M42 - Orion Nebula - Deep Sky Videos
Ғылым және технология
The Orion Nebula is quite "piddly" - but it happens to be in our neck of the galaxy. In this video Meghan Gray (University of Nottingham), Paul Crowther (University of Sheffield) and Nik Szymanek (ccland.net) - More Messier Objects: bit.ly/MessierObjects
Image credits:
Adam Block: caelumobservatory.com/
Rogelio Bernal Andreo: blog.deepskycolors.com/
Bob Fera: www.feraphotography.com/
Nik Szymanek: ccdland.net
Glen Youman: www.astrophotos.net/
Fred Espenak: astropixels.com
Mike Wilson: www.flickr.com/photos/mikewpho...
Deep Sky Videos website: www.deepskyvideos.com/
Twitter: #!/DeepSkyVideos
Facebook: / deepskyvideos
Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/68847473...
More about the astronomers in our videos: www.deepskyvideos.com/pages/co...
Videos by Brady Haran
Additional editing in this film by Stephen Slater
Пікірлер: 182
thank you... hope you'll enjoy our whole year's worth of them!
This was my first Messier object, and is still one of my favorites.
this episode is so good! beautiful messier object, top-notch production, and magnificent explanations from the pros. love deepsky
m42 my favorite nebula and very easy Deepsky object for amature telescopes like 60mm.. And its in my favorite constellation Orion..
@Xboomer1
6 жыл бұрын
My favorite DSO also...
I love how he states that Orion is just a piddly one. M42 is Amazing! Thanks, Brady!
1:03 "Well a nebula is a fairly vague term, which can actually encompass a... quite a wide variety of different astronomical objects". Yes, you could almost say it's... nebulous. :P
COOL... I was hoping you would do this one soon! Great Job! Just when you thought you knew everything about M42 you get just a little more!
First deep sky object I got to see through a telescope was M82, during 2014 at a star party on the southern CA border. But the second, and most favorite was M42. Just mentally remember it in a bluish cast (probably some kind of filter?). Gorgeous and inspiring.
I'm glad I saw this video, I saw the nebulae in Orion before and I noticed how colorful it looked. Now I'm happy that I actually found out what was with in.
thank you for explaining in detail about this beautiful nebula
This video is so interesting and so beautifully realized that I decided to subscribe... Great job!
I love Orion, and videos like this this make it all the more beautiful to look at even with the naked eye. Quality work!
Beautiful! Can't wait to start my DIY 12" telescope build.
@mylesbishop1240
7 жыл бұрын
James Webb do you mind telling me about your build. I'm curious in creating my own I didn't know one could
Ive seen this through my 4.5 inch telescope. Its MAGNIFICENT thanks Brady. You're what helps a teen like me be ABLE to learn about astronomy.
very pleased to have you watching!
@DeepSkyVideos I clicked "like" before watching the video, because I always like the videos in this channel
Really nice video! This is one of the best objects in the night sky!!!
I couldn't see it last night. Hope to catch it tonight.
My favorite Nebula, thanks for posting! This is an invitation to see an artist theory on the physics of time! This theory is based on just two postulates 1. Is that the quantum wave particle function Ψ or probability function represents the forward passage of time itself 2. Is that Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle that is formed by the w-function is the same uncertainty we have with any future event within our own ref-frame that we can interact with turning the possible into the actual!
Saw M42 with a good telescope back in high school and it was just amazing.
This video is very humbling on so many levels
my favorite thing to observe in the night sky …… and now I know more about it …. Thx for the amazing video ..... :D
My Favorite!
@drasst5503
2 жыл бұрын
what are you doing here??
It's in a part of the sky that's directly above the Earth's equator (if you were standing on the equator at a certain time, Orion would be directly above you or close to that). So you have a clear line of sight to it from either hemisphere as well. The North Star (Polaris), for an inverse example, is above the north pole, so if you're in the southern hemisphere you can't see it - the Earth itself is blocking your line of sight. There is nothing blocking your line of sight to Orion.
Oh wow... i was waiting for this one.
At the beginning and end of the video, how do you get those 3D animations of the sky and nebulae? Those are really cool. What software/data did you use to make them?
