@@AliKhan-tq5nx yes it means that it takes light 12 billion years to reach us from that point (Pablos galaxy) meaning whatever image we see is made with about 12 billion years of lag
@@AliKhan-tq5nxyes and it takes light time to travel so it took 12 billion years for it to travel to earth for us to see what is happening there 12 billion years ago.
We’re literally seeing the universe 1 billion years after its creation lmao Edit: Only on TH-cam can you post a comment that has no value and get a shit ton of likes
Which means that the real galaxy in the present moment is already dead, since no new stars in 12 billion years would leave a galaxy just a cloud of red dwarfs and various cinders of dead stars.
Good news, you learned a cool new fact today! Now you too can horrify people with the knowledge that we’re rotating a giant never-ending vortex of death.
This video has a common, and understandable misconception. The supermassive black hole at the center of most galaxies is not the glue of a galaxy in the same way our sun is. Dark matter is majorly what is responsible for holding galaxies together.
@@aikrichter5403 What he's saying is that the gasses that would form new stars are being expelled instead. No new stars plus dying old stars equals shrinking (starving) galaxy.
The fear of this is overblown, the reason it was capable of that was the conditions of the early universe, just as stars were the black holes of that time would have been significantly larger giving them a far larger accretion disk and overall mass that could drag that gas in from far deeper into that galaxy, instead of the relative equilibrium we see today in our galaxy it would have stripped the base elements out of the stellar nurseries.
The Supermassiv Blackholes at the center of galaxys dont hold the galaxy together. While our Sun has 99.8% of the mass of our solar system, supermassiv black holes only contain 0.001% of the mass of the galaxy, galaxys are held together by darkmatter in a way we dont understand yet.
What if it was just the gravitational mass of every planet and or star inside that galaxy just clinging and pushing on each other always conflicting with one another, thus they can never get close, or push another away because they're just going around in a circle...idk lol I just pulled that out of my ass.
@@lloydpaikea7357 heres some food for your newfound theory! while my knowlege doesnt extend far gravity does infact. Gravity has an infinite range in space and so all matter in the observable universe is under a gravitational force. gravity will get weaker the further ur away from it however. as well as gravity there is also magnetic fields which is an entirely seperate force than gravity. our suns magnetic feilds extends far beyond pluto into the heliosphere "ending" at the heliopause some 120 astronomical units away. "ending" isnt really the right word to use but yeah anyway, you should definetly do some research about this stuff its cool!
@@lloydpaikea7357 The distance of the gravatitational effect from our solar system is extremly huge. But in galactic messurements its nothing, stars barely ever come close enough the get rly effected by another. And if it was just gravity Stars and their solar system would still leave the galaxy from time to time without being bond to it. Most scientist agree on the dark matter theory. Since Dark Matter is causing the expansion of the universer it might just push everything together in one direction or froms some kind of "border" around massive clusters of matter.
Remember everyone, we're seeing the Pablo's Galaxy as it was over 12B years ago. There's no telling whether the galaxy is still intact by now. We just will never know.
Its likely gone by now including the black hole which probably evaporated. 96% of all galaxies to ever exist we will never see as they are gone already. And 98% of all galaxies we’ve observed are also already gone. It’s a shame we can’t observe things faster than light because in reality outside our own solar system our information is extremely delayed and likely changed by the time we receive the old news.
interesting. i was about to ask "if supermassive black holes can keep galaxies together, how big of a star would they have had to be? and could there be more stars like that in the universe?"
Correction: black holes do not hold together galaxies, dark matter does. Even a supermassive blackholes gravity is inconsequential when compared to the size of its galaxy.
Not actually true. At least in the sense that the black hole at a galaxies center operates like the sun in our solar system, keeping things organized. The sun is able to dictate planetary movement in the solar system because it accounts for 99+% of the mass in the system. Supermassive black holes at galactic centers, while super dense, account for less than a fraction of a percent of the galactic mass.
