Sounds like terrible neighbours are a universal problem
@endtimesninja1235
15 күн бұрын
Lol. As above so below
@NoMoreNarrative
15 күн бұрын
When your neighbors are resident aliens, cultural wars manifest on a regional multi-galactic scale.
@WarkWarbly
15 күн бұрын
ba da dum tsssssss Dad. Joke. Of the. Year.
@submachinegun5737
15 күн бұрын
This is the galactic equivalent of being neighbors of the nuclear boy scout, you wake up one day and he’s irradiated the whole neighborhood from a makeshift reactor in his shed
@SMGA14
15 күн бұрын
The quasar shot black energy
@michaeljames5936
15 күн бұрын
Quasar: "It's my 700 millionth birthday" "First, I'm going to blow out these candles."
@CanadianStargazer
15 күн бұрын
and then Quasar declares "I am the champion of the Universe!"
@JayKay-d5p
15 күн бұрын
😂
@flyingfetus4364
15 күн бұрын
Random alien living his happiest life until 💀
@hiteshrx2024
15 күн бұрын
how would it count its birthday?
@HeySenthil
15 күн бұрын
Super comment
@arctic_haze
15 күн бұрын
When I was a teenager I read everything I could find on cosmology. What JWST discovers now is exactly what I hoped we would see one day with much better instruments. This is indeed the Golden Era of observational cosmology.
@Breakfast_of_Champions
15 күн бұрын
The computer revolution added orders of magnitude to this field of knowledge. I remember what it was like in the 1970s when it started to take off, black holes were still a theoretical thing🙂
@davidmcnaughty4889
15 күн бұрын
Something tells me we ain't seen nuthin' yet.
@solmyrpendergast8387
15 күн бұрын
Personally, the golden age for me will be when we have multiple JWSTs in various Lagrange points in the solar system. But I agree, this is all awesome.
@gasdive
15 күн бұрын
I really thought by this time we would have several 1000m aperture optical telescopes in space and multiple large radio telescopes co-orbital with Earth giving us a 2au aperture radio telescope. Instead we've wasted billions of dollars destroying sacred mountains, imprisoning indigenous people and making them pay for their own beatings. Overall it's been pretty disappointing.
@nadahere
15 күн бұрын
Sorry to rain on your parade but here is no scientific evidence for BHs...and math is NOT science. These mathamagicians are inventing things with math and pretending they are real. Scientists will do almost anything for grant $. Check some articles about academic/research fraud. === 🤜⚡💥⚡🤛 LOL LOL LOL The hubris and arrogance to think we understand star/galactic evolution. But of course they are WRONG!!!All this and more is better explained with experiment-based plasma science; i.e. Plasma Cosmology. 1] the Universe is based on plasma; 2] plasma's are electric in nature/origin; 3] plasmas inherently self-organize into structures; 4] plasma's produce many EM-band emissions (light, 'rays' and radio frequencies). Conclusion: just another plasma emission. Move on! Nothing unusual here. Astronomer Halton Arp made a good case for it in his books. Similar to the item in this video, Halton showed galaxies and star clusters that are connected by bridges...yet have vastly different red shifts. This occurs because a parent galaxy can eject smaller bodies which then grow in size with time to become galaxies. MSS will continue to be clueless until the scientists admit they have been wrong and adopt new physics in dealing with the 'mysteries' they don't understand. Clearly the current approach doesn't serve them well. == Carrying on with darkwhatever is like religions claiming that Earth etc. are evidence of god. It's all misappropriation just the same. If you can't understand something DON'T just invent fairy tales. Geezus!!! Yeah, science has gone off the rails on other things too. Yes, there are so many blunders that it's become a joke. Some scientists, like Sabine Hossenfelder comment on some of these fallacies. 💥 Moreover, black holes do not exist. No 'Onerock' rings have been detected for Milkyway's central BH, Sagittarius A, proving that gravity does not bend light, thereby nullifying/disproving Onerock's theories. Dr. Dowdye demonstrated that the Eddington light bending experiment to prove Onerock's theories was a sham. It was simply atmospheric diffraction within the limb of the Sun. Bending due to grabbity would have been detectable up to 0.1 AU from the Sun's surface but this was not observed thus Onerock was wrong. Whenever I think about gravity it brings me down. ))) == My comment to Anton Petrov's video *"One of the Largest Stars Known Dimmed Just Like Betelgeuse"* -- don't be surprised when a red supergiant splits into 2 stars or ejects a hot object[s] that will cool to form a planet[s]._ is relevant here, Conventional science is oblivious to this fact... for now, but evidence/observations will force this conclusion. Another observation/fact they will have to concede is that stars of same or similar class will, on average, have similar types of planets with the exception of stars whose Birkeland current has gone through a structural and energetic change in the past which occurs frequently. Variable output stars/objects demonstrate this. Other electrical phenomena affect the aforementioned which add to variations. 🤜⚡💥⚡🤛 ... .. .
@Innomen
15 күн бұрын
I've had my view of space changed by this. I was under the impression it was possible to be safe with enough distance and that events were more or less confined to galactic regions. I viewed things like galactic clusters are mostly abstraction where for all intents and purposes galaxies were all isolated and that grouping them was a bit academic. But the idea of a single blackhole's accretion disc sterilizing an area 16 million lightyears wide changes my perception utterly. Simply incomprehensible power. I thought magnetars were insane. This is unimaginable.
@TheSprinkler
15 күн бұрын
yea i never thought it'd reach this far
@catpoke9557
15 күн бұрын
@@TheDredConspiracy In this case, if it were nearby, it would kill us even if we stayed... horrifying
@99guspuppet8
15 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ I feel threatened …. And my friends, the elephants feel frightened as well. ……. Let’s all go to Sugar rock Candy Mountain.
