Sarafina: *I want it to explode.* People living around Betelgeuese: *Wait! What?!* 😳 Don't destroy my joke. Yes, I know. Either they all already died in the supernova or because the star swallowed their planet or it just didn't happen or nobody lived there in the first place.
It was only a short time ago that I looked into the skies more and learn about the stars, especially Rigel, Sirius and of course Betelgeuse. I actually noticed a dimming and then the whole internet noticed too
I'm glad I stumbled across this video. It's my first time at this channel and I'm more than just a little impressed. Your enthusiasm and production values are through the roof. Combine that with a stellar guest and you've landed a killer video and channel. Well done, sir.
Great video, Trace! My kid and I love your vids. We are both hoping very much that we will get to see Betelgeuse go boom in our lifetimes. Preferably tomorrow. OH, also, to anyone who goes to Curiosity Stream to watch "Cosmic Front" - the "Betelgeuse" episode, the how-it-would-look-to-us part starts at 45 minutes in.
Great work as always, Trace. :-) I shared your channel on my FB page the other day - I hope it gets you more subscribers. And yay for Sarafina - she’s cool, & I’m gonna go follow her on Twitter now. I love how excited she got over this subject! I love to see people enjoying the work they do.
To be a bit more precise on what happens in a supernova, because to put it bluntly, its fucking awesome (based largely upon 'The Physics of Core Collapse Supernovae' [1]): Star cores go through earlier elements in millions of years, but when they get up to silicon its running at 2 or 3 billion degrees and cooks it all in a couple of _weeks_*; With the last of the fuel going up, the core runs out of ways to sustain itself and collapse is imminent. In a fraction of a second a core weighing well in excess of the Sun and about the size of the Earth collapses down to just a few tens of kilometers across. It does this at around 70,000km/s a speed approaching quarter of the speed of light. The results are... dramatic: The temperature almost instantly exceeds 7 billion degrees, its density goes up over two orders of magnitude, and then faster than it started the implosion halts. The resulting shock-wave bouncing back out in the immediate aftermath causes the most powerful explosion known to humankind, releasing on the order of 10^46 Joules of energy. About as much as Sol could pump out across many billions of years... At least thats how I was taught it as a kid. A more current view appears to be that the implosion is stabilized by a staggering output of neutrinos. A hyper dense neutron heavy core is left at the center, continuing to collapse as it accretes solar mass sized amounts of material every few seconds. A rate that would see it become a black hole in moments if it didnt give itself a fighting chance by radiating away astonishing amounts of energy. Only a fraction of whats released will have an effect on its surroundings as it rushes away, but so much energy is pouring out that it blasts away everything within its vicinity. and in the end, if the remnant of the star is lucky enough to survive the cataclysm, it will begin its new life as a city sized neutron star. (AKA the most fascinating objects in the universe. Come at me black hole enthusiasts.) [1] www.nature.com/articles/nphys172 *Its probably the differentials here that are most mind boggling. Stars burn away for billions of years, quite often in a very stable way with very little dramatic variation. Even as the star is dying and ballooning up in to a red giant, it will do so across incredible time spans as far as any human is concerned. Then, one day, in the time it takes for someone to blink, it will dump 10% of its mass out as energy, obliterating its surroundings and quite possibly itself in an explosion so large aliens in another galaxy could see it.
Love your channel, Trace! I really enjoy your mix of topics and how you break them down in fun and interesting ways. The interview with Sarafina was fascinating and I'm another person who hopes we get to see the spectacular lightshow of Betelgeuse going BOOM! sometime in the very near future.
haven't seen the whole vid yet-- this might even be mentioned further in, but wouldn't it be more accurate to say that betelgeuse exploded and we're just noticing it roughly 642 years after the fact?
Or it may have exploded but since the premier date is the only thing they give an estimate of we don't really know when it will be finished and then be premiered.