@@andrewmiller6264 which is why we speculate some other factor is holding galaxies together, and that would be dark matter. even though we dont really know what dark matter *is* yet, we know it has to exist, because according to our current understanding of physics which have been accurate so far, galaxies have no reason to stay together, there isnt enough gravity
@@womp47thats just stupid and also easy. Assuming the big bang happened ( regardless of what CAUSED IT) EVERYTHING is MOVING AWAY from a ORGINAL center. (Blah blah blah blah specs blah blah into specs blah blah into bigger specs blah blah into dust blah blah the history of everything i guess blah blah ) and planets are formed and stars are formed and so on. The earth orbits the sun. The sun orbits another star which orbits another star.. the milky way rotates and also orbits with adramda which means right now earth is in a different location then it was when i started typing which it has NEVER been to before and NEVER will again. Earth WILL NEVER be in the same place twice as we are ALWAYS CONSTANTLY being pushed FURTHER from the original center when the BB happened. And because the galaxy is rotating and orbiting and gliding through the universe NOTHING has ever crossed its own tracks before.. And why doesn't everything just "break apart" because theres nothing to break it apart. There is.... for ass intensive purposes no resistance in space. At least nothing that would impead the movement of a COLOSSAL entity Such as a star or planet. The microneutons of tiny specy space dust isnt enough to resist the mass of a planet much less a star. The atoms in OPEN SPACE is so insignificant that the air on earth resists your hand waving through ot with 100000000× more efficiency. Also the big bang was a big BOMB so everything is STILL being sent out in a giant blast wave so were all just gliding through void space being carried by GODS ALMIGHTY FART. So every spec of dust has NEARLY INFINITE momentum. Gravity as we know it is just enough force to EVER so slightly change trajectory to collide with another partical. So unless your CLOSE enough to a gravity source there is NOTHING to stopbyou from riding the BLASTWAVE and keep going along with EVERY OTHER LITERAL ATOM.
This was super interesting because we used to think when a super massive black hole suffocates, star systems would go chaotic. But Pablo's galaxy is still chilling and has really made us reevaluate what is a dead galaxy.
What we are seeing is how this galaxy was 12 billion years ago. The death of a galaxy isnt a quick spectacular event, but a slow, painful death which drags on for billions of years as each star in the galaxy explodes, vaporizing their solar systems and then either turning into more black holes, which get sucked into the main super massive one, or simply remain as star dust and fall into the super massive black hole eventually. Its likely if we could go to this galaxy today that there'd be little to nothing left but black holes scattered around and red dwarf stars on the verge of going super nova any moment
Interestingly also is the James Webb telescope saw this when that universal 700 million years old, relatively young. Who knows what it's current status is? It's very fascinating.
Technically we're just magnifying a specific section of the EM spectrum; gama, xray, infrared, uv, visible, that was released 12 billion years ago. But it is crazy that we can magnify it and study it with great accuracy.
@@ProSkillzDragonGal it is kinda crazy that it looks like to us how it actually was nearly 2 billion years after the formation of the universe, so imagine what it looks like now if you were to suddenly teleport to it
The way this works is that the black hole pulls gas close but any that it didn’t eat and just barely missed the black hole itself gets CRAZY velocity which is enough to completely clear it of the galaxy.
It's a common misconception that black holes hold galaxies together. Black holes are influential, but the overall structure and cohesion of galaxies are primarily governed by the combined gravitational forces of all the stars, gas, dark matter, and other components within the galaxy
"self-contained self-destruction" its like there was a big gaseous aura that was suffocating the things around it while also consuming it at the same time
Misconception. Ill yap about it: While its true supermassive blackholes at the center of galaxies (ej: Sagitarius A*) have millions of solar masses, you cant just extrapolate the solar system concept to galatic scales. In the solar system, the Sun sums up to 98% of all available mass, which means everything orbits it. In a galaxy, even a giantic blackhole doesnt sum to even 0,1% of the total mass (nor it has a gravity well that could extend for thousands of lightyears) It is true that some star systems DO ORBIT THE BLACKHOLE (we discovered Sagitarius A* that way, looking how some stars seemed to orbit an empty center),but its not keeping the galaxy together by itself. It is actually the mass of the stars themselves, and mostly, dark matter, the ones keeping galaxies together.
