The Largest Objects in the Universe

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @southwestphilomath807
    @southwestphilomath807 Рік тому +1758

    The network of Simon’s channels is the biggest thing in the universe

    • @Talisguy
      @Talisguy Рік тому +60

      It's somehow bigger than the entire internet. ... Nobody's sure how.

    • @felwinter5528
      @felwinter5528 Рік тому +34

      If he had a website with all his UA-cam channel on it and a description of each of them, it would be larger than all the harry potter books combined

    • @PatrickStarfishman
      @PatrickStarfishman Рік тому +14

      This gets a well earned....lol

    • @InquisMalleus
      @InquisMalleus Рік тому +19

      And it continues to expand faster than the speed of light.

    • @thelegalliam
      @thelegalliam Рік тому +12

      Some say it is made of pure dark matter.

  • @JackBWatkins
    @JackBWatkins Рік тому +886

    Simon is like the Dark Matter of You Tube, he makes up 96% everything worth watching on the platform.

    • @craigh5236
      @craigh5236 Рік тому +27

      Simon is real unlike dark matter. Dark matter is just an excuse to explain why their calculations was wrong. Instead of saying like a normal person 'hey my math doesn't add up maybe I should check it again' they went and said 'hmmm is my math wrong or the universe? The universe'

    • @shinji391
      @shinji391 Рік тому +9

      Atomic Shrimp.

    • @slcpunk2740
      @slcpunk2740 Рік тому +4

      That's dark matter AND dark energy

    • @slcpunk2740
      @slcpunk2740 Рік тому +31

      ​@@craigh5236 umm no, dark matter is an observable phenomenon which we can see affecting clouds of dust and gas, maybe you should do some more research ... Dark energy however, that could be magic or fairies for all we know at the moment

    • @JackBWatkins
      @JackBWatkins Рік тому +13

      @@craigh5236 in college I tried to blame the universe when they said my math was wrong. Since I was an undergrad and a non-math major the prof blamed me. I still suffer the effects of that emotional scar, but back then nobody gave a 💩. I am so glad that education now takes into account student’s feeling’s. Today we are discovering new genders faster than anytime in history. Back then individual rights stopped at the others persons nose, now individual rights stop at the other persons feelings no matter where in the world they may be and offenders are publicly shamed or put in jail. It is a great time to be alive.

  • @johncarpenter440
    @johncarpenter440 Рік тому +199

    The image at 11:29 isn't a void. It is the nebula Barnard 68, which is a dust cloud that blocks the light of stars behind it. It is often accidentally used in place of Bootes Void, which is one of the least dense areas of its size in the universe.

    • @XraynPR
      @XraynPR Рік тому +19

      Some quite big mistakes in this video ..

    • @fumanpoo4725
      @fumanpoo4725 Рік тому +10

      Booty void?

    • @richardwalker6004
      @richardwalker6004 Рік тому +5

      Interesting you are the 1st person I ever heard mention it. No one have ever gave an explanation like that. I can see how that would more sense than a void . However , that is a extremely large dust cloud. So wouldn’t that be one of the biggest objects in the universe

    • @richardwalker6004
      @richardwalker6004 Рік тому +5

      @@johncarpenter440 thank you for the information. I def will check it out . Cheers .

    • @bigshorty4855
      @bigshorty4855 Рік тому +1

      True, saw this in another vid.

  • @JeffMoody
    @JeffMoody Рік тому +89

    I think you meant 6 hours instead of 6 minutes to travel the circumference of Canis Majoris at light speed. Light doesn’t even make it a portion of the radius in that time... 8 minutes from the sun to earth, and 43 minutes to Jupiter.

    • @savagesarethebest7251
      @savagesarethebest7251 Рік тому +5

      With all that update lag it is really amazing how an object can be coherent. It fascinates me to no end that the universe works the way it does with this slow speed of light.

    • @tyl9371
      @tyl9371 Рік тому +6

      @@savagesarethebest7251 Time is relative to the observer - like how flies perceive time at 1/4 the speed we do, and since information can only travel at the speed of light a photon(light) would not "experience" time or anything whatsoever. We're just not operating at the timescale required to observe the true majesty of the universe, sadly.

    • @DannyG683
      @DannyG683 Рік тому +2

      What impressive things our Lord has made with His hands!

    • @Sarutulf_Lertimud
      @Sarutulf_Lertimud Рік тому +13

      @@DannyG683 Who, Voldemort?

    • @DannyG683
      @DannyG683 Рік тому +4

      @@Sarutulf_Lertimud God!

  • @emyrwebster9458
    @emyrwebster9458 Рік тому +34

    Jupiter's orbital path is 32AU. To circumnavigate Canis Majoris at the speed of light would take over four hours, not six minutes!

    • @FurrSquee
      @FurrSquee Рік тому

      While you're closer to the correct result, it is actually closer to 28 hours to circumnavigate VY Canis Majoris. Reasoning being that it takes roughly 8 minutes and 20-something seconds for light to reach Earth from the Sun, and said distance is 1AU. Jupiter is, as you mentioned, out around 32AU. So, using the circumference formula (2r*pi), you get 32*2*3.12 = 200.96. Multiply this by 8.34 (some rounding necessary), to get 1676.01 minutes. Divide this by 60 to get the hours, which come out to just under 28.

