Unsolved Space Mysteries
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@KGTiberius
26 күн бұрын
🤓 Grammar pet peeve: @5:40 between vs among.
@BarbaricAvatar
26 күн бұрын
I can't remember what video you did it on but you'll never top the "Now for the most ironic sponsorship on KZread.." intro you gave them one day.
@Eztoez
25 күн бұрын
He's got to be squirming in his seat having to promote products that are either utterly unsuitable to him or just plain garbage. He certainly looks both embarrassed and disingenuous.
@MindBodySoulOk
25 күн бұрын
Fascinating eggskull
@xessenceofinsanityx
25 күн бұрын
I just imagine that whoever writes the Keeps briefs for Simon just sits down and thinks "what can we get the bald dude to say this time?🤣"
Kudos to Keeps for consistently going to the baldest man they could find for the sponsorship.
@oracleofdelphi4533
26 күн бұрын
I don't know how he pulls it off. While Simon says the phrase, he doesn't really take the angle "Don't be like this guy". Makes me wonder how well he could sell the "Slap Chop"
@schiz0phren1c
26 күн бұрын
He"Keeps" his beard...Its so virile it looks fake., Simon probably turns his camera or head upside down when talking to keeps...
@kryw10
26 күн бұрын
And shout out to Simon for supporting those who still have time. Hairless Hero.
@BoblopZmuda
25 күн бұрын
Tbf the day Simon turns up with a full head of hair I'll buy the product
@nickrog6759
21 күн бұрын
Simon was never talking about his head 😅
It's always nice to find an actual person narrating
@PhoenixRebirthed
22 күн бұрын
So many AI channels these days
@rbgtk
4 күн бұрын
@@PhoenixRebirthed Too many yap AI's for cheap video production and reaping ad money
0:55 - Mid roll ads 2:35 - Chapter 1 - What is dark matter 10:20 - Chapter 2 - What is the great attractor 13:30 - Chapter 3 - What was oumuamua 17:30 - Chapter 4 - Is humanity unique ?
@nickrog6759
21 күн бұрын
20:30 - Chapter 5 - No, just me
@stfu_mango_baboon
14 күн бұрын
Chapter 1 - Gravitational frame shifts. Chapter 2 - the center of gravity of the local cluster. Chapter 3 - Ejected asteroid from a distant system. Chapter 4 - no there are others at similar levels to humans everywhere
10:16 Ah, yes. The Great Attrtactor
@TheGozzeh
26 күн бұрын
😆
@neverbob
25 күн бұрын
This made me wince as well
@dmonvisigoth1651
22 күн бұрын
19:06 Almost as cool as the Fermi Praire Docs
@johntoe6127
21 күн бұрын
Apparently it attracts great typos.
@allanmanaged5285
18 күн бұрын
You got that to a T.
Niel Degrass Tyson summed up his take on the fermi paradox with one with one question. "if you were to take a cup of water from the ocean, and it contained no whales, should we instantly assume there are no whales?" sheer fact that there is a virtual horizon beyond which we know nothing about, only makes this more poignant.
@christiannyblom5727
24 күн бұрын
Also, just because we can’t detect it, it doesn’t mean it isn’t there… Or hasn’t been there in the past… Or won’t be there in the future.
@svenzverg7321
23 күн бұрын
Professor Tyson have only so much time to popularize science, so maybe he doesn't want people to focus on something that unimportant. The real scale of Fermi paradox cannot be adequately describe in such analogy. Think about that this way, for example. The process of living matter originating from non-organics is not very well researched, because it happen, like 4 billion years ago. We have some ideas, how it could happen, but we probably will never know how exactly it did. What we don't know is any particular thing, that would make it difficult on Earth-like planet. You have an Earth-like planet (with water, atmosphere, and temperate climate in parts, basically) - give it a billion years or so and you should have life on it, or so it seems. Now, there are statistically about 8 billion Earth-like planets in our galaxy, the Milky Way. That seems like a lot, until you realize, that they actually pop up with a rate of about one every 5 years (just years here) or so, which mean that there were more of them in the past. Now, the universe is 14-something billion years old, and our galaxy is not much younger. Some people will point out, that first stars had no planet and they had to die before planet would appear. Yes, but first stars were supermassive and had different stuff in them, so their lifetime was literally dozens of millions of years. We, with all our limitation, already found planets, which age is more than 10 billion years (e.g. PSR B1620−26 b). So not only we should have a bunch of people around now (we might indeed be not able to detect them if we imagine that they are on the same technological level), but we should have absolute bunch of people with billions upon billions years head-start upon us. And we are only, like, 150 thousand years old. These guys should be flying around, spreading radiation with their fancy drives like nobody's business, and building Dyson spheres and whatnot everywhere. And where are these? We observe not a tiniest trace of them for dozens of thousands of light years around us for dozens of thousands of years back in time. 1 billion seconds is 32 years. Imagine, what several billion civilizations developing for several billion years should produce. And compare it to deafening silence we witness. That is why a lot of scientist find Fermi paradox disconcerting.
