@nezkeys79 Blud is trying so hard to not say propaganda but still emits the same brainless aura those people have around their non functioning brains...
that planet is likely almost as hot as a star , and likely puts out radiation levels near stellar numbers. the video forgets to mention if you flew in a plane around it , you'd likely be dead from radiation in 1-2 seconds flat. Jupiter itself has some really nastily high levels of radiation and this thing is 752x times jupiter's mass.
Fun fact: With that mass the planet could actually become a star Edit: I am assuming it is the highest mass, with 13x Jupiters mass it would be a brown dwarf Don't wanna be that person but ty for 3.2K Likes
That's why in the video at 0:15 you can read in the text that it's potentially a brown dwarf, which is a proto star. So the real fun fact is you seem to lack attention.
Bro if you needed 5 months to arrive at your family's place on this planet it would mean your family leaves in the same place as you, and you just took the longest way possible by going all around the planet...
This is nothing compared to largest star ever known. If I remember correctly, it would take you hundreds of years to orbit its equator by plane. A time much longer than from your birth to death.
We know that there is a theoretical maximum size that any given gas giant could be before it begins initiating deuterium fusion and becomes a brown dwarf star, and this planet is pretty close to that limit
The NASA website does say that this object has 752 Jupiter masses. That has got to be an error, though, as it is three-quarters of the Sun's mass. Some other sources suggest the mass is about 60 Jupiter masses, which is more what one would expect for a brown dwarf.
I think the planet is a star in formation, and it is still gathering up material. It just hasn’t really settled into a fixed size so it just keeps growing. With all of the material building upon it, it can’t get it dense enough fast enough (to catch up with the added material) under its own gravity to become a star and ignite nuclear fusion. In fact, it may already be a star, the light just hasn’t reached us yet. But idk, just my thoughts
Hmmm... nothing was said about the star that it supposedly orbits... I wonder if it's been mistaken for a planet and is actually a star, in binary star system?!?
Everything was ok... until he mentioned the mass. You see there’s this thing called the "stellar mass limit" which is the minimum mass at which an object can initiate nuclear fusion in its core and thus become a star. In terms of our Sun's mass, this limit is approximately 0.08 solar masses. One solar mass is approximately 1,047.6 Jupiter masses. So, roughly speaking… the minimum mass for star formation would be 0.08 x 1047.56 which equals to 83.8 Jupiter masses. 84 Jupiter masses… Sure there might be a brown dwarf out there up to 100 Jupiter masses… but 752! That’s just wrong. A quick search about HD 100546b reveals its mass is well below that “84 Mj limit”. I know this is not common knowledge unless you are in a science field… but you would think a person making a video about such subject would at least know that.
No offense to anyone in the field, but it's guess work at best. There's no way to verify if that's even what causes the transition, it could very well be little to do with the size and more to do with its position in space or its orbit or the conditions in said area vs what's going on with the planet itself. There's a million and one trillion made-up-number-illion potential variables or interactions that we may not even be remotely aware of. We've claimed lots of things to be indisputable facts based off of repeated observations and experiments that we conducted and the resulting correlations, that are the basis of our proof/evidence supporting said claims, just to find out we were connecting the dots all wrong, other times we find out its been one way for X amount of time, but then something changes one day and there's a new cycle/routine and it doesn't change just like previously, and we learn that some things are only permanent in our limited conception of time. We're claiming to know things about processes that "estimate" taking hundreds and thousands of years, or claiming that our observations of something we assume is billions of light years away is accurate, and deny any possibility of said observation being distorted or the result of illusions. You can see through a car window right? And if you stop looking through it, and look at it, all of a sudden you see your reflection, you can even see a mix of both if you stop adjusting your focus midway, one of mankind's least reliable senses is sight, it's easily manipulated even just right in front of you, let alone outside the planet. We shouldn't even be worrying ourselves with space.... it's a wasted investment of time and resources, we should be focusing on our own planet. Ppl talking about colonizing Mars.... why? So we can go kill each other over the rights to it, before inevitably destroying it slowly but surely like we are earth? Running its resources dry to try and make a buck.... We're the equivalent of an infestation of destructive pests.
It is not dense enough. There are red dwarfs that are just slightly larger than Jupiter in size, but dense enough to produce a fusion, a very much slower fusion than the Sun, but still.
@@Jcbsbzs Yes… And a brown dwarf is right on the fringe of that. The density required is Result of gravity, in relations to its size. Jupiter would be a star if it was 9 to 11 times larger… Or that would be the approximate Size required to create enough gravity, therefore density, therefore, heat up enough to start the nuclear fission reaction. So back to my original statement at 750 times the size of Jupiter how was it not a star… I understand it takes a little bit of time and this is an early solar system still forming… I just didn’t think it took much Time at all, when you’re talking about a play, that mass this large
Maybe. There is something a bit more to that fear that I cant quite identify in the event that we were able to confirm that we really were alone out here though. But... we happened. There's no way that different versions of us (or different somethings altogether) havent happened already or arent happening now somewhere else. Feels almost arrogant to believe it's just us floating around.
@@Sixsoul If you think about it, it took 4 and a bit billion years for intelligent life to form on a Goldilocks planet with water a magnetic field, an ozone layer etc, and that's only thanks to 5 mass extinctions allowing small mammals to finally dominate the ecosystem. So much luck was needed and it all had to happen at the right time. There was a great interview with Prof Brian Cox about this and he believes the only 'living' stuff out there will most likely be single-celled slime. It's sorta sad but the reality is we're most likely alone.
Honestly, I find the idea that we are alone to be infinitely more terrifying. The idea that we're such an insanely anomalous event on this little tiny planet, that nowhere else in the absolutely boundless infinite expanse of the universe has come close to developing anything resembling what we call life. That the entire universe is dead. We are the only ones who can figure it all out for ourselves. And that, even after we conquer the solar system, entire galaxies, clusters, and superclusters, we will never encounter anything else like us.
Yeah... Weird that the NASA article on it is a tiny little footnote with a cute "fact" sheet with number values... Even though it says they don't really know shit about it for sure. And then you read th Wikipedia article and it's all, "Well. They tried this method... And got these results. Which made no sense at all and everyone disagrees with it. Then we tried this... And we got a range anywhere from 3-25 times the mass of Jupiter- and we have no real way to confirm that. And then there's the fact that we don't even know the radius for sure partly due to it (appearing to) still be forming and is still a protoplanet... Honestly, all we really know... It's big, it's bright, it's hot, it's orbiting a star. And after that, fuckall is for sure."