    • @FieldBoy111
      @FieldBoy111 8 місяців тому +3

      I was wondering how the fuck people know the moon is 3cm farther away than last year

    • @user-semenar
      @user-semenar 5 місяців тому

      I was thinking the same: "wait, isn't it 8 minutes to reach Earth from Sun at the speed of light? How could the orbit of Jupiter be shorter than that distance?"

    • @jeromehorwitz2460
      @jeromehorwitz2460 5 місяців тому +1

      The Apollo crew placed mirrors on the surface of the Moon that lasers can be aimed at to give very precise measurements .

  • @heshamelshami3117
    @heshamelshami3117 Рік тому +50

    Hi Simon, I don't find that you make mistakes often on your shows and I very much appreciate your content. THe Milky Way is approximately 100,000 light-years in diameter and not 50,000 like you mentioned. You also stated that Andromeda is about 100,000 light-years across from end-to-end when in fact it's 220k light-years in diameter. Keep doing the great work you're doing and cheers from Canada!

    • @chiefchimp2789
      @chiefchimp2789 Рік тому +3

      He pronounces Uranus the way a 13 year old does too, so I don't think this guys words hold that much weight.

    • @Kae-Lexi
      @Kae-Lexi Рік тому +1

      @@chiefchimp2789 Get that stick out of Uranus.

    • @tikki723
      @tikki723 Рік тому +3

      @@chiefchimp2789 this is what you get when someone who isnt qualified to talk about these subjects gets on youtube

    • @Oli-Johnson
      @Oli-Johnson Рік тому +3

      ​@@chiefchimp2789that's like saying no one should listen to Americans because they pronounce so many things wrong.

    • @Xanderbelle
      @Xanderbelle Рік тому +1

      ALso didnt mention Stephenson 218 or Ton 618

  • @acejet6797
    @acejet6797 Рік тому +53

    I think you mistook radius for diameter. The Milky Way and Andromeda are both twice as wide as you state (7:30). If you had said "from the center to the edge" instead of "from one side to the other" you would have been correct.

    • @aleksandar6056
      @aleksandar6056 Рік тому

      I actually didn't realize this when I wrote my comment. Still, 1 acceptable mistake among so much more, if you can find my comment

    • @carlroy
      @carlroy Рік тому

      Nice catch!

    • @antoanthony3400
      @antoanthony3400 Рік тому

      But that would Andromeda 200,000 ly, isn't it like 150k ly?

    • @acejet6797
      @acejet6797 Рік тому

      @@antoanthony3400 True. My comment was more about mistaking radius for diameter. It was stated that "Our galaxy is roughly 52,000 light years from one side to the other." This is closer to a clean factor-of-two mistake than the mistake about Andromeda. Andromeda is neither 100,000 nor 200,000 light years across, but the mistake of confusing diameter and radius is the same. I'm trying to give an otherwise good video some leeway.

  • @hopefullynotbutprobably6643
    @hopefullynotbutprobably6643 Рік тому +5

    Well this video got quite a few things wrong.
    1. The moon is not moving away from Earth because of Jupiter. It’s because the rotational velocity of the Earth is transferring some of the energy to the moon causing it to move further away over time.
    2. VY Canis Majoris probably didn’t explode yet. It’s not expected to explode for another 100,000 years. It’s 4000 light years away. This means there’s only like a 4% chance is already went supernova.
    3. Alcyoneus Galaxy’s large size has nothing to do with the super massive black hole in it’s center. It’s entirely because of all the dark matter scattered throughout it.
    4. The empty space picture you showed is Barnard 68. You were talking about Boötes Void. They’re entirely different things.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 9 місяців тому

      5. The Milky Way and Andromeda are twice the size stated.
      6. Dark Energy isn't a kind of Dark Matter.

  • @CHIIIEEEEEEEEFFFFSSS
    @CHIIIEEEEEEEEFFFFSSS Рік тому +32

    Fun, informative video Simon, but Dark Energy and Dark matter are two separate things. Dark energy is not a subcategory of dark matter like you suggested.

    • @norijagar
      @norijagar Рік тому

      Shut up

    • @esaedvik
      @esaedvik Рік тому +3

      Always a few errors in these videos. If not factual, then pronunciations...Still, makes people think and some even fact-check them.

  • @davesilkstone6912
    @davesilkstone6912 Рік тому +2

    Correction. Jupiter is not pulling our Moon away, the reason that the moon is moving away from the Earth is due to the spin of the Earth moving the tidal bulge of the oceans slightly forward of the direct line between the Moon and the Earth, thus pulling the Moon forward and increasing it's orbital velocity, which in turn increases it's orbital radius.

  • @d4mdcykey
    @d4mdcykey Рік тому +11

    Cosmology is easily the most fascinating, mindblowing, and thought-provoking subject, just can't get enough of these discoveries.

    • @Ezekiel903
      @Ezekiel903 Рік тому +2

      never forget, that everything we see is long history!! we only see how it was .....years ago!!

    • @XraynPR
      @XraynPR Рік тому +1

      I'd recommend the SEA channel, great quality and better researched than this video

  • @joepairitz6817
    @joepairitz6817 Рік тому +4

    Great video, one glowing revision -Circumnavigating Jupiters orbit at the speed of light would take you more than four hours. A star larger than Jupiter’s orbit would take even longer, much longer than six minutes.

