@@f1reasp3ct5 It has geothermal vents, surrounded by water. That's how earths life first emerged. It also has nutrients early life would need thanks to the surface. It seems quite promising to me.
@@zev4133 how would you know how the Earth’s life emerged? You weren’t there. It’s all speculation. All of it. Also, saying there are nutrients that life would need says nothing about life existing. So, my argument is still valid. Until there is 100% proof that life exists outside this planet, it just doesn’t.
@f1reasp3ct5 You're right that we can't be fully certain, but scientific theories are based on biological, geological and chemical evidence. It's not pure speculation. Saying life doesn't exist because we havent found it yet is just jumping to conclusions. Absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence.
If any of the hypothetical life forms in Europa developed sapience, encountering one of our probes would be something truly alien to them. Their entire existence would have taken place in this underwater world, that has a thick ceiling above it, with nothing but an empty void beyond, they wouldn't have spent their years staring at the stars like we do, wondering if there are other planets like ours out there, so to see something like a mechanical probe enter their world, coming from beyond the ice shell, might defy their very understanding of their existence.
Interesting point. The same about Intelligence as a non-exclusive-to-humans phenomenon. How do animals think? How do aliens would think? Does our planet think?
This reminds me a lot of Plato's cave myth. Europe is the cave and that intelligent species would be trapped inside, seeing only a tiny part of existence. If we ever manage to reach Europe and meet them, we would be the ones to break their chains to let them out of the cave and discover the entire universe they could not see. The more you think about it, the more incredible it is. Such a society would have no idea what the sun or the stars are. For them, the whole world would be reduced to the space between the seabed and the ice cap above. We often don't stop to think about it, but the sky has had incredible importance in our history. Many cultures viewed the sun as a god and the moon as a goddess. Many cultures used the North Star to determine where North was at night and the position of the Sun during the day. The Greeks saw shapes in the stars and created constellations. It was thanks to the Moon that they began to think about the possibility that there were other worlds besides ours.We created telescopes to be able to see those lights in the sky better, so we discovered that our planet had seven brothers and that the sun was not alone. That intelligent species from Europe would have none of that. How would they react when they realized that what was all of existence to them is actually just a tiny moon orbiting a much larger planet, which in turn orbits an even larger star? We knew from the moment that there was something above our heads, although we did not know exactly what it was. They, on the other hand, believed that above their heads there was only an infinite wall of ice. It's really amazing to think about all this.
@@Comicbroe405 So where are your primitive friends? +I said alien. I didn't say intelligent life. All extraterrestrial life is alien. If you can't prove your argumant, you can't say it's %100 right. People like you are dangerous.
@@Comicbroe405 So where are your primitive friends? + I said alien. I didn't say intelligent life. All extraterrestrial life is alien. If you can't prove your argument, you can't say it's %100 right. People like you are dangerous.
and a 100km-deep ocean! It's a kind of a small "waterworld", "ocean planet"! At least, the moons seem more friendly than the planets, as they lack geological power.
Falling into Sagittarius A…. I know you’ve done black hole videos already, but falling into THE BIG ONE would just hit different. Not to mention you could speed up the falling process, starting adrift in space and eventually falling into the black hole. Definitely would be a longer video, but it would be a masterpiece for sure.
Duuuuude! You're getting *very* good at this. Wonderful! And once again, showing me things I have always tried to imagine. Warm wishes from Minnesota! ❤️❤️❤️
It's a shame that, due to cost overruns, NASA delivered a magnetometer that was simpler than it should have been. I hope that in the near future a landing module will be sent to Europa (preferably with a seismometer to detect a possible ocean).
@@nedward.7442 I'm hoping we could possibly hit the landing mission before 2035. Really improbable, but maybe. They really should try for the best equipment though, there's a million possibilities on Europa & I really don't want us looking over any of them. My moneys on the subsurface ocean, but I'm not even close to a professional lol
I wish we had the scientists and dedication of those from the 50’s and 60’s. We got so far in such a short amount of time and really haven’t done much since. There’s a whole universe out there and we really do have the means to explore it.
