The New Horizons probe was launched January 2006, had its closest approach to Pluto 9.5 year later in July 2015. Pluto is 0.000624 light years away from Earth.
Do what i do. Whenever i know I'm probably wrong. I put headphones walk away. Works 100% now. At first it would get her more upset but after doing it so often. She realized she rather that then arguing and in my mind that means i now win every agruement
To think, the Parker Solar Probe would have travelled ~1,764km during our POV in this video is crazy. From London that would get you to Norway, Sweden, Poland, Italy or Spain.. in 10 seconds.
I did some simple calculations and found out that it traveled about 2174 miles in the time it was shown; that's almost the entire length of route 66! I included both the third person and first person views of it
Even at 1 million km/h, it would take 9-10 days to reach Mars. 6 months to reach Neptune. 4700+ years to reach the neighbouring star system Alpha Centauri.
i heard the biggest chance would be an atomic explosion propulsion which lets many really, really small atomic explosions accelerate it. Due to atomic nature, it can produce immense energy for a long time. and while doing so, it can gather a lot of speed and then reach the speed which would be needed for traveling. but even then... lets say it reaches 9/10 of light speed.. it would still need years to reach some close planets. And centurys, milleniums to reach planets that are a bit further. and 99,999x% of space would still be unreachable. The thing that interests me the most is that time really bends and change accordingly to Einsteins theory? Its beyond my imagination how this is even possible... like would the passengers of the 9/10 light speed space ship really witness how they live 450 years instead of just living 80? My mind cant simply explain why suddenly their cells should be able to live longer, just because they travel faster? I could just imagine, that they still reach their normal age. But from our perspective on earth, they only aged a little when we reach a high age. And from their perspective / their perspective of time measurement, we get old extremely quick while they only age a little. So the concept of time is indipendent from each observer and is always experienced individually without interfering with oberserves from a different plane. So from their own perspective they only reach the age of 80 and from our perspective its simply an illusion that they reach the age of 450 due to the flexible nature of our time measurement. Which means that measuring time is highly questionable/ inconsistent and not really effective. I guess thats why people in older times had different methods of describing time, seasons etc. Looking at the high precision and insane intelligence of the maja calender, i could imagine that those earlier humans had smarter ways of measuring time then we do. Our measurement only works in our relatively flawed way of society and living. Looking at this, it suddenly makes more sense that we often cant imagine how earlier humans created insanely complex structures and also cant really understand their connection to nature/ animals/ spirits/ god/ gods/ supernatural etc. - would be interesting to find out, how their ways of measuring / describing time would react to the paradoxon of light speed travel. if their system would give an accurate result where the people on earth and the people on the 9/10 light speed space ship age at the same rate.
@@theaikidokait depends on whether or not one includes mars as a part of space. if one does, then the rovers are space probes. i would say it is useful to lump mars into space, but you could certainly argue against it.
Fun fact: The Earth is moving through space at 1 MILLION Mph relative to the cosmic background radiation. That's Mach 1,349. During this entire video, we've travelled roughly 133,000 miles through space.
Nice fact, thank you. When Mach is used in terms of space travel it grinds my gear though. Speed of sound isn't in space. Mach 1349 is 0 mph. (More a commentary on the video descriptions than your comment).
1:12 On deployment in Iraq, a sgt in my unit disconnected the governorer in his 113 and claimed to get it up to 60 something and said it scared the s!@# out of him. Month later an APC threw a tracking doing 30 something and killed everone in it. Ive heard Abrams is even faster ungoverned but theres a reason track vehicles are governed
@@daledillahunty6575 There's probably a lot of truth to that rumor...and I'd bet no one was hurt (badly at least) or it wouldn't just be a rumor, it would be a cautionary tale told for years in countless safety briefings in that motor pool for years to come
Just realised something here! It takes the fastest known human made object, the Parker Solar Probe roughly 3 and a half minutes to circle the entire Earth just one time! So even at speeds soo fast that objects passing by appearing to blur the fucx out, it would still take about 3.5 mins to circle the entire Earth only one fuczxxinn time! Yet it would take photons 0.13 seconds! Which means that light is travelling at about 1,500 times faster than the PSP. By the time light travels say 100 metres, the fastest human made object ever engineered would have only travelled 5-6 centimeters! How slow are we to light exactly?! And the Parker Solar Probe is absolutely fast compared to all other human made objects ever created! Would even leave bullets in the dust and we all know how fast bullets appear to us!
