Best channels: Fraser Cain, SEA, PBS Spacetime, and SFIA. Those are my 'go to' favs.
@bobinthewest8559
Жыл бұрын
I didn’t catch which planet was the question identifier, but… I just loved that word, “flippening” 😂
@RMBlake007
Жыл бұрын
Me too 17:25 in the Bespin Chapter. Interesting that the Closed Captions changed it to "flipping".
@universemaps
Жыл бұрын
Mandalore. Thanks for another awesome episode and for using my art in the thumbnail, Fraser, it's an honor! I really appreciated how you captured the feeling of the sad situation, where a federation communicates from orbit with entities living on an inescapable planet. Hopefully, a new system of transport, beyond our current imagination, will become available, and this federation will be able to set them free.
@bonniebarton6061
Жыл бұрын
Fraser I really loved your explanation of the infinite universe being beyond the observable universe. I understand this now! Thanks!!
@deltalima6703
Жыл бұрын
Yeah. Fraser gets it. Was a good answer.
@treefarm3288
Жыл бұрын
So that means before the big bang when the universe was infinitely small, there was another universe around it? Naboo.
@peterjones958
Жыл бұрын
Thankyou so much for explaining the size of the universe again. With your help along with Paul Sutter I finally get it. At last it makes some sense to me. It just goes to show we are never too old to learn something new. I am only 77 by the way and I still want to know how and why this universe got started in the first place. Keep up the great work you are doing in providing others like myself with so much interesting and fascinating information.
@beaudanner
Жыл бұрын
Mandalor. Really interesting question and I enjoyed your answer. I typically listen on the podcast so never find the chance to vote.
@alflud
Жыл бұрын
If the universe is finite but non-spherical and instead a torus then this 'wrap-around' concept takes on a whole new meaning. A torus is kinda like a sphere multiplied by another sphere and gives rise to multiple radii within in, not all of which will cycle back around to where they began - at least not on a single cycle or period.
@dnz6941
Жыл бұрын
It truly stumps me to try to figure out how mankind truly thinks we know the size limit of the universe.
@archmage_of_the_aether
Жыл бұрын
Keep trying, you'll get it
@theboathaaa7654
10 ай бұрын
How did you miss the word “minimum” so many times? Alternatively, how do you define “observable universe” that gives you a different answer for size of the observable universe? Hella hubris
@georgitushev
5 ай бұрын
Your description of curious properties of this finite universe pretty much matches what would expect to experience if we existed on the event horizon of an ultra massive black hole.
@feelincrispy7053
Жыл бұрын
That is such a great idea by using key words to short hand what chapter you liked the most. I can see other creators using that
@miketriesmotorsports6080
Жыл бұрын
Coruscant! Wow, what a great answer! I could never wrap my head around this question until now. I didn't even know how to ask it. Thanks for taking that one on!
@whochecksthis
Жыл бұрын
Hey Frasier! I like to explain the grapefruit size universe question like this. The part of the universe we can see (observe) once occupied a minute size... imagine the earth suddenly went through the same kind of expansion, Delaware would eventually be the size of the observable universe... obviously, earth and the solar system or even our galaxy was considerably larger than Delaware, but it would be outside the viewable space to that future observer.
@metroidmania8833
Жыл бұрын
While watching I had the exact same thought, about the possibility of a planet swapping stars in a figure 8 orbit.
@MusikCassette
Жыл бұрын
Re Mustafar I think for orbital refuelling to really make sense, you need to combine it with asteroid mining.
@MCsCreations
Жыл бұрын
And comet mining as well.
@MusikCassette
Жыл бұрын
@@MCsCreations Y do you mock me?
@MCsCreations
Жыл бұрын
@MusikCassette I'm not! I'm agreeing with you.