Well not really because there’s a limit to the size of planets, since at some point if they’re too big they’ll start doing nuclear fusion in their core and become a star
@@reecefell8354 the temperature of this exoplanet is so hot that anything more would mk it a gas mass wch is basically a star So existence of any other planet larger than this would mean the proximity to its star n also the captive heat of its own gas mass wch invariably would mk it a potential star in a few millennia Hence any larger planet than this existing is almost negligible n also a star to contain such a large gass giant would mean a Red Dwarf or Red Giant Star either of wch means an implosion or explosion of such a star is very much around the corner.. basically the death of that star is near As such a supernova or black hole or magnetar or pulsar formation would be very much likely on the charts Thus any other planet larger than this one even if existed is now a part of some byproduct of a star's death
@codyhess5390 not really, jupiter is nowhere near massive enough to ever have been even a brown dwarf. It's half the mass of the smallest known brown dwarf AFAIK. It's just a gas giant. Also the composition of stars and planets are different, the largest planet is larger than some Red Dwarves.
@codyhess5390 Jupiter would need to be 80x more massive to be a star, its not even close to being a star, that exo planet however is likely close to being a protostar
@yoursuperior1148 I can't find any more interesting ones. Can you recommend any? I've got 2800 in my library which I've read all of. Just can't find anything more of interest. Maybe a glib saddo like yourself can recommend something? But doubtful, if you have to reply to a harmless, humorous comment like that.
@@kumaslime8478 it's the first cameraman joke I've ever posted😅🤣😂. Stop being a spectator and join in. I have no responsibility to monitor whatever you've seen too much of.
@@Sarahpurple12It is possible, if it collects enough mass from its surroundings. As soon as it hits the Deuterium burning limit, it becomes a star. Also, the 752 Jupiter masses is an estimation. the estimations for its mass go from 10 to 752 Jupiter masses, but it's most likely somewhere in the middle. It's still very young and forming, so measuring accurately is pretty much impossible. Neutron stars for example can also become black holes, if they collect enough mass afterwards. The Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff limit. Stars and planets can "level up" by collecting mass from their surroundings, or from impacts
HD100546b only had atleast 15~60 Mjup ...to become a Borderline Ultra cool Redwarf star like Proxima Centauri it needs to be atleast 86~ Mjup(86 times the mass of Jupiter) to Kickstart the Nuclear fusion and some papers shows that the Ringe around the Largest known planet is just over less than a Jupiter mass possible Empire to form some exomoons around it so,thus its will never be a Star but a Browndwarf that will slowly cooldown and shrunk by the next billion years
@@stevenlang9849to become a real star atleast like an ultra-cool redwarf like Proxima Centauri it needs to be 86Mjup or 86 times more massive than Jupiter to Kickstart nuclear fusion.. 752Jupiter mass you say is like more than the Sun's mass which is 1047 times of Jupiter corresponding to late Orange(K) mainsequence stars like Epsilon Eridani and the Early Yellow main sequence Tau Ceti(Yellow dwarf but were less luminous and less massive than Sun)
@@stevenlang9849i saw an T tauri star with 0.45-0.70 Mass of Sun and it has a more massive ring and have Polar Jets from Nuclear Fusion and these Proto-stars are just 2million years old and this Star system which reside the largest known planet is already few million years,it doesn't show any Bright flare so its basically a Browndwarf something
The actual mass of this giant is 17.5 Jupiters not 752 because with that kind of mass Jupiter would be 75.2% the sun's mass (1 solar mass=1000 Jupiters)
That was an early miscalculation due to the obscuring gas cloud around the star, as well as circumsolar and circumplanetary disks. The realistic mass is 1.65J and radius of 3.4J.
@Cool Cat I was thinking 5 months is not much considering how many earth's make a Jupiter and how many fuckin Jupiter's make the giant ass planet. I was thinking like it would take a few years
Jupiter's gravity would kill 100% of people on Earth. So watching 1,300 Earths (each population 8 billion) go into Jupiter - means you're watching about 10.4 trillion people die... but it's cute.
752 jupiters? Isn't like 70 is enough to be counter as a brown dwarf star? Edit:so, I did my own research and found out that, nobody ACTUALLY knows what the fuck HD 100546 b is, some say it's a star, others say it's a uniquely big gas giant (NASA says it's a gas giant while Wikipedia and google tell that this is a star, so you are free to think whatever you want)
It’s A star bc it’s a brown dwarf and if Jupiter was 50x it would could be a star, but it wouldn’t look like it, but it would be it would just be a red dwarf
A brown dwarf isn't really a star. They're called "failed stars". The pressure at their core isn't high enough to start the fusion of hydrogen so they're slowly cooling.
The star is about 2 solar masses, 1.5 solar radius, but the planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system. Like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
@The Joker wooow we have a superior being among us, please share with us your highly and godly gifted wisdom. Because even the most brilliant minds in humanity assume their ignorance and lack of comprehention about the universe. But you certainly is not human, i assume...
Considering that its circumference is 3,098,867 kilometers, it will take a plane about 149 days to cover the distance. For reference, it takes only 1 day and 22 hours to cover the circumference of the Earth.
People don't want the truth they want their silly imagination to wonder what might be out there without having to physically investigate my pet peeve is People saying they know something without fully Investing it.. like these fan boys and girls who believe NASA.. Nasa hasn't traversed space yet they know about it.. give me a break!!!
@@Quvl Jupiter is often called a 'failed star' because, although it is mostly hydrogen like most normal stars, it is not massive enough to commence thermonuclear reactions in its core and thus become a 'real star'.
An ignorant selfish greedy species. It is ridiculous that some of us think, they know reality, our origins, and think, the origins of life was a coin cidence. We know shit. these people should realize that all we can have is to believe. We don't know the truth, but we should have faith.
Honestly, that is just your personal view/perspective/interpretation. Just because earth inhabits a small place in terms of space, doesn't mean it is insignificant. And just because the earth is the only place we know where life exists, doesn't mean we should view the rest of the universe as a "life-threatening, dead ocean". One could equally well say that we are the eyes & ears of the universe. That the entire universe reached its qualitative apex in conscious organisms. That the universe is indeed alive, since we are alive, and we are manifestations of said universe. The universe is putting up this orgasmic show or dance, and then produces humans so that this show is not wasted but actually observed, noticed & celebrated by us. If one continues with the ocean analogy, the universe is a giant ocean, and we humans are a part of that ocean. We are not cut off from that ocean, we are connected to it, immersed in it, made out of its same constituents, totally enveloped by it. And while our human bodies might seem small in a "physical" sense compared to the utter vastness of the universe, we are what gives this entire universe conscioussnes, feelings, emotions, intelligence, life. You are not a distinct thing to the universe, a living & conscious organism surrounded by a dead & unconscious world. You ARE the universe itself, as it observes itself, wonders about itself, marvels at its own beauty or despairs at its own apparent meaninglessness. You are ALL of that, taking particular shapes and forms, and in this case, a human one.