all of what you said is true but then u must realise how compared to the distance between planets/stars in space, light is painfully slow, we will never travel the universe
Exactly, the speed of light is inconceivably fast, yet still takes over 100,000 years just to cross our mid sized galaxy. The size of the universe is just mind blowing!
@ warp drive/hyperdrive are science fiction and saying we will ‘figure them out’ one day is nonsense, that’s like saying we will figure out lightsabers one day, it sounds almost possible but it’s actually not at all
Incredible! I love videos like this. The amount of detail, and quality of animation gives us a realistic perspective of how fast these things are moving. It's so awesome!
4:23 Theres a piston engined streamliner called "Speed Demon" that has held the speed record for a piston engined wheel driven car since 2012. Its fastest "official" run was only 704kmph, but it has reached speeds of 774kmph on "unofficial" attempts. (the reason official and unofficial are in quotation marks is what counts as official and unofficial depends on who you ask)
6:36 I know it looks cooler this way, but Apollo 10's CSM did _not_ use its main engine during its top speed when entering the Earth's atmosphere. The cylindrical service module with the engine had in fact been separated from the cone shaped command module before re-entry and the latter had been turned around to let the heatshield absorb the heating.
I just checked out the math and the Parker probe is actually closer to the speed of light than a snail is to a jet. A tighter comparison would be an average person running compared to a jet.
I just watched the TGV POS 150 record breaking vid again. It's amazing how smooth the ride stayed. They must have put a lot of work into those rails. Back in the 80s I got to see an SR-71 on static display at an air show. The next day some of us came back to watch it take off. Then the pilot did a "dirty" flyby and then a "clean" one. I thought my chest was going to explode! 😂
Imagine the negative G forces just to follow the curve of the earth going that fast! I guess anything after Starlink, was the only one thats in earth orbit, right?
There are no g forces, the satellite travels at constant speed and gravity is pulling it towards the earth, but it's going fast enough that it does not collide with the earth. That is an orbit. From the inertial frame of reference of the satellite, you would not feel any movement at all. And of course this would be way above atmosphere, not like the video shows, otherwise it would get disintegrated from atmospheric friction or loose speed until it collides with the ground.
@@Alepap. yea, at the level these videos show, they are traveling well above orbital speeds, and to maintain their proximity with the earth they would need a high negative G "pushover" or nose down. Suborbital velocity youll hit the earth, superorbital velocity youll go away, unless you experience negative (upwards) G to keep you there.
ngl. hey. these are videos from the future. you have no clue how advanced and ahead of its time it is. i genuinely never expected to see such good quality nowadays. just excellent. i love you and everyone that helped work on this master piece.
Can you image hoping in the SSC Thrust and seeing 750MPH on the speedometer😂 No wonder the SSC Ultimate Aero and SSC Tuatara are threats on the street. WOW LOL
You should do one showing speed around the world. Like show how fast the parker solar probe would take to go around the earth and compare it to how far the rest would make it in that time.
Not to mention the literal manhole cover that was welded over a pit that we turned into a hyper sized potato gun by setting off a nuke under concrete (that was vaporized and pressurized), and left the atmosphere in A SECOND.
Driving an M113 that fast would be absolutely terrifying. The vibrations from the tracks would be insane, and the possibility of throwing track would be huge, and so very dangerous. -Someone who has driven M113s a bunch, in the Army.
Suggestion: add the year to when these things became “the fastest”. I think it would be a cool little feature and would be surprising to see how long ago some of these records were set and remain unbroken!
