Light is a strange thing. Due to our distance from our source of light we think noting of it but when you're 450 million light years away you're right, it may not even exist. In a 100 million years or so we may see the explosion meaning it happened maybe 300 million years ago. This leaves space travel really risky, no guarantee that we may reach a civilization that has life.
For a second I was like nah, but then I was like wait I remember a similar pattern on the floors of the old local movie theatre before it got replaced… damn 😂 spot on, also the skating rinks have a similar carpet
Our whole univerese could be just speck of dust in a movie theater and the speck of dust at the other end of the theater would be milllions of light years away.
@akashicrecords4049 its because recently they've found galaxies that "shouldn't" exist because they are so far out that it changes what we believed about the beginning of the universe, you act like this is an exact science when its not, just like with medicine we are constantly learning new things
@@dylananzaldua7006 It can't be. Everything is moving away from everything else. It may be 33 billion light years away from us but it didn't take that long to get to where it's at because we are moving away from it as well.
People are asking _"WHY "33 BILLION" light-years when Universe is "only" 13.78 Billion years old"_ - so i will try to give a good for quick explanation: I'm going to try to explain this, but it's going to take a couple paragraphs: Imagine 2 cars driving away from each other: At 13 car lengths one shines a flashlight ot the other. That light was 13 car lengths away _WHEN IT WAS SHONE_ yes, but since both cars continue to dive away from each other, those cars are now 33 car lengths away _NOW, when it arrives to be seen here._ OK, so now replace the cars with galaxies, the car lengths with light years (distance light travels in one year). Now we still have a couple things to resolve: 1) "Driving away" is actually space expanding. Space expands in every direction; every point gets farther away from every other point. 2) This expansion happens at a constant _RATE PER UNIT,_ so the more units you have between each point, the faster those points expand away from each other. (Think if it was 1 meter per second expansion, you would be 1 meter away for each unit after 1 second. So for 1 meter away you would be 1 meter apart, but for 100 meters away you would bev100 meters apart, in that same second.) Side Note: [We call these units of distance a Mega-parsec, and give a rate per that distance unit. The Universe is somewhat large, so we need large units. A Light-Year is a unit of distance, not time. It is the distance _through space vacuum_ that light travels in 1 year. 3.26 of these light-years is 1parsec (pc) of distance. 1 Million of these parsecs is a Mega-parsec (Mpc). So 1 million x 3.26 light-years makes 1 Mpc a distance of 3.26 Million Light-years. A big ruler indeed. For each unit of that distance, space is expanding about 70km every second. So 70km per sec of new space every second, for each megaparsec. If you have 2 units, it's 2x that, and so on. The more units of space are between 2 points, the faster they expand away from each other. That point is very important to understand]. 3) Ok, now we don't measure in meters but Light-Years of distance, so you can imagine the total expansion at that distance- it's faster than light can travel. Faster than light speed. Because it's _cumulative_ expansion of that huge distance. Galaxies aren't moving _THROUGH_ space faster than light, _space itself_ is expanding faster than light (for points with lots of distance [space] between them.) So what does this all add up to? We see the pulse of light from where it was pulsed, and it travels from there to our location at a certain speed ("c) thar takes a certain time to cover each unit of distance (Light-Year). Each unit of distance is continually expanding, so light expands too, and gets stretched out ("Red Shift"), which is why light traveling longer (ie. started farther away) looks red, and all these distant galaxies look more red the farther away they are. Every point of space itself is expanding, so _EVERYTHING_ is farther away than when that light left. If it left 13 Billion years ago, it traveled through expanding space for 13 Billion years. Multiply that by the rate space was expanding in that time, and you get 33 Billion light years away _NOW._ The mind boggling part is this expansion is happening in 3D, not just 1D like cars driving away from each other in a line. But we don't "feel" this effect because gravity helps keep the matter stuffs within each galaxy pulling itself together. Gravity (locally) is a bit stronger than the expansion force ("dark energy") pushing everything away from everything else.
@@MyJsm121063 I appreciate that, thank you. Glad somebody read it in our "TLDR" culture. These topics are nuanced and involved. Some people in the comments section are acting like the explanation should be simple, flippant, or obvious so shouldn't need an explanation... but it's more complex than they assume. These things are newly discovered (1990's), and they received a Nobel Prize for it. So i got irritated by the "so simple" folks and wrote a bit more detail for people who wanted more than a "just because" answer.
Thanks for your detailed explanation. But I might comment that in point 2, it's an assumption that the expansion is (or has been) a constant speed. Time is the only thing that proves what we thought we knew, is wrong. As the JWST is proving to scientists who died in the 50s 60s 70s etc.
@@balebu1 Yes, that's a good point. I think we should say is the expansion seems constant _now,_ but accelerates as a cumulative effect of those individual expansion units. As to those individual units, the _rate_ they expand is what we can measure _now_ but that rate may change in future or in past. Science is an ongoing process, not a religion. It's scientists who are challenging scientist's, and hope they discover something new. There are 6 newly discovered galaxies which (hopefully) will prove some old assumptions incomplete. They are significantly larger than expected for that early formation/ collision process. Those early galaxies being larger, and age of Universe- are two separate things. The galaxies you're talking about are larger than expected for that time, but are still 33 B Light-Years away _now,_ after expansion for 13.8 Billion years. What we don't know is how they got that size that fast. Could be they are older, or could be some other dynamics that happened early which are no longer seen today. Could be some structures feeding more gas than expected to them, like black holes. Or filaments of gas lanes in the early Universe which connect most galaxies together, and still is seen today, called the Cosmic Web. To say it means the current universe is much older than 13.8 Billion years would be something very different; a different question. Expansion of Universe and larger than expected galaxies may not be causally related at all. They may not explain each other. But, it _IS_ all very exciting and everyone is hoping for big new science revelations. Still, we have a process that requires proof and evidence. These galaxies may rewrite earlier explanation, update them, or (as every scientist constantly hopes but rarely happens): completely upend our previous model in favor of a new and more complete one which explains radically more of the Universe- Answers BIG questions we all have, and more importantly: ASKS new questions we hadn't even known to ask. Science is not defensive, it's exploratory. Exploration of the new. But it needs evidence to build those roads to the unknown. (As fun as it is to just go by leaps and bounds, science cannot jump to conclusions [or shouldn't, anyhow]).
@@onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475 the expansion is now believed to be getting faster, to the point that we will not be able to see another galaxy soon ( in galactic terms)
I remember a red splotch that Hubble found that everything past that was said would be in the earliest stages of "galaxy formation". Turns out there were fully formed galaxies far beyond Hubble's splotch - as Dr. Jason Lisle successfully predicted. And now the JWST has found it's own "red splotch".
The light gets stretched into the red part of the spectrum the further out you go. We call it the red shift. The more red the light we see, the farther away an object is. If you look at the image, you'll see dots around it that are blue. These are stars in our own galaxy, much closer than the galaxy in question. It's so far away that we couldn't see it with the powerful hubble space telescope.
Because Mc D's ice cream machines are designed to need an experinced service tech for the simplist of problems. It's a total con job with Taylors and Mcdonalds hand in hand with each other
How funny and convenient???😂😂😂😂 there is infinite galaxy in the universe and it is why WE ARE A GALACTIC CITIZENS…so act like ONE, so all this mafia fake media will dissolve..💜ONELOVE 💜
What shows the immensity of the universe is that the first image taking by the JWST was the equivalent size of one grain of sand held at arm's length, in that image alone they counted 1000 galaxies.
Wish I'd had this info for a presentation on color I gave to an artists' association. I discussed the science behind color which included red shift, blue shift, and the doppler effect. I keep adding info like this to the presentation. Guess I'll have to ask for a two-hour time slot next time. Ah hahahaha.
Determine what? You can determine distance by looking at supernovae. Supernovae explode in distinct spectra and timeframes based on their size and composition, so if you look at one, you can tell its size and absolute brightness. Then from that you can use its apparent brightness to calculate its distance. Also the dude misspoke. It's not the farthest galaxy ever. It's just the farthest galaxy yet discovered.
1. The universe is 13.8 billion years old. Nothing has existed longer than 13.8 billion years (relative to us). 2. Light years is confusingly used as a unit of distance (not time). So that galaxy is 33 billion light years away in terms of distance, but the light we use to see it traveled a much shorter distance. It's the distance between us and that galaxy that has increased (more space is coming into existence everywhere outside galaxies, causing things to be further apart from each other, without those things actually moving.) 2. If you were to travel at the speed of light, you would no longer experience time (due to time dilation. From the perspective of that light, it came into existence and reached that telescope at the same time. From the perspective of those photons that image was created from, those photons took 0 seconds to get here.
