New GIANT Space Telescope Proposal // ExoVenus Found // China's Space Aquarium

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  • Опубліковано 25 чер 2024
  • A proposal for a giant new space telescope, a Venus-sized world in a star’s habitable zone, Vera Rubin gets its camera, and the first data release from Euclid.
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    00:00 Intro
    00:14 SALTUS: Giant 14m space telescope proposal
    www.universetoday.com/167083/...
    03:32 New ExoVenus planet found
    www.universetoday.com/167096/...
    05:07 Massive Protoplanetary disk
    www.universetoday.com/167038/...
    06:24 Voyager-1's Back for Real
    blogs.nasa.gov/voyager/2024/0...
    07:27 China's space aquarium
    news.cgtn.com/news/2024-05-19...
    09:11 Vote results
    10:27 More Evidence for Gravitational Wave Background
    www.universetoday.com/167058/...
    13:09 Vera Rubin Got Its Camera
    noirlab.edu/public/news/noirl...
    14:25 Euclid data release
    www.esa.int/Science_Explorati...
    16:23 More space news
    17:32 ExoVenus
    Host: Fraser Cain
    Producer: Anton Pozdnyakov
    Editing: Artem Pozdnyakov
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    ⚖️ LICENSE
    Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 221

  • @bbartky
    @bbartky Місяць тому +27

    7:27 Fraser,
    Since I’m older than dirt I know that space aquariums are not new. In fact, an aquarium with live minnows and 50 minnow eggs was brought to Skylab back in the ‘70s. Interestingly, the Skylab crew saw similar results. The adult fish swam in loops at first but eventually figured it out. The most interesting finding was that the fish born in space swam correctly at birth. To read more, the website for _Scientific American_ has a good write-up.

    • @coachtaewherbalife8817
      @coachtaewherbalife8817 Місяць тому

      Just wondering, how did they get oxygen for the fish? Bubbling oxygen wouldn't float away from the nozzle.

    • @thebigpicture2032
      @thebigpicture2032 Місяць тому +1

      @@coachtaewherbalife8817 slight pressure from the oxygen nozzle should be enough to dissipate the O2.

  • @joeyarnold3793
    @joeyarnold3793 Місяць тому +14

    Hi, I am 73 old woman. I love these wonderful pictures. Admitting that I do not understand it, but send it on to my young grandson 14. We stand in awe. The fish will be our next discussion. Why the spesific species of fish? We look forward to seeing more.

    • @zelh5969
      @zelh5969 25 днів тому

      Zebra fish are small, partly transparent, and already well-studied in labs.

    • @marck717
      @marck717 22 дні тому

      Hi,
      I just read an article about how experiments on fish in space first started way back in 1973, when an aquarium was set up on the Skylab Space Station to study Mummichog Minnows. NASA wanted to find out how long it would take for them to adjust to a zero gravity environment. It turned out that they were able to adjust within a few weeks. At first they would swim to wherever a light source was, because they associated light with the direction of the surface, but surprisingly the fish were smart and after a while were able to get their bearings and become more aware of where they were in their tank. It was really interesting to read about. There was also an aquarium installed on the International Space Station in 2012 to study the function of a fishes inner ear in a a zero gravity environment to try to find a cure for Tinnitus. They were also studying the effects of Osteoporosis and bone loss on fish to see how it could apply finding a cure for people with weakened bones on Earth.

  • @martythemartian99
    @martythemartian99 Місяць тому +14

    Looking back on the Bio-Dome, I always felt the people involved were too focused on making us think it was a success, rather than actually learning from the experiment. When it ran low on food and oxygen, they were more concerned about hiding the facts rather than openly talking about lessons they learned about the area and volume needed per person for survival.
    I think they were scared of all the negative publicity about the cost.

    • @kennethferland5579
      @kennethferland5579 Місяць тому +2

      Having visited the structure and learned a lot about it, the cause of the failure was rushing to do both large crew and long duration enclosure too soon. They went from an enclosure period of weeks and then immediatly tried to do years which was crazy ambitious, working up gradually to longer durations would have been the smart move, but the project managers were in a rush to prove themselves. The cause of oxygen loss was Carbon Dioxide absorbtion by Concrete which is something ANY person with the slightest chemistry knowlege knows happens to concrete over time and infact never really stops. Either sealants needed to be applied to the concrete surfaces or the structure needed to be 'cured' by saturating it with pure CO2, at pressure for a year before any living things were introduced.
      P.S. Their is a long running misunderstanding that the facility is called 'Biosphere 2' as a reference to the Earth itself being Biosphere 1, this is false. Biosphere 1 is a small room sized structure built first at the same site in which 1 man and a bunch of potted plants stayed for a few days to validate the concept.