@coolbionicle - Excellent question. I believe the teardrop shapes are being carved out by the strong interstellar winds coming from the Trapezium star cluster interacting with dust in the proplyds, but I'm not sure if the proplyds themselves have any "solar" wind to be creating an area of hydrostatic equilibrium (heliopause shell). I'm curious to see their answer.
How convenient, that's where I live! Though I'm a little worried about the atmospheric conditions, such as cloud formations and air temperature differences.
Stunning..
I've seen it before with reflector telescope. pretty beautiful
I love these video's. Please keep it up.
thnx for this wonderful video !!
Is the first clip in the video a real hubble recording (is the nebula so close that we can see stars in front of it and behind it shift as we are changing our position) or is it processed to show depth? It would be so cool if it was the unedited thing.
THANK YOU!
I'm curious... Are there any places in Sweden that would be suitable for ameteur observations? I have a flaming hot interest for astronomy and would absolutely love to get a glance at the depths of the night sky with my own eyes.
Very enjoyable, thank you
how do you give this impression of a camera moving around the nebulae ? I guess it's not a warp 9 camera and a kind of image processing but... what kind ?
Cool Video and channel. This channel helps explain a lot about the objects you can see in your backyard telescope.
Love Deep Sky. Hope you can keep on producing these. The physics is always clear, Wish this had existed when I was a student!
@taraz3d By taking shots of the same deep sky object from opposite sides of our orbit around the sun (two times a year) we can see it from two different vantage points, and that gives us a "depth perception" on the object, much the same way you can visually measure distance with two eyes. Putting that information into a computer can allow us to then model the stars and such in the object 3-dimensionally (with fair accuracy), producing what you see here.
Good god....this is fantastic. Dr. Gray should get a TV gig...she's at least 30X better than some of the other folks I see on science programs.
The Orion nebula is the "middle" star looking object in the sword which hangs down from the belt. The bright colors won't be seen unless you take a long exposure of it. I got a lot of color just after 20 seconds. Looking thru my 11" scope without camera I could see gray and bluish colors of the nebula but no reds until using my Canon DSLR. Try it. It's awesome!!
@Kwodlibet Orion is upside down in the southern hemisphere, rather than mirrored. I think some telescopes flip images, maybe that's what happened.
Orion is perfect for faking cosmological knowledge to the uninformed. You'd be amazed how many people drop their jaws when you say you can recognise a few constelations.
@sirdaniel1156
8 жыл бұрын
or that you can see 5 planets with the naked eye.
@snowrida1
6 жыл бұрын
fake knowledge is the best
@dougieh9676
4 жыл бұрын
I always fake my constellation knowledge.
Excellent. If you guys would give how to's for these vids, that would be even better.
does interstellar gases in such nebula emit light....how do we see the color in them in visible light............?
Why is there a "mirror" image of the Orion at 0.39 ? Is it because how you would see it from the southern hemisphere? PS Thank you Brady! :)
I live in a valley... I have far enough to walk for clouds to catch up with me. eg, looking out of the window doesn't really work. Besides, what's up straight over my head is stuff I've seen so many times before.
Wow! Weird that I just finished my coursework for my Astronomy GCSE and this happened to be one of the things I wrote about
muito bom :)
Mind = totally blown. Thanks. =]
No, we observe them at the frequencies they emit and then we color them based on what we want those frequencies to represent.
Resembles Eduard Munch's "The Scream" painting guy indeed! ^_^
About the star map at 0:30 : why are the constellations flipped horizontally but not the text?
@Reactordrone
5 жыл бұрын
It might be a star globe view looking in from the outside so to speak
Quite a few to go! Hope you don't get bored - we won't! Fucking brilliant!!
Hay posibilidad de verlos en español?
I don't know why people assume that since we live in an ordinary place we are unimportant. I mean, we, as sentient beings, are the Universe's means of experiencing itself. I know that importance is entirely subjective, but intelligent life is literally what created the concept of importance to begin with, and to me, that sounds sort of important.