Fun fact! Supermassive black holes, while quite massive, don't actually have nearly enough mass to hold galaxies together. That is where dark matter comes in! Something currently undetermined (there are many theories) is holding galaxies together.
So that was twelve billions years ago, if we had the power to teleport it would totally different and probably not even exist at that point which is pretty cool 🎉
At least there’s some reoccurring themes in space which have to make me wonder about the overall design. 1. There’s always round planets and moons, never any other shape. 2. Black holes at the center of every galaxy and I’m sure there are some others I just don’t know about but small steps you know. I wonder what this means as far as who or what created all this
Pablo must be a pretty hungry boy
he is :]
I am
@@PabloAlvarez011you are
Yes
12 billion years ago i was too
"This galaxy is already dead, it just doesn't know it yet. 🎅🎅🦀💵"
where is that guy, he doesnt show up in my shorts anymore
@@ronil2186 what guy?
@@ronil2186 idksterling
@@ItzJupiter the 🎅🎅🦀💵 guy
HOHO *money*
Keep in mind, that was the situation 12 billion years ago
He said light years, a form of measurement for vast distance in space.
@@AliKhan-tq5nx yes it means that it takes light 12 billion years to reach us from that point (Pablos galaxy) meaning whatever image we see is made with about 12 billion years of lag
@@AliKhan-tq5nxyes and it takes light time to travel so it took 12 billion years for it to travel to earth for us to see what is happening there 12 billion years ago.
@@Xylophytae forgot about that, thanks
EDIT: Apologies. Light years measure BOTH distance AND time.
Finding out Galaxies can STARVE TO DEATH before GTA 6 is crazy
New time comparison confirmed and officialized
Keep in mind, the galaxy is 12 billion light years away, meaning that the way we see it right now is how it was 12 FUCKING BILLION YEARS AGO
We’re literally seeing the universe 1 billion years after its creation lmao
Edit: Only on TH-cam can you post a comment that has no value and get a shit ton of likes
Yes! For all we know Pablo probably starved a few neighbors by now but we might never know
Which means that the real galaxy in the present moment is already dead, since no new stars in 12 billion years would leave a galaxy just a cloud of red dwarfs and various cinders of dead stars.
Light years is a measurement of distance, not time.
@@yurngo1109 If you are seeing something 12 billion light years away you are seeing it as it was 12 billion years ago.
"we all know that the vast majority of galaxies have a super massive black hole in the center"
no i didn't know actually 😭
Good news, you learned a cool new fact today! Now you too can horrify people with the knowledge that we’re rotating a giant never-ending vortex of death.
I think its safe to say that Pablo is having a *heart attack* …
Thats one of the best jokes ive ever heard
You’re laughing. The entire galaxy is dead and you’re laughing.
@@figo2989 oh shit. I think I am
@@PartyPhil1 LMAOOO YES YES I AM😭😭🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@PartyPhil1 lmao
This video has a common, and understandable misconception. The supermassive black hole at the center of most galaxies is not the glue of a galaxy in the same way our sun is. Dark matter is majorly what is responsible for holding galaxies together.
Yeah I heard that misconception and immediately didn't believe anything it said after.
@@gregspecht3706but Pablo☹️😢
@@gregspecht3706 he aslo seems to think that stars eat the gas to stay alive,and now starve to death. which they don't.
@@aikrichter5403 What he's saying is that the gasses that would form new stars are being expelled instead. No new stars plus dying old stars equals shrinking (starving) galaxy.
