Why are all the comment's on this dude's videos glazing his balls like everyone thinks they have a personal relationship with him, and not discussing the content of the video?
Bennu sample is another tiny sample of just one asteroid. We now know there are two types floating around in this solar system. Whether either, or both are typical, we cannot yet establish. Still, it's a start Thanks, Anton.
My question is: if any of that water is still present, does the isostatic profile of that water share the isostatic profile of water found on Earth, Titan, and Saturn? I'm a huge fan of the Electric Universe Theory. It tickles my brain more like no other rabbit hole I've ever visited.
@@hegemonycricket9549earth’s water doesn’t have a uniform isostatic profile. And, this, in any context, wouldn’t be related to the electric universe theory. Not trying to be rude! Just wanted to point this out
@ryanrobin12 According to Wallace Thornhill (Physicist, Cosmologist, and Chief Science Advisor of the Thunderbolts Project) Earth water does indeed have a very similar isostatic profile to that found on both Saturn and Titan. He knew what he was talking about, so I'll take his word for it. If you're not familiar with the Electric Universe Theory, I wouldn't expect you to understand why I specifically referenced those bodies. And yes, the question is relevant.
We do have a lot of meteorite samples, though. We don’t have any orbital data on most of those but they have shown a lot of compositional information about the types of materials flying around.
So exciting! I wish I could live another 200 hundred years to see all the new discoveries. I've always been hoping that space travel would become reality, and every discovery brings us closer to it.
@@mtrest4 Aww, I'm sorry that you have such a sad opinion of our future discoveries. Remember, humans only use a small portion of our brains and we won't stop searching. I hope you can be more optimistic of our futures.
What is an asteroid was a 1000 solar systems? Time is altered by all of us, everything we live haves a equal action to every path we can go. Amazing knowledge.
Anton, so many of your videos are BRILLIANT confirmations of the ancient history of the solar system that was known by our prehistoric ancestors. This goes as far to speak to Planet Tiamat being torn in two by Marduke, forming the hammered bracelet and earth. Fascinating!!!
There's something really sad about another ocean world so much like ours, existing long ago and being blasted to pieces that now float around, lifeless, in the cold blackness of space
Shouldn't the sample be kept in the same environmental conditions as would exist on the asteroid so as to preserve the structure and chemistry of the sample. In that photo of the scientists looking at the sample that would obviously not be the same as where it came from. Another thought is that maybe they exist due to a low oxygen level, and the cold environment, no oxidation initiation so more stable. The water present would only be liquid for for very short period as it would either evaporate or freeze due to the temperature extremes, so little time for the water to form oxygen molecules in the solute . I am just wondering these two things, if I am wrong please let me know as to why? Thanks in advance, and I really enjoy your channel Anton, keep up the good work mate.
Even then you have to trasfer samples to microscopes or perform chemical tests. I wonder if Optimus could work in a large vacuum chamber with out over heating.
i saw a video about the place where NASA keeps their moon rocks. the reason why they don't use vacuum chambers is because all vacuum chamber seals will break over time, and these rocks have to be kept around for decades. after a certain point, outside air will seep into the chamber and cause it to oxidize. keeping the samples in nitrogen at higher pressure than the outside ensures that, even if the seal on the chamber breaks, the high pressure nitrogen will seep out of the chamber and not let any air in. also, in the photo, the samples hadn't been opened yet.
You are making an assumption that the team is working on the sample. At this point they just removed the outer shield and found some of the asteroid's ejecta around the electronics. Look for a video that shows this.
Was Bennu a comet a one time, the water has been blown away like on Mars by the solar wind. Now it's a dead comet core, was formed from a potential life bearing minor planet that was destroyed, called 142 Polana 2 billion years ago. Wow! Those bright reflecting squares look like huge pyrite crystals in the close ups, Anton.
