Astronomy Bucket List, Reigniting A Dead Star, Types of Black Holes | Q&A 237

Ғылым және технология

How do we know that Psyche is a metal asteroid? Did primordial gravitational waves stretch when inflation happened? When do we finally get more Trappist-1 data from JWST? Can a dead star possibly reignite?
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00:00 Start
00:53 [Andoria] Why is the Ice Cube Observatory at the South Pole?
05:49 [Vulcan] Can a dead star reignite?
09:51 [Risa] What about asteroid mining?
15:18 [Aeturen] How do we know Psyche is a metal asteroid?
17:40 [Vendikar] Are there different types of black holes?
21:13 [Remus] How to monitor auroras?
24:30 [Janus] How fast do gravitational waves go?
26:23 [Cait] How many black holes are there?
29:40 [Betazed] What if you go too close to a gravitational wave event?
31:45 [Cheleb] Astronomy bucket list?
35:13 [Nimbus] Trappist-1d and 1e from JWST. Wen?
37:41 [Belos] From how far away can you detect life on Earth?
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Пікірлер: 271

  • @mihan2d
    @mihan2d6 ай бұрын

    Ok I got to ask, why did you retract the interview on the antimatter propulsion? Was it because of the blunder, about where do you get the energy to make antimatter?

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I had enough people tell me that the math didn't make sense, violating the laws of physics, that I pulled the video so I can investigate it further.

  • @mihan2d

    @mihan2d

    6 ай бұрын

    @@frasercain Ooooh I smell behind the scenes drama 😉😉 But seriously man I appreciate your scientific integrity. That said, the video sadly went down along with a question I asked (there was even a small discussion), about what is the official scientific term for the point when the colony on Mars for the first time becomes so resource independent that they are able to continue to survive and grow indefinitely even if Earth goes poof, do you happen to know? I heard the term multiplanetary but it doesn't really convey that point of redundancy so to speak. Also would be nice to one day see a long video looking in detail into the technology and economics of making Mars colony fully tech and resource independent.

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    6 ай бұрын

    I think independent is a good word for it.

  • @IDavidson55

    @IDavidson55

    6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for that. I had watched the first few minutes and then had to do an errand. When I came back there was no trace of it. 🙂 @@frasercain

  • @mihan2d

    @mihan2d

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@frasercainBut how do you refer to that singular point when the species becomes redundant, as in it can no longer go extinct if life on one planet is extinguished? I assume there is no established term then, you just gotta get creative and say something like point of redundancy?

  • @apachetrout1223
    @apachetrout12236 ай бұрын

    The addendum on having a conversation with your content supporters is spot on. The 15 minute conservation was greatly enjoyable and left me feeling honored to fund your work.

  • @karlharvymarx2650
    @karlharvymarx26506 ай бұрын

    I finally crossed off taking a picture of the Andromeda galaxy from my bucket list Monday. I would guess most viewers here would laugh at me for picking something so easy. Still, I'm essentially in a temperate rain forest, so lots of trees and clouds blocking the sky, My equipment is a raspberry pi camera, wifi, a 3d printed adaptor for Canon lenses, and an arduino to adjust the lens. I used Stellarium to make an informed guess about where to point it before sunset and hope it will eventually drift past. I think it took me 5 years to capture the bloody thing. It is probably the ugliest photo ever of a galaxy but I'm still damn proud of it.

  • @darkonc2

    @darkonc2

    6 ай бұрын

    Did you post the picture publicly somewhere?

  • @theoptimisticskeptic

    @theoptimisticskeptic

    6 ай бұрын

    That's awesome, my Dad recently just did that from Upstate NY. Just think, you accomplished something it took humanity 100's if not 1000's of years to accomplish!

  • @karlharvymarx2650

    @karlharvymarx2650

    6 ай бұрын

    @@darkonc2I was going to post it to YT for you but apparently that feature disappeared when I wasn't looking. Maybe after I add tracking motors I'll attempt a video.

  • @karlharvymarx2650

    @karlharvymarx2650

    6 ай бұрын

    @@theoptimisticskeptic Thanks, that is a heck of a nice way to think about it.

  • @KnittedFox
    @KnittedFox6 ай бұрын

    I found the Universe Today podcast around 2004 and fell back in love with Astronomy because of it. So when I became a patron a year ago and got a chance to chat with Fraser I was ecstatic! He sat aside a good chunk of time to chat with me, and it was fantastic! It meant a lot to me to be able to tell him how much his work means to me, and has inspired me. Thanks again Fraser!!