@@mazz2001If we spent a whole lot less on the military, they'd be more than enough funding. Just that the world is full of people who love the military and war waaaayyyyyy too much lol.
@@f1reasp3ct5 Not OP but to me, it's both. These two things don't necessarily contradict each other, even though it seems like they do at first glance. It's terrifying, but I know that I'm not in any immediate danger, so the fascination of the cosmos also leads to relaxation.
I really wait eagerly for all these videos to fall in some other planets of our solar system or universe and escape the earth for some time. Thank you so much for gifting us that chance and opportunity to travel around space in our minds. I'm thinking of getting an indestructible suit for wearing in our greatest festival in Kolkata,i.e., Durga Puja.
Interesting! I like this fall! I thought that on such depth water starts to behave like ice because of immense pressure or something. i cant wait for an actual spacecraft to go there to look around
Unless said remote spacecraft can dig several miles down through thick ice on its own without any human intervention we’re gonna be waiting a very long time
There's simply not enough water for high pressure ice to form. For that to happen, the world has to be completely made of water and be bigger than earth.
2:25 Would Europa's thin atmosphere keep sound waves produced by landing from being able to travel due to lack of resistance, or would the impact reverberate from the soles of the boots through the self-contained atmosphere within the super space suit to the traveler's ears?
Guys come on it's fair if stargazer did a survival lost in space series or video movie plsssssssssssssssssss I don't care if 90% would be edited just pls try first person cam would still be awesome
Wooooow... That's cooool! And those possible creatures look so nifty! :D The lines at first gave me the heebie-jeebies, I won't lie. LOL But wow...nice looking water below!
It might not even have to be a full-flegled creature(s) like what we expect and have as it can be just as simple as cells or some sort of organism! Or *anything* that could indicate potential alien life!
@@laniakeas92 True. But why, in Europa, would these single-cell organisms exist for millions or billions of years without evolving into something more "meaningful"? I prefer the hypothesis of the video. At least, some curious spounges. Predators, colorful coral, bioluminescence, swimming structures...
Great video! Europa is my favorite Solar System moon. I am still devastated that I missed the chance to get my name inscribed on the Europa Clipper mission 😢
some moons and dwarf planets seem more decent, friendly, than planets to explore. Without protection from space radiation and a solution for microgravity, we can't step out from Earth...
I hope i'll live long enough to learn about life forms on Europe. To see them, and know what's special about them and, more interestingly, what's common with OUR life forms.
Imagine we actually make it into the oceans of Europa, and everyone expects subnautica-looking creatures, only to find barotrauma’s horrors like the husk parasite.
I would imagine the potential life in Europa would be microscopic or at single cellular level. Like it was in Earth's oceans near the underwater volcanoes. I hope we can find a way to check without invasive procedures.
In practice, I don't even know how we could possibly get through the ice crust. It would probably need human presence and facilities. In a couple decades if we're very lucky...
@@Stargaze_youtube No. No human will ever land on Europa. Europa still orbits inside Jupiter's radiation belts, so the radiation exposure is too high for humans to survive.
People, definitely check out the movie 'Europa Report'... It's amazing and it's shot like a real mission that's gone to Europa to drill through the ice.
I strongly believe there is life on Europa. I really wish some space agency would develop and send a probe that could dig to the subsurface ocean and explore it.
Interesting that all this ice crust would shield Europas oceans from insane radiation emoited by Jupiter! Also if an asteroid hit Europe, it might not even punch through the ice sheet meaning that there could not be any extermination lvl event like we had here on Earth!
Liquid water isn't really enough to jump-start life. It also needs obscene amounts of what thermodynamics call free energy. We have it in the form of sunlight. What does Europa have?
@@ExtremeMadnessX Gravity and other forms of mechanical energy are very poorly transduced into chemical energy that could fuel biochemistry. Thermal energy is even worse in this regard.
@@maelstrom57 Technically, you don't directly depend on the sun either. But if a terrestrial lifeform extracts carbon and/or energy from any form of organic compounds, you can be dead certain that sunlight was involved in creation of these compounds. Those organisms that use more exotic biochemistries like hydrogen sulphide are edge cases that can only get sustenance at the rate at which it is released from geochemical processes (which is not fast).