  • @olorin4317
    @olorin4317 Місяць тому +4

    The Euclid release elicited an unintentional but very audible curse of appreciation from me breaking the timid morning silence quite rudely.

  • @pigbenis8366
    @pigbenis8366 Місяць тому +15

    Those galaxies in the Euclid photos are awesome. I just can't fathom that with the amount of galaxies and the amount of stars and planets in each one, that we would be the only life forms in the universe. There has to be life out there somewhere.

    • @davehoward22
      @davehoward22 Місяць тому +1

      Doubtful we will ever know

    • @leonmusk1040
      @leonmusk1040 Місяць тому

      Problem being time not distance we don't have much as a species let alone as individuals in the time we evolved from something akin to great ape to modern man wouldn't even get to the nearest galaxy at even 98% light speed and at that speed the cmb would cook you.

    • @FLPhotoCatcher
      @FLPhotoCatcher Місяць тому

      Did you know that, with Earth's greenhouse effect, its temperatures are hot enough to melt mercury? Crazy.
      As some extra-terrestrials would say.

    • @Jondoe18702
      @Jondoe18702 Місяць тому

      RATATATA

    • @FLPhotoCatcher
      @FLPhotoCatcher Місяць тому

      There does not *have* to be. I think we will find out someday though.

  • @AliHSyed
    @AliHSyed Місяць тому +8

    I’m a lowly postal worker and the extent to which astronomical discoveries actually affect my life, they might as well be part of a fictional universe on a Netflix show or sci-fi novel. But days turned to months to years to decades where I continue to follow the updates. Why? Certainly as a fantastical escape from the arduous banality of daily life.

    • @michaellee6489
      @michaellee6489 27 днів тому +1

      Hey man lighten up. I'm a partially paralyzed young 50 y.o. who is living the rest of my life with a bunch of dementia and alzheimer patients at an adult care home in the middle of nowhere. all I have is the days and my life and finding the humor in all of it. life ain't so bad!

    • @AliHSyed
      @AliHSyed 27 днів тому +1

      @@michaellee6489 en endless laid back country retreat with a bunch of goofballs, doesn’t sound half bad 😉😁 thanks for sharing mate

    • @michaellee6489
      @michaellee6489 27 днів тому

      @@AliHSyed take care brother

  • @MCsCreations
    @MCsCreations Місяць тому +4

    Thanks for all the news, Fraser! 😊
    Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊

  • @72APTU72E
    @72APTU72E Місяць тому +10

    Saltus, badass name

  • @MrCs83
    @MrCs83 Місяць тому +4

    If "This Image is to Scale", your head must be HUGE

  • @ilkoderez601
    @ilkoderez601 Місяць тому +2

    I had no idea the pulsar array was a thing and producing good data! Thanks for the news Fraiser!

  • @brianarkins7401
    @brianarkins7401 25 днів тому

    This is the podcast I have been looking for. Nice job. Keep up the great work. You have a dedicated new viewer eagerly awaiting more episodes. Ty

  • @VincentTheAtheist
    @VincentTheAtheist Місяць тому +2

    Biosphere is the best movie ever. I didn't know they made a second one!

  • @user-ve9xn8do7d
    @user-ve9xn8do7d Місяць тому +2

    Love your video! Thanks for all the work you do!!!!!

  • @jessec3609
    @jessec3609 Місяць тому +2

    Those new pictures👀🤯so amazing!!👌💯🔥

  • @Raz.C
    @Raz.C Місяць тому +1

    I expect it would be VERY hard to keep the water in the fish tank, oxygenated. On Earth, you'd just bubble air through the water. On a space station, bubbles won't rise/ fall, so you'd need to find a new way to dissolve oxygen into the water.

  • @LarryTurner-kd7vq
    @LarryTurner-kd7vq Місяць тому

    Awesome reporting! Thank you.