Yes, being as it is 642 LY away, we're only seeing it just now, it exploded back in the 1300s probably 1358, or maybe a bit later than that, since we're not seeing the light from the actual explosion.
Great editing 👍! Loved the video. My son wants to know when our sun will go supernova. Lol I told him to not to worry about it. Also love the NASA shirt.
Beatle-Juice? Beh-tel-goose? Star-Honk? Either way, awesome episode for an awesome star! I am glad you're geting this creative freedom after Dnews/Seeker! Would've been cool to see more supernova cfd visualizations. And of course love Sarafina enthusiasm!
I dreamt it many years ago. Did not fully understand what it was. The dream showed a star brighter than the Moon, with a halo around it, like Saturn’s ring. Unlike Saturn, which seems like an eye, due to the viewing angle, this star’s halo was circular from the perspective of Earth. We were all looking at it, in the dream, and it was a sight to see. Something amazing. Just imagine a bright star with a circular halo around it. Everybody was looking at it in amazement for the halo, the ring around it was pulsating, becoming larger and smaller in its radius. It was beating like a heart, the ring increasing its size as it pulsated becoming larger, then smaller, as if it were a multistage implosion about to take place. It was an ominous feeling and people started seeking for shelter, running to their homes, trying to protect themselves from an explosion. Then, as the ring around the star collapsed for the very last time, and in an instant, as I was watching, I saw the bodies of people carbonized in an instant. The legs disintegrated and human bodies just fell on the ground, dark brown, unrecognizable. This event took but an instant, and the odd thing was how trees and homes were intact, as if nothing had happened. That’s the dream. I’ve kept the dream for many years, since 1981, when I had this dream I haven’t forgotten. Now that I hear everyone talking about Betelgeuse, I have come to understand that the Pyramids of Egypt were left there for us as a warning, so that we would look up to the sky, in the direction of Orion’s Belt. I am now convinced this great sign on the sky announces the end, the baptism by fire of Earth. When I see Betelgeuse dimming it reminds me of a tsunami, how water retreats before it comes at us with a vengeance. Yes, I am a Christian, and I believe we are living in prophetic times. Imagine if we are positioned right in the northern of southern axis of the star. The neutron star explosion would shoot a beam of gamma rays so strong it would obliterate Earth with its power. I am also wondering if the Sun has gone shy lately due to Betelgeuse electromagnetic influence, after all, it’s an Orange Supergiant with could end up creating a nebulae thousands of light years in diameter, putting Earth and our solar system inside that nebulae once it goes bye bye. Well, go to confession, repent before it’s too late. I’m sure once the phenomena starts there won’t be enough time to do it. We are in the Great Tribulation undoubtedly, for one fifth of humanity has been butchered inside the womb, 1,500 million thus far, 61 million in the USA, in a clear attempt to destroy the human family. It all is happening as it was written in the book of Revelation, right before the second coming of Jesus Christ in glory, to take us to a New Earth, in a New Universe. Believe me you, the sky will look a lot different after this Betelgeuse even takes place. Imagine being surrounded by a sky filled in blue and pink colors, a super bright night sky, as it has never happened on Earth before. However, I doubt there be any to contemplate such a sight, which makes me wonder. Who knows, we might have to leave this planet and see a brand new sky, somewhere else in the Universe. Are you ready to board “Noah’s Vessel” the New Jerusalem, heading to a brand new planet in your brand new bodies, because I honestly doubt our carbon based bodies will be able to withstand what’s coming. Now you know. I said it. Let it not be said I kept this intel to myself, I did share it, to as many as I could. (Don’t kill the messenger of Betelgeuse).
the star is 642 LYs, so if we are observing something right now, probably beetlejuice might have gone boom boom right? its just the speed of light delaying the broadcast... Please correct me if I am wrong
Betelgeuse has much more nitrogen than it should have. This might be a clue. Betelgeuse is moving from its birth place 8.5 million years ago very quickly in the galaxy to its present location. Betelgeuse is rotating much faster than it should for its size. If it was a binary system then when it got booted out of its stellar nursery the two stars would eventually coalesce, and that would account for the rapid rotation. And if this is true then Betelgeuse has much more than 100,000 years left before it collapses. The nitrogen was stirred up during the coalescence so that it can be detected today.
