Imagine if both Trappist-1 d and e end up habitable and develop sentient life at around the same time. How crazy would it be live on a planet where you can look into a telescope and see nightlights of an another civillisation.
Just imagine that some where out there that a being is saying the same thing about our solar system. “This star has a planet 3rd from the sun that may have life like ours” 🤯 mind blown.
But the second planet is almost exactly like our home, Vartan III. The invasion fleet will arrive there next Tuesday. The inhabitants of the third planet may fight, but we shall exterminate them by releasing small amounts of oxygen into their atmosphere.
You can actually explore this system in the game Elite Dangerous. They updated the systems around Sol as more scientific data comes in from the science community. Not to mention the rest of the Galaxy is there to explore in 1:1 scale and procedurally generated.
Also if those planets are tidally locked you would have perpetual daytime even in the habitable zones, with the sun barely moving in the sky I guess. Must be crazy
@Stiggy Vanderkskeen Can you take your flat Earth, anti-space nonsense somewhere else? After all, it's not like you can or will offer any objective facts or evidence, you will just keep spewing nonsense.
Imagine an intelligent civilization on one of these planets and having neighbors that are REALLY close that are also intelligent. Also think of all the religions these two hypothetical species created
Yup. Imagine if our Moon (somehow) had an Earth-like atmosphere and as a result comparable biosphere... Our global Civilization as we know it would be quite different just from the moon looking differently.
Hi Dave, my 5 yo son loves space related videos and he was pleasantly surprised to find your Trappist 1 video. He's hooked to it now. Thanks for your channel. I'm sure my son Shrihan is going to enjoy of your space videos. 🙏
He did a very good job. And as he stated there are a lot of exoplanets found around red dwarf stars. Do note the temp he gave. So when some idiot tells you that all stars are white. And so they do all produce the full electromagnetic spectrum they all have a color sequence Our star is a yellow star. with around a 5000 K temp. But you also need to study it on your own. To see the full story. It is an incredible field. When i was 10 i started to grind my own telescope. and in doing so got a break most kids do not get. in 1973 i met an actual cosmologist and he took me in and i got a two week stent at a 200 inch monster. After that it was my field the one i would follow the longest and actually throughout my life. And one dad would learn to regret using his words against when it came time for college. It is a JUNK SCIENCE he would not help me become a cosmologist choose something else or no college. So i chose medical science. But then in 2012 i met Miss Aller. Christine Aller 3 generation PhD in cosmology. I did not say much to her just a small comment and i described my telescope to her. Now her parents would know about this telescope and its fate. the primary was cracked during transport. taking the amount of the largest at its time telescopes from 5 to 4. Her and her family surrounded to more club president. All she could say about me was ( oh that is some new member that for some reason knows all the deep sky objects without a map ) the surrounded my family and found out why i did not become a cosmologist even though i more than qualify as one. In fact i am one. 3 different groups of cosmologist fell to the same fate. Until the president could not stand how i could stop a lecture in its tracks just by saying something It is like the last one talking about dark matter. So what did i do? mention the bullet super cluster.
It's probably been so for a long time, but I've recently discovered the TRAPPIST-1 system exists within the star map of Stellaris! All 7 planets are present in the system, and TRAPPIST-1d through 1f are habitable planets of three preset climate conditions (Dry, wet and cold), which is really damn cool.
Depending on the planets distance from its star and the size+brightness of the star itself it would either be interesting, or you would die instantaneously from either scorching heat or frigid cold.
[alex/bad boy/singel] *KICKS TO HOT SIDE* [walter] *dodges and pushes to cold side* [alex/bad boy/singel] *DOES NOT DIE BEACUSE I AM IMMORTAL* {System} iamaleximmortal43759 was kicked from the game beacuse rping as an immortal thing.. is just dumb.
I had a question while watching this. With all the orbits only taking days to complete, how frequently do all the planets at Trappist line up perfectly for an epic train eclipse of sorts? Or, if this ever happens at all? Might be a dumb question, not sure lol
Please do more of these! Even if I don't have access to the latest and greatest telescopes and don't understand the math and science behind it, I always love hearing about new planets we're discovering. Also, it's super fun to go through the comments section of your videos *specifically* to look for FE-ers and denialists floundering around trying to discredit you.
@@ProfessorDaveExplains I assume the answer is yes, but do these binaries have habitable zones as well? What's the difference between what a habitable zone would and would not be for these systems compared to ours?
@@Eric_The_Cleric Seeing the professor didn't answer you... allow me. Yes, binary system have habitable zones too. There are two types of planets that could exist here. Planets that orbit both stars and planets that orbit just one of the stars. There are a lot of variables to consider when determing if a planet may be habitable or not. Too many to explain here in a comment but you can google it if you like.