It's a good thing we are so tiny. It's less likely to collide with other objects, it's more likely to be completely dominated by it's Star, so, stable orbit for BILLIONS of years. Gigantic objects have more frequent collisions, or captures. Jupiter is much more likely to capture objects that come anywhere near it, eventually to collide with it violently.
@Richard Schiffman Exactly! It's a good thing that such events are rare. 66 million years ago such an event upended life on Earth, changed the direction the flora and especially the fauna were trending.
@@elmafico7605 lmao denial. There are people who are absolutely addicted. Stoners and psychonauts love to go on and on about no chemically addictive compounds yet always love to ignore psychological ones.
The inaccuracy about the mass is way more important than people think in comments More than 20 jupiter = brown dwarf More than 80 jupitet = Red dwarf How can something this big not be a star ?
Because it orbits a star and doesn't emit it's own light meaning there's no fusion taking place for whatever reason. It's quite possible that it's a failed red dwarf.
It's not so big. The planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system, like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
if you look it up the estimates are between 1.6-24Mj with most being around the 15Mj mark (which, if you ignore exoplanets that *could* be Brown Dwarfs this makes it the second biggest exoplanet behind GQ Lupi-B). there's a possibility it's a brown dwarf in which case the mass would be much higher but the planet is nowhere near dense enough (not even close) based on current readings also, if it were truly a star, it would be big enough to be a small main-sequence star, which it definitely isn't based on its behaviour. The mass is definitely wrong in this vid otherwise it would be a star.
You're correct. The planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system. Like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is a dismal 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
The planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system, like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is only 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
I totally agree with you I don't know why those who give us information like this always tell us things like this like that know everything and all they do is speculate and say things they only want you to know and believe
@@jeromebattlejr4278 Because there is a physical limitation of how big a planet can be before it becomes a gas cloud, also, the information on this short is wrong, this much mass is more than enough to be a star.
You know as soon as you get going, with a month under your belt, the babies on board will start crying. I was on a bus for 23 hours once. Think I'd rather hitch hike.
I'd like to credit the guy that used a Stanley metal tape measure to work it out, for his dedication to science and his ability to hold his breath. Just wondering how many kneepads he went through.
@@IndigoSignature1234you don't know what that phrase means? In terms of the observable universe or even the milky way galaxy this giant exo planet is literally few doors down the street from us.
@@nikkbronxerage plane flies speed at 880-926 Km/H compared to fucking voyager 1 which is 61,500 Km/H Even that that Fucking speed it would take you nearly 40k years to a nearest start WHICHS IS 4 LIGHT YEARS AND THAT PLANET WAS 300+ LIGHT YEARS
Sadly, the planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system. Like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
Wait.. only 360 light years from earth? Wouldn't that make it the largest planet in our galaxy? If there are supposedly 100+ billion galaxies in the observable universe, this claim is absurd.
@yesac101 any statement about anything is 'that we know of' Jupiter is the biggest planet in our solar system 'that we know of'. Earth is the only plant to have life 'that we know of'. If we don't know it, we don't know it. Duh
It was a mistake; he meant largest ‘discovered’ in the Milky Way. Although it might have happened, we cannot generally pick out planets in other galaxies.
Not even a planet its either a puffy brown dwarf or multiple planets that together look like a large planet nobody is really sure. But me personally I think its just a brown dwarf and even if it is its fricking huge for a brown dwarf they don’t usually get that big.
This concept doesn't really exist. We're just looking at the things from our perspective but the concept of big and small doesn't make any sense in nature
Largest DISCOVERED planet in the OBSERVABLE universe
THANK YOU
@@ninjanacho5671 THEY MEAN OUR GALAXY, I HATE HOW PEOPLE GET THE GALAXY AND UNIVERSE MIXED UP
@@Gl1tchyGuy there could still be bigger ones in the galaxy we might have not found yet
@@ninjanacho5671 yea I hate how people get it mixed up, the galaxy and universe arnt the same thing
HIP 65426b 4.5 billion light years away…
I went there on vacation last year. Rained the whole time. Avoid
Yeah i went there last Christmas and it was so windy and cloudy. It didn’t even seem like they had the same sun over there
Thanks for the info think I’ll go somewhere else for vacation then
And it was HOT, MISERABLE.
My fucking plans are ruined. Thanks
Idk if we went on the same planet or not because when i went there the weather was perfect for a beach party and the inhabitants were so nice
"There's always a bigger fish."
- Qui Gon Jinn
The line between planet and stars blurs at this masses. Not more and it starts to glow
Till God, God is one and only and the mightiest and strongest one
Xd
not if you're the biggest fish
@@baykedi-mrcat9359...Which is created by us humans..😂
It’s crazy how we’re just sitting in the middle of nowhere out in space
Or were being lied to
@nezkeys79 Blud is trying so hard to not say propaganda but still emits the same brainless aura those people have around their non functioning brains...
@@nezkeys79AHT! get back in the corner and put your dunce hat back on.
@purpleskittlesbag I love the confidence you have in something you've never seen 😅 🐑
@@nezkeys79 I love how you’re so confident to say that the entirety of space is fake like bro if space wasn’t real then where would we be?
Honestly 5 months was a lot shorter than I was expecting
to fly around earth takes about two days (44 hours) that big dude makes the trip 70 times longer. long enough for me lol
@@krisstopher8259 2 days Alone? Okay
Until you think about it, and realise that it's 5 months
Wym 5 months is massive bro get outta here
Yea but imagine being on a flight for 5 months!! I get impatient just going from LA to NY🤷🏾♂️
The universe just constantly remind you there's always something bigger lurking around.
Nothing in the universe is bigger than a human's ego and delusion.
There’s always a bigger fish
@@bobbymoss6160 it's bigger than the reality itself!
@@bobbymoss6160Oh boohoo Humanity bad
Yes I definitely agree. His name is God The Father Son and Holy Spirit
Imagine being the size of a star but you don't get to emit cool light beams 😡
Which that thing probably would, at least light beams, not so sure about cool tho ;). More than 7 jupiter masses means that thing is a brown dwarfSTAR
L bozo indeed 🤓
@@MowraqThe mass he gave would more be like a K-type star.
grrrrr
that planet is likely almost as hot as a star , and likely puts out radiation levels near stellar numbers. the video forgets to mention if you flew in a plane around it , you'd likely be dead from radiation in 1-2 seconds flat. Jupiter itself has some really nastily high levels of radiation and this thing is 752x times jupiter's mass.
