*Thanks for watching!* Today we science the colonization of Callisto, Jupiter's "Dead Moon." Whether you play the game or not, hopefully you learn something!
I feel like it would be smarter to just send a probe with AI and some nuclear fusion powered batteries and wait for them to colonize since humans are so fragile to the harsh conditions.
Destiny 2 had Humans colonize both Titan and Europa (though the latter hid a secret of Perfect Crystal-creating Darkness power). But I hear Neptune can be pretty scenic if you have the right technology.
The biggest incentive to develop Callisto or any other Jovian moon is so that we can have a chance to hang out in some tavern there and brood about the ghosts of our past space cowboy style.
Saturn's Titan would be OK. No pressure suit required, just a thermal suit. Low gravity and dense atmosphere would enable very easy flight. The large amount of water ice could be used to produce O2 and H2 using nuclear reactors. See, among others: "Titan: A Distant But Enticing Destination for Human Visitors."
@@biggsdarklighter0473 that's Saturn, not the moon Titan. Titan is alright... atmospheric pressure is a bit higher than earth, but manageable. Gravity is crazy low though, lower than the moon, and it's -179°C. Hope you brought your thermal undies! Oh, and Oxygen, or the means to generate it.
@@ItsDrMeme Little known fact: Disney products have been banned from IO. There was an unfortunate incident where songs had been used to motivate the miners in one of the original settlements. After the 17,233rd rendition of "IO, IO, it's off to work I go!", far from being a motivational start to the shift, it resulted in one miner going postal and killing everyone.
"The skidmark" is an actual plot point ina web serial named "The Deathworlders", and involves a woman dropping a deuce on an alien world and her gut flora annihilating the native life.
@@bootchoo96 haven't read the series myself, but according to my brother who has, Karen life is a lot more robust and competitive than most of the other life forms on the planet. What something like the common cold is a minor inconvenience is a lethal plague to most aliens. If I recall correctly, there's a plot point where there is a conspiracy amongst some of the more powerful alien factions to keep all deathwilders on their home planets. Because if they get off they think they're all screwed.
@@bootchoo96 the main plot of "deathworlders" texts is mainly earth life scary they realise that concept by having nearly everything else evolved on well... perfect save worlds and none could've imagines a world as inhospitable as ours producing sentient life
So similarly, Barotrauma is a game that covers human habitation of Europa's underground ocean rather than Calisto, going around in submarines trying to fend off horrible bitey sea monsters. As a marine biologist the prospect does kind of excite me a little
I just want to make enough money to live comfortably enough to be able to donate to people like you truly one of the best youtubers out here spreading the best science
I wanna make a non profit that helps smaller creators with very good videos whom deserve more attention, i wanna help them get bigger for little to no money out of their pockets. The feeling of being able to start someone’s dream careers would be awesome
I feel like one of the biggest challenges for settlement on Jupiter's moons is asteroid impact. Jupiter acts as a big magnet for space debris, and the reason why Callisto is covered in impact craters is because it often gets hit by space rocks. A settlement would presumably need to be able to defend against the those somehow
You could crate the settlements underground with only the bare minimum of structures above ground, and those structures could be done in a way they are easy an cost effective to replace. This would also make it easier for exploring the deeper regions of the moon as you are several 10's feet to 10's meters underground allowing for easier drilling an digging. Add in that being underground if you worked it right you could maybe have these settlements air-locked so that while inside them you are no required to have air tanks, though how long that might take to fully realize is hard to say, and if there was a break in the air-lock mechanism you would need both air tanks an protection readily available.
once numbers are introduced into theories and letters are introduced into numbers in math, I'm completely fucking lost! my school never taught me. kids, don't fuck around in your first year of high-school, nor with your mental health, or your teachers will think you're an idiot and force you to do essential-level math throughout your next 3 years. I had to do my times tables for my first day of grade 12 math 🤦♀️ (I've known my times tables since the 2nd grade). I was so insulted. I wish I was taught algebra back then because there's no way I'd sit through it now.
@@leaf6356 That sucks. My teachers always noticed I leaned VERY easily into nerdy stuff. My actual school was objectively low-quality, even compared to U.S. standards, but my teachers noticed I wanted information. They made sure I got it. It's really shit that you didn't get that help. Still, the concepts are perfectly fine to understand, even sans the math. 😁
I think it's easy to find volonteers to colonize Calisto. Find the most educated death row inmates and train them for the project. You never know, it might be as good of a redemption story as Australia
Super cool kyle! I have been a fan of yours since your time on that one channel. I am so amazed at what you have done with your own control , content is top notch ❤
You, sir... have earned another sub. I'm a science nerd, but the fact that you make the boring parts of science seem fun and entertaining, is awesome. If only school teachers were more like this. Oh, and i was told Callisto protocol has a slower pace than what is acceptable for FPS and i decided not to spend my money on it and just wait for Dead Space.
I would think it is reasonable to be in Callisto in 300-400 years, bare minimum. We are slowly learning about long-term space travel, mainly that radiation, lack of gravity, and space dust pose greater threats than previously assumed. I see Mars and obviously the Moon again within this century, but anything more will have to be limited visits, not space bases until at least some 800-1000 years.