@gustavgnoettgen
15 күн бұрын
@99guspuppet8 ok
@kapsi
15 күн бұрын
Galactic clusters aren't abstractions, because the galaxies are held together by gravity, which prevents them from flying away too much, and maybe is enough to counteract the dark energy.
@tayzonday
15 күн бұрын
Now THAT’S a weapon of MASS destruction! 😳🤯
@wildliferox2
15 күн бұрын
Quasar: Thats it, its over. The Great Attractor: Nah, after the hissy fit, he'll back with us at the bar.
@cosmictreason2242
12 күн бұрын
History quickly crashing through your space Telescopes make your wonder where it went
@handlemonium
9 күн бұрын
Chocolate Radiation
@backpfeifengesichtsyndrome3708
5 күн бұрын
YOU CAN NEVER HIDE FROM THE CHOCOLATE RAIN BABYY
@MrRobertX70
15 күн бұрын
It's difficult for me to imagine or comprehend something powerful enough to exert its influence over millions of light years.
@Toxicpoolofreekingmascul-lj4yd
15 күн бұрын
Like gravity?
@grantschiff7544
15 күн бұрын
Time warping.
@nadahere
15 күн бұрын
Correct. It is unimaginable...because it's FALSE. There is no scientific evidence for BHs...and math is NOT science. These mathamagicians are inventing things with math and pretending they are real. Scientists will do almost anything for grant $. Check some articles about academic/research fraud. === 🤜⚡💥⚡🤛 LOL LOL LOL The hubris and arrogance to think we understand star/galactic evolution. But of course they are WRONG!!!All this and more is better explained with experiment-based plasma science; i.e. Plasma Cosmology. 1] the Universe is based on plasma; 2] plasma's are electric in nature/origin; 3] plasmas inherently self-organize into structures; 4] plasma's produce many EM-band emissions (light, 'rays' and radio frequencies). Conclusion: just another plasma emission. Move on! Nothing unusual here. Astronomer Halton Arp made a good case for it in his books. Similar to the item in this video, Halton showed galaxies and star clusters that are connected by bridges...yet have vastly different red shifts. This occurs because a parent galaxy can eject smaller bodies which then grow in size with time to become galaxies. MSS will continue to be clueless until the scientists admit they have been wrong and adopt new physics in dealing with the 'mysteries' they don't understand. Clearly the current approach doesn't serve them well. == Carrying on with darkwhatever is like religions claiming that Earth etc. are evidence of god. It's all misappropriation just the same. If you can't understand something DON'T just invent fairy tales. Geezus!!! Yeah, science has gone off the rails on other things too. Yes, there are so many blunders that it's become a joke. Some scientists, like Sabine Hossenfelder comment on some of these fallacies. 💥 Moreover, black holes do not exist. No 'Onerock' rings have been detected for Milkyway's central BH, Sagittarius A, proving that gravity does not bend light, thereby nullifying/disproving Onerock's theories. Dr. Dowdye demonstrated that the Eddington light bending experiment to prove Onerock's theories was a sham. It was simply atmospheric diffraction within the limb of the Sun. Bending due to grabbity would have been detectable up to 0.1 AU from the Sun's surface but this was not observed thus Onerock was wrong. Whenever I think about gravity it brings me down. ))) == My comment to Anton Petrov's video *"One of the Largest Stars Known Dimmed Just Like Betelgeuse"* -- don't be surprised when a red supergiant splits into 2 stars or ejects a hot object[s] that will cool to form a planet[s]._ is relevant here, Conventional science is oblivious to this fact... for now, but evidence/observations will force this conclusion. Another observation/fact they will have to concede is that stars of same or similar class will, on average, have similar types of planets with the exception of stars whose Birkeland current has gone through a structural and energetic change in the past which occurs frequently. Variable output stars/objects demonstrate this. Other electrical phenomena affect the aforementioned which add to variations. 🤜⚡💥⚡🤛
@BobbyChipmunk
15 күн бұрын
@@Toxicpoolofreekingmascul-lj4yd no, not at all. That's more of an unwritten constant, sort of how no one questions how much air is around us volumetrically, but marvels at mountains or oceans.
@MrRobertX70
15 күн бұрын
@@Toxicpoolofreekingmascul-lj4yd No, not like gravity. Gravity is not a force.
@AL_EKs
14 күн бұрын
What is really mind-blowing is the fact that a region 16,000,000 light-years across is nothing more than a statistical anomaly on the scale of the entire universe.
@USAF-NGAD
15 күн бұрын
This is the first cosmological event that has ever truly made me fearful of the Universe, 16 million light years in every direction? That’s absurd.
@khumokwezimashapa2245
13 күн бұрын
I feel the same way. That's such an absurd distance. There's no analogy you could come up with to understand how stupid this was
@lordlittletoeq8537
11 күн бұрын
@@khumokwezimashapa2245 DBZ power scaler: " pffft, kinda weak brah"
@USAF-NGAD
11 күн бұрын
@@khumokwezimashapa2245 I was gonna try and use a Dragonball Z reference like the guy above my comment used but even that crazy series has nothing that could compare to this event.
@khumokwezimashapa2245
11 күн бұрын
@@lordlittletoeq8537 😂😂😂
@khumokwezimashapa2245
11 күн бұрын
@@USAF-NGAD That's what makes this event so crazy. I think in DBZ at least. The most destructive feat was Broly destroying the South or East Galaxy. I know those movies aren't canon, but I think that's the most a single character has destroyed in Z. This would clap a lot of the DBZ characters, which is insane to think. This Quaser unironically solos a lot of verses 😂😂
@nurdyoga8228
15 күн бұрын
....Now witness the firepower of this fully armed and operational quasar....