You're absolutely right. I mean just take a look around or something; one of the system has to be flat. It is usually the most arrogant and narcissistic one, so "d" is the obvious choice. xD
being so close to their star and thus orbiting so rapidly, wouldnt there be tremendous tidal forces at play as well? Which might heat up the planets and make them habitable beyond what would normally be the outer edge of the habitable zone?
It would also depend on the atmosphere--a high greenhouse effect could quite easily let the planet retain enough heat to have liquid water. Another possibility could be that the outward side of the planet is frozen, but some or all of the "sun side" gets enough light to be habitable. And when talking about "habitable zone", bear in mind that two of the best local candidates for extra-Terran life (Enceladus and Europa) are both well outside of it in our solar system.
Tidal forces will add heat to the planets or lock them to the star (like Earth has done to the Moon). The expectation is that most or all of these planets are tidally locked, so they won’t experience any tides as a result.
How fascinating! I sure do hope that one day we get to visit these things. It'd be interesting to also see if they have their own complex societies. Living out lives much like we do and in their own special ways.
i had to do a basic, lab style, report on this system a couple of months ago based off of some star brightness data, i didnt realize just how significant the system actually was
1:11 that means nothing at all, since all stars are also made of gas, and with increasing mass they become able to hold significant amounts of plasma, or unformed matter as a protium-Neutron-Electron soup, which is mixed with infused hydrogen and helium-3. Except this star is too small for that, and hence only primarily uses the hydrogen-> helium-3 process. It would still be too small (due to being 0.089 solar masses, far under the 0.3 masses needed) for any CNO fusion to happen and too big that deuterium would be a significant factor in fusion processes, like that is in Brown Dwarfs (deuterium is the primary indicator, Hydrogen’s passive aggressive isotope cousin, and in some cases like Jupiter magnetic energy as well as meaningless amounts of deuterium fusion can give off radiation. Hence TRAPPIST-1 might be one of the smallest functioning stars we know of, and likely one of the longest lasting.
Well if they are tidally locked. That would mean their day is the same as their year. So speaking of years lasting a few days maximum. Even if they did have seasons then Spring would last like 12 hours (if the year is 2 days), 12 hours of summer, 12 hours of autumn and 12 hours of winter. Crazy if you think about it :)
@@ProfessorDaveExplains yea we would need to significantly advance our technology very quickly just for the even slight possibility to plan that trip let alone leave or get there in our lifetimes.
Fun Fact: Trappist is an order of monks that brew beer. Most trappist beers are made in Belgium and this solar system was discovered by Belgian scientists, so they named it TRAPPIST, after the telescope they have placed and used in Chile: Transiting Planets and Planetesimals Small Telescope, or TRAPPIST for short.
Wouldn't these things be huge in the sky if one were to stand on the surface of their sister planet? Think about what their lore and storytelling might be like if a civilized species evolved along the terminator line of one of these worlds... where this giant vicious red ball of fire loomed on the horizon ever-still... and burned and scorched the lands beneath it, with other worlds flying by like slightly smaller moons and occasionally traversing across this massive red fireball as these ethereal black orbs. Fascinating stuff.
What amazes me is how many planets we've found using the transit system. If the orbit of the exoplanet doesn't transit the star FROM OUR PERSPECTIVE we'd never see it. If we were directly under, or above the the orbital plane of these planets they would never transit their star from our perspective. Its amazing to me so many of them do.
The good side of living in this planet is that you can celebrate your birthday every single week 😂 One earth year is like a week in those planets. Technically I am 27 in Earth but about 2457 in Trappist-d 😔
The system is too young for any of those planets to have oxygen atmospheres. Plus the flaring from the star probably strips the ozone column of any planet with an oxygen atmosphere, or will when they evolve. So look for microbes in the seas if there are seas present, but no metazoan life.
Barton, the question of oxygen in the atmosphere is very important, as you seem to understand. Currently, to the best of my knowledge, there are no known planets with a significant amount of oxygen in the atmosphere; since oxygen is very reactive, any oxygen that might have existed in early non-earth planetary atmospheres has long since reacted with metals to produce metal oxides, thus eliminating oxygen from the atmosphere. Photosynthetic life on earth has produced the oxygen in our atmosphere, so the lack of oxygen elsewhere strongly suggests that photosynthetic life as we know it does not exist there. I look for the day when oxygen will be discovered in the atmosphere of an exoplanet; that will certainly be one of the greatest discoveries of all time because of the strong suggestion that photosynthetic life exists on that exoplanet.