  • @Jasonronsteinberger
    @Jasonronsteinberger Місяць тому +3

    Thank you, i enjoyed this

  • @kstaxman2
    @kstaxman2 27 днів тому

    The wide field deep pictures of our universe simply take our breath away when we see a billion stars.

  • @Tbauti
    @Tbauti Місяць тому +4

    I helped build the James Webb Space Telescope and can tell you from first hand experience that something of this size is unfeasible. I’d love to tell you it’s possible but the amount of work that went into the Webb, is just mind blowing.

    • @diverguy3556
      @diverguy3556 Місяць тому +1

      What part of Webb did you help build?

    • @jaimeduncan6167
      @jaimeduncan6167 Місяць тому +1

      Was the first bit that came to my mind. After thinking a little bit more I wonder if using a segmented mirror will and dropping the off-axis requirement will change the equation. If Space X ever succeeds, Starship is supposed to have a 9m diameter fearing. This will require a 60 to 70% expansion. Does that change your perspective? The good part is that even an on-axis 9m telescope will be so much better than what we have.

    • @MichaelWinter-ss6lx
      @MichaelWinter-ss6lx Місяць тому +3

      The first precalculations for the next telescope started after the first test of Starship. What made JWST so expensiv, was mainly its origami design. With a 9m fairing and its reduced launch costs, universities can possibly afford their own space telescope. ESA is also looking into this.
      🚀🏴‍☠️🎸

    • @Tbauti
      @Tbauti Місяць тому

      @@diverguy3556sunshirld, mid boom, spreader bars, OTIS (not the mirrors, built in Goddard), solar array, MRD/NEA’s and it was a nightmare. Getting everything to work was a something short of a miracle.

    • @Tbauti
      @Tbauti Місяць тому +2

      @@jaimeduncan6167 the biggest issues were the sun shield, midboom, spreader bars and tensioning. Every time we tensioned and deployed all five layers we’d run into damaging the solar shield layers.

  • @12pentaborane
    @12pentaborane Місяць тому +2

    8:31 YESS this is what I want from LEO stations. Why the ISS or western space programs haven't been focused on ecologic closed loop life support is beyond me.

  • @drawyrral
    @drawyrral Місяць тому +2

    I'd like to see a space station orbiting Venus.

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan Місяць тому +3

    11:40 That looks like a map of the Borg transwarp network 🖖

    • @kennethferland5579
      @kennethferland5579 Місяць тому +2

      No it's clearly the Hirogen communication network.

  • @timpointing
    @timpointing Місяць тому +1

    For future reference, the dominant pronunciation of "Gliese" has the first vowel sound as a long-E (and varied pronunciation (or non-pronunciation) of the trailing "e" - pick one of "nothing", short-E or long-E.)

  • @-OICU812-
    @-OICU812- Місяць тому +1

    I loved the story about the migration of Uranus and Neptune. It reminded me of a story I read about an astronomer who saw a possible alien craft, but now it seems to be hiding behind Uranus. Could you move a few steps to the right? I'd like to see how this story ends up. 😁 Great video!

  • @joaodecarvalho7012
    @joaodecarvalho7012 Місяць тому +2

    It's impressive that they can fix the Voyager.

  • @blurglide
    @blurglide Місяць тому +2

    Is it possible to make an enormous cheap mirror...maybe even a mylar balloon...and use adaptive optics to correct all the imprefections?

  • @takanara7
    @takanara7 11 днів тому

    The off-axis mirrors shouldn't be that difficult. If you got rid of half the james web mirrors (on one side) you'd be left with an off-axis system. i think the problem though is that you have to either make another huge mirror and cut your mirror out of it, *or* you have to grind an asymmetric mirror from the start. With JWST you basically use tiny servos to get the thing into shape so maybe it could be done that way. I always wondered why that wasn't done but I assumed there must be some reason, lol.

  • @epsyuma
    @epsyuma 28 днів тому

    Saying it's ONLY 40 LY away does not change the fact that even at the fastest speed we can travel in space, it would still take 4 million years to get there.

  • @snowballs2023
    @snowballs2023 Місяць тому +1

    Correct me if im wrong, Starship booster being 30ft wide, you in theory could build foldable JWST 2.0 mirrors of 28ft wide making it 145ft wide in total. All need 2nd stage same as Falcon 9 rocket fairing. Replace starship with 30ft fairing holds JWST.