Exploding? Shouldn’t it be imploding into or bouncing back into, just a thought. 😎 Understanding that the gravitational waves detected in the general area of Betelgeuse and the ideas that it might be that Betelgeuse is actually two stars merging and the swelling ( puffing out ) of Betelgeuse is actually the result of the mixing of the star stuff. And now the gravitational waves now indicate the stars have merged into one and will start settling done. 😎 Just a thought.
Orion is the most interesting constellation in the night sky. I hate it. The only reason I hate it is because it signifies winter, and I hate winter ;) Actually, I only hate when it first appears because it's the end of summer. Orion looks very odd at the moment with Betelgeuse being so dim!
Due to the awesome upload you get....... How many special people change? How many lives are living strange? Where were you while we were getting high? Slowly walking down the hall Faster than a cannonball Where were you while we were getting high? Someday you will find me Caught beneath the landslide In a champagne supernova in the sky Someday you will find me Caught beneath the landslide In a champagne supernova A champagne supernova in the sky Wake up the dawn and ask her why A dreamer dreams she never dies Wipe that tear away now from your eye Slowly walking down the hall Faster than a cannonball Where were you while we were getting high? Someday you will find me Caught beneath the landslide In a champagne supernova in the sky Someday you will find me Caught beneath the landslide In a champagne… Happy new year trace!
@@sarafinananceSF Why is that? Is it something to do with what is happening inside a star at the last moments before the explosion? Does the explosion take so much time to reach the outer ring that neutrinos have been on their way a long time before photons get to go(Like, neutrinos can get through, but photons do not)? Not sure if I explained my thought in any understandable way hahah.
an interesting thought if someone travel to 100 light years to some planet and then observe our planet at real-time is he looking at past or future or present
I think we would be looking at the past. If the voyage takes 100 years and I traveled with the light, for example I started in the year 2020, when end my travel and reach my location the year on earth will be 2120, but I would still be seeing light coming from 2020.
@@hrithiksharma2047 I assumed that real time is the time that light takes to travel to a certain place, if light was instantaneous or teleported and we where somehow able to look at the present everywhere, then we would see a totally different image of the space at night, but this doesn't make sense because it's impossible for light to travel in no-time. Therefore, if I travel with light for a 100 years, a 100 years would have passed on earth too, but if I look back I would simply see no changes on earth because the same image that I left with a 100 years ago has just also traveled and reached with me to the same place. I would still see the image of 2020 in the year 2120, and for me to want to see what the earth looked like in 2120 then I would have to stay on the same place and wait for the year 2220... On the other hand if I somehow manage to travel faster than light then I would be able to look at the past.
Hi, I’ve been making videos for a decade. I know how this works. Audition is fine, but sometimes SD cards just die and there’s nothing you can do about it. Luckily, iZotope did it’s best with the camera backup audio!
And just a friendly reminder to tone down the ‘splaining. Audition is good but cannot fix heavy echo from a backup audio source that exists only for syncing. You don’t know the situation, don’t know how it was made or what the production looked like. You’re making and assumption - and we all know how that makes people look.
@@TraceDominguez Yaay! I send her my love! and I send you my love! : ) make sure to feed her some snacks lol! Love Love Love! : ) Yay! purr purr- cuddles!
I feel we are still good guessing on anything in space. We don’t know our oceans let alone been to the center of the earth. Good science fiction though.
Trace Dominguez I love this content and your presentation. We have to question everything to know anything. Did I just make that saying? I’m a have to update my status. Lol 😂
Sarafina Nance you are beautiful and intelligent, so let me just say that to not knock your knowledge. So let’s just take for example our own earths’ core. We haven’t been there but are sure of it complete composition? We only been roughly 21 miles down. How could one know by just shooting lightwaves? Let’s figure out the pyramids and I will start believing in What we know of space.