@dusermiginte4647
22 күн бұрын
Yes, I remember this.. 😃
@elusiveDEVIANT
22 күн бұрын
Don't listen to that man. He's no better than the homeless nutters.
@ElanMorin
22 күн бұрын
also, Tyson is a rabid lunatic. just saying.
For me personally, the Great Attractor is a notifiction that Simon has uploaded a new video to the Whistlerverse. I always gravitate to his channels. Almost naturally.
@razzle1964
26 күн бұрын
His spelling, less so. 🤔✌️
@hibaakaiko3888
26 күн бұрын
He IS the great attractor.
@midwestweirdo666
26 күн бұрын
I wonder how many of his viewers are dedicated Fact Boi Fan Bois and how many are just casual viewers that don't even realize how deep the beard of knowledge goes.
@cdyearsley
24 күн бұрын
@@hibaakaiko3888allegedly..... in my opinion.....
@samuelgarrod8327
18 күн бұрын
He's a talking head, a face. There is no Whistlerverse. Grow up.
Your humility to advertise for keeps was awesome
The great filter theory is why discovering primitive life is scary. It moves the likely timeframe of a great filter forward and thus more likely to be in our future. If we find zero planets with life then odds are we got lucky and got past the great filter. If we start finding crude radio transmissions, especially from multiple sources, but nothing more advanced, well that would truly be scary.
I don't think the Fermi paradox and Copernican principle are so incompatible. To me it just says we have a low sample size, and that makes it hard to figure out what the common elements are.
Do i think there is extraterrestrial life out there somewhere? Yes. Do i think we will ever find them? No, at least not in our lifetimes and perhaps not ever.
I've always thought the idea that "life can only flourish in a similar type of planet to Earth" to be odd. For instance, this statement: "Most planets aren't in the habitable zone of their host star, and that many of the planet that do live in this safe distance aren't even rocky, but instead gaseous" This is a true problem, but only if we look at it from a human perspective. But humans have evolved specifically for life on the planet Earth. Life didn't form on Earth because it had the perfect conditions for life to form. It's the other way around. Life formed on Earth in such a way that it can survive on the planet. We breath oxygen BECAUSE Earth has plentiful oxygen to breath. Earth's gravity is perfect for us BECAUSE we formed and evolved with the force of Earth's gravity. There is zero reason to believe that if life formed on a different planet, those lifeforms wouldn't be adapted for life on their planet. Like, for instance, Jupiter. Jupiter is not inhabitable for humans because it's too far away from the sun and its atmosphere is mostly hydrogen. But any life that forms on Jupiter would have formed under those conditions, so they would have evolved to breath hydrogen and with the colder heat as their natural heat. There's no reason to believe that Jupiter is unsustainable for intelligent life just because it's unsustainable for HUMAN life.
@JariDawnchild
10 күн бұрын
Much less Earth life. :) This needs more likes.
@williamslater-vf5ym
5 күн бұрын
That's true. But it still doesn't necessarily mean that the universe is teeming with life. Luck is more important than environment when it comes to forming life.
