I was once laying on the ground looking up into a clear starry sky, and suddenly felt as if I were looking down into space. I felt suspended, stuck against the ceiling of the earth only held there by what seemed very tenuous gravity. I wanted to grab something to hold on, as if gravity might let go and I would fall a very, very long way down. No, no drugs. Like an optical illusion, and quite scary.
@@markthegreat3774 Ha! I'm surprised by the comment and the likes. I'd never heard of anyone else "suffering" this illusion. Was a moment I won't forget. Glad I'm not alone.
@@sunsetsam33 I actually enjoy it. Although I won't necessarily call it a suffering. It's like a once in a while trip to different kind of world. It's fun 🙂
@@markthegreat3774 Yeah, I get that, which is why I put "suffering" in quotes. It was the actual fear of falling that was startling, like a momentary panic attack or serious vertigo. It was also accompanied by the sky looking very 3 dimensional, with the stars at lots of different depths, which heightened the perception of the very vast distance and the height at which I was suspended, and how great the fall would be, with nothing physically holding me up against the earth. But falling into space would be quite an adventure I must admit.
I rode a bicycle across the US to see what is really there. One nite I was in New Mexico where I was a long way from anything. I got up in the middle of night to take a leak. There was no moon. For the first time I saw the Milky Way. It is worth traveling somewhere where one can see it.
I did the same thing at Pic Du Midi observatory in the Pyrenees in France one year. An amazing view of the Milky Way that high up and the clouds below you.
@jeffgoldsmith8912, agreed it is fascinating! It appeared as if "you" would just slide right off the surface of the planet, yet we remain otherwise, upright and completely unaware.
The only complaint I have is that it took 3 and a half years to make it to my reccomended list. But at least I lived to see it. I am ecstatic about that.
The most beautiful thing is another galaxy itself instead of our own galaxy's part of milky way. In a few billion years the anderonoma galaxy will collide with milky way that will be beautiful asf and if course there are many more beautiful phenomenons in our universe
This is a different perspective from what we usually see. Normally the camera is fixed and makes it appear that the objects in the sky are moving. Here the camera tracks the sky so we can see how the Earth is rotating. Great video!
@@killerqueen4681 "its all fake and cgi wake up kid." Even though anyone, even you, could get the same footage with a camera and an equatorial mount, but yeah, easier just to say "thats fake."
Can there be anything more beautiful than this. All those ppl who think they are powerful, watch this. We are just a spec on this one tiny planet in this ginormous unimaginable universe.
I find it hard to believe that were alone in this universe the government tries to cover it up and say that it was some other type of military aircraft or some random shit but I find it impossible that in this entire universe that we're the only ones there are trillions of stars billions of planets and millions of galaxies there is just no way we are the only intelligent life in this universe
This is amazing! Thank you for making this! This seems to be the right way to capture the night sky, keeping space stationary while showing the Earth moving!
@@breakingnews5324 Equatorial mount used for telescopes. It offsets the rotation of the Earth to track stars. The axis is pointed at the celestial pole of the hemisphere that you are in. In the Northern Hemisphere, it is near Polaris.
@@blim76 It runs at a rotational speed of once every 23 hours and 56 minutes in the opposite direction of Earth's rotation. That length of time is called a sidereal day. It takes into account the Earth's rotation and the Earth's motion around the sun. The sun's motion around the milky way is negligible in angular velocity, so no need to factor that in. In a 12 hour period you wouldn't notice any motion of the galaxy. Even over long periods of time the star patterns (made up of mostly nearby stars) barely change, since they are all orbiting the milky way in the same direction at almost the same velocity as us. There are rare exceptions like Bernard's Star which has noticeable motion, when comparing photos several years apart. But in a 12 hour period, that small amount of motion is imperceptible.
Simply breathtaking! There are quite a few stunning timelapses of the Milky Way, but they are normally showing the rotation of the galaxy, while the earth stands still. This video now is the first, I have see, being the other way round. And this is just incredible!
Marcus, I agree, this is a very nice different perspective. John, this video is done using a tracker fixed on the Milky Way, not video manipulation, some good work & technology out into this technique.
@@sabrinayahisreal1078 yes because the earth is round. The camera is focused on a fixed point in the sky. It rotates in its mount around a single axis at the speed of earth's rotation or 15 degrees per hour. When that fixed point goes behind the horizon you will get around 12 hours of filming dirt (depending on where on earth you are doing it). Once night returns the point of focus rises and you see it all over again.
This is amazing and scary at the same time. Really gives you a perspective of how Earth is just a rock moving through an ever expanding universe... Everything from the music to editing is excellent, can’t admire this video enough. Keep up the good work
@waterside hey, guy... Stop posting "It's fake!!11!1!1" on every comment. It's not fake, and was most likely done using some sort of gimbel that swivels the camera at an appropriate speed to the earth's rotation on that point on the planet. The camera is focused on the galaxy, so it looks like the earth is moving instead of the galaxy (which is actually what happens.) It makes it look like the camera is floating above the earth and moving independently of our constant motion. Pretty cool, right?
Disbelief in Earth's rotation should be regarded as prima facie evidence for committal to a mental hospital. The 'genius', Tesla, claimed that the Moon does not rotate. Oh, if only the Earth were flat ... we could push the flat-Earthers off the edge.
@@DDawnIII But since were on the subject, have you ever felt our world move? Not earthquake movement. I'm not going to ask you if you know has seismographs work but will ask this. Why doesn't a device that measures force not record centrifugal force? Dumbing down the seismographs it basically a plumbob attached to a fixed object so if this blumbob is suspended why would it not detect the apparent force that acts outwardly, the centrifugal force?
Because if you believe we are spinning to the speed we are told...and not feeling it...well it's brainwashed at it's finest. All the photos and supposedly videos are all CGI
No.. a chosen people made by the one true God in his image and likeness, for a divine purpose, loved and cherished by God Jehovah, a people found worthy of his blood.. saved, called, forgiven and promised.. children of God, a creation after the heart of his creator, an inheritance of heaven. That is who we're, those that believe, obey and love their God...if u don't know that before then know it now..God loves you all
Have been into astronomy all my life, and constantly amazed we're a ball of rock spinning in space. But didn't realize how much I needed this video until I saw it.
@@sophiayosephmasih2021 wow! In Arabic we call Him Allah! All powerful, most merciful and most wise. There is only one who is the lord of the heavens and the earths.
I’ve always commented on how the Milky-Way moves across our sky. My mind just not grasping it really is the earth that is revolving and here some person films it in a way I’ve never seen before. I feel so insignificant in the realization just how small we are in our own galaxy much less in the greater schemes of things.
