." -Neil Degrasse Tyson
Such a good quote, very fitting for this. Perfect.
Neil DaAss Tyson. Dude is pompous and annoying af
Neil and SETI scientist Seth Shostak can go have a bowl of static for lunch.
NDT, the celebrity of physics….
McDonald's worker: sir......are you going to order?
I am inlove with the universe!!! It is so beautiful! Yet so scary!
Gadi, we still watch you from NM! Keep up the great work!
There is an estimated 100 billion planets in our galaxy. Our TINY galaxy compared to others with more planets. There is an estimated 200 billion galaxies in the universe. I suspect these estimates are not even close to the amount that exists. Then when you think about the possibility of different universes...
That's an old number. The latest number is at 2 trillion galaxies.
@@bengsynthmusic That's insane. And even that number will probably be dwarfed 10 years from now
masterful engineering by a great creator and designer.
@Damdumps just explain how the universe exist from nothingness of eternity?
Gadi is such a ham. Always so proud to see him and watch his career grow since Albuquerque.
New 🇲🇽
I love how Kaku is basically the only name to appear whenever there’s something to discuss about space lol watched him in several documentaries over the years and he’s still relevant haha
Neil deGrasse Tyson: What am I a joke to you?
@@SchoolRumble4ever22 There are others other than Kaku or Tyson. Still, Kaku is one of my favorites, Tyson not so much... he gets too chummy with anti-science folks, and it's a waste of his time and reduces his credibility. And as for others, I love seeing Michelle Thaller, Paul Sutter or Laura Danley. Andrea Ghez is also awesome and a Nobel Prize winner, but I don't recall if she ever got invited in some news show to talk about something. And I'm sure there are many other scientists I love to hear speaking that I can't recall their name now!
@Herlander Carvalho oh I know there are others but I've seen a LOT of interviews where they invite Neil on for anything regarding space.
Wow! Michio Kaku is such a good explainer!
he really is if he was my science teacher i would be so happy
I would love to meet him in person and shake his hand. Would be a dream come true. Always love talking to other highly intelligent people. Hard to find in my town
kak u too!
the cepstral transform was invented in the 1960's..
aaah.. never mind ya bunch of suckers...
@@atomictraveller tuck yourself woke mind.
How Can We See 46.1 Billion Light-Years Away In A 13.8 Billion Year Old Universe ?
th-cam.com/video/sleZx0r-_wI/w-d-xo.html
I like this interviewer, and I feel like he’s a lot more in touch than what he lets on to help everyone else relate to it.
What a time to live in. Watching this really feels like how I watched Interstellar for the first time. Amazing, think about all the lives that can be saved.
What is the point when humans are destroying the planet earth, the environment and ecosystem every day???
This is amazing, thank you to everyone involved in the realisation of this new telescope, I'm so grateful! New information will continue to flow from this project and I can't wait to see what happens next.
Those images are faked
This the stuff I like seeing in the news
Agreed!
Speaking of being too old, this treasure of a man seems far older than the last time I heard from him.
the size of the computing power needed to predict earthquakes sounds really interesting to me and also mind boggling how big of a model that would be.
im sorry but its so cool to see the news reporter get so excited about this; it makes me just as excited haha. also mr. kaku is very good with analogies. i love explanations through analogies and examples, so it helped grasp an understanding of the theories. i respect that. thank you.
Amazing! I love science! The ever changing information is spectacular. Thanks for sharing.
I have a question for you. If you and I stood on the street and you asked "what's the speed limit?" And I said it is "25", then said "no its 35" and then said "no its 45." Exactly what point would you say "just admit that you don't know."
@@sethfichter1050 ok ok ok🤣I got a couple answers for this but I'm gonna need to know what's not going to offend you😅
@R.K. Ssshhh it's not a question that requires alot of answers. It's a simple question.
I love science. A never ending spectacle of unwarranted certainty. The age of the universe is 13.8 +/-0.2 billion years. But is now thought to be much older !! LOL.
It's amazing that there are some people that don't believe that God created the Universe. They always say they trust science, yet science is constantly changing. So weird.
I am so happy to be in this time frame of history, seeing all these beautiful galaxy’s an of our universe , thank god for giving the very intelligent people the knowledge to make such technology to allow us to see all his wonders
Yeah its Homosapiens who have evolved over 230,000 years that provided this , not any god , you should keep the made up and the scientific apart because to claim a god is to deny the scientific principle , you have belief or a book to follow , there are no souls nor miracles and no gods in science because it is an attempt to explain the natural world without resorting to the supernatural , as there has never been any evidence for a god to exist the scientist/rational honest thinker would conclude the claims to date must be false and when we looked we found that yes they don't hold with scientific fact .