"It also needs obscene amounts of what thermodynamics call free energy" Do you know what free energy even is? You probably don't. And who said that energy can only come from sunlight? The energy released by accretion is also a form of energy lifeforms can use. For example, here on Earth, archeas have been found in geotermal vents deep under the oceans where sunlight doesn't reach. These lifeforms have a biochemistry that is unlike what most lifeforms on Earth have. And photosynthesis also came about hundreds of millions of years after life first started on Earth. Hypothetical lifeforms on Europa would live on the geothermal vents on the rocky mantle that is surrounded by the global undercrustal ocean: the energy there is supplied by tidal dissipation from Jupiter, the same source of energy that melts Io's interior and makes it the most volcanic body in the solar system.
Crazy to think. Our firment was gravity and an atmosphere to overcome when we went to space. If the creatures on Europa ever evolve to an intelligence level, it would need to drill upward through 10km of ice. They have their work cut out for them
Europa and Enceladus have the same attribution, they are the most interesting moons to me in the Solar System. I think, bacterial life can be possible on this moons.
For future videos, which exoplanets would you like to fall into? 👀
That one planet with glass rains i forgot the name
@@Stargaze_youtube falling into super saturn
J1407b!
@@TheFanartFREAK24 thx for naming the planet with so many wings
Wasp 12b.
Are Europa's living creatures European?
USA: "Not if anything to say about it, I have"
Colonialism 😱
Of course! That’s why nasa requires two launches to get there, the first and the Final Countdown.
Europican
European Life
2:25 scared the crap out of me XD
You didn’t see that coming?
@@ctakesgames1172 😂😂😂
Superhero landing! 👏👏👏
ME TOO HAHA
Bruh fr I was like "Ouch"
I really hope Europa has life. Even if it’s some tiny bacteria or something. Would be a powerful sign that we’re far from alone in the universe.
It would be cool, but i don’t think it will.
Last thing I want is Bill Gates getting his liver spotted hands on ANOTHER GERM
that muhfucka will make Andromeda Strain real-life 🤷
@@f1reasp3ct5 It has geothermal vents, surrounded by water. That's how earths life first emerged. It also has nutrients early life would need thanks to the surface. It seems quite promising to me.
@@zev4133 how would you know how the Earth’s life emerged? You weren’t there. It’s all speculation. All of it. Also, saying there are nutrients that life would need says nothing about life existing. So, my argument is still valid. Until there is 100% proof that life exists outside this planet, it just doesn’t.
@f1reasp3ct5 You're right that we can't be fully certain, but scientific theories are based on biological, geological and chemical evidence. It's not pure speculation.
Saying life doesn't exist because we havent found it yet is just jumping to conclusions. Absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence.
Perfect. Great video. Now falling into Io, the most vulcanic active place.
Thank you! It might just be on the way, keep an eye out!
I'm very curious about Io also!
@@Stargaze_youtube Please be true!
@@Stargaze_youtubecan u do falling into all the moons of our solar system our moon Enceladus Triton Io Calisto Ganymede Mimas and the rest
@@Stargaze_youtubeDO NOT FALL INTO CALLISTO
as an European, I can confirm that's my home (:
Ya me too :3
*Europe's "The Final Countdown" intensifies*
A
@@loveglas3580A indeed
please never end this series
If any of the hypothetical life forms in Europa developed sapience, encountering one of our probes would be something truly alien to them. Their entire existence would have taken place in this underwater world, that has a thick ceiling above it, with nothing but an empty void beyond, they wouldn't have spent their years staring at the stars like we do, wondering if there are other planets like ours out there, so to see something like a mechanical probe enter their world, coming from beyond the ice shell, might defy their very understanding of their existence.
they have jupiter
Interesting point. The same about Intelligence as a non-exclusive-to-humans phenomenon. How do animals think? How do aliens would think? Does our planet think?
@olidaholi they can't see that though...
@@grahamhill676 at least they have friends bro
unlike me 😔
This reminds me a lot of Plato's cave myth. Europe is the cave and that intelligent species would be trapped inside, seeing only a tiny part of existence.
