DeepSkyVideos

DeepSkyVideos

Exploring deep space - one video at a time. Including videos about the famous Messier Catalogue and access to world-class telescopes. Videos by Brady Haran.

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  • @kylesargert3336
    @kylesargert33364 күн бұрын

    I remember this I was 10 and lived in Idaho. I also went to Cabo in Mexico it was amazing!

  • @rockmusicvideoreviewer896
    @rockmusicvideoreviewer89611 күн бұрын

    4:47. having someone shine a bright light in your face wouldn't help you see it either.

  • @andreadesenibus6887
    @andreadesenibus688714 күн бұрын

    Pleaseeee talk a little bit slower 😊😊

  • @shamsingh2604
    @shamsingh260418 күн бұрын

    Hii. S

  • @paulakallidis8856
    @paulakallidis885619 күн бұрын

    This video showed absolutely nothing. People will be caught unawares and many many will die due to lack of knowledge of what is coming to the earth. Darkness is coming.

  • @paulakallidis8856
    @paulakallidis885619 күн бұрын

    The veil in the sky is thinning and soon we will see them from other dimensions and realms entering into ours. This won’t be pretty.

  • @DeveshPande
    @DeveshPande19 күн бұрын

    Loved that tune. Has a nice ring to it

  • @leroyharold878
    @leroyharold87821 күн бұрын

    The farthest star up north may be the kingdom

  • @reteipdevries
    @reteipdevries21 күн бұрын

    10:44 ???Halley is appearing every 75-79 years. The average age for humans or a little less. Yes I've seen Halley and indeed Hale-Bopp. I feel privileged to have seen them both. Ánd hearing The Beatles in 1962 and...

  • @ChrisCastro-to5vb
    @ChrisCastro-to5vb27 күн бұрын

    Incredible work 🙏

  • @ChrisCastro-to5vb
    @ChrisCastro-to5vb27 күн бұрын

    Messier ? He literally organized them .

  • @madrasbrewing5500
    @madrasbrewing550029 күн бұрын

    No thanxs It is Pointed at a child room window

  • @digitalworms
    @digitalwormsАй бұрын

    I was 14 when hale bopp was visible! We was visiting my family in Arkansas from California and it was such a site! It seemed so close close that greenish blue tail was so long looking and amazing!

  • @andreaskohler6872
    @andreaskohler6872Ай бұрын

    👍

  • @randyhavard6084
    @randyhavard6084Ай бұрын

    Professor Merrifield is great on the channel. Watched all the videos at least twice so thanks for the educational entertainment.

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    This is so cool! Am I understanding correctly that the energetic jets should be at 90 degrees to the dust lanes but aren't in this case? Or was that just due to the way the pics were all oriented and that the jets are antiplanar to the remnants of disc that this object appears to show?

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    That IR imagery is interesting 😂 would love to see this revisited by JWST... time to go see what's on the schedule. Imagine how glorious that imagery would be, given how much it overtakes that CCD on Hubble 🥰

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    Meghan is the best! Being a 2D rendering of a 3D field of view herself, she beautifully demonstrated the problem of determining what angles these clusters might be interacting at with those fist bumps!

  • @jessejones663
    @jessejones663Ай бұрын

    That's stainless steel are some time of metal . That is not a teliscope

  • @jessejones663
    @jessejones663Ай бұрын

    That is not a telescope

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    Such a lucky institution to have some of the greatest science communicators of our times! Dr's Gray, Merrifield, Smethurst, et al. I think the real glue is Brady coaxing them out of their natural comfort zones 😂

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    Also, this is probably the best Becky vid, I think! Still would love to argue with her that Vera's proposed name change is a great idea though 😂 this galaxy is way too beautiful to have any kind of negative connotation 🥰

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    Super cool that he was considering this before he worked on Galactic Astronomy, but sounds like he was doing this research at the same time he was co-writing it. Awesome! Need to attend an astronomy conference Mike is at to get my book signed! I'd prolly turn into a puddle if I saw him in person though, Mike is a real celebrity to me 😅

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    So good to see Liam on again! Such a lovely dude! And as always amazing lecture from Mike! His students are so lucky 😭 I study astronomy for fun cuz I'm a geology student and astrophysics is obviously fascinating. Love Mike's book and I wish he had time to write more!

  • @tyskerbarn5171
    @tyskerbarn5171Ай бұрын

    Attention to all Aliens. Dangerous liveform is coming.