Am I the only expecting him to say 285 years or something instead of 5months😅
I didn’t understand when he said a radius of three hundred thousand miles, I would’ve thought a lot more than that.
@MrASM78 the radius of 300k means the circumference, or the distance all the way around, is nearly 1.9 million miles
@@MrASM78 a radius of 300,000 miles means that the distance between the edge of the planet and the center is 300,000 miles long.
Fun fact: With that mass the planet could actually become a star
Edit: I am assuming it is the highest mass, with 13x Jupiters mass it would be a brown dwarf
Don't wanna be that person but ty for 3.2K Likes
Friendly reminder that the limit before gravitational collapsing and actual nuclear fusion igniting is 80 Jupiter
@@jambon2730 should be a star
@@jambon2730 friendly reminder that gravitational collapse is related to many processes but not to the ignition of fusion.
That's why in the video at 0:15 you can read in the text that it's potentially a brown dwarf, which is a proto star. So the real fun fact is you seem to lack attention.
That's not a fun fact because I knew it already. That's as old as the Hills. As a matter of fact it's thought that it is a failed star.
EXCUSE ME?
5 MONTHS?
Dawg we are so damn small💀
No, the exoplanet is damn big!
We totally are, to go around the biggest star with a normal airplane would take you 1000 years-
If humanlike life forms exists there then they might be Avatar Big
Speak for yourself. I'm average
Dude if it's super big it can be a star
“man, i can’t wait for christmas break with my family!”
*flys in plane, gets off*
“almost summer already??”
You just need to leave in the summer, easy. My problem is jetlag... How long will it take to go away another 5 months?
Bro if you needed 5 months to arrive at your family's place on this planet it would mean your family leaves in the same place as you, and you just took the longest way possible by going all around the planet...
@@thinksmooth2382 bro i was just making a joke 😭😭
This is nothing compared to largest star ever known. If I remember correctly, it would take you hundreds of years to orbit its equator by plane. A time much longer than from your birth to death.
@@FootLettuce "Bro let's took a plane"
"Sure"
Grand Children: yeay we arrived
Correction: Biggest exoplanet KNOWN to humans in the OBSERVABLE universe
yeah, as the TOP comment with 17k likes already mentioned.
humans living on the planet Earth
We know that there is a theoretical maximum size that any given gas giant could be before it begins initiating deuterium fusion and becomes a brown dwarf star, and this planet is pretty close to that limit
Biggest exoplanet discovered in the milky way Galaxy. We never discovered any planet outside our galaxy
There's a limit. At some point, you'd wind up with stars.
Shooooot, 5 months? Now thats a first class ticket i would pay for.
You'll lose your mind after a week or two but 5 months? Good luck.
How u gonna refuel bro?
You couldn't afford the trip
@@fabiokaya202 idk, maybe Jupiter is *made of gas*
There is atleast 1 gas that can be used as fuel
dude they are revealing major secrets this cycle. i've been seeing this alot lately. Various media that reveals truths in redicoulius suggestion
The NASA website does say that this object has 752 Jupiter masses. That has got to be an error, though, as it is three-quarters of the Sun's mass. Some other sources suggest the mass is about 60 Jupiter masses, which is more what one would expect for a brown dwarf.
I think the planet is a star in formation, and it is still gathering up material. It just hasn’t really settled into a fixed size so it just keeps growing. With all of the material building upon it, it can’t get it dense enough fast enough (to catch up with the added material) under its own gravity to become a star and ignite nuclear fusion. In fact, it may already be a star, the light just hasn’t reached us yet. But idk, just my thoughts
Hmmm... nothing was said about the star that it supposedly orbits... I wonder if it's been mistaken for a planet and is actually a star, in binary star system?!?
@@M0NTANAC0WB0Y The other sources did mention the host star. (It's not difficult to find said sources... just Google the object's name.)
At some point a gas giant that is massive enough has enough mass to begin burning hydrogen. So why do they still call it a planet?
@@seageo4303 please never use the word "burning" for nuclear fusion again
Everything was ok... until he mentioned the mass. You see there’s this thing called the "stellar mass limit" which is the minimum mass at which an object can initiate nuclear fusion in its core and thus become a star. In terms of our Sun's mass, this limit is approximately 0.08 solar masses. One solar mass is approximately 1,047.6 Jupiter masses. So, roughly speaking… the minimum mass for star formation would be 0.08 x 1047.56 which equals to 83.8 Jupiter masses.
84 Jupiter masses… Sure there might be a brown dwarf out there up to 100 Jupiter masses… but 752! That’s just wrong. A quick search about HD 100546b reveals its mass is well below that “84 Mj limit”. I know this is not common knowledge unless you are in a science field… but you would think a person making a video about such subject would at least know that.
*cough* NERD
@@Dannybythebanana ah yes, the good old knowledge = nerd shut up
@@Dannybythebanana *cough* anime profile
Lol 752 Jupiters also had me questioning my knowledge about the limited mass a planet can have before it becomes a star, thanks for the info.
No offense to anyone in the field, but it's guess work at best. There's no way to verify if that's even what causes the transition, it could very well be little to do with the size and more to do with its position in space or its orbit or the conditions in said area vs what's going on with the planet itself. There's a million and one trillion made-up-number-illion potential variables or interactions that we may not even be remotely aware of. We've claimed lots of things to be indisputable facts based off of repeated observations and experiments that we conducted and the resulting correlations, that are the basis of our proof/evidence supporting said claims, just to find out we were connecting the dots all wrong, other times we find out its been one way for X amount of time, but then something changes one day and there's a new cycle/routine and it doesn't change just like previously, and we learn that some things are only permanent in our limited conception of time. We're claiming to know things about processes that "estimate" taking hundreds and thousands of years, or claiming that our observations of something we assume is billions of light years away is accurate, and deny any possibility of said observation being distorted or the result of illusions. You can see through a car window right? And if you stop looking through it, and look at it, all of a sudden you see your reflection, you can even see a mix of both if you stop adjusting your focus midway, one of mankind's least reliable senses is sight, it's easily manipulated even just right in front of you, let alone outside the planet. We shouldn't even be worrying ourselves with space.... it's a wasted investment of time and resources, we should be focusing on our own planet. Ppl talking about colonizing Mars.... why? So we can go kill each other over the rights to it, before inevitably destroying it slowly but surely like we are earth? Running its resources dry to try and make a buck.... We're the equivalent of an infestation of destructive pests.
Honestly, Caseoh would win the biggest one
If Earth's grav field strength is 9.8
What's this guys
More
A lot lot more - for a more precise scientifically oriented answer.