@TypeZeta2
15 күн бұрын
Quasi-Stellar Obliterator
@BoycottChinaa
15 күн бұрын
"Local Thug"
@htos1av
15 күн бұрын
LOL!
@BoycottChinaa
15 күн бұрын
@@htos1av nothing for me? It wiped out a local group sized neighborhood! C'mon
@Flesh_Wizard
15 күн бұрын
@@TypeZeta2the BFG 900,000
@joeyholthusen6495
15 күн бұрын
In 2004 a magnetar had a star quake and it damaged our ozone from the other side of our Galaxy
@Yaivenov
15 күн бұрын
Awesome in the truest sense of the word.
@JorgetePanete
15 күн бұрын
magnetar*
@gustavgnoettgen
15 күн бұрын
Earth is sturdy from one angle, and resembles a soap bubble from most others.
@MoreFootWork
15 күн бұрын
There is no evidence that the eruption of the magnetar SGR 1806-20 in 2004 caused any damage to the Earth's ozone layer. Here are some key reasons: ## Distance from Earth Magnetar SGR 1806-20 is located about 50,000 light-years away from Earth. This vast distance means that even a powerful eruption could not have had a direct physical impact on our planet. ## Nature of the Radiation The eruption emitted primarily intense bursts of gamma radiation. While this was the strongest gamma radiation recorded to date, the ozone layer effectively protects life on Earth from this type of radiation. ## Lack of Observational Evidence Scientists closely monitored Earth and its atmosphere during and after the magnetar eruption. No anomalies in ozone levels or other atmospheric gases were observed that could indicate damage to the ozone layer. ## Mechanism of Ozone Formation The ozone layer is formed through photochemical reactions driven by ultraviolet radiation from the Sun. Gamma radiation from the magnetar eruption could not disrupt this natural process. In summary, while the eruption of magnetar SGR 1806-20 was a spectacular astronomical event, it had no measurable impact on the Earth's ozone layer due to the immense distance of the source and the nature of the emitted radiation. The ozone layer remained intact
@musicalvisions
15 күн бұрын
Where is evidence that there was ozone damage to earth's atmosphere? I have only seen reports that our ozone was not affected by the 2004 magnatar star quake.
@mapache-ehcapam
15 күн бұрын
And then we wonder if or why life is rare... damn, the universe is fucking hostile. We are damn lucky to be here.
@anthonynehoda2064
13 күн бұрын
Yea, even our planet and sun hostile towards us, we can live here only because our body repairs itself 24/7, DNA is OP in surviving.
@abhijithp2116
13 күн бұрын
There may be someone lucky than us living somewhere far away from us😢
@RayThackeray
11 күн бұрын
@@abhijithp2116 I hope so. To think of us as being the only intelligent life in the universe is utterly depressing.
@dmitrypoletaev7478
11 күн бұрын
I mean, we really don't know how rare life actually is. There might be life on Europa, but we just haven't discovered it yet.
@xBains
3 күн бұрын
@@RayThackeray Calling humans intelligent is a bit of a stretch.
@darraghchapman
15 күн бұрын
These astronomical units and the reality they convey are always baffling to me. Our brains haven't evolved to think on these scales, so I can only 'picture' them in a logical, abstract way. Thanks for your thorough, constant uploads. I always wait to see your lovely smile at the end :)
@thomasyunick3726
15 күн бұрын
it also works on the sub atomic level...... we have not looked inward as far as we have looked outward. if infinity is a reality it goes both ways
@hugegamer5988
15 күн бұрын
@@thomasyunick3726 at this point I think we are tucked in a reality that goes infinite in quite a few ways.
@vaevictis2789
15 күн бұрын
Space engine legitimately scared the crap out of me back in the day when i accelerated my camera to parsecs/s for the first time. Too huge, too fast
@sabinrawr
13 күн бұрын
It's not that hard to imagine... Just imagine the distance from Earth to the Sun, and make that journey 1.0118 trillion times. Easy peasy! 😅
@nsmith0723
15 күн бұрын
I had a middle school science teacher tell me black holes didn't exist in 2005
@garyjonah22
15 күн бұрын
Why? Had they all gone on holiday? Or maybe they didn't/don't? (exist)
@nadahere
15 күн бұрын
And your teach was correct. There is no scientific evidence for BHs...and math is NOT science. These mathamagicians are inventing things with math and pretending they are real. Scientists will do almost anything for grant $. Check some articles about academic/research fraud. === 🤜⚡💥⚡🤛 LOL LOL LOL The hubris and arrogance to think we understand star/galactic evolution. But of course they are WRONG!!!All this and more is better explained with experiment-based plasma science; i.e. Plasma Cosmology. 1] the Universe is based on plasma; 2] plasma's are electric in nature/origin; 3] plasmas inherently self-organize into structures; 4] plasma's produce many EM-band emissions (light, 'rays' and radio frequencies). Conclusion: just another plasma emission. Move on! Nothing unusual here. Astronomer Halton Arp made a good case for it in his books. Similar to the item in this video, Halton showed galaxies and star clusters that are connected by bridges...yet have vastly different red shifts. This occurs because a parent galaxy can eject smaller bodies which then grow in size with time to become galaxies. MSS will continue to be clueless until the scientists admit they have been wrong and adopt new physics in dealing with the 'mysteries' they don't understand. Clearly the current approach doesn't serve them well. == Carrying on with darkwhatever is like religions claiming that Earth etc. are evidence of god. It's all misappropriation just the same. If you can't understand something DON'T just invent fairy tales. Geezus!!! Yeah, science has gone off the rails on other things too. Yes, there are so many blunders that it's become a joke. Some scientists, like Sabine Hossenfelder comment on some of these fallacies. 