The hypothesis that these minerals were created in a brine solution also accepts the understanding that the parent planet had running water as a brine solution can only be created by erosion. At least that’s our understanding now. This also work with the theory that a planet used to be in that particular orbit between mars and Jupiter and was destroyed creating the existing asteroid field.
Glad I waited for this exposition rather than any of the clickbait out there. Another educational coffee break. I guess the takeaway must be that we cannot possibly be the only life form out there, if the ingredients are so easily found. Question, given the assumption that Bennu was part of a destroyed planetismal - what if you added up the mass of the asteroid belt? Would we have enough material to create a suitably sized planet?
I recall a show from years ago in which a man theorized that there should be a planet where the asteroid belt is. The model was based upon the solar system being like musical notes, I think? The math of musical progression? I know that people in the sciences have not accepted the idea that there was ever a planet there, but that non scientific people think the belt is remnants from a collision, that also affected Mars. I recall that there was a compiled photo of Mars, years ago, that showed it as extremely misshapen. Lopsided, and like a very huge chunk had been taken out. Can’t find that anymore.
Which is interesting because you would think there would be a "more educated" viewership, wether that be academically educated or just learned in general, that wouldn't fall for bot scams. If I ran a botnet, I would be keeping track of which videos (types, creators, etc) that get the most return clicks or redirection or whatever it is the bots are trying to scam or sell. My point is...I wonder why they consider his videos a good target? Very strange
@FreejackVesa I don't even understand what the point of those bots is... I mean, they leave random stupid comments on videos. Then what? do they contact people that reply to them? I don't get it, I just report them whenever I see them.
The implications are that we had another water bearing world relatively near us in the distant past that was destroyed, possibly by collision or possibly because of something else. I think this asteroid really needs to be investigated a lot further!
I do believe that everything currently in our solar system, didn't necessarily form in this system.Its quite possible that as our system has traveled near other systems and exchanged objects, from small to even planetary . If Omuamua wasnt traveling so fast , it could have been gravitationally captured.
The cool thing is, if we can get samples to a mass spectrometer, we can TELL that. By the isotope ratios. NASA flies stratospheric jets with dust trap panels to collect those, and can isotopically tell the interstellar grains in the catch. Mass Spectrometers are dang close to that magic-science divide.
Very interesting. So... the parent body might well have been a Kuiper belt or trans-Neptunian object large enough to have liquid water within it approx 2bn years ago, that migrated to the inner solar system where it was destroyed in a collision. That's one hell of a collision, and if there was one there were likely several. The idea there were several Enceladus - Pluto sized objects wandering around the inner solar system is, is, crazy. Yarrabubba, Vredefort and Sudbury craters are about 2bn years old, part of that destruction? Was the Earth lucky these 'wanderers' were destroyed?
I suggest Bennu is a piece of debris from the core of a gas giant that exploded 186 million years ago. The finer particles from this destruction landed as grey debris on all planets and their moons in the area - and here on Earth this debris is described as Jurassic sedimentary rock - mostly a magnesium-silicate. Each year as Earth enters the debris zone another layer of this 'cosmic debris' is laid down forming strata. The first fall was of conglomerate particles and this caused a mass extinction event but subsequent falls laid down finer and finer particles - to make sandstones, mudstones, shales, and finally clay strata. This is not the only gas giant that has collapsed - in fact one must have collapsed every 93 million years when they approached an orbit around the Sun of about 500 million KM.
“Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space." ― Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
I'm excited for what we will soon learn when SpaceX Starship allows us to launch many huge telescopes into space to observe every possible spectra, and also allows us to send hundreds of robotic explorers to planets, moons, asteroids, etc. Greatly increased access to space will be a huge boon to science and humanity.
It’s kind of weird life began right after the creation of the planet. What if life was on a planet that existed pre-super nova and a hitchhiker landed on earth? There are several extremophile candidates.
Evidence of *_past_* liquid water on an object whose original size - when liquid water was believed to be present - is still completely unknown. You're not taking into account how long it's been since the presence of water, and how much material may have been lost due to collisions between then and now.