Sarafina is a monster! Anything within 50 light years will be wiped out! Whole civilizations, planets, and moons. Bub bye! That being said, I hope it explodes soon too.
I'll eat anything you want me to eat and I'll swallow anything you want me to swallow. So come down I'll…chew on a dog. Whoooooo!!!! You have no idea the powers your messing with here. Cool video and thank you, I often wonder what forms of radiation we can expect even at this distance, cosmic rays and other fast movers.
I had to stop watching after you started talking about our sun going supernova, our sun will become red giant and then it will shrink to white dwarf. Our sun is too small to explode into supernova. White dwarf needs companion star for supernova explosion.
Thank you so much for having me on the show, I had so much fun!!! #BetelgeuseForever
YOURE THE BEST AND I HEART YOU
Don’t know what I enjoy more...watching a cutie like you talk Sarafina or the fact Betelgeuse might explode in our lifetimes 😍😍
Great presentation!! A pleasure to watch
just wanted to let you know that your voice is totally great and i take u very seriously
Sarafina: *I want it to explode.*
People living around Betelgeuese: *Wait! What?!* 😳
Don't destroy my joke.
Yes, I know. Either they all already died in the supernova or because the star swallowed their planet or it just didn't happen or nobody lived there in the first place.
Imagine the celebration if this happens in our lifetime. I'll pop open a bottle of champagne so I can enjoy a... champagne supernova in the sky.
I think you’ll have to be on a rigid airship to REALLY enjoy it in luxxxury.
That could be great...but for what we know tomorrow or in 100000 years Betelgeuse will go Kaboom
loving that bmth profile pic
Someday you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova in the sky
It was only a short time ago that I looked into the skies more and learn about the stars, especially Rigel, Sirius and of course Betelgeuse. I actually noticed a dimming and then the whole internet noticed too
I'm glad I stumbled across this video. It's my first time at this channel and I'm more than just a little impressed. Your enthusiasm and production values are through the roof. Combine that with a stellar guest and you've landed a killer video and channel. Well done, sir.
Why thank you, my friend! Come back soon 😅
If i get to see a supernova in my lifetime, i will consider myself infinitely lucky
Omg I am with sarafina. I want it to explode SO BADLY.
@@TraceDominguez what if it hurls an asteroid at Earth though?
Excellent presentation, Trace (and Sarafina). Thanks for pulling together so much fascinating information. Go Betelgeuse!
Betelgeuse is much younger than the Sun. Big stars live fast and die young.
JUST LIKE ME, or maybe like I used to? I’m not sure anymore
Great video, Trace! My kid and I love your vids. We are both hoping very much that we will get to see Betelgeuse go boom in our lifetimes. Preferably tomorrow. OH, also, to anyone who goes to Curiosity Stream to watch "Cosmic Front" - the "Betelgeuse" episode, the how-it-would-look-to-us part starts at 45 minutes in.
0:44 LIL BIIITS
Great work as always, Trace. :-) I shared your channel on my FB page the other day - I hope it gets you more subscribers. And yay for Sarafina - she’s cool, & I’m gonna go follow her on Twitter now. I love how excited she got over this subject! I love to see people enjoying the work they do.
Thanks Alicia!!! ❤️❤️❤️
I always love your editing!
Thank you!! It’s come a long way believe me 😅
To be a bit more precise on what happens in a supernova, because to put it bluntly, its fucking awesome (based largely upon 'The Physics of Core Collapse Supernovae' [1]):
Star cores go through earlier elements in millions of years, but when they get up to silicon its running at 2 or 3 billion degrees and cooks it all in a couple of _weeks_*; With the last of the fuel going up, the core runs out of ways to sustain itself and collapse is imminent.