TIL: when I stopped growing I essentially started being dead. May I rest in peace
This galaxy is already dead, it just doesn’t know it yet! 🎅🎅🐱
i was about to comment that
When he said the galaxy is already dead I thought 🎅🎅🎅🥕🐡
With that guitar music😭
Lol
Whats the name of that guy again?
"this galaxy is dead,it just doesn't know it yet"🎅🎅🎅🐡
Who named Pablo Galaxy, scientists or Mexican cartel? 💀
They took hostage of the scientesit
@@isansabina1044 lol
nah, me
@@pablohernandez3899 why did you
Nahhh am dead😭😭😭😭
Damn, for it to die like that, Pablo's Tacos must've been a bit too insane for that galaxy
Me whenever looking at the sky after watching this short :-
"pablo"
Rip Pablo the galaxy 🕊
Remember Pablo.✊🏾
New PC ignore pablo
It’s a me, Pablo
@@therealno_one hehe
The fear of this is overblown, the reason it was capable of that was the conditions of the early universe, just as stars were the black holes of that time would have been significantly larger giving them a far larger accretion disk and overall mass that could drag that gas in from far deeper into that galaxy, instead of the relative equilibrium we see today in our galaxy it would have stripped the base elements out of the stellar nurseries.
“alright nasa. we’ll help you, but only if we get a galaxy” -the cartel probably
I’m surprised there’s not a “cocaine galaxy” or “Sinaloa galaxy” yet 😂
We should call Uranus Escobar.
Why the cartel?
It was named because they discovered it in the middle of a cocaine binge
"pablo." - The universe, apparently.
Life of pablo❌
Galaxy of pablo ✅
I miss the old kanye 😭
We giving 8 years panic attacks with this one🗣🗣🗣🔥🔥🔥
they pronounce pablo like pablo in that galaxy
Did you hear how u.s officials have been touching those kids?
Damn! Really?!? I figured they would pronounce it pablo
no ive been there it's pronounced pablo
pablo
?
“The galaxy is already dead, it just doesn’t know it yet.” 🎅🏼🎅🏼🐡
The Pablo galaxy has probably already disappeared because we're seeing it 12 billion years in the past
The Supermassiv Blackholes at the center of galaxys dont hold the galaxy together. While our Sun has 99.8% of the mass of our solar system, supermassiv black holes only contain 0.001% of the mass of the galaxy, galaxys are held together by darkmatter in a way we dont understand yet.
What if it was just the gravitational mass of every planet and or star inside that galaxy just clinging and pushing on each other always conflicting with one another, thus they can never get close, or push another away because they're just going around in a circle...idk lol I just pulled that out of my ass.
I think its simply electromagnetic forces holding galaxys together, no need for dark stuff
@@lloydpaikea7357 heres some food for your newfound theory!
while my knowlege doesnt extend far gravity does infact.
Gravity has an infinite range in space and so all matter in the observable universe is under a gravitational force.
gravity will get weaker the further ur away from it however.
as well as gravity there is also magnetic fields which is an entirely seperate force than gravity. our suns magnetic feilds extends far beyond pluto into the heliosphere "ending" at the heliopause some 120 astronomical units away.
"ending" isnt really the right word to use but yeah anyway, you should definetly do some research about this stuff its cool!
@@lloydpaikea7357 The distance of the gravatitational effect from our solar system is extremly huge. But in galactic messurements its nothing, stars barely ever come close enough the get rly effected by another. And if it was just gravity Stars and their solar system would still leave the galaxy from time to time without being bond to it.
Most scientist agree on the dark matter theory. Since Dark Matter is causing the expansion of the universer it might just push everything together in one direction or froms some kind of "border" around massive clusters of matter.
Remember everyone, we're seeing the Pablo's Galaxy as it was over 12B years ago. There's no telling whether the galaxy is still intact by now. We just will never know.
Kinda frustrating.
Its likely gone by now including the black hole which probably evaporated. 96% of all galaxies to ever exist we will never see as they are gone already. And 98% of all galaxies we’ve observed are also already gone. It’s a shame we can’t observe things faster than light because in reality outside our own solar system our information is extremely delayed and likely changed by the time we receive the old news.