If Mars is doable, Callisto is equally doable. It has plenty of materials that are perfectly suited for radiation shielding, it has gravity, and it's significantly less dusty than Mars. The low gravity is likely to be the biggest issue, but we really don't know how much gravity is enough gravity so it's quite possible that even Mars doesn't have enough, in which case spin gravity is going to be the rule pretty much everywhere apart from Earth and Venus.
As soon as they knew that space (or the sun) is radioactiv it was apparent that colonisation of planets or moons will be challengenging. Mars colonisation is a unlive mission if they do it in our lifetime.
I think you underestimate the technology required to go to the moon and to stay in zero g for long periods as our astronauts currently do, and overestimate how difficult of a jump it is to go outside earth's gravity well. Our moon Luna should be harder to colonize then jup jup's moons, especially since at first we will have to mine water from the lunar surface but after we leave the earth's gravity well we will have more water in ice then we could ever use in thousands of years, and we will first have to build on earth and launch from here, after the moon is colonized we will be able to construct Massive, MASSIVE space ships that can cruise using unusual orbits and gravity slingshots to multiple diffrent locations while people casually live on them
When nuclear power was brought up I rolled my eyes bc I was thinking "oh, boy. Here were go with atomic haters." Been then I realized Kyle isn't stupid.
Callisto is actually the only moon of Jupiter that you could survive on. The radiation on the other three is too high and would kill anything alive above the surface.
The facility itself seems to be designed to break every OSHA regulation, so that's going to be the most dangerous part; as for the "zombies" all you have to do is sidestep...
The second we find life in Callisto's ocean the place will be up to its metaphorical testicles in fishermen...the fourth government agency in space (behind NASA, the State Department, and the Deparment of Defense, and not necessarily in that order) would be the Department of Fish and Game to issue licenses and post wardens.
Why the SD and DoD tho? I feel like the CDC would up there instead, since it’s probably really unlikely that there’d be anything more than microbes and maybe some simple multicellular life- and the SD deals in... Yk, things that have to do w the states
@@stellathefoxgirl3648 State Department handles most of our treaties (and other involvements) from the Executive Branch standpoint...the Senate approves treaties, State handles the administration of those treaties, including operating our embassies. DoD handles, as their name implies, all military affairs...if human feet touch ground in any long-term scenario, Marine Corps boots will be among them. CDC would be on the list of agencies to go, but would be lower on the list...USAMRIID would be up there long before CDC would ever leave US soil, with the WHO screaming to be allowed up the whole time.
Callisto is nice and all, but Europa is the place to be. That being said, we need to start fully exploring our Jupiter system. It's like a mini solar system.
Apparently scientists are set to announce a breakthrough in nuclear fusion tomorrow so... I guess Callisto habitation just got a teensy bit more feasible. Anyways, great video. I feel like you're becoming a better presenter with each video, not that you were lacking before. Looking forward to the next.
could be a whole other video talking about how we didn't do a good job the first time of planetary quarantine. lasted like a few hours before someone accidentally came in contact.
Something I've wondered for a bit now is would a weight suit help with a low gravity environment? Not something that is just on the joints like a lot of the common training weights that you see at sporting goods stores, talking about something that covers you from head to toe fingertip to fingertip and a bunch of weighted tiles. They wouldn't necessarily help with issues involving Gravity versus your internal organs, but it would help at least as far as I understand with your weight-bearing muscles and bones
There are tons of websites that sell medieval-style maille...butted or riveted links, a simple suit weighting about 20lbs or so for about eight hours a day is one hell of a workout.
@@Gilleban I mean admittedly that would be a good starting point. But if you're on say Mars where the gravity is about 40% of earth's, you're going to need a weight suit that makes up the remaining 60%. For example if a space Explorer weighed 70 kilos on Earth and weighed about 28 on Mars he would need another 42 kilos of weight suit to give his muscles the exercise they would have had on earth. In the scenario the suit would have to be even heavier on the moon which is about 1/6 of Earth's gravity so you would need a weight suit in the scenario to weigh about 58 kilos.
All the problems described here are just more extreme versions of the problems we will have trying to set up a base on Mars. There are A LOT of big tough problems we need to solve before reaching out to the rest of the solar system.
It's official then...I already went months ago with Smart Thor and now Kile owns it. In time, I learned he's more like a Bill Nye on his 20s so excited and out of bread from the enthusiasm. Good show, dude!!
I would love for you to research Quantized Inertia...a new theory that explains galaxy rotation (which violates GR) and obviates the need for Dark Matter and Dark Energy. It leverages Rindler Horizons and Unruh Radiation (recently proven in the lab) to elegantly explain Interia, but more importantly, can create thrust for use in space.
There are already many successful lab experiments proving its validity. It elegantly combines virtual particles, Rindler Horizons, and Unruh Radiation (all proven) to explain how loss of information reduces an accelerating body's inertial mass. It can be utilized to produce thrust, which is what has been recently proven in several labs. It will re-write science. And unlike MOND, it has no adjustable parameters.
Something that will always fuck me up is microbes and shit, and the thought of meeting an alien species could just explode your cells on the spot, probably; Also, Space STDs would be terrifying. Do with that what you will.