@geodkyt
4 күн бұрын
There are actual *chemical* reasons to suspect that "Earth adjacent" conditions are far, *far* more likely than any other. Chemically speaking, a liquid water, hydrogen/carbon/oxygen environment is the one that works the best for the necessary types of chemical reactions for basic processes necessary to equate "life". Other combinations of chemicals don't hit that nice sweet spot of "chemical bonds strong enough to stay consistent" and "chemical bonds reactive enough to allow metabolism of any sort". Even one of the best alternate substitutes for oxygen (chlorine) has quite a lot of short comings as a life sustaining oxidizer. Temperatures significantly outside the range of liquid water either becomes far less reactive (losing down chemical processes that would be necessary for any variation of life, or the additional heat makes for almost instant chemical bond breakdowns and the degradation of complex chemical compounds that can readily change bonds to allow metabolism. Substitute silicon for carbon (silicon being the best alternate for carbon)? Unfortunately, silicon has far fewer useful compounds that could form the backbone of life in the same way carbon does. Water is almost the perfect solvent for the kinds of chemical compounds that would be necessary for any metabolic processes. TL;DR - Science (specifically the atomic structure of the candidate elements and their resulting potential molecular bonds) is what says that life is almost certainly going to be found in "Earthlike" conditions (which, note, doesn't even remotely mean "conditions current life on Earth could survive" - it means a handful of key chemicals in reasonable abundance, within an astronomically narrow temperature range). It isn't that "Earth is uniquely perfect for life", but rather, "Earth falls within a broad range of chemically similar environments where life is far, far more likely to develop," and while it is "average" for a life bearing world, it is still unusual compared to the universe at large.
Re: MoND and Dark Matter, I highly recommend watching some of Angela Collier's videos. For example, she explains that dark matter isn't an explanation, it's a somewhat misleading name for a collection of OBSERVATIONS... and that we're still trying to pin down the explanation.
@hugh.g.rection5906
24 күн бұрын
is she hot?
Ever thought the gravitational pull might be the universal "sink drain" and we're swirling into it?
@jackcarterog001
26 күн бұрын
No becayse that would go against all observable evidence.
@verhuzz
25 күн бұрын
Change gravitational pull with dark energy and you might have a leg to stand on there
@micahfoley9572
25 күн бұрын
where is it draining to, in your model?
@cmecre8629
23 күн бұрын
@@micahfoley9572 the great attractor?
@micahfoley9572
23 күн бұрын
@@cmecre8629 yeah yeah, that's the drain, but i'm more wondering about the pipe and where they think it goes. cuz you hear people talk about "outside" or" before" the universe, and setting aside that such a thing is essentially impossible as far as we know, it's always interesting to hear what people think that would entail.
I’ve been watching too much decoding the unknown cuz it’s weird to hear Simon read more than one sentence without going off on some tangent…
@pretzelgtr
26 күн бұрын
original tangent channel is allegedly Brain blaze
@joerocker237
26 күн бұрын
@@pretzelgtr Alegendly...
@aneasteregg8171
26 күн бұрын
Honestly I prefer the channels where he includes the tangents and his own thoughts, it's more fun. Just reading a script gets dry
@cheekyb71
25 күн бұрын
@@aneasteregg8171same, for the most part! CC and DTU win though, because podcasts I can listen to in the car... I wish Into the Shadows was podcasted too
@pretzelgtr
25 күн бұрын
@@aneasteregg8171 I like both
The existential dread that the Fermi paradox gives me is crazy. There’s a famous quote that goes “we are either alone in the universe or we are not, both of which are equally terrifying” and that pretty much sums up the dread I feel when thinking about alien life.
@LuckySSU
7 күн бұрын
Read "The three body problem" books to add to it even more lol It's called Space horror for a reason ;)
@williamslater-vf5ym
5 күн бұрын
It really doesn't matter that much.
@BillAnt
4 күн бұрын
Nothing to fear, if they come they come, if not then life goes on like it did for millions of years.
@sid1gen
3 күн бұрын
The one I dread is "Lights Out," when the last star in this universe goes dark. If there are intelligent, technologically advanced beings out there by then (maybe our descendants, what we will become when we are no longer human), what will they try to do? How will they survive? Reignite the last star? Create an artificial one? Kill each other in a fit of despair, like the people in Asimov's story "Nightfall?" (different circumstances, yes, but "world ending" to say the least.) For something that is not expected to happen until, what, ten billion years in the future? it still gives me goosebumps.
@sid1gen
3 күн бұрын
@@LuckySSU I may be in the minority, but the China-centric Three Body Problem was a big "nah" for me: hyped, poorly written (or perhaps poorly translated, IDK), with the appearance of depth but the reality of shallowness, I just cannot understand the fandom it has developed. To each their own, of course.