I'm convinced our entire universe is in a huge black hole and thats why its impossible to see beyond a certain point and why its constantly expanding at an exponential rate.
Everything expanding away from us certainly does not preclude every point in the universe being the center of it if the universe is infinite in all directions.
Many many amazing worlds out there with beings doing what they do. Billions of civilizations came and went. Truly amazing thinking about it. Hubble deep field changed my life the first time I saw it. Some people don’t understand it at all.
If Hubble blew your mind may I introduce to you the James Webb Telescope. It made the discovery of the little red galaxy while adjusting the mirrors focus. It never fails to amaze me just what little we know about earth let alone the universe.
I truly want to believe in aliens and I do but I think they’re about the same technology level as us because to be able to travel the universe conveniently and fast would basically make that civilization gods
@@JonathanStanford-j4z I have researched it for over 39 years. We are 1000% being visited and have been for thousands of years. Tons of evidence out there. Do research. I know for a fact.
@@JonathanStanford-j4z it’s a mathematical fact there is other living being out there. I personally have seen things in the sky that would change your life forever. I’m not some idiot. I have studied this for decades.
@@Masoch1st Yes, it's around 14 billion years old. But as light was traveling from it to us the universe was expanding, so it's more than 14 billion years distant.
The older I get the more I realize scientists are very smart, but even they have absolutely no idea what’s really going on in the dark emptiness of space.
Space isn't real and nasa is a lie. Look up stars zoomed in on with the Nikon P 1000, it will blow your mind. The word firmament in the bible its Hebrew definition is the solid vast dome god created on the second day to separate the waters above from the waters below so that dry land could appear. The moon produces cold light. Nikola Tesla can be see quoted using the word firmament. the first people in recoded history to go way high in a aluminum ball said the earth seemed flat with an upturned edges. That edge is the artic circle that circles all the realm. And you might wonder why would they go through such great measures to make up this lie? Well as the bible describes the northern lights as the bottom garments of his robe. The Mountain where all compasses point to aka magnetic mountain. There's something wonderess up there
Glad we got the facts from someone who actually came from there not seen a dead pixel on the computer and was like oh man thats a galaxy far far far away ! The math is the best part like what !? 33 billion howd we get here from there !
Yes.. i mean you just need to imagine the distance... its so unreal.. and who knows if there are human like intelligent creatures over there with a completely different looking world, different looking sky asking the same question about our galaxy. That thought is so fascinating. We are so unbelievable small in an unbelievable HUUUGE universe
Happy if someone can correct me where I'm confused, but I take issue with "more than 33 billion light years away." Assuming the big bang theory is correct, and the estimated age of the universe is correct (about 13.8 billion years old), then the oldest light we could possibly see from Earth would have started traveling in our direction about 13.8 billion years ago (less, really, since 13.8 billion years ago all the matter on Earth was MUCH closer to the singularity, so that initial light would have "caught us" a long time ago). And even if that galaxy is moving in the exact opposite direction as us from the singularity, I fail to see how there's even a theoretical way that we could see an object more than twice that distance in light years, or about 27.6 billion light years away. What am I missing?
This is so amazing to know that the furthest galaxy that we know about is 33 billiion light years away...is mind blowing. I have to say around 2012 I will never forget listening to a news broadcast of the pictures from the Hubble and what they were saying about what they are now finding is so intriging to me because I knew that as they told of these galaxy discovered we were only just scratching the service...I had chills go down my spine just as it was explained and even the ones we call experts that were explaining were they sent the Hubble and just hearing them explain what they have learned was clearly beyond anyones expectations ever imagined by their explanation and the excitement that could not be contained was a beautiful feeling that I will never forget. It just shows how we are just a grain of sand on a beach compared to the stars...I am captivated by our exisistance and that we are still here or were ever here in the first place is unbelievable to me. You have to ask yourself "what are the odds", and "we are not alone" are my first thoughts to what could happen 33 billion miles away. I could only imagine a alot.....
@@vinnvinn88 Yes I remember someone talking about this years ago how if a star dies and we are still seeing the light because it hasnt caught up to us yet is a concept that baffled me when I was younger. The black hole scared the living #^#^*$@ out of me. All I could think is if it consumed earth I think someone said we would be compacted to the size of a baseball. I just think that it is great to be born in a time when all these discoveries are unfolding right now in our lifetime and it is sublime..
GOD is beyond amazing. A little scary too. The universe we think we know is soooooo vast, what lies beyond that and what else that we have no idea of that is well beyond our reach forever and ever. Just wow!
It didn't. It is doppler shifted such that it has been moving at such a speed that the light hitting the CCD is nowhere near as old. In other words the light is from something whose contents are much further away than the starting point which has been figured deductively from observations and known fundamental laws. It would take light 33 billion years to travel to the center of that object (if it even still exists in that form, but for the sake of the exercise) from where we are.
The light didn't travel 33 billion years worth of time. The galaxy is 33 billion lightyears away in distance. Lightyear is a measure of distance, not time.
In time, the light from that galaxy has probably traveled for only about 13.8 billion years. During that time, the galaxy apparently moved to a point 33 billion lightyears away from Earth.
What they are falling short of is where it is today. The image shows wher it was 33 billion years ago, but over those 33 billion years its been moving away
@@trevdoodit's wrong anyway. Can't say it's older than 13b yo. Can't say the thing we see now is 33b light years away, we dont know what it is "now", if it IS 33b ly away we cannot see it because light didn't reach us, The only non confusing way to talk is in redshift I think.
Info drop: The universe is roughly 14 billion years old. How did we observe a galaxy 33 billion years away? Because .... Although we've been told nothing can exceed the speed of light, there is however something that can. Space can expand at whatever rate it wants.
The infinite pursuit of knowledge that only Christ can grant by faith that Jesus is who he says; the only way to heaven. Not government, not people, not self
I always thought that the farther we could see the older they would think the universe is. What seems really stupid to me is that every time they can see further they seem to think something must have happened, a big bang...... Because we can see that for that must be when it started...... I thought scientists were supposed to be smart!
They follow the evidence. Im sure the are much smarter than you think. Because you dont have the capcity to understand what they discover. If your point is the scientists dont know what they are talking about, you are probably right. Thats why its called discovery if they new it all there would be no reason for it the universe is more than you can imagine. People like you will always think science is bogus. They have a hunger to learn the truth. You have a hunger for mashed potatoes. tommytwotone81
Time and distance are not the same thing. Because of the rate of expansion it would take 33 billion MORE years to see it today as it looks today. But If both galaxies started the same time right next to each other at much closer distance originally, we’ve been getting the light ever since, not that it took 33 billion to reach us, even though the distance has now expanded to 33billion light years, light years is more about distance than time.
Actually you're sort of right, but yes today it is 33 billion light years away but that doesn't mean the light will get here 33 billion years from now. Because in 33 billion years that thing will be over 200 billion light years away and the light will still be traveling towards us. In fact, the light it's currently emitting today will never reach Earth. Because the Hubble constant is actually accelerating in time and eventually the expansion of space between galaxys will surpass the speed of light and all distant objects will slowly fade away as our observable horizon recedes back in on us.
@@Eyeyamgod yes, keeps going, but the other side won't ever see it because of the expansion going faster than light, assuming that math / theory is correct. That's what I'm calling disappearing.
@@elliottmarshall1424 no it did not, it can be 33B ly away because space is expanding at rate faster than speed of light, but no law is broken because speed of light only applies to objetc,photon traveling thru space-time and not for space-time itself
@@elliottmarshall1424 but I was guilty thinking the same and I thing everyone is, because we are not told specificly that it only applies for objects traveling thru the space-time
It didn't..light traveled at most 13.B years(started some 380.000 years after the BB, but 33 billion LY is because universe is expanding at faster rate than speed of light (but no law is broken, because speed of light ONLY apply to an object traveling THRU space-time not for space time itself. Hope U understand better
And even if we had Lightspeed capabilities and we had our engines working at full capacity and full load..... it would take us almost 56 billion generations just to get where that Galaxy was in the photograph. And then it would take another 48 billion generations to get to where the Galaxy is then. But by then, the Galaxy would have moved on even further. So if the essence of what I'm saying is no matter what we do, we will never ever ever ever get to that Galaxy with light speed technology. We would have to use for lack of a better term a warp drive or figure out how to use and control wormholes in space. That is the only way that we could ever get to this galaxy. Mathematically, I'm almost 100% sure I am correct. There might be a few generations give or take that need to be added or subtracted. But the number is in the billions of generations it would take to get to the current location of said Galaxy.