Just for context: the earth is orbiting the sun at nearly 67,000 mph, roughly Mach 88, so ALL of us are traveling through space at a mind numbing rate of speed already…
One of the things that I have recently found fascinating is the space probe Voyager 1, the most distant manmade object from earth. It was launched in 1977, getting near 50 years ago. It is now 24.7 billion kilometers from earth and far outside the most distant planet in the solar system, 30 billion miles away. All that would be interesting enough, but the space craft is still sending data back to earth, all that distance away, after all those years in space.
@@BRU-TALE or it could be like how they portray it in X-men with quicksilver seeing everything around him slowed down giving him plenty of time to do things. But then again your argument holds up in the real world as light rays would also be slowed down.
@@BRU-TALE i suppose.. since space-time is one, if time is slowed down relative to the speedster, space must be as well. So all lightrays are also basicly frozen in time. I see 2 major issues here the speedster will encounter. One being there would probably be a shift of light where everything the person sees will shift in colors of objects very rapidly in relation to the distance of the object. And two, air molecules are not moving so he'll basicly run through a lot of resistance and ignite the air around him like anything going through the atmosphere.
@@Knownasnemoo yeah, this makes sense. Also the lightray will travels at the same speed of you, so you live in darkness because you see when the lightray is absorbed by the eye…interesting, i’m sure somebody made a video about it
✅ Take a look to this Surreal Speed Comparison : ua-cam.com/video/Y-y3lYFAPQk/v-deo.htmlsi=rvRfN12Y2fdfUtPm
And the Parker Solar Probe is still only going 0.064% the speed of light
AND still light itself! Needs about 4 years to reach the nearest star!
Once we make that around 15 times faster, we'll have only hit 1% of the speed of light. Mind-boggling.
(BUT: we'll have at least HIT 1%! 👍)
@@justinklenk yep. And there is a pulsar that is rotating and their equatorial speed is 25% the speed of light
The New Horizons probe was launched January 2006, had its closest approach to Pluto 9.5 year later in July 2015. Pluto is 0.000624 light years away from Earth.
@@mattmccallum2007
That's absurdly absurd. 😮 😮
("Gonna need close-up video, or it doesn't count!!")
Honorable Mention: The 900 kg "manhole" cover that was launched by a underground nuke test to 240,000 km/hr.
That'll be so cool if that actually got out of the atmosphere.
@@tungzauzage977
It flew about 30 meters, and split into molecules
@@andreypizun lol
Imagine your spacecraft getting hit by that🤣
Was kinda disappointed it didn't end with that
My brain also goes Mach 160 in the shower after losing an argument
Why bro gotta do me like that😂
Brain goes brrrr
Do what i do. Whenever i know I'm probably wrong. I put headphones walk away.
Works 100% now. At first it would get her more upset but after doing it so often.
She realized she rather that then arguing and in my mind that means i now win every agruement
Let me guess, it's the Paper Mario Argument, is it?
What you doing losing arguments in the shower?
To think, the Parker Solar Probe would have travelled ~1,764km during our POV in this video is crazy. From London that would get you to Norway, Sweden, Poland, Italy or Spain.. in 10 seconds.
635,000 km/h ... thats ~105,000km in 10 minutes. Or around the world in 4 minutes
koenigsegg ccgt
I did some simple calculations and found out that it traveled about 2174 miles in the time it was shown; that's almost the entire length of route 66! I included both the third person and first person views of it
@@enyu2855that's roughly London(ENG) to Sydney(AUS) in 1 min 34 secs.
Well, it would get your corpse there. Stupid frail human body...
Even at 1 million km/h, it would take 9-10 days to reach Mars.
6 months to reach Neptune.
4700+ years to reach the neighbouring star system Alpha Centauri.