I pre-ordered the game and I absolutely love it! Glen Schofield really knows how to put together a great team that really put so much passion into whatever project they create. They have put so much depth into the gore effects, physics effects, atmosphere, environment, gross & grime, yet it's really oddly facinating to look at. I'm so excited. This dev team seems so good & passionate about what they do and create. It gives me vibes to the best of the good old days of the Xbox 360 era games. Finally something like this but with the capabilities of the modern day tech/software/hardware capabilities and actually being used in effective satisfying ways. It's crazy how rare it has been to see something like this. We've been going through a really long slump in gaming quality for quite a few years now imo. So I'm hoping this is the start to a new chapter of gaming & development now starting. Me personally, I care way less about graphics, ray tracing, etc. Compared to how much I care about physics builds, good enemies good a.I., physics effects related to combat and environmental aspects, character movement. Like being able to move around uniquely, climb, etc. Really letting us explore and play around with well built game mechanics in a polished environment. That's what matters to me. It Truly feels like software capabilities are FINALLY catching up to Hardware technology and honestly I feel that will be the huge factor in improving games. Up until now, we've had powerful hardware tech but devs really have been so limited and restrained to what they can do, create, all because previous game build engine's were so tedious, stubborn, restrictive, cumbersome, hindering to a devs creativity, to how gameplay mechanics, physics effects feel, render, process things. We finally now have software capabilities that I truly believe will improve our quality of games and improve the quality, the process of building games, becoming way less tedious and cumbersome, and opening the door to way more capabilities for satisfying mechanics, and just how the games even process rendering to enhance the overall quality of how games can run with the new hardware and console's. Im very excited to see what the future brings. (someone Please get behind supporting Glen Schofield and his team so they can create and dive into any project that they are passionate about. This is s great group of people. Whatever they make, they make with quality and satisfying gameplay mechanics, physics builds, etc. I hope investors BACK THIS TEAM at striking distance studios! Gaming needs teams like this one, they understand how to make games fun and satisfying.)
Small pedantic correction, you can technically scream in space (assuming a spacesuit or some other means of compensating for the pressure differential), you screaming is simply the sudden expulsion of air from your lungs technically. It's just that the sound of your scream won't propagate beyond the boundaries of whatever air immediately surrounds you such as the helmet of a spacesuit. In other words, in space no one will hear you scream.
I have a question. At 1:50, Kyle says the “so-called Galileo spacecraft”. What’s with the “so-called”? That was its name. There isn’t anything controversial about that.
Hey Kyle, I have a question that's been bugging me and I think would make a good episode. In another reality you did a video on spaceships needing radiators to stop the inhabitants from boiling alive. Why is it then that the Apollo 13 crew nearly froze to death when they had no power?
I was just watching a Q&A On your old channel, I imagine you don't really read comments on there anymore. So I'll respond here; BTW I am left handed and dyslexic, in overcoming that I learned I write backwards naturally with my right hand. Also if I focus I can write upside-down, backwards or both simultaneously. I would love to do a demo clip of just my hands and some paper so you can explain how that's possible in a video. You live my dream. Keep it alive. And if I get one question; the next space telescope(which will be designed to search for life) may be named 'The Carl Sagan' how do you feel about that? I loved Carl, and I know you did too. You do a great impression of him btw.
No wonder I don't see you anymore! You left 'Because science' really enjoy your video thought you own the channel lol. Glad I found you here haha through the comments from the other channel. Just subscribed and hit the bell too🤗 have a great day Kyle
It's interesting to think we're getting to the point we don't need to send people on these missions. We can just build robots with AI advanced enough to perform and react to any scenario that might occur independent of our own input. We could have them deployed working on building a colony base years or even decades ahead of actual humans arriving.
After their horrendous launch with terrible performance on PC and even worse review on steam I love that you make a nice video on it. Hope they'll patch these issues soon. :(
Probably snow to suggest to the player that it's cold af outside, think they just skimped on the realness there, but I haven't looked this up so just taking a guess
It's likely to be the "volcanic" dust from other moons. Orbiting sufficiently close to be picked by gravity. I don't remember the name of the moon, but there is one moon that is basically a big yellow volcanic rock. Maybe that, But cold. Edit: Io. The name is Io.
I feel like the best way to manage the harmful effects of microgravity would be to build an orbital recovery station. It would be built large enough to avoid getting the motion sickness of a rotating habitat, and it could be used to mimic 1g. The scientists would then swap with workers on the surface. If we can't find a medicinal way to prevent low / microgravity from deteriorating our bodies, then the only other option would be to have a recovery environment of 1g. Or, instead of a recovery station, they make the orbital station the primary habitat and they go on rotation down to the surface.
Callisto is probably the best choice for colonization outside Earth: decent gravity (comparable to the Moon), virtually unlimited supply of ice (thus water), and the lowest radiation exposure in the entire Solar System: totally outside the deadly radiation belts of Jupiter, but still well inside its powerful magnetosphere, that efficiently shields cosmic rays and solar wind.