  • @SuliXbr
    @SuliXbr6 ай бұрын

    the way you described how most would see asteroid mining is not at all how I see it. I see asteroid mining as a way to build more stuff in space, if enventually it becomes cost effective to bring it back to the earth so be it, but the main goal is to build structures in space.

  • @christopherwilkening7843

    @christopherwilkening7843

    19 күн бұрын

    agreed, like he said "asteroid mining will never ever never happen! but some day, maybe soon, we will do asteroid mining to use the materials directly in space to build things that will stay in space." ok but that is asteroid mining, unless I am missing something?

  • @NullCreativityMusic
    @NullCreativityMusic6 ай бұрын

    Another great show. Congrats with the 400k!

  • @wavemaker54

    @wavemaker54

    6 ай бұрын

    He deserves at least 5 times as many subscribers, there’s no annoying advertising every 3 minutes, and no BS. Up to date and accurate as always. Tell your friends and families, even total strangers, who isn’t interested in space, astronomy, and astrophysics?

  • @davidallen306
    @davidallen3066 ай бұрын

    Just wanted to say that you, your channel and all those who make it possible are greatly appreciated!. Thanks for all the hard work!

  • @theoptimisticskeptic
    @theoptimisticskeptic6 ай бұрын

    Having lived right near Cape Canaveral, we used to sit by our pool and watch the rocket launches. Our trees blocked the first few seconds of lift off but once they were about 3 or 4 seconds up, we could see them perfectly! Especially at night! It was a dream come true for me, a New Yorker. But I'd also recommend: Viewing a comet and viewing Jupiter & Saturn with your own eyes as well. I was lucky enough to see Haley's and the Halle-Boppe comets, missed the most recent green one, like a dummy!

  • @noelstarchild
    @noelstarchild6 ай бұрын

    I was surprised that asteroids were basically gravel loosely bonded by gravity, but as I thought about it, it was fairly obvious really. Gravity is so weak that you need alot of matter for it to start becoming spherical. ..simple but important revelations , so thank you Mr Cain. Valarian

  • @MelindaGreen
    @MelindaGreen6 ай бұрын

    Don't worry about ruining science fiction Christmas. In fact thank you for speaking up about hard realities. Whenever you find yourself disillusioned, it's best to ask yourself how you became illusioned in the first place.

  • @olorin4317
    @olorin43176 ай бұрын

    Cheleb I’m from Orlando and seeing rockets is a little like how you see aurora often where you live. It is funny how astounding things can almost become routine. One tip is that I would definitely recommend seeing the biggest rocket possible.

  • @realzachfluke1

    @realzachfluke1

    6 ай бұрын

    I saw the SLS launch from Orlando, and I will never forget it. The way it lit up the night sky, even from here, was jaw-dropping.

  • @surferdude4487

    @surferdude4487

    6 ай бұрын

    Starship 2 should be launching between Nov 13 and Nov 30. That's the biggest rocket anyone is likely to see for a while.

  • @adamredwine774
    @adamredwine7746 ай бұрын

    Ice cube keeps two over-winter staff who spend winter in Antarctica. It sounds like a fantastic experience. Also, there's another neutrino detector under construction in the Mediterranean.

  • @nastropc

    @nastropc

    6 ай бұрын

    Dr. Dre keeps four staff who spend summer in the Sahara.

  • @Dr.Wael.Alrifai
    @Dr.Wael.Alrifai6 ай бұрын

    Thank you, Fraser! There is nothing I enjoy more than watching you ruining sci-fi Christmas! I love you for the science you report. There are other places if one is looking for fantasies :-)

  • @NovaDeb

    @NovaDeb

    6 ай бұрын

    😊

  • @BabyMakR
    @BabyMakR6 ай бұрын

    a year or so ago, I found a series where they would get an expert in a field and they would explain their field to school kids of 3 different levels. Primary, middle and secondary. I'd love an episode, or even a series probably where you or an expert you could get to do it would do this.

  • @hoplitnet
    @hoplitnet6 ай бұрын

    QUESTION: if humanity evolved on an earth-sized moon orbiting a very large gas giant, would it be easier to launch rockets if they were pointing directly at the gas giant using it's gravity as an assist?

  • @byalexy93
    @byalexy936 ай бұрын

    I’m in a local aurora Facebook group so that is what I would recommend for updates on when they happen!

  • @aureaphilos
    @aureaphilos6 ай бұрын

    "I know that I'm ruining Sci-Fi Christmas" OMG that was such an hysterical line, Frasier!!!🤣🤣🤣. But I agree with your points; until we are a manufacturing in space, the costs of getting to another body, extracting metals, and then returning them to the bottom of our gravity well is just too impractical. 2001 A Space Odyssey set us up for such potential yet such disappointment.