In a fraction of a second a core weighing well in excess of the Sun and about the size of the Earth collapses down to just a few tens of kilometers across. It does this at around 70,000km/s a speed approaching quarter of the speed of light. The results are... dramatic: The temperature almost instantly exceeds 7 billion degrees, its density goes up over two orders of magnitude, and then faster than it started the implosion halts.
The resulting shock-wave bouncing back out in the immediate aftermath causes the most powerful explosion known to humankind, releasing on the order of 10^46 Joules of energy. About as much as Sol could pump out across many billions of years... At least thats how I was taught it as a kid.
A more current view appears to be that the implosion is stabilized by a staggering output of neutrinos. A hyper dense neutron heavy core is left at the center, continuing to collapse as it accretes solar mass sized amounts of material every few seconds. A rate that would see it become a black hole in moments if it didnt give itself a fighting chance by radiating away astonishing amounts of energy. Only a fraction of whats released will have an effect on its surroundings as it rushes away, but so much energy is pouring out that it blasts away everything within its vicinity.
and in the end, if the remnant of the star is lucky enough to survive the cataclysm, it will begin its new life as a city sized neutron star.
(AKA the most fascinating objects in the universe. Come at me black hole enthusiasts.)
[1] www.nature.com/articles/nphys172
*Its probably the differentials here that are most mind boggling. Stars burn away for billions of years, quite often in a very stable way with very little dramatic variation. Even as the star is dying and ballooning up in to a red giant, it will do so across incredible time spans as far as any human is concerned. Then, one day, in the time it takes for someone to blink, it will dump 10% of its mass out as energy, obliterating its surroundings and quite possibly itself in an explosion so large aliens in another galaxy could see it.
Thanks for sharing! Sarafina studies this every day, you should follow her!!
Really enjoyed the colab! Keep working on the channel! I'm hoping science influencers like yourself have a spot in any future administrations.
Thank you!!
Love your channel, Trace! I really enjoy your mix of topics and how you break them down in fun and interesting ways. The interview with Sarafina was fascinating and I'm another person who hopes we get to see the spectacular lightshow of Betelgeuse going BOOM! sometime in the very near future.
3:13 Actually Ibt Al-Jauza means 'Orion's Armpit", also the proper Arabic name for it is 'Mankib Al-Jauza' which means "Orion's shoulder'.
Yeah the translators seemed to have different opinions on this, so I went with the one that would be the least distracting ;)
I can't believe I just found this channel. It is fantastic and needs waaaay more subscribers :)
haven't seen the whole vid yet-- this might even be mentioned further in, but wouldn't it be more accurate to say that betelgeuse exploded and we're just noticing it roughly 642 years after the fact?
Or it may have exploded but since the premier date is the only thing they give an estimate of we don't really know when it will be finished and then be premiered.
Yes, being as it is 642 LY away, we're only seeing it just now, it exploded back in the 1300s probably 1358, or maybe a bit later than that, since we're not seeing the light from the actual explosion.
Yes. But it hasn't really exploded.
I did mention this, yeah! It’s nearer the end, but I think this is one of the amazing parts of studying the sky. Looking UP is looking BACK
Great editing 👍! Loved the video. My son wants to know when our sun will go supernova. Lol I told him to not to worry about it. Also love the NASA shirt.
Yeah, nice. He definitely shouldn’t worry about it! It shouldnt go supernova for billions of years. Earth will have died by then!
The Sun doesn't have enough mass to go supernova. It will expand and become a red giant and then turn into a white dwarf.
Beatle-Juice? Beh-tel-goose? Star-Honk?
Either way, awesome episode for an awesome star! I am glad you're geting this creative freedom after Dnews/Seeker!
Would've been cool to see more supernova cfd visualizations.
And of course love Sarafina enthusiasm!