@John Smith You're not insignificant. You, me, every human, atom, photon, planet, solar system, galaxy combine to make this universe a wonderfully beautiful and magnificent place to be explored.
HI, I LIVE IN HAWAII, I JUST TURNED MY COMPUTER ON AND HIT UA-cam AND THIS POPPED UP ON MY VIEWING LIST. IM 80 YEARS OLD AND HAVE NEVER SEEN THIS BEFORE, IM GOING TO DOWNLOAD IT. THANKS FOR SHARING.
Thank you for an amazing vid, didn't really look at the title, so thought it was just the MW doing it's thing across the sky, to see the earth rotate instead, well that was just stunning and beautiful.
@@cccarter9858 "That's fake... lol." Even though anyone, even you, could get the same footage with a camera and an equatorial mount, but yeah, easier just to say "thats fake."
@@Tazz-zo5fm You nailed it my man! Swear to God we are surrounded by idiots. Did anyone mention, why did they move the camera and not keep it stationary and set it at an angle? Answer; to continue the lie to keep the sheeple sheeple!
Beautiful use of camera to enlighten people about the rotation of earth in space .....A big thanks to creator of this universe and this video as well ..
Unfortunately, a lot of the video would just be footage of the earth, since the camera itself is still ultimately rotating with the earth, even if the camera's angle is not.
It just showed upon my list. Love it! I used to go outside at night and lie in the grass starring at the stars. I swear i could feel the earth's rotation. I Need to do that again. Life simple pleasures are the best!
I use Night Vision Goggles for night flying. Although monochromatic, it is just staggering all the stars I would never be able to see without them. And seeing the Andromeda galaxy is still my favorite. Amongst all those crisply illuminated stars sits one small pale smear on the canvas. It looks like a mistaken thumbprint.
From the artist : As our planet makes its way around the Sun, it rotates on an axis that runs from north to south, spinning at roughly 1,600 kilometres per hour (1,000 miles per hour). The time it takes to complete this rotation is called a sidereal day, which is not exactly 24 hours - it's more like 23.9344696 hours. The mount, therefore, works by rotating at the same rate and along the same axis as our own planet, but in the opposite direction. "Equatorial mounts are aligned to the North Star and rotate the camera at a rate of 15° per hour which is the same rate of Earth's rotation," says Nirenberg, "so the camera follows the stars in the sky, and the camera remains pointed at the same part of the sky no matter how many hours pass."
Read the thumbnail, it's fake! It is not a real representation of our world, please wake up and stop believing everything you see and hear. It's important because if your easily swayed here then you believe anything you see on the news.
Lol youre breathing yeah? Breathing gas called oxygen yeah? You do realise that the necessary antecedent for gas pressure is a container, right? If no container the gas will fill the available volume... This natural gas law debunks anything that anyone has ever claimed about earth being next to a 10 -17 Torre vacuum WITHOUT having a physical barrier between the 2 environments... Natural gas law, man... You can also do a quick google search: gas pressure And it literally states that "it (gas) is the force of gas exerting on the walls of its container"...
@@MathieusTheWalkingWitness wow , that knowledge seems something new to me but do you realise if this fucking land which you are either standing sitting or laying has something called TREES or Plants which was the first ever source to produce oxygen Before all this scientific knowledge could be acknowledged to you do you think how did you breathe then. natural gas (oxygen) that's photosynthesis buddy ! Happy Breathing b/w the walls of your container producing O² Phew I dint really understand what made you write this but it was fun reading to your GAS PRESSURE theory !
@@suhanss0721 Lol that gas pressure LAW is not a theory, kid... Its a fkn law, unlike your theory tale of gravity... Here is some actual scientific experiments that debunk your blind faith pseudo science religion of natural gas law being violated due to a belief system: It's a shame that gas pressure requires a container or the gas will fill the available volume. MIT professor ua-cam.com/video/HtmjNlBAnwU/v-deo.html My own demonstration ua-cam.com/video/nL5jb5b6pWw/v-deo.html Gas pressure next to a vacuum with the barrier broke ua-cam.com/video/n2PehSqvxns/v-deo.html Action Lab demonstrating that a container is necessary to have gas pressure ua-cam.com/video/026GF7yLCeE/v-deo.html Lab360 replicating a cloud in a container ua-cam.com/video/44GH2gs8avo/v-deo.html Lab360 replicating rain in a container ua-cam.com/video/3v98madaW1M/v-deo.html You do realise science is establishing a cause and affect relationship in nature, thats backed by a hypothesis test (experiment) to see if your independent variable (IV aka cause) is gonna change the dependant variable (DV aka affect) amd that your IV must be manipulated nu the scientist, right? Now you know this, amd i have gave you my presentation of this natural gas law in action (proving my original claim), I expect for you to show me a presentation of gas pressure NOT requiring a container and the gas NOT filling the available volume... P.s. I been where you're at... I too believed for 32 years I was on a spinning globe etc. I started asking questions in FE groups... Pay attention to their answers and you'll be left questioning the reality that every child is taught... I have a few other non FE videos on my channel (music videos 😎) that you might find intriguing... Anyways, I tried to debunk FE amd ended up realising that what we were all forced to learn (programming) in school does not coincide with reality/ basic senses... I.e. Can't feel any movement feom earth yet believe I'm spinning amd traveling in 3 other directions at "ludicrous speed" (Mel Brooks spaceballs reference😁)? My basic senses tell me thats all b.s., man... I.e.2 We all see the sky/stars is moving but claim the earth is moving instead?🤦 Once again, the majority deny their basic senses cause "a book told em so"... I.e.3 (Contradiction claim/ sight denial) "You cant see the earths curvature cause the earth is so big" Same people will also say: "that boat is going over the curve" Me: thought the earth was too big to see a curve? FFS make up your mind!which is it? Can you see the curve or is the earth too big to see the fkn curve?" Been debating this for 8 years now and you should see some of the responses I get when ballers (blind faith heliocentric zealots) have their theory tales questioned... They make shit up to appear intelligent... Lol I have 3 videos of some whimsical baller claims theyve made during debates amd im sure you will even be like "wtf!?🤦"...
@@mawage666 Don't need thousands....you can do this with and camera and a tripod with a second ball head. Not nearly as easy but doable. A tracking mount can be bout for $400US or less (think used) and an older DSLR you could buy for $200. You CAN spend $1000's but you can also spend less. I have about $1200 invested.