The worst part is that even the fastest thing we've created is way too slow for space travel
parker space probe still takes minutes to do 1 lap of the earth which is such a tiny distance compared to the distance between objects in space :(
and it still wouldn't get me to work on time. 😂
Even light is to slow.
i heard the biggest chance would be an atomic explosion propulsion
which lets many really, really small atomic explosions accelerate it. Due to atomic nature, it can produce immense energy for a long time.
and while doing so, it can gather a lot of speed and then reach the speed which would be needed for traveling.
but even then... lets say it reaches 9/10 of light speed.. it would still need years to reach some close planets. And centurys, milleniums to reach planets that are a bit further.
and 99,999x% of space would still be unreachable.
The thing that interests me the most is that time really bends and change accordingly to Einsteins theory? Its beyond my imagination how this is even possible...
like would the passengers of the 9/10 light speed space ship really witness how they live 450 years instead of just living 80?
My mind cant simply explain why suddenly their cells should be able to live longer, just because they travel faster?
I could just imagine, that they still reach their normal age. But from our perspective on earth, they only aged a little when we reach a high age.
And from their perspective / their perspective of time measurement, we get old extremely quick while they only age a little.
So the concept of time is indipendent from each observer and is always experienced individually without interfering with oberserves from a different plane.
So from their own perspective they only reach the age of 80 and from our perspective its simply an illusion that they reach the age of 450 due to the flexible nature of our time measurement.
Which means that measuring time is highly questionable/ inconsistent and not really effective. I guess thats why people in older times had different methods of describing time, seasons etc.
Looking at the high precision and insane intelligence of the maja calender, i could imagine that those earlier humans had smarter ways of measuring time then we do.
Our measurement only works in our relatively flawed way of society and living. Looking at this, it suddenly makes more sense that we often cant imagine how earlier humans created insanely complex structures and also cant really understand their connection to nature/ animals/ spirits/ god/ gods/ supernatural etc.
- would be interesting to find out, how their ways of measuring / describing time would react to the paradoxon of light speed travel.
if their system would give an accurate result where the people on earth and the people on the 9/10 light speed space ship age at the same rate.
Yeah, light speed does seem like baby speed compared to the vastness of our universe.
The amount of work you put into your videos is mind blowing. Well done.
i like how both the slowest and fastest things in the video are space probes
Sorry to be picky, but the first one is a planetary exploration vehicle. It's not designed for space.
@@theaikidoka but it traveled through space to get there
@@MinerBat It did, yes, but by that definition Buzz Aldrin is a space probe.
@@theaikidokait depends on whether or not one includes mars as a part of space. if one does, then the rovers are space probes. i would say it is useful to lump mars into space, but you could certainly argue against it.
@@theaikidokaat what age were you diagnosed with autism?
From this perspective its easy to understand a meteorite hitting the atmosphere and exploding
Yeah.... we arn't immortal.
Fastest crewed vehicle gets you around the world in just over an hour.
Fastest un-crewed vehicle gets you around the world in less than 4 minutes.
To be more specific 3 minutes, 47 seconds, and 197 milliseconds.
I might be off by few milliseconds.
Nope nvm it’s correct. I double checked it.
@@wantedsavage7776around at the equator or vertically through the poles?
@@wantedsavage7776 i got the same answer but off by 3 milliseconds
5:39 the line "OF COURSE, IM F*CKING TERRIFIED!" fits so well while your in a Lockheed SR 71A Blackbird 😭🙏
These are the videos I always wait for. Kindly make the Captions bigger to be able to read them or enable subtitles for the video
And put them in MPH! 😒
Fun fact: The Earth is moving through space at 1 MILLION Mph relative to the cosmic background radiation. That's Mach 1,349. During this entire video, we've travelled roughly 133,000 miles through space.
That's amazing.
So that makes us traveling through space
While sitting on earth
And the earth itself is our fastest ever spacecraft
@@Exoskeleton1 Human occupied vehicles in space. There are stars out there goes 10% the speed of light.
Navigator nightmare lmao
Nice fact, thank you. When Mach is used in terms of space travel it grinds my gear though. Speed of sound isn't in space. Mach 1349 is 0 mph. (More a commentary on the video descriptions than your comment).