If we ever manage to reach Europe and meet them, we would be the ones to break their chains to let them out of the cave and discover the entire universe they could not see.
The more you think about it, the more incredible it is. Such a society would have no idea what the sun or the stars are. For them, the whole world would be reduced to the space between the seabed and the ice cap above.
We often don't stop to think about it, but the sky has had incredible importance in our history. Many cultures viewed the sun as a god and the moon as a goddess. Many cultures used the North Star to determine where North was at night and the position of the Sun during the day. The Greeks saw shapes in the stars and created constellations. It was thanks to the Moon that they began to think about the possibility that there were other worlds besides ours.We created telescopes to be able to see those lights in the sky better, so we discovered that our planet had seven brothers and that the sun was not alone.
That intelligent species from Europe would have none of that. How would they react when they realized that what was all of existence to them is actually just a tiny moon orbiting a much larger planet, which in turn orbits an even larger star?
We knew from the moment that there was something above our heads, although we did not know exactly what it was. They, on the other hand, believed that above their heads there was only an infinite wall of ice.
It's really amazing to think about all this.
It's so fascinating to think that we may not be the only living creatures in the universe
may not? definitely not
@@mikeonthetube79Really? Where are your alien friends?
@@MenuzianEmpire Not every life has to be intelligent tho
@@Comicbroe405 So where are your primitive friends? +I said alien. I didn't say intelligent life. All extraterrestrial life is alien. If you can't prove your argumant, you can't say it's %100 right. People like you are dangerous.
@@Comicbroe405 So where are your primitive friends? + I said alien. I didn't say intelligent life. All extraterrestrial life is alien. If you can't prove your argument, you can't say it's %100 right. People like you are dangerous.
"Thin layer of ice"
"More than the height of Mt. Everest"
and a 100km-deep ocean! It's a kind of a small "waterworld", "ocean planet"!
At least, the moons seem more friendly than the planets, as they lack geological power.
Thin compared to the entire moon, which is several thousand kilometres across
I didn't expect it to be THIS interesting! I knew nothing of Europe but now it may be one of my most favorite your video ❤ Thank you so so much!
3:50 "Detecting multiple leviathan class lifeforms in the region. Are you certain whatever you're doing is worth it?"
He wants to scan the ghost leviathan
I cannot escape reapers anywhere, can I?
@@mysteriousinkling8276 *Distinct roars of Reaper Leviathan intensifies*
this announcement always gets me shittin my pants
Ahh, the Indestructible suit takes a cold plunge. 🥶
Still holding out for a dip into UY Scuti.
or Stephenson 218
Or canis majoris
Four hour long video lmao
Seeing what life Europa could possibly have could be like the game Subnautica. A true Alien.
There might be Leviathans then! 😬
Yall play too much Subnautica
Subnautica: Far Below Zero
Barotrauma is exactly that. Adding the fact that Jove emits a strange radiation towards Europa, that makes life on the surface unbearable.
Subnautica players upon learning about Europa's ocean (including me): OK IT'S HAPPENING EVERYBODY STAY CALM!
Babe, wake up, new Stargaze upload!
🎉🎉🎉
Falling into Sagittarius A…. I know you’ve done black hole videos already, but falling into THE BIG ONE would just hit different. Not to mention you could speed up the falling process, starting adrift in space and eventually falling into the black hole. Definitely would be a longer video, but it would be a masterpiece for sure.
Man I freaking Love your content, You are one of my favourite youtuber
Thank you!!
@@Stargaze_youtubeI'm your 1st fAn
You post this as soon as I begin playing Barotrauma, niceee.
Duuuuude! You're getting *very* good at this. Wonderful! And once again, showing me things I have always tried to imagine. Warm wishes from Minnesota! ❤️❤️❤️
tysm❤️
This makes me so psyched with the Europa Clipper spacecraft launching in October.. We could very soon possibly find alien life..
It would be cool, but I’m not gonna hold my breath.
@@f1reasp3ct5 I know realistically it's gonna be more than a few years til we find anything, this is only a flyby. Still, I can hope.
It's a shame that, due to cost overruns, NASA delivered a magnetometer that was simpler than it should have been.