@@aztkshorty9138 Black holes are the most stable structures in the Universe. It'll take around 10^100 years for one to actually evaporate
We will in 12B years, stay optimistic!
We can find out in 12 billion years how its doing today.
Our black hole could suck up all of the gases in the Milky Way and yet Karens would still find the breath to ask for the manager.
“This galaxy is dead, it just doesn’t know it.” 🎅🏻🎅🏻🥕🐡
“999 miss calls from Pablo Picasso” 💀
The supermassive black hole doesn't actually hold the galaxy together, it's dark matter that does this
Is this dark matter in the room with us now
@@Thrax.mp4 😂😂😂
@@Thrax.mp4probably
It’s a very mysterious substance
Yeah. It's not like the solar system or anything like that where the binding object makes up the vast majority of mass.
interesting. i was about to ask "if supermassive black holes can keep galaxies together, how big of a star would they have had to be? and could there be more stars like that in the universe?"
High as a mfer and the videos of the black holes just made my stomach droppp 10/10 🤣🤣🤣
New galaxy destruction before gta 6
How about you make your parents proud before GTA 6, huh?
Pablo probably had too much of that space powder
Nah Ye has to make a sequel to life of Pablo named Pablo’s galaxy 😭🙏
As much as I love the life of pablo , Ye is currently incapable of making something as good
And he can do a merch collab with Galaxy Gas.
Correction: black holes do not hold together galaxies, dark matter does.
Even a supermassive blackholes gravity is inconsequential when compared to the size of its galaxy.
Love watching his vids everyday and the space ones are the best
The black hole in the middle of galaxies doesn’t hold the galaxy together…
I can't believe Pablo's Galaxy was the Ice Truck Killer.
Why am I getting dexter references in a video about black holes 😭
I SWEAR TO FUCKING GOD THIS TREND IS SPREADING LIKE A DISEASE EVERYWHERE I’M SCARED 😭
I can't believe I get a random reference like this for once wow. I feel cultured lmao
It’s insane that all this happened before we existed
this galaxy is already dead, it just doesnt know it yet.
I'm sure the galaxy knows it's dead now...
We about to invade aliens
Pablo was not a very good man...He liked to have-
Oh dear, mini ladd 😳
I knew if I scrolled far enough, I knew I would find someone telling the tale. The tale of the man, the myth, the monster, Pablo... XD
"this galaxy is already dead, it just doesnt know it yet 🎅🎅🎅🐡"
I literally just understood that black holes create a gravitational force, that is why they are at the center of galaxies😮
Everything has a gravitational pull but same
Everything has a gravitational pull except you when you are pulling girls@@gamerslife1876
Not actually true. At least in the sense that the black hole at a galaxies center operates like the sun in our solar system, keeping things organized.
The sun is able to dictate planetary movement in the solar system because it accounts for 99+% of the mass in the system. Supermassive black holes at galactic centers, while super dense, account for less than a fraction of a percent of the galactic mass.
@@andrewmiller6264 which is why we speculate some other factor is holding galaxies together, and that would be dark matter. even though we dont really know what dark matter *is* yet, we know it has to exist, because according to our current understanding of physics which have been accurate so far, galaxies have no reason to stay together, there isnt enough gravity
@@womp47thats just stupid and also easy.
Assuming the big bang happened ( regardless of what CAUSED IT)
EVERYTHING is MOVING AWAY from a ORGINAL center.
(Blah blah blah blah specs blah blah into specs blah blah into bigger specs blah blah into dust blah blah the history of everything i guess blah blah ) and planets are formed and stars are formed and so on.
The earth orbits the sun. The sun orbits another star which orbits another star.. the milky way rotates and also orbits with adramda which means right now earth is in a different location then it was when i started typing which it has NEVER been to before and NEVER will again.
