@@NoProtocol Music recommendation for you (although they're NOT instrumentals): "Europa and the Pirate Twins" by Thomas Dolby and its follow-up/sequel song "Eastern Bloc." Neither song has anything to do with space exploration (although "Eastern Bloc" is from his album "Astronauts and Heretics"), but either one should get your toes tapping! For low-key "background" music while writing, I usually select a random classical mix on YT. If I'm trying to rapidly pound out some day-job work, I'll select an instrumental trance mix.
5:55 I don't know if you've heard of it, but there's a term for the region around a star that is conducive to life: the 'Goldilocks zone'. It is called that because it's 'just right', just like the bear's porridge!
Cool choice with Shook Ones, first time checking them out and recognised the venue immediately - Bidston Hill Observatory, our company refurbished that building a few years ago, I've stood on that very roof!
I'll be honest, the only thing scarier than our ocean are alien oceans. Unless it's just a bunch of micro organisms, which could still be scary in it's own unique way. Anything that can survive that much radiation intrigues me. Perhaps we'll find water bears 🤔
Thank you for this most informative and entertaining reaction. I've been trying to get interested in astrophysics, as my youngest is studying it at Cambridge, but a simple retired surgeon like me finds the subject beyond my ken. You are humanising it better than my son has succeeded in doing. Asante sana. ❤
Before the start of the Clipper mission, people from around the world could submit their names through NASA's website, which would then be included on the mission on board the space probe. It was called "Message In A Bottle". A nice side-project to include the public and increase the interest in this mission.
That Piet Mondrian pic you have on the wall takes me away back to a training company I used to go to. I went on to work with them professionally as I grew close to the very eccentric Viv who ran it. She had great taste in art. Who'd have thought I'd get such nice feelings from a random poster on a wall in a TH-cam video! Anyhoo... ❤🤪
The film Europa Report is an incredibly effective, low-budget sci-fi with Sharlto Copely (District 9, Hardcore Henry). Very cool movie. ...or any of these conditions change slightly and we're a very different form of life (maybe). Music - Blood Incantation "Absolute Elsewhere" prog/death metal, but oddly chilled/soothing. Book - hmm....
Arthur C Clarke also wrote a book in 1978 or '79 called Rendezvous with Rama. What I found fascinating is that the description of the object in his book seems very similar to the object known as Oumuamua, which passed through our inner solar system in 2017. It had to odd behaviors too.
Long ago when I was in college, I had mix tapes of classical music I'd taped off of the radio to listen to, so it was just a mix of stuff, but I also had a copy of Holst The Planets that I'd bought from the store and would listen to over and over while studying, so I'd definitely recommend it. Generally speaking, the Goldberg Variations by Bach is regarded as helpful music to listen to while studying. I also used to love listening to the soundtracks for the original Star Wars movies, Total Recall, Silence of the Lambs, and Fire in the Sky over and over. You might find those last two stressful if you don't enjoy horror / scary movies, but those soundtracks were enjoyable to me. I wore out the tapes I had, I listened to them so much. X) Love space stuff, so I really enjoyed this video! :) I watch Veritasium every now and then, but I don't really have a favorite video from that channel. It's simple enjoyable in general.
Study music without lyrics: 1) A Gallant Gentleman - We Lost the Sea 2) Your Hand in Mine -Explosions in the Sky 3) Friend of the Night - Mogwai 4) Bowsprit - Balmorhea 5) Gathering Storm - Jeremy Soule 6) Loom - Ólafur Arnalds We Lost the Sea, Explosions in the Sky & Mogwai are all post rock bands. We Lost the Sea is Australian, Explosions in the Sky are American (Texas) and Mogwai are Welsh. Balmorhea is really hard to label, you just gotta listen to them to figure them out. Jeremy Soule is a video game music composer, the song I gave is from Skyrim. Ólafur Arnalds is my favorite modern music composer is from Iceland. Loom was a song he wrote 5 years ago where he plays piano and has a string quartet and synthesizer accompanying him usually.
I've probably mentioned them before, but The Comet is Coming are great for background music. Because the End is Really the Beginning is a good place to start.
They use wavelengths or electromagnetic spectrum to determine the colors. For example, 445nm would be in the lower blue spectrum, almost UV. Other methods, though, are probably used.