Over 9000!!!!
@@Charlesanthony92DBZ reference nice
@@IDidntAskAtAll DBZ kid
Imagine you flew 2 months around that planet just to get catfished.
😢
It’s life
This planet is made of gas, if life DID exist on it it would probably be some kind of bird-thing that can fly REALLY fast
Who the heck would fly to the other side of the planet for a potential romantic partner?
@@georgeofhamilton don’t underestimate the stupidity of humanity and love.
How is it not a star? With that size in gravity shouldn’t it have Turned into a fusion generator…?
It is not dense enough.
There are red dwarfs that are just slightly larger than Jupiter in size, but dense enough to produce a fusion, a very much slower fusion than the Sun, but still.
They’re what’s known as ‘failed stars’ as they don’t have the density to become a star but still have all the needed recourses to become one
@@Jcbsbzs Yes… And a brown dwarf is right on the fringe of that. The density required is Result of gravity, in relations to its size. Jupiter would be a star if it was 9 to 11 times larger… Or that would be the approximate Size required to create enough gravity, therefore density, therefore, heat up enough to start the nuclear fission reaction. So back to my original statement at 750 times the size of Jupiter how was it not a star… I understand it takes a little bit of time and this is an early solar system still forming… I just didn’t think it took much Time at all, when you’re talking about a play, that mass this large
I think the biggest gas giant is UY Scuti
The simulation is still down loading then another UPDATE it will become a STAR in next PATCH 😆 🤣 😂
Pumbaa: 'I thought they are balls of gas burning billions of miles away.'
Timon: 'Pumbaa, with you it's always gas.'
Imagine traveling 30,000 miles, and you ask
Are we there yet?
You'd REALLY rack up the miles!
Did he say the radius ? Probably over a million fkn miles!!
Where’s this planet located?
@@KingDragonBoyPrime1998in space
@@Seizure_LLL Then I’ll get a volunteer with NASA
I love that famous quote that says “either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone both are equally terrifying”
Arthur C. Clarke
Maybe. There is something a bit more to that fear that I cant quite identify in the event that we were able to confirm that we really were alone out here though. But... we happened. There's no way that different versions of us (or different somethings altogether) havent happened already or arent happening now somewhere else. Feels almost arrogant to believe it's just us floating around.
We're not alone and if you think it's even remotely possible that we're alone, that's the truly terrifying thing here
@@Sixsoul If you think about it, it took 4 and a bit billion years for intelligent life to form on a Goldilocks planet with water a magnetic field, an ozone layer etc, and that's only thanks to 5 mass extinctions allowing small mammals to finally dominate the ecosystem. So much luck was needed and it all had to happen at the right time. There was a great interview with Prof Brian Cox about this and he believes the only 'living' stuff out there will most likely be single-celled slime. It's sorta sad but the reality is we're most likely alone.
Honestly, I find the idea that we are alone to be infinitely more terrifying. The idea that we're such an insanely anomalous event on this little tiny planet, that nowhere else in the absolutely boundless infinite expanse of the universe has come close to developing anything resembling what we call life. That the entire universe is dead. We are the only ones who can figure it all out for ourselves.
And that, even after we conquer the solar system, entire galaxies, clusters, and superclusters, we will never encounter anything else like us.
Its mass is not 752 jupiters. That much mass would make it a star. It's actual mass is between 4-13 masses of jupiter.
Yeah... Weird that the NASA article on it is a tiny little footnote with a cute "fact" sheet with number values... Even though it says they don't really know shit about it for sure.
And then you read th Wikipedia article and it's all, "Well. They tried this method... And got these results. Which made no sense at all and everyone disagrees with it. Then we tried this... And we got a range anywhere from 3-25 times the mass of Jupiter- and we have no real way to confirm that. And then there's the fact that we don't even know the radius for sure partly due to it (appearing to) still be forming and is still a protoplanet... Honestly, all we really know... It's big, it's bright, it's hot, it's orbiting a star. And after that, fuckall is for sure."
But seriously though. There isn't even a consensus on the damn radius. And no way does that mass make any sense whatsoever.
Jupiter
It’s 20 jupiter mass
Bro thats big enough to become a star 💀
It would need one more Jupiter to crash into it and it’s about as big as the sun so if it had moons we can go live there
752 masses of Jupiter IS a star. Unless the narrator meant something else.
@@SeanBordelon not exactly it’s a brown dwarf
Dude I've been there. DO NOT visit during the rainy season!
@@bobbobby-o2w yeah, at 2000+ celcius temperature, the rains are too much!
Theirs always a bigger fish-wise Jedi master qui-gon
There's, not theirs, ignorant.
@@wehrewulfu understand very well what he said so don't try to be oversmart 😤 sometimes people make mistakes....
@@wehrewulfnobody cares about grammar why do you think ppl use u and ur
Well not really because there’s a limit to the size of planets, since at some point if they’re too big they’ll start doing nuclear fusion in their core and become a star
@@wehrewulf Ain't no fucking way on god's green and blue earth this donny said "ignorant"
I'M DEEEEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAD
There are actually larger planets, we just don't know about them
No there is NOT. 😒 40 times bigger mass than Jupiter simply means a star. Anyone says otherwise lives in different universe. 😒
@@duran9664are u actually crazy 😂😂 cause there's planets bigger out there what u even smoking 😂😂
@@reecefell8354 There is a limit to how big a planet can get, at a certain point there is no stopping it from becoming a star.
@@reecefell8354 the temperature of this exoplanet is so hot that anything more would mk it a gas mass wch is basically a star
So existence of any other planet larger than this would mean the proximity to its star n also the captive heat of its own gas mass wch invariably would mk it a potential star in a few millennia
Hence any larger planet than this existing is almost negligible n also a star to contain such a large gass giant would mean a Red Dwarf or Red Giant Star either of wch means an implosion or explosion of such a star is very much around the corner.. basically the death of that star is near
As such a supernova or black hole or magnetar or pulsar formation would be very much likely on the charts
Thus any other planet larger than this one even if existed is now a part of some byproduct of a star's death
@@reecefell8354 Planets only get so big.
Bro that exoplanet must be ready to be the star 💀
fr
@codyhess5390Jupiter isnt necessarily a failed star
@codyhess5390 not really, jupiter is nowhere near massive enough to ever have been even a brown dwarf. It's half the mass of the smallest known brown dwarf AFAIK. It's just a gas giant. Also the composition of stars and planets are different, the largest planet is larger than some Red Dwarves.