  • @sadie526
    @sadie526 Місяць тому

    I would love to be able to view what the science team see view our universe. I appreciate you and NASA. Tthankyou

  • @kamilZ2
    @kamilZ2 Місяць тому +4

    You can work years on 5% improvement in software analysis or build bigger hardware 400% better. There will no significant progress in astronomy without much bigger telescopes.

    • @SuperYtc1
      @SuperYtc1 Місяць тому

      Yep, data is the limitation. To improve data collection we need bigger and better telescopes.

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      6 out of 7 proposals for telescope time on JWST are rejected. Size matters and so does the number of telescopes.
      Telescopes don’t necessarily have to be bigger to make significant progress.

    • @kamilZ2
      @kamilZ2 Місяць тому

      @@executivesteps By significant progress I mean stronger limits on models of dark matter, dark energy, Hubble constant, etc. Observing more similar objects on the sky is not significant.

  • @RobMutch
    @RobMutch Місяць тому

    you would need quite the adapter/converter to get vera rubin's lens on your dslr. awesome! ;o)

  • @ricardoabh3242
    @ricardoabh3242 28 днів тому

    Gravitational Wave and pulsar mathematic must be next level.
    I wonder if this challenges current models?

  • @ZMacZ
    @ZMacZ 29 днів тому

    Omg, I think they should start using microwave or lower frequency telescopes instead.
    A larger telescope can at best increase the distance of observation with the size over size
    fraction for any similar smaller telescope. This means like maybe x10 or x20-40.
    With newer forms of distant observation, they really should start looking at things from microwave
    or below frequency observation. This could mean x1000's.

  • @BabyMakR
    @BabyMakR Місяць тому

    With the advent of the pulsar timing array, is there a need to build bigger and better interferometers in space to detect gravitational waves? Are there detections that could be made by Earth-Sun L3,4,5 detector that can't be made by the pulsar array?

  • @karlthemel2678
    @karlthemel2678 18 днів тому

    Herschel had about a 3 m mirror diameter and only was in operation for a few years. ESA must have been wasting money. A mid-IR telescope wouldn´t need the precision of a UV to near-IR mirror, but Herschel still was a major observatory. Webb is expected to be in operation for about 20 years.

  • @Top_Weeb
    @Top_Weeb Місяць тому

    I'm hoping that the Starship spacecraft is so wildly successful that we don't have to wait decades to get new, large space based observatories.

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      You have to know how big your rocket is then design, build and test your super big telescope.

  • @rwarren58
    @rwarren58 Місяць тому

    Dear Fraser, I know this sounds like science fiction but here I go. Can we send out several small satellites to form a giant one? As time passed, we could also add more satellites with extra functions to add longevity, maintenance and scalability. Edit: what is the habitable zone of the new protosystem? Thank you.

  • @karlharvymarx2650
    @karlharvymarx2650 Місяць тому

    Probably a dumb idea but just in case it isn't, I wonder if there is a way to use large solar panel farms as some sort of telescope at night? Obviously the lack of a lens/mirror is an extra credit challenge problem. But maybe some sort of phased array or detect something other than photons. Maybe it would be super blurry but give huge brightness resolution so something new might be discovered.

  • @jedicab
    @jedicab 23 дні тому

    A Biodome reference without a picture of Pauly Shore? Missed opportunity.

  • @IapetusStag
    @IapetusStag Місяць тому

    I have a feeling that Venus-type planets, which are hostile to life is norm for earth-size, are the norm in the universe.

  • @Pateramalina
    @Pateramalina Місяць тому

    16:13 butterfly galaxy :D

  • @wapane7721
    @wapane7721 Місяць тому +1

    woaa… going by that thumbnail your head is way bigger than I thought :0

    • @wapane7721
      @wapane7721 Місяць тому

      nvm just naw the * disclaimer :’(

  • @bersig
    @bersig Місяць тому

    I have to wonder where the money for all this new hardware is going to come from when debt levels are already so high, for national governments as well as at local and especially personal levels. We're already having funding trouble and we haven't even really gotten started with projects like Artemis. These things never come in within budget either.

  • @stupidburp
    @stupidburp Місяць тому +2

    I think we should build space binoculars. Take a maximum diameter telescope that will fit on current rockets. Then another one inverted stacked on top. Connect them with a hinge and data cables. When the booster places it in the destination such as a lagrange point, fold them into a side by side binocular position. This is probably one of the largest feasible configurations that can boost on a single rocket. The binoculars also have some imaging advantages.