I’d rather be born 100 years in the future
But I also feel good being in an era where we aren’t completely reliant on tech and can just live our life without it in an organic manner . Maybe 100 years from now things are not like this at all which kind of scares me.
@@shukrantpatil 100 years into the future the earth could very well be cloaked in a Nuclear Winter and no humans are left...
I've been saying it for years. The universe is infinite, it has no beginning or end. It's just always been.
I agree. And since it is infinite, the fact that we are the only ones within it simply cannot be true.
I concur
The universe is probably not infinite since space itself is still expanding. Probably 150+ billion light-years at least
The universe cannot be infinite because the laws of thermodynamics don't allow for that. Even alternative models to the Big Bang theory like the string theory, multiverse, pre-Big Bang cosmologies, inflationary scenarios, semiclassical models, closed time-like curves, ekpyrotic cyclic models, oscillating theories and loop quantum gravity models are all proven to require a beginning of space-time (BGV-theorem).
An infinite universe would also contradict logic itself (as shown by mathematicians like David Hilbert), and without logic we couldn't do science in the first place.
@@friedrichrubinstein Yeah, they're all wrong
I always love learning about space . It’s so beautifully chaotic yet majestic . Just knowing that at anytime , an unexplained phenomena could erase us from existence in the blink of an eye is blissful .
There is no chaos what so ever.
@@KaiserBlade 🙄 asteroids zipping through space , suns exploding, black wholes swallowing things , rouge planets crashing , other planets with magma spewing or gas giants like Jupiter with storms the size of our planet . How is that not chaotic !?
Mr. Kaku is awesome! Celebrating possible new evidence and entertaining new theorys. Other people and institutions dismiss and ignore... trying to make new info fit into old theorys
Nope , he's laughed at in the theoretical physics science community 🤣
He's a cool dude. His mind is not so closed that he can accept there might be aliens amongst us.
@@facetubeyoubook40 why?
He is an old quack.. an entertainer.. if you are entertained by him ur not bout that science life ...u that special class wearing a helmet type
@@facetubeyoubook40 thank you finally 1 who knows
Has anyone considered the possibility that perhaps with the big bang happening and it being early that the galaxies simply formed faster back then? Our understanding of the universe kinda comes from how things work now, but things may have worked quite differently in the early universe.
Of course I think there's some important context missing here too. Our observable universe in 13.7 billion years old, but we have no real way of knowing if we see the actual origin point, or just the oldest/farthest point backwards we can see. The universe could be 20 billion years old or more in totality and we just can't see the stuff passed 13.7 because light can't travel fast enough from those places to reach us ever expansion has just spread things too far for that now.
That's not how the age of the universe was calculated
Like the guy said above the 13.8 billion number is not based on how far back we can see.
Though there is a limit to how far back we can see and that's called "Recombination" which is approximately 370,000 years after the big bang. Before then, like you stated, the universe worked differently and was too dense and hot to form matter for light to reflect off of so matter was sort of "transparent" to light and its impossible to observe light earlier than that point in time
I may add, the laws of physics have never changed and even if they did at some point it was either at the moment of or “before” the big bang if that’s even possible. We can use the laws of physics to very accurately measure the age of the universe several different ways, and I’ve heard the big bang referred to as the point in time where our current understanding of physics break down i.e. our calculations and formulas give conflicting answers where they didn’t before.
@@iampfaff the laws in physics can in fact change as constants have been observed to change such as the hubble constant and the speed of light
@@vimax3858 these things you mention aren’t “laws” of physics. i’m sure you’re aware of this as well, but hubbles constant is a value that continually changes as we get closer and closer to the true age of the universe. and it isn’t even that big of a change, we are talking thousandth decimal places.
i should so say the same applies to the speed of light. we know it’s approximate speed, 299,792,458 m/s, but mathematicians and physicists are refining whether or not it is 299,792,458.13467 or 299,792,458.13466. this is the degree of change you speak of.
also we haven’t “observed” their change. we refine the values we assign to them, so we are changing them. the speed of light is a constant. our best guess right now is close enough to the real answer we can use it like it’s the actual value.
Carl Sagan would love to see this.
He is chilling wit the aliens
They gonna snatch Kaku soul too. They capture souls. Brad pitt? Oh They getting him too 😂
I love how they show a "fact sheet" and the two main points are prefaced "believed to be", meaning these are not facts, but guesses and theory presented as facts
This is an incredible find and I really wish they'd fund astronomy so they can peer back further.