@@joeshmoe7967 I totally agree with that. But I'm 99.99999999% sure this video equipment for this video was not cheap. I do have a Nikon D-3200 and an adapter for my Celestron Nexstar 127 SLT. But I have no idea how to make a time lapse with it. I would love to just get a better camera that has a time lapse mode like my brother's P-900. But that's not a removable lense so there is no adapter for it. A time lapse track would be awesome!
@@mawage666 Quality wise the D3200 is a better camera than the P900. I run my Canon with an app on my tablet. There are similar apps for Nikon. Also external shutter releases that can give you time lapse. Or the old fashion manual way of using a plain shutter release and timing with a watch etc. You could piggyback the camera on the Celestron as the tracker. For now just shoot some wide time exposures. Still very cool and a lot of fun. Your gear is plenty to get going. Clear Skies!
For those who cry "fake" how much of the following don't you understand? A timelapse of the Milky Way that was recorded using an equatorial tracking mount over a period of around 3 hours to show Earth's rotation relative to the Milky Way. I used a Sony a7SII with the Canon 24-70mm f2.8 lens and recorded 1100 10" exposures at a 12-second interval. All the frames were captured at F/2.8 and 16000iso.
The thing that looks fake to me is that the sun is rising, yet the sky is still totally black. I'm not saying it's definitely fake, but that is odd. Maybe the exposure makes the dawn look much brighter than it would do in reality.
@Graham Rathbone Its commentary! And my opinion stands as is, this is a deceptive video that only an blind, blatantly ignorant globetrotter would believe!
"...From the southern hemisphere, the galaxy is dense and huge. That comment will blow a flat earthers mind. Umm, is the view from the south more dense than a flat earther?
Hi. When you say this is the view looking "outward," do you mean that we (the camera is) facing away from the center of the spiral, and the southern hemisphere 's view is TOWARD the center? @Aryeh Nirenberg, thanks for this video. I love aids like this that can put things we observe in PROPER perspective.
Do you have some diagram to help me understand why? I live in the South Hemisphere, btw. The best hemisphere. Closer to Alpha Centauri about 4000 km out of 45 trillion!
Beautiful way of visualzing the earth's rotation making it obvious to anyone that the galaxy is fixed and the earth moves. To speak more precisely, the galaxy moves on a timescale of 10.000 years while the earth moves on a timescale of hours.
I found this just relaxing, it's raining outside and happening to see whats on the youtube . This came up and all I need to say about it is . Anyone that thinks nothing is going on because of lack of something ,perhaps a friend ,money, material things or any feelings of despare. Look at this ,surely know nothing is at a stand still . Thank-you
Ken, look up Timestorm UA-cam videos. They have a lot of time lapse videos of the sky and landscapes from all over the world. My favorite is "Nox Atacama".
Somebody linked to it and you popped up saying it was yours and “thanks for sharing” so I had to click on it at that point. And I feel well rewarded, thank you.
If we were spinning the camera wouldn't have to keep adjusting its position 😊 Beautiful visualization and truly a piece of art, though! Still doesn't prove we are spinning.
Be reminded that only 99.7% of this visual motion is caused by Earth's rotation; the other .3% is it's orbit around our Sun; 366 observed rotations of the stars in 365 days
And add the rotation of the solar system around the center of gravity of the Milky Way to the mix, too. :) One orbit takes only some 250 million years.
@@Kedvespatikus.....Neither the rotation of the solar system around the center of the Milky Way, or the subsequent movement of our galaxy relative to the Universe is observable by eye in 10 lifetimes; Earth's orbit around our Sun IS clearly observable as ≈1° every 24 hours.
I'm an amateur astronomer and am familiar with tracking devices for astrophotography. But let's begin first with what's happening due to earth's rotation. To us, the sun (for example) appears to rise in the east and set in the west. This is because the earth is actually rotating from our west to east. (That's why the west coast's clock time is earlier than the east coast's.) So, the western horizon (seen from wherever we are located) is turning toward the sun, which bit by bit brings it higher and higher in our sky until mid-day. Then, as earth's rotation continues over the course of the day, the sun descends lower and lower as the western horizon continues approaching it. Sunset occurs when the sun and western horizon turning toward it make contact, with the sun eventually disappearing as western horizon continues turning eastward. Now, consider what happens if I have a camera on a tracking device such that the camera (properly filtered to avoid blinding the photographer) is locked onto the sun. The tracking device will rotate the camera to keep up with the sun as the earth turns in the opposite direction. As a result, the camera will turn toward the western horizon in the same way that the sun appears to move toward that horizon. Thus, the western horizon will appear to move from right (west) to left (east) across the view finder frame, as shown in the video. Another commenter said this essentially, but didn't go into the detail that I have. Hope this helps.
Which idiots are giving this a thumbs down? This is beautiful and interesting. Thanks for taking the time to make it. Haters out there - thanks for sitting on your arses and being failures so the rest of us never have to come up against you in life.
@Chester Guitarman Really? You genuinely, honestly think that? You just really can't conceive that this video might not be someone's favorite thing to watch? A total stranger's thumb count is THAT important to you? I'll bet you like EVERY kind of music and every recording by every artist ever produced. You probably like EVERY kind of food/car/movie/girl-boy-alien friend. I'll bet you like the clothes that your grandparents wear.
This just showed up on my phone. I always wanted to actually see the Milky Way, about 55 years ago I was about 7 and thought I was looking at the Milky Way.
I had a chance to photograph it, but I was too scared to drive in the mountains in the middle of the night and stay overnight in cold temps with wild animals. Usually astra photography needs to be color enhanced, so if you did see it with the naked eye, it probably wouldn’t look like this.
This is a simple but awesome presentation. The camera is actually moving with respect to earth, but fixed on the stars, so thus demonstrates the rotation of the earth.
If you're seeing this, please comment how you found this video!
In my home page
Daily Dose in recommended.
Homepage! Great video! I wish you had a full rotation though🙃
Absolutely amazing. Thank you.
science alert
I was once laying on the ground looking up into a clear starry sky, and suddenly felt as if I were looking down into space. I felt suspended, stuck against the ceiling of the earth only held there by what seemed very tenuous gravity. I wanted to grab something to hold on, as if gravity might let go and I would fall a very, very long way down. No, no drugs. Like an optical illusion, and quite scary.
Same here
@@markthegreat3774 Ha! I'm surprised by the comment and the likes. I'd never heard of anyone else "suffering" this illusion. Was a moment I won't forget. Glad I'm not alone.
@@sunsetsam33 I actually enjoy it. Although I won't necessarily call it a suffering. It's like a once in a while trip to different kind of world. It's fun 🙂
@@markthegreat3774 Yeah, I get that, which is why I put "suffering" in quotes. It was the actual fear of falling that was startling, like a momentary panic attack or serious vertigo. It was also accompanied by the sky looking very 3 dimensional, with the stars at lots of different depths, which heightened the perception of the very vast distance and the height at which I was suspended, and how great the fall would be, with nothing physically holding me up against the earth. But falling into space would be quite an adventure I must admit.