    • @eppsunc
      @eppsunc Рік тому

      I thought he meant 6 hours but correct! 43 minutes for light to reach Jupiter from the sun so no way 6 minutes around it

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Рік тому

      Yep.. 4 hours 30min at least

  • @Rawrbarianxoxo
    @Rawrbarianxoxo Рік тому +140

    Even if some other people are writing all the scripts for these channels editing and everything else Simon really does put in a colossal amount of time into alls the videos he’s doing pretty much every day

    • @Sideprojects
      @Sideprojects  Рік тому +117

      Nah bro, I just read the prompter and then go have a couple of beers.

    • @SargBjornson
      @SargBjornson Рік тому +20

      @@Sideprojects Well earned beers, mate

    • @isaacward5162
      @isaacward5162 Рік тому +8

      ​@@Sideprojects giga chad

    • @shahan484
      @shahan484 Рік тому +3

      @@Sideprojects we watch for you Simon

    • @richardvandertulip4061
      @richardvandertulip4061 Рік тому +3

      ​@@Sideprojects You've clearly earned them after your CC and ItS reads.

  • @David5thUltra
    @David5thUltra Рік тому +40

    I’m sure the Milky Way is larger than 52,000 light years accross, more like 100,000. Still great video 😊

    • @petercozzaglio6070
      @petercozzaglio6070 Рік тому +9

      Right. And the Andromeda galaxy is closer to 225,000 light years across.

    • @Michael75579
      @Michael75579 Рік тому +11

      @@petercozzaglio6070 And Jupiter is 1300 times the volume of Earth, not 130.

    • @petercozzaglio6070
      @petercozzaglio6070 Рік тому +4

      @@Michael75579
      And if Jupiters gravitational pull is strong enough to pull our moon away from Earth a few centimeters a year, then why isn’t it strong enough to pull Mars out of its orbit? Inquiring minds want to know.

    • @renaissanceredneck73
      @renaissanceredneck73 Рік тому +8

      It takes 8 minutes for light to reach 🌎 from the 🌞, so if the star at 4:12 is as big as the orbit of Jupiter I think it would take more than 6 minutes for light to go around it's circumference.... I hope some body is getting flogged down in the basement for these egregious errors!! My perception of you as infallible is now ruined Simon, we'll spare you the flogging...this time.
      Bahaha....

    • @Michael75579
      @Michael75579 Рік тому +7

      @@petercozzaglio6070 Because it's not Jupiter's gravity that's causing the moon to recede; it's conservation of angular momentum. Tides are causing the Earth's rotation to slow, and so to conserve angular momentum the moon has to orbit further away.
      Jupiter's gravity does affect the solar system - it's largely responsible for cyclic variations in the exact shape of the Earth's orbit for example - but it doesn't affect the moon the way the video claimed.

  • @dustinplatt6882
    @dustinplatt6882 Рік тому +3

    Props to Jupiter for taking some hits for us here on Earth. Appreciate you, bro.

    • @mikey92362
      @mikey92362 Рік тому

      But stop stealing our moon. You have one already, and we're still using ours. Quit being a douche, Jupiter.

  • @nickcoupe2964
    @nickcoupe2964 Рік тому +2

    "We have no idea" - The most exciting words in science.

  • @patriciaposthumus6684
    @patriciaposthumus6684 Рік тому +58

    Simon when are you going to start a channel that deals with stuff pertaining to everything about the universe? I would love that. Some of my favorite programs that you've done recently have to do with space.

    • @Sideprojects
      @Sideprojects  Рік тому +66

      I would like to do more space, but they never seem to perform super well, so I get a bit discouraged about it. I think at some point I'll just do a space related channel so that the videos can just be for people who love space stuff.

    • @sendthis9480
      @sendthis9480 Рік тому +25

      @@Sideprojects
      Do you know how NASA organizes for a big event?
      They planet.

    • @jhtrq1465
      @jhtrq1465 Рік тому

      Hopefully nver, because he don't know shit on this subject and make a poor work of researching good source on the matter. Better watch PBS than licking his boots.

    • @jayyydizzzle
      @jayyydizzzle Рік тому

      Geographics occasionally does a Spaceographics episode, there is some backlog to watch

    • @oskarskalski2982
      @oskarskalski2982 Рік тому +2

      There are plenty more channels that deals with universe and do it far better: Pbs space time, dr becky, sci show space.

  • @BlackThunderRC
    @BlackThunderRC Рік тому +116

    I’m shocked at the amount of errors / out of date information on this video Simon.
    I’d honestly say it would best to makes this video again.
    Normally the content you pump out is bang on.
    Stephenson 2 is the largest currently known red giant.
    Our galaxy is between 80,000-100,000 light years across. Andromeda is nearly double that.
    It would take light around 6 hours to circus navigate VY Canis Majoris.
    They are just the larger errors in this but are many more smaller ones. Just look at the comments.

    • @bobbyb42
      @bobbyb42 Рік тому +8

      Yeah a lot of the information and numbers are totally wrong

    • @patrickjohnsen4199
      @patrickjohnsen4199 Рік тому

      Not trying to come off as an asshole. But what are some of the errors?

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Рік тому +14

      @4:14 time should be at least 2 hours 15min.. and he's acting impressed by 6min which is less than the time it takes ligjt to hit earth

    • @nealheidekat5726
      @nealheidekat5726 Рік тому

      "Red Giant" is specifically a term for a phase in certain solar mass life cycles that have already achieved fusion. At best, Jupiter could be considered a "brown giant", a sizeable mass that never ignited. Unsubscribing from all Simon channels, it is barely researched click-bait. Perhaps if they weren't just gagging for likes and did some actual homework, they could have a positive, educational impact on the world.