@ - strongly disagree. I am not claiming that liquid water existed for billions of years. Just long enough underground on a moon sized body for the reactions to take place. The evidence is the materials & minerals.
It is not surprising it confirms the theory of Randolph Kirkpatrick! He published in the 1910s about some meteorites being the remains of ocean floors.
I hope they do a radiometric dating age for Bennu. I'm thinking this asteroid was formed at the initial impact that formed our moon and thrown out away from the moon's collection zone.
@whatdamath I recently found a meteorite of high-density metallic composition, I have had an initial scan done, now just working on classification. It appears quite unique, so I hope to have more to share shortly. Love your content 👍
14 different amino acids seemed like it could make some kind of life to this non-biologist. Maybe, but as I understand it now all life on earth uses exactly 20 amino acids. E. Coli can make all 20. We humans can make 11 amino acids, but we need to get the rest from our food. What I said above is not quite right in that there are a couple more amino acids that are used in producing proteins but eukaryotes only use one of them.
Makes sense... Hydrogen is common. Just what it bonds with is all that changes. My cat rubs on my phone when I play your videos. He must like you too. 😊
If you ever sprayed a fine mist on a pile or collection of dust, you would see that it forms little balls of water and dust. I would guess that it's some kind of static attraction?🤓😊
There seems to be no discussion that Bennu may have originated on Earth (or Mars???) though this is the most obvious source of a salt-water environment. Is there some obvious reason why this possibility is excluded? If it happened roughly 2Ba or less, the Sudbury impact structure is large and roughly the right age. The Vredefort structure might be at the upper end of the age range, but not beyond possibility and it is certainly large as well. Of course, we have many examples of impact structures that are very hard to locate, so it's easy to imagine a case of a particularly large one that has been completely obscured by plate tectonics. Perhaps it was on the eastern edge of the Juan de Fuca plate, which is now subducted beneath North America, just to provide an example. Are these simply too small to release a large object that ends up in Bennu's orbit a billion years or more later.
Water can be created electrochemically -- with the introduction of a catalyst such as paladium. Water is not just an in-situ element - but one that given the right charge conditions - can & does create H2O.
The presence of a few mixed chiral amino acids is a long, long, long way from any chance that actual life was formed. It seems people just don't understand how very complex the structures and processes of even the most rudimentary life forms are. Good for your budget to trumpet the claim though.
It is said that our sun and another one is due to kind of " mix up " (sorry i don't know the exact term ) at some point ... though it may takes light years , but they are starting to exchange matters ... so my question is : Is there a change that all the subtle changes or surprises ( in space and on earth ) are the consequences of these exchanges??!
Everyday Anton posts a classic. He has to be among the hardest working TH-camrs out there.
He really deserves 10 million subscribers.
Why are all the comment's on this dude's videos glazing his balls like everyone thinks they have a personal relationship with him, and not discussing the content of the video?
I watch Anton every day and I'm convinced that he is the best TH-camr of them all.
i say everyone on youtube should be auto subbed to anton.
And also one of the least biased and open minded. I never feel like he is pushing an agenda or opinion. ✌🏻
"Deserves got nothin to do with it."
- William Munny
This channel has become like an encyclopedia of universe. What a productive person Anton is. Let’s say “Anton Encyclopedia of Universe”😊
Anton for human of the year award.
And president of Russia 🇷🇺!!! ❤
He really is a wonderful person
Are we here for the science?
Or for arbitrary praise of someone on the tubes, because trust me, the 2 don;t mix well.
😊
This makes the exploration of the solar system even more exciting !
Uranus?
Super cool! Thanks Anton, your wonderful person ✌🏻
Thanks Anton. You always keep me informed. I always have something new to talk about with fellow space nerds.
Thanks!
Bennu sample is another tiny sample of just one asteroid. We now know there are two types floating around in this solar system. Whether either, or both are typical, we cannot yet establish. Still, it's a start
Thanks, Anton.