I hope that in the near future a landing module will be sent to Europa (preferably with a seismometer to detect a possible ocean).
@@nedward.7442 I'm hoping we could possibly hit the landing mission before 2035. Really improbable, but maybe. They really should try for the best equipment though, there's a million possibilities on Europa & I really don't want us looking over any of them. My moneys on the subsurface ocean, but I'm not even close to a professional lol
@@ithasnomen9253
I agree, I want it sooner.
I learn more from stuff like this than I did at school 😅
Sadly there's not much astronomy taught in schools anymore
@@Stargaze_youtube Yeah, It's much more interesting than people think
Same here- and it’s more interesting too!!
At first, we're falling into each planet of the solar system, even the sun
Now we're falling into each moon of the solar system lol
Make luna earth's moon next video
Next: Falling in Love ❤
Moons and exoplanets coming up!
@@Stargaze_youtubeyaay!
Planet Love ...
Blud went Barotrauma for this one....
This game is amazing
I was waiting for the mudraptor jumpscare.
Another great falling into video people forget there are some interesting moons in our solar system
If you ever played barotrauma, you would know those creatures will not let you make it to the bottom
latcher jumpscare
These types of videos can mitigate anxiety 😊 thank you stargaze ❤
Until I watch a black hole one lol
I wish we had the scientists and dedication of those from the 50’s and 60’s. We got so far in such a short amount of time and really haven’t done much since. There’s a whole universe out there and we really do have the means to explore it.
Not enough funding anymore that’s why
@@mazz2001If we spent a whole lot less on the military, they'd be more than enough funding. Just that the world is full of people who love the military and war waaaayyyyyy too much lol.
@@empress_alex 100%
your videos bring me so much ease and comfort. i hope you never stop making them ✨💗✨
seconded
You feel ease and comfort when you watch falling into a black hole? Or the Sun? Damn…. Those videos terrify me lol
@@f1reasp3ct5 Not OP but to me, it's both. These two things don't necessarily contradict each other, even though it seems like they do at first glance.
It's terrifying, but I know that I'm not in any immediate danger, so the fascination of the cosmos also leads to relaxation.
@@hichaelhyers that’s fair, but I have an overactive imagination, so anything about spaghettification just scares me lol
Thank you - again. The bioluminescent creatures are particularly beautifully rendered.
pretty sure those are just videos of deepsea earth life bro
these videos bring me an immesurable amount of joy
Europa and Titan are my favourite moons! Can't wait for the Europa Clipper mission!
Beautiful simulation!
imagin playin this in VR and falling down there!
Would be a dream to see things like this in VR
Heeeeellll noooo
@@randomvideos1826it’s a cool idea but I still agree with you-
ELITE DANGEROUS for PC
So there are glasses for the phone. Or are they not so good compared to regular VR glasses?
Very interesting theoretical presuppositions of the marine life indeed.
Very smooth simulation ❤
I love your channel, thanks for the videos ❤ love from México.
I love this! Thanks for uploading this! 😁
Spectacular video as always!!🥰🎉🎉🎉
Thank you very much!
I really wait eagerly for all these videos to fall in some other planets of our solar system or universe and escape the earth for some time. Thank you so much for gifting us that chance and opportunity to travel around space in our minds. I'm thinking of getting an indestructible suit for wearing in our greatest festival in Kolkata,i.e., Durga Puja.
Bless your videos man
Bless you
Interesting! I like this fall! I thought that on such depth water starts to behave like ice because of immense pressure or something. i cant wait for an actual spacecraft to go there to look around
Unless said remote spacecraft can dig several miles down through thick ice on its own without any human intervention we’re gonna be waiting a very long time
There's simply not enough water for high pressure ice to form. For that to happen, the world has to be completely made of water and be bigger than earth.
@@Soniman001why couldn’t they use the same machines that do oil digging? You know those thingies that swing back and forth that get deep into our soil
@@bwayagnes Soil and ice are not the same thing
Excellent as usual ! Thank you ! Very much.
Thank you!!
We should go to Betelgeuse next and/or just go for broke and dive into a supernova.
The Main Question: Is the Water drinkable for Humans ?