    • @eroraf8637
      @eroraf8637 Рік тому +6

      So. Much. Pain. He seriously needs better fact-checking.

  • @NoahVenesile
    @NoahVenesile Рік тому +2

    "cos watch time's important for me"
    that's fair, and i appreciate you making this explanation as enjoyable as possible for us
    Way to go, Simon Whistler

  • @TannCo2
    @TannCo2 Рік тому +51

    The largest object in the universe is the collection of UA-cam channels that Simon has created.

  • @Dirt1061
    @Dirt1061 Рік тому +2

    This would have been really cool if Stargate Universe could have explored these.

  • @pdxmusl1510
    @pdxmusl1510 Рік тому +6

    Nice video! One comment.. on that large galaxy. Theres an estimate for central black holes mass given the mass of a galaxy. That's the basis of the thought of the galaxy having a really large blackhole.
    Its a common misconception that we are gravitationally bound to a central blackhole. While some things most certainly would be... most objects in a galaxy are not bound to the cental black hole. Its in the center because heavier objects tend to migrate to the center of mass.
    For reference... the gravity you experience from Sagittarius is so stupid small... you will experience something insane like 1 million times more gravity just sitting 3inches away from your significant other. Its so insignificant its not worth considering unless your basically taking the most sensitive gravitational measurement that has ever been taken. If you were at a standstill and Sagittarius was the only thing pulling on you. It would take about 25 thousand years to be going at blistering speed of 1mph. If we were in fact gravitationally bound to our black hole... we would orbit so stupid slow it would take 1000s of times longer than the universe has existed to make a single orbit. We travel faster than that. Fun thought... an ant orbiting around the earth at basically satalite distances pulls harder on earth than Sagittarius a. An ant... Which also suggests ignoring atmosphere... theres a point where if the ant is close enough the ant could steal earth from Sagittarius and the earth would "orbit" (using that term extremely loosly.. thats not accurate) the ant instead of Sagittarius providing its only earth, an ant, and Sagittarius. Probably not really but basically sneezing while having your face pointed up could push earth away from Sagittarius a. Or at least would over come its gravity. Again. Ignoring atmosphere. Thats basically how insignificant Sagittarius is gravitationally to us. We are not orbiting at all.
    Black holes do not keep galaxies together. If they did... they'd be stupid small. There influence in today's universe is too insignificant.

  • @dustinplatt6882
    @dustinplatt6882 Рік тому +1

    I guarantee that that $10 I swear I had in my pocket the other day is outside the observable universe. Thanks, science.

  • @itcangetbetter
    @itcangetbetter Рік тому +3

    The most prevalent thing is far and away from being the largest thing. Didn't expect the video to faceplant so hard at the end

    • @antonkovalenko364
      @antonkovalenko364 Рік тому

      Yeah, and UY Scuti is not the biggest star on record (by diameter)anymore, either. It's now, and has been for a while, Sephenson 2-18.

  • @EAcapuccino
    @EAcapuccino Рік тому +10

    How and why is this a side project?
    I absolutely love this! 😅 👏👏👏👏

  • @marklewus5468
    @marklewus5468 Рік тому +3

    Great video, Simon, but your writer mixed up radius and diameter. The size of the Milky Way from “one end to the other” is its diameter, which is 104,000 light years; its radius is 52,000. Same with Andromeda at 220,000 light years diameter.

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Рік тому +1

      Just like he said that a star whos diameter puts it's edge at Jupiter takes 6 minutes to orbit at light speed when that's about how long it takes light to hit earth..so at least double times pi, I'd guess or more (can't really remember how far Jupiter is out) edit: Google sez 43min for light to hit Jupiter so 4 hr 30min or so

  • @rayzor1380
    @rayzor1380 Рік тому +1

    I have my own playlist with just simons videos from all his channels . Very informative content. And he puts a lot of time and effort in to them. I know he doesn't write most of them but still hes the face and voice of the channel.

  • @dustinplatt6882
    @dustinplatt6882 Рік тому +12

    I always liked to think that the Great Void was a super advanced civilization that was so advanced that they have the ability to harness energy from entire galaxies and have just massive Dyson Spheres or something similar which is why we can't detect any light from that area.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 9 місяців тому

      I'm pretty sure physicists would have thought of that, after all they're actively looking for Dyson spheres.
      Maybe we'd have to get more infrared radiation from the void or sth. Even a super advanced civilization still has to get rid of waste heat and can't contradict thermodynamics.

  • @quix66hiya22
    @quix66hiya22 Рік тому +1

    I love videos about the cosmos and size of objects in it! Thank you!

  • @GrouchierBear
    @GrouchierBear Рік тому +7

    4:13 This doesn't sound right. Six minutes is less than the time it takes for light to travel from the sun to the earth. If the star's radius extends to jupiter's (around five astronomical units), the circumference should be big enough that something moving at the speed of light should take over four hours to circle it.
    So either VY Canis Majoris has a smaller radius than the video suggests, or someone got the circumference wrong.

    • @francois-xavierdavid5670
      @francois-xavierdavid5670 Рік тому +2

      I actually thought the same and reached the same figure as you.

    • @nagualdesign
      @nagualdesign Рік тому +4

      It has a larger radius than the video states; 2,069 solar radii. So it's circumference would be 8 light-hours, 23 light-minutes by my reckoning.

