HiI'm a top comment Addition: using another method, another 'average' luminosity result is ~0.0015... Means that on average 650 random Red Dwarfs can beat Sun
This is such an underrated astronomy education channel. Digestible, yet nuanced. I remember being subscribed to Anton Petrov at 8K subscribers back in early 2016, and I saw his potential to become big. Your channel has that potential too.
Not only you're talented at animating, but the amount of information you gave to us.... We need more channel like this! Also next time maybe, I wanna see a video about "what will it look like if we stand on a habitable planet orbiting a red dwarf". Will we see a perpetual red sky on the entire day side? Will the star look reddish orange through the Earth like atmosphere to our eyes? So many question!
this is actually a really good video as it mostly depends on the different sizes and brightness of 10000 random red dwarves, thus the video is more scientifically accurate.
Is it possible for a binary star system to exist between a red dwarf and a star like our sun? And if so, if the sun were to magically become a binary system with a red dwarf how would it affect us?
There already is one like that, in fact a trinary--that's what Alpha Centauri is. A yellow star, an orange star, and a tiny red dwarf (Proxima), all orbiting each other. As for how would it affect us here on Earth if the Sun itself had a red dwarf partner...depends on how close it is. Might mess up orbit stability if it's real close; might only look like a brightish star in the night sky if it's far away.
@@banananugget8149 Somebody tested it before in universe sandbox appearenetly at the orbit of jupiter it wouldn't affect us too much... well beside the fact that sometimes we will have a dim red light at nightime on earth during certern times of the year
Talking about all ofthese red dwarves, I wonder if it would be possible for a Sun-like star to have a red dwarf partner _AND_ planets orbiting around it! And I do mean a red dwarf, perhaps as far out as Uranus or Neptune. Would some rocky planets, especially closer ones to the Sun-like star, remain in a stable orbit?
@@iapetus6110 You would think so, but no, I specificly stated that the red dwarf should be close to the host star. Alpha and Proxima Centauri are rather far from eachother, therefore not fitting the idea I talk about.
@@philippinescountryball7436 I've seen a few crossovers, like a planetball one with a black hole or a supernova or something, and then it cuts to Polandball looking at a picture of the destruction from way far away on Earth and being like "Pretty!" :P But that seems to be fairly rare.
What if 65Billion Red Dwarfs(All of Red Dwarfs in galaxy) vs The Luminosity of R136a1 (9Million suns) 1Billion Red Dwarfs vs 1 Blue Giant star(example Rigel)
hwo about this star called, EBLM J0555-57Ab? it's a red dwarf, and it's size is nearly the same as saturn, so by using fancy math 10,000 EBLM J0555-57Abs can defeat only above 1 sun
Didnt you made some comma mistakes either in your math or in your video? Using the data you given me i came to the conclussion thats they all can beat sun (exluding the lightest stars and the average value) but still good video PS: I just misread it so hes still right
You actually don't need 10,000 red dwarfs to equal the Sun's luminosity - Considering they have masses between 0.08 and 0.6 Suns, all what you need is taking two to thirteen of them (depending whether we are at the high or low end of the range), let them merging et voilà your Sun-like star!
HiI'm a top comment
Addition: using another method, another 'average' luminosity result is ~0.0015...
Means that on average 650 random Red Dwarfs can beat Sun
No fair
lol, am im a top reply, but maybe not
@@blithegd8 you can already see a reply above u 💀💀
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My space knowledge just expanded by at least 15 percent today...
same
2nd top comment
Same
-___-
really
Same
This is such an underrated astronomy education channel. Digestible, yet nuanced.
I remember being subscribed to Anton Petrov at 8K subscribers back in early 2016, and I saw his potential to become big.
Your channel has that potential too.
Well, That's a very well-explained Episode, Great Job!
thanks for the praise
This feels like one of those school educational videos but with planet balls
Not only you're talented at animating, but the amount of information you gave to us.... We need more channel like this!
Also next time maybe, I wanna see a video about "what will it look like if we stand on a habitable planet orbiting a red dwarf". Will we see a perpetual red sky on the entire day side? Will the star look reddish orange through the Earth like atmosphere to our eyes? So many question!
Nice as always DogePro!!
I always liked science and space growing up. But this stuff would have just blown my tiny little brain away. Love it.
This lad. His/her vids. A MASTAHPIECE!