@MusikCassette
Жыл бұрын
@@MCsCreations the hole point about asteroid mining is, that their are a lot of asteroid, that are qutie close to earth orbit. (in terms of deltaV) so bringing mass from Asteroids is in a way easier, than from earth. The viability of asteroid mining pretty much stops for asteroids that are further away, than the surface of the moon. because if you need actually that much mass, you might as well start mining there. So why the hell would you mine comets?
@MCsCreations
Жыл бұрын
@MusikCassette For fuel. Things like methane. Or even water to brake it into O2 and H2.
@Jordy120
Жыл бұрын
Mustafa. E, E, Doc Smith wrote a series (mid 70s to mid 80s) called 'Family d'Alembert'. The main characters were human but born and raised on a high gravity planet. One of of my favourite series in SciFi.
@volpedo2000
Жыл бұрын
Hey Fraser, what do you think? Should scientific educators on social media and YT make an effort (quasi an oath) of always making a distinction between the Universe and the Observable Universe? I’ve seen many renowned content creators using Universe when they were clearly talking about the OU.
@lurkst3r
Жыл бұрын
Naboo is a fantastic question. Exoplanet studies is my fav subject right now, besides using gravitational lensing as a telescope! Tolliman mission is really exciting too.
@MCsCreations
Жыл бұрын
Mustafar! Thanks a bunch for all the answers, Fraser! 😊 Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
@smarkwal
Жыл бұрын
If the CMB was once high energetic / high frequency radiation and then got “streched” to today’s microwave frequency, there must have been a time when it passed through wavelengths of the visible spectrum. Was the light intensity at this time high enough that the background of space was blue, green, and then red insted of black? Or was the intensity already so low that we could not have detected this light with our eyes?
@tonywells6990
Жыл бұрын
The CMB started out as a hot 'orange' glow of about 2700 Kelvin (like a hot piece of metal, or the hot surface of a small star), 380,000 years after the big bang.
@EdisonDiBlasi
Жыл бұрын
Ok, I know I have heard you explain the CMB a few times, but today was the lightbulb moment. Maybe it was because of the way the question was phrased. Thanks and keep making these! [Coruscant]
@emark8928
Жыл бұрын
Tattooine -- I asked Paul Sutter this exact question and he very politely showed me how wrong my premise was. And then he ate cheese. Please invite him [back] to your channel!
@WilhelmDrake
Жыл бұрын
Question: Are there any finite non-wrapping geometries possible for the universe?
@jeffmccrea9347
Жыл бұрын
Your question leaves me flat.
@cykkm
Жыл бұрын
Vote: ALERAAH. An excellent question! It's indeed true that the restricted 3-body problem (with one mass negligible compared to the others) doesn't have an _analytic_ solution: the only provable analytic solution is Euler-Lagrange with the 5 stationary points, and stable orbits exist only at L₄ and L₅ of the binary, aren't figure-8 (F8). It's unknown, AFAIK, whether or not a numeric solution exists. Considering the Roche potential of the binary, it's easy to spot an equipotential F8 orbit passing through L₁, but it is indeed unstable. It should be noted that a stable _one-period_ F8 orbit, or “free-return orbit,” has been used by the Apollo missions. Without a Moon orbital insertion burn, the free orbit closes back at the Earth after self-intersecting near the Moon. I don't know if the solution can be extended further (assuming exactly circular Moon orbit, for example), but I suspect that it can't It is remarkable, however, that a stable F8 orbit exists for 3 equal mass bodies (Chenciner and Montgomery 2000, ArXiv math/0011268), KAM-stability proof (Simó 2002, MR1884902), linear, stronger stability proofs by (Moore and Nauenberg 2006, ArXiv math/0511219), (Roberts 2007, DOI-10.1017/S0143385707000284) show that the solution remain stable within a certain mass difference margin. Animation: kzitem.infoNifhFOPk7h8. In fact, Simó found multiple regular KAM-stable solution of n-body problems, called “choreography solutions.” This is a whole area of research in chaotic dynamics. For example, a 3D solution for a “corkscrew orbit“ _(not_ F8!) of the restricted problem has been found (Oks 2015, DOI-10.1088/0004-637X/804/2/106, corr. in DOI-10.3847/0004-637X/823/1/69).