Been listening to an ambient artist called Biosphere, his 1997 album "Substrata + Man with a Movie Camera" is top notch. Chill album with occasional glimpses of more evident electronic elements. It even has some narration samples in french and russian. Amazing background, ambient music.
A decade ago they had some wild idea on how to melt their way through Europe Icey surface The ice maybe 10 miles thick, so the proposal I've seen is that a lander has a module on it's belly that lowers to the surface of the ice, it eould contain Plutonium, which will heat the ice & melt it's way down, with a trailing wire back to the lander for communications.
When you said "Shook Ones pt 2," I immediately thought of the songs by the rap group "Mobb Deep" who's song "Shook Ones at 2" was a featured song on 8 Mile. Lol, but my go-to music for working, driving, or sleeping is Brian Crain radio on Pandora. Classical piano mostly.
Geo Girl did an interview on her channel with one of the geological scientist after the launch, had a lot of deep details on what they're expecting to find or learn. And the 2010 movie is a much watch if you haven't. It's good hard scifi, and some of the scenes and effects still hold up very well. My favorite is the aerobraking - there's one part where you get to see the scale of Jupiter via how small the ship's trail is.
Wouldn't it be a lucky coincidence to find alien life this close and fast? That would drastically change the idea of how much life there would most likely be in the greater universe, including intelligent life.
When it was mentioned that, on Europa, there might only be single celled organisms, you were quite disappointed. Don't be. If we find that to true in our own solar system, given the expanse of the Milky Way, let alone the Universe, just imagine what else is out there.
I’ve fell down that rabbit hole of the exact condition needed for life on earth. The odds would be the same of winning the lottery every day of your life
Suzuki Tsunekichi is an artist I listen to often whilst writing. Also Ryo Fukui, based off your recommendation. And lately I've been playing the soundtrack to Midnight in Paris, which has some songs with words but is mostly instrumental.
Recommending music pieces that aren't songs (as they are not sang 😂) - Moonlight Sonata, from Beethoven - The Loner, by Gary Moore - any album by Yoko Kanno and the Seatbelts (jazz fusion for you, since you like jazzy genres) - Melodia Imortal, by Pedrinho Matar - Smile, composed by Chales Chaplin, for this I recommend any recording on strings or a capella 😊
Yo, you know I’m suggesting Mothers Cake and Spiral Drive again (both in the Austrian music scene). OMA is loosely their scene, and a dope great choice! Lord Fascinator might be another good option for background music. They bridge the gap.
One way is to drop a heat element powered by an RTG on there. It might take years, but it should eventually get through the ice. Another alternative if the cracks reach down is so have a drone on a fibre optic line.
For books, I would suggest Stefano Benni "Terra!" (1983) ~ it's Italian satire at its best, hugely intelligent, filled with philosophical and literary references, and superb individual side-stories. Takes place in a dystopian future with different fractions racing to find another habitable planet, as Earth is in the terminal stages of climate collapse (sounds familiar?) ~ yet despite the dystopian setting it is filled with poetry and humor. Read it as a teen, has stayed with me ever since. 😙👌
Good quality acoustic bands/projects I enjoy: 1. Bohren & Der Club of Gore-Everything they've done, just an amazing ambient jazz soundscape project 2. Cthulhu Mythos Music-YT channel making instrumental tracks based on the various stories of H.P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos as well as affiliated stories/authors. Personal preference is the 1 hour instrumental for The King in Yellow 3. The Mount Fuji Doomjazz Corporation-Dark Jazz, Doom Jazz, Ambient, just great 4. Man of No Ego-Can't go wrong here, ambient psychill 5. Cryo Chamber-Dark Ambient, for when you need to isolate in a wind tunnel and ponder desolation
Speaking of Arthur C. Clarke's books: He wrote four books in the series; 2001, 2010, 2061 and 3001. Clarke didn't usually write sequels, so I find it funny how he seemed almost ashamed in the forewords that he wrote in the last two. In 2061: Odyssey Three ha apologised about writing it, but he just had this idea he had to work out. And in 3001: The Final Odyssey he promised that it would be the last one. The odds for life on Europa are good I think. If we find it on our first try -- or tries -- is another deal, or if we'd even be able to identify it as life if it is based on different chemical compounds from life on Earth. I think if there is life on other planets and moons in our system, it has evolved somewhere and then spread. And then evolved in its different new environments. There are theories (it was years ago, so I don't know if they have been confirmed or disproven) that even the ice in the Oort Cloud are "contaminated" by carbon compounds that are the building blocks of life as we know it. Perhaps life in our star system didn't even originate here, but from an older system in our galaxy?