💥 Moreover, black holes do not exist. No 'Onerock' rings have been detected for Milkyway's central BH, Sagittarius A, proving that gravity does not bend light, thereby nullifying/disproving Onerock's theories. Dr. Dowdye demonstrated that the Eddington light bending experiment to prove Onerock's theories was a sham. It was simply atmospheric diffraction within the limb of the Sun. Bending due to grabbity would have been detectable up to 0.1 AU from the Sun's surface but this was not observed thus Onerock was wrong. Whenever I think about gravity it brings me down. ))) == My comment to Anton Petrov's video *"One of the Largest Stars Known Dimmed Just Like Betelgeuse"* -- don't be surprised when a red supergiant splits into 2 stars or ejects a hot object[s] that will cool to form a planet[s]._ is relevant here, Conventional science is oblivious to this fact... for now, but evidence/observations will force this conclusion. Another observation/fact they will have to concede is that stars of same or similar class will, on average, have similar types of planets with the exception of stars whose Birkeland current has gone through a structural and energetic change in the past which occurs frequently. Variable output stars/objects demonstrate this. Other electrical phenomena affect the aforementioned which add to variations. 🤜⚡💥⚡🤛
@gasdive
15 күн бұрын
Sadly I find this very believable. I was taught Bohr's atom 50 years after that model was abandoned. I was also taught that the earth is flat and infinite, (though to be fair I don't think my teachers understood that was what they were saying when they said that a dropped object had constant acceleration). They called it "Newtonian" which was interesting because it was actually Newton who first realised that acceleration due to gravity is not constant, but varies as the inverse square of the distance between objects. So they were teaching pre-newtonian. 400+ years out of date
@BobbyChipmunk
15 күн бұрын
Me too, caused a huge argument. Got asked to leave.
@davidmacphee3549
15 күн бұрын
He should have checked with Steven Hawking. Who?
@Bothorth
15 күн бұрын
Now we have galaxy killers! Can't wait for this to find it's way into science fiction, if it hasn't already.
@GeriUrzejh
15 күн бұрын
It has, check the redemption of time by Baoshu if you are interested
@DavidUtau
15 күн бұрын
Literally a lot of X3 games like endless space 2 and stellaris
@Syncrotron9001
15 күн бұрын
Master Chief has entered the chat
@SlowMonoxide
15 күн бұрын
Ringworld, anyone?
@Bothorth
15 күн бұрын
Thanks so much. My knowledge stops at _Star Wars_ , _Trek_ & _Dune_ .
@lollypopalopicus
15 күн бұрын
Beautiful, Awe inspiring and bringing existential horror and dread all in one. Cosmology is truly remarkable.
@danieltal3d
15 күн бұрын
Talk about a Great Filter!! I don't fully comprehended what kind of force would kill off Galaxies over 16 million light years?
@Chris-ex5ed
15 күн бұрын
It was probably some avengers type good alien bad alien fighting
@ConsciousApostle999
12 күн бұрын
Curious question, do you really think a quasar completely destroyed a galaxy? Because this is real life, not dragonball super🤦🏿♂️
@danieltal3d
11 күн бұрын
@@ConsciousApostle999 Curious if this is a troll and did you watch the video. The quasar "killed", Antons words, Galaxies with 16 million light years. So going with me feeding the troll. Now go away and watch the videos instead of harassing those with a large intellectual capacity then your own!
@ConsciousApostle999
11 күн бұрын
@@danieltal3d Nothing can kill an effing galaxy is my point… y’all are sorely mislead. The magnitudes of difference between the largest black hole, and even the smallest of galaxy’s is fairly large, meanwhile the difference between the largest black hole and a mid size galaxy such as our Milky Way is incomprehensible. A quasar hitting a galaxy is like a human being pepper sprayed… All of these galaxies will most likely live on and integrate with other nearby galactic neighbors/accumulate gas for the rest of infinity while this quasars dies out in the next few million years, sterilizing neighbor galaxies for less than a few thousand years, which is insignificant when stars are forming every second for billions upon billions of years. 9/10 people watching this video, unironically think there are 100 less galaxies in the universe, like this is dbz in the buu saga during the age of Kai’s, give me a break😂
@danieltal3d
11 күн бұрын
@@ConsciousApostle999 what a more thoughtful answer. Thank you.
@marknovak6498
15 күн бұрын
So every time we look at quasars they seem more consequential
@neiladlington950
12 күн бұрын
I feel like a peasant in the middle ages who believed oceans were filled with giant monsters, demons and temperamental gods. I used to think of space in more romantic and benign ways and now I'm becoming like that middle-aged peasant only now I'm on a small island surrounded by an ocean more hostile than I can imagine.
@HeroInHelp
15 күн бұрын
That shockwave is moving 2 light minutes every hour? Holy shit.
@MartinSparks-ef9gr
15 күн бұрын
Jack Bauer " I'm fine " .
@milutzuk
15 күн бұрын
At least it's not 2 light minutes every second! That would have been mind-blowing.
@nadahere
15 күн бұрын
With all the anal references in this vid, you'd be right. HAHAHA
@EMLtheViewer
15 күн бұрын
@@milutzukQuasar (blowing out the cosmic candles): _For my birthday I wish to violate relativity!_
@dustinswatsons9150
15 күн бұрын
That hurts my brain
@Iserion13
14 күн бұрын
Anton's got the best quasar updates on KZitem
@paulm749
15 күн бұрын
Holy guacamole! The destructive power of this quasar makes an Imperial Death Star seem like something all the way down at the Planck scale - and it's not sci-fi, it's *_REAL!!!_*
@costrio
15 күн бұрын
An old ad for a TV set, in my youth: Zenith came out with a "Quasar TV" in 1967 (now Panasonic, I think.) Quasars were the new marvel as I recall. Oh and it was a transistorized TV -- selling point -- fewer tubes to replace?