  • @Reyajh
    @Reyajh6 ай бұрын

    Ohh, you hit 400k Sub's!!! Congratulations!!! 🎉✨🎇🎊

  • @cykkm
    @cykkm6 ай бұрын

    Rocket launches (35:00): SpaceX also have enough launches scheduled from Vandenberg AFB in SoCal, just south of Santa Barbara. It's a military base, and there is no public viewing area, but you can still see them from public roads. There's a lot of info on the 'Net on viewing locations. Make sure to have enough water and sun protection with you.

  • @fsmoura
    @fsmoura6 ай бұрын

    Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion... And C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate, of course.

  • @GrouchyHaggis
    @GrouchyHaggis6 ай бұрын

    Remus - I feel your pain, I hate that feeling of waking up and hearing you missed a huge storm... -Scotland near the 56th parallel (many mountains to the north blocking horizon view)

  • @ayushagrawal3346
    @ayushagrawal33466 ай бұрын

    @frasercain The one video that absolutely opened up a different world of astronomy for me was the star party with you and trevor jones a couple of years back. When do you think you could do something like that again? Also, it would be really cool if you could get someone from the southern hemisphere along with you two

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    6 ай бұрын

    I really want to again. It's on my medium-term list. I'm going to get a new telescope setup and get Trevor's advice. :-)

  • @aaronpettigrew9674
    @aaronpettigrew96746 ай бұрын

    Risa: Asteroid mining made me think of another question about it: wouldn't the first and most practical use of the concept be to smelt them into materials, and eventually forms that could be used to make larger and more functional space stations, and perhaps even science vessels that could further be used for better exploration of the rest of the solar system? Even if it were to only start out as frame and support pieces, allowing us to only need to send up lighter and more intricate supplies, which can only be manufactured here on earth for now. Culminating into it being more of an engineering plan rather than being driven by profit. I could probably write up a more detailed idea for such a concept if you'd be interested.

  • @WilliamHostman
    @WilliamHostman6 ай бұрын

    For really good aurorae, visit Fairbanks, AK, in mid-winter. You'll suffer for it (temps hit the -20°F range regularly)... but the reds, blues, and oranges in it are absolutely worth it... occasionally. Farbanks denizens tend to become inured by over-exposure. If you're eligible for hops on USAF MAC flights, Eilson AFB is in the greater Fairbanks area....Nome and Barrow have better, but are much harder to get to. (lower light pollution.)

  • @michaelgian2649
    @michaelgian26496 ай бұрын

    Belos gets my vote this week. The use of our present technologies as explainers brings it home.

  • @chadr2604
    @chadr26045 ай бұрын

    I have only seen aurora once in Barrow AK. Going that far north completely screws up my internal clock almost beyond repair and I actually felt dizzy. Basically being close to earths rotation axis and looking at stars I could perceive earths rotation over several minutes. I had to go back in the hotel and lay down. It was very different than being near the tropics.

  • @MrRoddyRod
    @MrRoddyRod6 ай бұрын

    Hi Fraser! Awesome work. As an add-on note to your asteroide mining is not feasible. What people usually forget is that the asteroid is only worth a "quintillion dollars in precious metals" because these metals are rare. If you have a ready-steady, near infinite supply of them, They're not worth a quintillion dollars anymore. People on earth don't each consume a metric tone of platinum, gold and iridium... All of a sudden, you've destroyed the supposed value of your own product with an unrestricted supply, yet a restricted demand. No wonder these companies go bankrupt even before the takeoff. Who would invest in that?

  • @Gridl6
    @Gridl66 ай бұрын

    I totally agree about a total solar eclipse. Watched the last one from Nebraska. 2 minutes 41 seconds of totality. Street lights came on. Night time radio stations several hundred miles away came up out of nowhere and disappeared again a few minutes after totality. It was great.

  • @dannybell926

    @dannybell926

    6 ай бұрын

    Can you please shortly explain the thing about the radio stations? You have me curious now, thank you.

  • @sentientdesign295
    @sentientdesign2956 ай бұрын

    that was great, resonated with me a lot, what you said. 🌙

  • @abastein2000
    @abastein20006 ай бұрын

    Congrats on 400k subs! 🍺🍺🍻

  • @SlyG67
    @SlyG676 ай бұрын

    Thank-you soo much for your videos, great fun and soo interesting.

  • @Bitchslapper316
    @Bitchslapper3166 ай бұрын

    Thanks Fraser, looking forward to listening to this. The other day I watched your episode talking about antimatter propulsion but can't seem to find the video again. Was it taken down? I thought it was a new upload but maybe it was an older interview I watched?