2:33 Should have put Kerosene here
1:12 On deployment in Iraq, a sgt in my unit disconnected the governorer in his 113 and claimed to get it up to 60 something and said it scared the s!@# out of him. Month later an APC threw a tracking doing 30 something and killed everone in it. Ive heard Abrams is even faster ungoverned but theres a reason track vehicles are governed
Rumor while I was at Ft Knox is they removed the turret from an Abrams and it nearly reached 90mph before the track disintegrated.
@@daledillahunty6575 There's probably a lot of truth to that rumor...and I'd bet no one was hurt (badly at least) or it wouldn't just be a rumor, it would be a cautionary tale told for years in countless safety briefings in that motor pool for years to come
5:23 whats in the audio lol?
OP forgot their pornos playing in the background
Darude-Sandstorm
I think... Maybe vox machina?
if parker solar probe hit you in the head, youd have the biggest headache
You can't have a headache with no head
You, your house, surrounding neighborhood and suburbs would be leveled lol
But it would fly off ur head
Just realised something here! It takes the fastest known human made object, the Parker Solar Probe roughly 3 and a half minutes to circle the entire Earth just one time! So even at speeds soo fast that objects passing by appearing to blur the fucx out, it would still take about 3.5 mins to circle the entire Earth only one fuczxxinn time! Yet it would take photons 0.13 seconds! Which means that light is travelling at about 1,500 times faster than the PSP. By the time light travels say 100 metres, the fastest human made object ever engineered would have only travelled 5-6 centimeters! How slow are we to light exactly?! And the Parker Solar Probe is absolutely fast compared to all other human made objects ever created! Would even leave bullets in the dust and we all know how fast bullets appear to us!
all of what you said is true but then u must realise how compared to the distance between planets/stars in space, light is painfully slow, we will never travel the universe
Exactly, the speed of light is inconceivably fast, yet still takes over 100,000 years just to cross our mid sized galaxy. The size of the universe is just mind blowing!
@hazza2247 yes we will once we figure out warp drive/hyper drive. It takes a infinite amount of energy to go an infinite amount of time/distance.
@ warp drive/hyperdrive are science fiction and saying we will ‘figure them out’ one day is nonsense, that’s like saying we will figure out lightsabers one day, it sounds almost possible but it’s actually not at all
Remember, speed doesn't kill you. Suddenly becoming stationary does.
Suddenly accelerating can do that too.
@@TicTac-g7m Gradually living does too
@@LetterToGodFromMeToYou
Yeah, I'm hearin' you. I'm not getting any younger. Gotta make use of and enjoy every moment, I guess.
always remember! Speed and Power
speed makes you lighter
Yeah those poor guys who performed a Red Out on the rocket sled. Yikes!!!
And the fastest man made object today would take over 1000 years to get to the nearest star beside the sun.
Let's see theoretically the Romans 2000 years ago sent a space probe at that speed to that star then it would have gotten there and came back by now
SO youre saying theres a chance.... awesome!
That’s honestly pretty quick
Fun fact: the parker solar probe can travel from London to boston in only 28.54 soconds. 💀
No it can't
It would simply disintegrate in our atmosphere at that speed... in fact much before that
@@abhir7823 Of course I know, I mean that the parker solar probe can finish the distance between London and boston in only 28.54 seconds.
@@abhir7823 no way you thought he was serious
@@abhir7823😭😭😭 no way bro thought he’s serious
@@abhir7823no way he thought he was serious. 😮
i want 2 thing after this video:
i want a POV of the nuclear explosion powered manhole cover
and i want a 360* VR version of this video
Speed of light 7:50
Ha, nice one
300 000 km per second.
@@megasuchy, space speed faster, coz space it's fundament
The Parker Probe after hitting an asteroid.
Incredible! I love videos like this. The amount of detail, and quality of animation gives us a realistic perspective of how fast these things are moving. It's so awesome!