Well you don't really need oxygen for earth-like life. Sure it could still be carbon-based, bit it could have evolved to use another gas, like nitrogen or methane for example, or even carbon dioxide. Life is very flexible. Basically, life needs water, an energy source and nutrients. Sure, ozone in the atmosphere is needed to protect life from radiation, but life could have evolved to tolerate high levels of solar radiation. You just need a few individuals that are more tolerant or better adapted to higher levels of radiation. Over time you have life that's adapted to those conditions. If it's bacterial then this process can happen very quickly, possibly in just a few years.
That one planet literally has one HeII side and the the other is Heaven because it's cool...👌🏼💯✔ The habitual zone is purgatory, where both demons and angles play...😬
This isn't just for this video but for all the content you make thank you. I got interested first hearing you debunk flat earth idiots and then your "debate" with Kent Hovind, but the things I have learned about chemistry and the history of my own country through the presidents has greatly improved my understanding of the world I live in. Thank you
That star at 0:20 is super eager to hear some science stuff Edit: at 8:27 it closed is eyes and opened its mouth in shock at how much science stuff it learned
According to my calculations from data given on video at 1:01, Trappist 1 has density of approximately 71g/cc, which is >3X that of Osmium (22.59g/cc), the most dense naturally occurring material on Earth. Explain
That theoretical habitable band at the terminator line on tidally-locked worlds would make for a fascinating science fiction setting for a novel. If I could write for sh*t, I’d get right on it. I hope someone else does.
The Earth Moon system is a binary planet system and I think our best chance at finding highly evolved life is finding something similar. This would also would eliminate the problem associated with tidal locking and is likely the cause of plate tectonics.
That image was made before terragenesis was created. When Trappist-1 was being added to terragenesis, the terragenesis team got the rights to use the same textures used in this photo from the original creators of the photo.
"The type of this star is *Red Dwarf.* This close to the star, it's very hot. It's habitable zone is here, and liquid water may exist on these planets. *It's cold outside,* and liquid water is unlikely on these outer planets. Depending on atmospheric conditions, there may be habitable zones on these planets, but *there's no kind of atmosphere* that could allow us to live on these planets here and here."
@@pranavlimaye There was a comedy on British TV, a long time ago, called Red Dwarf. The theme song began: "It's cold outside. There's no kind of atmosphere. I'm all alone, more or less. Let me fly far away from here!"
You know, our solar system is hella lucky. We got a planet near the sun (showing what happens there), a planet with a heavy atmosphere (showing what happens if you have a thick atmosphere), a habitable planet (guess.), a planet with ice caps but no liquid water (proving that planets can have water in ice), an asteroid belt, 4 gas planets (imagine if we didn't have these and found gas planets, our minds would be fucking blown) and 2 gas planets with rings,
a way to tell is to see how close the planet is to a star if it's really close to it then most likely the stars gravity will make the planet unable to rotate on its axis.
Sir I love your channel so much ... You are my saviour please suggest me some books in calculus , phisics, chemistry, electronics I want more in depth learning
The most similar Solar System planets to the Trappist-1 system planets Trappist 1 B - Venus Trappist 1 C - Venus-earth Trappist 1 D, E & F - Earth Trappist 1 G - Mars Trappist 1 H - Ceres
I would LOVE a VR game of what it would be like standing on different planets and moons, or you can zip quickly around space within our galactic neighborhood to see different stars and planets. But the VR would have to be incredibly detailed and realistic. That would be freaking badass!
That _"Terminator Line"_ ... Somehow, it hits me hard upon a re-imagining of how that line would look on _'Kharak'_ (from that certain RTS video game, Homeworld) - just barely-colder on both North and South, and blasting heat-wave at Equator...
Imagine if both Trappist-1 d and e end up habitable and develop sentient life at around the same time. How crazy would it be live on a planet where you can look into a telescope and see nightlights of an another civillisation.
The odds of that happening are astronomical but it's a cool thought nonetheless.
I see what you did there
If i lived on one of those planets i would think that life would be very common
Why not f and g
You wouldn’t even need one honestly.
Why is it so satisfying to imagine/dream living on exoplanets? It seems so exotic and happy places.
In my head I imagine paradise on planets.
No wars, conflicts, terrorism, or anything else like that. A fresh start at a new society.
fr
@Matthew Cornell will there rich and poor there? if there is then forget about heaven. if not who will serve food in restaurants?
@@lakrinmex8132 you need rich and poor to sustain a country.
I feel sad for all the flat earthers and space deniers that can't appreciate the existence of things like that in our universe.
don't. they made the choice themselves.