If you let it flow those feels maybe you can unlock ability to fly...lol
Thank you!
Thank you too!
I'm glad you featured this video in your video Daily Dose.
iits beautiffuuuullll
OMG lmao
Thank YOU for making good videos!
I rode a bicycle across the US to see what is really there. One nite I was in New Mexico where I was a long way from anything. I got up in the middle of night to take a leak. There was no moon. For the first time I saw the Milky Way.
It is worth traveling somewhere where one can see it.
I did the same thing in near the geographical center of the state.There are no lights for a hundred miles each way
It is an amazing thing. Imagine how people saw the sky hundreds of years ago before lights....
I did the same thing at Pic Du Midi observatory in the Pyrenees in France one year. An amazing view of the Milky Way that high up and the clouds below you.
I was amazed by the starry, moonless night sky I saw, when camped on a very sparsely populated island, of The Great Barrier Reef.
Out in the country the Milky Way is still very evident even with a moon. So many more stars.
Please make more of these! Very potent! What a simple shift in point of view, but what a profound shift in perspective.
@jeffgoldsmith8912, agreed it is fascinating! It appeared as if "you" would just slide right off the surface of the planet, yet we remain otherwise, upright and completely unaware.
I agree. Please make more. It really does open one up to new perspectives.
When you realize that life is more than just your local pub 😳
Hello real life
No bro life is not lock pub... Try to find life in religion I am sure u will find (ISLAM)
@@randomvideo5476 By "life" you mean hate and ignorance, that's right?
@@fuckednegativemind misguidance.. From childhood
@@randomvideo5476 sorry good sir no thank you
I don't want to blew people so don't try to recruit me
The only complaint I have is that it took 3 and a half years to make it to my reccomended list. But at least I lived to see it. I am ecstatic about that.
👏🏼😊😯
Same feeling as you about recommendation
Same HERE!
Same
Me too, just seeing this now (April 2021).
It was recommended to me. And I am really blessed that I have seen it.
That is such beauty and really miraculous. I loved watching this. Sure wish you would do that over a year's time. I'd love to see what happens.
If this isn't the most beautiful thing, I don't know what is....
I agree
The most beautiful thing is another galaxy itself instead of our own galaxy's part of milky way. In a few billion years the anderonoma galaxy will collide with milky way that will be beautiful asf and if course there are many more beautiful phenomenons in our universe
@@redfrostgaming4056 Not everything have to be literal
This is a different perspective from what we usually see. Normally the camera is fixed and makes it appear that the objects in the sky are moving. Here the camera tracks the sky so we can see how the Earth is rotating. Great video!
Remember the stars are in constant movement too... Or not?
The camera tracks the sky so we can falsely see the Earth rotate!! Crap video!!! I don't experience this.
its all fake and cgi wake up kid
@@killerqueen4681 "its all fake and cgi wake up kid." Even though anyone, even you, could get the same footage with a camera and an equatorial mount, but yeah, easier just to say "thats fake."
@@josehermesrosarioguzman3144 Stars are in a constant movement of course, but nothing you can see in the span of a night.
Can there be anything more beautiful than this. All those ppl who think they are powerful, watch this. We are just a spec on this one tiny planet in this ginormous unimaginable universe.
I find it hard to believe that were alone in this universe the government tries to cover it up and say that it was some other type of military aircraft or some random shit but I find it impossible that in this entire universe that we're the only ones there are trillions of stars billions of planets and millions of galaxies there is just no way we are the only intelligent life in this universe
This is amazing! Thank you for making this! This seems to be the right way to capture the night sky, keeping space stationary while showing the Earth moving!
But how to do it
@@breakingnews5324 Equatorial mount used for telescopes. It offsets the rotation of the Earth to track stars. The axis is pointed at the celestial pole of the hemisphere that you are in. In the Northern Hemisphere, it is near Polaris.
Yep. It's not sunrise, it's sunsight, and it's not sunset, it's sunclipse.
@@my3dviews How does it offset the path of earth round the sun, and the sun round the milky way?
@@blim76 It runs at a rotational speed of once every 23 hours and 56 minutes in the opposite direction of Earth's rotation. That length of time is called a sidereal day. It takes into account the Earth's rotation and the Earth's motion around the sun. The sun's motion around the milky way is negligible in angular velocity, so no need to factor that in. In a 12 hour period you wouldn't notice any motion of the galaxy. Even over long periods of time the star patterns (made up of mostly nearby stars) barely change, since they are all orbiting the milky way in the same direction at almost the same velocity as us. There are rare exceptions like Bernard's Star which has noticeable motion, when comparing photos several years apart. But in a 12 hour period, that small amount of motion is imperceptible.
Simply breathtaking! There are quite a few stunning timelapses of the Milky Way, but they are normally showing the rotation of the galaxy, while the earth stands still. This video now is the first, I have see, being the other way round. And this is just incredible!
Because you have to manipulate the video to make it look like the earth is moving and not the stars.
Marcus, I agree, this is a very nice different perspective. John, this video is done using a tracker fixed on the Milky Way, not video manipulation, some good work & technology out into this technique.
Meh, it's alright i guess.
This just shows the camera moving, if the video was longer we would have been seeing the ground at the rate the camera was moving.
@@sabrinayahisreal1078 yes because the earth is round. The camera is focused on a fixed point in the sky. It rotates in its mount around a single axis at the speed of earth's rotation or 15 degrees per hour. When that fixed point goes behind the horizon you will get around 12 hours of filming dirt (depending on where on earth you are doing it). Once night returns the point of focus rises and you see it all over again.
This is amazing and scary at the same time. Really gives you a perspective of how Earth is just a rock moving through an ever expanding universe... Everything from the music to editing is excellent, can’t admire this video enough. Keep up the good work
Scary?
I felt so tiny watching this. The vastness of space is hard to comprehend.
I didn't get any Hubble-constant feel from this video.
What's scary?
Aunty🙄🙄🙄
UA-cam just randomly suggested this and what an awe-inspiring, soul feeding, piece of beauty it ended up being. Thanks!
I almost cried ten seconds in..ten seconds from the end and I'm full of tears. This is beautiful
BRO STILL CRYING?
Please don't tell my wife, but this is the most beautiful thing I've seen all week!
LOL
Dont worry we wont she too busy atm
Your wife is a "thing" o_O?