    • @theemperorofmankind3739
      @theemperorofmankind3739 Місяць тому

      You would design it to use the upcoming SLS Block 1B cargo fairing at 8.4M, you could make an obscenely large telescope by making it as a binocular.
      But there is a more wild idea you could do if you make the system modular in the sense you could keep adding segments to it. What is stopping you from making a far larger trinocular setup or going insane with 10 mirrors?

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      What advantage would binoculars have in space?

    • @stupidburp
      @stupidburp 28 днів тому

      @@theemperorofmankind3739 Lifted mass limits would mean a binocular is probably the biggest for a single lift. Instead of trying to add extra segments together in space, lift extra binoculars to park in the same general area and network them together..

    • @theemperorofmankind3739
      @theemperorofmankind3739 28 днів тому

      @@stupidburp That is what I meant I am not good that language.

    • @stupidburp
      @stupidburp 28 днів тому +1

      @@executivesteps There are some large ground based binocular observatories. The binoculars in space would have the same advantages. Large total optical area for a given diameter limit. Additional parallax related data. Interferometry capabilities both from the two optics in a binocular as well as any networked binoculars. Error correction and Image correction, such as reducing or eliminating the diffraction spikes. In other words, the image quality can be improved.
      Another benefit is that they can share some imaging modules, allowing for example perhaps imaging in two different bandwidths at the same time. They could also potentially have duplicate modules with some degree of redundancy for some data.

  • @upsguppy520
    @upsguppy520 28 днів тому

    CMB HAS NEVER BEEN MEASURED AT L2

  • @keesguijt1619
    @keesguijt1619 Місяць тому

    Hi Fraser, Question: Why are many UA-camrs so concerned about the many refilling launches for starships? I am confident that once SpaceX nails reusability and refilling, launching quickly, cheap and often will happen soon after.

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      Musk once promised we’d have humans on Mars by 2024. He’s got 7 months left.

  • @avgjoe5969
    @avgjoe5969 25 днів тому

    This "Earth like" planet is useless to us for colonization purposes if the info on it is correct.
    At the inner edge of the Goldilocks zone of a Red Dwarf the planet would be tidally locked... Bright side would likely be hot and subject to severe storms, not sure about the dark side due to convective forces swapping cold air from the rear with hot air from the front. Not sure of the effect, but "earth like" weather would seem unlikely. With an "average" 100C temp, not sure what that means as there are two extremes involved and the temp should vary wildly depending on which side you are viewing.
    Info indicates, it is about the right volume, however, the planet is MUCH more massive than Earth according to all the sources I could find. 3.8x the mass in the same or slightly smaller volume, so the surface gravity would be more than 1.6g.
    A 180lb human would weigh 288lb.
    IF the mass calculations are accurate at 3.8x earth, the size becomes completely irrelevant as "good" things go. Surface gravity is what is important. You would probably die of heart failure in weeks. (Imagine walking around with an 80lb army pack... day and night.)
    3.8x seems rather high, however, and is hopefully (very) wrong, though I would imagine it easy to calculate correctly at only 40ly away. Earth has an average specific gravity of 5.5 (water is 1.0) So this would suggest an average specific gravity of 21. This would put the Average density on a par with Platinum... Seems unlikely in the extreme. Begging the question: "What is this planet Made of?"
    If they can't even guess the density (mostly) right at only 40ly away... the rest is just trash info, too vague to be useful.
    If they got it right at 3.8x earth density, then this is a crap candidate for anything like colonization.
    We'd be better off building rotating cities in the asteroid belt near places like 16Psyche where heavy metals are plentiful.
    Sorry for the negative attitude, but I'd Really rather they stop didling around with Red Dwarves (yes, 10x more common... so what) and focused on Yellow main sequence stars with Much larger Goldilocks zones and No problem with tidal locking and fierce magnetic storms that frequently blow away atmospheres on candidate worlds as is the case with most Red Dwarves... which, by definition have no protective convective zones.
    Ie focus mostly on K, G, and F type stars. Surely there are plenty of good targets. (That's 22% of all stars.)

  • @NicholasNerios
    @NicholasNerios 10 днів тому

    I like the China zebra fish experiment.
    Has anyone researched Birds, Reptiles, Amphibians? My thought is we could learn more about bone density research. As we know most of these species have lighter bones and cooler blood, quite possibly they might acclimate to low gravity and zero gravity with no issue...?