It's got funding
@@thomasweir2834 103billion should be a trillion dollar budget when all things considered i.e. pollution. Costs big money to drive that car you driving and even bigger cost to a rapidly aging earth.
@@treesareshady refer to recent my comment.
@@frankcastle5737 sure there are things funded more... But 103 billion is not an underfunded industry. There are big names in astronomy and physics and I'd be willing to bet they get about as much done as their labor force can uphold. More money won't send more people to graduate school
Sounds like he’s alluding to the theoretical Black hole stars of the early universe.
Not often mentioned is that our method of measuring distance at these extremes might not be as accurate as we first imagined.
We’re looking so far back that we seeing the backside of ourselves 🤔
It's funny how these pictures are transmitted millions of miles yet I can't pick up a tv channel 90 miles away..lol
My guess is that, whilst the Universe probably is still about 13.7 billion years old, these giant early galaxies found by JWST probably formed much faster than what we currently understand about the rate of galaxy formation. The Universe 500 million years after the big bang was probably very different from the Universe we occupy now, or was, say several billion to 5, 6 billion years ago.
Exactly. The age is well known. Its the chaos and power of the early universe that we underestimate
Yea, it's more likey those galaxies just formed faster. Remember, 85% of our universe is potentially dark matter and we have almost no idea what it is. Could be the culprit.
I think the universe is much older than we originally predicted, We are clearly missing variables integral to calculating it's age.
@@jasonhildebrand1574 So why don't these early galaxies look chaotic? That's the whole point of these observations, these early galaxies are looking surprisingly mature.
-The universe may be older than we thought.
-Humans may be older than we thought.
-Civilizations may go back further than we always believed.
-Advanced technology may go back further than we always believed.
-Earth may be older than we thought.
*It seems we may have got the ages of things and time, figured out all wrong.
That's the best part of science; finding out things that you never knew or thought could/would be possible. I love that we only have predictive theories of how galaxies formed relatively soon after the big bang and the JWST is making us question those theories. But, as Michio said, it could be a "cosmic illusion" due to gravitational lensing so, we need more photos plz! lol I cannot wait.
It's called progress. We learn by both proving and disproving current knowledge. Thanks to the scientific method.
@@GungaLaGunga I always find it frustrating when some people think that disproving a theory means we have regressed.
@@Timmycoo Indeed. They misunderstand the scientific method. Or the times when scientists were trying to do one thing, fail at that, but discover some other thing that ends up being useful at a something completely different.
@@GungaLaGunga Lmao, my pharmacology teacher would constantly bring up the original intended use of Viagra to get that point across.
This chap is a global treasure.
I LOVE this interview. I almost felt like i was present. This was awesome
Amazing! Who knew that NBC could actually report real news?!
This isn't real news. More than likely not real at all.
Never seen anything like this on fox to say the least lol
@@TG-vk1ut because you're always watching CNN
Your thinking of Fox. They don't even deal in facts.
@@TG-vk1ut They're too busy whining about the CRT boogeyman to devote any time to scientific discussions.
first thing i wanted so bad when this thing went up was to look all the way back. it's great that they didn't make us wait years and are publicly releasing them so soon, it's awesome.
Isn't it funny how this is the only thing they release right away for us to see lol
@@Melasvasapelar dont look up ;D
I think the universe is much older than they think it is.
*Dr. Michio Kaku is awesome!*
Great new article. Keep up the good work . I didn't think Jame Webb telescope would reveal these mind-blowing relevations so quickly. Every pixel of light reveals more of the true nature of the universe and our place on this tiny insignificant blue speck called Earth .
The young earth/ universe creationists are HAPPY that JWST has been created. 13 billion years is way too much. That age will never explain why a cosmic noon galaxy is as massive as the Milky way.
I love it! "we may have to revise our theory of the creation of the universe." who'da thunk it?
I think the bigger issue is ignoring the expansion's effect on the flow of time. If spacetime is expanding, time is dilating.
Would that explain why time seems to be going faster ..
It talks about it in the Bible. The days will become shorter or more less go by faster to our observation as we approach the end.
@@shayalynn 🤣🤡
@@shayalynn The bible talks about treating medical conditions with animal sacrifices but I'm sure you don't believe that
@@shayalynn you better not be eating seafood
The awesome thing about science is it’s ability to adapt to new information.
....... that new information or data can shamed scientists. Age of the universe is now in question. Let us hope that cosmologists would not be so narrow minded to listen to universe is just thousands of years old.