@@jetli740 L
@waterside needs somebody with both crayons and patience to convey the inner workings of an equatorial tracking mount to a knuckledragger...
This is magnificent! Well done! One of the best videos to comprehend earth's rotation relevant to space.
@waterside hey, guy... Stop posting "It's fake!!11!1!1" on every comment. It's not fake, and was most likely done using some sort of gimbel that swivels the camera at an appropriate speed to the earth's rotation on that point on the planet. The camera is focused on the galaxy, so it looks like the earth is moving instead of the galaxy (which is actually what happens.) It makes it look like the camera is floating above the earth and moving independently of our constant motion. Pretty cool, right?
@waterside it's just the camera angle, man. The camera is tilting. It just happens to be at the rate the earth is doing it's thing.
Filmed with an equatorial mount turning at siderial rate.
Anyone can reproduce this given clear skies away from street lighting.
@waterside you're the dumbest person i've ever seen
Disbelief in Earth's rotation should be regarded as prima facie evidence for committal to a mental hospital. The 'genius', Tesla, claimed that the Moon does not rotate. Oh, if only the Earth were flat ... we could push the flat-Earthers off the edge.
I can just hear my mugs and plates sliding out the cupboard
gravity
But they don't don't do they? I hope you know why, because what your viewing is not real, sorry!
@@WORDversesWORLD How so
@@DDawnIII But since were on the subject, have you ever felt our world move? Not earthquake movement. I'm not going to ask you if you know has seismographs work but will ask this. Why doesn't a device that measures force not record centrifugal force? Dumbing down the seismographs it basically a plumbob attached to a fixed object so if this blumbob is suspended why would it not detect the apparent force that acts outwardly, the centrifugal force?
Gravity is pulling the plumbob straight down toward the Earth. The Earth Rotation is Not going to affect it.
Those dislikes are definitely from the flat earth community
😄😄😄😄
The camera is rotating man, can’t you tell😂
@Derbali Nos finally someone is using their brain in the comment section, so refreshing thank you 🙏!!
Because if you believe we are spinning to the speed we are told...and not feeling it...well it's brainwashed at it's finest. All the photos and supposedly videos are all CGI
@@FEBob Yes, and it's locked to the sky.
When u realise that afterall we're just species on one small rock 😑
Made in GOD' image
@@adamdaniel6245 consider ourselves lucky ,we are able to live on most habitable planet so far 🌍💖
No.. a chosen people made by the one true God in his image and likeness, for a divine purpose, loved and cherished by God Jehovah, a people found worthy of his blood.. saved, called, forgiven and promised.. children of God, a creation after the heart of his creator, an inheritance of heaven. That is who we're, those that believe, obey and love their God...if u don't know that before then know it now..God loves you all
@@jesusislord5543 amen but not all are children of The Most High. Not all are called unfortunately. May HIS grace abound even more.
@@adamdaniel6245 hey sorry man I thought I was replying to the first comment who said earth is just a rock
Have been into astronomy all my life, and constantly amazed we're a ball of rock spinning in space. But didn't realize how much I needed this video until I saw it.
Indeed. Fixing on the galaxy instead of the Earth really flipped the perspective on an incredible way.
@@MiscDotGeek deceivers
FE'ers aren't drinking the Ball Earth Koolaid.
@@ronpapi9539 You just need to watch a lunar eclipse. You can see Earth's shadow, which shows the shape of the earth.
We live in such a beautiful universe...
And What is even more beautiful is that I get to share this universe with you and others. 🙂
And we live on such a small bit of it (and maybe we're alone seeing that beauty), can't we keep that tiny bit safe - put your shoulder to that wheel.
We are the custodians
Yet we don't appreciate the place we live in.
Yes it's out of this world!
Thank you so much. This is such a beautiful and moving piece of art. I discovered it through my astronomy class. Just wow.
The creator of this beautiful universe is only worthy of worship!
This comment is an atheist repellent!
Yahowa is the creator of this universe and we worship him. 😍
@@sophiayosephmasih2021 wow! In Arabic we call Him Allah! All powerful, most merciful and most wise. There is only one who is the lord of the heavens and the earths.
@@cooldude3421 yes, praise the lovely God.
@@sophiayosephmasih2021 not praising the creator of universe will render me in trouble??
I’ve always commented on how the Milky-Way moves across our sky. My mind just not grasping it really is the earth that is revolving and here some person films it in a way I’ve never seen before. I feel so insignificant in the realization just how small we are in our own galaxy much less in the greater schemes of things.
Isn't strange that a 55 second video shows us how Truth... and reality. I love this video.
What’s even stranger to me is if the milky way is moving to it even gets that much weirder of how it all combined moves in sequence
@John Smith You're not insignificant. You, me, every human, atom, photon, planet, solar system, galaxy combine to make this universe a wonderfully beautiful and magnificent place to be explored.
No matter how many times I watch, never get bored of this video
HI, I LIVE IN HAWAII, I JUST TURNED MY COMPUTER ON AND HIT UA-cam AND THIS POPPED UP ON MY VIEWING LIST. IM 80 YEARS OLD AND HAVE NEVER SEEN THIS BEFORE, IM GOING TO DOWNLOAD IT. THANKS FOR SHARING.
Thank you for an amazing vid, didn't really look at the title, so thought it was just the MW doing it's thing across the sky, to see the earth rotate instead, well that was just stunning and beautiful.
That's wonderful!!!
That's fake... lol
👏🏼😯😊😊
@@cccarter9858 "That's fake... lol." Even though anyone, even you, could get the same footage with a camera and an equatorial mount, but yeah, easier just to say "thats fake."
Earth is something so unique. We are always in a roller coaster and yet v don't feel it.
how do you know earth is unique ? we dont know much about universe to say that earth is something unique
@@smradlaveponozky1627really ?earth is unique because it is the only planet,where we lives and life forms possible.
@@susanta1633 actually life could be out there somewhere, but we will never know
You don't feel it because your not moving plain and simple
@@Tazz-zo5fm You nailed it my man!
Swear to God we are surrounded by idiots.
Did anyone mention, why did they move the camera and not keep it stationary and set it at an angle? Answer; to continue the lie to keep the sheeple sheeple!
Beautiful use of camera to enlighten people about the rotation of earth in space .....A big thanks to creator of this universe and this video as well ..
There's nothing more beautiful than the nature itself 🍀
Nature is a Creation of God
@@iWh15tl3 no, it’s not. god doesn’t exist babe.
@@iWh15tl3 if it is created by someone then it is not nature.
@@iWh15tl3 no GOD
@@iWh15tl3 there is no god
This is probably one of the best. There is no other way to see this without time lapse. Love how the earth looks like it is tilting.