If the waters are Oxygen based (if there is enough in the waters of Europa) then life will exist. Background Music - Solar Fields (Missing) is my fav song/tune
I'm of the opinion that they found us a long long time ago and they never left. The oceans are deep and dark, and there are a lot of things in our skies that can not be explained.
Music recommendation...PJ Harvey's 2011 album named 'Let England Shake'. It's somewhat of a concept album with the common thread being WW II and its effect on Europe. Although the topic is somewhat maudlin, PJ pulls it off and the album is very entertaining. It won an award called The Mercury Prize for 2011. The musicianship it wonderful and is about 35 minutes long.
Music suggestion..."i speak astronomy " by the band Jinjer. You you dont strike me as a metal head but you might dig it the lead vocalist is female and she is fantastic. They're also Ukrainian but write their songs in English. Highly recommend. Love your channel btw 👍
I'm optimistic, and I'd say there 0% change they'll find any kind of life down there on the moon Europa. But it be a good expedition to learn from all around.
About life in Europa: The oldest known trace fossil for bacteria on Earth was estimated around 3.8 billion years old to the estimation of 4.5 billion years for Earth itself. That gives about 500 million to a billion years for lofe to get going when accounting for error bars in the estimations. So the time frame of 4.5 billion for Europa's oceans given in the interview would be a pretty comfortable period if all other conditions were similar to Earth. Of course, we don't know which variables matter the most amd how much luck we had on our side. As you correctly pointed out anything slightly different and we wouldn't be here. But that does not guarantee that nothing else would fit those slightly different conditions just as well as we fit ours =)
I want to suggest to you the book "The Mote in God's Eye" by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, an extremely well thought out take on first meeting with an alien intelligence.
@NoProtocol Sweet! They're from up north, where I'm from. My music recommendation to listen to while you study is "Children" (Dream Version) by Robert Miles th-cam.com/video/CC5ca6Hsb2Q/w-d-xo.htmlsi=DfZwdtq5AG-_pgaJ
There have been several companies formed with the goal of creating a "Europa Submarine". There have even been tests but no design can be solidified until they figure out how to get through all that ice. I'm only 7 minutes in and he may cover this but the designs and animations are really cool. It would have to be tethered for data transmission so how do you get a couple hundred miles of data tether to Europa?🤔
So Jupiter has a magnetic volcanic death circle. Makes sense. I've been listening to Chop That Wood by Milez Benjiman whenever I have to do thoughtless monotonous tasks like working out. Great for keeping pace. It has lyrics tho. For more allround background music id go for Inicio by Windows 96 or Slightly All The Time by Soft Machine.
Imagine the pressue at 100km underwater and dozens of miles of ice on top aswell. I just asked ChatGPT and it concluded it would be 130 megapascals or 1300 times the surface pressue at sea level on earth.
100%, some of the things you can find in our oceans may as well be aliens, I can see any number of things swimming around in there. Madlib's Blue Note album is perfect for background and active listening, and that's not just because I'm a huge Madlib fan lol his productions are all pretty amazing tho.
If a scientist says something is possible he is almost certainly right, but if he says something is impossible he is very probably wrong. Arthur C. Clarke
I think the odds are good for some form of life there, bacteria, single celled organisms that sort of thing. I'd love there to be more complex life, but who knows. Like you I'd be more surprised if we find nothing. We know more about the moons and planets, than we know what's in our oceans. So given it has twice as much water, how exactly are we going to find it
Yes, I realized that just after I posted my comment. My bad! 🤦🏿♂️ You just look a lot like another TH-camr I'm subscribed to. My apologies; please forgive my mistake. Again, it's a great watch so far.😁
Bro this is both terrifying and amazing at the same time But i will always be kind of skeptical of NASA but i do believe it be impossible for us to be the only life in a universe this big🤷♂️
Albeit an obvious conclusion perhaps, I think its way more likely there is microbial life than animals, per se. Still, would be a spectacular discovery
imagine humans evolve enough to travel to other planets and try conquering other civilizations,we might be the super advance species trampling over others. we made countless stories representing ourselves as victims but we might be the evil aliens to them😅(such a human thing to do)
Naaah, the Goldilocks zone is actually fairly wide the conditions for life are very very wide and even once you get outside that zone there would probably still be life it just wouldn't be Life as we know it now if gravity was more we might be shorter If gravity was less probably be taller so it's not as narrow as people think, of course we wouldn't be us we would just be different, you would still be cute as hell though😊
Not that it will happen anytime soon, but imagine watching TV at 5 meters distance and later your TV is 30 meters away. 😂 And if NASA says they are going to Europe, many will say ''oh that's not so bad''....but they mean another planet instead of a continent.