We need more News reporters like these who have some sort of expertise on the matter they are talking.
What is insanely mind-blowing more than understanding the age of the universe...is that light can travel and exist that LONG! Let alone REACH us. Imagine all the light that's lost. There's infinite unknowns.
You can learn a lot on TH-cam about what light is and about other scientific topics, it’s absolutely fascinating. Light is a particle called photon and it can’t get “lost” unless it meets an atom that absorbs it.
@@abc33155 wait what? I had no idea, the more ya know
@@saintjames1718 Weird, ya somehow thought I was talking to ya. I obviously wasn’t. And just in case you’re not joking, educate yourself. ;)
@@abc33155 I wasn’t joking. I just chimed in because I thought what ya said was interesting. Idk who hurt you or if you were bullied as a kid to respond in such a way
My brain and body just melts every time I listen to Michio Kaku 🤩🤩
I’ll be honest, it’s refreshing to hear Michio Kaku’s take on what’s going on with these new discoveries. Tyson has been approaching these new discoveries in his own way, like refusing to believe the Big Bang may have not happened. Until we know more about what’s being discovered today we can’t truly cement what we’ve previously come to understand about the early stages of the universe. A quote from Tyson which seems ironic to me now is “One must be content with the questions themselves.”
Quoting 2 entertainers 😂🤣 big F bro
Well yes this should be a common sense. Humans should HUMBLE themselves and understand that THEY DONT UNDERSTAND. We are a spec of dust....so there is something way bigger and more intelligent to say the least. Let’s keep discovering, but let’s also be humble in our learning. ❤
@Zlysess same. I think his hubris is his own personal blackhole
the universe always has been and always will be. there is no big bang lol. it's like a long donut shape recycling matter into new things. there are no physical limits only temporal.
Hold up where did you hear this from Tyson? Link
Dr Kaku never disappoints. Mind blowing !
Kaku is disappointed that the James Webb space telescope proved him incorrect.
Professor Michio Kaku is a national treasure!
JWST has proved Prof Kaku wrong. Hope he would be humble enough to say that the bible is correct (again) that the universe is just thousand of years old.
Him: Not as smart as we think we are
NASA: Literally builds JWT
Phenomeal images!!!! Fabulous!!!
of what?. Some horribly grainy images are fabulous?
@@BertGraef did you miss the other images, genius? And of course the furthest objects in the universe we can image are going to be grainy. Duh. What's fabulous is seeing them at all.
@@BertGraef Lets see you try to capture galaxies 13 billion light years away in full Hd then. Where is your telescope project funding at?
@@Power_to_the_people567 Hubble did a much better job. These pictures are pure sht.
@@tthomas184 yeah I missed them. What are they showing this 20x20 pixel crap for?
Kinda figured that our understanding of the universe was flawed. Especially since both Einstein and Stephen Hawkins both said their findings aren't absolute and, in the future will be proven wrong.
Correct. Most "science" will be proven wrong one day.
The JWST is an amazing piece of equipment.
The best tech a few shaved monkeys have made so far.
Pretty crazy that if you have the lens you can look deep enough into the cosmos you will see the earliest entities that existed and then the amount of distance between that object to our earth is mind boggling
An excellent report, in my view. Thanks for putting this on here.
I'm a firm believer we're not alone why are so many people astonished by the fact when we learn something we don't know they're sounding like they're scared of it .
If more people cared about this kind of story the world would be a better place.
how?
😂😂you think so?
Lucas I’m sure majority of your problems are man made.
@@thaiylooze8217 no the majority of my problems are chronic pain from crohn's disease.
I’m too stupid enough to wrap my head around what these guys were saying but I know I’m glad to be alive while it’s happening lmao
This is so exciting! 🖤 I love Dr. Kaku!!
Cool dude.
Why do galaxies have a massive black hole at their centers? My intuition tells me it has something to do with new star formation. They are the wombs of the galaxies. Or not.
We need Dr.Kaku and Neil to go on wayyy more podcasts and interviews, I can sit for hours and listen to what they have to say
Those two should be humble enough to say that 13 billion years universe age is WRONG. Universe might be just thousands of years old like what the bible said.
Whenever I see this dude I can’t help but sing “This is up”
I’m sure there will be another sometime in the future when humanity hears, we used to think there were five distinct layers and now we have come to a new and better understanding.
We'll probably get a relatively compelte understanding in the coming decades. There is a limited depth to the Earth, so no room for new layers once we mapped out all of it.