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    6 ай бұрын

    It seemed to violate the laws of physics, so I need to investigate more deeply.

  • @Bitchslapper316

    @Bitchslapper316

    6 ай бұрын

    @@frasercain Thanks for the reply. I thought I was going crazy.

  • @bbbl67
    @bbbl676 ай бұрын

    9:51 I think the secret to profitable asteroid mining is to couple it up with space manufacturing too, where you take space factories upto asteroids and build stuff up there which stay up there. For example making space ships in space factories. The space ships can then bring pre-manufactured goods from the asteroids to Earth. Such as the spaceships themselves. Then the cost of transporting things in space will plummet astronomically.

  • @aalhard
    @aalhard6 ай бұрын

    Of course, 38:00 Look for PFAS , forever chemicals are the calling card and perhaps also, The Great Filter.😮

  • @RichUniverse_
    @RichUniverse_6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for posting my question ❤ I changed my logo - It’s Rich Universe.

  • @Zane1414
    @Zane14146 ай бұрын

    We have the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory located in Sudbury Ontario Canada. It was located in a mine around 2100m underground and used heavy water to detect neutrinos passing through. It shut down 2006 and not sure why.

  • @krakhedd
    @krakhedd6 ай бұрын

    I feel a little bit like it's 1987 again and I'm in 2nd grade hearing about the imminent end of oil (20-30 years tops, we were told) when I say this: There will come a time when our economically accessible minerals run out, and asteroids may well be our only option for new deposits which are economically accessible. Especially with a Moon base and space elevators, I could see not only industrial but consumer purposes for either mining in situ, or taking a long-game approach, decades, and sending a mission to bring an asteroid near Earth for mining

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA6 ай бұрын

    Seen a few eclipses, and watched them with a welding helmet, though I did have to use a range of 3 of varying density, as the denser ones were less useful as totality approached, but the view was great, even without a telescope or binoculars.

  • @CaptainAhorn
    @CaptainAhorn6 ай бұрын

    Regarding the issue of “adding hydrogen to a star”, the main issue is convection. White dwarfs are believed to be fully convective, meaning they circulate all their hydrogen through the core areas and eventually burn nearly all of it. This is part of why they’s so long-lived. A star like the Sun is not fully convective, and a significant chunk of usable hydrogen never reaches the core where it could be fused into helium. This extra hydrogen ends up being mostly expelled during the red giant phase of stellar evolution. So adding hydrogen to the sun wouldn’t work. If anything could work, it would be either removing mass from the sun so that fusion slows down and the sun’s life is extended (i.e. turning a G-type star into a much longer-lived but smaller K-type star) OR finding a way to stir more of the hydrogen to the core in a controlled manner. Regarding an M-type red dwarf, it seems possible to extend its life by adding mass at a controlled rate that equalled its rate of expenditure. If you add too much you will simply increase its mass, increase its hydrogen consumption rate, and decrease its lifespan. However, this might be desirable if increasing the mass and increasing the luminosity (while decreasing the lifespan) makes an otherwise frozen star system habitable.

  • @NIL0S
    @NIL0S6 ай бұрын

    About asteroid mining... What if financial cost was not an object? What if we just want the resources for some megaproject? Monetary cost must be only considered if taking for granted that the current economic system will last forever. I highly doubt that will be the case.

  • @stevens-universe
    @stevens-universe6 ай бұрын

    I've got a quick space question, but I don't know if you've ever answered it before. Mars has Olympus Mons, and some of the moons of the gas giants have cliffs up to 20km, but Earth only has Everest. How relatively smooth would a super Earth type exoplanet and/or is there a limit to how high a mountain could get given the higher gravity?

  • @johnfruh
    @johnfruh6 ай бұрын

    Fraser, back in Feb, you explained that we knew about spinning black holes because of frame dragging. My question has to do with frame dragging. So, here goes... Can frame dragging also happen directly into a black hole? If so, and space falls into a black hole (e.g. like the flowing river model of spacetime going over a waterfall/event horizon), how is the spacetime lost to the black hole replenished?

  • @peterclarke3020
    @peterclarke30206 ай бұрын

    Risa - Yes, the only material ‘worth’ bringing back to Earth, will be ‘scientific samples’. But even much of that could be performed remotely. So such ‘remote samples’ would be mainly for vanity purposes - like I can imagine them in museums. Although they would be more likely inside labs somewhere. In-situ use is definitely the way it would go.

  • @mikh9202
    @mikh92026 ай бұрын

    A meteor sounds like the screeching roar of a fighter jet, with crackling and popping as bits come off it. I had a close encounter with one in 86.