JAXA also have samples of an asteroid.
My question is: if any of that water is still present, does the isostatic profile of that water share the isostatic profile of water found on Earth, Titan, and Saturn?
I'm a huge fan of the Electric Universe Theory. It tickles my brain more like no other rabbit hole I've ever visited.
@@hegemonycricket9549earth’s water doesn’t have a uniform isostatic profile. And, this, in any context, wouldn’t be related to the electric universe theory. Not trying to be rude! Just wanted to point this out
@ryanrobin12 According to Wallace Thornhill (Physicist, Cosmologist, and Chief Science Advisor of the Thunderbolts Project) Earth water does indeed have a very similar isostatic profile to that found on both Saturn and Titan. He knew what he was talking about, so I'll take his word for it.
If you're not familiar with the Electric Universe Theory, I wouldn't expect you to understand why I specifically referenced those bodies. And yes, the question is relevant.
We do have a lot of meteorite samples, though. We don’t have any orbital data on most of those but they have shown a lot of compositional information about the types of materials flying around.
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. 🙂
Thanks for all the good videos!
Hello wonderful Bennu, this is Probe
Anel Probe 🥒😁
Thanks for another great video, Anton! This is really cool.
So exciting! I wish I could live another 200 hundred years to see all the new discoveries. I've always been hoping that space travel would become reality, and every discovery brings us closer to it.
What if we are at our peak, and it's downhill 🛷 all the way from here.
@@mtrest4 Aww, I'm sorry that you have such a sad opinion of our future discoveries. Remember, humans only use a small portion of our brains and we won't stop searching. I hope you can be more optimistic of our futures.
What is an asteroid was a 1000 solar systems? Time is altered by all of us, everything we live haves a equal action to every path we can go. Amazing knowledge.
Well, according to the bots, this video is hilarious. I'm expecting peak science jokes here Anton. 😂
Such a crazy Earth. Thank you for reminding us that it's a great and wonderful universe.
Again amazing content. 👍
HELL YEAH BEEN WAITING ON THIS VIDEO SINCE THEY BROUGHT THE SAMPLES BACK SUCCESSFULLY
Your caps lock key is broken
@mtrest4 YOU THINK???? 🤔🤔🤔
Wild info! Thanks Anton.
Anton, you rock my man - I've learned so much from you! Thank you sir!!
This really was an amazing discovery! ❤
Exciting, also,greatful för my old chemistry knowledge,thanks Anton❤👍
Thanks Anton.
Anton, so many of your videos are BRILLIANT confirmations of the ancient history of the solar system that was known by our prehistoric ancestors. This goes as far to speak to Planet Tiamat being torn in two by Marduke, forming the hammered bracelet and earth. Fascinating!!!
Amazing! We keep finding amino acids and other organic molecules almost everywhere.
Looking forward to the next vid wonderful person!
Anton honestly is the most wonderful person on yt with the mosted wonderful community 😂 everyone seems to love you ❤️
Hey Anton, thanks again for another interesting video. You make life better.
There's something really sad about another ocean world so much like ours, existing long ago and being blasted to pieces that now float around, lifeless, in the cold blackness of space
You have the long sight.
@@BentReality.369
👀
What a brilliant report on the origin of life. This research opens a new insight. I am restless to see the detailed report promised by ANTON.
Shouldn't the sample be kept in the same environmental conditions as would exist on the asteroid so as to preserve the structure and chemistry of the sample. In that photo of the scientists looking at the sample that would obviously not be the same as where it came from. Another thought is that maybe they exist due to a low oxygen level, and the cold environment, no oxidation initiation so more stable. The water present would only be liquid for for very short period as it would either evaporate or freeze due to the temperature extremes, so little time for the water to form oxygen molecules in the solute . I am just wondering these two things, if I am wrong please let me know as to why? Thanks in advance, and I really enjoy your channel Anton, keep up the good work mate.