Imagine the supernova from 10K stars colliding lmao
(fires up Universe Sandbox)
@@robinchesterfield42 lol
this is actually a really good video as it mostly depends on the different sizes and brightness of 10000 random red dwarves, thus the video is more scientifically accurate.
"10.000 red dwarfs vs sun?"
*our- our sun is a yellow dwarf*
1:42 I thought that that said Actresses...
Is it possible for a binary star system to exist between a red dwarf and a star like our sun? And if so, if the sun were to magically become a binary system with a red dwarf how would it affect us?
depends on how far the star is in the binary system
I'm guessing the red dwarf would provide shade at certain times
There already is one like that, in fact a trinary--that's what Alpha Centauri is. A yellow star, an orange star, and a tiny red dwarf (Proxima), all orbiting each other. As for how would it affect us here on Earth if the Sun itself had a red dwarf partner...depends on how close it is. Might mess up orbit stability if it's real close; might only look like a brightish star in the night sky if it's far away.
Would it be a binary system or would the red dwarf be a satellite of the sun?
@@banananugget8149 Somebody tested it before in universe sandbox appearenetly at the orbit of jupiter it wouldn't affect us too much... well beside the fact that sometimes we will have a dim red light at nightime on earth during certern times of the year
I learn more and more thanks to you.
Another knowledge and fact video!
truly a blessing from the cat who loves science and Astrophysics.
Only the og's remember the channels old name,"dogepro"
Interesting question: How many EBLM-J0555-57ab's can outshine the B416 (10 million times brighter than the sun)
i miss the old cat character pfp for this channel... it was my favorite... :(
Great educational video!
My next suggestion is: 100,000 brown dwarfs vs Sun
The art is good! Keep up the good work!
Hey, your quality has really gone up! I was looking forward to this video, was not disappointed.
Anyone else just watched one of this channels videos and then got hooked on it?
yes
And now THATS science!!
Sun and Alpha Centauri talking together belike:
this channel feel like I'm at school and watching the lessons given to the teacher DogePro
Talking about all ofthese red dwarves, I wonder if it would be possible for a Sun-like star to have a red dwarf partner _AND_ planets orbiting around it! And I do mean a red dwarf, perhaps as far out as Uranus or Neptune. Would some rocky planets, especially closer ones to the Sun-like star, remain in a stable orbit?
You can calculate the Gravity from both stars and find a reasonable result
My guy forgot about alpha centauri , whitch is a trinary system tho
@@iapetus6110 You would think so, but no, I specificly stated that the red dwarf should be close to the host star. Alpha and Proxima Centauri are rather far from eachother, therefore not fitting the idea I talk about.
2:19 Ayo My star compared to the Sun?
So cool!
Greetings from Countryballs ;)
Would like a crossover
Oh… I don't know if Countryballs and Planetballs will met… (Do I?)
Hi hi
@@philippinescountryball7436 I've seen a few crossovers, like a planetball one with a black hole or a supernova or something, and then it cuts to Polandball looking at a picture of the destruction from way far away on Earth and being like "Pretty!" :P But that seems to be fairly rare.
Oh it make sense…
Even if red dwarfs are the least burning Star it will still eat your soul into hell
Love your videos
Day 33 asking for a dogepro discord server! Also nice correction on the number of red dwarfs, if you wonder why there is a reupload
It seemed to me that the Sun itself was a dwarf, albeit yellow and not red.
I watch you videos every day and I learn by doing it
Next video idea: how many brown dwarfs can beat the sun?
Wow, how quickly you get subscribers! I remember a couple of months ago it was only 2500, congratulations!
Very cool bro
Can you make Arcturus planetball timeline?
New subscriber!
This video is great !
the name of the vid is called which brigher
03:39 A Part of Replacing the Sun video
Can you do 100 brown dwarfs vs. Jupiter?
How many of the dimmest star ever discovered will you need to match the luminosity of the brightest star?
Video idea: what if Jupiter was a star.
When I looked at the thumbnail I thought it was gonna be chaotic
very cool video
suggestion for another video : What if Mars colide with Earth?
What website did you use to make your videos? I want to make videos the exact same way you did in your animations on star timelines?
Can U do video of a quasi star anything included the star
And uh if u already made a video about it then Imma watch it
Can u do timeline of the Solar System V2.0?