"I don't know, a space prison or whatever..." "...hopefully not full of monsters." "You look like a bagpipe with mouths." Whoever writes for you, Kyle - you or someone else - is brilliant and has a beautifully devious imagination! Thank you, Kyle, for all you do. ❤️ ❤️
Hi Kyle, could you make a video on the idea of everyone having a tiny nuclear reactor in their homes? like the safety of how one might work? how much nuclear fuel would be needed to run it and for how long for example. I think it could be a really interesting idea/solution to green energy but just don't know if something like that could even exist like is it so far fetched to think we could one day all have a mini boiler size reactor powering your home self sustainably? would you get sick? would you be able to sell power to your neighbours? I think you'd have a really interesting take on this concept!
If you are interested in learning more about Callisto, go watch Simon Whistler's Geographics episode all about its past and future. And all about our plans to explore and even inhabit this mini planet
I love calisto protocol I can't wait for the dlc I'm hoping we get to go deeper underground and see the under sea and. Also, I'm hoping we get more exploration and more in depth lore
Extra-planetary prison colonies would only turn out like Australia, I think, but probably get worse due to the differences between criminals then and now. It would make more sense to just have prison stations, with automated staff, internal and external defenses, and minimal human or other biological presence. No mobility for the station, modular construction for maximum cost-effectiveness, plus the ability to jettison rioting prisoners into the void if need be, and be able to bring them back once they calm down. Makes way more sense to me than prison ships or prison colonies.
If I was in space and able to breathe there (in some space suit thing, I mean), I would be able to scream in space. The sound might not carry very far, but oh well. But since I'm not in space, you're entirely correct that I can't scream in space.
*Thanks for watching!* Today we science the colonization of Callisto, Jupiter's "Dead Moon." Whether you play the game or not, hopefully you learn something!
If I get dragonballs or a genie I'mma wish for you to have immortality and control over when it ends.
I feel like it would be smarter to just send a probe with AI and some nuclear fusion powered batteries and wait for them to colonize since humans are so fragile to the harsh conditions.
Destiny 2 had Humans colonize both Titan and Europa (though the latter hid a secret of Perfect Crystal-creating Darkness power). But I hear Neptune can be pretty scenic if you have the right technology.
I’m currently playing the game and it’s fantastic! Not what I was expecting but I love it.
Have you seen the movie, "Europa Report"? I really liked it with it showing them going ti Europa.
The fact that he giggles when he calls us a "dirty boy" is gold
im a certified dirty boi and i can confirm. very cool!
7/5 would infect Enceladus with butt crack germs
It was part of the script/forced laugh, but yeah.
That wasn't just a giggle, that was almost a LAUGH!
kyle's humor is just awesome.
Ganymede has wifi I’ll stay there
And no lag😂
And rock lobsters.
@@DahVoozel and butter sauce!
You won't have an internet though
Ganymede Elegy
The biggest incentive to develop Callisto or any other Jovian moon is so that we can have a chance to hang out in some tavern there and brood about the ghosts of our past space cowboy style.
*Eros dubstep from the Expanse intensifies*
Have a Ganymede elegy?
Saturn's Titan would be OK. No pressure suit required, just a thermal suit. Low gravity and dense atmosphere would enable very easy flight. The large amount of water ice could be used to produce O2 and H2 using nuclear reactors. See, among others: "Titan: A Distant But Enticing Destination for Human Visitors."
@@tickking IO isn’t that hype tho. Have been there multiple times. Doesn’t hit the same since the Pyramids glassed that Moon.
BTW, it literally rains literal Diamonds on Titan, so we'd need protection against that.
@@biggsdarklighter0473 that's Saturn, not the moon Titan. Titan is alright... atmospheric pressure is a bit higher than earth, but manageable. Gravity is crazy low though, lower than the moon, and it's -179°C. Hope you brought your thermal undies! Oh, and Oxygen, or the means to generate it.
@@ItsDrMeme Little known fact: Disney products have been banned from IO. There was an unfortunate incident where songs had been used to motivate the miners in one of the original settlements. After the 17,233rd rendition of "IO, IO, it's off to work I go!", far from being a motivational start to the shift, it resulted in one miner going postal and killing everyone.
Ah yes Titan, nothing bad ever happens on Titan
*looks vaguely in Dead Space 2's direction*
"The skidmark" is an actual plot point ina web serial named "The Deathworlders", and involves a woman dropping a deuce on an alien world and her gut flora annihilating the native life.
Godamn those monkeys and their multi-bacterial bodies.
Tf did she eat? Taco bell? Lmao
@@bootchoo96 haven't read the series myself, but according to my brother who has, Karen life is a lot more robust and competitive than most of the other life forms on the planet. What something like the common cold is a minor inconvenience is a lethal plague to most aliens. If I recall correctly, there's a plot point where there is a conspiracy amongst some of the more powerful alien factions to keep all deathwilders on their home planets. Because if they get off they think they're all screwed.
@@bootchoo96 the main plot of "deathworlders" texts is mainly earth life scary
they realise that concept by having nearly everything else evolved on well... perfect save worlds and none could've imagines a world as inhospitable as ours producing sentient life
Which chapter is this?