Who want this video for full 10 to 20 mins
Unfortunately, a lot of the video would just be footage of the earth, since the camera itself is still ultimately rotating with the earth, even if the camera's angle is not.
@@user-xw1yh2py4j I know that.. i just Said .. it will be awsome. If that video can be made for 20 to 30 mins
@@user-xw1yh2py4j Needs to start pointing at the opposite horizon, then can get 6 - 8 hours (depending on latitude and time of year).
Even if it was only 720p, it would result in an extremely large video file.
Nobody because it doesn't work.
It just showed upon my list.
Love it! I used to go outside at night and lie in the grass starring at the stars. I swear i could feel the earth's rotation. I Need to do that again. Life simple pleasures are the best!
That's possibly the most beautiful thing I have ever seen.
wow just wow
Totally agree.
Could have been done a hundred years ago!
If you liked this, then you will like Gigapixels of Andromeda [4k]
Check out 'The World outside my window - A timelapse of Earth from the ISS' and 'AWAKEN Trailer by Tom Lowe'
MrAaronvee really?
How?
This is OUTSTANDING! Adam Savage just twitted about this video of yours and I'm in awe!
*tweeted
@Walrus Bellhop
*twatted
Thank you you tube for recommending this.
Its beautiful and i can watch it over n over again.
Stunning video. Shows the true beauty of science and astronomy and the complex relationship that they share. Thank you!
I watch the occasional astronomy video and sometime YT recommends a gem like this.
This was on my recommended viewing list. It’s absolutely stunning
Your Gullibility is on display.
I use Night Vision Goggles for night flying. Although monochromatic, it is just staggering all the stars I would never be able to see without them. And seeing the Andromeda galaxy is still my favorite. Amongst all those crisply illuminated stars sits one small pale smear on the canvas. It looks like a mistaken thumbprint.
I use NVGs as well and it is amazing especially "shooting stars".
We need a "behind the scene" footage, i'm curious to know how the hell did you do that xD
JnouBy ... Camera attached to an equatorial mount turning at sidereal rate.
@@florencegomer7937 yea explains everything
From the artist :
As our planet makes its way around the Sun, it rotates on an axis that runs from north to south, spinning at roughly 1,600 kilometres per hour (1,000 miles per hour). The time it takes to complete this rotation is called a sidereal day, which is not exactly 24 hours - it's more like 23.9344696 hours.
The mount, therefore, works by rotating at the same rate and along the same axis as our own planet, but in the opposite direction.
"Equatorial mounts are aligned to the North Star and rotate the camera at a rate of 15° per hour which is the same rate of Earth's rotation," says Nirenberg, "so the camera follows the stars in the sky, and the camera remains pointed at the same part of the sky no matter how many hours pass."
Yeah i thought math would be involved
@@SoufianeTahiri wow, is that it?!
OMG, stupendous! This video deserves a billion views and likes. Watching this gives an unexplainable sense of peace and pleasure. Thanks very much 🙏
Read the thumbnail, it's fake! It is not a real representation of our world, please wake up and stop believing everything you see and hear. It's important because if your easily swayed here then you believe anything you see on the news.
Too many stars.. too many dreams..🌠 The reality is that in front of all these.. I'm just a speck of dust..🌏💕
~RM (BTS)
A speck of dust that is sometimes bigger than the Earth
@@theelilac113 haha, do you expect that thing from a bts lover
Sometimes this reminder makes my problems look small and I'm able move forward without as much worry I had before
@@theelilac113 it's sometimes, not every time
@@nishitha5930 that’s what I said :)
One of THE best videos not just on UA-cam, on the internet!!! Absolutely fantastic!!! ❤
not!
@@animalcrackrzz Stunningly verbose and erudite rebuttal there champ. You're clearly an intellectual powerhouse.
Brilliant! I love this perspective! It brings home that it's us that's moving. Kids should see this in schools! Great camera work!
Catching the Earth rotation in relation to the Milky Way was really the cherry on top. Great job!
This is so awesome! And the Instagram pictures is all stunning, can't even believe the time/effort/patience put into this work... Wow, good job!!
Got recommended by my geography professor... It’s absolutely stunning !
When things fall apart , I just remember how the earth is spinning and I am yet alive breathing . Thank you for creating such a mesmerising timelapse
Lol youre breathing yeah? Breathing gas called oxygen yeah? You do realise that the necessary antecedent for gas pressure is a container, right? If no container the gas will fill the available volume... This natural gas law debunks anything that anyone has ever claimed about earth being next to a 10 -17 Torre vacuum WITHOUT having a physical barrier between the 2 environments... Natural gas law, man... You can also do a quick google search: gas pressure
And it literally states that "it (gas) is the force of gas exerting on the walls of its container"...
@@MathieusTheWalkingWitness wow , that knowledge seems something new to me but do you realise if this fucking land which you are either standing sitting or laying has something called TREES or Plants which was the first ever source to produce oxygen
Before all this scientific knowledge could be acknowledged to you do you think how did you breathe then. natural gas (oxygen) that's photosynthesis buddy ! Happy Breathing b/w the walls of your container producing O²
Phew I dint really understand what made you write this but it was fun reading to your GAS PRESSURE theory !
@@suhanss0721 Lol that gas pressure LAW is not a theory, kid... Its a fkn law, unlike your theory tale of gravity...
Here is some actual scientific experiments that debunk your blind faith pseudo science religion of natural gas law being violated due to a belief system:
It's a shame that gas pressure requires a container or the gas will fill the available volume.
MIT professor
ua-cam.com/video/HtmjNlBAnwU/v-deo.html
My own demonstration
ua-cam.com/video/nL5jb5b6pWw/v-deo.html
Gas pressure next to a vacuum with the barrier broke
ua-cam.com/video/n2PehSqvxns/v-deo.html
Action Lab demonstrating that a container is necessary to have gas pressure
ua-cam.com/video/026GF7yLCeE/v-deo.html
Lab360 replicating a cloud in a container
ua-cam.com/video/44GH2gs8avo/v-deo.html
Lab360 replicating rain in a container
ua-cam.com/video/3v98madaW1M/v-deo.html
You do realise science is establishing a cause and affect relationship in nature, thats backed by a hypothesis test (experiment) to see if your independent variable (IV aka cause) is gonna change the dependant variable (DV aka affect) amd that your IV must be manipulated nu the scientist, right?
Now you know this, amd i have gave you my presentation of this natural gas law in action (proving my original claim), I expect for you to show me a presentation of gas pressure NOT requiring a container and the gas NOT filling the available volume...
P.s.