I had the exact same thoughts
Working on it in a vacuum chamber would be hard the easiest thing would be working in a cold inert atmosphere using a glove box.
Even then you have to trasfer samples to microscopes or perform chemical tests.
I wonder if Optimus could work in a large vacuum chamber with out over heating.
i saw a video about the place where NASA keeps their moon rocks. the reason why they don't use vacuum chambers is because all vacuum chamber seals will break over time, and these rocks have to be kept around for decades. after a certain point, outside air will seep into the chamber and cause it to oxidize. keeping the samples in nitrogen at higher pressure than the outside ensures that, even if the seal on the chamber breaks, the high pressure nitrogen will seep out of the chamber and not let any air in.
also, in the photo, the samples hadn't been opened yet.
You are making an assumption that the team is working on the sample. At this point they just removed the outer shield and found some of the asteroid's ejecta around the electronics. Look for a video that shows this.
Top man , as usual .
Bottom man
Anton! What an interesting video. Thank you for your channel. ❤
I am also amazed about the light enhancement of the pictures, as the material Bennu consists of is actually dark as charcoal
Cool. Thanks for sharing.
Was Bennu a comet a one time, the water has been blown away like on Mars by the solar wind. Now it's a dead comet core, was formed from a potential life bearing minor planet that was destroyed, called 142 Polana 2 billion years ago. Wow! Those bright reflecting squares look like huge pyrite crystals in the close ups, Anton.
mindblowing! Thanks a lot for that!
i always say that hia was a waterworld as well
Very informative.
Hello wonderful Anton!
Very cool 😊
Great content as always
Life is out there, somewhere.
Even if there is only one intelligent species in every enormous galaxy the universe would be full of life and that is heartwarming.
No, not somewhere... Somewhen!!😉
Primitive life may be very common in the universe.
very surprizing bennu is so tied to a water world history
The hypothesis that these minerals were created in a brine solution also accepts the understanding that the parent planet had running water as a brine solution can only be created by erosion. At least that’s our understanding now. This also work with the theory that a planet used to be in that particular orbit between mars and Jupiter and was destroyed creating the existing asteroid field.
Huge thank, Anton.
Great video. Very informative.
Glad I waited for this exposition rather than any of the clickbait out there. Another educational coffee break.
I guess the takeaway must be that we cannot possibly be the only life form out there, if the ingredients are so easily found. Question, given the assumption that Bennu was part of a destroyed planetismal - what if you added up the mass of the asteroid belt? Would we have enough material to create a suitably sized planet?
Been waiting for this 🍻
👍great video
I want some meteorite counter tops, they look kinda like granite but would be way cooler
You need to seal them to prevent oxidation. A meteorite left on its own will rust and crumble. But, yeah, that would be cool.
8:00 I've always heard that when you have everything that is needed, life is not only possible, but inevitable.
Excellent piece of news. Brined water.
Thanks for your updates as always.
I’m not a bot
I recall a show from years ago in which a man theorized that there should be a planet where the asteroid belt is. The model was based upon the solar system being like musical notes, I think? The math of musical progression?
I know that people in the sciences have not accepted the idea that there was ever a planet there, but that non scientific people think the belt is remnants from a collision, that also affected Mars.
I recall that there was a compiled photo of Mars, years ago, that showed it as extremely misshapen. Lopsided, and like a very huge chunk had been taken out. Can’t find that anymore.
Its still mind blowing that there are giant piles of rubble just floating around out there.
Planet that died and dried out and got destroyed by astroid hits.
@Fido-vm9zi Riiìght. It doesn't hurt to guess I suppose.