“Science Thor” is the most accurate nickname to date. I love it
So similarly, Barotrauma is a game that covers human habitation of Europa's underground ocean rather than Calisto, going around in submarines trying to fend off horrible bitey sea monsters.
As a marine biologist the prospect does kind of excite me a little
I just want to make enough money to live comfortably enough to be able to donate to people like you truly one of the best youtubers out here spreading the best science
I want to become a billionaire so I can sponsor random UA-camrs and make them do ads for a website with pictures of my cat or something.
@@DonVigaDeFierro hahaha that would be so great
I wanna make a non profit that helps smaller creators with very good videos whom deserve more attention, i wanna help them get bigger for little to no money out of their pockets. The feeling of being able to start someone’s dream careers would be awesome
@@kill3rbamb146 for real sounds amazing
@@kill3rbamb146 people like you are the only reason I haven't gave up my hope on humanity yet. Never change my man, wish ya the best in life.
0:56 You read the script in a way that made it sound like the absence of an atmosphere had something to do with it being tidally locked with Jupiter.
I love how Kyle can do adds but still make them interesting and informative videos!
I love when Kyle makes himself giggle involuntarily 😂
While you're on the space version of early history Australia, the boys and I will be in a sub singing sea shanties in the oceans of Europa.
Barotrauma be like
Until a giant alien jellyfish suddenly slams into the hull, rupturing it in 17 places and giving everyone blunt force trauma
That's really cool that they thought of the planetary protection thing! Nice forward thinking there
Watch out for Captain ferris as he caves faces, the disrespect 😂
I feel like one of the biggest challenges for settlement on Jupiter's moons is asteroid impact. Jupiter acts as a big magnet for space debris, and the reason why Callisto is covered in impact craters is because it often gets hit by space rocks. A settlement would presumably need to be able to defend against the those somehow
You could crate the settlements underground with only the bare minimum of structures above ground, and those structures could be done in a way they are easy an cost effective to replace. This would also make it easier for exploring the deeper regions of the moon as you are several 10's feet to 10's meters underground allowing for easier drilling an digging. Add in that being underground if you worked it right you could maybe have these settlements air-locked so that while inside them you are no required to have air tanks, though how long that might take to fully realize is hard to say, and if there was a break in the air-lock mechanism you would need both air tanks an protection readily available.
@@elricengquist9989 that sounds depressing
Ah, now this one is more to my style. I really like when you throw numbers at space. It's my kinda nerdy.
once numbers are introduced into theories and letters are introduced into numbers in math, I'm completely fucking lost! my school never taught me. kids, don't fuck around in your first year of high-school, nor with your mental health, or your teachers will think you're an idiot and force you to do essential-level math throughout your next 3 years. I had to do my times tables for my first day of grade 12 math 🤦♀️ (I've known my times tables since the 2nd grade). I was so insulted. I wish I was taught algebra back then because there's no way I'd sit through it now.
@@leaf6356 That sucks. My teachers always noticed I leaned VERY easily into nerdy stuff. My actual school was objectively low-quality, even compared to U.S. standards, but my teachers noticed I wanted information. They made sure I got it. It's really shit that you didn't get that help. Still, the concepts are perfectly fine to understand, even sans the math. 😁
I think it's easy to find volonteers to colonize Calisto. Find the most educated death row inmates and train them for the project. You never know, it might be as good of a redemption story as Australia
Captain Kirk had to deal with that bunch...twice.
there are plenty of law-abiding, tax-paying, highly educated citizens that would volunteer to go to another planet. or die trying.
SCP Foundation, is that you?
@3:25, "One hundred years ago, back in 2003."
Thanks for making me feel REALLY old Kyle
:)
I was vorn in 2004 and he made me feel old
Super cool kyle! I have been a fan of yours since your time on that one channel. I am so amazed at what you have done with your own control , content is top notch ❤
You, sir... have earned another sub. I'm a science nerd, but the fact that you make the boring parts of science seem fun and entertaining, is awesome. If only school teachers were more like this. Oh, and i was told Callisto protocol has a slower pace than what is acceptable for FPS and i decided not to spend my money on it and just wait for Dead Space.
Love it! Ive always been interested in Jupiter's Radiation belt- and Ive always thought about Terra forming.
I would think it is reasonable to be in Callisto in 300-400 years, bare minimum. We are slowly learning about long-term space travel, mainly that radiation, lack of gravity, and space dust pose greater threats than previously assumed. I see Mars and obviously the Moon again within this century, but anything more will have to be limited visits, not space bases until at least some 800-1000 years.
If Mars is doable, Callisto is equally doable. It has plenty of materials that are perfectly suited for radiation shielding, it has gravity, and it's significantly less dusty than Mars. The low gravity is likely to be the biggest issue, but we really don't know how much gravity is enough gravity so it's quite possible that even Mars doesn't have enough, in which case spin gravity is going to be the rule pretty much everywhere apart from Earth and Venus.
As soon as they knew that space (or the sun) is radioactiv it was apparent that colonisation of planets or moons will be challengenging. Mars colonisation is a unlive mission if they do it in our lifetime.
