Evolving Dark Energy // JAXA's Moon Rover for NASA // Eclipse Experience

Ғылым және технология

New measurements show dark energy may be evolving, Japan is joining Artemis with a pressurized rover, why the Moon has two different faces, and my experience with the total solar eclipse.
🦄 Support us on Patreon:
/ universetoday
📚 Suggest books in the book club:
/ universe-today-book-club
00:00 Intro
00:16 Dark Energy might be evolving
www.universetoday.com/166508/...
04:44 JAXA's Moon rover
www.nasa.gov/news-release/nas...
06:52 Moon's two different halves
www.universetoday.com/166588/...
08:57 Ice-melting probe
www.universetoday.com/166548/...
10:51 Vote results
• Vera Rubin's Big Miles...
11:24 Rainbows on exoplanets
www.universetoday.com/166535/...
13:21 Small black hole
www.universetoday.com/166566/...
14:30 Solar eclipse 2024
www.universetoday.com/166596/...
16:44 Two cool videos
www.universetoday.com/166612/...
18:24 Even more space news
19:09 JAXA is so cool
Host: Fraser Cain
Producer: Anton Pozdnyakov
Editing: Artem Pozdnyakov
📰 EMAIL NEWSLETTER
Read by 70,000 people every Friday. Written by Fraser. No ads.
Subscribe Free: universetoday.com/newsletter
🎧 PODCASTS
Universe Today: universetoday.fireside.fm/
Astronomy Cast: www.astronomycast.com/
🤳 OTHER SOCIAL MEDIA
Mastodon: astrodon.social/@fcain
Twitter: / fcain
Twitter: / universetoday
Facebook: / universetoday
Instagram: / universetoday
📩 CONTACT FRASER
frasercain@gmail.com
⚖️ LICENSE
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
You are free to use my work for any purpose you like, just mention me as the source and link back to this video.

Пікірлер: 286

  • @m.branson4785
    @m.branson4785Ай бұрын

    I'm a simple man. I hear the words "baryonic acoustic oscillations", and I click like.

  • @michaeljames5936

    @michaeljames5936

    Ай бұрын

    I'm a complex person. I see someone writing 'Baryonic Acoustic Oscillations' in the comments and I click 'reply'...and 'like'.

  • @holographicman

    @holographicman

    Ай бұрын

    I'm observant. If if see people liking and replying about baryonic acoustic oscillations, i observe and like and reply

  • @michaeljames5936

    @michaeljames5936

    Ай бұрын

    @@holographicman New evidence is coming in all the time, but (and this is hypothesis only at this early stage.), but it appears that, even a reply to a comment, about Baryonic Acoustic Oscillations, which itself contains the words BAO (in full) 'causes?' me to like and reply. Science moves quickly.

  • @JamesCairney

    @JamesCairney

    Ай бұрын

    Im arrogant, I see "baryonic acoustic oscillations and think "I have a theory!" Im probably wrong, though my arrogance says I'm right.

  • @debranelson1987

    @debranelson1987

    Ай бұрын

    @@JamesCairney I'm musically inclined and when I see Baryonic Acoustic Oscillations, I think when is the next album due out...😎

  • @eristhekerbal2294
    @eristhekerbal2294Ай бұрын

    I recently found you, Frasier, and your channel, plus Universe Today, has reignited my passion for space and astrophysics

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    Ай бұрын

    Oh great, that's amazing to hear. :-)

  • @eristhekerbal2294

    @eristhekerbal2294

    Ай бұрын

    @@frasercain I’m currently teaching myself calculus so I can go back to college for physics

  • @mrbamfo5000

    @mrbamfo5000

    Ай бұрын

    ​@eristhekerbal2294 How's that working our? Seems like if you're going back to college anyway, just take a calculus class.

  • @eristhekerbal2294

    @eristhekerbal2294

    Ай бұрын

    @@mrbamfo5000 I’m currently working in a factory full time and I don’t have the time nor the money for college classes, so teaching myself with textbooks and online resources is much cheaper and easier for me at the moment

  • @MichaelWinter-ss6lx

    @MichaelWinter-ss6lx

    Ай бұрын

    @eristhekerbal2294, remember what Frank Zappa once said: If you want to get laid, go to collage, but if you want to learn, visit the library! That was years ahead of www. 🚀🏴‍☠️🎸

  • @ACMichler
    @ACMichlerАй бұрын

    Id love to hear an interview with someone at JAXA about thier diffrent approach to space missions than western space agencies.