Who would win? 1 trillion lions or the sun? We need to know
xd
Nice vid
I really like your illustrations and writing but I find the captions are going way too fast
If I’m correct Neptunes core is hotter then a red dwarf
What if 65Billion Red Dwarfs(All of Red Dwarfs in galaxy) vs The Luminosity of R136a1 (9Million suns)
1Billion Red Dwarfs vs 1 Blue Giant star(example Rigel)
Red Dwarfs win
Rigel wins
@@AstroCatz thanks
I got very curious question how many black holes that detected yet still unseen?
Red Dwarf: STRONG
When I saw the title I was about to say “this dude about to make a supernovae”
Is Gleise 710 a red dwarf because ? I think it's orange dwarf (K type). But in kurzgesagt video they said it's a red dwarf.
It's somewhere between themBut more like an orange dwarf
@@AstroCatz oh thanks ☺️
These videos make my 10k of my brain cells come back
Link to your scraped videos
The music is so cute >w
Why you always private videos. So you edited the video I remember that there was an error saying 30 Billion instead of 66 Billion
too many *key mistakes* in the first release
Since I’m a idiot could you explain the atmospheres and inner stuff of all the planets?
this was 10x more better than school
Arcturus is actually an incredibly bright giant star eeh
Sun:YUMMY,HUGE RED POPSTARS
Doge, du have a discord server?
If no, du want to make one, I could make it for u?
How many red dwarfs would it take to be brighter than DogePro?
∞ red dwarfs
56,013
@@AstroCatz You're awesome xd
Can you talk about the furthest object in the universe?
Me:were half of those even words
Scientists:very common ones
do l type stars main-seqence count as ultra cool dwarfs
But how many red dwarfs would edge out Rigel in Mass?
Around 200
3:30 yay my star is stronger than 10000 ultra cool red dwarfs :D
My star too :)
@@davdiusproductions yay ur star is strong 2 ^^
@@Atula416 same with mine
You must simulate this in Universe sandbox
Maybe they could be a bigger red dwarf out there maybe about 3 quaters of the radii of the Sun
what about BROWN DWARFS of the L,T class?
@green_the_planet anything higher than L7.5? any Known L3-0?
How many red Drawfs For Stephenson 2-18 (Stephenson 2-18 is 3 billion km big)
this Was Comment on 4:12 Pm
Coool
*my 29.9999999999999999999991% of brain cell have been disapeared with many red dwarf*
What Is Proxima Centauri
Second closest star to earth (After the sun)
@@Atula416 and a trinary star
@@srisrifamily2544 he didn't mention Alpha centauri A or B
cool!
"Which is Brigher?"
Yeah we know the real word is brighter
its a tie!
2,500k Kelvin degrees or 2,500k k as in thousand
Cool
How about gliese 229A its a red dwarf that's the size of our sun
random fact: brown dwarfs live forever
What about r136a1
hwo about this star called, EBLM J0555-57Ab? it's a red dwarf, and it's size is nearly the same as saturn, so by using fancy math 10,000 EBLM J0555-57Abs can defeat only above 1 sun
Didnt you made some comma mistakes either in your math or in your video? Using the data you given me i came to the conclussion thats they all can beat sun (exluding the lightest stars and the average value) but still good video
PS: I just misread it so hes still right
? I claimed that stars more than 0.13xSun's mass can beat Sun
or having an average luminosity of 10^-4
In the video TRAPPIST-1 is *0.000373%* of Sun, not 0.000373xSun
@@AstroCatz well you said thats a specific star have 0.004 of sun's luminosity multiplying it with 10k will make it to 40 not 4
@@AstroCatz Wait was it in precent?
PS: it really is so my bad
You actually don't need 10,000 red dwarfs to equal the Sun's luminosity - Considering they have masses between 0.08 and 0.6 Suns, all what you need is taking two to thirteen of them (depending whether we are at the high or low end of the range), let them merging et voilà your Sun-like star!
_Brigher_
*_SHHH,_* no one tell DogePro-
How about 10,000 orange dwarves?
"When your learning in TH-cam than online class"
Impressive considering I know nearly everything
( ˃ᯅ˂) i cant stop
( ꪊꪻ⊂) cute catfemboy
0:51
OH YES NEW VIDEO IN APRIL
I saw it pop out of no where