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Рік тому

      4 hours 30min .. Jupiter takes 43min for light to hit so if its that diameter then multiply by pi (edir: corrected for radius vs diameter)

    • @nrocirpactar5697
      @nrocirpactar5697 Рік тому

      @@forbiddenera 2*pi because 43 min is time for the radius.

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Рік тому

      @@nrocirpactar5697 you're totally right! My bad!!

  • @usmc24thmeu36
    @usmc24thmeu36 Рік тому +7

    I am surprised by all the mistakes. I have seen his channel make so many.

  • @bradlevantis913
    @bradlevantis913 Рік тому +1

    Imagine being Fritz Zwisky. Came up with a theory that was ignored for your lifetime only to have it become one of the most important quests after you die.

  • @Carvetii
    @Carvetii Рік тому +12

    Oh Simon Stephenson 2-18 (St2-18) is a red supergiant located in the constellation Scutum. Also catalogued as Stephenson 2-DFK 1 and RSGC2-18, it is the current record holder for the largest star known, with a size 2,150 times that of the Sun. The star is located at a distance of 18,900 light years from Earth. It is a member of the open cluster Stephenson 2.
    Whoever is doing the fact checking needs to do better

    • @jedaaa
      @jedaaa Рік тому +2

      Another of several errors I've noticed less than halfway through the vid

    • @TheRealRollinator
      @TheRealRollinator Рік тому +3

      @@jedaaa u are not right but also not wrong. the problem with these Hypergiants is that they are often variable in size. they are contracting and therefore changing their size. also they are often remeasuered. one time scuty seemed bigger than stephenson, next time not. its also not easy to measure a star at this distance. all in all u can say that these 3 are the current biggest stars we know at the moment.

    • @Carvetii
      @Carvetii Рік тому

      @@TheRealRollinator I understand what your saying and and that is true but Stephenson 2-18 is so much bigger that UY Scuti its a non contest variable or not its a young star still growing where as UY Scuti and Canis Majoris are both in terms of hypergiants coming to the end of there life. When you read up on any of these stars the mind just boggles with the numbers involved.

  • @nevertruelydead
    @nevertruelydead Рік тому +3

    It'd be really cool if we, one day, found out that that gigantic void was ground zero for the big bang.

    • @DarkZodiacZZ
      @DarkZodiacZZ Рік тому +1

      Maybe it is a massive cloud of Von Neumann machines expanding to the rest of the universe. 👿

    • @-AxisA-
      @-AxisA- Рік тому +1

      Stop thinking of it as an actual explosion. It's more like hyper expansion of space itself.

    • @nevertruelydead
      @nevertruelydead Рік тому +1

      Yes. From a singularity. Ground zero. Could have been an explosion from a previous universe contracting to a critical state and "exploding" back out, or "hyper expanding," you might say. There are many theories out there. Science is ever-changing, and to tell the truth, we still can't say what exactly happened before, during, or after the Big Bang with 100% certainty. We can only speculate and theorize and make the necessary assumptions based on the scientific evidence that we are capable of revealing with our current technologies.

    • @-AxisA-
      @-AxisA- Рік тому

      @@nevertruelydead Yea I started to think after reading your comment that could we pinpoint a point in the current universe where the big-bang started? I doubt it, because space and time are interconnected, so I think "ground-zero" of this hyper-expansion is around 13.8 billion years ago.

    • @nevertruelydead
      @nevertruelydead Рік тому

      Except the universe didn't expand out in a straight line or one certain direction. At first it was thought that it expanded out in all directions pretty evenly for the most part, but more and more, we are finding that is not exactly the case. It's 13.9 billion years old as far as we know. The 'observable' universe as we call it, but - like I stated before - we are discovering, more and more, celestial bodies that seem to predate the universe given our current estimations, pointing to the fact that the universe may, or may not, be older than we think it is.

  • @bobingabout
    @bobingabout Рік тому +2

    7:30 Error. 52 thousand lightyears RADIUS, one side to the other is Diameter, it's more like 105 thousand lightyears from one side to the other.

  • @jimmybisk
    @jimmybisk Рік тому +9

    Thanks for a fascinating look at the biggest objects. Those two large stars are an insane size! I wouldn't like to be near them when they blow that's for sure! Simon's UA-cam monopoly, however, may one day give them some competition!

    • @tigercap100
      @tigercap100 Рік тому +1

      Some day we Christians will have time and ability to investigate God's vast artistry

    • @ridethecurve55
      @ridethecurve55 Рік тому +1

      I know of some peoples' egos that dwarf all things in this video. I found it's best to not orbit near them.

    • @RichieKrol
      @RichieKrol Рік тому

      Bot

    • @THE-BUNKEN-DRUM
      @THE-BUNKEN-DRUM Рік тому +1

      Look up "Stephenson star 2-18" 🌟

    • @jimmybisk
      @jimmybisk Рік тому +1

      @@THE-BUNKEN-DRUM Thanks, that will certainly give me some bedtime reading!

  • @jayyydizzzle
    @jayyydizzzle Рік тому +2

    Megaprojects should do an episode on the low frequency array (LOFAR) !

  • @shanematthews1985
    @shanematthews1985 Рік тому +9

    OP's mom should be on this list

    • @xstunners188
      @xstunners188 Рік тому

      What is OP?