I been where you're at... I too believed for 32 years I was on a spinning globe etc.
I started asking questions in FE groups... Pay attention to their answers and you'll be left questioning the reality that every child is taught...
I have a few other non FE videos on my channel (music videos 😎) that you might find intriguing...
Anyways, I tried to debunk FE amd ended up realising that what we were all forced to learn (programming) in school does not coincide with reality/ basic senses...
I.e.
Can't feel any movement feom earth yet believe I'm spinning amd traveling in 3 other directions at "ludicrous speed" (Mel Brooks spaceballs reference😁)?
My basic senses tell me thats all b.s., man...
I.e.2
We all see the sky/stars is moving but claim the earth is moving instead?🤦
Once again, the majority deny their basic senses cause "a book told em so"...
I.e.3
(Contradiction claim/ sight denial)
"You cant see the earths curvature cause the earth is so big"
Same people will also say: "that boat is going over the curve"
Me: thought the earth was too big to see a curve? FFS make up your mind!which is it? Can you see the curve or is the earth too big to see the fkn curve?"
Been debating this for 8 years now and you should see some of the responses I get when ballers (blind faith heliocentric zealots) have their theory tales questioned... They make shit up to appear intelligent...
Lol I have 3 videos of some whimsical baller claims theyve made during debates amd im sure you will even be like "wtf!?🤦"...
its not the time laps
its the camera rotating slowly
And you are not falling off its back
That was the best and relaxing video that I’ve seen in a long time. Hope you make a longer version with the same music.
When I see things like this, I can feel, for just little seconds, happy.
I feel that
Fabulous unusual perspective...makes all the difference. Thank you.
Came from Wolfe 6020
Your video is beautiful the milky way in all its glory thank you for sharing
Showed up in my recommendations. Glad it did- great video!
That was the coolest idea for a video. Now I need more! NEED more!
Make your own!!!
Get an idea, make a video!!!
@@abelis644 I would but my videos would suck because I don't have thousands of dollars worth of camera and time lapse equipment or training.
@@mawage666 Don't need thousands....you can do this with and camera and a tripod with a second ball head. Not nearly as easy but doable. A tracking mount can be bout for $400US or less (think used) and an older DSLR you could buy for $200.
You CAN spend $1000's but you can also spend less. I have about $1200 invested.
@@joeshmoe7967 I totally agree with that. But I'm 99.99999999% sure this video equipment for this video was not cheap. I do have a Nikon D-3200 and an adapter for my Celestron Nexstar 127 SLT. But I have no idea how to make a time lapse with it. I would love to just get a better camera that has a time lapse mode like my brother's P-900. But that's not a removable lense so there is no adapter for it. A time lapse track would be awesome!
@@mawage666 Quality wise the D3200 is a better camera than the P900. I run my Canon with an app on my tablet. There are similar apps for Nikon. Also external shutter releases that can give you time lapse. Or the old fashion manual way of using a plain shutter release and timing with a watch etc. You could piggyback the camera on the Celestron as the tracker. For now just shoot some wide time exposures. Still very cool and a lot of fun. Your gear is plenty to get going. Clear Skies!
Found your beautiful video in a Move Shoot Move Facebook group. I'll be saving your video to watch again and again. Simply lovely!
Absolutely stunning.....❤
Do not show this to any "flat-earthers"....they will think they'll slide off ☺
Is more easy slide off fron a sphere...
It's Koolaid for Mental Midget Ballers.The Earth does not spin, it is Stationary.Genesis 1 14
@Namir Deshmukh Tell me about yourself Namir.
"Slide off" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@fernandaabreu5625 cant spell?
For those who cry "fake" how much of the following don't you understand?
A timelapse of the Milky Way that was recorded using an equatorial tracking mount over a period of around 3 hours to show Earth's rotation relative to the Milky Way.
I used a Sony a7SII with the Canon 24-70mm f2.8 lens and recorded 1100 10" exposures at a 12-second interval. All the frames were captured at F/2.8 and 16000iso.
runbei everything between ‘a’ and ‘.’
@@randomjasmicisrandom dummy.
The thing that looks fake to me is that the sun is rising, yet the sky is still totally black. I'm not saying it's definitely fake, but that is odd. Maybe the exposure makes the dawn look much brighter than it would do in reality.
@@RevStickleback I missed the sunrise. When was that?
@@EricGasner73 maybe it's city lights, but from about halfway there's a yellow glow on the horizon that seems to grow, like the start of a sunrise.
I've never seen such a stunning view of the earth's rotation.
It's awesome.
Makes me watch over and over
You still haven't! Simpleminded globetrotter..
@Graham Rathbone Its commentary! And my opinion stands as is, this is a deceptive video that only an blind, blatantly ignorant globetrotter would believe!
That is the most fascinating thing I have seen in a long time!
0:38 Oh no!! We re all going to fall off. Hang on everybody! 🤣😂
Cheers that was excellent👍
Incredible footage!
This is the view from the northern hemisphere - outward. From the southern hemisphere, the galaxy is dense and huge.
"...From the southern hemisphere, the galaxy is dense and huge. That comment will blow a flat earthers mind. Umm, is the view from the south more dense than a flat earther?
Hi. When you say this is the view looking "outward," do you mean that we (the camera is) facing away from the center of the spiral, and the southern hemisphere 's view is TOWARD the center?
@Aryeh Nirenberg, thanks for this video. I love aids like this that can put things we observe in PROPER perspective.
Do you have some diagram to help me understand why? I live in the South Hemisphere, btw. The best hemisphere. Closer to Alpha Centauri about 4000 km out of 45 trillion!
From the Southern Hemisphere, the sky also "rotates" in the opposite direction.
Wow. . . 55 seconds of exquisite beauty.
Beautiful way of visualzing the earth's rotation making it obvious to anyone that the galaxy is fixed and the earth moves. To speak more precisely, the galaxy moves on a timescale of 10.000 years while the earth moves on a timescale of hours.
Nothing short of amazing (in the profoundest meaning of the word). Thank you.
I can see this video in loop for hours
Sober up .
I found this just relaxing, it's raining outside and happening to see whats on the youtube . This came up and all I need to say about it is . Anyone that thinks nothing is going on because of lack of something ,perhaps a friend ,money, material things or any feelings of despare. Look at this ,surely know nothing is at a stand still .
Thank-you
Here from Dr. Becky, today, November 13, 2020. This is wonderful, I wish it were longer.
That's what she said...
Ken, look up Timestorm UA-cam videos. They have a lot of time lapse videos of the sky and landscapes from all over the world. My favorite is "Nox Atacama".