Always disappointing when they downgrade the possible life to single celled organisms. Within our solar system single celled organisms could have originated on earth at some point in history and been ejected to fall on another body where they survived. If organisms can survive in a spacecraft they can likely survive deep in the center of a large rock in space as well. Proving single cell organisms exist there will not conclusively prove it formed there. I want to see real different alien life. Multicellular complex life, possibly not even carbon based. Some form of DNA unlike life on earth would also be nice. Like a quad helix or something completely unknown. Honestly it's a bit deceiving to me when they say they found life or could find life somewhere but its only single celled organisms you cant see with the naked eye. Like there is a sign outside a tent saying something like 'SEE ALIEN LIFE INSIDE! $5' and you get in there and its just an empty looking petri dish.
I am very curious about life outside our planet. I don't personally have high hopes for the moons here. I do not think life is common in the universe and to have so many sources in one small solar system seems odd. But I do wonder how my fellow christians would react if life was found in that moon's theorized oceans. I wonder with how big the universe is, how close and clustered life could be.
Your genuine inquisitiveness is refreshingly wholesome, and I'm here for it.
I dig your channel ... Keep it up!
Thank you, glad you’re liking it!
@@NoProtocol Music recommendation for you (although they're NOT instrumentals): "Europa and the Pirate Twins" by Thomas Dolby and its follow-up/sequel song "Eastern Bloc." Neither song has anything to do with space exploration (although "Eastern Bloc" is from his album "Astronauts and Heretics"), but either one should get your toes tapping! For low-key "background" music while writing, I usually select a random classical mix on YT. If I'm trying to rapidly pound out some day-job work, I'll select an instrumental trance mix.
I'm loving this journey through space that you're bringing us on. Thank you for the video and can't wait until the next one
You always upload right when im going to bed, and i find these insanely relaxing. 😁
perfect timing
Babe, wake up. New NP has dropped.
Your narrative is priceless
5:55 I don't know if you've heard of it, but there's a term for the region around a star that is conducive to life: the 'Goldilocks zone'. It is called that because it's 'just right', just like the bear's porridge!
Cool choice with Shook Ones, first time checking them out and recognised the venue immediately - Bidston Hill Observatory, our company refurbished that building a few years ago, I've stood on that very roof!
I'll be honest, the only thing scarier than our ocean are alien oceans. Unless it's just a bunch of micro organisms, which could still be scary in it's own unique way. Anything that can survive that much radiation intrigues me. Perhaps we'll find water bears 🤔
Makes the mind wonder, doesn’t it?
And Water Bears may be one of those commonalities we find all over 🤔
Thank you for this most informative and entertaining reaction. I've been trying to get interested in astrophysics, as my youngest is studying it at Cambridge, but a simple retired surgeon like me finds the subject beyond my ken. You are humanising it better than my son has succeeded in doing. Asante sana. ❤
Before the start of the Clipper mission, people from around the world could submit their names through NASA's website, which would then be included on the mission on board the space probe. It was called "Message In A Bottle". A nice side-project to include the public and increase the interest in this mission.
That Piet Mondrian pic you have on the wall takes me away back to a training company I used to go to. I went on to work with them professionally as I grew close to the very eccentric Viv who ran it. She had great taste in art. Who'd have thought I'd get such nice feelings from a random poster on a wall in a TH-cam video! Anyhoo... ❤🤪
The film Europa Report is an incredibly effective, low-budget sci-fi with Sharlto Copely (District 9, Hardcore Henry). Very cool movie.
...or any of these conditions change slightly and we're a very different form of life (maybe).