  • @quantx6572
    @quantx6572 Місяць тому

    planets possibly being formed up to 145 billion miles from its star. awesome.

  • @shootz2344
    @shootz2344 Місяць тому

    hey fraser, ive always wanted to get into astronomy as a career but just havent gone into it in college because the math seems so daunting. im currently going to college for a neuropsych degree and was wondering if you could think of any way i could potentially use knowledge and skill from that profession to edge my way into a position at/with nasa or any other space agency really

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      There’s more to NASA than just astronomy. A lot more.

  • @hansleeuw2840
    @hansleeuw2840 Місяць тому

    You forget to mention that Gliese 12 is not a flare star.

  • @Raz.C
    @Raz.C Місяць тому

    I'm concerned that I'm too far north (In Australia) to ever see 'The Lights.'
    Australia's southernmost cities have seen them and are likely to see more, but not us up here in Brisbane! If I'd planned things out better, I might have put some airfare money aside and taken a trip to Melbourne or Hobart, but no...

  • @contraplano3157
    @contraplano3157 Місяць тому

    In my school they do experint with fish, make N2 cicle. Fish, algae and snails, they have to find the balance.
    And they need O2 and constant temperature.

  • @briandeschene8424
    @briandeschene8424 Місяць тому

    Voyager is roughly 0.94 lightday distant at present.
    Hopefully we are able to keep in contact with Voyager 1 until it is one lightday distant. That would be an awesome “round number” milestone (excusing English’s inherent unit pun) to achieve.

  • @DGPPhysics
    @DGPPhysics 2 дні тому

    6:03 please Astronomic Units measurement.

  • @timtamzimzam
    @timtamzimzam 28 днів тому

    hi fraser, not sure if this is a dumb question but when nasa sends messages to spacecraft that are far away, e.g voyager at 22 hours away, do they have to overshoot the signal where voyager will be in 22 hours? also is this an easy process it seems unreal that we can send messages to something that far away.

    • @anthonystulpin2623
      @anthonystulpin2623 28 днів тому

      I would imagine that any communication signal will disperse over distance. Even a laser beam would disperse to a wider array than the voyager can move in 22 hours. As long as the signal is pointed in the general direction, Voyager should receive it.

  • @ESF19791111
    @ESF19791111 27 днів тому

    INTERESTING :)
    THANK YOU FOR SHARING :)
    THANK YOU FROM ISRAEL :)

  • @Albert_TwinEinsteinMiko-chan07
    @Albert_TwinEinsteinMiko-chan07 Місяць тому

    MUIWAST(Multiple Infrared Wavelength space telescope) 25 meters General Infrared observatory From Near infrared to Far infrared
    A True Successor for James Webb Space Telescope and Spitzer Space Telescope 🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀

  • @Roguescienceguy
    @Roguescienceguy Місяць тому

    It's crazy to think that the most valuable pieces of real estate in all of our solar system are a barren mountain in Chile and an empty point in space(L2)😉

  • @RobNugen
    @RobNugen Місяць тому

    Given off-axis mirror, will there be no diffraction spikes in images?

  • @pjt48108
    @pjt48108 Місяць тому

    Hmmm... I think there is a story in a "closed ecosystem" on a colony ship whose colony didn't make it, but it went on and evolved...

  • @briangman3
    @briangman3 Місяць тому +1

    Love to do a gigantic telescope, but I think the us is out of money

  • @zippythinginvention
    @zippythinginvention Місяць тому

    I once read that the Biosphere project was ruined by the ongoing chemistry within the huge amount of freshly poured concrete. If the thing is still there, maybe the project should be revisited. Return to Biosphere

    • @frasercain
      @frasercain  Місяць тому +1

      It's still there. I visited it about 6 months ago

    • @zippythinginvention
      @zippythinginvention Місяць тому

      @@frasercain wow! That's exciting.

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan Місяць тому +1

    The Large Binocular Telescope is not off axis (secondary mirrors are in front, but they are not on regular tripod structures). The outer ring of mirrors on The Giant Magellan are off axis, it will be interesting to see if that improves the images.

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      With circular mirrors and no mirror supports blocking the incoming light there will be no diffraction spikes in the images.