The biggest flaw with the Fermi paradox is the assumption that alien life would have our technology or better otherwise we're alone when radio is only about 150 years old and has only gotten good enough for long distance communication within the last 30 years or so. There's probably hundreds of thousands of stone-age-esk civilizations we just have to wait for.
@maikmeier5032
24 күн бұрын
The idea is if there are hundreds of thousands, SOME of them should have our technological capacity, and we do not find a trace. Indeed some of the great filters suggest that intelligent life will always eradicate itself.
Combine the rare earth theory with the possibility that faster than light travel is truly impossible, and it might be that there is life out there, but we’ll never find it.
@facetubetwit1444
25 күн бұрын
Couple that with interstellar travel might also be impossible for us life forms due to some unknown reason we haven't discovered yet, Like artificial gravity might not be the key we think it is. Or we need some magic secret sauce that only inner star systems can provide to survive. Which leads to ask why haven't we seen machine tech life forms then yet? Or maybe faster then light communications is also impossible rendering any advanced civilizations to stay close together until absolutely necessary to move on.
@johnbox271
25 күн бұрын
I think a better qustion is why haven't they found us? von Neumann probes
@kingofflames738
23 күн бұрын
@@facetubetwit1444 if I didn't misunderstand how cables work, ftl communication is technically possible, but it would require a connected wire to whatever we're communicating with. Because when the electrons in a wire push on eachother all of them push on eachother at once, meaning the end of the wire moves at the same time as the start. The information essentially doesn't have to travel any distance. Wireless on the other hand would be limited by the speed of causality (light). Communicating with people on Mars would already be hit with long delays. We're talking about having to wait almost half an hour on the phone to get an answer because it takes fifteen minutes for your message to get to them and fifteen more to get back to you.
@somethinglikethat2176
20 күн бұрын
@@johnbox271 first born hypothesis? It could be there wasn't enough metal (in the astronomical sense) for life to exist. And we're just early to the party.
@arianamaria_
13 күн бұрын
Ah yes another existential quandary to add to my list of Things I Am Displeased To Read About™
I am just waiting for humanity to find a monolith either here on Earth, Luna, or Mars so we can figure out which timeline we're in. For those who don't know: in Dead Space, humanity finds a monolith while excavating the impact crater in Mexico, which helped humanity advance technologically. in Mass Effect, humanity finds the Prothean ruins on Mars, which helped humanity advance technologically. in 2001: ASO, humanity finds the monolith on Luna, causing humanity to build a ship capable of travelling to Europa to investigate the message they received from said monolith.
0:18 It's been a long road, Getting from there to here.
@GuntherRommel
26 күн бұрын
It's been a long road. But my time is finally here.
@MORE_BEANS_PLZ
26 күн бұрын
Stroking it while watching this video and reading this comment
@stereo-soulsoundsystem5070
25 күн бұрын
@@MORE_BEANS_PLZ horny jail. You're going to horny jail
@andrewmcminn6192
25 күн бұрын
Worst theme song ever.
When people ask why we haven’t found life outside the Earth, I imagine pre-contact Easter Islanders wondering why they haven’t encountered life from beyond their island. When you consider the unfathomable enormity of the universe, it’s downright silly to think we can make conclusions about it based on the tiny speck of the universe we have been able to examine. It’s like those Easter Islanders concluding that there is no intelligent life beyond their island because they hadn’t found any in the entire area they had explored.
@JeeVeeHaych
26 күн бұрын
Completely agree. I've heard a lot about both the 'rare earth' hypothesis, or the other theory that states the universe should be teeming with life. But given the absolutely insane scale of the universe we're talking about, both in time and space... I liken it to a giant warehouse, filled with a penny dropping every 5 minutes on every inch of space. Every penny turning up heads is no life, every one turning up tails is microbial life. And every penny landing on its side is a planet with intelligent life. Taking that into account, how infinitesimally small are the odds that two pennies would fall on their side in each others vicinity and at about the same time?
@glenchapman3899
26 күн бұрын
And to add to the mix. The Easter Islanders were not disadvantaged by time. On a galactic scale, we have 13 billion years of a couple Easter Island races putzing around trying to find someone else to talk to
@miloszkraszewski3533
26 күн бұрын
Pale Blue Dot photo from Voyager is a good show of what we really are. A spec.