Music - Blood Incantation "Absolute Elsewhere" prog/death metal, but oddly chilled/soothing.
Book - hmm....
Good movie!
Arthur C Clarke also wrote a book in 1978 or '79 called Rendezvous with Rama. What I found fascinating is that the description of the object in his book seems very similar to the object known as Oumuamua, which passed through our inner solar system in 2017. It had to odd behaviors too.
Long ago when I was in college, I had mix tapes of classical music I'd taped off of the radio to listen to, so it was just a mix of stuff, but I also had a copy of Holst The Planets that I'd bought from the store and would listen to over and over while studying, so I'd definitely recommend it. Generally speaking, the Goldberg Variations by Bach is regarded as helpful music to listen to while studying. I also used to love listening to the soundtracks for the original Star Wars movies, Total Recall, Silence of the Lambs, and Fire in the Sky over and over. You might find those last two stressful if you don't enjoy horror / scary movies, but those soundtracks were enjoyable to me. I wore out the tapes I had, I listened to them so much. X)
Love space stuff, so I really enjoyed this video! :) I watch Veritasium every now and then, but I don't really have a favorite video from that channel. It's simple enjoyable in general.
Study music without lyrics:
1) A Gallant Gentleman - We Lost the Sea
2) Your Hand in Mine -Explosions in the Sky
3) Friend of the Night - Mogwai
4) Bowsprit - Balmorhea
5) Gathering Storm - Jeremy Soule
6) Loom - Ólafur Arnalds
We Lost the Sea, Explosions in the Sky & Mogwai are all post rock bands. We Lost the Sea is Australian, Explosions in the Sky are American (Texas) and Mogwai are Welsh.
Balmorhea is really hard to label, you just gotta listen to them to figure them out.
Jeremy Soule is a video game music composer, the song I gave is from Skyrim.
Ólafur Arnalds is my favorite modern music composer is from Iceland. Loom was a song he wrote 5 years ago where he plays piano and has a string quartet and synthesizer accompanying him usually.
+1 for Your Hand in Mine - Explosions in the Sky. That whole album is pretty amazing.
Helpful
I've probably mentioned them before, but The Comet is Coming are great for background music. Because the End is Really the Beginning is a good place to start.
They use wavelengths or electromagnetic spectrum to determine the colors. For example, 445nm would be in the lower blue spectrum, almost UV. Other methods, though, are probably used.
Been listening to an ambient artist called Biosphere, his 1997 album "Substrata + Man with a Movie Camera" is top notch. Chill album with occasional glimpses of more evident electronic elements. It even has some narration samples in french and russian. Amazing background, ambient music.
A decade ago they had some wild idea on how to melt their way through Europe Icey surface
The ice maybe 10 miles thick, so the proposal I've seen is that a lander has a module on it's belly that lowers to the surface of the ice, it eould contain Plutonium, which will heat the ice & melt it's way down, with a trailing wire back to the lander for communications.
When you said "Shook Ones pt 2," I immediately thought of the songs by the rap group "Mobb Deep" who's song "Shook Ones at 2" was a featured song on 8 Mile. Lol, but my go-to music for working, driving, or sleeping is Brian Crain radio on Pandora. Classical piano mostly.
Yess, it’s a Mobb Deep cover! I don’t have Pandora, but I’ll look up Brian Crain
7:42 Not to mention the fact that life on Earth is believed to have started in the ocean.
A beautiful song by Carlos Santana, happens to be called "Europa". Take a listen if you can.
Europa is also Europe in a lot of languages
Geo Girl did an interview on her channel with one of the geological scientist after the launch, had a lot of deep details on what they're expecting to find or learn.
And the 2010 movie is a much watch if you haven't. It's good hard scifi, and some of the scenes and effects still hold up very well. My favorite is the aerobraking - there's one part where you get to see the scale of Jupiter via how small the ship's trail is.
No Protocol Awesome Video Today!!🔥🐐🐐💎
Wouldn't it be a lucky coincidence to find alien life this close and fast? That would drastically change the idea of how much life there would most likely be in the greater universe, including intelligent life.
My favourite veritasium vid "the riddle that seems impossible even if you know the answer"
Tangerine dream is a good shout.