I think you underestimate the technology required to go to the moon and to stay in zero g for long periods as our astronauts currently do, and overestimate how difficult of a jump it is to go outside earth's gravity well.
Our moon Luna should be harder to colonize then jup jup's moons, especially since at first we will have to mine water from the lunar surface but after we leave the earth's gravity well we will have more water in ice then we could ever use in thousands of years, and we will first have to build on earth and launch from here, after the moon is colonized we will be able to construct Massive, MASSIVE space ships that can cruise using unusual orbits and gravity slingshots to multiple diffrent locations while people casually live on them
-218 f would freeze you instantly I know of no material that will stay mobile at those temperatures
Did he say “a hundred years ago, back in 2003”??? Time travel confirmed 😂
this moment made me laugh haha
When nuclear power was brought up I rolled my eyes bc I was thinking "oh, boy. Here were go with atomic haters." Been then I realized Kyle isn't stupid.
“In fact, 100 years ago, in 2003…” Sure feels that way!😂
Callisto is actually the only moon of Jupiter that you could survive on. The radiation on the other three is too high and would kill anything alive above the surface.
The facility itself seems to be designed to break every OSHA regulation, so that's going to be the most dangerous part; as for the "zombies" all you have to do is sidestep...
Kyle, you did an OUTSTANDING job creating this video. Well done!! 👏 🙌 🙏!!!
The second we find life in Callisto's ocean the place will be up to its metaphorical testicles in fishermen...the fourth government agency in space (behind NASA, the State Department, and the Deparment of Defense, and not necessarily in that order) would be the Department of Fish and Game to issue licenses and post wardens.
Why the SD and DoD tho? I feel like the CDC would up there instead, since it’s probably really unlikely that there’d be anything more than microbes and maybe some simple multicellular life- and the SD deals in... Yk, things that have to do w the states
@@stellathefoxgirl3648 State Department handles most of our treaties (and other involvements) from the Executive Branch standpoint...the Senate approves treaties, State handles the administration of those treaties, including operating our embassies. DoD handles, as their name implies, all military affairs...if human feet touch ground in any long-term scenario, Marine Corps boots will be among them. CDC would be on the list of agencies to go, but would be lower on the list...USAMRIID would be up there long before CDC would ever leave US soil, with the WHO screaming to be allowed up the whole time.
if we do end up living there, better believe they'll make a lot of narrow spaces for us to crawl through...
It's why I loved the movie "Europa Report"
Explores that what if scenario of life on a Jovian moon.
Callisto is nice and all, but Europa is the place to be. That being said, we need to start fully exploring our Jupiter system. It's like a mini solar system.
Too bad denuvo absolutely castrated the Callisto Protocol on launch. Bad game, good video
Mercury also doesn't have anything we could really call an atmosphere and is also tidally locked. I can't believe *you* made that mistake lol
This is a master class on how to do a sponsored content video. This was amazing.
Apparently scientists are set to announce a breakthrough in nuclear fusion tomorrow so... I guess Callisto habitation just got a teensy bit more feasible.
Anyways, great video. I feel like you're becoming a better presenter with each video, not that you were lacking before. Looking forward to the next.
could be a whole other video talking about how we didn't do a good job the first time of planetary quarantine. lasted like a few hours before someone accidentally came in contact.
Love and appreciate all your work!
Something I've wondered for a bit now is would a weight suit help with a low gravity environment? Not something that is just on the joints like a lot of the common training weights that you see at sporting goods stores, talking about something that covers you from head to toe fingertip to fingertip and a bunch of weighted tiles. They wouldn't necessarily help with issues involving Gravity versus your internal organs, but it would help at least as far as I understand with your weight-bearing muscles and bones
There are tons of websites that sell medieval-style maille...butted or riveted links, a simple suit weighting about 20lbs or so for about eight hours a day is one hell of a workout.
@@Gilleban I mean admittedly that would be a good starting point. But if you're on say Mars where the gravity is about 40% of earth's, you're going to need a weight suit that makes up the remaining 60%. For example if a space Explorer weighed 70 kilos on Earth and weighed about 28 on Mars he would need another 42 kilos of weight suit to give his muscles the exercise they would have had on earth. In the scenario the suit would have to be even heavier on the moon which is about 1/6 of Earth's gravity so you would need a weight suit in the scenario to weigh about 58 kilos.
As long as you break down matter into energy efficiently enough, you can live just about anywhere.
Good to see a fellow champion's club member
Completed the game today and now can finally watch this.
Majestic science man back to tell us stuff, what a good day
All the problems described here are just more extreme versions of the problems we will have trying to set up a base on Mars. There are A LOT of big tough problems we need to solve before reaching out to the rest of the solar system.
I'll personally stay on IO the machine moon with it's ai and highly metallic sands and spires
It's official then...I already went months ago with Smart Thor and now Kile owns it.
In time, I learned he's more like a Bill Nye on his 20s so excited and out of bread from the enthusiasm. Good show, dude!!
That's why Ganymede should be our destination. Nearly the size of Mars but it has Oceans and Magnetosphere.
As long as you just steer clear of Europa, you should be all set.
You would think with the amount they spent on promoting their game they could actually afford enough testing to make the game at all playable on pc...