Anton, can we talk about fusion at some point, respectfully? I love your videos
Amazing content. 😮 👍🏾
I like How Bennu went from "The Most dangerous asteroid" to "the Most interesting asteroid" in just 4 years
The more and more we learn about everything outside of this world, the less I believe we are special/alone.. 😮
True he is very intelligent in a humble way
The bots love Anton
Which is interesting because you would think there would be a "more educated" viewership, wether that be academically educated or just learned in general, that wouldn't fall for bot scams. If I ran a botnet, I would be keeping track of which videos (types, creators, etc) that get the most return clicks or redirection or whatever it is the bots are trying to scam or sell. My point is...I wonder why they consider his videos a good target? Very strange
@ they like being called a wonderful “person” 😂
@@OriginalApexTwin bots just need some love and direction and theyll quit their life of crime!
In all seriousness, I would love to have our helper droid bots greet us with the salutation: "Hello Wonderful Person!"
@FreejackVesa I don't even understand what the point of those bots is... I mean, they leave random stupid comments on videos.
Then what? do they contact people that reply to them? I don't get it, I just report them whenever I see them.
Thank you.
The great filtration at work😮
Hey wonderful Anton this is person
The implications are that we had another water bearing world relatively near us in the distant past that was destroyed, possibly by collision or possibly because of something else. I think this asteroid really needs to be investigated a lot further!
I do believe that everything currently in our solar system, didn't necessarily form in this system.Its quite possible that as our system has traveled near other systems and exchanged objects, from small to even planetary . If Omuamua wasnt traveling so fast , it could have been gravitationally captured.
The cool thing is, if we can get samples to a mass spectrometer, we can TELL that. By the isotope ratios.
NASA flies stratospheric jets with dust trap panels to collect those, and can isotopically tell the interstellar grains in the catch.
Mass Spectrometers are dang close to that magic-science divide.
Thankyou wonderful influencer
Very interesting. So... the parent body might well have been a Kuiper belt or trans-Neptunian object large enough to have liquid water within it approx 2bn years ago, that migrated to the inner solar system where it was destroyed in a collision. That's one hell of a collision, and if there was one there were likely several. The idea there were several Enceladus - Pluto sized objects wandering around the inner solar system is, is, crazy.
Yarrabubba, Vredefort and Sudbury craters are about 2bn years old, part of that destruction? Was the Earth lucky these 'wanderers' were destroyed?
I suggest Bennu is a piece of debris from the core of a gas giant that exploded 186 million years ago. The finer particles from this destruction landed as grey debris on all planets and their moons in the area - and here on Earth this debris is described as Jurassic sedimentary rock - mostly a magnesium-silicate. Each year as Earth enters the debris zone another layer of this 'cosmic debris' is laid down forming strata. The first fall was of conglomerate particles and this caused a mass extinction event but subsequent falls laid down finer and finer particles - to make sandstones, mudstones, shales, and finally clay strata. This is not the only gas giant that has collapsed - in fact one must have collapsed every 93 million years when they approached an orbit around the Sun of about 500 million KM.
"The universe is a pretty big place. If it's just us, it seems like an awful waste of space."--Carl Sagan, _Cosmos_
Maybe it's just our Dimensional Space. Other Dimensions are probably loaded w/civilizations!
"Means to an end".
No waste.
“Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space." ― Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
I'm excited for what we will soon learn when SpaceX Starship allows us to launch many huge telescopes into space to observe every possible spectra, and also allows us to send hundreds of robotic explorers to planets, moons, asteroids, etc. Greatly increased access to space will be a huge boon to science and humanity.
It’s kind of weird life began right after the creation of the planet. What if life was on a planet that existed pre-super nova and a hitchhiker landed on earth? There are several extremophile candidates.
Liquid water on an object smaller then our moon
On or IN. 100% possible it was a sealed cavern in a ~ moon mass body
Evidence of *_past_* liquid water on an object whose original size - when liquid water was believed to be present - is still completely unknown.
You're not taking into account how long it's been since the presence of water, and how much material may have been lost due to collisions between then and now.
@ - strongly disagree. I am not claiming that liquid water existed for billions of years. Just long enough underground on a moon sized body for the reactions to take place.
The evidence is the materials & minerals.
*than
@ - grammarian!