  • @mt-mg7tt
    @mt-mg7ttАй бұрын

    I must say the Toyota branding of the Japanese pressurised rover made me smile. You just know it will be reliable. Just a bit expensive if you break a tail-light or headlight moulding :-) .

  • @BIGREDDOG09
    @BIGREDDOG09Ай бұрын

    we got lucky with the total eclipse as well, cloud coverage completely disappeared right before it started. Blessed to have the opportunity to watch one without having to travel anywhere!

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneidАй бұрын

    I can't believe this was your first solar eclipse! I was lucky enough to have caught the 1999 solar eclipse and it really was an indescribable moment.

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    Ай бұрын

    We had clouds in 2017.

  • @billmiller8945
    @billmiller8945Ай бұрын

    Mr. Cain's channel is the Mr. Rogers Neighborhood of Astronomy. Always respectful, no inapproriate innuendos and always family friendly. Can anyone come up with something as catchy as "It's a Beautiful Day in the Neighbood" kind of jingle for him. Mr. Cain, we all grew up with Fred Rogers and you are in good company. Thank you.

  • @cuteswan
    @cuteswanАй бұрын

    Just what Fraser has always wanted: reaction wheels that break even more easily… 😜

  • @howaboutataste
    @howaboutatasteАй бұрын

    I'm down for an RV trip across the Moon. It'd be even better with a lunar orbiter that looked like the Winnebago from Space Balls.

  • @absalomdraconis

    @absalomdraconis

    Ай бұрын

    Suggest it to Musk, I'm sure that he'd be up for commissioning a plushie of the Eagle 5 as a zero-gee detector (or whatever that phrase is).

  • @GadZookz
    @GadZookzАй бұрын

    Some emergency lunar pogo sticks should be onboard the moon rover so the astronauts could bounce their way back to base amp in case the rover gets stuck on the far side. 🤔

  • @snezzles278

    @snezzles278

    Ай бұрын

    and a cell phone to film it with

  • @JilynnFurlet

    @JilynnFurlet

    Ай бұрын

    @@snezzles278 With an 8K camera.

  • @joeymillette5870
    @joeymillette5870Ай бұрын

    Having witnessed the 2017 eclipse in Hopkinsville Kentucky with my sons it was a no brainer that we travelled to Southern Ontario from Sudbury for the eclipse. Friends of mine from Hamilton joined us and with the weather forecast not looking so great we headed further south and found a ball park in Selkirk. I had planned to take video of totality but due to a camera failure on arrival I found myself absorbing the view with my own eyes the entire time. I regret nothing! Eclipse chasing is a great excuse to travel.

  • @MCsCreations
    @MCsCreationsАй бұрын

    Thanks for all the news, Fraser! 😊 Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊

  • @MCsCreations
    @MCsCreationsАй бұрын

    Fraser, I have a bad feeling about Moon rovers with AI... I hope none of them have Hal9000 installed. 😬

  • @billmullins6833

    @billmullins6833

    Ай бұрын

    As long as they don't try to make the AI lie it should be okay. That's what drove Hal around the bend.

  • @LouisianaAstroRambler
    @LouisianaAstroRamblerАй бұрын

    The eclipse was amazing.. I got the chance to experience up in the Ozark mountains in northwest Arkansas.. I'm just mad at myself for recording video only, when I should've taken a few pictures as well since my phone tends to take higher quality photos compared to videos.. Now all I've got is a bunch of grainy videos and screen shots lol.

  • @aureaphilos
    @aureaphilosАй бұрын

    I totally agree with your emotions during the solar eclipse! For me, experiencing totality (2m20s at Vergennes, Vermont) was one of the greatest experiences of my life; right up there with reaching my first Rocky Mountain summit (11,600 ft), descending to the 6350 ft level in the Homestake Gold Mine (Lead SD), watching a NASA rocket launch from the VIP viewing area at Cape Kennedy; riding one of the new TGV high-speed trains in France, in 1982 (256 km/h). I don't think Iceland's infrastructure will be handle the influx of as many tourists coming as came to Vermont for this eclipse (estimated at 160,000), so I might head for Barcelona, Spain. Great show! Packed with lots of fascinating segments... as always! Thanks Fraser!