@reinholdmathuni5134
Жыл бұрын
First KZitem Blogger who gets that Big Bang thing right 👍
@LarryBonson
Жыл бұрын
How do you get a theory right without conformation.
@reinholdmathuni5134
Жыл бұрын
@@LarryBonson I don't mean the theory itself. I mean that if the universe is infitite now it must have been infinite forever, even at the big bang. Nobody gets that right, everybody says it was a point. The "observable Universe" was small point but the whole universe was infinite. You cant jump from a point to infinite.
@gregkiser8880
Жыл бұрын
Recently, plasma science has lately come into my purview and, being an electronics engineer myself, I'm blown away by the special rules that plasma obeys (electromagnetism, double-layers, dark-, glow-, and arc modes, z-pinches, etc.). But I have been shocked at how astophysics articles hardly (if ever) mention any of these things. Yet at first glance, plasma and electromagnetism seem to be good candidates for considering of possibly playing a major role in forming the massive structures we can observe in space and some of the electrical activity that occurs. And knowing electromagnetism is 1000 trillion trillion trillion times (10^39) more powerful than gravity, do you see plasma science coming into or being more and more included in astronomy and cosmology in the future? Like, maybe gravity & plasma together to help explain some of the mysteries and anomalous observations? (I'm so new at plasma, I'm not even sure I'm asking the right questions). Anyway, I'm a huge fan of Universe Today and you! Thanks for all you do!
@chaosopher23
Жыл бұрын
Perhaps we're not looking at the 'edge' when we look back 13+ billion years ago, but the center. Mindblowing, but it's true. 13+ billion years ago, that was the center, but now we call it the edge, even though we're whizzing away from it at a godzillion meters a second.
@ImBrezii
Жыл бұрын
As a thought experiment/question, what are the chances that black holes may not even be “holes” at all. What if the matter/object is just so dense that it doesn’t allow light to escape it’s gravitational influence, and that behind the event horizon is just an incredibly dense physical object?
@Vedurin
Жыл бұрын
Mandalore: That question also states another fact. Can there be a planet where the escape velocity is so big that life on that planet could never leave the planet ? That also means there are planets where we shouldn't go, because we couldn't return.
@Vedurin
Жыл бұрын
Oh, well. I wrote too early, you already brought up that point. 😀
@storyspren
Жыл бұрын
Dagobah is for sure my favorite for this episode! We already have gravitational wave astronomy but it's still a newborn field basically, and the idea explored here will probably be in the center of developments in it in the future. Maybe very far in the future, but still.
@ardentdfender4116
Жыл бұрын
My simple minded question based on the first viewer question is this: If the universe at one time was the size tiny the size of a grapefruit, what is on the outside of the grapefruit? If the universe keep growing and expanding in volume it is pushing forth into whatever is on the other side of that grapefruit. When does whatever is on the other side of the grapefruit exert force and push back onto the universe?
@ematthew71
Жыл бұрын
Strong explanations this week Fraser. Keep eating those Wheaties!
@frasercain
Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@Flowmystic
Жыл бұрын
Bespin. After a 6 hour surgery I had a week ago I’ve been having some wild dreams. A few days ago I dreamt you had a Q and A in an orange F-150 that a few of us got to ride with you but the catch was we had to write down our questions on paper while you drove erratically down the city streets. We were flying around in the cab of the truck while trying to keep a grasp of the dashboard without seatbelts.
@frasercain
Жыл бұрын
That might have happened...
@rhoddryice5412
Жыл бұрын
BESPIN: In a very strong magnetic field it’s possible to flip the polarity of an ordinary magnet. An idea popping up in my mind is that the flipping of Earth’s magnetic field may be caused by events in our galaxy.