@kenamoe86
26 күн бұрын
Your presuppositions fail because you're using your perspective in place of an actual Easter Islander, when you close extrapolate from other Polynesians. Is it like Easter Islanders (direct comparison) or "as if" (hypothetical)? I'm from pedantic because it affects your subsequent points so I want to make sure I'm understanding your argument.
@jackcarterog001
26 күн бұрын
Absolute Nonsense. Those that first colonized Easter Island knew there was human life outside the island and passed this knowledge down through generations.
10:18 Dude, did someone fall asleep at the keyboard? 😂
Harambe in 2016 “Listen kid I haven’t got much time, the great attractor is….”
Not the latest space news but a collection of the most interesting! Perfect production as always! I ❤ it!
Time for our brains to become ever more wrinkly
@y0sarian
26 күн бұрын
*gray matter jiggling intensifies*
@TheKalaxis
26 күн бұрын
With our host Simon "Brain wrinkler" Whistler
@joerocker237
26 күн бұрын
I have gained another wrinkle...
@davescott7680
25 күн бұрын
... My brain must be full, they're forming on my face instead.
The assumption that large-scale cosmological structures are affected entirely by gravity and have net-zero charge is not necessarily valid, and we really have very little way of testing it at great distances. Electromagnetism is so strong compared to gravity, that even a slight net charge in the solar wind compared to stars/planets could lead solar systems to bond with each other like atoms, or at least experience Van Der Waals style attractions.
This was really good episode thank you. That’s giving me a lot of food for thought!
I think gravity scales in a way we don't understand yet. More likely than invisible matter.
@markferguson5924
25 күн бұрын
MOND theories modify the strength of gravity at different accelerations - but they can't move the center of mass to make gravity's arrow point in other directions away from the visible matter, as the Bullet Cluster suggests.
(10:18) "WHAT IS THE GREAT ATTRTACTOR?" 😂🤣😂🤣😂 Lmao @ 'Attrtactor'. From now on, I'm going to pronounce the word 'attractor' as "attrtactor" (pronounced: atter-tack-ter) 😂
I loved the slow pan to the alien in the corner 😂
It still feels like it's more likely that we just don't understand all of the math than there being some magical material that we can't see... :P
Whenever i hear about the Great Attractor i always feel like its the start of a 'your mum' joke?
Galaxies pulled towards a point in the universe. I feel a "Your momma" joke coming up.
Unsolved Space Mysteries: A bald man promoting a shampoo.
I imagine if we ever make contact with more intelligent life than us and we try to explain our theories of dark matter to them, they will laugh their alien asses off at us 😅
This is the episode ya show yer mates. Perfection!
Unlike some other KZread channels I can actually understand Simon, so clear and concise, rather like SciShow. I also don’t think he’s nuts :)
The beard length difference between the video and the advert is crazy 🤣
20:46 We also have Theia to thank for doubling up our iron core. We’re one planet, with two cores worth of iron. Without the impact of Theia and Pre-Theia Earth, we wouldn’t have as strong of a magnetic sphere. We are also the densest planet in the solar system.
The Great Attractor is no longer considered a mystery. It is essentially the gravitational center of a massive supercluster known as the Laniakea Supercluster.
"[...] this particle would interact with mass and therefore gravity but not with light, a behavior that we've yet to see elsewhere." Neutrinos only interact with gravity and the weak force, not with electromagnetism (photons, i.e. light) or the strong force.
I really enjoyed this video.
We're still in the infancy of our ability to develop detection technologies. It's reasonable to say there's a whole lot we just aren't able to see yet.
The Great Attractor is truly powerful since it managed to pull all Simon's hair.
Hello, Simon, Best Wishes from NY. As much as I am a fan of your great, informative and very entertaining science episodes, they also serve an important "off-label" benefit: Your genteel and fine narration feel like visiting with an old and trusted friend. Thanks for all of the wonderful work you do! Art Donovan Southampton
Great video, as usual. One observation: "Unique" is unique. There is no "more unique" or "less unique," than this or that. There is only "unique" by itself: it either is or it isn't. Unique is and absolute. And, of course, among trillions and trillions of galaxies, each of them containing from tens of billions to hundreds of billions of stars, chances for a few worlds pretty much like ours are not low, but shoot up into the millions, at the very least. The Milky Way alone contains more than 100 billion stars. We may be a Black Swan in our little pond in our vast Milky Way island, but with 100 million ponds to check in this island chances are there will be more black swans out there. Unique? Hardly.