  • @kengill9367
    @kengill93676 ай бұрын

    Thank you love your show 🎉

  • @supersaiyanfife
    @supersaiyanfife6 ай бұрын

    Couldn't agree more about total solar eclipse. The moment it goes dark it is so eerie; you almost feel like you're in 2001: A Space Odyssey or something. I am hoping to make the 2024 one, but not looking great sadly. Glad I got in the 2017 one.

  • @blogsfred3187
    @blogsfred31876 ай бұрын

    Question: does black hole frame dragging slow rotation?

  • @kadourimdou43
    @kadourimdou436 ай бұрын

    34:07 vote for Cheleb that is a good list. Q. Red Dwarfs have high energy flares, and would require a planet to be nearer. More massive Stars only last a few million years, so not enough time for complex life. So what is the mass range for a star that is best for complex or intelligent life. For example would 70% solar mass to say 20% more massive be ok. Do we know?

  • @bbbenj
    @bbbenj6 ай бұрын

    Thanks a lot 😊

  • @drwaynebuck
    @drwaynebuck6 ай бұрын

    A question about rocky asteroids that has always puzzled me: what kind of rock are they made of? Igneous, metamorphic or sedimentary? I can't see how gas, dust or even small grains of material could come together in the small volume of a typical asteroid to produce volcanoes (igneous), enough pressure and heat (metamorphic) or water/wind movement (sedimentary). Maybe "rock" when it comes to asteroids is just a misnomer? Thanks for all the great content!

  • @nerufer
    @nerufer6 ай бұрын

    [Cait] Hello Frasier, my question: is it feasable for an advanced civilisation to redirect asteroids to, for example, give spin to a tidally locked planet / moon? What kind of speed/mass are we talking about? Also, on this note, what was the impact of previous large asteroid collisions on earth when it comes to rotation speed and maybe even orbital distance to the sun? Like for example the asteroid that killed the dino's. Thanks!

  • @adamtschupp9825
    @adamtschupp98256 ай бұрын

    Since black holes are the absolute best way to get energy from matter, could we search for advanced civilizations by their black hole power plants? What would that even look like? Do we even have the technology to see it?

  • @dondaniels127
    @dondaniels1276 ай бұрын

    Frailer, as an airline pilot I had a rather unique experience of flying UNDER the northern lights while on the polar routes from Chicago or Washington DC to China. It was very much like flying under Virga, very beautiful but probably getting nuked at the time. Wish cameras were better back then, my current Samsung S-23 Ultra takes good hi-res night astronomy photos, my flip phone at the time was not up to the task.

  • @duncanbeggs4088
    @duncanbeggs40886 ай бұрын

    The JWST data on the Trappist-1c atmosphere just ruled out a thick CO2 atmosphere. It does not have the spectral sensitivity to detect a thinner atmosphere nor a thicker one with nitrogen, abiotic oxygen and several other gasses that are thought to be common around Red Dwarf planets.

  • @ayushagrawal3346
    @ayushagrawal33466 ай бұрын

    @frasercain A question for q&a, Wouldnt it appear from the center of the great attractor that nearby galaxies are moving towards you and the galaxies further away are moving away from you which would contradict the inflation and big bang theory from that point of view

  • @mrln247
    @mrln2476 ай бұрын

    On starting/prolonging stars one of the other podcasts either Event Horizon or Cool Words, covered aome astro engineering for uplifting mass from a star to prolong it's life and engineer a steady brightness it might have been uplifting Helium as pretty sure it was the daughter (to borrow the fission term) products that you want to remove

  • @triskeliand
    @triskeliand6 ай бұрын

    Set up a neutrino observatory on one of our distant icy moons/sub/planets

  • @jjchouinard2327
    @jjchouinard23276 ай бұрын

    Hey Fraser! What would be the minimum mass/distance of moon to a planet that would create enough tidal forces on the planet to maintain a liquid core and therefore a magnetic field? (Mars: asking for a friend.)

  • @jamesfowley4114
    @jamesfowley41146 ай бұрын

    Cheleb I saw a ring eclipse, about 90-95%. It was a really thin ring. A few stars were visible, but it wasn't like a sunset darkness. I saw a really good aurora when I was a kid. Northern Wisconsin, and I'll try to see one again, but the wonder of seeing one at seven years old or so will be hard to match.

  • @EinsteinsHair

    @EinsteinsHair

    6 ай бұрын

    There will be a total eclipse crossing part of the US in April 2024. Learned about it when looking up the recent annular eclipse. A NASA web page had a map of the tracks. There was a region outside San Antonio, Texas which would be near the center of both tracks, if weather permitted viewing.