I would love for you to research Quantized Inertia...a new theory that explains galaxy rotation (which violates GR) and obviates the need for Dark Matter and Dark Energy. It leverages Rindler Horizons and Unruh Radiation (recently proven in the lab) to elegantly explain Interia, but more importantly, can create thrust for use in space.
There are already many successful lab experiments proving its validity. It elegantly combines virtual particles, Rindler Horizons, and Unruh Radiation (all proven) to explain how loss of information reduces an accelerating body's inertial mass. It can be utilized to produce thrust, which is what has been recently proven in several labs. It will re-write science. And unlike MOND, it has no adjustable parameters.
**retard has left the chat**
@@matrikater nooo, come back! it's good to learn.
He's only a quasi-nerd.
@@leaf6356 lol, you know what i meant
Great job, as always.
May the algorithm lay its mercy upon you.
Just started playing this yesterday, feels like Dead Space 4 and I absolutely love it
6:19 "You look like... a bagpipe with mouths"
Poor guy didn't deserve that 😭
Something that will always fuck me up is microbes and shit, and the thought of meeting an alien species could just explode your cells on the spot, probably; Also, Space STDs would be terrifying. Do with that what you will.
1:15 "the most cratered surface in the solar system"
Wait till the astronomers get a look at my ego
I like your content. As a visual artist, I like celestial bodies and always putting them into my canvas. New subs here.
I pre-ordered the game and I absolutely love it! Glen Schofield really knows how to put together a great team that really put so much passion into whatever project they create. They have put so much depth into the gore effects, physics effects, atmosphere, environment, gross & grime, yet it's really oddly facinating to look at. I'm so excited. This dev team seems so good & passionate about what they do and create. It gives me vibes to the best of the good old days of the Xbox 360 era games. Finally something like this but with the capabilities of the modern day tech/software/hardware capabilities and actually being used in effective satisfying ways. It's crazy how rare it has been to see something like this. We've been going through a really long slump in gaming quality for quite a few years now imo. So I'm hoping this is the start to a new chapter of gaming & development now starting. Me personally, I care way less about graphics, ray tracing, etc. Compared to how much I care about physics builds, good enemies good a.I., physics effects related to combat and environmental aspects, character movement. Like being able to move around uniquely, climb, etc. Really letting us explore and play around with well built game mechanics in a polished environment. That's what matters to me. It Truly feels like software capabilities are FINALLY catching up to Hardware technology and honestly I feel that will be the huge factor in improving games. Up until now, we've had powerful hardware tech but devs really have been so limited and restrained to what they can do, create, all because previous game build engine's were so tedious, stubborn, restrictive, cumbersome, hindering to a devs creativity, to how gameplay mechanics, physics effects feel, render, process things. We finally now have software capabilities that I truly believe will improve our quality of games and improve the quality, the process of building games, becoming way less tedious and cumbersome, and opening the door to way more capabilities for satisfying mechanics, and just how the games even process rendering to enhance the overall quality of how games can run with the new hardware and console's. Im very excited to see what the future brings. (someone Please get behind supporting Glen Schofield and his team so they can create and dive into any project that they are passionate about. This is s great group of people. Whatever they make, they make with quality and satisfying gameplay mechanics, physics builds, etc. I hope investors BACK THIS TEAM at striking distance studios! Gaming needs teams like this one, they understand how to make games fun and satisfying.)
I still haven't gotten an answer if the live streams are "like that" or not now that he's stopped denying it
Small pedantic correction, you can technically scream in space (assuming a spacesuit or some other means of compensating for the pressure differential), you screaming is simply the sudden expulsion of air from your lungs technically. It's just that the sound of your scream won't propagate beyond the boundaries of whatever air immediately surrounds you such as the helmet of a spacesuit. In other words, in space no one will hear you scream.
I can't wait for that game! I've been anticipating it for a while.
I have a question. At 1:50, Kyle says the “so-called Galileo spacecraft”. What’s with the “so-called”? That was its name. There isn’t anything controversial about that.
Hey Kyle, I have a question that's been bugging me and I think would make a good episode.
In another reality you did a video on spaceships needing radiators to stop the inhabitants from boiling alive.
Why is it then that the Apollo 13 crew nearly froze to death when they had no power?
I was just watching a Q&A On your old channel, I imagine you don't really read comments on there anymore. So I'll respond here;
BTW I am left handed and dyslexic, in overcoming that I learned I write backwards naturally with my right hand. Also if I focus I can write upside-down, backwards or both simultaneously.
I would love to do a demo clip of just my hands and some paper so you can explain how that's possible in a video.
You live my dream. Keep it alive. And if I get one question; the next space telescope(which will be designed to search for life) may be named 'The Carl Sagan' how do you feel about that? I loved Carl, and I know you did too. You do a great impression of him btw.
The end is the best part of every Kyle's video
This version of Callisto looks way different than the one shown in Cowboy Bebop.
This randomly got recommended and now I'm really interested and I love science Thor
Ironicly, I was coughing away when he offered the beast a cough drop!
Ripley : Listen to me, if we break quarantine, we could all die.