  • @EMichaelBall

    @EMichaelBall

    Ай бұрын

    Be aware that Barcelona, itself will be outside of totality. Valencia will be in it. Gijón will be in it (it’s not as sunny as Valencia, though you can visit the museum Fernando Alonso designed for himself). Going inland away from the coasts should on paper get you the best views. Well, there is Majorca, but that’s expensive…

  • @Eamenic1
    @Eamenic1Ай бұрын

    FRASER!!!! I drove from Austin to central AR to see the eclipse because the TX weather had me very very worried. So glad you got to see it!!!!

  • @snezzles278
    @snezzles278Ай бұрын

    I'm so happy you got a good view of the eclipse! :)

  • @olorin4317
    @olorin4317Ай бұрын

    Nice week for space news. Thanks Fraser.

  • @mypridemonth
    @mypridemonthАй бұрын

    Absolutely love JAXA and their collaboration with NASA. Nippon!! 😍🎌

  • @heaslyben
    @heaslybenАй бұрын

    Nice! That's awesome the weather worked out 😎

  • @mikemann2053
    @mikemann2053Ай бұрын

    That was a great ep thanks Fraser.

  • @billmullins6833
    @billmullins6833Ай бұрын

    Regarding a Japanese astronaut becoming the first non-American to go to the moon. At the rate NASA is moving with Artemis, the Chinese will already have a base established and 1,000 people living and working there!

  • @IMBlakeley

    @IMBlakeley

    Ай бұрын

    Hopefully the competition will once again spur on the space race.

  • @billmullins6833

    @billmullins6833

    Ай бұрын

    @@IMBlakeley With as bureaucratically hide bound and rigid as today's NASA is I doubt it.

  • @charleslaurice
    @charleslauriceАй бұрын

    I’m on the edge of my seat every single time I watch your video . Thank you so much from the Philippines 🇵🇭

  • @Wrbps2000
    @Wrbps2000Ай бұрын

    Took my my kids and partner to see the eclipse. It really was amazing

  • @caerdwyn7467
    @caerdwyn7467Ай бұрын

    We should just outright give Chandra to JAXA. They can handle it. We can't, apparently.

  • @EMichaelBall

    @EMichaelBall

    Ай бұрын

    Elon can buy it.

  • @estraume
    @estraumeАй бұрын

    I live in Iceland, and I plan to watch the eclipse, however, I think the weather statistics for Spain might be more favorable for successful observation.

  • @AdamosDad
    @AdamosDadАй бұрын

    This was my second total eclipse, in beautiful weather. I feel blessed.

  • @markmarkmark08
    @markmarkmark08Ай бұрын

    Thanks for another great content

  • @jt9602
    @jt9602Ай бұрын

    Great stuff as always, thanks for all your hard work space bites! So many channels are just clickbait trash with clips of things that have nothing to do with the content.

  • @coulie27
    @coulie27Ай бұрын

    Most excellent! First time seeing the shadow cross from space! Always wanted to see it so I made my own simulation, the real thing is so cool

  • @richmon78
    @richmon78Ай бұрын

    For the SLUSH mission, I hope they include similar detectors as used to listen to whale sounds in the ocean. It would make sense that if something evolved in an ocean world, then it would have evolved to use such a convenient method of communication as liquid reverberations.

  • @privateerburrows
    @privateerburrowsАй бұрын

    I never heard of Kheops; how is that possible? Kheops should be all over the news and the internet.

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    Ай бұрын

    Cheops. www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Cheops The mission has been around for a few years.

  • @TheEducat0r
    @TheEducat0rАй бұрын

    From evolving dark energy mysteries to lunar rover collaborations, this video has it all!

  • @markanderson3740
    @markanderson3740Ай бұрын

    Glad you caught the eclipse. I found myself halfway up the coast of New Brunswick with a perfect sky and 15C. On a concrete pier, which showed the ripples perfectly when you looked down. Worth the 10 drive, 3 up and 7 back. Strangely half the population of Nova Scotia was driving back at the same time on the same road.

  • @e.palpatine2464
    @e.palpatine2464Ай бұрын

    Thanks Fraser.

  • @tomschmidt381
    @tomschmidt381Ай бұрын

    We live in southern NH so were slightly out of the path of totality but my wife and I had fun viewing the eclipse with a pin-hole box. We were lucky as the weather was perfect.