It is not surprising it confirms the theory of Randolph Kirkpatrick! He published in the 1910s about some meteorites being the remains of ocean floors.
sweet im playing elite dangerous right now .. nice ED clips
Sounds like it would be a good idea to put chunks of that asteroid on your garden. Might have a future fertilizer factory on our hands.
This is one of the most exciting discoveries of this century. The big question is which planet was it s origin. Is it sure it is not earth?
Space Cooties?
Building blocks for Space Cooties, huh? Well, that's the next best thing, I guess. 😮😮😮
Hello wonderful Anton
Right out of The Andromeda Strain.
Women and minorities affected most!
Remember, the Andromeda Strain had no amino acids, no proteins, no RNA, no DNA....and converted energy directly into matter. ;)
I hope they do a radiometric dating age for Bennu. I'm thinking this asteroid was formed at the initial impact that formed our moon and thrown out away from the moon's collection zone.
This could be, that could be, everything we learn tells us we have nothing but ideas that are usually wrong
Comes out Anton is a wonderful AI 😂 if not he's my favourite human of the year ❤
@whatdamath I recently found a meteorite of high-density metallic composition, I have had an initial scan done, now just working on classification. It appears quite unique, so I hope to have more to share shortly. Love your content 👍
14 different amino acids seemed like it could make some kind of life to this non-biologist. Maybe, but as I understand it now all life on earth uses exactly 20 amino acids. E. Coli can make all 20. We humans can make 11 amino acids, but we need to get the rest from our food.
What I said above is not quite right in that there are a couple more amino acids that are used in producing proteins but eukaryotes only use one of them.
Makes sense... Hydrogen is common. Just what it bonds with is all that changes. My cat rubs on my phone when I play your videos. He must like you too. 😊
Geez Anton......you're a digital chick magnet. Thanks for the great content.
A magnet for digital chicks?
TF are you on about?
Life is out there. We just can't reach it yet
😮 😊 nice 😊
If you ever sprayed a fine mist on a pile or collection of dust, you would see that it forms little balls of water and dust. I would guess that it's some kind of static attraction?🤓😊
There seems to be no discussion that Bennu may have originated on Earth (or Mars???) though this is the most obvious source of a salt-water environment. Is there some obvious reason why this possibility is excluded? If it happened roughly 2Ba or less, the Sudbury impact structure is large and roughly the right age. The Vredefort structure might be at the upper end of the age range, but not beyond possibility and it is certainly large as well. Of course, we have many examples of impact structures that are very hard to locate, so it's easy to imagine a case of a particularly large one that has been completely obscured by plate tectonics. Perhaps it was on the eastern edge of the Juan de Fuca plate, which is now subducted beneath North America, just to provide an example. Are these simply too small to release a large object that ends up in Bennu's orbit a billion years or more later.
good stuff like wow man
Water can be created electrochemically -- with the introduction of a catalyst such as paladium.
Water is not just an in-situ element - but one that given the right charge conditions - can & does create H2O.
What outer system world would fit the clues the Bennu sample is hinting at 🤔
This is very exciting!!!! I'm a big proponent of panspermia
In the video where they were talking about what they found, they said they found DNA too.
The presence of a few mixed chiral amino acids is a long, long, long way from any chance that actual life was formed. It seems people just don't understand how very complex the structures and processes of even the most rudimentary life forms are. Good for your budget to trumpet the claim though.
Were there any chains of amino acids, or were they just floating around by themselves?
Chains of amino acids are called peptides, and they don't mention peptides.
What came first the astroid belts or planets?
They formed simultaneously.
They both did. One inside the other.
It does seem with every passing year the mechanism for pan spermia is becoming more understood.
It is said that our sun and another one is due to kind of " mix up " (sorry i don't know the exact term ) at some point ... though it may takes light years , but they are starting to exchange matters ... so my question is : Is there a change that all the subtle changes or surprises ( in space and on earth ) are the consequences of these exchanges??!