  • @seansarmast3355
    @seansarmast33556 ай бұрын

    Hey Frasier…you talked about how gas giants if they get big enough become brown dwarfs etc but what is the lower limit for a gaseous planet? I.e. how small can they get before they’re not planetable? Thanks!

  • @jarirepo1172
    @jarirepo11726 ай бұрын

    Here's a question: What would be good starting equipment to look at our planets, the moon etc? My sons birthday is soon and he seems interested in space and everything in it and I too would love to get to (literally) look some of it myself. Probably nothing too expensive or technical at first I guess but what would you get?

  • @michaeltumey7756
    @michaeltumey77566 ай бұрын

    I've seen aurora's in Illinois, though it's rare. I lived in Alaska for 5.5 years and one night in Fairbanks, I saw the most incredible auroras in my life. I saw a spoked wheel (without the outer circle wheel) rotating in the sky...

  • @theoptimisticskeptic

    @theoptimisticskeptic

    6 ай бұрын

    I've seem them once, in upsate NY in the Finger Lakes region. It was a rare event, but it was almost no colors at all just shades of grey and white. We were told that was because of how far south we were. This was around 1989-90, I'd guess. Of course it was also at a Rainbow Gathering and it was also the last time I ever dropped acid but the Aurora was actually real, at first we thought it was fireworks, then the acid. But then other people who were not on acid started seeing it too. So we knew it was real. So the one time I've seen them I was also tripping, it was pretty awesome! (edited to try to get the dates correct)

  • @jeffmathers355
    @jeffmathers3556 ай бұрын

    Hey Fraser another question just popped into my head! Do astronomers have a good idea about how much total mass is in the Kuiper Belt and Ort Cloud? Is there a New Horizons 2 being planned to learn more? Thanks!

  • @NathanaelNewton
    @NathanaelNewton6 ай бұрын

    I follow website from a hm radio operator in Cornwall, Ontario called solarham for space wather news and technical details. I don't think he has an app that gives notifications, but I used to have Twitter notifications for him before that went south..

  • @HPA97
    @HPA976 ай бұрын

    [Vulcan] Would it be possible to align mirrors in some dyson sphere manner that we could heat up some of the planets/moons further out in the solar system, I.e. heat up Titan, Europa, etc...?

  • @ashleyobrien4937
    @ashleyobrien49376 ай бұрын

    Okay, how about this- we send a manned mission to Psyche and they set up a mass driver, solar or nuclear powered or both, the mass driver takes material from the asteroid and flings it into space, with the goal being to change the orbit of the asteroid, we bring the asteroid to us, maybe even get it to orbit the earth at say 50,000 kilometers. The amount of material required to do this will only be a miniscule amount of it's total mass.

  • @vincentclark5739
    @vincentclark57396 ай бұрын

    Bro, only 10 million of the 40 quintillion black holes are in our galaxy?! I can never wrap my head around the size of the observable universe

  • @MelindaGreen
    @MelindaGreen6 ай бұрын

    If you get close to merging black holes spinning in the right frequency range but not so close for it to be a danger, there is a region where you will literally hear the gravitational waves coming through empty space as they gently push and pull on your eardrums.

  • @takanara7

    @takanara7

    6 ай бұрын

    That's an interesting question. It's also a question of whether or not the gravitational waves would cause regular acoustic waves in the air, and also if they would be directly detectable by your eardrums or w/e.

  • @oznerriznick2474
    @oznerriznick24746 ай бұрын

    Excellent discussion! Why would you bring resources back from asteroids? Send a swarm of autonomous ai agent entities capable of analysis, extraction, processing, manufacture and building structures in place to accommodate future visits from biological lifeforms. Imagine how much they could tell us long before we set foot on them.

  • @terminusest5902
    @terminusest59026 ай бұрын

    What impact may Gereration 4 fission reactors have on space exploration.

  • @JD-mm4ub
    @JD-mm4ub6 ай бұрын

    Hi Fraser, My question is, why are Aurora’s mostly green? And what causes the other colors? Thank you ever so much! JD

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden00406 ай бұрын

    Coyld darkmatter be drom photons and neuyrinos having miniscu;e mass greater than zweo?

  • @Yonko_W
    @Yonko_W6 ай бұрын

    In my high school physics class, i learned that there is a Gravitational constant, and that it is everywhere. Now my question is how do we know if the constant is Gravitational waves or not. If not, then whats is it?

  • @EinsteinsHair

    @EinsteinsHair

    6 ай бұрын

    A constant is just a number, not a thing. There is a constant, about 2.2, to switch between pounds and kilograms. Multiply it times kilograms or divide it into pounds. Newton's Gravitational constant is the same everywhere and, using the right equations, can be used to convert to force or acceleration if you know mass and distance. Hope this answers the question.