5:15 "This particle would interact with mass, and therefore gravity, but not with light. A behavior that we've yet to see elsewhere." I see what you did there writer
@stereo-soulsoundsystem5070
25 күн бұрын
explain pls
@verhuzz
25 күн бұрын
@@stereo-soulsoundsystem5070photons (light particles) interact with everything else, that's how we "see". That's the joke. The only thing photons don't interact with is with other photons, but as they don't have any mass, the joke still stands.
Regarding discussion at ~5:00, if the center of spiral galaxies are massive black holes, or a singular massive black hole, would not the time distortions make the inner galaxy appear to move or rotate more slowly than the outer?
The marketing team at Keeps must be high out of their minds if they think that a completely bald guy is going to help sell their hair loss prevention snake oil.
Very interesting-thank you
How Simon keeps coming up with new material is a mystery...
***shows New York*** “about the size of a skyscraper” We all know what you meant there Simon 😂
Heard a weird skip in Simon’s voice while saying “mass” now I’m convinced Simon is AI.
@theonecalleddoc
26 күн бұрын
His love of chatGPT makes a lot more sense now…
Fantastic episode! Thank you so much to Simon et al for putting together this deep dive into some really interesting science!!! ❤
This should be on the Main Channel. Brilliant content!
@cheekyb71
25 күн бұрын
Is that a joke I don't get? What do you think the "main channel" is?
@matthewfarrell1763
25 күн бұрын
@@cheekyb71You haven't found his main channel yet? Oh my Gosh, you've got to! It brings together the best parts of all the others.
The MONDS theories have already been dismantled in a pair of studies released last month. Anton Petrov covered it
Oh, gee, my model of things doesn’t work, let me just make something up so that it does. I’ll remember that next time they tell me the Earth is going to catch on fire and explode whilst simultaneously not being able to tell me if two weeks from now the weather will be nice.
if there is life out there, its likely not technologically advanced enough or has such different mechanics we cant detect them and they cant detect us, or they're just far away. like the other side of the galaxy, or hell probably a different galaxy.
I always had the problems with axions that if they have very small masses, anything that gives them energy will tend to make them shoot at a velocity just short of light in a vacuum, like neutrinos. Thus there would have to be a force making them stick together, but we're eliminating the forces that could do that.
i always thought the great attractor was a “come hither” smile
"We can lick gravity, but sometimes the paperwork is overwhelming." -- Wernher von Braun
I am the great attractor. Watch me as I do the squats. Cha cha cha *runs fingers through his hair*
Concerning Dark Matter - our galaxy, and most others, are contained within megastructures. Dyson swarms of absolute enormity.
Even if life is commonplace, civilisations can come and go over unfathomably long timescales. Each simply missing each other by a million years or so, passing each other between ticks of the clock. Couple that with looking from our little spec to find signs of technology that we can comprehend…
The only reason we even have hair on our heads and faces is to protect us from impact blows. Most of us dont get hit in the head very often, hair is over rated.
Th Keeps promo you put at th start of this video was brilliant, funny, and very well done. Kudos.
Simon didn't go bald... his hair just slid down.
Indeed, the entire foundation of the concept of 'dark matter' and 'dark energy' were that the simulations we made did not match what we observed in the real world. The math had a gap.. as if there were missing mass. However, humans being human, egos sort of took the wheel and named it 'dark matter' as a catchy term that didn't imply that physicists didn't have the complete understanding of the universe. The problem is, that this has focused so much energy, perception and even new students into this concept that there must be some physical thing that we haven't discovered, and very little effort on 'Where does our understanding go wrong?', when that is indeed, what started the whole topic. As an engineering student in a school with a strong physics group, it was very frustrating to talk amongst the physics department about how things worked, because it was all about 'oh this is too complex' when it was more like they didn't know either. So much focus about finding new particles and the like, that no one wanted to focus on sorting out where the math went wrong. That's why MOND isn't popular... it starts with the assumption that the physics world isn't perfect, and digs into our flaws. Granted, it very well could be a combination of gaps in the math and new particles or phenomenon we've not yet discovered. But the problem is mostly one of the culture of science these days and the lack of interest and funds to scrutinize what we base our foundations on. Maybe it's just that I've spent my whole career in safety-critical work, where mistakes cost lives, and being skeptical is a way of life. But hopefully some of these new discoveries by JWST showing that no, a singularity is not infinitely small, will get more people back into looking at the less sexy work of checking our assumptions.