    • @shanematthews1985
      @shanematthews1985 Рік тому

      @@xstunners188 original poster, as in the person who made the post, having to explain the joke makes it less funny

    • @refilwemokoene2922
      @refilwemokoene2922 3 місяці тому

      ​@@shanematthews1985 It was never funny mate

  • @alyssinwilliams4570
    @alyssinwilliams4570 Рік тому +1

    This was pretty spectacular, one of my fave sideproject videos of recent memory

    • @XraynPR
      @XraynPR Рік тому

      If this is the average quality I better not watch another video of his

  • @rjolly87
    @rjolly87 Рік тому +4

    There's a "Your mama" joke in there somewhere, there has to be!

  • @tonytaskforce3465
    @tonytaskforce3465 Рік тому +1

    The fact that 96% of everything is something we can't experience kind of puts the kybosh on the idea that we're what it's all about. Bummer that.

  • @Matthew...1979
    @Matthew...1979 Рік тому +5

    Simon, you said our galaxy is roughly 52,000 light years across... Most if not all other estimates I've heard or read have said it's 100,000 lyrs across. Was that just a mistake on your part? If not, that's a pretty big discrepancy.

  • @brianhaidle3474
    @brianhaidle3474 Рік тому

    As a MTG player, when I see UA-cam videos not about magic use MTG art is always interesting

  • @fischer0762
    @fischer0762 Рік тому +9

    The picture you show of “the great void” is actually a nebula called Barnard 68 which does not allow light from the stars behind it through.

    • @wowplayer160
      @wowplayer160 Рік тому +1

      That's the problem with mass produced content. At some point you are gonna do things because it's close enough to get the idea across but not be always 100% accurate.

    • @antonkovalenko364
      @antonkovalenko364 Рік тому

      I made this exact comment myself.

    • @Bacon_and_Busch
      @Bacon_and_Busch Рік тому

      Aiming for 100% accuracy needn't be the goal. Hell, science is always making claims of absolute facts that are proven false or inexact... but it'd be nice if "stuff you find on Google" wasn't the primary research tool.
      If science communicators at least get people to look for correct sources it'll be alright, probably.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 9 місяців тому

      Bruh.
      I noticed like 4 errors myself, but this I didn't know about.
      Is anything in the video correct?

  • @albachera90albachera51
    @albachera90albachera51 8 місяців тому

    Dude whatever you speak about, please never change.

  • @Zeppathy
    @Zeppathy Рік тому +14

    I would like to know how many hours of work Simon's team have put into all these channels.

    • @thelegalliam
      @thelegalliam Рік тому +3

      A very surprising amount looking at serial killers only to intermittently get breaks by googling what the biggest sun is.

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Рік тому +8

      Like 10 seconds for this one judging by the fact there's at least 10 mistakes/errors/completely wrong numbers

    • @siheard4206
      @siheard4206 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, that's what I thought. And by going on how good his usual uploads are, I started to question whether I had my facts correct. Like Stephenson is the biggest star known, not Scuti. And I even think that Stevenson has been eclipsed now. And the Milky Way and Andromeda are double what he said. MWay is 100,000 ly across, not 50,000. I hate being 'that guy' but information like this has to be correct otherwise false info gets told to people, who in turn then relay that false info to others. So it needs jumping on straight away. Sorry.

    • @ianyoung1106
      @ianyoung1106 Рік тому

      All the hours. There are none left.

    • @cheesetoasty5139
      @cheesetoasty5139 Рік тому

      Not enough hours to be bothered to fact check.

  • @SmoothAsL
    @SmoothAsL Рік тому +2

    Love Simon’s videos, but this one makes it obvious that it’s volume over substance. Getting the circumference of VY Scuti (likely 6 minutes at light speed) and the diameter of the Milky Way (105k LY vs 52k LY) obviously wrong is so alarming that I wonder whether any of this stuff is being proofread.

  • @thedayidied
    @thedayidied Рік тому +2

    I am soon to be an astronomer, so it always excites me to see information about astronomical phenomena being discussed. Lovely video as always. One thing though: you said it's approximately 52,000 ly from one side of our galaxy to the other - that actually is its approximate radius from the galactic core to its outer stars. Its diameter is approximately 105,000 ly across. Andromeda is the same issue - its diameter is 220,000 ly. Otherwise though, awesome video!

  • @davewave1982
    @davewave1982 Рік тому +2

    Never heard of Jupiter referred to as a red giant. That’s a term reserved for large main sequence and other hypergiant stars.

  • @Morgyborgyblob
    @Morgyborgyblob Рік тому +10

    Alcyoneus isn't *that* big, or at least, the host galaxy isn't - the giant size quoted here is actually the radio lobes on either side of it.

  • @Killergold88
    @Killergold88 Рік тому +1

    Poor Stepheson 2-18
    Ton 618 would have been a neat one to mention too.. or is it Phoenix A now?

  • @Unfrendly14
    @Unfrendly14 Рік тому +4

    Way too many mistakes,Stehenson 2-18 is the bigest star,Alcyoneus is not the bigest galaxy,for it is a radio galaxy and they are measured diferendly, IC1101 is still the bigest galaxy,size of the Milky way and Andromeda also wrong.Would sugest research again and redo the video.

  • @Knervik
    @Knervik Рік тому +2

    @6:08 Neutron star and black hole formations both involve supernovae. White dwarf formation is the least harmful form of star death, but even that is pretty turbulent to any planets in that system.

    • @Knervik
      @Knervik Рік тому

      From 12:34 through the end of the video should be taken with a grain of salt, or several.

    • @XraynPR
      @XraynPR Рік тому

      From 00:00 onwards ...