What really trips me out is we are seeing that galaxy as it existed billions of years ago. For all we know it could have been swallowed up by a black hole billions of years ago and doesn’t even exhaust anymore. But we have no way of knowing it really exists or it did exist.
Imagine being in a galaxy that the night sky is not dark but red, yellow, blue, or any other color but many many years later realizing space is actually dark and not any other color
The galaxy light is from 13 billions light years but the universe expansion at distance is faster then the speed of light and taking that in consideration now the galaxy is at 32 billion light years. In the future the expansion will be so big that light would never reach other galaxies and the universe would seem to be just a lonely galaxy.
@@nuperaa6617 it's a miracle if understanding of the laws of the universe a big bag theoretically is not possible. It's called the moment of singularity. All the laws of the universe came into effect immediately after the birth of the universe. The rapid expansion is being mathematically answered as there being invisible matter they call dark matter. And is the only explanation as to why something is 43 billion light years one way and 43 billion light years the other way. Which really is not possible if it's only 13 billion light years old unless there's this magical dark matter to explain it. But I think it's bs and me personally, I think string theory has more to offer as a Big bang is possible to happen multiple times, It would explain why objects are so far away... Those objects can be from another bang
for those who wondering: we can see 35B Lightyears away even if the universe is only 14B years old, because the light travels through expanding space. The galaxy was closer when the light started its journey.
@@aaargh3965 Your reasoning doesn't seem entirely coherent to me. Here's why: It's unclear to us (or at least to me) exactly when that galaxy came into existence. All mathematical reasoning concerning this topic eventually relies on certain postulates that could potentially be disproven in the future, despite the fact that well-established theories such as Relativity have been extensively validated. We (or, at least I) don't have precise knowledge of the distribution of matter at such great distances. I'm confident that nobody does; hence, we can only make educated guesses. I could be wrong, but as a humble human, I perceive a circular logic at play here. To perform the necessary calculations, we require knowledge of the distribution of matter as light traverses it. To ascertain that very distribution, however, we have to use the same calculations again, leading us into a seemingly endless loop. Consequently, it boils down to placing trust in certain postulates. Your distinction between what you accept as "valid mathematical reasoning" and what you dismiss as "mere conjecture" appears quite arbitrary to me. If you're more inclined to trust complex equations than simple language, we could attempt to apply the Friedmann equation: (a')² / a² = 8πGρ/3 - kc² / a² + Λc² / 3 We could then integrate over a: D = c ∫(dt/a) This equation requires numerical solving, which I cannot do due to its complexity. Eventually, you'll find that D is approximately equal to 2.5, or you could simply rely on redshift measurements. As far as I'm aware, no one has conducted more extensive calculations for this than those involved in determining the redshift.
@@DemocratsReadMyBio You're right on both counts. Whether we can see the light from a galaxy really depends on how far away that galaxy is. The farther a galaxy is, the faster its distance from us increases. This means there are some galaxies moving away from us faster than the speed of light, and their light will never reach us, at least as far as our current understanding goes. There are also galaxies so distant that we only see their "old" light. The light they're emitting right now will never reach us, and we'll never be able to see it. if they are "only" some million Ly away, the light is just stretched as you said. it's stretched because the space is expanding.
Actually that's not true, because by the time is broadcast reaches it in 33 billion years, the Galaxy will be another 33 billion years away, it can never reach it
The crazy part is, all of its matter is the same age as the universe. It's just the farthest away from us. Its redshift means it's moving away from us... Real fast...
Nope... the recent discovery does however shows that there are some galaxies older or even younger to ours. You can search in short videos on Dr. Michio Kaku.
Those are blue shifted, meaning their closer, the problem is the object is smaller so it looks further away but in actuality is closer. Red shifted is the furthest away color we can see before we see nothing.
The furthest thing we can see is the cosmic microwave background. It's the "afterglow" of the big bang. While there's absolutely more space and galaxies beyond what we can see, it just hasn't had enough time for its light to reach us.
@@mikegargan967 "Our current cosmological event horizon is about 16 billion light-years away. As long as the universe's acceleration continues, any light emitted today that is beyond that distance will never reach us."
Probably only by their gravitational field or gravitational lensing. I recently learned that there many times more rogue planets in the universe than there are planets orbiting stars. There's an unknown number of brown dwarf stars that are to dim to be detected.
@@wilhelmbeck8498 That and many other violent occurrences. Our knowledge of the universe is actually about 100 years old. It was the 1920s that we discovered the Milky Way galaxy was the only galaxy in the universe. Actually we did not know there was a universe in a proper way. Our understanding and knowledge is woefully limited even now. It really very exciting to know there is much to learn and discover. Science isn't fixed and settled and I don't believe it will ever be.
We already have, in Elliptical galaxies. They used up all their star forming energy, and are invisible to the naked eye... except they put out IR, so our telescopes can see them. Totally dark would be interesting though... we'd have to pretty much wait for it to bump into something.
@@briansmith8730 it’s 60 minutes and Scott Pelly just works there. Did you see the hit job? The media is clearly the enemy of hygrometer people of the US. Including Scott Pelly. No offense
And now we have to rewrite everything we thought we knew about “The Big Bang Theory”. These galaxies weren’t supposed to exist but with James Webb telescope nothing makes sense anymore. We need to start building the telescope that’s 10 times bigger than James Webb and I bet we’ll be surprised yet again.
We are not sure they exist yet, the picture shows these galaxies from billions of years back. It’s not a present picture, and no bigger/powerful telescope can show us present, the light takes its time to travel here
@@mohit3736 yea but it was thought that galaxies didn’t form until billions of years after the Big Bang which more likely is false. And they’re discovering that these galaxies probably formed more like 500 million years after the Big Bang.
@@mohit3736the issue isn’t whether or not they exist still , possible they don’t. The issue is that it’s such a short time after the “big bang” that a galaxy of that size should not exist. So it’s defying current thinking about how our universe came to be. The Big Bang theory is now obsolete. Has to be revisited.
@@WarPartyFitness I think a lot of what we know about cosmos will keep changing, because we have only observed past and made predictions based on math and science, but sometimes these things can work differently who knows. It’s fascinating to think about
If it wasn't endless and their was an end, we would be wondering what's beyond the imaginary block or wall at the end of space & time; yet they say it's expanding, but into what?
@@Blacky474 This was my conclusion I got as a teen, there can't be any end with nothing behind but there can be an end of the universe where no energy exist for a very long distance until a new universe show up somewhere. Scientists have problem with the match where no clocks exist, without light or atoms it's not possible to calculate distance either. That is the reason for the claim that time started at the big bang but it was an eternal time before that so time is just a tool that we made by starting with the rotation of the planet or as they believed, the Sun.
They no longer exist and as they do not produce their own light, there's no way to get a close up of any planets that may have existed in that long gone galaxy.
Cool story. Now what if we were on a planet in that galaxy looking beyond? Whoops! Infinity! Scientists fear it; mathematicians avoided it like the plague.
You do realize 33 billion light years means it takes 33 billion years for light from that galaxy to reach Earth right? That’s not in our living room. That’s not even in our country lmao
The Galaxies are all varying degrees of red as a result of the light waves stretching out, indicating they are moving away or the space between them is expanding, also known as red shifting. This occurs when the object is approaching the speed of light. This is similar to the Doppler affect with sound. If the object is moving towards us, it will have a blue shift. Fun fact, if you leave the galaxy, you will never return, because they move at or near the speed of light.
@@crocop6873 who knows. There’s also the assumption that our universe is in a black hole. Which would explain why our universe is expanding, and things are getting further away from us
What's crazier is that once fully zoomed in, there are little specks of blue all around, leaving me to believe there's still more beyond that which is incredible and almost impossible to view with better clarity due to their distance.
Can you guys smell BS or is it me? Let me show you a smudge real quick and tell you to trust me, cause you can't check it out for your self. Could they "zoom in" on the moon for a bit, as amateur astronomers are seeing quite interesting stuff for years now.
Do you ever wonder if some sort of entity can become aware of Earth by our own observations? "Careful when you stare into the abyss... you may find the abyss staring back."