@kevinhambsch9201
Жыл бұрын
2nd It is of utmost importance to distinguish what "type" of mag sail you are talking about...there are four "types": 1st is the Mag Sail by Zubrin and Andrews 2nd is the electric mag sail by Janhunnan 3rd is the Winglee static dipole bubble sail. (not considered viable) 4th is The Plasma Magnet John Slough NIAC phase I and II U of W.
@jeffmccrea9347
Жыл бұрын
For the sake of this question, we are going to ignore the effects of direct gravitational attraction, radiation , magnetism and spaghettification. If one were to do a space walk within 100 miles of a soon to be merging pair of neutron stars or black holes, what would the effect of being that close to a powerful source of gravity waves? Would it shake you around? Would it tear you apart? Would you even notice? I've wondered this ever since they were first detected.
@AdvaitChoudhary
Жыл бұрын
I have a question about the CMB. If CMB represents a moment in time when the atoms separated enough for light to travel long distances, how long did this 'moment' last? After all, we have been observing the CMB for decades now.
@sarahgarrow303
Жыл бұрын
Hi Fraser! Your newsletter is so rich that I'm almost afraid to open it every week as I may not get a single other thing done that week if I do! You do FANTASTIC work. Just wondering whether questions are limited to those with a financial subscription, or whether anyone can submit one? Assuming the latter, I have two probably pretty lame ones: a) you know how when you look at a star, you're seeing the light as it was when it began its journey from that star and when you see it, it's that light finally hitting your eyeball on Earth however many light years later? I get that part, but what wrecks my head is that if you look at the same star the next night, why is more light coming? I mean surely its light hit your eye the previous evening, so game over? (This is kinda like the question I used to ask my parents as a kid: ie, if the Earth turns around during the night, how come our house isn't on the other side of the street in the morning?! My parents patiently explained that it was because the WHOLE PLANET turned around, not just our street, but as a kid I just couldn't grasp this) b) You know how the atoms in your right hand may have originated in a different supernova than the ones in your left? How does the fact that you're built from your mother and father's DNA affect this? This is another primary school level question, I know, so apologies for the overall lameness, but I can't get my head around that either! I think it's wondrous that we are made of materials blown off by stars at the end of their life cycle, but can't separate out the atoms coming direct from stars into either of my hands, from the atoms coming from your parents' combined DNA, if you see what I'm getting at? Again, if Qs are just for paying subscribers, I understand, but that wasn't clear from your EXCELLENT presentation above. Regards Katherine
@ChristopherSterwerf
Жыл бұрын
Corellia . Great question and answer!
@thebigerns
Жыл бұрын
The universe was always infinite in size, just not always infinite in density. Remember Space and Time are inextricable aspects of the same thing, so space can't expand or time pass in isolation of the other. I think the problem is this requires an infinite amount of imagination to grasp.
@gravelpit5680
Жыл бұрын
Agreed, its just a shell game
@WingmanSR
10 ай бұрын
'You would have like 10 stages, but it would still theoretically work' Say less, My boy Jebediah is on it tonight.
@theboathaaa7654
10 ай бұрын
How did it go? Godspeed Jeb, and hold on tight
@LordZordid
Жыл бұрын
I vote we name the earth's magnetic field reversal "The Big Flip Off". Or something similar dense.
@guillep2k
Жыл бұрын
I've said this before, in this channel: the fact that the images in the background actually show "the Universe" as being round-shaped really doesn''t help. I get the explanation, but can't the images at least show a representation of what's being said? Because if there was ever a communication error, it was this graphical representation of the Universe expanding like an explosion, and yet that's what we see here! One example of what could help is showing the screen completely white with a point in the middle and a circle around it, and arrows marking: "this is you, this is the observable universe, this is the UNobservable universe, and guess what: everything now is futher apart from everything else and now it's not that the universe is 'bigger', but the circle your gaze can reach is. The universe was always infinite, or at least considerably larger than the circle".
@cj3kosh
Жыл бұрын
Fav Q&A Mandalor Very thought provoking - Good demonstration of the Rocket equation...