@@Ruzzky_Bly4t you don’t think new technology that you can’t imagine now will be able to discern layers within layers? Sure it’s not getting any deeper, but five years ago scientists thought they had it figure out at four layers. Now they can differentiate another layer. Fifty years from now they might realize it’s like looking at brocolli crowns. There might be fifty discerning layers when you have tools to see more details
@@Ruzzky_Bly4t in 1676 when the microscope was used to see cells, no one had any concept or organelles. THEN when they were…. They had no concept or mitochondria and genes. THEN they had no concept of base pairs.
When scientists broke down the atom into protons, neutrons and electrons. They thought well now we have it figured. But then quarks, neutrinos, dark matter.
We don’t know what we don’t know and can’t see until the tools evolve beyond current imagination.
@genuine impulse I just don't see how the composition of the Earth comes anywhere near the complexity of cells or atoms. I'm sure we will learn new details about it in the future, but I don't think we will go far beyond our current number of distinct layers. What would be the cause of such complexity? I think once we can identify the composition of the Earth all the way to the center, there will be limited room for new discoveries.
@@Ruzzky_Bly4t i don't why are you certain about that. AFAI can tell, sub-layers could exist within these layers. These sub-layers might be able to tell us how the earth is formed before it became "livable", or if there are other things that could have 'lived' even before the perceived "livable" eras that we currently know. Which in turn could help us understand how other planets behave/look from a different perspective.
This is just unbelievable. Just imagine having this discussion 50 years from now.
50 years from now we will be communicating with other life
Infinite will continue to be bigger then any single minded being could ever think or let alone understand.
Rambling gibberish
@@maxwellsimoes238 I'm sorry that you can't compute it, but you're proving my point.
@@RiverHolySitesGoBRRRRRRR 😊👏👏👏
I just want to say beyond this interesting news, I really appreciate the passion of the interviewer in this video. Glad to see someone who really cares!
Scientits: we might be wrong, so fascinating!
Religious people: We aren't wrong, facts are!
I love science it's ever changing and adjusting its own reality.
Yeah that’s how science works, numbskull. You can thank science for the phone you’re using and the roof over your head
man. imagine if we could travel through all that.
Right 😩😩😩😩😩
6 singularities at the beginning of time sounds like the 6 infinity stones from the MCU🤣
“Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools.”
Came to say this.. just a few pics and hundreds of years of science needs to be re-written but we’re SO certain there’s no God and all this came from nothing…
@@SQUISHBUBBLE yep. Given enough time, everything is “possible”. But the precision of even so much as a peptide requires such a large number for the chance of that to happen. Then add to it the billions of billions cells to make single being. I mean, not only does each tiny atom need to exist, it needs to exist near all the other types of atoms and none of the others with the exact reaction to make a compound and then for those compounds to be near all the other compounds and no others to make a, well, anything. And then for that to happen in a way that spins and moves and tilts so perfectly and so precisely. For all that to happen at ‘random’ 🙃 To keep believing all that happened at random so hard that everything else must be based on that first and any contrary discoveries are rejected… well, it sounds like a lot of absurd assumptions just to try and be contrary to the Genesis account.
That's exactly what came to my mind too,
This just confirms what I have been saying we don't know crap when it comes to the universe.
Michio Kaku have some great interviews on the Art Bell show Coast to Coast AM - it was literally like 2-3 hours of him talking
I listened to many of those. Art had an incredible radio voice.
How can 'black holes' look like these "super galaxies?"
Personally, I suspect we are putting our own artificial constraints on how old and big the universe is?
We’re lucky to be living in times where this technology is doing anything at all
wait another 5-8 years...this will be small compared to what else they will be able to see or do...this is only the beginning my friend
Kaku is a legend
Kaku ridiculus when his predict phich keeping out fundamental Law of phich proceedings. He isnt phisician but opportunist writer sci fi.
WonkyPedia: "The age of the universe based on the best fit to Planck 2018 data alone is 13.787±0.020 billion years." Now we find it's a couple of billion more.
Bake a cake.
I ll go get some candles.
This is scientific proof that the earth is actually alive.
if head lice had technology .........
No is proof earth is flat
its so amazing i cant even wrap my mind around it...
Highly recommend his books!
Michio kaku is a beautiful man. I shook his hand once 10yrs or so ago when he came to speak at my college. Listen to his appearances on Joe rogan experience it's wonderful. Also when Neil degrasse tyson was on
We know the earliest stars (Population III) were much more massive than any stars that exist today, so perhaps there is a reason extremely massive galaxies could have existed then but not now.
Why does he keep reminding him his book may also be rewritten? We got ur gotcha already