@codyhess5390 Jupiter would need to be 80x more massive to be a star, its not even close to being a star, that exo planet however is likely close to being a protostar
@@josephtheoracle3344 it's actually larger than the smallest brown dwarf (which afaik has a diameter of just over 150000 miles, 2x of jupiter)
5 months is WAY faster than I would’ve expected, tbh.
Nah!
credit to the cameraman who checked every planet in the universe to make sure this was the largest! 😅
@yoursuperior1148 I can't find any more interesting ones. Can you recommend any? I've got 2800 in my library which I've read all of. Just can't find anything more of interest. Maybe a glib saddo like yourself can recommend something? But doubtful, if you have to reply to a harmless, humorous comment like that.
Cameraman joke again?. Cant you think new?
@@kumaslime8478 it's the first cameraman joke I've ever posted😅🤣😂.
Stop being a spectator and join in.
I have no responsibility to monitor whatever you've seen too much of.
Hey, don't forget to credit the person who filled Jupiter with 1,300 Earths!
lmao 😂
hats of to the guy who cut the top of Jupiter to fit 1,300 earth in
Wait am I dreaming 462 likes?
MOM MOM I'M FAMOUS MOM I'M FAMOUS
No the strong guy threw the earths at the planet since it’s a gas planet 😡
A few fell out. Press F to pay respects to the hundreds of billions of lost lives
@@Radioactive-Cactus like the ones who intered jubiter servived
@@اسكندرفكار oh good point 🥲
@@Radioactive-Cactus F
that exoplanet more than likely don't have a surface so landing on it would go through the planet
What a fitting name they gave to that giant planet
I wanna name it big joey
@@SnooziBunizI would call it humungazoid
@@abcdef8915 nice idea
I mean, it can be given an official IAU name and that would be interesting
Bigger but not greater
What a big boy he really is, he will surely grow up to become a star in the future… 🙏💖⭐️
Can planets even become stars? I thought that wasn't possible.
@@Sarahpurple12It is possible, if it collects enough mass from its surroundings. As soon as it hits the Deuterium burning limit, it becomes a star.
Also, the 752 Jupiter masses is an estimation. the estimations for its mass go from 10 to 752 Jupiter masses, but it's most likely somewhere in the middle.
It's still very young and forming, so measuring accurately is pretty much impossible.
Neutron stars for example can also become black holes, if they collect enough mass afterwards. The Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff limit.
Stars and planets can "level up" by collecting mass from their surroundings, or from impacts
HD100546b only had atleast 15~60 Mjup ...to become a Borderline Ultra cool Redwarf star like Proxima Centauri it needs to be atleast 86~ Mjup(86 times the mass of Jupiter) to Kickstart the Nuclear fusion and some papers shows that the Ringe around the Largest known planet is just over less than a Jupiter mass possible Empire to form some exomoons around it so,thus its will never be a Star but a Browndwarf that will slowly cooldown and shrunk by the next billion years
@@stevenlang9849to become a real star atleast like an ultra-cool redwarf like Proxima Centauri it needs to be 86Mjup or 86 times more massive than Jupiter to Kickstart nuclear fusion..
752Jupiter mass you say is like more than the Sun's mass which is 1047 times of Jupiter corresponding to late Orange(K) mainsequence stars like Epsilon Eridani and the Early Yellow main sequence Tau Ceti(Yellow dwarf but were less luminous and less massive than Sun)
@@stevenlang9849i saw an T tauri star with 0.45-0.70 Mass of Sun and it has a more massive ring and have Polar Jets from Nuclear Fusion and these Proto-stars are just 2million years old and this Star system which reside the largest known planet is already few million years,it doesn't show any Bright flare so its basically a Browndwarf something
Filling Jupiter with Earths looked like filling a bowl with blueberries 😅
I think its crazy how a big ball of smoke with no solid surface can be called a planet.
Thanks. I was wondering how long the flight was going to be. Can’t wait!!
Over a 1,000 layovers
The actual mass of this giant is 17.5 Jupiters not 752 because with that kind of mass Jupiter would be 75.2% the sun's mass (1 solar mass=1000 Jupiters)
No, he calculated the volume, not the Mass.
@@davidpinzari1302He says "Mass". The text in the video also says Mass (3.1 to 752 times). No mention of volume in regards to "752".
@@Zokeh ok but the size Is calcuted with volume (m³) not Mass(kg)
Yeah, if it really was 752x the Mass of Jupiter, it'd be a K-Class Oranger Dwarf.
That was an early miscalculation due to the obscuring gas cloud around the star, as well as circumsolar and circumplanetary disks. The realistic mass is 1.65J and radius of 3.4J.
It’s basically just a failed brown dwarf star. Anything even marginally larger would likely just be a star.
The most shocking part of this video is how fast planes are.
Truly
Yeah I couldn’t believe it’s only 5 months for something that incredibly massive.
I think this guys graduate from his theory.
@Cool Cat I was thinking 5 months is not much considering how many earth's make a Jupiter and how many fuckin Jupiter's make the giant ass planet. I was thinking like it would take a few years
Is it only me or did someone else also found so cute the small Earths going inside Jupiter?
😂😂 haha me too.. funny n cute
Jupiter's gravity would kill 100% of people on Earth. So watching 1,300 Earths (each population 8 billion) go into Jupiter - means you're watching about 10.4 trillion people die... but it's cute.
1M earth's fit inside our sun
Not as cute as tiny earth's going inside uranus (sorry. I had to make that joke)
@@enutrofdude so you mean we would have clones of each person on Earth dying at the same time?
Now that's cool not cute
752 jupiters? Isn't like 70 is enough to be counter as a brown dwarf star?
Edit:so, I did my own research and found out that, nobody ACTUALLY knows what the fuck HD 100546 b is, some say it's a star, others say it's a uniquely big gas giant (NASA says it's a gas giant while Wikipedia and google tell that this is a star, so you are free to think whatever you want)
It’s A star bc it’s a brown dwarf and if Jupiter was 50x it would could be a star, but it wouldn’t look like it, but it would be it would just be a red dwarf
@@Sovietunion233 *70
@@zazakardava no it need 50x more mass to be a dwarf star like u know and it it need 80x more mass to be a star*
A brown dwarf isn't really a star. They're called "failed stars". The pressure at their core isn't high enough to start the fusion of hydrogen so they're slowly cooling.
@@4seiken-594 yea
Everyone saying how its the biggest we FOUND, dont realise that theoretically anything with more mass isn't a planet anymore but a star
Having observed the entire universe you are the go to source of this kind of mind stimulus 😎👍
Fascinating presentation but I would have loved to have heard what the size of its star is
B9V
It's not a star
@@davidpinzari1302 He did say the planet was the star. He wants to know what the size of the sun that planet orbits.