@LaserFur
Жыл бұрын
[Tatooine] Atoms are shrinking and the speed of light is slowing down. If you take two points in the early universe and scale it to the current two points you get a view that subtracts out the expansion. This visualization makes it easier to see how the universe energy turns into matter and the matter condenses. The "Shrinking" theory is not useful from the science point of view since it does not make any different predictions, but it is a way to think about expansion.
@Threedog1963
Жыл бұрын
You have stated in the far future, observers will not be able to see anything beyond the local group. The rest of the once observable universe will be beyond observation due to expansion of the universe. So, have we seen anything disappear due to expansion, never to be seen again?
@frasercain
Жыл бұрын
Not yet. The CMB is the farthest that can be seen... and we can see it.
@ikariameriks
Жыл бұрын
Our observable universe is still expanding not contracting
@Threedog1963
Жыл бұрын
@@ikariameriks Yes, but the universe is expanding faster than the speed of light. Meaning things that are observable now, at the edges of the observable universe will someday disappear. Universe Today has done an episode on this. Just asking for clarification.
@creightondaniels7748
Жыл бұрын
Love show! Here's a Therory! A singularity in a Donut! A VAST Universe with a blender singularity in the middle. Goes in one end and recreated on the other. Explains alot........ Thus the Donut none stop sound of creation. And or destruction.... Norcal...
@gravelpit5680
Жыл бұрын
Yep... horn torus... dark energy and spacetime squishing in and out
@stevenlafavor9823
Жыл бұрын
On the topic of an intelligent species potentially "trapped" on their planet due to its high gravity there is a two book series from the 1980's by Robert L. Forward, Dragon's Egg and Starquake, about lifeforms that evolve on the surface of a neutron star, and eventually develop space travel.
@MaryAnnNytowl
Жыл бұрын
Mustafar is definitely my favorite subject! Re: Naboo. Shouldn't we call the "habitable zone" the "liquid water zone," instead? Because what would sometimes be considered uninhabitable could, through something like Enceladus does, have liquid water. As for Bespin, thank you for clarifying that, since many seem not to understand it. But... "flippening?" 😂😂 That's a technical term, right? 😂😂 Thanks, Fraser, for all you do! ❤❤
@oleran4569
Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Just bought the book. His Mars series was great! Your review promises more greatness to come!
@Yezpahr
Жыл бұрын
Coruscant. I think this is still the most mind boggling thing in science... We can't reconcile why we see this thing at that distance, if that happened so long ago. Whatever we are told, it feels weird that something we see is this size and distance happened to something so small and nearby. As if the reality itself never expanded but shrunk instead. This is why it's strange it's even there, far behind a dark zone with nothing in it. If it blew up where we see it radiate from, how could it have been so small when it created the light. At some point it feels the CMB was the edge where energy started to turn to mass, and we can only view it from the inside.
@stevenbliss989
Жыл бұрын
Regarding toast simulation, the answer is actually NO NO NO!!!!!!!!!! Because ironically you would need WAY WAY more atoms to build a computer that can simulate down to that level of detail. I am bot an electronics engineer and systems programmer, so I have a deep perspective on this. So Frarser, your answer is kinda ok, but way to optimistic. ...hey, I still love you! :)
@idodekkers9165
Жыл бұрын
Hey Fraser is there any connection between the physical phenomena where for example they take the T shape spanner in the ISS and spin it, and it flips direction by itself, and the magnetic pole shift ?
@annsidbrant7616
Жыл бұрын
I have a question. We all know that the Universe is expanding, but some astronomers still think the expansion may one day stop and the Universe may start contracting. If that were to happen, what would be the first signs that the Universe had begun contracting?
@N8DE420
Жыл бұрын
How far would we be in space exploration without the dinosaurs ever existing?
@frasercain
Жыл бұрын
We burn them for rocket fuel.