@davidmacphee3549
15 күн бұрын
We got the "Motorola Works in a drawer" All the circuitry pulled out on a tall tray in the front. Everything was marked. What a Fun TV to learn and adjust. You sort of go for clean Black & White then bring the colors up from there. Alignment, nice. 26 inch classic. Worked for decades with a little love.
@MaxWindshear
15 күн бұрын
The push to solid state was inevitable, but I miss the days when you could smack the side of your TV to improve the picture. 😊
@randallpetersen9164
14 күн бұрын
We had a Quasar. It's true, it required less service. Back then, home visits by TV repairmen were a big thing. Sometimes they could replace the tubes in your house, and sometimes not. The Quasar was made with banks of solid state components. If something went bad, you replaced the whole board. Service calls were fewer and faster with the Quasar.
@IOSARBX
15 күн бұрын
Anton Petrov, Keep making videos!
@mishie618
15 күн бұрын
Its so amazing that we have our own way to travel through time. So far back in time, seeing events lime this.. its absolutely beautiful
@Phoenixoflife56
15 күн бұрын
The sheer power responsible for this is insane “normal” quasars are crazy powerful but this a new mind boggling level. I’d make an educated guess the black hole responsible would have to dwarf most supermassive black holes to produce a quasar that extreme either that it could be unique environmental factors. If primordial black holes exist that black hole would probably fit the bill.
@FireAngelOfLondon
11 күн бұрын
Any supermassive black hole would do, the difference is the amount of matter in its accretion disk. Usually there is a local limitation on the amount of matter that can accumulate into an accretion disk, but if conditions local to the black hole are sufficiently unusual then the accretion disk can become much denser and therefore much more powerful than usual. This is likely an exceptional event, given that so far it is the only one found with such power. Of course as our instruments become more sensitive we may learn that they were more common earlier in the universe's history, or it may remain an exceptional event. I will find it interesting when enough evidence accumulates to answer that question.
@kookamunga2458
15 күн бұрын
This quasar is the ultimate death- star. It makes the Star Wars Death-Star look like a soggy firecracker.
@alfredsutton4412
15 күн бұрын
Good job, wonderful person. Very interesting topic, well presented.
@jimcurtis9052
15 күн бұрын
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. 🤘☺️
@gordonwallin2368
15 күн бұрын
Thanks, Anton. Cheers from the Pacific West Coast of Canada.
@jimmimak
13 күн бұрын
The scale of things in the universe is mind boggling. 16.8 million light years, and we're only 2.5 million from Andromeda. Radiation so strong it sends gases away at 10,000 miles per second.
@PSUQDPICHQIEIWC
15 күн бұрын
Dang. It's crazy to think something could be so dangerous. Really gives me second thoughts about keeping one in the house.
@In-Marty-We-Trust
15 күн бұрын
Every time Anton comes out with a video like this I think of Death’s End and Redemption of Time.
@MWLS1
15 күн бұрын
Sounds like it could explain the Voids.
@AlanSmithee-r3t
15 күн бұрын
I was thinking the same thing
@m3sT1k
15 күн бұрын
Didnt think of this until now, thank you
@denysvlasenko1865
15 күн бұрын
Quasar formation occurs in locations with highest average density of matter, dense enough to allow formation of supermassive black holes. Voids are the lowest density regions. So ... no.
@ConsciousApostle999
12 күн бұрын
No that makes 0 sense. Voids are a lack of galaxies that span hundreds of millions of light years across. No, it is completely and utterly impossible to kill of a galaxy, you got clickbaited, and no, a void is normally much larger than 16 million light years
@bonysminiatures3123
7 күн бұрын
@@ConsciousApostle999 Agree i think its just coy to make alien life less possible through statistics
@LordDustinDeWynd
15 күн бұрын
Thank you for the great content!
@RazvanMihaeanu
15 күн бұрын
Oh, no! RIP FIRST (probably intelligent too) life forms! RIP Grandmas and Papas!
@ganymede6535
15 күн бұрын
Remember this is only 2 billion years after the Big Bang so no life would of been around at that time especially intelligent life
@douglaswilkinson5700
15 күн бұрын
@@ganymede6535Yes, the metalicity of the universe was not high enough to produce rocky planets and provide elements needed for life until it was about 8 billion years old (per Isaac Arthur )
@Zookeeper.
15 күн бұрын
*_"Quasar Söze"_* aka the usual suspect 😉
@whatdamath
15 күн бұрын
I see what you did there!
@custos3249
15 күн бұрын
Some of those galaxies were pretty young too
@douglaswilkinson5700
15 күн бұрын
@@whatdamathYou answered some questions. Good job!
@MartinSparks-ef9gr
15 күн бұрын
" The greatest trick a black hole ever pulled .....was looking like it didn't exist ...
@Scrpius
15 күн бұрын
And like that... He is gone 😃
@sheldonhatch8255
12 күн бұрын
Looking good Anton. Many years of invaluable information has come from your channel, thank you for everything
@binksterb
15 күн бұрын
In theory, we could already be dead and just not know it yet.
@growlith6969
15 күн бұрын
Yup. The light to tell us we're doomed just hasn't reached us yet.