Earth WILL NEVER be in the same place twice as we are ALWAYS CONSTANTLY being pushed FURTHER from the original center when the BB happened.
And because the galaxy is rotating and orbiting and gliding through the universe NOTHING has ever crossed its own tracks before..
And why doesn't everything just "break apart" because theres nothing to break it apart.
There is.... for ass intensive purposes no resistance in space. At least nothing that would impead the movement of a COLOSSAL entity Such as a star or planet.
The microneutons of tiny specy space dust isnt enough to resist the mass of a planet much less a star.
The atoms in OPEN SPACE is so insignificant that the air on earth resists your hand waving through ot with 100000000× more efficiency.
Also the big bang was a big BOMB so everything is STILL being sent out in a giant blast wave so were all just gliding through void space being carried by GODS ALMIGHTY FART.
So every spec of dust has NEARLY INFINITE momentum. Gravity as we know it is just enough force to EVER so slightly change trajectory to collide with another partical.
So unless your CLOSE enough to a gravity source there is NOTHING to stopbyou from riding the BLASTWAVE and keep going along with EVERY OTHER LITERAL ATOM.
People that unironically believe this is legitimately stupid.
This was super interesting because we used to think when a super massive black hole suffocates, star systems would go chaotic. But Pablo's galaxy is still chilling and has really made us reevaluate what is a dead galaxy.
It was chilling 12 billions years ago...
What we are seeing is how this galaxy was 12 billion years ago. The death of a galaxy isnt a quick spectacular event, but a slow, painful death which drags on for billions of years as each star in the galaxy explodes, vaporizing their solar systems and then either turning into more black holes, which get sucked into the main super massive one, or simply remain as star dust and fall into the super massive black hole eventually. Its likely if we could go to this galaxy today that there'd be little to nothing left but black holes scattered around and red dwarf stars on the verge of going super nova any moment
The Black Hole is not suffocating. The galaxy around it is being suffocated by the black hole.
Interestingly also is the James Webb telescope saw this when that universal 700 million years old, relatively young. Who knows what it's current status is? It's very fascinating.
Caseoh finally got a competitor 💀
this is why every other generation hates you guys
I wanna know if there is a galaxy juan or something, this is awesome and my day is made. Thank you Pablo
Oh great, another way to die from the cosmos deciding "fuck this galaxy".
Pablo owns a Galaxy, lucky guy he made it from a normal mexican to the owner of an entire galaxy.
All I can say, is whoa. This stuff is deep!
Destroy entire galaxy? Thanos has entered the chat
This guy calls me dumb in a good way
Poor Pablo. His galactic empire ended before he could take over the universe.
The way you say pablo irks my soul😭😭😭
Im lil pablo man. From down the street man (galaxy gas) ⛽️🌌🪐🍃😵💫
I have a lambo 😈
I have a private jet 🗿
guy named pablo:
HOW TF CAN WE SEE 12 BILLION LIGHT YEARS AWAY HOLY HELL
Technically we're just magnifying a specific section of the EM spectrum; gama, xray, infrared, uv, visible, that was released 12 billion years ago. But it is crazy that we can magnify it and study it with great accuracy.
because the universe is more than 12 billion years old so the light from that distance has had time to reach our telescopes
@@ProSkillzDragonGal it is kinda crazy that it looks like to us how it actually was nearly 2 billion years after the formation of the universe, so imagine what it looks like now if you were to suddenly teleport to it
@@Crazyclay78YT you just triggered my megalophobia... oh god
@@ProSkillzDragonGal The light that travels to us is 12 billion years old....doesn't mean the galaxy lasted 12 billion years
The way this works is that the black hole pulls gas close but any that it didn’t eat and just barely missed the black hole itself gets CRAZY velocity which is enough to completely clear it of the galaxy.