@chris-terrell-liveactive
Жыл бұрын
Tatooine.. the size of the universe seems a bit more comprehensible now and I can eat that orange in the fruit bowl to celebrate!
@MikeFields83
Жыл бұрын
I have a question: What’s the meaning of all this? The meaning of existence. That is all thank you 😊
@fabzter
Жыл бұрын
Only you can answer that question. The universe itself by itself doesn't have an inherent meaning. However, your life can very well have a meaning, but that meaning is personal. Live, enjoy life, and find your very personal meaning :)
@CybAtSteam
Жыл бұрын
42
@doncarlodivargas5497
Жыл бұрын
Easy, beer, pizza and a relaxing sunday in the garden
@doncarlodivargas5497
Жыл бұрын
@@fabzter - questions like this, "meaning" are like who created god, what is outside the universe, etc etc etc, it never ends, questions that only produce new questions
@LarryBonson
Жыл бұрын
The meaning of life question can only be answered individually since we all have to find our own purpose 😊.
@Handles-R-Lame
Жыл бұрын
Kamino. Cause a part of my heart belongs to SOFIA
@HebaruSan
Жыл бұрын
For Mandalore, a Project Orion nuclear pulse engine (~6000 sec ISP) would probably be more accessible than metallic hydrogen or antimatter, if a bit messier. For when you absolutely, positively have to get off of your ultra massive habitable planet.
@billrosell3064
Жыл бұрын
Q: Why do all the systems ( planets and galaxies ) rotate? Q; Do all systems rotate in the same direction? Q: Where does that energy come from? Q: Is the universe trying to balance E =E or G=G ? Q ; What percent clockwise & percent counter C.? Thank you
@rhayat10
Жыл бұрын
I have a question: What is that background music? It's so relaxing.
@garman1966
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Fraser! To me it seems the dense hot early universe was like a state of matter that went through a phase change, sort of like water, that expands many many times when it changes state to a gas. How that happened everywhere at once I don't know, but maybe a foam of bubbles formed formed first during "inflation", they all expanded in size until they crashed into each other leaving filaments of residue left over? Maybe gravitational wave detectors could be used to look for these bubble collisions? I'm so psyched you addressed my question!
@billallen275
Жыл бұрын
The more important thing for our civilization is not the seven hundred thousand a-year reversal cycle but the 6,000 year magnetic excursion cycle. It appears to bring disaster on a 6,000 year cycle. It's been about 6,000 years, and the poles are moving rapidly. The field strength is dropping, also, which shields us less from space and the Sun
@tiagotiagot
Жыл бұрын
At which point would we be able to tell the difference between our Universe simulation models having the wrong physics versus not matching observations due to large-scale influence of alien civilizations?
@unclvinny
Жыл бұрын
Mandalore! I feel bad for those squished creatures.
@mhult5873
Жыл бұрын
Tatooine | Thank you for your great videos!
@BestBFam
7 ай бұрын
Thank you Fraser.
@BillAngelos
Жыл бұрын
Question: From my understanding the higgs boson does something (possibly creates a field) that gives everything its mass. If it decays in less than a fraction of a second, how can it do anything?
@richardseymour3399
Жыл бұрын
The obvious solution is that back then grapefruits were infinite in size.
@Jacob-Vivimord
Жыл бұрын
The universe must be infinite. It's possible that our physical universe is "contained" in some way, but there must be something infinite beyond that. Nothing else would make any sense.
@soaringstars314
Жыл бұрын
In the digital world it's an infinite universe. There is never a border as you can always go through it or know what's beyond it even if it crashes you know it extends forever. The only limit is te numbers that can be inputed to some extent. But it's still infinite. So the real world must be infinite too
@Jacob-Vivimord
Жыл бұрын
@@soaringstars314 My reasoning is simply that "absolute nothing" cannot exist in a universe with something/anything in it. It's a binary choice. It's 0 or 1, and our universe is clearly a 1. "Nothing" means no possibilities, and that includes the possibility of something arising out of that nothingness.