Lambert : Look, could you open the god-damned hatch? We have to get him inside.
ah yes, next great sci-fi horror game
Keep on perfecting the art of narration dog!!!
1:43 I am a human and like to breathe and not die so I could see how this would be a problem
3:25 Yeah! its been 100 years since 2003!
No wonder I don't see you anymore! You left 'Because science' really enjoy your video thought you own the channel lol. Glad I found you here haha through the comments from the other channel. Just subscribed and hit the bell too🤗 have a great day Kyle
This video was the best part of the Callisto Protocol... Well...that and Sam Witwer yet again going out a window. (dude is so typecast. 🤣)
It's interesting to think we're getting to the point we don't need to send people on these missions. We can just build robots with AI advanced enough to perform and react to any scenario that might occur independent of our own input. We could have them deployed working on building a colony base years or even decades ahead of actual humans arriving.
I hope we explore Jupiters moons oceans one day. I wouldn't be surprised if these oceans have some form of life. 👍🏻🇺🇲
After their horrendous launch with terrible performance on PC and even worse review on steam I love that you make a nice video on it. Hope they'll patch these issues soon. :(
3:47 HOPE project sounds like something straight out of a sci-fi story.
As it's constantly "snowing" in the game wouldn't that suggest water? What is it just space dust?
Probably snow to suggest to the player that it's cold af outside, think they just skimped on the realness there, but I haven't looked this up so just taking a guess
It's likely to be the "volcanic" dust from other moons. Orbiting sufficiently close to be picked by gravity.
I don't remember the name of the moon, but there is one moon that is basically a big yellow volcanic rock. Maybe that, But cold.
Edit: Io. The name is Io.
He did mention constant bombardment of asteroids and meteors. Which BTW anyone paying attention look up how detrimental space dust is.
I feel like the best way to manage the harmful effects of microgravity would be to build an orbital recovery station. It would be built large enough to avoid getting the motion sickness of a rotating habitat, and it could be used to mimic 1g. The scientists would then swap with workers on the surface. If we can't find a medicinal way to prevent low / microgravity from deteriorating our bodies, then the only other option would be to have a recovery environment of 1g.
Or, instead of a recovery station, they make the orbital station the primary habitat and they go on rotation down to the surface.
Callisto is probably the best choice for colonization outside Earth: decent gravity (comparable to the Moon), virtually unlimited supply of ice (thus water), and the lowest radiation exposure in the entire Solar System: totally outside the deadly radiation belts of Jupiter, but still well inside its powerful magnetosphere, that efficiently shields cosmic rays and solar wind.
Callisto? Hell, I can barely survive on Earth.
Ok this looks cool more vids like this plz thx
Just casually mocking horror game monsters. Right on man.
Dudeeee. Kyle man el hombre Kyle!!!! Out did the scenario today. I actually jump when I saw that thing walking by!!!! 😬😱🧐⚒️🚀🗡️
For the nerd in all of us., This is like getting a slice of your favorite dessert every time he post something
"I don't know, a space prison or whatever..."
"...hopefully not full of monsters."
"You look like a bagpipe with mouths."
Whoever writes for you, Kyle - you or someone else - is brilliant and has a beautifully devious imagination! Thank you, Kyle, for all you do. ❤️ ❤️
Hi Kyle, could you make a video on the idea of everyone having a tiny nuclear reactor in their homes? like the safety of how one might work? how much nuclear fuel would be needed to run it and for how long for example. I think it could be a really interesting idea/solution to green energy but just don't know if something like that could even exist like is it so far fetched to think we could one day all have a mini boiler size reactor powering your home self sustainably? would you get sick? would you be able to sell power to your neighbours? I think you'd have a really interesting take on this concept!
If you are interested in learning more about Callisto, go watch Simon Whistler's Geographics episode all about its past and future. And all about our plans to explore and even inhabit this mini planet
OMG "SCIENCE THOR" MADE ME LOL SO IRL THAT I EVEN HADNT 🤣🤣🤣
This sponsored video is the best thing that came out of this game
The science king has returned
I thought that europa had bigger oceans under surface and had most promise for extraterrestrial life in its hydrothermal vents.
I love calisto protocol I can't wait for the dlc I'm hoping we get to go deeper underground and see the under sea and. Also, I'm hoping we get more exploration and more in depth lore
Me already knowing it's possible because I watched the Expanse and know it's super sciency-accurate
Extra-planetary prison colonies would only turn out like Australia, I think, but probably get worse due to the differences between criminals then and now.
It would make more sense to just have prison stations, with automated staff, internal and external defenses, and minimal human or other biological presence. No mobility for the station, modular construction for maximum cost-effectiveness, plus the ability to jettison rioting prisoners into the void if need be, and be able to bring them back once they calm down. Makes way more sense to me than prison ships or prison colonies.
If I was in space and able to breathe there (in some space suit thing, I mean), I would be able to scream in space. The sound might not carry very far, but oh well. But since I'm not in space, you're entirely correct that I can't scream in space.
7:50 Lmao Kyle's face went from 😂 _You're a dirty boy_ to 😠 _Is why planetary protection is a thing that we have to do._
3:25 when you realize 2003 was 100 years ago 😨