No. Because it might contain minerals or even bacteria that could pose a threat to the human body.
No, it's salt water.
Doubt it, especially since its a literal alien ocean _unless_ proven otherwise.
Where did you get this information from?
only if you are european
2:25 Would Europa's thin atmosphere keep sound waves produced by landing from being able to travel due to lack of resistance, or would the impact reverberate from the soles of the boots through the self-contained atmosphere within the super space suit to the traveler's ears?
Thank you for this video!!
is that the ghost leviathan from subnautica 4:04 😨
no it was me
@@ReaperLevithan hey, i think i saw you in the Dunes that one time! Thanks for not utterly demolishing my seamoth!
“ALL THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS EXCEPT EUROPA. ATTEMPT NO LANDING THERE”
Road to 200k bro, ur almost there, Stargaze.
Yes!! Very close now!
i didn't see any submarines or end worms
have you played barotrauma?
There is a nice movie about exploring Europa: Europa Report (2013). I recommend.
Guys come on it's fair if stargazer did a survival lost in space series or video movie plsssssssssssssssssss I don't care if 90% would be edited just pls try first person cam would still be awesome
Wonderful as always…
Pls do ganymede next
Don't you all remember what the aliens said in 2010 space Odyssey?
Stay the hell away from Europa That's their place
Thank you for making this one. Europa is literally the reason why I went into STEM.
Barotrauma!!
Staggering!
Wooooow... That's cooool! And those possible creatures look so nifty! :D The lines at first gave me the heebie-jeebies, I won't lie. LOL But wow...nice looking water below!
I'm almost sure there's life in those oceans, probably very primitive but still life.
Fantastic video.
It might not even have to be a full-flegled creature(s) like what we expect and have as it can be just as simple as cells or some sort of organism!
Or *anything* that could indicate potential alien life!
@@9ightdreamer yeah, simple cell organisms will actually indicate that life is pretty common, just not advanced.
@@laniakeas92 True. But why, in Europa, would these single-cell organisms exist for millions or billions of years without evolving into something more "meaningful"? I prefer the hypothesis of the video. At least, some curious spounges. Predators, colorful coral, bioluminescence, swimming structures...
3:50 made this my favorite Stargaze video
Great video! Europa is my favorite Solar System moon.
I am still devastated that I missed the chance to get my name inscribed on the Europa Clipper mission 😢
some moons and dwarf planets seem more decent, friendly, than planets to explore. Without protection from space radiation and a solution for microgravity, we can't step out from Earth...
Love the superhero landing at 2:25.
Europa is one of the most interesting surfaces in our solar system. This video needs more love!
I love these videos, this one was kind of scary! Do you think you could add speed to the display as well? I think it would help grasp the scale better
Best video yet.
Is it possible to make a "Falling into a Magnetar"?
Also, keep this series alive, it's one of the best kind of space videos.
I hope i'll live long enough to learn about life forms on Europe. To see them, and know what's special about them and, more interestingly, what's common with OUR life forms.
Maybe with the Europa Clipper in 2030!
If there is life to begin with of course.
Imagine we actually make it into the oceans of Europa, and everyone expects subnautica-looking creatures, only to find barotrauma’s horrors like the husk parasite.
Or nothing….. that would be equally as eerie.
@@f1reasp3ct5 Eerie indeed, but the feeling would die out faster than if there was something inside.
@@notatimetraveler6444 well that’s what I think will happen. I feel like people are counting all their eggs already, but I’m not holding my breath.
Perfect
I would imagine the potential life in Europa would be microscopic or at single cellular level. Like it was in Earth's oceans near the underwater volcanoes. I hope we can find a way to check without invasive procedures.
In practice, I don't even know how we could possibly get through the ice crust. It would probably need human presence and facilities. In a couple decades if we're very lucky...
@@Stargaze_youtube No.
No human will ever land on Europa.
Europa still orbits inside Jupiter's radiation belts, so the radiation exposure is too high for humans to survive.
People, definitely check out the movie 'Europa Report'... It's amazing and it's shot like a real mission that's gone to Europa to drill through the ice.