I dreamt it many years ago. Did not fully understand what it was. The dream showed a star brighter than the Moon, with a halo around it, like Saturn’s ring. Unlike Saturn, which seems like an eye, due to the viewing angle, this star’s halo was circular from the perspective of Earth. We were all looking at it, in the dream, and it was a sight to see. Something amazing. Just imagine a bright star with a circular halo around it. Everybody was looking at it in amazement for the halo, the ring around it was pulsating, becoming larger and smaller in its radius. It was beating like a heart, the ring increasing its size as it pulsated becoming larger, then smaller, as if it were a multistage implosion about to take place. It was an ominous feeling and people started seeking for shelter, running to their homes, trying to protect themselves from an explosion. Then, as the ring around the star collapsed for the very last time, and in an instant, as I was watching, I saw the bodies of people carbonized in an instant. The legs disintegrated and human bodies just fell on the ground, dark brown, unrecognizable. This event took but an instant, and the odd thing was how trees and homes were intact, as if nothing had happened. That’s the dream. I’ve kept the dream for many years, since 1981, when I had this dream I haven’t forgotten. Now that I hear everyone talking about Betelgeuse, I have come to understand that the Pyramids of Egypt were left there for us as a warning, so that we would look up to the sky, in the direction of Orion’s Belt. I am now convinced this great sign on the sky announces the end, the baptism by fire of Earth. When I see Betelgeuse dimming it reminds me of a tsunami, how water retreats before it comes at us with a vengeance. Yes, I am a Christian, and I believe we are living in prophetic times. Imagine if we are positioned right in the northern of southern axis of the star. The neutron star explosion would shoot a beam of gamma rays so strong it would obliterate Earth with its power. I am also wondering if the Sun has gone shy lately due to Betelgeuse electromagnetic influence, after all, it’s an Orange Supergiant with could end up creating a nebulae thousands of light years in diameter, putting Earth and our solar system inside that nebulae once it goes bye bye. Well, go to confession, repent before it’s too late. I’m sure once the phenomena starts there won’t be enough time to do it. We are in the Great Tribulation undoubtedly, for one fifth of humanity has been butchered inside the womb, 1,500 million thus far, 61 million in the USA, in a clear attempt to destroy the human family. It all is happening as it was written in the book of Revelation, right before the second coming of Jesus Christ in glory, to take us to a New Earth, in a New Universe. Believe me you, the sky will look a lot different after this Betelgeuse even takes place. Imagine being surrounded by a sky filled in blue and pink colors, a super bright night sky, as it has never happened on Earth before. However, I doubt there be any to contemplate such a sight, which makes me wonder. Who knows, we might have to leave this planet and see a brand new sky, somewhere else in the Universe. Are you ready to board “Noah’s Vessel” the New Jerusalem, heading to a brand new planet in your brand new bodies, because I honestly doubt our carbon based bodies will be able to withstand what’s coming. Now you know. I said it. Let it not be said I kept this intel to myself, I did share it, to as many as I could. (Don’t kill the messenger of Betelgeuse).
Love your work trace.
Love your comments, Xillion!
Plague, Volcanoes, Earthquakes, WW3... Add supernova to the list of 2020 doom scenarios
Haha it won’t harm us at all, it will just be a big show for the whole galaxy!
Well, we will be with Plagues, bombs but with a beautiful new star
And we gonna get new gravitational waves
@@danylunny8142 yes, Sarafina has a very bright career ahead of her.
the star is 642 LYs, so if we are observing something right now, probably beetlejuice might have gone boom boom right?
its just the speed of light delaying the broadcast... Please correct me if I am wrong
That is true! I mention it in the video!
Great video!
For the sake of comparison, was the 10th brightest, is now the 30th brightest. Last I heard.
THATS SO CRAZY
Betelgeuse has much more nitrogen than it should have. This might be a clue.
Betelgeuse is moving from its birth place 8.5 million years ago very quickly in the galaxy to its present location.
Betelgeuse is rotating much faster than it should for its size. If it was a binary system then when it got booted out of its stellar nursery the two stars would eventually coalesce, and that would account for the rapid rotation. And if this is true then Betelgeuse has much more than 100,000 years left before it collapses.