Maybe there is something out there in the vast expanse of the universe observing us, kinda like watching Coronation St on a massive scale; I mean what else would it do to pass time other than watch all the miseries & pain that goes on here.
the idea of infinity is radical and thus implausible, but i do agree with you in that there has to be more than what we're seeing, some sort of ongoing existence.. ive always believed that black holes must have something to do with it, but lets face it man will likely never really know
Weirder still is that this galaxy does not only NOT currently look like that but, may not even exist anymore...
@@LentilSoupGirl everything dies, every fades
How do you know?
By now, they have certainly put up different wallpaper.
Nah, they still exist, just different. Star and blackhole can last hundreds billion years.
Light is a strange thing. Due to our distance from our source of light we think noting of it but when you're 450 million light years away you're right, it may not even exist. In a 100 million years or so we may see the explosion meaning it happened maybe 300 million years ago. This leaves space travel really risky, no guarantee that we may reach a civilization that has life.
They are really just zooming in onto the local movie theater carpet
😂😂
Lmao 😂
For a second I was like nah, but then I was like wait I remember a similar pattern on the floors of the old local movie theatre before it got replaced… damn 😂 spot on, also the skating rinks have a similar carpet
More like dandruff on my black shirt..ugh
Our whole univerese could be just speck of dust in a movie theater and the speck of dust at the other end of the theater would be milllions of light years away.
No matter how far out you park your galaxy, someone else will come along and park their galaxy right next to yours.
All fake
True
@akashicrecords4049 its because recently they've found galaxies that "shouldn't" exist because they are so far out that it changes what we believed about the beginning of the universe, you act like this is an exact science when its not, just like with medicine we are constantly learning new things
🤣💀
Ain't it the truth.
This is the furthest-away you have to travel to escape the IRS.
Lol tyrants
It's probably a memory at this point.
A memory with a of distance
@@noyb12345mem’ry; preposition article article preposition
That light took 33 billior years to travel to that very moment, crazy to think of. Is it older than the big bang?
@@dylananzaldua7006 It can't be. Everything is moving away from everything else. It may be 33 billion light years away from us but it didn't take that long to get to where it's at because we are moving away from it as well.
@@blueskyla7978 everything is not moving away faster than the speed of light though.
We really have no idea what is going on out there.
No you dont, 'cause theres no going out there!
@@truthiscriminal if we know very little about what's out there then how do you know that there's nothing going on out there?
they dont😇
No, you really have no idea what is going on out there.
Nothing is going on
People are asking
_"WHY "33 BILLION" light-years when Universe is "only" 13.78 Billion years old"_ - so i will try to give a good for quick explanation:
I'm going to try to explain this, but it's going to take a couple paragraphs:
Imagine 2 cars driving away from each other: At 13 car lengths one shines a flashlight ot the other. That light was 13 car lengths away _WHEN IT WAS SHONE_ yes, but since both cars continue to dive away from each other, those cars are now 33 car lengths away _NOW, when it arrives to be seen here._
OK, so now replace the cars with galaxies, the car lengths with light years (distance light travels in one year).
Now we still have a couple things to resolve:
1) "Driving away" is actually space expanding. Space expands in every direction; every point gets farther away from every other point.
2) This expansion happens at a constant _RATE PER UNIT,_ so the more units you have between each point, the faster those points expand away from each other. (Think if it was 1 meter per second expansion, you would be 1 meter away for each unit after 1 second. So for 1 meter away you would be 1 meter apart, but for 100 meters away you would bev100 meters apart, in that same second.)
Side Note: [We call these units of distance a Mega-parsec, and give a rate per that distance unit. The Universe is somewhat large, so we need large units. A Light-Year is a unit of distance, not time. It is the distance _through space vacuum_ that light travels in 1 year. 3.26 of these light-years is 1parsec (pc) of distance. 1 Million of these parsecs is a Mega-parsec (Mpc). So 1 million x 3.26 light-years makes 1 Mpc a distance of 3.26 Million Light-years. A big ruler indeed. For each unit of that distance, space is expanding about 70km every second. So 70km per sec of new space every second, for each megaparsec. If you have 2 units, it's 2x that, and so on. The more units of space are between 2 points, the faster they expand away from each other. That point is very important to understand].
3) Ok, now we don't measure in meters but Light-Years of distance, so you can imagine the total expansion at that distance- it's faster than light can travel. Faster than light speed. Because it's _cumulative_ expansion of that huge distance. Galaxies aren't moving _THROUGH_ space faster than light, _space itself_ is expanding faster than light (for points with lots of distance [space] between them.)
So what does this all add up to? We see the pulse of light from where it was pulsed, and it travels from there to our location at a certain speed ("c) thar takes a certain time to cover each unit of distance (Light-Year). Each unit of distance is continually expanding, so light expands too, and gets stretched out ("Red Shift"), which is why light traveling longer (ie. started farther away) looks red, and all these distant galaxies look more red the farther away they are.
Every point of space itself is expanding, so _EVERYTHING_ is farther away than when that light left. If it left 13 Billion years ago, it traveled through expanding space for 13 Billion years. Multiply that by the rate space was expanding in that time, and you get 33 Billion light years away _NOW._
The mind boggling part is this expansion is happening in 3D, not just 1D like cars driving away from each other in a line. But we don't "feel" this effect because gravity helps keep the matter stuffs within each galaxy pulling itself together. Gravity (locally) is a bit stronger than the expansion force ("dark energy") pushing everything away from everything else.
Thank u so much for the detailed explanation. U were able to shed some light on the question so many of us have asked
@@MyJsm121063 I appreciate that, thank you. Glad somebody read it in our "TLDR" culture. These topics are nuanced and involved. Some people in the comments section are acting like the explanation should be simple, flippant, or obvious so shouldn't need an explanation... but it's more complex than they assume. These things are newly discovered (1990's), and they received a Nobel Prize for it. So i got irritated by the "so simple" folks and wrote a bit more detail for people who wanted more than a "just because" answer.
Thanks for your detailed explanation. But I might comment that in point 2, it's an assumption that the expansion is (or has been) a constant speed. Time is the only thing that proves what we thought we knew, is wrong. As the JWST is proving to scientists who died in the 50s 60s 70s etc.
@@balebu1 Yes, that's a good point. I think we should say is the expansion seems constant _now,_ but accelerates as a cumulative effect of those individual expansion units. As to those individual units, the _rate_ they expand is what we can measure _now_ but that rate may change in future or in past.
Science is an ongoing process, not a religion. It's scientists who are challenging scientist's, and hope they discover something new.
There are 6 newly discovered galaxies which (hopefully) will prove some old assumptions incomplete. They are significantly larger than expected for that early formation/ collision process. Those early galaxies being larger, and age of Universe- are two separate things. The galaxies you're talking about are larger than expected for that time, but are still 33 B Light-Years away _now,_ after expansion for 13.8 Billion years.
What we don't know is how they got that size that fast. Could be they are older, or could be some other dynamics that happened early which are no longer seen today. Could be some structures feeding more gas than expected to them, like black holes. Or filaments of gas lanes in the early Universe which connect most galaxies together, and still is seen today, called the Cosmic Web.
To say it means the current universe is much older than 13.8 Billion years would be something very different; a different question. Expansion of Universe and larger than expected galaxies may not be causally related at all. They may not explain each other. But, it _IS_ all very exciting and everyone is hoping for big new science revelations. Still, we have a process that requires proof and evidence. These galaxies may rewrite earlier explanation, update them, or (as every scientist constantly hopes but rarely happens): completely upend our previous model in favor of a new and more complete one which explains radically more of the Universe- Answers BIG questions we all have, and more importantly: ASKS new questions we hadn't even known to ask.
Science is not defensive, it's exploratory. Exploration of the new. But it needs evidence to build those roads to the unknown. (As fun as it is to just go by leaps and bounds, science cannot jump to conclusions [or shouldn't, anyhow]).
@@onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475 the expansion is now believed to be getting faster, to the point that we will not be able to see another galaxy soon ( in galactic terms)
I remember a red splotch that Hubble found that everything past that was said would be in the earliest stages of "galaxy formation". Turns out there were fully formed galaxies far beyond Hubble's splotch - as Dr. Jason Lisle successfully predicted. And now the JWST has found it's own "red splotch".
We could park a telescope out near Pluto and upgrade to a new splotch level.
That's the great thing about science... facts aren't facts forever if new information is discovered.
@@TheDixiepa See this title posted a couple of hours ago The James Webb Telescope KEEPS Confirming the Bible
Be worth a trip there just to make sure the distance is right😮
Funny
I was wondering how they measure the distance that far.