  • @bbbenj
    @bbbenjАй бұрын

    Thanks a lot 😊

  • @HisBortness
    @HisBortnessАй бұрын

    I live right on the centerline of the eclipse in western NY. It has been a dream of my life to see a total solar eclipse. So, of course, it was totally overcast from horizon to horizon. But, this allowed for a very unique and unexpected experience: when viewing totality from underneath overcast skies, you can see the umbra shadow (and subsequently its endpoint and return to the penumbra) projected onto the cloud layer as it passes overhead. Pretty dramatic. This whole experience is basically gonna force me to fly to Australia in 2028. I need to see one in clear skies now.

  • @loomysh
    @loomyshАй бұрын

    i'm glad the dark energy is not this boring stuff everybody thought and that there are new things to learn about it. maybe we will be amazed

  • @alexjustalex_
    @alexjustalex_Ай бұрын

    I would have loved to hear comments on the solar flares all around the Sun during totality as well, it was amazing!

  • @sea-ferring
    @sea-ferringАй бұрын

    The 2028 eclipse is going to be in New Zealand too - jeez!

  • @scottangle3118
    @scottangle3118Ай бұрын

    I wonder if you replaced the batteries on the old lunar rovers at the Apollo sites if they would work today?

  • @unvergebeneid

    @unvergebeneid

    Ай бұрын

    I somehow doubt it. Those things sat in a vacuum for decades, with extreme temperature swings, a hash radiation environment, the regolith floating around and they were never engineered to withstand any of that. You should at least bring your soldering iron, some fresh lubricant, a new set of tires and a couple spare parts.

  • @dustindude4995
    @dustindude4995Ай бұрын

    Couldn't make it to the end; my vantage point for the eclipse was central Texas. I'm glad others had better equipment and views. I'll come back around to it when I can accept the sky isn't trying to hurt my feelings for the third time in a row

  • @alexisdespland4939
    @alexisdespland4939Ай бұрын

    what do you do with you eclispe glasses.

  • @bmwolgas
    @bmwolgasАй бұрын

    I got to view the eclipse from Ohio, and thankfully the skies were mostly clear. No photo or video adequately represents what it is like to see in person. The light from around the sun during totality was a lot brighter and whiter than I was expecting. Also, the few minutes before totality are interesting in that it is still fairly light outside even with only 1 percent of the sun coming through. That light though has a very strange look to it - to my eye its color temperature was a lot bluer than normal sunlight and it almost has an artificial look to it like somebody replaced the sun with a blueish-white headlight from a car.

  • @smeeself

    @smeeself

    Ай бұрын

    The fact that the edge of shadows get sharper near totality probably contributes to that strangeness.

  • @bonerici
    @bonericiАй бұрын

    My first total eclipse too. you can prepare all you want but if will still surprise you

  • @itsmodsiw
    @itsmodsiwАй бұрын

    love it!

  • @jasonboard572
    @jasonboard572Ай бұрын

    Hi Fraser glad you got to see the Ecliipse, I saw my eclipes in the UK back in 1999 under cloud ! Unrelated to your interesting eolving dark energy, is Am I wrong, but surly if they are going to catch the boster or Starship they must have stick out catching mounts of some sort, as there is no way you can catch just, on what looks like a ball joint off a trailor lifting points? Sorry for the disjointed question.

  • @Midatlanticriverrat
    @MidatlanticriverratАй бұрын

    hey... has anyone ever seen northern lights during an eclipse? because if the answer is no, then perhaps going to Iceland to see that eclipse might be awesome

  • @javaman4584

    @javaman4584

    Ай бұрын

    The eclipse is in August, and the aurora season starts in September. It's possible, but very, very unlikely.

  • @EMichaelBall

    @EMichaelBall

    Ай бұрын

    Iceland may have cloud cover. I hope it will be sunny.

  • @AdamosDad
    @AdamosDadАй бұрын

    The Moon has been our shield, another thing that makes it special.

  • @JAGzilla-ur3lh
    @JAGzilla-ur3lhАй бұрын

    Now we're going to need a road trip comedy movie about two astronauts with polar opposite personalities trying to get along while they spend thirty days on a long-range moon rover expedition.

  • @eneslem
    @eneslemАй бұрын

    Hey Fraser, Anton, in his video on the gravitational wave detection from the neutron star collision, said it was unknown what the 2nd objective was. You seemed confident that it was a black hole. So, do we actually know if it was a black hole?

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    Ай бұрын

    It's an object more massive than the most massive neutron star seen.