Brilliant videos
It's a common misconception that black holes hold galaxies together. Black holes are influential, but the overall structure and cohesion of galaxies are primarily governed by the combined gravitational forces of all the stars, gas, dark matter, and other components within the galaxy
Love how we don't know what's on the dark side of the moon, yet we apparently know what's going on 12b lightyears away 😂
🤦♂
Pablo's galaxy: *exists*
Black hole: Alright, austerity time!
Imagine your own center starving you
It's sad to think that a lot of the stars we see in the night sky are the remnants of that which has long since died
Pablo the hungry boy
-Netflix documentary
pablo's supermassive black hole probably had too much galaxy gas
most galaxies: cool names or numbers/ random words
This galaxy: Pablo 👍
Do you realize what that means? That means when all the gas is gone, all that's left is a rogue, wandering supermassive black hole 😳
"self-contained self-destruction" its like there was a big gaseous aura that was suffocating the things around it while also consuming it at the same time
Misconception. Ill yap about it:
While its true supermassive blackholes at the center of galaxies (ej: Sagitarius A*) have millions of solar masses, you cant just extrapolate the solar system concept to galatic scales.
In the solar system, the Sun sums up to 98% of all available mass, which means everything orbits it.
In a galaxy, even a giantic blackhole doesnt sum to even 0,1% of the total mass (nor it has a gravity well that could extend for thousands of lightyears)
It is true that some star systems DO ORBIT THE BLACKHOLE (we discovered Sagitarius A* that way, looking how some stars seemed to orbit an empty center),but its not keeping the galaxy together by itself.
It is actually the mass of the stars themselves, and mostly, dark matter, the ones keeping galaxies together.
Fun fact! Supermassive black holes, while quite massive, don't actually have nearly enough mass to hold galaxies together. That is where dark matter comes in! Something currently undetermined (there are many theories) is holding galaxies together.
My hatred for reality tv.
that was 12 billion years ago and the people/aliens as we consider, have advance tech and found another way new planet to live on.
You explained it in such a weird metaphorical way that I didn't understand a single word
Pablo wants everthing on the menu!
As we know, the most common way galaxies are destroyed is when manga/anime writers don't give a shit about power scaling.
Bro's actually that one teammate that pulls everybody down with him.
Remember, logically, that happened 12 billion years ago
Pablo is the most interesting name for an eldritch master of the void I’ve ever heard
"We have a super massive black hole that holds everything together"
Buddy...
I hate people who talk about space with confidence.
We don’t talk about Pablo.
He did many things to those children
Pablo needs to get his shit together. He gets gifted a galaxy and this is what he does with it.
pablo must be crying rn 💀
"man i would really like a galaxy right about now"
Pablo:
"Ese compa ya está muerto, No más no le han avisado"
Escobar even bought his own galaxy, dope
Pablo’s galaxy, completely stable for 22 billion years, 12 billion years from now: man why you gotta dredge up all this old shit?
So scientists JUST realised a BLACK HOLE in the CENTER of the galaxy is what's killing it?
"This galaxy is already dead, it just doesn't know it yet."
So basicly Pablo's Galaxy is where Outter Wilds takes place.
cant wait for diddy's galaxy where the galaxy lures in younger galaxies
So that was twelve billions years ago, if we had the power to teleport it would totally different and probably not even exist at that point which is pretty cool 🎉
bro earned the most terrific title:galaxy eater
I have never thought about galaxies forming and looking for ‘food’ like an organism
dang, that fucking penguin rules over some big shit
Pablo's galaxy's super black hole is just a space zio starving the neighbours.
All I heard was galaxy gas😂
At least there’s some reoccurring themes in space which have to make me wonder about the overall design. 1. There’s always round planets and moons, never any other shape. 2. Black holes at the center of every galaxy and I’m sure there are some others I just don’t know about but small steps you know. I wonder what this means as far as who or what created all this
Moral of this video: As long as you are confident, you will look and sound knowledgeable.
Black holes aren't living entities. There's no such thing as black holes "suffocating" or "starving for food".
This galaxy is already dead, it just doesn’t know it yet 🎅🎅🎅🐡🐡