Background listening I’ll go for Dreadzone - Canterbury Tale and Odyssey - Expressions
God, I love Veritasium so much
When it was mentioned that, on Europa, there might only be single celled organisms, you were quite disappointed. Don't be. If we find that to true in our own solar system, given the expanse of the Milky Way, let alone the Universe, just imagine what else is out there.
I’ve fell down that rabbit hole of the exact condition needed for life on earth. The odds would be the same of winning the lottery every day of your life
Love your vids.Greetings from a 62 year old german. Quite the target group I guess. ;)
Dave Brubeck (e.g.; Blue Rondo). The classics (particularly symphonies that you already know well, so that they don't distract too much).
Fav Veritasium - Where Do Trees Get Their Mass?
I've come up with my own name for that smaller painting on your wall behind you: Mushroom trip Rubik's cube
I've always been curious on how they create these visuals and noises on our perspectives
Suzuki Tsunekichi is an artist I listen to often whilst writing. Also Ryo Fukui, based off your recommendation. And lately I've been playing the soundtrack to Midnight in Paris, which has some songs with words but is mostly instrumental.
Recommending music pieces that aren't songs (as they are not sang 😂)
- Moonlight Sonata, from Beethoven
- The Loner, by Gary Moore
- any album by Yoko Kanno and the Seatbelts (jazz fusion for you, since you like jazzy genres)
- Melodia Imortal, by Pedrinho Matar
- Smile, composed by Chales Chaplin, for this I recommend any recording on strings or a capella 😊
Music: "Gentle Giant". Great instrumentals. Good Band.
Yo, you know I’m suggesting Mothers Cake and Spiral Drive again (both in the Austrian music scene). OMA is loosely their scene, and a dope great choice! Lord Fascinator might be another good option for background music. They bridge the gap.
One way is to drop a heat element powered by an RTG on there. It might take years, but it should eventually get through the ice. Another alternative if the cracks reach down is so have a drone on a fibre optic line.
Can’t wait to see the update in 2000 something days 👍🏽
For books, I would suggest Stefano Benni "Terra!" (1983) ~ it's Italian satire at its best, hugely intelligent, filled with philosophical and literary references, and superb individual side-stories. Takes place in a dystopian future with different fractions racing to find another habitable planet, as Earth is in the terminal stages of climate collapse (sounds familiar?) ~ yet despite the dystopian setting it is filled with poetry and humor. Read it as a teen, has stayed with me ever since. 😙👌
Good quality acoustic bands/projects I enjoy:
1. Bohren & Der Club of Gore-Everything they've done, just an amazing ambient jazz soundscape project
2. Cthulhu Mythos Music-YT channel making instrumental tracks based on the various stories of H.P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos as well as affiliated stories/authors. Personal preference is the 1 hour instrumental for The King in Yellow
3. The Mount Fuji Doomjazz Corporation-Dark Jazz, Doom Jazz, Ambient, just great
4. Man of No Ego-Can't go wrong here, ambient psychill
5. Cryo Chamber-Dark Ambient, for when you need to isolate in a wind tunnel and ponder desolation
Speaking of Arthur C. Clarke's books:
He wrote four books in the series; 2001, 2010, 2061 and 3001. Clarke didn't usually write sequels, so I find it funny how he seemed almost ashamed in the forewords that he wrote in the last two. In 2061: Odyssey Three ha apologised about writing it, but he just had this idea he had to work out. And in 3001: The Final Odyssey he promised that it would be the last one.
The odds for life on Europa are good I think. If we find it on our first try -- or tries -- is another deal, or if we'd even be able to identify it as life if it is based on different chemical compounds from life on Earth. I think if there is life on other planets and moons in our system, it has evolved somewhere and then spread. And then evolved in its different new environments.
There are theories (it was years ago, so I don't know if they have been confirmed or disproven) that even the ice in the Oort Cloud are "contaminated" by carbon compounds that are the building blocks of life as we know it. Perhaps life in our star system didn't even originate here, but from an older system in our galaxy?
Maybe by the year 2262.
If the waters are Oxygen based (if there is enough in the waters of Europa) then life will exist.
Background Music - Solar Fields (Missing) is my fav song/tune
I'm of the opinion that they found us a long long time ago and they never left.
The oceans are deep and dark, and there are a lot of things in our skies that can not be explained.