  • @Goatcha_M
    @Goatcha_MАй бұрын

    What happened to the pressurised rover they had in the 2000s that James May took for a drive? Was it just too heavy?

  • @dalwanir
    @dalwanirАй бұрын

    Hey Fraser, I was in Texas as well for Eclipse. I was delighted to see something that I never expected to see... prominences. Did you see that as well? Can you talk about it. I had never heard about it until I saw them and researched about them.

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    Ай бұрын

    Yup, down at the lower right was a huge one. I was surprised to see it too.

  • @ioanbota9397
    @ioanbota9397Ай бұрын

    I like this video its interestyng

  • @hatterson
    @hattersonАй бұрын

    Can gravitational wave detectors be "pointed" to certain areas of the sky like telescopes can be? Obviously for the ground based observatories we have now the arms can't be moved, but if you want to know if there's gravitational waves coming from a certain area of the universe is there anything you can do with the detector mechanisms to listen to or watch that area?

  • @paratracker
    @paratrackerАй бұрын

    A question for you (besides the one I added to Q&A 254). I've heard a lot of people saying that the total energy in the Universe is ZERO and that the negative energy of space is what balances the positive energy of matter (and presumably radiation) so we can end up at zero. The colossal energy of the Big Bang is offset by the vacuum energy of space, but Dark Energy is forcing space to expand, thereby creating more space (with more Dark Energy), so Conservation of Energy is invalid or just 'local' like General Relativity? What?

  • @duncanbeggs4088
    @duncanbeggs4088Ай бұрын

    Those are some big mountains for Dallas!

  • @DexLuther
    @DexLutherАй бұрын

    Couldn't a largish collision on the farside of the Moon cause a volcanic eruption on the near side? This would have had to be when the moon was more active (as I understand, the Moon's core is dead now). Kind of like how you make a baby burp by tapping it's back. EDIT: would have been cheaper for you to come see the eclipse here in Montreal. It was a nice sunny day, so I got to see it. It was really nice. It was kind of eclipse mania around here. It's all people talked about for a while leading up to it and a few days later. I think it was amazing if it gets people (especially kids) interested in science and space.

  • @simonkristensson3077
    @simonkristensson3077Ай бұрын

    Changes in what direction of the DE?

  • @LordPhobos6502
    @LordPhobos6502Ай бұрын

    Definitely want to hear more about those Europan squid! The melt probe sounds fascinating & promising... but how is it going to transmit data back through the ice???

  • @emotionice7967
    @emotionice7967Ай бұрын

    It would be very interesting to know if the acceleration of the universe is a steady, continuous acceleration or if it fluctuates and is sometimes stronger and sometimes weaker while maintaining an overall trend. Much of what we observe seems to have randomness sort of built-in. Of course, we could never say that it is continuous as long as we dont see any evidence against it because we might not be measuring it accurately enough to detect the fluctuations.

  • @RectalRooter
    @RectalRooterАй бұрын

    I'm pessimistic aboot a pressurized rover. I just can't see them being able to keep it light enough to be able to launch it to the moon. I do hope they do it.

  • @tyrport
    @tyrportАй бұрын

    Does dark energy have to be pushing out or could it be pulling out. Could the Big Bang be a big suck.

  • @EMichaelBall

    @EMichaelBall

    Ай бұрын

    I’ve thought similarly.

  • @w0ttheh3ll
    @w0ttheh3llАй бұрын

    That reminds me a lot of the rovers from The Martian. Seems like the moon has almost ideal conditions for off-roading in such a vehicle: no aero drag, low gravity, decent terrain, plenty of sunlight - one problem might be the long, cold nights.

  • @metatechnologist
    @metatechnologistАй бұрын

    So did the neutron star "fall in" or "collide" with the black hole??

  • @jacobjacob5735
    @jacobjacob5735Ай бұрын

    I was wondering if he fist stage of starship with the 33 engines behaves like one single engine when just looking at the thrust. Because there is also one single mach diamond created by all of those engines and they are also quite close to each other. Have there been any articles/ papers on that topic?

  • @anthempt3edits
    @anthempt3editsАй бұрын

    Toyotathon on the moon!

  • @GizzyDillespee

    @GizzyDillespee

    Ай бұрын

    I'd've blurred that out...