They are sad for you that you cannot appreciate their sky wizard and that you don't believe in heaven.
Alternate ideas should be supported
@Stiggy Vanderkskeen why would they lie? what's in it for NASA or whatever to waste millions just to hide the shape of the Earth or space?
I agree and approve this message
Can you imagine being on one of those planets and seeing another planet so close to the one you are on?
🤙🏼
I would probably faint
it would be very beautiful
Just like in the movies.
stop.
Just imagine that some where out there that a being is saying the same thing about our solar system. “This star has a planet 3rd from the sun that may have life like ours” 🤯 mind blown.
But the second planet is almost exactly like our home, Vartan III. The invasion fleet will arrive there next Tuesday. The inhabitants of the third planet may fight, but we shall exterminate them by releasing small amounts of oxygen into their atmosphere.
@@rembrandt972ify weird comment but ok
@@rembrandt972ify wrong timeline
Glyne Lewis but if they can see us then ofc they’ll want to come to us, it’s a shame that we probably ant see them XD
Rembrandt972
Humans: Wait, less CO2, less greenhouse effect , a colder planet.
I have been laughing my head off at the videos of you tearing flat earthers and idiots alike to shreds.
Fun fact if the earth was flat it would be at a constant incline
You can actually explore this system in the game Elite Dangerous. They updated the systems around Sol as more scientific data comes in from the science community. Not to mention the rest of the Galaxy is there to explore in 1:1 scale and procedurally generated.
Channel name checks out
1:1 scale. THE galaxy. In my computer. Dude...
@@wellardbr The computer doesn't render 1:1 scale of the galaxy!
I renders a circle around depending on your render distance.
space engine too
I went there last month, Trappist 1 4 is so beautiful it makes me wanna cry!
I didn't realize how tight their orbits were, it seems so crazy
Indeed! In fact, you'd probably be able to see the surface of other planets with the naked eye.
Also if those planets are tidally locked you would have perpetual daytime even in the habitable zones, with the sun barely moving in the sky I guess. Must be crazy
@Stiggy Vanderkskeen Yes, telescopes can only be used with imagination.
@Stiggy Vanderkskeen Can you take your flat Earth, anti-space nonsense somewhere else?
After all, it's not like you can or will offer any objective facts or evidence, you will just keep spewing nonsense.
@@maximilianopena They probably would be, due to the proximity to the star
6:31 imagine living in a star system where the star is looking back at you like that.
Yes
&imagine what its equator must be like.
"Who you callin Pinhead?"
Imagine an intelligent civilization on one of these planets and having neighbors that are REALLY close that are also intelligent. Also think of all the religions these two hypothetical species created
Yup. Imagine if our Moon (somehow) had an Earth-like atmosphere and as a result comparable biosphere... Our global Civilization as we know it would be quite different just from the moon looking differently.
jack daniels bruh à fight is coming
Brutal colonialism is my first guess tbh
_"think of all the religions these two hypothetical species created"_ - creating a religion is not intelligent. Avoiding them IS.
I have a feeling that there is no life outside of this Earth. We are the special ones.
Hi Dave, my 5 yo son loves space related videos and he was pleasantly surprised to find your Trappist 1 video. He's hooked to it now.
Thanks for your channel. I'm sure my son Shrihan is going to enjoy of your space videos. 🙏
We need more exoplanet videos from professor dave... We just do
He did a very good job. And as he stated there are a lot of exoplanets found around red dwarf stars.
Do note the temp he gave. So when some idiot tells you that all stars are white. And so they do all produce the full electromagnetic spectrum they all have a color sequence Our star is a yellow star. with around a 5000 K temp.
But you also need to study it on your own. To see the full story. It is an incredible field.
When i was 10 i started to grind my own telescope. and in doing so got a break most kids do not get. in 1973 i met an actual cosmologist and he took me in and i got a two week stent at a 200 inch monster.
After that it was my field the one i would follow the longest and actually throughout my life.
And one dad would learn to regret using his words against when it came time for college. It is a JUNK SCIENCE he would not help me become a cosmologist choose something else or no college. So i chose medical science.
But then in 2012 i met Miss Aller. Christine Aller 3 generation PhD in cosmology. I did not say much to her just a small comment and i described my telescope to her. Now her parents would know about this telescope and its fate. the primary was cracked during transport. taking the amount of the largest at its time telescopes from 5 to 4.