Music recommendation...PJ Harvey's 2011 album named 'Let England Shake'. It's somewhat of a concept album with the common thread being WW II and its effect on Europe. Although the topic is somewhat maudlin, PJ pulls it off and the album is very entertaining. It won an award called The Mercury Prize for 2011. The musicianship it wonderful and is about 35 minutes long.
808 State - Pacific State (Original Extended Version)
For good background music, I'd suggest the albums:
Badbadnotgood - III
Bonobo - Dial M for Monkey (or any Bonobo album, really)
My overactive imagination immediately thinking of Subnautica.
Music suggestion..."i speak astronomy " by the band Jinjer. You you dont strike me as a metal head but you might dig it the lead vocalist is female and she is fantastic. They're also Ukrainian but write their songs in English. Highly recommend.
Love your channel btw 👍
I'm optimistic, and I'd say there 0% change they'll find any kind of life down there on the moon Europa.
But it be a good expedition to learn from all around.
.. MUSIC .. today is not a song, but look for " Black Alien " this brazilian singer.
@NoProtocol my favorite album of him is Babylon By Gus
My favorite is the car that can go faster than the wind that’s pushing it.
About life in Europa:
The oldest known trace fossil for bacteria on Earth was estimated around 3.8 billion years old to the estimation of 4.5 billion years for Earth itself.
That gives about 500 million to a billion years for lofe to get going when accounting for error bars in the estimations.
So the time frame of 4.5 billion for Europa's oceans given in the interview would be a pretty comfortable period if all other conditions were similar to Earth.
Of course, we don't know which variables matter the most amd how much luck we had on our side.
As you correctly pointed out anything slightly different and we wouldn't be here.
But that does not guarantee that nothing else would fit those slightly different conditions just as well as we fit ours =)
I want to suggest to you the book "The Mote in God's Eye" by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, an extremely well thought out take on first meeting with an alien intelligence.
Oh, OMA? Interesting, I'm from the UK and I've never heard of them. I'll give them a listen 🎶
They’re from Manchester!
@NoProtocol Sweet! They're from up north, where I'm from. My music recommendation to listen to while you study is "Children" (Dream Version) by Robert Miles th-cam.com/video/CC5ca6Hsb2Q/w-d-xo.htmlsi=DfZwdtq5AG-_pgaJ
NASA launched Europa Clipper on October 14, 2024.
Hopefully some interesting discoveries will be made soon
There have been several companies formed with the goal of creating a "Europa Submarine". There have even been tests but no design can be solidified until they figure out how to get through all that ice. I'm only 7 minutes in and he may cover this but the designs and animations are really cool. It would have to be tethered for data transmission so how do you get a couple hundred miles of data tether to Europa?🤔
Happy new year No protocol😁its been a while
Wishing you a happy new year as well!
So Jupiter has a magnetic volcanic death circle. Makes sense.
I've been listening to Chop That Wood by Milez Benjiman whenever I have to do thoughtless monotonous tasks like working out. Great for keeping pace. It has lyrics tho. For more allround background music id go for Inicio by Windows 96 or Slightly All The Time by Soft Machine.
Europa is the Dutch way to write and say/pronounce Europe🇪🇺 btw.
There's a Starship test flight coming up on Monday 13 January 2025. Any chance of reacting to it live?
Oh Background music. Gustavo Santaolalla - El Viaje. There is a great studio recording on TH-cam. It is great background music for an adventure.
7:13 ... 50%
its 50/50, they either do or they dont
giggles im messing, but will be cool to find out either way
Non-science related. But gosh dang are you beautiful, plus the intellect. *chef's kiss*
Is there an official greatest narrators list?
Imagine the pressue at 100km underwater and dozens of miles of ice on top aswell. I just asked ChatGPT and it concluded it would be 130 megapascals or 1300 times the surface pressue at sea level on earth.
100%, some of the things you can find in our oceans may as well be aliens, I can see any number of things swimming around in there.
Madlib's Blue Note album is perfect for background and active listening, and that's not just because I'm a huge Madlib fan lol his productions are all pretty amazing tho.
I don’t know Madlib yet! Thanks for the recommendation
Reso - Namida
I say 100% that there's animals there
I hope so
Here be Monsters, You could crash a probe to go into the ocean and sample it for DNA then transmit it back.
100% seguro que ahi abajo hay pulpos.