@@wanowiable a good old measuring wheel was used.
You'll need a 3-day weekend. Maybe a fourth day if you'd like to keep to the speed limit.
The light gets stretched into the red part of the spectrum the further out you go. We call it the red shift. The more red the light we see, the farther away an object is. If you look at the image, you'll see dots around it that are blue. These are stars in our own galaxy, much closer than the galaxy in question. It's so far away that we couldn't see it with the powerful hubble space telescope.
We can take a picture of a galaxy more than 33 billion light years away but Mcdonalds cant fix their ice cream machine!
There is more to it! Its a secret!
Lol
Because Mc D's ice cream machines are designed to need an experinced service tech for the simplist of problems. It's a total con job with Taylors and Mcdonalds hand in hand with each other
Actually it’s not even broke. It’s just dirty by FDA standards and they’re too lazy to clean it right after it needs cleaning.
They don’t want to sell ice cream 🍦
The forbidden Star Fox 64 final level 🚫🌌
"Do a barrel roll!"
@@Drew-bc7zj MY EMPEROR!! I’VE FAILED YOOUU! 🤯🤯🤯
How funny and convenient???😂😂😂😂 there is infinite galaxy in the universe and it is why WE ARE A GALACTIC CITIZENS…so act like ONE, so all this mafia fake media will dissolve..💜ONELOVE 💜
Slippy! They're on my tail!
😅😅😅
What shows the immensity of the universe is that the first image taking by the JWST was the equivalent size of one grain of sand held at arm's length, in that image alone they counted 1000 galaxies.
Wow that just blew my mind
Incredible.
Don’t even try to comprehend the distances of billions of light years. I am obsessed with this stuff and I can’t even grasp it. Absolutely incredible
But we can zoom in on that distance????
@@Kll-z8m 3 comments down gives a better explanation than I ever could ✌🏻
But yet, it’s dirty under your sofa. You need to get your priorities straight.
@@keithsudzy4364can you imagine being a teenager and having to rationalize all of this information?! Slk 😊
@@Kll-z8mwe dont zoom, we simply collect enough light from it to make a picture 😊
It never gets old seeing that field of all those galaxies.
that's some serious redshift!? 🤯👍🏻
Ironically the only reason you can see it is because they blue shift the whole image
Wish I'd had this info for a presentation on color I gave to an artists' association. I discussed the science behind color which included red shift, blue shift, and the doppler effect. I keep adding info like this to the presentation. Guess I'll have to ask for a two-hour time slot next time. Ah hahahaha.
its incredible how they can calculate the distance from us.
@@bobnandezusing parallax is incredibly inaccurate when space can be curved, even for objects in our own galaxy.
@@bobnandez I wonder how they do that
Somebody in that galaxy are watching us too while saying the same thing😂😂
That galaxy might not even be there anymore.
We don't exist in a long time from their perpective.
They may have been saying that over 5bn years ago.
God
They don’t even see the ignition of our home star yet let alone the earths formation
I just can’t wrap my head around how they have enough data to determine any of that.
Determine what? You can determine distance by looking at supernovae. Supernovae explode in distinct spectra and timeframes based on their size and composition, so if you look at one, you can tell its size and absolute brightness. Then from that you can use its apparent brightness to calculate its distance.
Also the dude misspoke. It's not the farthest galaxy ever. It's just the farthest galaxy yet discovered.
@@stoptryingtomakemeusemynam7829 You sound like you don't even know how
Red shift.
They can’t. Dude just said this galaxy is 20 billion years older than the entire universe.
@@ThorrnnI was wondering if anyone would catch this.
Imagine moving at the speed of light for 33 billion years.
1. The universe is 13.8 billion years old. Nothing has existed longer than 13.8 billion years (relative to us).
2. Light years is confusingly used as a unit of distance (not time). So that galaxy is 33 billion light years away in terms of distance, but the light we use to see it traveled a much shorter distance.
It's the distance between us and that galaxy that has increased (more space is coming into existence everywhere outside galaxies, causing things to be further apart from each other, without those things actually moving.)
2. If you were to travel at the speed of light, you would no longer experience time (due to time dilation.
From the perspective of that light, it came into existence and reached that telescope at the same time.
From the perspective of those photons that image was created from, those photons took 0 seconds to get here.
Pack a lunch.
Mondays can be like that sometimes.
The distance between Monday and the weekend
🤯🤯🤯
That's only what our telescope can pick up, there are probably thousands of galaxies that are 500 billion light years or more away.
The universe isn't that old.
@@EricLuceroit’s called expansion
Thousands?? Undercounting a little. Plus expansion between that far away and us is faster than speed of light, so we’ll never see each other
@EricLucero your proof?
@@emroy.129 No one can prove. That's just the scientific consensus. It's the whole reasoning behind my original question.
The most distant to us. Let that sink in. Let me remind everyone we are not the center of the universe.
I am. It ALL revolves around me.
Actually, hate to break it to you, but we ARE the center of the universe. So is everything. Bcuz Einstein.
Nothing exists unless you visibly see it. They said this is a fact now. You are the center of your own universe. Nothing else really exists.
I'm convinced our entire universe is in a huge black hole and thats why its impossible to see beyond a certain point and why its constantly expanding at an exponential rate.
Everything expanding away from us certainly does not preclude every point in the universe being the center of it if the universe is infinite in all directions.
That must have required a seriously long tape measure
😂
It required the longest tape measure of all...Math.
Your welcome
The universe is 13 B yo. That galaxy is 33 B yo. ??
@@BobCristofaro No, 33 B Light-Years away, "Light-Years" is distance, not time.
This is a wonderful journey for scientists. Congratulations and thank you for your support.
Correction. You've discovered the most distant galaxy in the OBSERVABLE universe. There. Fixed it for ya.
He said that.
@@TaxTheChurches. not in the title
@@grendul4497 He also didn’t whisper it to his grandkid before sending him off tho bed. Point?
Many many amazing worlds out there with beings doing what they do. Billions of civilizations came and went. Truly amazing thinking about it. Hubble deep field changed my life the first time I saw it. Some people don’t understand it at all.
If Hubble blew your mind may I introduce to you the James Webb Telescope. It made the discovery of the little red galaxy while adjusting the mirrors focus. It never fails to amaze me just what little we know about earth let alone the universe.
And a bronze age carpenter made all of it! 🙄😅
I truly want to believe in aliens and I do but I think they’re about the same technology level as us because to be able to travel the universe conveniently and fast would basically make that civilization gods
@@JonathanStanford-j4z I have researched it for over 39 years. We are 1000% being visited and have been for thousands of years. Tons of evidence out there. Do research. I know for a fact.
@@JonathanStanford-j4z it’s a mathematical fact there is other living being out there. I personally have seen things in the sky that would change your life forever. I’m not some idiot. I have studied this for decades.
After a closer look, it is our own galaxy 33 billion years ago.
Lol, it's a large mirror 16.6 billion light years away
lol nothing existed 33 billion years ago
@@Masoch1st Yes, it's around 14 billion years old. But as light was traveling from it to us the universe was expanding, so it's more than 14 billion years distant.
@@davidhoekstra4620 which means its an astronomical after image.
@@jbee02 open for debate
I wonder if that galaxy has discovered us.
I bet they like I love lucy the best.
We ain't that important unless you think you are
I wonder if anyone in our galaxy has discovered us
33 billion years.
It remembers us from
The Big Bang
The older I get the more I realize scientists are very smart, but even they have absolutely no idea what’s really going on in the dark emptiness of space.
I think we're at the point where we know just enough to understand how little we really know.
Watch the full episode. Its awe inspiring and the scientists are extremely humble and their lack of knowledge. Hence the need for more
Research
But scientist or not I think we can all agree the universe is much to big to not have life elsewhere. Even on a microscopic level.
Space isn't real and nasa is a lie. Look up stars zoomed in on with the Nikon P 1000, it will blow your mind. The word firmament in the bible its Hebrew definition is the solid vast dome god created on the second day to separate the waters above from the waters below so that dry land could appear. The moon produces cold light. Nikola Tesla can be see quoted using the word firmament. the first people in recoded history to go way high in a aluminum ball said the earth seemed flat with an upturned edges. That edge is the artic circle that circles all the realm. And you might wonder why would they go through such great measures to make up this lie? Well as the bible describes the northern lights as the bottom garments of his robe. The Mountain where all compasses point to aka magnetic mountain. There's something wonderess up there
Space isnt even real its a lie to hide magnetic mountain
"That we currently know about ...." sums up science pretty well lol
best post I’ve read today. nailed it.