Her and her family surrounded to more club president. All she could say about me was ( oh that is some new member that for some reason knows all the deep sky objects without a map ) the surrounded my family and found out why i did not become a cosmologist even though i more than qualify as one. In fact i am one. 3 different groups of cosmologist fell to the same fate. Until the president could not stand how i could stop a lecture in its tracks just by saying something
It is like the last one talking about dark matter. So what did i do? mention the bullet super cluster.
@@karasprouse595 woa not that this isn't riveting.... How did this .. :/ good for you?
It's probably been so for a long time, but I've recently discovered the TRAPPIST-1 system exists within the star map of Stellaris! All 7 planets are present in the system, and TRAPPIST-1d through 1f are habitable planets of three preset climate conditions (Dry, wet and cold), which is really damn cool.
This makes me appreciate our planet even more... How lucky we are for all the right and comfortable conditions for our home.
Living on a tidally-locked planet would be a cool idea for a role-playing setting
I'd play that.
Depending on the planets distance from its star and the size+brightness of the star itself it would either be interesting, or you would die instantaneously from either scorching heat or frigid cold.
Jamesthesaiyan or you would have to live on the border between day and night
Starfider is set on tidally-lock planets
[alex/bad boy/singel] *KICKS TO HOT SIDE*
[walter] *dodges and pushes to cold side*
[alex/bad boy/singel] *DOES NOT DIE BEACUSE I AM IMMORTAL*
{System} iamaleximmortal43759 was kicked from the game beacuse rping as an immortal thing.. is just dumb.
Just imagine celebrating your birthday after every four days
Imagine having months every few hours
"How old are you ?"
"I'm 10000 years old"
0:19 the planets are so perfect there it looks like the Trappist-1 star has 2 little planet eyes
Imagine celebrating a new year every week XD
Happy 700th birthday mom!
@@TheStraightGod exactly XD
I had a question while watching this. With all the orbits only taking days to complete, how frequently do all the planets at Trappist line up perfectly for an epic train eclipse of sorts? Or, if this ever happens at all? Might be a dumb question, not sure lol
All these Trappist System planets are “Shake and Bake “ Colonies ...
It’ll happen.
👽💚
Lol, I hope they don’t find any abandoned ships belonging to another civilisation with funky egg-shaped things hanging out in the basement.
@@humanpotatoes4958 In Space No one can hear you scream.
They mostly come at night......mostly
This is like a civilized top 10 list.
I'm a tourist from the past and what you have been able to discover is fascinating. No one will believe me back home. Nice moving pictures btw!
They are called the tea-there.
shut up
man, i love these videos! I like listening to them while world building or drawing
Please do more of these! Even if I don't have access to the latest and greatest telescopes and don't understand the math and science behind it, I always love hearing about new planets we're discovering. Also, it's super fun to go through the comments section of your videos *specifically* to look for FE-ers and denialists floundering around trying to discredit you.
This type of information is so exciting.
Thank you for this video.
Weird. All the planets in the TRAPPIST-1 System aren't 2D circles???? The flat earth community has lied to me.
Great video professor! How common is for planets to be on a binary star system? Read somewhere that that is the case for most planetary systems too
yes binaries are quite common!
@@ProfessorDaveExplains I assume the answer is yes, but do these binaries have habitable zones as well? What's the difference between what a habitable zone would and would not be for these systems compared to ours?
@@Eric_The_Cleric Seeing the professor didn't answer you... allow me. Yes, binary system have habitable zones too. There are two types of planets that could exist here. Planets that orbit both stars and planets that orbit just one of the stars. There are a lot of variables to consider when determing if a planet may be habitable or not. Too many to explain here in a comment but you can google it if you like.
@@Eric_The_Cleric en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habitability_of_binary_star_systems
The last time I was this early, I was a Time Lord!
TRAPPIST-1d iS fLaT!! rEseArCh fLat 1d guys!
You're absolutely right. I mean just take a look around or something; one of the system has to be flat. It is usually the most arrogant and narcissistic one, so "d" is the obvious choice. xD
@@AnyDrug what do you mean
@@AnyDrug its not
Dan Deian r/woooosh
And it's probably made of cheese if you ask me. More on that in this video, please educate yourselves!:
th-cam.com/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/w-d-xo.html
Do more on astrobiology and astrophysics, Dave! I love it!
The TRAPPIST system looks like Earth's trial run..
Excellent, as always! I would love to see a series about exoplanets. Love your work (and I won't mention your entertaining FE vids...er...damn!)
This system seems so flippn old , I could imagine seeing some alien ruins on these exo-planets .
being so close to their star and thus orbiting so rapidly, wouldnt there be tremendous tidal forces at play as well? Which might heat up the planets and make them habitable beyond what would normally be the outer edge of the habitable zone?