The nitrogen was stirred up during the coalescence so that it can be detected today.
Nice vid 👍
Thank you!!
Exploding? Shouldn’t it be imploding into or bouncing back into, just a thought. 😎 Understanding that the gravitational waves detected in the general area of Betelgeuse and the ideas that it might be that Betelgeuse is actually two stars merging and the swelling ( puffing out ) of Betelgeuse is actually the result of the mixing of the star stuff. And now the gravitational waves now indicate the stars have merged into one and will start settling done. 😎 Just a thought.
Nice video👍
Orion is the most interesting constellation in the night sky. I hate it. The only reason I hate it is because it signifies winter, and I hate winter ;)
Actually, I only hate when it first appears because it's the end of summer.
Orion looks very odd at the moment with Betelgeuse being so dim!
It will be severe light pollution to observe to night sky
There might be where you are, but you should still be able to see Orion!
@@TraceDominguez it will be the best light pollution ever.
I'm so excited.
Due to the awesome upload you get.......
How many special people change?
How many lives are living strange?
Where were you while we were getting high?
Slowly walking down the hall
Faster than a cannonball
Where were you while we were getting high?
Someday you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova in the sky
Someday you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova
A champagne supernova in the sky
Wake up the dawn and ask her why
A dreamer dreams she never dies
Wipe that tear away now from your eye
Slowly walking down the hall
Faster than a cannonball
Where were you while we were getting high?
Someday you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova in the sky
Someday you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne…
Happy new year trace!
Happy New Year, back!
Is there any other way to detect if Betelgeuse has exploded other than visual light? Some way that might provide an earlier detection???
colclark107 yep! It’ll emit a slew of neutrinos that we’ll detect hours before we detect the explosion
@@sarafinananceSF Why is that? Is it something to do with what is happening inside a star at the last moments before the explosion? Does the explosion take so much time to reach the outer ring that neutrinos have been on their way a long time before photons get to go(Like, neutrinos can get through, but photons do not)? Not sure if I explained my thought in any understandable way hahah.
@@hekev neutrinos are smalllllllll things that are very fast that eject when there's a a super nova that's what OK know
Okej, as we say in Sweden. This was awesome.
THANK YOU! I thought it was pretty good too
100,000 years? Guess I gotta go cyborg.
P.S.
Love the new animations
Thanks!!
an interesting thought
if someone travel to 100 light years to some planet and then observe our planet at real-time is he looking at past or future or present
I think we would be looking at the past. If the voyage takes 100 years and I traveled with the light, for example I started in the year 2020, when end my travel and reach my location the year on earth will be 2120, but I would still be seeing light coming from 2020.
This girl is way to excited about the destruction of a star 🌟 . shes obviously smart, but comon sense is lacking!
@@kingkeeper99 But i said observing real time doesn't that would mean we are looking at present
@@hrithiksharma2047 I assumed that real time is the time that light takes to travel to a certain place, if light was instantaneous or teleported and we where somehow able to look at the present everywhere, then we would see a totally different image of the space at night, but this doesn't make sense because it's impossible for light to travel in no-time.
Therefore, if I travel with light for a 100 years, a 100 years would have passed on earth too, but if I look back I would simply see no changes on earth because the same image that I left with a 100 years ago has just also traveled and reached with me to the same place. I would still see the image of 2020 in the year 2120, and for me to want to see what the earth looked like in 2120 then I would have to stay on the same place and wait for the year 2220...
On the other hand if I somehow manage to travel faster than light then I would be able to look at the past.
@@hrithiksharma2047 And now you left me super confused because I remembered that time doesn't function normally when you travel at the speed of light
Boom
POW
WoW....
Indeed
Rip kobe
Rip Kobe’s daughter
is science plus ever gonna make videos again?
Bellatrix was twinkling brighter last night.