@soaringstars314
Жыл бұрын
@@Jacob-Vivimord ah ok although it can apply to both looped and infinite if that's what you're talking about
@clortex
10 ай бұрын
Just imagine, there must be stars where you were the last human to observe it/them.
@jimcabezola3051
Жыл бұрын
I like the Mustafar question best. There's a lot of engineering to be done to get that refueling concept to work.
@Jamelith
Жыл бұрын
Is it possible… Black holes have infinite mass and infinite density. Observibly though they occupy a finite location in space. Could it be that mass breaks down at a level we haven’t even been able to measure yet? If so, doesn’t that sound like the perfect enviroment for a big bang?
@idodekkers9165
Жыл бұрын
Hay again Fraser are "the escape velocity of a black hole bigger then the speed of light" and "space around a black hole is curved back on itself" the same?
@Jens.Krabbe
Жыл бұрын
Ministry of the Future was a great listen! Loved it. Going to dig into Red Mars soon.
@markwarburton8563
Жыл бұрын
Tatooine. As I understand it, the laws of physics must have been very different at the time of the big bang, because to have all of that mass in the same place under our physics would inevitably result in a supermassive black hole with all of the universe's mass inside of it. What are the best theories around when the change in physical laws happened during the big bang and why did they change?
@dondaniels127
Жыл бұрын
Could you use the measurement of the gradual Red Shift of the CMB to get a clue as to the size of our universe? You would have to adjust for travel time and all, but if the CMB comes from the “Edge” of creation, the rate of redshift might give us some clues to extrapolate our current “size”.
@MarcosVinic
Жыл бұрын
Hello Fraser, consider that a Jupiter-like gaseous planet is spewed out of your solar system. How long until he becomes a giant ball of "ice" drifting through deep space?
@Meeeeeh
Жыл бұрын
That planet swapping thing is very unlikely but I would not exclude the possibility. Take Saturn who has two moons (Epimetheus and Janus) which actually switch orbit every 4 years and it seems to be very stable.
@doncarlodivargas5497
Жыл бұрын
The singularity that created our universe must have been like a black hole, could it be processes going on in black holes, only extremely slowly? So the black holes we see is actually "exploding" like the big bang did, only very slowly?
@topazmoon1191
Жыл бұрын
Nice video. Question: Why does Venus spin so slowly on its axis, especially compared to all the other planets?
@vertigo2893
Жыл бұрын
Alderaan has my vote!
@robertdufault3810
Жыл бұрын
I’m not a scientist so I hope you don’t find my explanation to my question too rudimentary. I was watching a show on Space-time & how gravity curves this space-time making space-time go slightly slower towards the centre of the mass of an object. I also remember hearing somewhere that gravity isn’t a force that is easily explained. My question is, could gravity simply be the curving of space-time simply pushing objects towards the centre of each other’s mass rather than an attraction of two objects towards one another? Which raises another question, is a black hole so massive that not only light cannot escape but space-time itself? Is a black hole so massive that time no longer moves forward? Does my question make sense?
@Zodtheimmortal
Жыл бұрын
I'm trying to understand what you mean about the size of the Universe just after the big bang. Previously I had pictured the Universe as only the size of a orange, just after the big bang; and then there was inflation which expanded the universe faster than light. To me the faster than light expansion seemed to explain why some of the Universe is currently not observable. So does your explanation include inflation as well? Are you saying that the universe essentially already existed before the big bang? And that the universe may have been empty before the big bang, which filled it with matter and energy? (In the observable portion).
@SeaTacDelta
Жыл бұрын
Hey Fraser, great show as always. Question for you... has there been, or are there any planned, earth orbital stations that uses a polar or sun synchronous orbit? All of them so far are equatorial with varying degrees of inclination based on launch location (40-50 degrees for all of the ones I can think of like Mir, Skylab, ISS, Tiangong). A sun synchronous orbit would have some power and observation benefits wouldn't they?