@hugegamer5988
15 күн бұрын
Your own two eyes are about a half nano light second apart meaning they see events at slightly different times and each sees a slight different edge to the visible universe as both are at different centers. On a short timescale there really isn’t even a definite present, it’s relative.
@sidpomy
15 күн бұрын
The more of these existential threats I learn about, the more I realize - and I despise admitting this - ignorance truly is sometimes bliss.
@binksterb
15 күн бұрын
@@sidpomy So true!
@jainysail2941
15 күн бұрын
We are already dead, we just don't know it yet 🎅🎅🐡
@CaseyW491
15 күн бұрын
Always a joy to watch your videos, Anton!
@johnathonstewart6666
15 күн бұрын
Well that's not unnerving at all.
@VikingOlberg-NymoenOfNorway
10 күн бұрын
You have easily become one of the best channels on youtube Anton. Keep them coming.
@capt.bart.roberts4975
15 күн бұрын
I'm just glad we're a bit further down the timeline.
@SlowMonoxide
15 күн бұрын
This is literally a major plot point of the Ringworld series. The "solution" there was to run away, on an unbelievably massive scale.... we're probably thousands of years from tech that would make that feasible, if all goes well. And if it doesn't, we'll never get there
@bobkoroua
15 күн бұрын
First you need to convince everyone that climate change is real, otherwise it will not be a problem that mankind needs to worry about. See Fermi paradox.
@peoplez129
15 күн бұрын
@@bobkoroua Do you think humans have the capacity to harness the global climate? It would be insane to believe so. We'd sooner develop light speed travel, because while light speed is a simple energy transfer in physics, you can't just pump energy into controlling the climate, unless you somehow intend to install global scale air conditioners, which would also not be a solution, because even if you had one the size of the moon on earth, you wouldn't be able to do anything with it without killing everyone on the planet. Volume, location, and physics....along with a thousand different processes taking place in the earth itself, and space weather, the suns maximums and minimums, etc. It's soo much to account for that just the natural processes of the earth itself would throw any attempts out of wack. For example, if we could somehow control the entire earths climate and make it all a nice 70 degrees everywhere all the time....but nope, because you have volcanoes going off, emissions of stuff from permafrost, stuff bubbling up from below the ocean. So it's literally not as simple as just running some device somewhere or putting a weather controlling device every square mile across the entire planet, because there's too many things going on all the time everywhere that you'll never be able to account for it all. You pull one thread tight, another one comes loose, a trillion times a second, at a trillion metric tons a second. Or in other words, what you think is achievable, is actually impossible. By the time we might have technology that could handle that, the planet itself would be pointless for our needs because we will be at a point where we can simply move beyond it.
@sidpomy
15 күн бұрын
@@bobkoroua Climate change is not going to wipe humanity out unless it goes the other way and we get a snowball Earth again. Warming from CO2 is bad but not an extinction-level event, or even a civilization collapsing one.
@andrewboyer7544
15 күн бұрын
@peoplez129 Not to mention the classic cosmic rays. We are constantly bombarded by alterations from outside our planet as well.
@bootblacking
14 күн бұрын
Puppeteers really be like "Hmm. The galaxy is exploding." "How long until it gets to us?" "200,000 years." "I'll start the car."
@72APTU72E
15 күн бұрын
Actually terrifying, most galaxies are 1/20th that distance across.
@fredwood1490
15 күн бұрын
I wonder if things like this might be responsible for the increase in the speed of the expansion of the Universe? If it is not expanding in a uniform manner but something more like clouds, here on Earth, then some parts would move faster than others and this may be what powers that uneven expansion. Just a thought.
@indoorkite651
15 күн бұрын
what about like a bubble that expands and contracts in different ways, but ultimately holds shape? instead of constant expansion it just expands in some areas for trillions of years, and then contracts back down again for trillions of years and all in different areas that have different "pressures" for lack of a better term. maybe in each pressure zone you have a bunch of different "big bangs" and "big rips" that ultimately increase or decrease "pressure" in that area before the cycle repeats. maybe background radiation is just radiation reflecting from tons of these events that effectively have no true end.
@ziondragon
15 күн бұрын
Interesting conjecture, however these accelerations powered by solar wind appear to be accelerating due to the force of the quasars energy within space, while the expansion the universe is more fundamental; it is space time ITSELF that is expanding. Its like drawing two dots on a balloon and then expanding the balloon. The dots are not moving but they are expanding away from each other.
@jmanj3917
15 күн бұрын
0:14 Hey, What's up, Anton?😎
@AlvaroALorite
14 күн бұрын
Ey wassup J man J?
@googlesucks3713
9 күн бұрын
That's just Broly doing his thing in the first 10 seconds of the original non-canon DBZ Broly movie. Just casually destroying galaxies like nobody's business.
@KellyBergerDeusVult
15 күн бұрын
It's hard to fathom the amount of energy that it would take to essentially sterilize 16 million light years of space. It's truly mind-blowing. Terrifying and cool at the same time
@jehl1963
15 күн бұрын
I wonder if it might be a bit dramatic to say that these quasars "killed" the neighnoring galaxies. The effect is apparently not permenant. Maybe it would be better to say that the quasars "quenched" neighboring galaxies.
@Gamebent1
15 күн бұрын
How about quasars "Cleansed" neighboring galaxies?
@lasarith2
15 күн бұрын
So …. Not all Black holes are Quasars but all Quasars are black holes 🤔
@jonathanseibert8832
15 күн бұрын
Yessir, that's correct. And an active galactic nuclei is essentially a quasar as well
@davidaugustofc2574
15 күн бұрын
They're blackholes with my kingdom come.
@douglaswilkinson5700
15 күн бұрын
If a neutron star has a binary partner from which it can acrete gas it can become a micro quasar with relativistic particle jets. shooting out of its two poles.