As someone who grew up there - we’re definitely the furthest galaxy from you guys
Bahahaaaa
Glad we got the facts from someone who actually came from there not seen a dead pixel on the computer and was like oh man thats a galaxy far far far away ! The math is the best part like what !? 33 billion howd we get here from there !
@@dark4ever_24 margin of error +/- 30 B light years.
So then yoi have to speak spataluska?
😂😂😂😂
There’s so much we don’t know and will never know and have no comprehension to understand as human beings it just blows my mind what even is nothing.
The Creator is full of wonders.
Just mind-boggling and absolutely FACINATIING!!!
Yes.. i mean you just need to imagine the distance... its so unreal.. and who knows if there are human like intelligent creatures over there with a completely different looking world, different looking sky asking the same question about our galaxy. That thought is so fascinating. We are so unbelievable small in an unbelievable HUUUGE universe
@@godoftestoe7956 definitely 🌞
So they say who phkn knows😊
Happy if someone can correct me where I'm confused, but I take issue with "more than 33 billion light years away." Assuming the big bang theory is correct, and the estimated age of the universe is correct (about 13.8 billion years old), then the oldest light we could possibly see from Earth would have started traveling in our direction about 13.8 billion years ago (less, really, since 13.8 billion years ago all the matter on Earth was MUCH closer to the singularity, so that initial light would have "caught us" a long time ago). And even if that galaxy is moving in the exact opposite direction as us from the singularity, I fail to see how there's even a theoretical way that we could see an object more than twice that distance in light years, or about 27.6 billion light years away. What am I missing?
The way this deal works is that when it all ends..........
It Just starts Over Again !
But with ice cream and pie and other snacks all mixed in.
I agree we have elements in our body that are only found in stars we get recycled lol 😂
We didn’t know anything billions of years before we were born so what’s a few billion years till we return
This is so amazing to know that the furthest galaxy that we know about is 33 billiion light years away...is mind blowing. I have to say around 2012 I will never forget listening to a news broadcast of the pictures from the Hubble and what they were saying about what they are now finding is so intriging to me because I knew that as they told of these galaxy discovered we were only just scratching the service...I had chills go down my spine just as it was explained and even the ones we call experts that were explaining were they sent the Hubble and just hearing them explain what they have learned was clearly beyond anyones expectations ever imagined by their explanation and the excitement that could not be contained was a beautiful feeling that I will never forget. It just shows how we are just a grain of sand on a beach compared to the stars...I am captivated by our exisistance and that we are still here or were ever here in the first place is unbelievable to me. You have to ask yourself "what are the odds", and "we are not alone" are my first thoughts to what could happen 33 billion miles away. I could only imagine a alot.....
I wonder what must be happening on that galaxy right now?.. does that still exist? Are/were there any life over there? My head spinning..
33 billin miles no no No 33 billion light years how far light travels at the speed of light in a whole year 1000s of 33 billion miles And in a year
Trust me, we are NOT alone.
Purely Amazing Life is a Gift❤️🦋❤️🦋❤️
@@vinnvinn88 Yes I remember someone talking about this years ago how if a star dies and we are still seeing the light because it hasnt caught up to us yet is a concept that baffled me when I was younger. The black hole scared the living #^#^*$@ out of me. All I could think is if it consumed earth I think someone said we would be compacted to the size of a baseball. I just think that it is great to be born in a time when all these discoveries are unfolding right now in our lifetime and it is sublime..
"Don't pay attention to that Man behind the...curtain!!."...
GOD
That's right.
One of my favorite classic comments..
Wizard Maybe, God, not even close, God doesnt hide behind the curtain... God is the curtain also...
GOD is beyond amazing. A little scary too. The universe we think we know is soooooo vast, what lies beyond that and what else that we have no idea of that is well beyond our reach forever and ever. Just wow!
In awe of the majesty of it all.
The fact that light could travel for 33 billion years without running into anything shows how truly empty the vast majority of space really is.
Yes I know what you mean , but at the same time how incredible it is how much there is outhere..
It didn't. It is doppler shifted such that it has been moving at such a speed that the light hitting the CCD is nowhere near as old.
In other words the light is from something whose contents are much further away than the starting point which has been figured deductively from observations and known fundamental laws. It would take light 33 billion years to travel to the center of that object (if it even still exists in that form, but for the sake of the exercise) from where we are.
The light didn't travel 33 billion years worth of time. The galaxy is 33 billion lightyears away in distance. Lightyear is a measure of distance, not time.
In time, the light from that galaxy has probably traveled for only about 13.8 billion years. During that time, the galaxy apparently moved to a point 33 billion lightyears away from Earth.
What they are falling short of is where it is today. The image shows wher it was 33 billion years ago, but over those 33 billion years its been moving away
Where they are falling short is that the universe is supposedly only 13.4 billion years old, so that galaxy didn't even exist 33 billion years ago.
@@EricLuceroonce again, stop confusing distance with time.
@@trevdoodit's wrong anyway.
Can't say it's older than 13b yo.
Can't say the thing we see now is 33b light years away, we dont know what it is "now", if it IS 33b ly away we cannot see it because light didn't reach us,
The only non confusing way to talk is in redshift
I think.
Info drop: The universe is roughly 14 billion years old. How did we observe a galaxy 33 billion years away?
Because ....
Although we've been told nothing can exceed the speed of light, there is however something that can. Space can expand at whatever rate it wants.
It's amazing and terrifying that we can see, but we cannot touch
If we touched it would be buried in plastic
Is called The Cosmic Strip Club for a reason
The infinite pursuit of knowledge that only Christ can grant by faith that Jesus is who he says; the only way to heaven. Not government, not people, not self
I always thought that the farther we could see the older they would think the universe is. What seems really stupid to me is that every time they can see further they seem to think something must have happened, a big bang...... Because we can see that for that must be when it started...... I thought scientists were supposed to be smart!
They follow the evidence. Im sure the are much smarter than you think. Because you dont have the capcity to understand what they discover. If your point is the scientists dont know what they are talking about, you are probably right. Thats why its called discovery if they new it all there would be no reason for it the universe is more than you can imagine. People like you will always think science is bogus. They have a hunger to learn the truth. You have a hunger for mashed potatoes.
tommytwotone81
Time and distance are not the same thing. Because of the rate of expansion it would take 33 billion MORE years to see it today as it looks today. But If both galaxies started the same time right next to each other at much closer distance originally, we’ve been getting the light ever since, not that it took 33 billion to reach us, even though the distance has now expanded to 33billion light years, light years is more about distance than time.
Actually you're sort of right, but yes today it is 33 billion light years away but that doesn't mean the light will get here 33 billion years from now. Because in 33 billion years that thing will be over 200 billion light years away and the light will still be traveling towards us. In fact, the light it's currently emitting today will never reach Earth. Because the Hubble constant is actually accelerating in time and eventually the expansion of space between galaxys will surpass the speed of light and all distant objects will slowly fade away as our observable horizon recedes back in on us.
No, the light will disappear since it's going backwards in distance from us by almost 3x
@@HansSchulzelight doesn't disappear my boi. It goes on forever. Light photons keep going.
@@Eyeyamgod yes, keeps going, but the other side won't ever see it because of the expansion going faster than light, assuming that math / theory is correct. That's what I'm calling disappearing.
Time is fake. 8ts a man made concept
And not 1 of them has human or equivalent or a species smarter than us? Yea right.
What about less smart
Ive spoken face-to-face with an alien being.
Apparently, we are equivalent to cavemen still.😂
@@VG-rj8pn your mom doesn't count
No one knows the answer to this question. Please read a book called "Rare Earth" to explore this in depth.
And someone on the red splotch is looking back zooming in and saying look at that blue splotch .
33 BILLION light years away! Space is huge!
That galaxy existed before our big bang…
A huge lie
@@elliottmarshall1424 no it did not, it can be 33B ly away because space is expanding at rate faster than speed of light, but no law is broken because speed of light only applies to objetc,photon traveling thru space-time and not for space-time itself
@@elliottmarshall1424 but I was guilty thinking the same and I thing everyone is, because we are not told specificly that it only applies for objects traveling thru the space-time
Time travel 😮
The fact it took 33 billion years for light to travel is pretty much infinite.