@@thudthud5423 Just watched all three - incredibly beautiful and moving! Thank you!
Your timelapse is amazing. Thank you so much for sharing what you've done.
Absolutely the COOLEST video on UA-cam!!! Video showed up in my suggestions, which is unusual because normally their suggestions are terrible.
Somebody linked to it and you popped up saying it was yours and “thanks for sharing” so I had to click on it at that point. And I feel well rewarded, thank you.
One Flatearther to another: Earth rotation isn't real, it can't hurt you
Earth rotation:
Fake video /s
@@nishant3631 🤣🤣🤣 troll
@@erdub84 the '/s' is actually a tone indicator and it means they're being sarcastic
Hei earth is flat and it is tilting
Also FE ppl:"oh no, anyways heres my stupid argument how this is fake cuz im lazy and dumb"
The camera constantly adjusts its position to stay focused on the Milky Way. So we notice the tilt of the earth. Excellent 👌
Can anyone tel how the camera was set in detail..
@@abhishekk6433 The camera is moving with respect to earth, but fixed on the stars, thus demonstrates the rotation of the earth
If we were spinning the camera wouldn't have to keep adjusting its position 😊
Beautiful visualization and truly a piece of art, though! Still doesn't prove we are spinning.
@@blacksheeptruther LOL
When I see or think of something like this I don't know why but I feel very happy
Marvelous video with a space perspective,thank you so much for sharing!!!
To realise that there could be as many as 500 billion stars in this one Milky Way Galaxy, you begin to understand how huge the universe is.
And how truly insignificant WE are! And people think they're so dang superior! Haha.
And trillions and trillions of stars! There are more stars than all the seaside grains of sand across the globe!
And very small we are or in the matter of fact, we are nothing compare to the universe.. so mankind, why are we so ignorant and arrogant ?
You're so dumbed down.
@@Amburmist and how great our God is and He holds everything together..
That is so cool I had to watch it at least 4 times.
Its almost as if the earth is revolving......
Around 15 degrees an hour. How very interesting.
Rotating, but yes.
Interesting..... ;)
Interesting's the word.
Bob K. get out off this body 😅
Yes , an amazing optical illusion
It always blows my mind to the fact that this painting is not just a flat painting, but a deep and long world
Be reminded that only 99.7% of this visual motion is caused by Earth's rotation; the other .3% is it's orbit around our Sun; 366 observed rotations of the stars in 365 days
And add the rotation of the solar system around the center of gravity of the Milky Way to the mix, too. :) One orbit takes only some 250 million years.
@@Kedvespatikus.....Neither the rotation of the solar system around the center of the Milky Way, or the subsequent movement of our galaxy relative to the Universe is observable by eye in 10 lifetimes; Earth's orbit around our Sun IS clearly observable as ≈1° every 24 hours.
@@bhaggen C'mon, don't take it too serious. :D
(Yes, u r right. :) )
What a unique perspective!! Our amazing universe!
I found this purely by accident. This is fantastic! I love how its filmed from the perspective of the galaxy. 🌌❤️💙
This video is breathtaking.
What if you did this on a mountain?
Hell yeah!
Woah
Yes
Please do!
@waterside Everyone hold on to your tinfoil hats, amurican on the loose.
flat earthers: wait thats illegal
they're dangerous!!
@@allpeoplefreepeople absolutely
@Somewhere Down The Road big brain
No it’s still possible the movement of the disc like thing that’s NOT A DISC
@Somewhere Down The Road Why would we waste money on those brain-dead apes?
When I look at the sky at night, it really moves and it's beautiful
It does cos earths flat
@@ekd5213 - No, it does because earth ISN'T flat.
Pretty fabulous.
It's so refreshing to view the night sky from a different perspective! That was so cool 🤩
I'm an amateur astronomer and am familiar with tracking devices for astrophotography. But let's begin first with what's happening due to earth's rotation. To us, the sun (for example) appears to rise in the east and set in the west. This is because the earth is actually rotating from our west to east. (That's why the west coast's clock time is earlier than the east coast's.) So, the western horizon (seen from wherever we are located) is turning toward the sun, which bit by bit brings it higher and higher in our sky until mid-day. Then, as earth's rotation continues over the course of the day, the sun descends lower and lower as the western horizon continues approaching it. Sunset occurs when the sun and western horizon turning toward it make contact, with the sun eventually disappearing as western horizon continues turning eastward.
Now, consider what happens if I have a camera on a tracking device such that the camera (properly filtered to avoid blinding the photographer) is locked onto the sun. The tracking device will rotate the camera to keep up with the sun as the earth turns in the opposite direction. As a result, the camera will turn toward the western horizon in the same way that the sun appears to move toward that horizon. Thus, the western horizon will appear to move from right (west) to left (east) across the view finder frame, as shown in the video.
Another commenter said this essentially, but didn't go into the detail that I have. Hope this helps.
the galactic plane is inclined to the elliptic plane, so that's why it moves at a weird angle, too 🙃
Which idiots are giving this a thumbs down? This is beautiful and interesting. Thanks for taking the time to make it. Haters out there - thanks for sitting on your arses and being failures so the rest of us never have to come up against you in life.
Like what YOU like. There are 7 billion other people. It's absurd to assume all 7 billion have the same taste in entertainment that YOU do.
Flat earthers probably
@@DrLumpyDMus I agree some people have no taste whatsoever
@Chester Guitarman Really? You genuinely, honestly think that? You just really can't conceive that this video might not be someone's favorite thing to watch? A total stranger's thumb count is THAT important to you?
I'll bet you like EVERY kind of music and every recording by every artist ever produced. You probably like EVERY kind of food/car/movie/girl-boy-alien friend. I'll bet you like the clothes that your grandparents wear.
Extremely cool
Anyone Else Here From Daily Dose Of Internet?
Lol, yep!
Guy above you is
Yes
:)
Yep.
No. Adam Savage post.
Beautiful footage.
goona have to try that one day
@@whereswa11y Same. I bought an EQ mount at an astro conference earlier this year; just need to get it out of its box and use it!
Hi wolfie😆
This just showed up on my phone. I always wanted to actually see the Milky Way, about 55 years ago I was about 7 and thought I was looking at the Milky Way.
I had a chance to photograph it, but I was too scared to drive in the mountains in the middle of the night and stay overnight in cold temps with wild animals. Usually astra photography needs to be color enhanced, so if you did see it with the naked eye, it probably wouldn’t look like this.
This is a simple but awesome presentation. The camera is actually moving with respect to earth, but fixed on the stars, so thus demonstrates the rotation of the earth.
rahmat izoh uchun. Shu kommentsriyni qidirdim😊