Amazing work, this is so relaxing for me lol
new Subnautica gameplay looks fire ❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥
If you want to explore Europa in submarine game like Subnautica, Highly recommend giving a try to Barotrauma! It's based on Europa
would be nice to have pressure / temperature info next to the altitude in the top right corner of the HUD :) Nice video
I love these!
Can you please do Saturn's moon Enceladus next?
I strongly believe there is life on Europa. I really wish some space agency would develop and send a probe that could dig to the subsurface ocean and explore it.
Well the clipper gets launched in October. I don’t believe there will be life on Europa, but I’m always open to changing my mind.
"send a probe that could dig to the subsurface ocean and explore it"
Good job, you'll then contaminate the subsurface ocean, if it exists.
Any individual when look at the Moon Europa: *Ice, cracks and a giant submerged ocean*
Me looking at the moon Europa: *Hookmouth*
Interesting that all this ice crust would shield Europas oceans from insane radiation emoited by Jupiter! Also if an asteroid hit Europe, it might not even punch through the ice sheet meaning that there could not be any extermination lvl event like we had here on Earth!
As you just saw, these plumes can reach impressive heights
Because of the minimal atmosphere, you quickly descend toward the surface
This is one of those movies where the "post credit scene" makes the film! Was not expecting an entire ocean under the surface! 🌊
I like how actual deep sea footage was used as the creatures down there look so alien.
Luckily, you brought a drill with you on this mission
WE FINDING LIFE WITH THIS ONE
Doom Slayer is done with Mars. The next stop is Jupiter and its moon.
In your next video, you please discover a new planet in space for falling into it. We will enjoy.
*detecting multiple leviathan class life forms in the region, are you sure whatever you are doing is worth it?*
We finna learn stasis with this one
Status: Calamitous
Liquid water isn't really enough to jump-start life. It also needs obscene amounts of what thermodynamics call free energy. We have it in the form of sunlight. What does Europa have?
Jupiter's gravity. Geothermal vents
People didn't seem to get the memo that not all life on Earth depends on the Sun.
@@ExtremeMadnessX Gravity and other forms of mechanical energy are very poorly transduced into chemical energy that could fuel biochemistry. Thermal energy is even worse in this regard.
@@maelstrom57 Technically, you don't directly depend on the sun either. But if a terrestrial lifeform extracts carbon and/or energy from any form of organic compounds, you can be dead certain that sunlight was involved in creation of these compounds.
Those organisms that use more exotic biochemistries like hydrogen sulphide are edge cases that can only get sustenance at the rate at which it is released from geochemical processes (which is not fast).
"It also needs obscene amounts of what thermodynamics call free energy"
Do you know what free energy even is?
You probably don't.
And who said that energy can only come from sunlight?
The energy released by accretion is also a form of energy lifeforms can use.
For example, here on Earth, archeas have been found in geotermal vents deep under the oceans where sunlight doesn't reach.
These lifeforms have a biochemistry that is unlike what most lifeforms on Earth have.
And photosynthesis also came about hundreds of millions of years after life first started on Earth.
Hypothetical lifeforms on Europa would live on the geothermal vents on the rocky mantle that is surrounded by the global undercrustal ocean: the energy there is supplied by tidal dissipation from Jupiter, the same source of energy that melts Io's interior and makes it the most volcanic body in the solar system.
Crazy to think. Our firment was gravity and an atmosphere to overcome when we went to space. If the creatures on Europa ever evolve to an intelligence level, it would need to drill upward through 10km of ice. They have their work cut out for them
"Bro how much more ice"
"We are literally meant to thrive in the ocean mf"
In fact, Europa holds the record for the smoothest surface in the solar system
i would recommend watching Europa Report. It's a fun smaller budget movie about traveling to Europa and landing on it
Europa and Enceladus have the same attribution, they are the most interesting moons to me in the Solar System. I think, bacterial life can be possible on this moons.
The moon's surface is covered with ice, hiding something beneath...
these are my favorite videos on youtube ❤I turn the lights off for each one lol
Love it. Thank you!!
beautiful!!!
Thanks!!
Barotrauma reference?
Actually there’s a film called Europa Report, in an attempt to find extraterrestrial life