  • @hiramhill1305
    @hiramhill1305Ай бұрын

    Will you talk about the PACE Mission next week since it released its first data yesterday? You can now process it yourself. And NASA Ocean released pre-processed images on instagram. Or will you wait till they've released more data/images or discovered something?

  • @kx4532
    @kx4532Ай бұрын

    TOTALITY! 🌑

  • @adrianworley7060
    @adrianworley7060Ай бұрын

    On Patreon, for me at least, the video suddenly stops towards the end, but watching it on KZread, that is not the case.

  • @Kenneth.Walbum
    @Kenneth.WalbumАй бұрын

    Does anyone know how the pressure in the ocean on Europa compares to the pressure in the ocean on Earth?

  • @tuckfeem0834
    @tuckfeem0834Ай бұрын

    9:07, is an alignement of all the planets actually possible and what are the potential effects on earth?

  • @Shanghaimartin
    @ShanghaimartinАй бұрын

    I reeeeeaaaallllllyyyy hope they do an ice melting probe to Europa in my life time. Unsure if that'll happen though. Assuming normal health, I recon I got about 30-40 years left :(

  • @bonniebarton6061
    @bonniebarton6061Ай бұрын

    Hi Fraser, Why does everything in the galaxy just orbit around the giant black hole in the middle? Why haven’t they all fallen in to the black hole. Or is it due to time dilation that we just haven’t seen it yet, maybe everything has already fallen in to the center of the black hole? The objects orbiting closest to the black hole are traveling so fast that it looks to us like their time has stopped?

  • @CliveManns
    @CliveMannsАй бұрын

    Question: Do satellites transport heat from the day side of the Earth to the night side? If so, will large constellations of satellites have a measurable affect on that area of space/atmosphere?

  • @mattkeith530
    @mattkeith530Ай бұрын

    That's interesting that the heaviest gravity on the moon is on the far side. I would have thought the "heaviest" part would have been facing the earth and caused it to lock in place facing the earth. Question. Do we know why the far side is the densest ?

  • @derRoteKampfflieger

    @derRoteKampfflieger

    Ай бұрын

    I came to ask about that myself, thought I'd search for the answer first. That definitely seems counter intuitive. Have you found anything further on this?

  • @leonmusk1040
    @leonmusk1040Ай бұрын

    Plz tell me they call it a moon cruiser I'd go drive on the moon if I got to drive the new moon cruiser they need tape measure for longest jump on the moon :)

  • @loomysh
    @loomyshАй бұрын

    so next eclipse will be in spain and portugal? thats actually much closer for me from slovakia. so we'll meet there? :D it would be awesome to see it in person. but i would be bummed if the clouds didnt clear like in your case

  • @EMichaelBall

    @EMichaelBall

    Ай бұрын

    Burgos, Soria, and Calatayud should be fine. Nothing surefire like Mallorca, though.

  • @kelton5020
    @kelton5020Ай бұрын

    So what were the tentative results for dark energy?

  • @GrouchyHaggis
    @GrouchyHaggisАй бұрын

    If the far side has had more impacts and the far side crust is thicker, isn't it safe to assume that's why it's thicker?

  • @joaodecarvalho7012
    @joaodecarvalho701212 күн бұрын

    On the Moon, it must have something to do with tidal forces, as they coincide with tidal locking.

  • @edishdraws
    @edishdrawsАй бұрын

    Hey Fraisier i wonder how the slush probe will communicate and send data to earth beneath all that ice? Have they addressed this issue ?

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    Ай бұрын

    It unspools a fiber optic cable behind as it descends that connects to the surface.

  • @edishdraws

    @edishdraws

    Ай бұрын

    @@frasercain thanks for the response! I figured something like that but then I thought man thats about 100 km of cable youll have to take all the way to the outer solar system! Theres gotta be another way!

  • @BabaGanooy
    @BabaGanooyАй бұрын

    Theory: what if all these galaxies, stars and whatnot are just expelling material throughout the universe and we are detecting that as dark matter? Because it thins out so much through the universe it's not detectable at this time. It could also explain the expansion.

  • @NomadUniverse
    @NomadUniverseАй бұрын

    8:05 is basically Minmus. Did a double take thinking it actually was and someone put it in for fun.

  • @Djfmdotcom
    @DjfmdotcomАй бұрын

    DESI is probably the one I'm most excited for/focused on. It's going to be a game-changer for the study of dark matter/dark energy. Vera Rubin is a close second 👽

  • @frasercain

    @frasercain

    Ай бұрын

    DESI, Euclid, Vera Rubin and Nancy Grace Roman. Answers are coming...