If a scientist says something is possible he is almost certainly right, but if he says something is impossible he is very probably wrong. Arthur C. Clarke
Reso - Onsen
your smile makes my day, thank you ;-)😇🤮😅
What does the planet Uranus sound like? Farts?
Thanks beautiful for the upload u just gained another subscriber ur absolutely beautiful aswell
SnotBot - or "MucAss" 😂
I think the odds are good for some form of life there, bacteria, single celled organisms that sort of thing. I'd love there to be more complex life, but who knows. Like you I'd be more surprised if we find nothing. We know more about the moons and planets, than we know what's in our oceans. So given it has twice as much water, how exactly are we going to find it
Millisievert(mSv) measures the amount of radiation the body absorbs
Hey ❤❤
This is a great watch so far. 🙌🏿 What happened to the guy that used to react to videos with you, the brotha?
It seems you have confused me with another channel, glad you like this video though!
Yes, I realized that just after I posted my comment. My bad! 🤦🏿♂️ You just look a lot like another TH-camr I'm subscribed to. My apologies; please forgive my mistake. Again, it's a great watch so far.😁
Launched on October 14 2024. Nasa has a grate page on it
Bro this is both terrifying and amazing at the same time
But i will always be kind of skeptical of NASA but i do believe it be impossible for us to be the only life in a universe this big🤷♂️
You have the loveliest smile on the whole internet for real😻
I find it hard not to smile when she smiles. It's infectious. :)
Albeit an obvious conclusion perhaps, I think its way more likely there is microbial life than animals, per se. Still, would be a spectacular discovery
Ok, the scientist ended up mentioning this
Music recommendation: LTJ Bukem - Progression Sessions. Very chill late 90's jazzy drum & bass. Choose the version without MC Conrad.
imagine humans evolve enough to travel to other planets and try conquering other civilizations,we might be the super advance species trampling over others. we made countless stories representing ourselves as victims but we might be the evil aliens to them😅(such a human thing to do)
Naaah, the Goldilocks zone is actually fairly wide the conditions for life are very very wide and even once you get outside that zone there would probably still be life it just wouldn't be Life as we know it now if gravity was more we might be shorter If gravity was less probably be taller so it's not as narrow as people think, of course we wouldn't be us we would just be different, you would still be cute as hell though😊
London (Europe) Calling: If we find life on Europa can we call it European
wow
hi
je bent mooi
Not that it will happen anytime soon, but imagine watching TV at 5 meters distance and later your TV is 30 meters away. 😂
And if NASA says they are going to Europe, many will say ''oh that's not so bad''....but they mean another planet instead of a continent.
🙂
Perfect study (coding) music, ----th-cam.com/video/SA7uXNeVRjs/w-d-xo.html
Tree of life
Chasing daylight is so nice.
Always disappointing when they downgrade the possible life to single celled organisms. Within our solar system single celled organisms could have originated on earth at some point in history and been ejected to fall on another body where they survived. If organisms can survive in a spacecraft they can likely survive deep in the center of a large rock in space as well. Proving single cell organisms exist there will not conclusively prove it formed there. I want to see real different alien life. Multicellular complex life, possibly not even carbon based. Some form of DNA unlike life on earth would also be nice. Like a quad helix or something completely unknown.
Honestly it's a bit deceiving to me when they say they found life or could find life somewhere but its only single celled organisms you cant see with the naked eye. Like there is a sign outside a tent saying something like 'SEE ALIEN LIFE INSIDE! $5' and you get in there and its just an empty looking petri dish.
85%
First!✌🏾 arrived as fast as i could when i saw the notification😁
Hey! Thanks for being here
I'm waiting for the confirmation from NP. I think I might have been last.
@@earthwormandruw Sorry I ruined that for you. Just got here a few minutes ago. :)
I am very curious about life outside our planet. I don't personally have high hopes for the moons here. I do not think life is common in the universe and to have so many sources in one small solar system seems odd. But I do wonder how my fellow christians would react if life was found in that moon's theorized oceans. I wonder with how big the universe is, how close and clustered life could be.
I can't read so I haven't read any of the recommended books. I like that you recommend them, though.
My background music is 'lofi girl' it is a youtube and spotify channel. Just sounds.
I also listen to lofi girl!
No collabs with cheeto guy👐 in your whitehouse.