@@FootballClubDavid_WI_USA ok sorry
The star is about 2 solar masses, 1.5 solar radius, but the planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system. Like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
The human mind can’t comprehend how big this actually is it’s crazy
@The Joker wooow we have a superior being among us, please share with us your highly and godly gifted wisdom. Because even the most brilliant minds in humanity assume their ignorance and lack of comprehention about the universe. But you certainly is not human, i assume...
CGI
@@glockiyana2591 lol anyways it's almost the size of our sun
@@glockiyana2591 punk you lose, AGAIN!!!
Considering that its circumference is 3,098,867 kilometers, it will take a plane about 149 days to cover the distance. For reference, it takes only 1 day and 22 hours to cover the circumference of the Earth.
Props to the guy who put 1300 Earths in Jupiter 👍
It's Just Dan
Dan does all the impossible
measurements.
Aw grow up! 😄
It’s named Muska because Chad Muska discovered it & did a grind the whole way around it. Especially impressive in those gravitational conditions!
I can appreciate just mentioning Muska.
I remember that
Thank you for reminding me that I haven't been happy since the late 90's.
Mmm… like
Lmaoooo😂😂😂
Space is mind-blowing
"Jupiter is so big that all the other planets could fit inside it". Yeah, no shit, that's what being the biggest planet means.
Bro really took "the pilot screwed up" to a whole new level ☠️
Imagine if we ever get to the point of living on planets this huge. It’s gotta feel so ethereal.
People don't want the truth they want their silly imagination to wonder what might be out there without having to physically investigate my pet peeve is People saying they know something without fully Investing it.. like these fan boys and girls who believe NASA.. Nasa hasn't traversed space yet they know about it.. give me a break!!!
Could we? I thought the gravity would be too much for us
You would be crushed instantaneously. Also it's made of gasses
Love learning about outer space! It is a beautiful thing!
who love to live there, Imagine how much land you could buy and live peacefully
"This is HD1000546b , the planet is " a brown reddish dwarf STAR
It isn’t a dwarf star. Its a failed star just like Jupiter
@@Average_German jupiter aint a failed star, its not even close to brown dwarf mass
@@Quvl Jupiter is often called a 'failed star' because, although it is mostly hydrogen like most normal stars, it is not massive enough to commence thermonuclear reactions in its core and thus become a 'real star'.
@@Average_German that would mean saturn is also "failed star" because it also has hydrogen and helium but its not
@@Quvl bro just search up is Jupiter a failed star. I don’t got time to argue.
only 5 months?
Ferb, I know what we're gonna do today!
The only place where we can live is so tiny and insignificant, it's unreal. We. Are are grain of dust in a life-threatening, dead ocean.
An ignorant selfish greedy species. It is ridiculous that some of us think, they know reality, our origins, and think, the origins of life was a coin cidence. We know shit. these people should realize that all we can have is to believe. We don't know the truth, but we should have faith.
Honestly, that is just your personal view/perspective/interpretation. Just because earth inhabits a small place in terms of space, doesn't mean it is insignificant. And just because the earth is the only place we know where life exists, doesn't mean we should view the rest of the universe as a "life-threatening, dead ocean".
One could equally well say that we are the eyes & ears of the universe. That the entire universe reached its qualitative apex in conscious organisms. That the universe is indeed alive, since we are alive, and we are manifestations of said universe. The universe is putting up this orgasmic show or dance, and then produces humans so that this show is not wasted but actually observed, noticed & celebrated by us.
If one continues with the ocean analogy, the universe is a giant ocean, and we humans are a part of that ocean. We are not cut off from that ocean, we are connected to it, immersed in it, made out of its same constituents, totally enveloped by it. And while our human bodies might seem small in a "physical" sense compared to the utter vastness of the universe, we are what gives this entire universe conscioussnes, feelings, emotions, intelligence, life. You are not a distinct thing to the universe, a living & conscious organism surrounded by a dead & unconscious world. You ARE the universe itself, as it observes itself, wonders about itself, marvels at its own beauty or despairs at its own apparent meaninglessness. You are ALL of that, taking particular shapes and forms, and in this case, a human one.
It's a good thing we are so tiny. It's less likely to collide with other objects, it's more likely to be completely dominated by it's Star, so, stable orbit for BILLIONS of years. Gigantic objects have more frequent collisions, or captures. Jupiter is much more likely to capture objects that come anywhere near it, eventually to collide with it violently.
@Richard Schiffman Exactly! It's a good thing that such events are rare. 66 million years ago such an event upended life on Earth, changed the direction the flora and especially the fauna were trending.
@@candaniel are you god?
5 months is much shorter then i would have expected considering how big and far apart things in the universe can be
I love those perspectives looking at them especially on really good shrooms
Cringe
@@TimeMACH1NE I don't know why would that be cringe
@@elmafico7605 because psychoaddicts can't enjoy anything without being on a drug its cringe.
@@TimeMACH1NE For your information, psychedelics are not addictive and psycho addicts are something else
@@elmafico7605 lmao denial. There are people who are absolutely addicted. Stoners and psychonauts love to go on and on about no chemically addictive compounds yet always love to ignore psychological ones.
It won't be five months if you get crushed by it's gravity
The inaccuracy about the mass is way more important than people think in comments
More than 20 jupiter = brown dwarf
More than 80 jupitet = Red dwarf
How can something this big not be a star ?
Calculation error
Because it orbits a star and doesn't emit it's own light meaning there's no fusion taking place for whatever reason. It's quite possible that it's a failed red dwarf.
It's not so big. The planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system, like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
Oooooh, new giant! Thanks for the update sweetie
As a physicist I must say, that mass can't be right
if you look it up the estimates are between 1.6-24Mj with most being around the 15Mj mark (which, if you ignore exoplanets that *could* be Brown Dwarfs this makes it the second biggest exoplanet behind GQ Lupi-B).
there's a possibility it's a brown dwarf in which case the mass would be much higher but the planet is nowhere near dense enough (not even close) based on current readings
also, if it were truly a star, it would be big enough to be a small main-sequence star, which it definitely isn't based on its behaviour. The mass is definitely wrong in this vid otherwise it would be a star.
Yep
You're correct. The planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system. Like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is a dismal 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
That Interstellar BGM gives Nostalgia!!!!!
and it also makes me wonder its been so many years still there isn't any movie close to it!!!!!!
do you know any movies almost as good as interestellar?
@@Cyrak49 nah bro there's nothin even close to it!
“it has a mass of 752 jupiters”
looks like the star system got a new sun
The planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system, like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is only 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
"Jupiter is the biggest planet in the solar system."