Planet h is however too far outside .Tidal forces are good for planets e,f,g warming them up and some of them could be i 3:2 resonance
It would also depend on the atmosphere--a high greenhouse effect could quite easily let the planet retain enough heat to have liquid water. Another possibility could be that the outward side of the planet is frozen, but some or all of the "sun side" gets enough light to be habitable.
And when talking about "habitable zone", bear in mind that two of the best local candidates for extra-Terran life (Enceladus and Europa) are both well outside of it in our solar system.
Tidal forces will add heat to the planets or lock them to the star (like Earth has done to the Moon).
The expectation is that most or all of these planets are tidally locked, so they won’t experience any tides as a result.
Correction. We haven't discovered 'hundreds' of exoplanets. We have discovered THOUSANDS.
This is so fascinating! Thanks Professor Dave
How fascinating! I sure do hope that one day we get to visit these things. It'd be interesting to also see if they have their own complex societies. Living out lives much like we do and in their own special ways.
i had to do a basic, lab style, report on this system a couple of months ago based off of some star brightness data, i didnt realize just how significant the system actually was
I heard Aquarius and my interest went from like 6 to 10 real quick
Dude you're awesome lol. This is like, the most interesting star system, and you had a video on it yay
Maybe it's a good idea to make an adventure game of this solar system on each planet in different chapter.
been looking into this very interesting system for awhile now, and it looks very promising
1:11 that means nothing at all, since all stars are also made of gas, and with increasing mass they become able to hold significant amounts of plasma, or unformed matter as a protium-Neutron-Electron soup, which is mixed with infused hydrogen and helium-3. Except this star is too small for that, and hence only primarily uses the hydrogen-> helium-3 process. It would still be too small (due to being 0.089 solar masses, far under the 0.3 masses needed) for any CNO fusion to happen and too big that deuterium would be a significant factor in fusion processes, like that is in Brown Dwarfs (deuterium is the primary indicator, Hydrogen’s passive aggressive isotope cousin, and in some cases like Jupiter magnetic energy as well as meaningless amounts of deuterium fusion can give off radiation. Hence TRAPPIST-1 might be one of the smallest functioning stars we know of, and likely one of the longest lasting.
I love this stuff I could watch videos like this all day long
Strange how whole system completes one revolution within a week 🤔
i imagine with such short years there’d be no such thing as seasons even with dramatic axial tilt.
But if some of them spin, the daylight cycle there is quite interesting
Well if they are tidally locked. That would mean their day is the same as their year. So speaking of years lasting a few days maximum. Even if they did have seasons then Spring would last like 12 hours (if the year is 2 days), 12 hours of summer, 12 hours of autumn and 12 hours of winter. Crazy if you think about it :)
Seasons would be called: Morning, Day, Evening, Night...
@@Shuhister Not really. Being tidally locked you either have day or night. With dusk in between.
@@SandsOfArrakis Was paper about it and 2 planets if not more can actually be n 3:2 resonance
Fun video! Love the artist rendering of the planets’ landscapes!
"Hotter than Venus and likely uninhabitable."
So you're telling me there's a chance.....:P
I cant believe I just found out about this channel. Gotta watch every single video. Amazing.
When will we go there ???
not in our lifetimes sadly
@@ProfessorDaveExplains yea we would need to significantly advance our technology very quickly just for the even slight possibility to plan that trip let alone leave or get there in our lifetimes.
Fun Fact: Trappist is an order of monks that brew beer. Most trappist beers are made in Belgium and this solar system was discovered by Belgian scientists, so they named it TRAPPIST, after the telescope they have placed and used in Chile: Transiting Planets and Planetesimals Small Telescope, or TRAPPIST for short.
Wouldn't these things be huge in the sky if one were to stand on the surface of their sister planet? Think about what their lore and storytelling might be like if a civilized species evolved along the terminator line of one of these worlds... where this giant vicious red ball of fire loomed on the horizon ever-still... and burned and scorched the lands beneath it, with other worlds flying by like slightly smaller moons and occasionally traversing across this massive red fireball as these ethereal black orbs. Fascinating stuff.
Imagine orbiting UY-Scuti or Canis Majoris. That would be insane! The star would literally consume your entire field of view :D
I think that it's probably time to look at other targets judging by the information JWST has been providing on this system.
Thank you for saying "less than half." My pet peeve would be "more than two times less."
What amazes me is how many planets we've found using the transit system. If the orbit of the exoplanet doesn't transit the star FROM OUR PERSPECTIVE we'd never see it. If we were directly under, or above the the orbital plane of these planets they would never transit their star from our perspective. Its amazing to me so many of them do.