@davidaugustofc2574
15 күн бұрын
It's a blackhole that's gooning
@jeffclarkofclarklesparkle3103
15 күн бұрын
Yes
@jameschristensen26
15 күн бұрын
What if some of the things we think of as dark matter is actually astral winds, radiation, and magnetic forces from various nova, quasars, black holes and magnatars.
@scififan698
15 күн бұрын
A new solution to the Fermi paradox?
@StopItGarrison
15 күн бұрын
That would have to mean that there are galaxy killers spread evenly throughout the universe and that they kill galaxies often enough to keep life from ever succeeding in the universe. Idk about that
@DrClock-il8ij
15 күн бұрын
If this solved it we wouldnt need to look 16 billion lightyears away into 10 pixels. Pretty rare event.
@nathanrathbun2619
15 күн бұрын
Quasars were already a solution. They say the number of quasars has decreased dramatically over time. This allowed life to finally grow without getting snuffed out. I believe it is part of the hypothesis that life began here on Earth as soon as it was possible to in the universe. Which is why we don't see others, yet.
@LieMac
15 күн бұрын
Fermi paradox is unfeasible, they’re already here.
@unameit0000
11 күн бұрын
Unbelievable Thank you very much Anton and have a nice week :)
@readtruth6670
15 күн бұрын
Weird how life is such a precarious and unlikely scenario that it should be a myth of imaginations that shouldn’t exist.
@ccgm_harpy
12 күн бұрын
what are you talking about?
@DQBlizzard_
10 күн бұрын
but with infinity everything exists
@khublaklonk4480
15 күн бұрын
"Absolutely ridiculous". Yep, that's a perfect description.
@bonysminiatures3123
7 күн бұрын
yes not even possible
@luudest
15 күн бұрын
3:00 What is the reason the gas accelerated away from the quasar?
@hayatofalconchild
14 күн бұрын
Radiation pressure. The massive quantities of high energy radiation blasting out from the quasar in every direction slams into the gas and pushes it faster and faster.
@luudest
14 күн бұрын
@@hayatofalconchild intresting thanks. The more a particle is away from the source the more it got accelarated by the radiation. makes sense.
@donh8833
Күн бұрын
Anton, thank you so much for these scienxe news stories. Your love of science shows.
@sideeggunnecessary
15 күн бұрын
This is why we're alone
@josephc8440
15 күн бұрын
Will probably happen to us if we don’t get our act together too
@RealistRatRace
15 күн бұрын
@@josephc8440hate to sound nihilistic but I highly doubt humans will exist and same with any intelligent species. Time and space is too damn grand that it’s impossible to do anything. This is why we’re alone. I don’t think intelligent species can’t avoid catastrophic extinction before space can hit us to our demise too.
@deanmyers453
15 күн бұрын
lol
@davidmacphee3549
15 күн бұрын
@@josephc8440 Darth Vader thought he was special. Hold my beer...
@josephc8440
15 күн бұрын
@@davidmacphee3549 lol it’s so crazy that science fiction level destruction of starwars does not compare to our reality where entire light years of galaxy’s can be deleted. We need to make peace with eachother and get out of our cluster ASAP
@anderssvensson4554
15 күн бұрын
Well, I must say that I found this very fascinating! Keep it up.
@mikelhansen8508
15 күн бұрын
Im not quite understanding how the solar winds destroyed stars and thier formation. Is it just heavy radiation? Or is more what we think of as wind that exerts force? Is it a constant force or a singular burst? I listen to Anton while I work, Im a supply chain analyst so I hardly understand what Anton is saying most the time! But im always interested! 😊
@whatdamath
15 күн бұрын
These are powerful winds created by the accretion disk and they end up heating up the gas in the entire galaxy, preventing it from forming chunks that would usually form stars. The wind itself is made of various gas particles but moving at a fraction of the speed of light (1000s of km/s)
@mikelhansen8508
15 күн бұрын
@@whatdamath talk about your cool answers, thanks!
@VYBEKAT
15 күн бұрын
@@whatdamath oh wow .. thank you for explaining in shorthand and adding the perspective of km/s that is something I can grasp even if it is mind boggling 😳 Will definitely watch the whole video when I'm done with work
@George-rk7ts
15 күн бұрын
Excellently put, Anton.
@thehellyousay
15 күн бұрын
he ain't talking about peasly solar winds. he's talking about the radiation created by the accretion disc a black hole 2 BILLION times the mass of the sun blasting star forming gases out of star-forming commission in galaxies for a whopping 16 million LIGHT YEARS (a volume of 20,000,000,000,000 kms X 16,000,000 years, cubed) of the space around that black hole's galaxy. space is where size really matters ...
@pelecyphora1
9 күн бұрын
Really like the graphics in your vids!
@MCsCreations
15 күн бұрын
Brilliant stuff!
@tijnfloris2553
14 күн бұрын
Thank you for all your awesome content sir. ❤
@entropyachieved750
15 күн бұрын
16 million lightyears... One in the Milky way galaxy would sterilise the whole galaxy
@johnwalker8417
15 күн бұрын
Amazing. Thanks!
@drincmusic2769
15 күн бұрын
oh wait, I don't think that scientists have said that the mass of black holes are infinite, but instead it's extremely concentrated. unrelated, but a new insight on my part.
@grantschiff7544
15 күн бұрын
We are surrounded by those things in every direction across all of time. Major time warp going on.
@ryanrobison8973
15 күн бұрын
The current math says it should be infinite, but it's known that infinity shouldn't really exist in nature in that way. That's the whole reason connecting relativity to quantum mechanics is such a big deal. It'll resolve the whole infinity issue.