  • @martinstallard2742
    @martinstallard2742 Рік тому +11

    0:33 the red giant
    3:24 the dog dethroned
    6:48 the cosmic giant
    9:21 your going to need a bigger telescope
    11:19 fear of the dark

  • @wombatperson5431
    @wombatperson5431 Рік тому +1

    I remember that they showed us this video at church group showing that basically our star was one of the tiny ones and that things just got bigger, and bigger, and bigger. Gave 8 year old me a crisis lol.

  • @Captain.AmericaV1
    @Captain.AmericaV1 Рік тому +1

    *Am i the only one who gets British Supervillain vibes from his voice?*
    *The casual dark humour and body language, instil fear into anyone who dares to cross him!! 😱😱*

  • @Dewarz2550
    @Dewarz2550 Рік тому +2

    Hey Simon! You should make a channel dedicated to space videos. I would love it!

  • @zylaaeria2627
    @zylaaeria2627 Рік тому +2

    Just a minor correction at the end, Dark Matter & Dark Energy are two completely different things. Dark Matter makes up around 26%, Dark Energy around 70% & the remaining baryonic matter (basically, all the shit we can see) around 4%.
    Not trying to be nitpicky, but in this subject matter, it helps to understand how to differentiate the two which is a common mistake I see people make when discussing this topic. It leads to a lot of misconceptions as a result.

  • @blackoutdk6769
    @blackoutdk6769 Рік тому

    i like how you just come straight to the point
    "and i'd like you to watch this video to the end"

  • @astrophysicistguy
    @astrophysicistguy Рік тому +1

    So just a point of clarification, the Andromeda galaxy will not collide with the MW for another 7.2 billion years not 100 million as he stated …

  • @caseyford3368
    @caseyford3368 Рік тому +1

    There are probably many smaller or tiny galaxies, planets and beings also. Billions or trillions of lives lost in a small splat on the windshield. We need to have finer detection equipment for those we can't see easily.

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Рік тому +2

    7:32 52k light years is the radius (center to edge) of the Milky Way galaxy, not its diameter ("side to side").
    Goddamn, Fact Boy

  • @YaePublishing
    @YaePublishing Рік тому +1

    Want Simon as a Bond Villain vs Henry Cavill's 007.

  • @rogueninja185
    @rogueninja185 Рік тому +1

    "A star that failed to ignite"... These fantasy stories passing as science are really entertaining

  • @BIGJATPSU
    @BIGJATPSU Рік тому +1

    Simon, "How can something that large possibly stay together?"
    Answer: 👇🏼👇🏼
    "Need something put back together? Hi! I'm Phil Swift, and this is Flex Tape!"
    🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @doclewis8927
    @doclewis8927 Рік тому

    Love that Simon's not shy about saying watch time is important because he like "money" as he says.

  • @emom358
    @emom358 Рік тому

    Simon, how much of the information in your videos do you retain? Is there one channel you love the best

  • @starcrafter13terran
    @starcrafter13terran Рік тому

    Dark matter is the magic of the scientific community. Be glad when they expand on this.

  • @sparkymlarky
    @sparkymlarky Рік тому +2

    3 years ago I used to believe scientists.

  • @cytherians
    @cytherians Рік тому

    It appears like Simon Whistler's knowledge network is rapidly expanding... can he identify his Big Bang? And there's certainly a lot of enlightenment to be found. I'm hooked!

  • @bobbybawbager
    @bobbybawbager Рік тому

    Simon!! This was a truly awesome episode!! 👌

  • @glendownton
    @glendownton Рік тому +2

    Simon, constructive criticism here: the flicker overlay that your editor puts over some (but only some!) video clips is really distracting, particularly when looking at things like detailed astro imagery. Not sure its intended purpose, but IMO that effect detracts from what you're trying to explain, rather than improving it. Cheers.

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Рік тому +2

      Oh man if you think thats annoying you should see his science of science fiction channel.. I can't even fkn watch it the editing is so bad and overdone! It's like meme worthy, you have to see it! (Which also sucks because some topics there seem interesting but the editing kills it plus it's not just visual vomit it's sound too so can't even pretend its a podcast)

    • @JohnGardnerAlhadis
      @JohnGardnerAlhadis Рік тому +1

      Agreed. It's gotta go.

  • @nofrackingzone7479
    @nofrackingzone7479 Рік тому

    Marvelous gesticulation with such tiny hands! Who can ask for more! Cheers!

  • @carpebratschem3894
    @carpebratschem3894 Рік тому

    Astrophysics student here. Thanks for this VNV (Very Nice Video). But can we agree on calling Jupiter a gas giant instead of a „red giant“ as the latter term is used to describe a type of star rather than a planet.
    Also the bok globule Barnard 68 is not an empty void but rather a dark nebula, aka the birthplace of stars. It only seems black and empty when observed in the visible part of light. In the infrared it is not at all dark and by no means empty.

    • @XraynPR
      @XraynPR Рік тому

      What do you think of the general research in this video?

  • @carlroy
    @carlroy Рік тому

    It almost look like the galactic cluster are running away from YOU, Simon! Nice video anyhow!

  • @PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm
    @PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm Рік тому

    The person who okayed this narration deserves to have their eulogy delivered by the same computer voice, in a church full of robots that can't cry.

  • @alfredotovar8984
    @alfredotovar8984 11 місяців тому +1

    Oh boy, I didn’t know I have megalophobia lol

  • @bodegacoast
    @bodegacoast Рік тому

    For anyone wondering, the name of the largest galaxy (6:47) is Alcyoneus. Simon's pronunciation was not very clear.