😂 “ stripey Batman” 🤣👍🏽
But if Betelguse explodes, we lose the star with the name that's the most fun to say! What's the next coolest star name after Beetlejuice?
Kruger 60
Why did you record this interview in a cave?
It seems to be some corporate meeting room which are usually small. Still, Adobe Audition or some software could have fixed it.
@@rylaczero3740 Always take a room sound recording
Hi, I’ve been making videos for a decade. I know how this works. Audition is fine, but sometimes SD cards just die and there’s nothing you can do about it. Luckily, iZotope did it’s best with the camera backup audio!
And just a friendly reminder to tone down the ‘splaining. Audition is good but cannot fix heavy echo from a backup audio source that exists only for syncing. You don’t know the situation, don’t know how it was made or what the production looked like. You’re making and assumption - and we all know how that makes people look.
@@TraceDominguez I, for one, was making a joke about recording in a cave. I didn't assume you'd have done it this way could you have avoided it.
SPACE TRACE!!!
THAT’S ME
Purr purr...how's kitty? I love her! : )
She is so great! Thanks for asking!
@@TraceDominguez Yaay! I send her my love! and I send you my love! : ) make sure to feed her some snacks lol! Love Love Love!
: ) Yay! purr purr- cuddles!
Orion's most famous star? Bellatrix!?!?... oh betelgeuse...
Betelgeuse didn't kill himself
I feel we are still good guessing on anything in space. We don’t know our oceans let alone been to the center of the earth. Good science fiction though.
Side note: never judge a book by its cover.
DARRYL HENRY care to clarify?
Well, I agree there’s a lot of educated guessing - but in this case you can actually LOOK at the star in the sky and see it dimming! It’s awesome!
Trace Dominguez I love this content and your presentation. We have to question everything to know anything. Did I just make that saying? I’m a have to update my status. Lol 😂
Sarafina Nance you are beautiful and intelligent, so let me just say that to not knock your knowledge. So let’s just take for example our own earths’ core. We haven’t been there but are sure of it complete composition? We only been roughly 21 miles down. How could one know by just shooting lightwaves? Let’s figure out the pyramids and I will start believing in What we know of space.
Creators are slowly but surely starting to migrate away from TH-cam and TH-cam is doing it to itself.
BEH-TEL-GOOSE
Yettle-geeze!
What are the chances that we're witnessing a Dyson sphere?
Pretty low, that would take a long time to make and be fairly predictable dimming. Tabby’s Star, on the other hand 😗
Little bits 😂
We got tiny little eggs 🍳
Oh shit, we got tiny people!
What is B-T-Dubs?
BTW
sun goes Supernova!?
It will eventually die! Everything does…
It won’t explode as a supernova- it’ll expand to a red giant and then fade to a white dwarf.
I like Stars 🌟
btw how nebula's created?
I LOVE YOU TRACE!!!!!!! : ) you're the greatest friend, ... like,.... ever girlfriend! : ) yaaaaaaaaaay!! you got my view =1,2,trace, 4! :O omg!
Sarafina is a monster! Anything within 50 light years will be wiped out! Whole civilizations, planets, and moons. Bub bye! That being said, I hope it explodes soon too.
I'll eat anything you want me to eat and I'll swallow anything you want me to swallow. So come down I'll…chew on a dog. Whoooooo!!!! You have no idea the powers your messing with here.
Cool video and thank you, I often wonder what forms of radiation we can expect even at this distance, cosmic rays and other fast movers.
I had to stop watching after you started talking about our sun going supernova, our sun will become red giant and then it will shrink to white dwarf. Our sun is too small to explode into supernova. White dwarf needs companion star for supernova explosion.
Did I say the sun will go supernova?? I thought I said it would swell into a red giant. Pretty sure that’s what I said. I’ll have to watch it again.
This guy is stuck in 2015 jokes and edits
Lol what does that even mean
I'd like to do something much more fun with her ♥️
Learn to pronounce the name of the star ffs