It didn't..light traveled at most 13.B years(started some 380.000 years after the BB, but 33 billion LY is because universe is expanding at faster rate than speed of light (but no law is broken, because speed of light ONLY apply to an object traveling THRU space-time not for space time itself. Hope U understand better
@gasperstarina9837 Even then that is still infinite.
@@LL-fb8wz no, its finite..33 B ly is finite number
Just goes to show you how infinite is infinity... 33bly is chump change
@@gasperstarina9837 wrong
That's where your friend's girlfriend lives when you're a kid.
lol it took me like 5 minutes to finally get that, haha, well done Bilb 😂
And even if we had Lightspeed capabilities and we had our engines working at full capacity and full load..... it would take us almost 56 billion generations just to get where that Galaxy was in the photograph. And then it would take another 48 billion generations to get to where the Galaxy is then. But by then, the Galaxy would have moved on even further. So if the essence of what I'm saying is no matter what we do, we will never ever ever ever get to that Galaxy with light speed technology. We would have to use for lack of a better term a warp drive or figure out how to use and control wormholes in space. That is the only way that we could ever get to this galaxy. Mathematically, I'm almost 100% sure I am correct. There might be a few generations give or take that need to be added or subtracted. But the number is in the billions of generations it would take to get to the current location of said Galaxy.
One thing I know about the universe is that it is amazing
@@patrickhorvath2684 it was a statement. I don't need your comment.
"The universe is not only more wonderful than we imagine; it is more wonderful than we can imagine." -- J.B.S. Haldane
Yeah, but I wouldn't want to paint it.
here here, let's all agree on that
There are no outer limits. Everywhere you are is the center of the universe.
How do you know that is the center? Or you're just another freelancing idjiot on the Internet?
We’ve always known about the “most distant galaxy…we currently know about”, ever since we discovered the first galaxy not our own.
There is no galaxy anywhere at all. All of NASA pics are fake
Wow. This video I loved. Bravo.
What really trips me out is we are seeing that galaxy as it existed billions of years ago. For all we know it could have been swallowed up by a black hole billions of years ago and doesn’t even exhaust anymore. But we have no way of knowing it really exists or it did exist.
Imagine being in a galaxy that the night sky is not dark but red, yellow, blue, or any other color but many many years later realizing space is actually dark and not any other color
I think it's red because the light has red-shifted on its way to us.
First he said "We've discovered the most distant galaxy in the universe". Then that we currently know about.😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
yeah. that was said in the video. 😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
That “pleeease… I’d love to see it”!! just BEGS to be memed
Man and his problems are pretty dam insignificant when you look at the big picture....😂
Don't let the globalists and demonic left hear you say that.
What are the blue dots?
We are not allowed to speak of the blue dots. 😂🤫
birthday wishes
The galaxy light is from 13 billions light years but the universe expansion at distance is faster then the speed of light and taking that in consideration now the galaxy is at 32 billion light years. In the future the expansion will be so big that light would never reach other galaxies and the universe would seem to be just a lonely galaxy.
Unless the actual birth of the universe we know is not a one time miracle they describe as the big bang.
@@mimicmage not really a miracle if the start was something else the big bang is still part of the universe lifetime
Agree
@@nuperaa6617 it's a miracle if understanding of the laws of the universe a big bag theoretically is not possible. It's called the moment of singularity. All the laws of the universe came into effect immediately after the birth of the universe. The rapid expansion is being mathematically answered as there being invisible matter they call dark matter. And is the only explanation as to why something is 43 billion light years one way and 43 billion light years the other way. Which really is not possible if it's only 13 billion light years old unless there's this magical dark matter to explain it. But I think it's bs and me personally, I think string theory has more to offer as a Big bang is possible to happen multiple times, It would explain why objects are so far away... Those objects can be from another bang
Thank you for making my day!
The light finally reached us.
for those who wondering: we can see 35B Lightyears away even if the universe is only 14B years old, because the light travels through expanding space. The galaxy was closer when the light started its journey.
I don't believe the words. I need calculations.
@@aaargh3965 Your reasoning doesn't seem entirely coherent to me. Here's why:
It's unclear to us (or at least to me) exactly when that galaxy came into existence.
All mathematical reasoning concerning this topic eventually relies on certain postulates that could potentially be disproven in the future, despite the fact that well-established theories such as Relativity have been extensively validated.
We (or, at least I) don't have precise knowledge of the distribution of matter at such great distances. I'm confident that nobody does; hence, we can only make educated guesses.
I could be wrong, but as a humble human, I perceive a circular logic at play here. To perform the necessary calculations, we require knowledge of the distribution of matter as light traverses it. To ascertain that very distribution, however, we have to use the same calculations again, leading us into a seemingly endless loop.
Consequently, it boils down to placing trust in certain postulates. Your distinction between what you accept as "valid mathematical reasoning" and what you dismiss as "mere conjecture" appears quite arbitrary to me.
If you're more inclined to trust complex equations than simple language, we could attempt to apply the Friedmann equation:
(a')² / a² = 8πGρ/3 - kc² / a² + Λc² / 3
We could then integrate over a:
D = c ∫(dt/a)
This equation requires numerical solving, which I cannot do due to its complexity. Eventually, you'll find that D is approximately equal to 2.5, or you could simply rely on redshift measurements. As far as I'm aware, no one has conducted more extensive calculations for this than those involved in determining the redshift.
@@vornamenachname906 I dont understand why we can see the light, wouldn't the light pull away??
@@vornamenachname906 or does the light just stretch?
@@DemocratsReadMyBio You're right on both counts. Whether we can see the light from a galaxy really depends on how far away that galaxy is. The farther a galaxy is, the faster its distance from us increases. This means there are some galaxies moving away from us faster than the speed of light, and their light will never reach us, at least as far as our current understanding goes.
There are also galaxies so distant that we only see their "old" light. The light they're emitting right now will never reach us, and we'll never be able to see it.
if they are "only" some million Ly away, the light is just stretched as you said. it's stretched because the space is expanding.
That is where this 60 minutes broadcast will be in another 33 billion light years!
Actually that's not true, because by the time is broadcast reaches it in 33 billion years, the Galaxy will be another 33 billion years away, it can never reach it
@@Ngc-ve7tb why can’t it ever reach it
Ok... but where is my Ford Galaxie?
That’s where my vacation home is.
Aston Martin making a space traveling ship that time warps. With a big ole warp drive??
Doxxed!
The crazy part is, all of its matter is the same age as the universe. It's just the farthest away from us. Its redshift means it's moving away from us... Real fast...
Nope... the recent discovery does however shows that there are some galaxies older or even younger to ours. You can search in short videos on Dr. Michio Kaku.
Redshift is not real.
33 billion light years away?? So that mean we are seeing the image of a galaxy that is 33 billions light years old.
@@ceaserborn1739 33 billion years old
@@KickRox ok boomer
That is one really nice kalydascope
This is where self-serving Scott Pompous (Pelley) lives.
Then it looks like theres objects beyond that lol aghhh space 😍😍😍
Good spot! I saw the same. Even while zooming in, I was thinking this is only what they can see with the available technology.
Those are blue shifted, meaning their closer, the problem is the object is smaller so it looks further away but in actuality is closer. Red shifted is the furthest away color we can see before we see nothing.
@@cosmicty8660 wow, space is amazing thx for the info
The furthest thing we can see is the cosmic microwave background. It's the "afterglow" of the big bang. While there's absolutely more space and galaxies beyond what we can see, it just hasn't had enough time for its light to reach us.
@@mikegargan967
"Our current cosmological event horizon is about 16 billion light-years away. As long as the universe's acceleration continues, any light emitted today that is beyond that distance will never reach us."
Now if humans had a lifespan of 90 Billion light years I'm there!
Light years is a term of distance not of time.
I wonder if they'll find galaxies that have gone extinct and have gone dark in the future
Probably only by their gravitational field or gravitational lensing. I recently learned that there many times more rogue planets in the universe than there are planets orbiting stars. There's an unknown number of brown dwarf stars that are to dim to be detected.
@@rickhale4348 Could this high percentage of rogue planets be a result of many "turbulent" galaxy merging's ?
@@wilhelmbeck8498 That and many other violent occurrences. Our knowledge of the universe is actually about 100 years old. It was the 1920s that we discovered the Milky Way galaxy was the only galaxy in the universe. Actually we did not know there was a universe in a proper way. Our understanding and knowledge is woefully limited even now. It really very exciting to know there is much to learn and discover. Science isn't fixed and settled and I don't believe it will ever be.