  • @universemaps
    @universemapsАй бұрын

    Amazing news! So you didn't say if the preliminary results show dark energy is augmenting or diminishing

  • @unvergebeneid

    @unvergebeneid

    Ай бұрын

    It's augminishing!

  • @CrasyFingers
    @CrasyFingersАй бұрын

    in texas or other places in the path of totality in the US could you see the alignment with jupiter eclipse venus saturn mars? i saw jupiter eclipse venus from my location, why aren't there more people talking about this? i feel like it's super cool

  • @RonMar
    @RonMarАй бұрын

    The first lunar RV!

  • @j7ndominica051
    @j7ndominica051Ай бұрын

    Sorry for offtopic. Why was there a call for a special "Moon time zone," and Earth-based universal time coordinated is not sufficient? It was reported on the news that the Moon has different gravity, and that influences passage of time by a microscopic (or "nanoscopic") amount. But we don't need an orbital time zone and an interplanetary space time zone where gravity is different too.

  • @greggweber9967
    @greggweber9967Ай бұрын

    8:50 I assume that they eliminated more craters on the far side because a percentage would have to go through the Earth in order to crash into the near side of the Moon. Another possibility is something whipping past the Earth, speeding up and crashing harder and deeper, producing Seas.

  • @Raz.C
    @Raz.CАй бұрын

    Question for anyone who knows - The calculations showing the age of the universe, don't they assume a *linear* expansion/ contraction of the universe? Where the expansion was *non-linear* in its progression, doesn't this mean that running the expansion backwards in a linear form will result in an incorrect answer? Also, the idea that _the farthest galaxies we can see, will be the oldest galaxies/ the earliest ones to form,_ isn't that idea only valid if we are the precise centre of the universe? If, in fact, there is no centre of the universe, as cosmologists have been telling us, doesn't that mean that the oldest galaxies can and WILL be found anywhere and everywhere and not just at the very limit of our perception, at the edge of the observable universe? I mean, according to relativity, an observer on one of those most distant galaxies, would see us in our galaxy as one of the most distant galaxies in their observable universe, right? Yet we KNOW that our galaxy isn't 13.8 billion years old. But maybe the next galaxy over (not andromeda) could be among the oldest galaxies in their observable universe, right? So why are cosmologists behaving as though we are at the centre of the universe and that the oldest galaxies can only be found at the periphery of our observable universe?

  • @greggweber9967
    @greggweber9967Ай бұрын

    How often can it be depressurized and repressurized? Think of the submarine with insufficient high pressure air to fill its ballast tanks in order to rise up again to the surface. Airlock? Could a small airlock be at half or less pressure if they are in spacesuits and then equalize pressure with the main cabin?

  • @AllatumD
    @AllatumDАй бұрын

    Moon's different sides: Could the density difference on the far side be due to centrifugal force, or is its orbit too slow for something like that?

  • @snezzles278

    @snezzles278

    Ай бұрын

    I bet the temperature difference kept the light side molten for longer during its cooling phase

  • @alexjustalex_
    @alexjustalex_Ай бұрын

    What would a total solar eclipse look like from the Moon? How much time would totality last?

  • @HansMilling
    @HansMillingАй бұрын

    In Denmark we call them bi-suns, as bi=2 in Latin/chemistry as the sun has two extra suns on the sides.

  • @doncarlodivargas5497
    @doncarlodivargas5497Ай бұрын

    Perhaps we could collect dark energy and use it to move stuff, like a kind of a hydraulic system? In mines for example, lifting the materials up to the surface with dark matter, environmental friendly technology

  • @RichardIresonMusician
    @RichardIresonMusicianАй бұрын

    I'm sure there are good scientific reasons for thinking that there is a force "pushing" the galaxies apart with ever greater effect and not some force "pulling" the galaxies apart with ever greater effect. Can someone explain those reasons please, many thanks.

  • @holographicman
    @holographicmanАй бұрын

    Lets bite that space! goooo!

  • @kaseyboles30
    @kaseyboles30Ай бұрын

    I wonder how hard it would be to change the moons spin so we would get to see both sides at least once a year. If the moon was homogenous all around at a given depth and very spherical it would be a lot easier than as it is now, but still I wonder if this is doable (if not practical) Or a mega project well beyond our capabilities.

Келесі