An interesting presentation; good job, Janine. I first heard of Barnard’s Star on an episode of the original Star Trek. The colonists to be rescued by the Enterprise are hosts to spores from parasitic,alien Easter lilies, and an infected Spock falls in love (!) with Jill Ireland, AKA Mrs. Charles Bronson. About the only thing Star Trek got right was the planet won’t support human life.
A planet that is a bit too cold may be much better than one too hot. Could be heated by geothermal or artificially for at least a small refueling base or research colony. Could there be other smaller planets besides that one?
if its moving so fast does it mean its getting somewhat closer to our system or it awready passed us and its going away? like does the distance increase since its discovery?
How do we know it's Barnard's star moving and not all the other stars moving together.I suppose it's a bit of both if moving against the motion of star's.
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An interesting presentation; good job, Janine. I first heard of Barnard’s Star on an episode of the original Star Trek. The colonists to be rescued by the Enterprise are hosts to spores from parasitic,alien Easter lilies, and an infected Spock falls in love (!) with Jill Ireland, AKA Mrs. Charles Bronson. About the only thing Star Trek got right was the planet won’t support human life.
Thank you mam for sharing this, never knew or heard about this interesting star :)
This is definitely a cool star to learn about. Thanks for watching!
Your teaching process is just awesome👍😊
A planet that is a bit too cold may be much better than one too hot. Could be heated by geothermal or artificially for at least a small refueling base or research colony. Could there be other smaller planets besides that one?
Amazing video keep up 👍
space is so fascinating
Why is the star moving so fast? And where is it headed?
It's headed directly to us. Watch the newest video of the channel "AstralDoorway"
Omg amazing I saw a red moving star do you know what it is ?
Thanks
if its moving so fast does it mean its getting somewhat closer to our system or it awready passed us and its going away? like does the distance increase since its discovery?
Watch the newest video of the channel "AstralDoorway". The "Star" aka Planet will arrive here
9.5 is pretty dim and, depending on your skies, probably at the limit of most hand held 50mm binoculars.
Such a rich loving red color
how is Barnard's Stars exoplanet is second closest to us when we have proxima B proxima C and proxima D its like fourth lmao
ISUBSCRIBED!!!
So, the Barnard star is a planet. Etymologically speaking :)
So it’s pretty much space 1999
The telescopes i wanted cost 4500$ decade and a half ago
What's the music?
serpent bear...or dromedary
O - fe - u - cus ? I thought it was O- Phe- shish ?
I think technically she has it right since it's a Latin name, but it's very common to anglicize it and pronounce it with the sh sound
Kinda looks like a dinosaur
so how fast is it moving ? ... sheesh wasn't that the subject ?
142.6 km/s, or 513,000 km/hour, or 318,000 mph.
How do we know it's Barnard's star moving and not all the other stars moving together.I suppose it's a bit of both if moving against the motion of star's.
The tall whites live there