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Місяць тому

      @@executivesteps Yes but the central mirror still has supports in the way. I wonder if they will ignore that mirror when taking some of the images.

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      @@zapfanzapfan The supports for secondary mirror are placed between the 6 primary mirrors so there’s no obstruction.

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Місяць тому

      @@executivesteps No obstruction for the outer 6 but still for the central mirror.

  • @j7ndominica051
    @j7ndominica051 Місяць тому

    How do they plan to bring a 14 meter telescope up? Is it foldable? Was the aquarium closed? I heard of blobs of water flying in the air in weightlessness.

  • @runrin_
    @runrin_ Місяць тому

    didnt a guest recently tell you that off axis mirrors arent any harder to make than regular ones? since they just make a big regular mirror and cut it.

    • @sciencecompliance235
      @sciencecompliance235 Місяць тому

      Wouldn't that make it harder? Since you need to make a bigger mirror than what you're going to use?

  • @agreen9831
    @agreen9831 Місяць тому

    I love NASA and their acronyms. Can't wait to look up in the sky and wonder where Old Salty is looking tonight. lol

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      Don’t forget space telescopes operate night AND day.

  • @nostalgiaarcadefuture
    @nostalgiaarcadefuture Місяць тому

    Anyone have a suggestion for a space weather alerting app or anything to notify me of potential aurora's next time. I can't stand I missed these ones.

  • @ibrahimhussain3248
    @ibrahimhussain3248 Місяць тому +1

    How come they don't detect bigger gravitational waves? Won't it be easier to do that than smaller ones?

    • @michaellee6489
      @michaellee6489 27 днів тому

      its all about wavelength. the bigger/longer the wave, the bigger the aperture you would need to detect it. LIGO is a couple km and can detect collisions of stellar-mass black holes, for example. they're talking about waves still bouncing around from Expansion and the Big Bang which could be light-years across. that's where using pulsar timing arrays come in. hope this helps!

  • @danmarce
    @danmarce Місяць тому

    Auroras? I live in Ecuador, if I see an aurora here, that might be bad news.

  • @GadZookz
    @GadZookz Місяць тому

    Interesting news about the proposed space telescope. Will it be deployed to the same zone of the zodiac as JWST and would it be able to detect a Dyson swarm?

  • @TroyRubert
    @TroyRubert Місяць тому

    So the SAR folks made it possible?

  • @helderalmeida3417
    @helderalmeida3417 Місяць тому +2

    I dont pay attention to any new discoveries around a red dwarf star in habitable zone because its a waste of time.

    • @sciencecompliance235
      @sciencecompliance235 Місяць тому +2

      Not a waste of time at all. It's an environment we don't really know much about, so we can learn an immense amount by studying these worlds since we don't really have analogs in our own star system.

  • @vanshankguitars
    @vanshankguitars Місяць тому

    If those three telescopes are in the same Lagrange point, could they not in theory take photos of each other?

  • @dereks1264
    @dereks1264 Місяць тому

    I thought red dwarf stars were not really conducive to life because of the radiation flares.

  • @clydecessna737
    @clydecessna737 Місяць тому

    Would it not be better to have two or more telescopes rather than one new one every thirty years with all the technology risk associated with it?

  • @Juze81
    @Juze81 29 днів тому

    When LUVOIR-A video?

  • @Leptospirosi
    @Leptospirosi Місяць тому

    4:15 venus ad earth are similar sized, compared to gas giants, but to put things in perspective, adding every single rocky planet and moon in the solar system to Venus, it is not enough to reach the size of earth.
    Earth is quite bigger.

  • @joaodecarvalho7012
    @joaodecarvalho7012 Місяць тому +1

    How are they supposed to put a 14-meter mirror in space?

  • @mytube001
    @mytube001 Місяць тому

    I just can't see how a 14 m one-piece mirror could be manufactured and then also launched. I thought the practical limit for one-piece mirrors today was at around 8 m, beyond which the distortions due to the own weight of the mirror become unmanagable. No space launch system today or on the drawing boards can carry a payload that wide, so how would you get it up there?

    • @anthonystulpin2623
      @anthonystulpin2623 28 днів тому

      Maybe the mirror could be manufactured in space? That would eliminate the weight problem. And the mirror would not have to have a 1/12 thickness to diameter ratio.