  • @patelk464
    @patelk464 Рік тому +1

    The numbers for the dog dethroned section does not add up. It states that the diameter is 1400 times that of the sun but at 04:18 states it would take 6 minutes to go around at the speed of light. It actually would take 6 hours.

  • @aronmiller7648
    @aronmiller7648 Рік тому +1

    I love space it fascinates me, but... It is kinda depressing because we will never see any of this stuff we can't ever reach it.

  • @brianupsher6675
    @brianupsher6675 Рік тому +1

    Great video but one correction, dark matter and dark energy are different things, dark means unknown. Dark matter is believed to be matter and particles that have mass, and with that gravity. Dark energy comes from the vacuum energy of space itself and causes a repulsive force called expansion. Dark energy also increases as space expands.

  • @chilibeer3912
    @chilibeer3912 Рік тому

    I love the space videos because they are grounding. Sometimes it’s not enough to consider how insignificant my problems are on a global scale. Sometimes you have to think bigger…

  • @Investorpotamus
    @Investorpotamus 4 місяці тому

    Simon, great stuff as always, however when you discuss the 'Great Void' you show an image of Barnard 68 which is a molecular cloud also termed a Bok Globule. This is anything but a void.

  • @Xiuhcoatl_
    @Xiuhcoatl_ Рік тому +1

    What I wish was the largest object in the universe: Danny's BB script

  • @operative0
    @operative0 Рік тому

    Thank you for calling it plasma. So many mainstream people still call it ionized gas out of spite.

  • @ryanradcliffe9756
    @ryanradcliffe9756 Рік тому

    Yup the idea of black holes still makes me unbumfituble

  • @I.amthatrealJuan
    @I.amthatrealJuan Рік тому +1

    4:11 That sounds off. The speed of light takes 8 minutes to reach the Earth straight from the sun. Surely circumnavigating VY Canis Majoris would take much longer.

  • @EmilyJelassi
    @EmilyJelassi Рік тому

    Fascinating video! I love these space videos.. so interesting! I keep asking.. have you done a video on Neptune yet? If not, please do; it’s the only planet in our solar system that’s left uncovered by a video.
    🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Рік тому +1

    13:16 Ok, wth..? There is no evidence that dark matter and dark energy are the same thing, or that one is part of the other. Your grasp of the universe is astonishing.

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Рік тому

      You mean his writer? He just reads w/no comprehension

  • @Transphantasmagoricalmutations
    @Transphantasmagoricalmutations 11 місяців тому

    "Size" is all relative. It's not an actual thing itself. When we talk about "comparisons", we're talking about a concept beyond the things themselves. If we were to understand an object for itself, it wouldn't be "big" or "small". It would be ambiguous to words and only explainable through itself.

  • @pozzowon
    @pozzowon Рік тому +1

    4:20 light takes 8 minutes to reach Earth, 43 minutes to reach Jupiter. I don't think an object that big would have a circumference 6 light minutes long

    • @E1eMenta1
      @E1eMenta1 Рік тому +1

      It would take 6 hours. I think he accidentally used the wrong unit of time

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Рік тому +1

      43min equates to 4hr 30m

  • @coalkey8019
    @coalkey8019 Рік тому

    This video might cause a person to be confused about the terms "dark matter" and "dark energy".
    Dark energy is the name that we give to the acceleration of the expansion of the universe.
    Dark matter is the name we give to another phenomenon. We have observed that galaxies / normal matter appears to have much more gravity than it should. (in other words, galaxies are spinning so fast that they should be flinging all of their stars out into space, but they don't.) It's more complicated than that, but that's a start.

  • @cw8jwh
    @cw8jwh Рік тому +1

    Sir,
    In considering star size,
    What about Stephenson 2-18b or R136a1 ?

  • @cleverusername9369
    @cleverusername9369 Рік тому

    The biggest thing in the universe is Jeff Goldblum's overwhelming charisma.

  • @Hoigwai
    @Hoigwai Рік тому +1

    Others have mentioned errors as well but for me, the one that jumped out was Stephenson 2-18 not being listed as the current largest star it being 3 billion km vs Scuti's 2.4.

  • @mopnem
    @mopnem Рік тому

    I honestly think that if everyone was required to learn about the stars, wars wouldn’t be on the table very often

  • @jackmason5278
    @jackmason5278 Рік тому

    Great video! But how did this wind up in Sideprojects? Wouldn't Geographics be a better fit?

  • @13minutestomidnight
    @13minutestomidnight Рік тому

    There were a few problems here, which people have already pointed out. Despite some errors in distances or units (and a mangled sentence about dark energy and dark matter at the end), this was still enjoyable anyway. This seems more proofreading errors than anything else? Usually your channels have incredibly high quality content, though.
    ...Honestly I think some people get way too worked up over a few mistakes.

  • @celter.45acp98
    @celter.45acp98 Рік тому

    It honestly blows my mind that we can look into space at something so far away and see it when it's been dead for a long time yet it looks perfectly fine to us because it's so damn fsr away

  • @728709jay
    @728709jay Рік тому

    Stephenson 2-18 is now known as being one of the largest, if not the current largest star ever discovered, surpassing other stars like VY Canis Majoris and UY Scuti. Stephenson 2-18 has a radius of 2,150 solar radii, being larger than almost the entire orbit of Saturn (1,940 - 2,169 solar radii).