I’d love to hear you talk about Turoks big bang is a mirror work.
with all the money Simon has , youd think hed get hairplugs.
@twincast2005
26 күн бұрын
Well, his smooth noggin is a part of his brand identity.
@themischief420
24 күн бұрын
some people are fine being bald, shocker
Time is another complicating factor. How long do advanced civilizations last? Maybe there was one close by spatially but far distant chronologically.
We are here, so the universe can support life. To posit that life only arose once, here on Earth, seems unlikely. What IS likely is that we will never know, one way or another.
With the galaxies rotating faster than they should, since a galaxy is nothing but billions of tiny solar systems all rotating, I wonder if the experiment with sitting on a stool and holding a spinning bicycle wheel would apply?
Howdy from Temple, Texas, USA!
Me. My knob is the giant attractor.
wtf is an ‘ATTRTACTOR’ 10:17? 🤔😅✌️
@ogshaggymac
26 күн бұрын
You find them on AFRARM.
@tripsaplenty1227
10 күн бұрын
one of the purposely mispelled words simon includes to boost the number of comments his videos get.
@razzle1964
10 күн бұрын
@@tripsaplenty1227 👏😉✌️
I have always thought the universe would make a lot more sense if it wasn't for us existing.
The question of "how unique we are" primarily serves to ignore the meaning of the word "unique"...
Any chance we are not approaching the big attractor but being dragged along with it?
Just to add to Simon’s doom and gloom for today, taking our own history for example, what happens when a technologically advanced society encounters a less advanced society??? Now imagine that on a planetary scale!!
Those robots driving around mars aren’t so little
This would be the best simulation video game ever!!
17:00 And don't forget the aliens have radar and lidar detectors and will drift their probe like a tuner car.
Man I really wanna see good astronomers talk about great attractor more in depth whatever they know, it is mind boggling to think of something like that
Commenting for the algorithm. Love this topic!
Here's a hypothesis... what if Dark Matter is actually the universe itself or as big as our observable universe and that's why we can't detect it?
There is without a doubt beings far more intelligent that humankind can ever imagine. It's a matter of time on how they realise how they can use this.
Is Sol/Earth unable to see the Great Attractor a Fermi Paradox filter? Like the core of the Milky Way acting as a kind of shield?
Bald guy selling hair loss treatment. Classic 😂
Simon has enough beard to be qualified as a Civil War general
Humanity might be special, just not special in the way common people think.
The real problem with figuring out how the universe works is... the ultra micro particles of the universe are so small that there is no way to study or even see what is going on in this unknowable aspect of the universe. Until we solve this problem we can only speculate and that my friends is the issue!
The biggest issue I have with Ch 1 is rather than just saying "at galactic scale we don't really understand how gravity works" they made up the term Dark Matter and treated its existence as a matter of fact, not a speculative cause of an observed result. Kind of anti-science when you think about it.
Q. How was the universe created? A. Nothing went bang and viola. Here is everything. Q. What's the Great Attractor? A. IDK. Can't see it. The Galaxy is in the way. 😂
@spaceageGecko
10 күн бұрын
Thats not a good comparison at all.
Cool space rocks.
There are somewhat 'fine lines' between Rare Earth Hypothesis and the Anthropic Principle...Depending on what variant of Drake Equation is used (To account for var. Great Filters + 'lesser' filters), It can result in 1 habitable planet per galactic supercluster or less. Depending on all this: it does cause one to have to start thinking about Anthropic Principle, and debate the merits of it.
I've always had a problem with the creation of an new type of invisible matter to make up for reality differing from calculations. I'm in the MOND camp, Occam's razor. BTW what's an attrtactor?
You can't march into space, Simon. PSHAW. Do you even physics!? XP
I derived the Rare Earth idea myself about 20 years ago, but I'm just a computer scientist so no one listens.
The Great Atteactor is the first civilisation of the universe. Instead of travelling across space they worked out how to bring all of local space towards them. Resources delivered. Type 7 Civilisation