  • @snozzmcberry2366
    @snozzmcberry2366 Місяць тому

    Brave of them to put this one-of-a-kind exorbitantly expensive camera on a Boeing plane.

  • @JenniferA886
    @JenniferA886 Місяць тому +1

    👍👍👍

  • @rodboggess
    @rodboggess Місяць тому

    You know, why don’t we have a pair of space telescopes in Lagrange points around the sun?

  • @petertimowreef9085
    @petertimowreef9085 Місяць тому

    I don't understand why an off-axis primary mirror is such a challenge? Why isn't it as easy as simply tilting the mirror sideways slightly?

    • @anthonystulpin2623
      @anthonystulpin2623 28 днів тому

      The mirror has a focus point. If the optics are not designed in such a way that the focus point is not off axis, you will get a distorted view. Most primary parabolic mirrors have the focus point on center of the spherical shape, which means the secondary mirror has to be at the same point. This will then create a "Secondary" obstruction, blocking some of the light gathering capability.

  • @jamesdubben3687
    @jamesdubben3687 Місяць тому

    Going the SALTUS

  • @jimjackson4256
    @jimjackson4256 Місяць тому

    A little cooler than venus.Well venus is about 900 degrees so i am thinking maybe it is not too habitable.

  • @kanekerous
    @kanekerous Місяць тому +1

    When you show a galaxy when talking about the universe you contribute to the misunderstanding of the subject you speak of

  • @disdehcet
    @disdehcet 26 днів тому

    AHHHH FRASER'S HEAD HAS GROWN LARGER THAN THE JWST! Get the shrink gun, quick!

  • @PitchWheel
    @PitchWheel Місяць тому

    Won't higher frequency light give more accurate resolution? And if that is true, why don't we build an X ray radio telescope in space?

    • @froobas
      @froobas Місяць тому +1

      There is an x-ray space telescope ... Chandra has been an active mission since 1999 ...

  • @sorrow_Sam
    @sorrow_Sam Місяць тому +1

    pogchamp

  • @Raz.C
    @Raz.C Місяць тому

    Ok, so Astronauts uses Astra from the Latin for 'Stars' and Nautus for 'Sailor/ Sails through.' Cosmonauts uses 'Cosmos.' But what is Taiko? What is the word Taikonaut based on?

    • @ZackTillotson
      @ZackTillotson Місяць тому

      @raz.c taikong meaning outer space. 太空人

  • @Thenextday8
    @Thenextday8 Місяць тому

    We should just hollow out rocks and use them as spaceships…save a lot of money. Think about it 👀

  • @EdwardHinton-qs4ry
    @EdwardHinton-qs4ry Місяць тому

    Q. Is mathematics and physics the only possible universal translator we could ever hope to have if we ever communicate with aliens?

  • @jaimeduncan6167
    @jaimeduncan6167 Місяць тому +1

    how are they planing to put a 14m mirror in orbit, we have nothing capable of doing that, unless it's segmented and the illustration is wrong.

    • @pigbenis8366
      @pigbenis8366 Місяць тому

      I'm sure by the time they actually build it and get it ready to send to space, Starship or some other large rocket would be able to. That or we may be able to put it together in space.

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Місяць тому

      It's a deployable antenna, similar antennas are used on communication satellites but not at that wavelength so that "mirror" has to be really smooth.

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      @@zapfanzapfanIf they’re looking at the far infra red the surface “smoothness” is a lot less.

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Місяць тому

      @@executivesteps Far infrared is a lot shorter wavelengths than satellite phones, sub mm compared with several cm. So the antenna has to be a lot smoother than the regular application of that technology.

  • @James_Ford4815
    @James_Ford4815 Місяць тому

    9:20 love it when i hear wojak video sounds on other random channels lol

  • @kieranlangley3092
    @kieranlangley3092 Місяць тому

    Voyager is only a light day away....

  • @samuelbailey688
    @samuelbailey688 Місяць тому

    How long do you think humans could theoretically survive for? Would it be till the last red dwarves died out or the final primordial black holes maybe?

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps Місяць тому

      Consciousness will be non biological in the distant future. Likely the Universe is already full of “brains in a vat”.

  • @eman67rp
    @eman67rp Місяць тому

    Well if its millions of light years away those planets have formed already

  • @juanengelaar7069
    @juanengelaar7069 Місяць тому

    You have to leave the text a bit longer visable. We don't have time to read it and its gone.