  • @AndersWelander
    @AndersWelander6 ай бұрын

    You have some great questions here. I wonder about your claim regarding a light year of lead. Do you really mean it? I guess I could look up the cross section for neutrino capture if it is known.

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    6 ай бұрын

    snews.bnl.gov/popsci/neutrino.html

  • @eneslem
    @eneslem6 ай бұрын

    Hey Fraser! Sorry if this question has already been answered. I have been wondering about this for a while. If you took a bowling ball and a golf ball to the ISS and put them in a vacuum, could you get them to orbit? What would this look like? How fast would the orbit be?

  • @NovaDeb
    @NovaDeb6 ай бұрын

    " Ruined Sci-Fi Christmas." LOL 😂

  • @ZionistWorldOrder
    @ZionistWorldOrder6 ай бұрын

    what pleasant respite it is from all the death and suffering to dream away about the future here for some minutes

  • @cykkm
    @cykkm6 ай бұрын

    I didn't grok the model for the mass of Psyche (16:00). From gravity interactions with other asteroids, it seems possible to calculate only mass ratios, unless absolute masses of these asteroids are known, but then we're back at the square one. Can anyone explain to me like I have a degree in physics please?

  • @ewmegoolies
    @ewmegoolies6 ай бұрын

    Wow 40 quintillion black holes in the observable universe! If each black hole produces a universe inside of itself that's just incredible. I mean it would be really cool if universes existed inside black holes.

  • @dustman96
    @dustman966 ай бұрын

    What kind of information can you get from gravitation wave observations? Do gravitational waves "redshift"?

  • @kengill9367
    @kengill93676 ай бұрын

    I think one of your shows got pulled or is missing the one on a antimatter drive?

  • @ferenclucas2842
    @ferenclucas28426 ай бұрын

    Question I missed asking before: if the 4th dimension is theorized as being what we experience as linear time then would a being living in the fourth dimension experience time like we do in the fifth dimension and so on? Could the 1+ dimension always be a phenomenon like time for us?

  • @garetclaborn

    @garetclaborn

    6 ай бұрын

    hmmm I wouldn't say that they "would" so much as they "could". There are different theories of how time could be similar to (or the same as) spatial dimension, even some theories that suggest we have fewer spatial dimensions than we think. We don't really know from experiment. It is really more that what we experience in time can be modeled as a 4th dimension, rather than being the 4th dimension. Meaning we can represent it that way, but that's not the only possible representation. Still, in the right theory yes a 4 dimensional being could experience 5th dimensional time.

  • @Zurround
    @Zurround6 ай бұрын

    On the topic of "reigniting a dying star" there is a science fiction movie filmed back in the early 2000s called SUNSHINE about exactly that. It was an awful movie. Season 3 (I think, took place after the destruction of the comet empire) of the anime TV series STAR BLAZERS dealt with the Gamelons, who went from being villains to allies, helping reignite Earth's dying sun

  • @daverobert7927
    @daverobert79276 ай бұрын

    Love your work. Thankyou From Aussie "42" Dave

  • @illogique7883
    @illogique78836 ай бұрын

    question: does the sun and sagittarius a* have lagrange point?

  • @cykkm
    @cykkm6 ай бұрын

    Kinds of black holes (18:00) from the theoretical POV. There are a couple of theorems about _theoretical_ black holes-GR is maths-heavy-which we probably should assume hold true in the physical world, since GR haven't failed us in any observation yet. One proves that the only 3 possible observables of a _stationary_ (not evolving it time) black hole are its: 1) mass; 2) angular momentum, i.e. amount of rotation and 3) electric charge. No one believes that charged BHs exist: charges attract and repel very strongly, and there's enough free-floating charges in space that a charged BH would quickly attract enough of the opposite charges to equilibrate to net zero charge. A possible exception would be a non-stellar BH (like a primordial one from the Big Bang, which are unobserved, but theoretically plausible) that ended up in a deep void with practically no gas, but there is no mechanism that could leave them charged. Neither can stellar collapse, obviously-stars are electrically neutral. Astronomical BH are indeed _not_ evolving in time for the purpose of this theorem: accretion of an Earth mass a second by a BH is still too slow an evolution, and can be ignored. The time scale at which BH may not be considered stationary is on the order of 10 milliseconds for a 100 Msun BH. This takes us to the ringdown of a BH after a merger of two BHs. It cannot be approximated by a stationary solution. The ringdown is the process that stabilises a BH: the traveling wave component on the surface of the BH radiates enormous energy as gravitational waves (radial component, i.e. symmetric pulsation, doesn't radiate GW, but the whole wave decays eventually, in 20ms or so). The theorem on ringdown proves that the ringing post-merger BH may only converge to either Schwarzschild or Kerr stationary solution, the former describing a non-rotating, latter a rotating uncharged BH. Non-rotating BH must be a rarity. So I'd say there are only two “types” of physical BH, as we understand and observe, both electrically uncharged: 1) stationary, characterised by only mass and spin (two BHs of the same mass and spin are entirely identical) and 2) perturbed and ringing during, and ringing down after a merger, which exist for a short time, on the order of tens of milliseconds, which quickly shed the excitation energy by emitting GW and turn into type (1). They are still very important, despite short lifetime, as this is the one which produces the GW that we measure with LIGO and friends.