@Mattz1995
15 күн бұрын
I believe its the density that is believed to be infinite, as well as having a volume of 0. the mass is not infinite, we can measure the mass of a blackhole based on how it interacts with objects gravitationally.
@knarftrakiul3881
5 күн бұрын
That is frigging mind boggling! Such power
@user-ur4hf4jn2x
14 күн бұрын
No worries, Elon will save us.
@codysearchfield8258
2 күн бұрын
Wow! A smile! Nice video mate
@JohnKuhles1966
15 күн бұрын
How many souls were killed?
@ganymede6535
15 күн бұрын
0. No life wouldve been there at that time
@Toxicpoolofreekingmascul-lj4yd
15 күн бұрын
Nobody has ever shown a shred of evidence that souls exist.
@JohnKuhles1966
15 күн бұрын
@@Toxicpoolofreekingmascul-lj4yd how much effort have made to come to that "conclusion"? ... ZERO .... Start with studying Dr. Pim Lommel his research in Near Death Experiences ... Study his publication in The Lancet (Peer Reviewed!) ... and that is just the beginning of a much longer journey of discoveries & insights you have NO CLUE about!
@markharwood7573
15 күн бұрын
Excellent stuff. Just needs an edit at 8.20. Thank you, Anton.
@skraaaaz
7 күн бұрын
Just imagining how much force it takes to make something like this happen. Its an absolute nightmare out there.
@kneelandub
15 күн бұрын
I love way Anton is so understated, imagine going for full National Geographic drama ;-)
@selfreliantpatriot1776
4 күн бұрын
Mind blowing. Thank you for the video.
@kylebroussard5952
11 күн бұрын
*Imagine right now, gamma rays from a pulsar 15 million light years away (150x the diameter of our entire galaxy), just instantaneously ended the entire galaxy, from an explosion 15 million years ago.* This is truly beyond human comprehension.
@james...cardinal
12 күн бұрын
orange was an interesting choice
@Ryanowning
14 күн бұрын
I guess the Fermi Equation isn't a Paradox because quasars keep culling galaxies everywhere. You have to be a type 3 to be able to survive something that kills multiple galaxies.
@jameselliott216
14 күн бұрын
I am talking about. . . just the title alone is WOW! 🤯
@mistborn1136
11 күн бұрын
thanks for the video
@cibulskia
15 күн бұрын
Wow, this is amazing, never knew that galaxies are alive, and can be killed. Thank you.
@thomasyunick3726
15 күн бұрын
a forest fire is not alive but it consumes and grows and extinguishing it stops the chemical reaction. ... when you blow out a candle you become a killer 🤔?
@ruthmckay9086
2 күн бұрын
"Quasars are absolutely ridiculous". I like it.
@yvonnemiezis5199
14 күн бұрын
Fascinating knowledge, thanks👍❤
@johnbaker9290
9 күн бұрын
Thanks Anton, wow, that's would be 100 galaxies in our neighbourhood!
@spacelemur7955
14 күн бұрын
I have no words for this. A whole great group of galaxies just snuffed out by one event!
@BiswajitBhattacharjee-up8vv
13 күн бұрын
Oh, surprising results. Super quick is really unbelievable. Once I had the hypothesis of beyond relativistic speed limit. Mechanism of speeding. Today I have solved gravity and quantum interactions in same unification. I have found in one stage infinite acceleration is possible. The law of nature in isolated system. I am delighted by you and your channel's Communication. Namaste 🙏
@keepitsteel1993
4 күн бұрын
This is like one of those devil tricks, "all you have to do is survive a major event, but you'll get over one million years notice. Fair?"
@michaelholt7994
15 күн бұрын
Hi anton,very interesting,I often wonder how big a plasmoid can get.that must be a record.
@jarman365
15 күн бұрын
Every time there is a dubstep drop, a quasar forms somewhere, sometime in the universe 1:58
@williamwillaims
15 күн бұрын
Imagine how many planets from the past probably had life on them (even simple life, moss or aquatic bacteria), and then get taken out from some stellar event 🤔 it's a bit tragic really 😢
@Softnsweetbb
3 күн бұрын
The only thing that could be worse than this type of event in terms of damage is the universe just collapsing, this is worse because 16M light years is insane and it’s real enough that we can observe it
@StephenJohnson-jb7xe
15 күн бұрын
How. Big is the Bootes void? Could something like this be a possible explanation for it?
@guysars1533
15 күн бұрын
Great video again thanks
@cheradenine1980
12 күн бұрын
0:56 HOW can that gap be 40kly apart if they’re billions of light years away
@olegvorkunov5400
14 күн бұрын
I will comeback to this channel in billion years to see if you were correct.
@Parasmunt
13 күн бұрын
What inspires awe about the Quasar is it's enormous energy comes from kinetic energy not nuclear reactions, basically particles rubbing against each other while travelling at relativistic speeds as they circle the black hole.
@SahoriEnvy
13 күн бұрын
I wonder if this could posibly explain super voids in some way due to such events happening so early in the universe life
@carjamlaw753
10 күн бұрын
Wow. Didn't think there would be evidence like this that leans to the possibility we are most likely alone out here.
@Phoenixoflife56
15 күн бұрын
Oh how I wish we could get telescopes beyond the Kuiper’s Belt and the Oort Cloud and get them to work properly for decades because we’d learn so much. This universe is so fascinating and I want to learn more about it
@AlanBerger1337
14 күн бұрын
Humans: We're dangerous The Universe: Hold my beer
@AnOwlfie
Күн бұрын
What are the chances an advanced intergalactic civilization was wiped out by this?
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