@qpdksf5 As far as i know NASA, ESA, and other big space agencies produce these renderings, based on many photographs from (slightly) different angles/telescopes and relative star distance analysis. That software is creating many layers of transparent photographs and puts it into perspective.
i saw it yesterday with a 102 mm telescope (celestron nexstar 4se) in a mid- high light pollution... anyway i live in the south hemisphere. if you can attach a camera with high exposure and aperture you should take some nice photos
What's not to like about this superstar (pun intended). If there were academy awards for Messier objects this would have at least one.
Still awe-inspiring to think that we as a solar system used to be a proplet in a similar giant molecular cloud like that about four and a half billion years ago 🥰
@ncfatcyclist you're welcome
Fantastic video but it is the light of the Nebula that condenses into the stars.Light is not the product of some reaction but is the creating force of matter.
The Orion Nebula was created by the notes from Cliff Burton's bass guitar.
Why only 360p? :(
Yes you got it!
More please.
Does anyone else feel like they're missing home when they look at pictures and videos like this one about the universe?... No? Just me? Okay.
@DavidJH007x
7 жыл бұрын
Watch Danny Wiltens video on creation
@Truth_Seeker96
7 жыл бұрын
Lucebelle Beelzebub I always say this!!! awesome comment.
@Truth_Seeker96
7 жыл бұрын
Professional Welders yes been listening to dan since i was 15 glad to see other people referencing his work
Have been dying to see so many HOT YOUNG STARS
Holy mother of God my mind has just been blown
Ok wow, I always thought Orion was another separate galaxy, not part of the Milky Way, our universe is HUGE!
It's crazy you can take such images from your backyard these days
nice
I wonder what the night sky would look like from a planet around a star in the nebula. Would it glow purple/pink? Can you imagine all the crazy ideas a developing civilization would invent to describe it before they discover astronomy?
@kolrabi Nice xkcd reference.
Orion is visible from both northern and southern hemisphere (0:45) How is that possible?
Looks so much like what it's supposed to be? All I can see is a saucepan.
nice :D
when i see orions belt with the naked eye i dont see colours of a nebula,if i had a telescope is this the right place to look in the night sky
I saw this in my 8in dob the other night!
Nebulas are My Favorite Part of the Universe
For some reason, one of the recommended videos I'm seeing is a dude talking about how the Vatican is responsible for covering up the discovery of the Orion Nebula. I'd explain more, but I'm too busy picking chunks of desk from my forehead.
@MrLeonardfalkland don't thank me... thank the astronomers!!! ;)
cest peut etre beau mais je crois quelle est dangereuse de sa proximitee et du fait quon la voient dans notre ciel, orion possede une plus grosse etoile que la notre du fait si elle sen vient de plus en plus proche elle risque de nous faire ''mal'' \ changer la vitesse \ lorientation ??? orion est il dangereux ???
I guess that our sun must have been part of a stellar nursery when it was being formed. Do we know what other stars were in the same nursery at the same time? I would guess our closest stellar neighbors? Or am I wrong?
its amazing just how massive everything is it mind blowing haha
Yes, I see it...even with a beard. It's in the upper left quadrant of this frame. Pretty intense. Is it the face of our creator? I ponder the thought.
in 5:00 as they say - we can see a hundred of them just formating in the very moment... But we see what happend billions of years ago... So probably they are already complete and have their very own alien life... I just wonder if it's as intelligent as ours... or even on higher stages.
kurtjmac?
Unas de las regiones más bellas del espacio profundo
3:45 Orion Molecular Cloud Complex!!!
Astronomy. Very interesting ,we say our moon is far but thes are infinity.
Do All Nebula give birth to Stars?
@kolrabi I KNEW that joke would be in the first comments, even before I opened this video! Still made me laugh pretty hard :) XKCD ftw!
Nebula is a fairly vague, or, nebulous, term.
Well, you see, if you live in an area where there are conditions for clouds to form, then that's to a disadvantage. Ofcourse you'd like to minimize that as it completely ruins your stargazing. That's why I care about stuff like that.
my phone wallpaper :)
Genèses 1;1-2
I know it near to Orion belt
@enisylo That's astronomically funny!