@DavidL-ii7yn
Жыл бұрын
What does "size" mean in the context of the universe? By what ruler is it measured?... the speed of light? If so, maybe the universe hasn't changed size. Maybe another way of looking at it is the speed of light decreasing instead of space changing size.
@avasquez3413
Жыл бұрын
Question: Could a black hole be a contact point of another universe and a white hole be the opposite side?
@phoule76
Жыл бұрын
Mustafar.... because it's the only time Fraser mentioned Lagrange Points. Drink!
@Nk36745
Жыл бұрын
CMB, what if you took an image at the CMB wavelength then another image at a fractionally shorter wavelength and repeat. You would end up with a video, what would this video show?
@vadimgur
Жыл бұрын
But then what was the significance of the Big Bang if there was always more Universe further then the observable Universe? It is also often said that the time itself was created in the Big Bang, so there is no point to ask what was before it as there was no before. If there was always more Universe, then the time was not created?
@JimKrause1975
10 ай бұрын
Is dark energy in empty space only? How does some space know to expand while other space knows not to? Or so it seems, right?
@Silverfox.J
Жыл бұрын
As above so below. If the quantum wave turns to a particle when observed and comes into reality from superposition. is there an observing making the universe arrive from superposition?
@seanb3516
Жыл бұрын
A simulated reality is interesting in that if you were to simulate a reality within the simulated reality the energy required for the second simulation is already within the first simulation. This implies that the second simulation was known before the first simulation was created. Does this mean the idea is impossible or does this indicate 'chronodelocalization'?
@khuti007
Жыл бұрын
Hi, my question is about time. Is there no present? Do we live in the past, as calculated by an event + speed of light, even a thought is delayed?
@adraedin
Жыл бұрын
Regarding the first question: What really made the idea of the "grapefruit --> infinite in a Planck moment" idea click for me was seeing approx. 5 seconds some B-roll footage from another other science channel here on KZitem... And i wish I knew where to find it to show you so I'll have to explain it instead... Let's start with a ruler (📏) with equal markings all the way down - we can use millimeters but the units are arbitrary. Now imagine it goes from 0 to infinity. Now, let's pretend we had a dial/slider to change the spacing between of each of these infinite markings. We could set the (equal) spacing to one Planck unit, one grapefruit, one meter, 10km, 1 million miles, 100 AU, etc. The smaller your spacing, the more dense the markings on the ruler will be, and vice versa. Now, if you haven't already, imagine (visually) what would happen if you set the spacing to 0.... All of the infinite marks would all be in the same spot. "0" looks different than any other number and looks point-like whereas any other number is positive, resulting in infinite length. Play with the idea. We were using a ruler which was 1D and counted from 0 to infinity, however, the "grapefruit to infinity" would happen from an origin point and go in 3-dimensions, akin to a sun radiating. I hope that made it click for at least one person.😅
@radman1136
6 ай бұрын
What's amazing is that 95% of cosmology is unknown, but you can get a PHD in that.
@tiagotiagot
Жыл бұрын
Could we observe the light from stars/galaxies behind a black-hole merge rippling during the merge if we had a telescope aimed at the right spot at the right time? If not with current technology, how much better would our telescopes need to be?
@ralboraggins9564
3 ай бұрын
If location earth was selected to begin with, it will be close to a series of other planets we can leapfrog to. like islands. maybe.
@ravensrulzaviation
Жыл бұрын
Thank you Fraser, I love the question and answer show. By the way, the Universe is so infinite that it goes beyond my brain. Keep up the great stuff, Is always off the hook!!!!!! 6:05
@SoCalBenner
Жыл бұрын
What percentage of the visible galaxies are duplicates due to spatial lensing? Is it possible to determine?
@ianglencross
Жыл бұрын
Possible Question : How does cold new early dark energy (NEDE) differ from the dark energy we have now, and does it resolve the H0 and S8 tensions?
Пікірлер: 362