"So big, that every planet could fit inside it."
you didnt have to cut me off-
Remember guys, the universe is unbelievably big. This is only the largest exoplanet humans have found.
I totally agree with you I don't know why those who give us information like this always tell us things like this like that know everything and all they do is speculate and say things they only want you to know and believe
@@jeromebattlejr4278
Because there is a physical limitation of how big a planet can be before it becomes a gas cloud, also, the information on this short is wrong, this much mass is more than enough to be a star.
This short has the strongest aura of "your mom" jokes
When I was younger we called them “yo mama” jokes, and my favorite was “Yo mama’s so fat she’s the original mama from the Yo mama jokes.”
@@GrantTarredus Ha ha ha..
@@GrantTarredus Ha ha ha..
@@GrantTarredus Smh
Bold of you to say tgat it's the buggest planet in the universe
Known universe
Known galaxy
What's known-of in our tiny known corner of our galaxy
In the universe, if it gets any bigger than it'll turn into a star
Jupiter is a bigass planet ❌
Jupiter is a big gas planet ✅
5 month plane flight :
Can I get a full can of Sprite at least ?
You know as soon as you get going, with a month under your belt, the babies on board will start crying. I was on a bus for 23 hours once. Think I'd rather hitch hike.
What the hell
Jupiter is really nice in the summer. Was there back in 98.
It was nice to meet you. Come back in next summer.
The size of that planet is absolutely terrifying.
That seems like a lot of peanut snacks on that plane.
I'd like to credit the guy that used a Stanley metal tape measure to work it out, for his dedication to science and his ability to hold his breath. Just wondering how many kneepads he went through.
Funny how we are actually quite close to it in the grand scheme of things.
And what exactly is this "grand scheme of things" u speak of?
@@IndigoSignature1234you don't know what that phrase means? In terms of the observable universe or even the milky way galaxy this giant exo planet is literally few doors down the street from us.
@@pwnomega4562 I think neither of us really know how massive the real grand scheme of things is.
Ummm we're on the only blue planet in the observable universe.
5 months doesn’t sound too long tho
Edit: first time getting this many likes🥹
Do you know how fast a plane is? That too nonstop.
It takes just around 43-45 hours for a plane to fly around the earth.
@@nikkbronxdo you even know how long is a light years
@@nikkbronxerage plane flies speed at 880-926 Km/H compared to fucking voyager 1 which is 61,500 Km/H
Even that that Fucking speed it would take you nearly 40k years to a nearest start WHICHS IS 4 LIGHT YEARS AND THAT PLANET WAS 300+ LIGHT YEARS
@@KeiseaFv5 what tf does that have to do with what I said?
Imagine having a world war on that plant, you wouldn’t even be able to find anybody lol
This made it to my top 10 favorite short video
Its nearly a star
Its a briwn dwarf star
@@TheRainbowKey it certainly does not have the mass of 752 jupiters. It would be almost as heavy az Alfa Centauri B
@@TheRainbowKey ik it's a brown dwarf
@@kecskebeka7738 ah yes, *az*
Sadly, the planetary figures hyped in this video were based on faulty preliminary data due to the gas cloud surrounding the star system. Like seeing fog around a mountain and assuming that's part of the mountain. The planet's realistic mass is 1.65J, not 752J, and a radius of 3.4J, not 6.9J.
Wait.. only 360 light years from earth? Wouldn't that make it the largest planet in our galaxy? If there are supposedly 100+ billion galaxies in the observable universe, this claim is absurd.
358 ligh-years makes it in our backyard as our galaxy is 100,000 light-years wide.
It's the biggest we know of, not the biggest in the universe. Observing planets is difficult even in our own galaxy.
@yesac101 any statement about anything is 'that we know of' Jupiter is the biggest planet in our solar system 'that we know of'. Earth is the only plant to have life 'that we know of'. If we don't know it, we don't know it. Duh
Crazy that there are Toyotas out there that have driven more miles than the radius of the largest discovered planet in the universe
So the largest exo planet in the entire universe is only 358 light-years away?
The largest one discorvered.
@Captain Einsicht you would be a much better narrator sir. 😌👍
Observed universe
It was a mistake; he meant largest ‘discovered’ in the Milky Way. Although it might have happened, we cannot generally pick out planets in other galaxies.
Not even a planet its either a puffy brown dwarf or multiple planets that together look like a large planet nobody is really sure. But me personally I think its just a brown dwarf and even if it is its fricking huge for a brown dwarf they don’t usually get that big.
Biggest
That we know so far....
Exactly what I was saying.
Bigger than that will become a star
@@JustCallMeAarav theory.... untill we find a bigger one😉
@@jasmijnariel it's not a theory, search it up
@@JustCallMeAarav if its made of rocks and metals, it will never turn into a star...
The better question is, are the planets that big or are we just too damn small?
we are basically just micro organisms in this giant universe.
@@sounds0fmeows from our perspective overgrown bacteria.
This concept doesn't really exist. We're just looking at the things from our perspective but the concept of big and small doesn't make any sense in nature
Jupiter to HD 100546 B - "Daddy?"
Sun has left the chat
Jupiter has joined the chat
The universe is incredible
Amen
Weel, considering it is everything that exists, it would be strange if it wasn't incredible
They can't possibly know it's the largest in the universe. Have they seen every planet in the universe? No.
How do we even know it’s the biggest planet in the universe. The universe is literally expanding as I write this comment
That we know so far. Obviously
Ok 5 months to revolve around it but you missed the part, how much time it will take to be there 😂
He said that, it's 358 light years
Are we there yet?
How about now? Now are we there yet?
The light speed is 300 million m/s and the fastest Object launch by Nasa called Parker Solar Probe it travel maximo speed of 692,000 km/h
Subhan'Allāh
Good boy❤
Am 17
And am a boy too
Always with the bloody interstellar tune 😂
That giant planet’s name should be Gobstopper Because it looks like a Half sucked Gobstopper 💀
We don’t know what it looked like but if it did look like that, then yes
Yes, YES !!!
IT ReallyDoes, look like a giant Vending - Machine-"Jaw Breaker!"
Camera man needs an Oscar.
That joke always gets old.
Why did he filmed your mom getting nailed by a dog?
Pathetic comment 🤦♂️
We are all insignificant specks of dust in the grand scheme of things.
The amount of times earth can fit into Jupiter keeps getting higher lol
Space is so beautiful. Can’t even explain it.
It's not even good cartoons. Smh.
Are you telling me the video isn’t real footage of space? Well duh I’m not an idiot 😂
And to my Heavenly Father, these are nothing more than dust specks floating in nothing.
The Cameraman: 🗿