We already have, in Elliptical galaxies. They used up all their star forming energy, and are invisible to the naked eye... except they put out IR, so our telescopes can see them. Totally dark would be interesting though... we'd have to pretty much wait for it to bump into something.
@@onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475 things are changing so fast hard for someone like me to keep up with
Super red-shifted.
Since Mike Wallace did a hit job on the journalist that reported the facts in the Vince Foster case, I will never believe a word.
Well, that’s Scott Pelley, so…
@@briansmith8730 it’s 60 minutes and Scott Pelly just works there. Did you see the hit job? The media is clearly the enemy of hygrometer people of the US. Including Scott Pelly. No offense
Epstein committed suicide. Allegedly. And Casey Anthony was innocent.
GN-z11 is a high-redshift galaxy found in the constellation Ursa Major. It was among the farthest known galaxies from Earth ever discovered
Until JWST, it shattered that record with its first image.
Yah gen z is way off from the boomers!
@@johnhuston650
…what?
They sure love the number 33😂
@@leonardajimenez2011 33 degrees of freemasonry. 33 and a 1/3rd of the angels fell from Heaven also I believe.
And now we have to rewrite everything we thought we knew about “The Big Bang Theory”. These galaxies weren’t supposed to exist but with James Webb telescope nothing makes sense anymore. We need to start building the telescope that’s 10 times bigger than James Webb and I bet we’ll be surprised yet again.
Exactly rewrite all the astronomy books at this point
We are not sure they exist yet, the picture shows these galaxies from billions of years back. It’s not a present picture, and no bigger/powerful telescope can show us present, the light takes its time to travel here
@@mohit3736 yea but it was thought that galaxies didn’t form until billions of years after the Big Bang which more likely is false. And they’re discovering that these galaxies probably formed more like 500 million years after the Big Bang.
@@mohit3736the issue isn’t whether or not they exist still , possible they don’t. The issue is that it’s such a short time after the “big bang” that a galaxy of that size should not exist. So it’s defying current thinking about how our universe came to be. The Big Bang theory is now obsolete. Has to be revisited.
@@WarPartyFitness I think a lot of what we know about cosmos will keep changing, because we have only observed past and made predictions based on math and science, but sometimes these things can work differently who knows. It’s fascinating to think about
The company that build the telescope deserves the credit.
The universe is endless
If it wasn't endless and their was an end, we would be wondering what's beyond the imaginary block or wall at the end of space & time; yet they say it's expanding, but into what?
It's beyond human capabilities to know how the universe works, there is no beginning or end
@@Newstarz1WRONG
@@Blacky474 This was my conclusion I got as a teen, there can't be any end with nothing behind but there can be an end of the universe where no energy exist for a very long distance until a new universe show up somewhere.
Scientists have problem with the match where no clocks exist, without light or atoms it's not possible to calculate distance either. That is the reason for the claim that time started at the big bang but it was an eternal time before that so time is just a tool that we made by starting with the rotation of the planet or as they believed, the Sun.
Would be fascinating to get an up close of its planets
Truth be told. Your believing a lie..
@@hokuponopono4415 me when i spread misinformation on the internet 🤭
They no longer exist and as they do not produce their own light, there's no way to get a close up of any planets that may have existed in that long gone galaxy.
@@annakeye 🥹
Safe to say its not there now 😮
Fascinating
I love how enthusiastic Scott Pelley is in this 0:08 🎙
Furthest the tech is able to see, not as far as the other side of an infinite void.
Yeah, no.... Our tech isnt the problem. Light having the time to reach us, is the limiting factor. Not the quality of our cameras.
We’ve come a long way from climbing a tall tree for a view.
@@captain_context9991 Our limited technology definitely plays a part of the problem.
@@suspicioustumbleweed4760
I still do that.
@@ericpena7418
In what way.
Woah!
That is amazing,
We cant even fathom the distance..
Blows my mind!!!
The mindblowing thing is the fact that we have figured out a way to see things 33 billion light years away. That's about 200 trillion miles.
What’s cool is if somehow they had a powerful telescope and tried to look at earth. They wouldn’t see anything because our galaxy hadn’t formed yet
That's the point my guy..... to befuddle your mind so that it accepts crap.
@@ziff_1 And in fact it probably doesn't even exist anymore. We're seeing the light from when it existed, not as it is now.
Sure we can it's quite easy actually it just means traveling at the speed of light it would take more than thirty three billion years to get there.
Cool story. Now what if we were on a planet in that galaxy looking beyond? Whoops! Infinity! Scientists fear it; mathematicians avoided it like the plague.
I have seen a galaxy 2X as far away as that one. 😎
Fantastic. Please demonstrate that.
Im from a galaxy that is twice the distance
Yeah I’ve seen it too. They’ve even made movies about it. Star Wars.
I don't need to see to know there are an infinite number of galaxies beyond it in this infinite universe.
I too have abused mind-altering substances.
33 billion light years away is practically in our living room, if the Universe is Infinite.
You do realize 33 billion light years means it takes 33 billion years for light from that galaxy to reach Earth right? That’s not in our living room. That’s not even in our country lmao
@@ridgecrestwack9746 exactly like a room
True
Nope maybe if it said millions, but were talking billions not even in the front yard
Exactly.
Incredible
The Galaxies are all varying degrees of red as a result of the light waves stretching out, indicating they are moving away or the space between them is expanding, also known as red shifting. This occurs when the object is approaching the speed of light. This is similar to the Doppler affect with sound. If the object is moving towards us, it will have a blue shift. Fun fact, if you leave the galaxy, you will never return, because they move at or near the speed of light.
Thought the galaxy was going to rickroll us
What are those pale blue dots around those 2 galaxies ?
Probably that cosmic background radiation, it’s seen at roughly the same distance in all directions
@@michaelbauschelt1294 oh ok. Thank you
Actually stars in our own galaxy
It's blue light
@@efrinortega4822 oh really? Ok thanks 👍🏻
My cellular phone loses connection when I walk in a tin garage but this telescope sending pictures back from how far away in like 5 secs
That's just a beautiful photo....cannot imagine the distance
That galaxy may look different now, but we won't know because we're seeing it 33 billion years in the past.
That is so mind blowing
Probably gone by black hole or just completely dispersed by now 😮 who knows
@@crocop6873 exactly!
No, you’re seeing it as it was 13 billion years ago. Read the long explanation above.
@@crocop6873 who knows. There’s also the assumption that our universe is in a black hole. Which would explain why our universe is expanding, and things are getting further away from us
What's crazier is that once fully zoomed in, there are little specks of blue all around, leaving me to believe there's still more beyond that which is incredible and almost impossible to view with better clarity due to their distance.
Blue blood
those are closer. The farthest things are red in color. Those may be stars that are much much closer but way smaller than a galaxy?
Blue is not far, far galaxies are red shifted, the farthest only visible in infrared.
I thought that too
@@harmvandorp6017 furthest away are invisible now. Receding at faster than the speed of light.
The universe expands faster than light can travel
You don't know that
Can you guys smell BS or is it me? Let me show you a smudge real quick and tell you to trust me, cause you can't check it out for your self. Could they "zoom in" on the moon for a bit, as amateur astronomers are seeing quite interesting stuff for years now.
@@1skeeta4u If math tells them that, they'll buy it, if it doesn't snow it, they'll make it show it.
@@4Everlast I'm tooo familiar with the scientific community theory of simplicity ✨️
😂😂😂
He says we are spinning ball 15000 mph 😂😂😂😂😂
This comment shows your lack of understanding, we measure the rotation of the earth in degrees not mph. Maybe go troll somewhere eles
and youre completely wrong with that number, at the equator the earth spins about 1000mph
Do you ever wonder if some sort of entity can become aware of Earth by our own observations? "Careful when you stare into the abyss... you may find the abyss staring back."
Maybe there is something out there in the vast expanse of the universe observing us, kinda like watching Coronation St on a massive scale; I mean what else would it do to pass time other than watch all the miseries & pain that goes on here.
This means that the universe is older than 13.5 billion years old..... I think the universe is infinitely old.
Big bang is nonsense
Me too. I don't believe in the Big Bang
nope that's wrong
No. Just no.
the idea of infinity is radical and thus implausible, but i do agree with you in that there has to be more than what we're seeing, some sort of ongoing existence.. ive always believed that black holes must have something to do with it, but lets face it man will likely never really know
Go 33 billion years on the other side of 33 billion galaxies consecutive and you will still have eternity
God’s creation is wonderful!!