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    This Galactic Astronomy book has been a joy to read and to work through the problems! I'm several chapters in studying it a little more than casually, given time constraints. Really nice broad overview of things so far, and it does lean technical which I love as an engineering undergrad. Well-written, especially Mike's parts! ( Judging from his lecture style on Brady's channels) Worth every penny! Amazingly approachable rigorous info packaged as a satisfyingly fat lil stack of pages and shockingly affordable given the cost of undergrad textbooks. Looking at you, my beloved Dana manual of mineralogy 👀

  • @amrinmansuri2449
    @amrinmansuri2449Ай бұрын

    All time my fvrt rip neil armstrong ❤

  • @peterbonnema8913
    @peterbonnema8913Ай бұрын

    I can't help but hear 'Bard galaxy'

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    This might be the most powerful of all the Messier series videos! Definitely a very strong commentary on the scientific process snd how it can go wrong

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    So awesome to see how hypothetical models computed directly can contribute to physics! Just imagine how many discoveries AI will help the current generation of researchers find 🤯

  • @QIgorecki
    @QIgoreckiАй бұрын

    Modified Newtonian dynamics

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    This is awesome, but given we now know that some globular clusters are remnants of paleo satellite galaxies, do we know for sure that this one is is actually a single generation of stars? The CMD seems to indicate that but just playing devil's advocate 😂 surely the peeps who wrote this paper had data in there to indicate this, all same metallicity or whatever

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    Hard to believe this was only two years ago! Mike's bookshelves are now bare 😭 and y'all have already finished the Messier series and moved onto the NGC. What a fantastic time to be alive 🥳

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    Ok I've watched this vid a few times like all the others on this channel, Brady. And what a masterpiece! Amazing that a dim lil thing like a white dwarf is perceptible to a relatively dim satellite like Gaia! 🎉 So cool! And it might just be an imaging aberration, but seems like you can almost see the companion in that imagery! 🥰 Wow so cool!

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    Good lerd I love the science in this vid, Brady! So cool how much data we can discern on objects that are as old or older than our galaxy, and Becky's explanation of everything is so clear as always! This is the GOAT of channels! Thank you!

  • @icyxxxxx
    @icyxxxxxАй бұрын

    Cool bruh!

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    Love that mike didn't commit to proposing a name, even with brady's prodding 😂 honestly wise cuz that's a pretty one but what could it possibly be called? 🤔

  • @marysharpe2580
    @marysharpe2580Ай бұрын

    calm down

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedlesАй бұрын

    Brady, your vids featuring Meghan are always among your best, but damn this might be the best! Love Dr. Gray and her way of super-concisely breaking things down to an understandable level. She is definitely among the best science communicators of our time! Along with Dr. Merrifield you've helped them become the Sagans of KZread. Thank you for your work!

  • @GravityDabs
    @GravityDabsАй бұрын

    4:29 Is an insane shot of the sun like that with the shape and the colour of of it.

  • @leck4emba
    @leck4embaАй бұрын

    My mom, 94 year old grandmother and I (staff at her nursing home agreed to let us take her) went to the North of Grand Manan and watched Halle-Boo over the Bay of Fundy. Such a wonderful experience. Nana lived to 101 and was always keen on new experiences. She wondered if the comet if the next time it appears it would be visible from heaven!

  • @Triantalex
    @TriantalexАй бұрын

    Only 7839 to go 🙃

  • @deanmohamed7575
    @deanmohamed75752 ай бұрын

    So if u left earth and you want to travel to m53, you have to go north up above

  • @elir.torres8642
    @elir.torres86422 ай бұрын

    I remember Halley in 1986 in Puerto Rico and again when I lived with my dad in 1997 I also saw Hale-Bopp it lasted 16-18 months depending on what part of the planet you were in Puerto Rico you could see it every night up and realnclose and clear until it fades in late 1997.

  • @pangrac1
    @pangrac12 ай бұрын

    The guys who burned Galileo.

  • @CanalDuModem
    @CanalDuModem2 ай бұрын

    "Stars and galaxies, they're just little floaty bits. They're the sprinkles on top of this vast sea of gas and dark matter." - How incredibly and wonderfully small that makes you feel, doesn't it.

  • @MountainFisher
    @MountainFisher2 ай бұрын

    I always find one of the most humorous stories about the Milky Way is when there was a big power outage in Los Angeles and 911 was swamped with calls from frightened people asking what the thing in the sky was. A Summertime Moonless nights' view of the Milky Way. If you've ever been to a Bortle* 1 or 2 site and seen the Milky Way in the Summer when the Northern Hemisphere is pointed at the center of it you know what I mean. It is bright enough to cast a shadow. I live in New Mexico where the dark skies are only 30 to 60 minutes away. *Bortle scale goes from One with no light pollution to Nine where you can only see the Moon and a couple of planets and about three stars. Downtown Tokyo or NYC for instance. My son lives out in the country under Bortle 4 sky, but to the North and NW it is Bortle 3. To the South and SW are the light domes from the cities of Las Cruces and El Paso/Juarez, Mexico. Ruins the views of low to the horizon deep sky objects like C80 or Omega Centauri a naked eye visible 150 light year wide globular cluster with 10+ million stars estimated to be .10 to .20 LYs apart from each other. If you lived on a planet of a yellow sun like ours on the outskirts of C88 it would never be dark at night.

  • @GooberFace32
    @GooberFace322 ай бұрын

    I was going to college in upstate New York in 1997; it was so cool to see this comet every night walking around campus with friends. Knowing that it won’t be back for another 2,000+ years, I feel fortunate!

  • @InquilineKea
    @InquilineKea2 ай бұрын

    Wait that's Jim kasting

  • @goldtonestudio4471
    @goldtonestudio44712 ай бұрын

    Some of those stars are in the shape of a mini Orion! Cool!