The good side of living in this planet is that you can celebrate your birthday every single week 😂
One earth year is like a week in those planets. Technically I am 27 in Earth but about 2457 in Trappist-d 😔
Excellent video as usual
Too bad we can't visit any of this :'(
I feel like we're stuck in this part of the universe, hell, this solar system.
if only we could find a way to travel 35 light years. maby in 1000 years humans could find a way.
2:01 is to me such a great visualisation.
The system is too young for any of those planets to have oxygen atmospheres. Plus the flaring from the star probably strips the ozone column of any planet with an oxygen atmosphere, or will when they evolve. So look for microbes in the seas if there are seas present, but no metazoan life.
Barton, the question of oxygen in the atmosphere is very important, as you seem to understand. Currently, to the best of my knowledge, there are no known planets with a significant amount of oxygen in the atmosphere; since oxygen is very reactive, any oxygen that might have existed in early non-earth planetary atmospheres has long since reacted with metals to produce metal oxides, thus eliminating oxygen from the atmosphere. Photosynthetic life on earth has produced the oxygen in our atmosphere, so the lack of oxygen elsewhere strongly suggests that photosynthetic life as we know it does not exist there. I look for the day when oxygen will be discovered in the atmosphere of an exoplanet; that will certainly be one of the greatest discoveries of all time because of the strong suggestion that photosynthetic life exists on that exoplanet.
Well you don't really need oxygen for earth-like life. Sure it could still be carbon-based, bit it could have evolved to use another gas, like nitrogen or methane for example, or even carbon dioxide. Life is very flexible. Basically, life needs water, an energy source and nutrients. Sure, ozone in the atmosphere is needed to protect life from radiation, but life could have evolved to tolerate high levels of solar radiation. You just need a few individuals that are more tolerant or better adapted to higher levels of radiation. Over time you have life that's adapted to those conditions. If it's bacterial then this process can happen very quickly, possibly in just a few years.
@@sigisoltau6073 None of those gases will work as an oxidizer. Without oxygen you don't get metazoan life. Only microbes.
Good stuff Prof Dave. You have a very friendly, understandable voice and tone. 👍
That one planet literally has one HeII side and the the other is Heaven because it's cool...👌🏼💯✔ The habitual zone is purgatory, where both demons and angles play...😬
This isn't just for this video but for all the content you make thank you. I got interested first hearing you debunk flat earth idiots and then your "debate" with Kent Hovind, but the things I have learned about chemistry and the history of my own country through the presidents has greatly improved my understanding of the world I live in. Thank you
On one planets I wonder how the other planets in the system would look in the sky of the planet you are standing on.
That star at 0:20 is super eager to hear some science stuff
Edit: at 8:27 it closed is eyes and opened its mouth in shock at how much science stuff it learned
0:16 lol aww, the sun has eyes.
💡
He just checking up on his kids
According to my calculations from data given on video at 1:01, Trappist 1 has density of approximately 71g/cc, which is >3X that of Osmium (22.59g/cc), the most dense naturally occurring material on Earth. Explain
There is something called nuclear fission dude, which occurres due to high pressure and hence high density.
This is an awesome solar system. I hope it gets explored more thoroughly in the nearby future.
Waiting on JWST to do in depth spectroscopy.
That theoretical habitable band at the terminator line on tidally-locked worlds would make for a fascinating science fiction setting for a novel. If I could write for sh*t, I’d get right on it. I hope someone else does.
Just look under examples->Literature at tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TidallyLockedPlanet
Imagine being a flat earther with a lisp trying to explain this!
“See that planet it’s cgi NASA with their Jew penguins already landed there.”
Please do a video on Kepler 1649C. It is a new exoplanet found in mid April 2020 and is the most Earth-like exoplanet found to date.
Imagine the flat Trappist-1ders
Actually, I wouldn't doubt if other civilizations have conspiracy theorists lol.
The Earth Moon system is a binary planet system and I think our best chance at finding highly evolved life is finding something similar. This would also would eliminate the problem associated with tidal locking and is likely the cause of plate tectonics.
the moon is a moon
a binary system has to orbit eachother
@@willowthesily672 So to fit your definition the barycenter would have to be where?
@@larryd6143 in the middle
@@willowthesily672 Aren't you strict!
3:33 I see a skull in the clouds
Are all stars not also predominantly made of gas? @ 1:10?
i think 1f seems most likely for life to evolve and survive.
Next time I sit down with a tall glass of Chimay I will most certainly visualize the planets in the Trappist system. Excellent!
Trappist-1, I'm sure there's a joke there somewhere...
In b4 "It's a trap!" jokes.