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    6 ай бұрын

    Do you think the ring down phase can tell us anything about the interior of the event horizon?

  • @cykkm

    @cykkm

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@frasercain I don't think they do. These are, after all, solutions to the same fully classical GR EFE-and all LIGO models are based on them, we don't "see" more in GW than the best fit of raw data to the theoretical model. It's an extremely weak signal; it is real magic that we can detect it at all. But in the end, the waveform is discarded if it deviates from the model too much. AFAIK, there was not even a suspected systematic deviation from theory, people are looking at the marginally discarded data indeed, and the residuals are just random. And according to GR, there is no matter inside, except for the central singularity. Rotating, and especially merging and ringing BH are more geometrically interesting that the plain old Schwarzschild solution (the Kerr singularity is ring-shaped, for one, but still has a non-physical zero volume), but it's still geometry of empty space.

  • @bertrand1289
    @bertrand12896 ай бұрын

    What about non rotating black hole or electrically charged black hole?

  • @MakeAMark
    @MakeAMark6 ай бұрын

    I understand the Planetary Nebula leave behind white dwarf stars, which you point out are the exposed core of the dying star. As an astrophotographer, Planetary Nebula are a favorite targets to shoot. Since Type 1A supernova events require a white dwarf and a companion feeding it hydrogen, are you aware of any visible (photographically) planetary nebula which are also supernova remnants?

  • @ivorcogdell8483
    @ivorcogdell84836 ай бұрын

    Hi Fraser, A question. Why are Martian landers not designed with rotating solar panels, so that they can self clean the dust that gets on them or have them on all vertical surfaces? I realise weight is a factor so add gearing to the axle of rotation. Thanks for a great podcast.

  • @douglaswilkinson5700

    @douglaswilkinson5700

    6 ай бұрын

    The regolith adheres to the solar panels by static electricity. Turning them vertically would not cause it to fall off.

  • @agentdarkboote
    @agentdarkboote6 ай бұрын

    Isn't there a constant precipitation of dead organic matter near the bottom of the ocean? Wouldn't this be bad for a neutrino observatory?

  • @Michel613
    @Michel6136 ай бұрын

    Andoria was the best for me.

  • @hansleeuw2840
    @hansleeuw28406 ай бұрын

    Should not more observatories also optical be built on both the North and South pole purely from the perspective of directions in the Universe / Galaxy that we now look at through a lot of (warm) atmosphere?

  • @MistSoalar
    @MistSoalar6 ай бұрын

    Cheleb. Only one left for me! Will travel to Buffalo, NY for total eclipse.

  • @senorvillarruel8129
    @senorvillarruel81296 ай бұрын

    Hello from California

  • @HughPryor
    @HughPryorАй бұрын

    What's the best resolution we're going to get for neutrino photographs or 'neutrinographs'??

  • @JMHGlass
    @JMHGlass6 ай бұрын

    Speaking of harvesting asteroids ... What about when manufacturing has moved into space? Like to build habitats or ships, and there just happens to be a huge asteroid thats 90% iron. Wouldnt it be cheaper to harvest that opposed to bringing it up from earth?

  • @mister_r447
    @mister_r4476 ай бұрын

    For asteroid mining, Kurzgesagt made a video and they included the possibility of redirecting an asteroids orbit towards earth's orbit where it would be mined. Wouldn't that be cheaper?

  • @arnerood690
    @arnerood6906 ай бұрын

    Abouth asteroid mining, would it make sence to make solar panels on the moon and beam the power to earth? (you could also beam it to low orbit space stations but theirs probably not enough of them at the moment)

  • @cjnthn
    @cjnthn6 ай бұрын

    never heard of the ice cube observatory

  • @disinclinedto-state9485
    @disinclinedto-state94856 ай бұрын

    Hi, Fraser and team. Neutrinos are so difficult to detect... How did we ever know to look for them?

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    6 ай бұрын

    They were predicted when people did the math of hydrogen fusion. There should be leftover particles.

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