Oh wait...
0:41 Just out of curiosity, did you get that image from Terragenesis?
That image was made before terragenesis was created. When Trappist-1 was being added to terragenesis, the terragenesis team got the rights to use the same textures used in this photo from the original creators of the photo.
"The type of this star is *Red Dwarf.* This close to the star, it's very hot. It's habitable zone is here, and liquid water may exist on these planets. *It's cold outside,* and liquid water is unlikely on these outer planets. Depending on atmospheric conditions, there may be habitable zones on these planets, but *there's no kind of atmosphere* that could allow us to live on these planets here and here."
I don’t understand the point you’re trying to make
Ok
I thought some people would see what I did there, but I guess *I'm all alone* in remembering that thing. Well, two likes, so *more or less* all alone.
@@Sableagle Man now I feel bad. Could you explain it to us anyway?
@@pranavlimaye There was a comedy on British TV, a long time ago, called Red Dwarf. The theme song began: "It's cold outside. There's no kind of atmosphere. I'm all alone, more or less. Let me fly far away from here!"
You know, our solar system is hella lucky. We got a planet near the sun (showing what happens there), a planet with a heavy atmosphere (showing what happens if you have a thick atmosphere), a habitable planet (guess.), a planet with ice caps but no liquid water (proving that planets can have water in ice), an asteroid belt, 4 gas planets (imagine if we didn't have these and found gas planets, our minds would be fucking blown) and 2 gas planets with rings,
*I’ve been searching traps in anime and now I got this oh no*
There could be real anime traps on these planets
crosssy
*My time has come*
@@Niribu astolfo is waiting for us there
I dont get it.Can you explain?
Eh 11 months old nvm
Was there a way to determine if the planets are tidally lock?
Idk
a way to tell is to see how close the planet is to a star if it's really close to it then most likely the stars gravity will make the planet unable to rotate on its axis.
How long does red dwarf suns last
Red dwarves burn extremely low amounts of fuel due to their size, so, Red Dwarves can live for up to trillions of years.
About 8 seasons, oh you meant a red dwarf
@@prismgames How do you know that information?
@@lunaromegatype1384 I actually don't know where exactly I know that from, although I've been very interested in astronomy for a long time
@@prismgames You could get lot of information by reading astronomy books right?
Trappist 1e is actually the one most like Earth, since it has a similar density indicating it may have a strong enough magnetic field.
If we travel and migrate to a different planet (which is a long time from now) we will probably get flat *insert planet name here*ers.
flat j1407b ers
@@uzernmae26472 Haha yep
to be fair if we settle a planet they will more than likely rename the planet instead of keeping "j 1407b"
@@cptmiller132 Earth II will be the new name let's be honest.
@@Eric_The_Cleric Nah. It'll be named after the quadrillionaire who bankrolls the thing. XD
Sir I love your channel so much ... You are my saviour please suggest me some books in calculus , phisics, chemistry, electronics I want more in depth learning
aCuAlLy SpAcE dOeSn’T eXiSt BeCaUsE i CaNt SeE tHe EaRf CuRve
The most similar Solar System planets to the Trappist-1 system planets
Trappist 1 B - Venus
Trappist 1 C - Venus-earth
Trappist 1 D, E & F - Earth
Trappist 1 G - Mars
Trappist 1 H - Ceres
Since we have 8 planets, and thousands of exoplanets, I think we should just call "exoplanets" planets. Maybe call our special 8 planets "endoplanets"
I would LOVE a VR game of what it would be like standing on different planets and moons, or you can zip quickly around space within our galactic neighborhood to see different stars and planets. But the VR would have to be incredibly detailed and realistic. That would be freaking badass!
No man's sky would be pretty close
@@mactallica9293 What about Space Engine?
I found a fun fact:
Remove the first letter of trapist 1
:)
Fun fact, a Belgian discovered Trappist and a trappist is a typical beer brewn in Belgium. Cheers!
1st.
Whoopdidoo!
You have reached the peak of your existence
This planetary system would be the perfect place for an interplanetary civilization to grow if 1 or more of those planets have of had life.
acn you imagine how terrifying it would be to see the other planets, so large in the sky moving absurdly quickly
Is there a reason that 1g is shown in the animation as having rings?
That _"Terminator Line"_ ...
Somehow, it hits me hard upon a re-imagining of how that line would look on _'Kharak'_ (from that certain RTS video game, Homeworld) - just barely-colder on both North and South, and blasting heat-wave at Equator...
Best video about the Trappist system ! I'd like to make a more detailed animation in 3d studio
petition for Professor Dave to become universal science teacher