7:30 must be really windy when you put your face out the window
💀
Bro 💀
Camera man on anything over 80mph
Camera man on anything over Mach 1
Camera man on Starlink 💀
Note: the camera man needs to be faster than everything to record the speeds, if not, he won't be able to record the speeds faster than him
Cameraman is OP
@@Bluekittygamerboiofficals8689 terrence from angry birds 🗿
plz add POV of the speed of light 😄
Go to Google and search "white". That's what it looks like lol
4:23 Theres a piston engined streamliner called "Speed Demon" that has held the speed record for a piston engined wheel driven car since 2012. Its fastest "official" run was only 704kmph, but it has reached speeds of 774kmph on "unofficial" attempts.
(the reason official and unofficial are in quotation marks is what counts as official and unofficial depends on who you ask)
RED SIDE, This is perfect! I subscribed right away!
Damn never realise a satalite is that fast, and the parker solar probe speed is ridiculous 🤣
still too fast for a dust blower :-b haha
_Everything_ in low earth orbit has to move at 27-28,000 km/h in order to avoid being pulled down by the gravity.
The speed the Parker Solar Probe travelled at was the result of its entry into into the Sun's gravitational field.
You haven't seen the doors open on Black Friday
Yeah, but its still slower than my thinking.
That was amazing. Thank you. Please can you add mph if possible?
7:38 Huge props to the cameraman!
amazing,the channel is worth to be subscribed
RED SIDE, nice video keep it up bro
The vehicles are interesting and I'd like to see the 3D models on screen for more time too :)
Amazing perceptions of speed.
he has another video of this uploaded not too long ago
This is seriously amazing loved the animation speed is crazy 🤯. Thanks for sharing!
Can you do a video of the top 10 Fastest men of all time please 🙏🏾
These guys deserve much more subscribers
Thank you. Now I can feel the way Superman feels when he flies
This channel is amazing! It encourages me to look all this cool stuff up one by one.
Simply incredible, thank you for making this video, in the previous one I had asked you for this favor, without words!
😂
6:36
I know it looks cooler this way, but Apollo 10's CSM did _not_ use its main engine during its top speed when entering the Earth's atmosphere. The cylindrical service module with the engine had in fact been separated from the cone shaped command module before re-entry and the latter had been turned around to let the heatshield absorb the heating.
It's a great immersive experience
非常棒的沉浸式体验😎
I really like this concept, the scenery is soothing
amazing speed comparison video ... cool and good job
Incredible there's so many categories of fastest vehicle and very cool to see it all faster and faster.
One time, I saw a Juno running on the street. I almost got hit by it, but reflexes saves me.
4:12 "Korabl maket" just means "ship model", it's called ekranoplan.
лунь
my eyes are BLURRED now after seeing solar probe concentratedely
Make a visualization around the Earth model. For greater clarity of the satellites' speed.
Ok the Blackbird and North American POV experience's _flavor sounds_ were unexpected
dang who let bro cook, haven't watched this channel in a while and DAMN
Voyager 1 is currently moving at a speed of 38,027 m/hr
Do you mean km/hr? 38 km/hr is not very fast.
Really well done mate keep it up!
Meanwhile speed of unknown energy particle in Universe 🚀
Speed of Light ✈️
Speed of Solar Probe 🐌
I just checked out the math and the Parker probe is actually closer to the speed of light than a snail is to a jet.
A tighter comparison would be an average person running compared to a jet.
@@chuffer595 Thanks that's an awesome calculation you did and quite interesting
You mean tachyons?
It would literally take only 36 minutes to get to the moon aboard the Parker Solar Probe.
You forgot the manhole cover during a nuclear test that got launched like at around 50,000mph into space lol
I just watched the TGV POS 150 record breaking vid again. It's amazing how smooth the ride stayed. They must have put a lot of work into those rails. Back in the 80s I got to see an SR-71 on static display at an air show. The next day some of us came back to watch it take off. Then the pilot did a "dirty" flyby and then a "clean" one. I thought my chest was going to explode! 😂
Imagine the negative G forces just to follow the curve of the earth going that fast! I guess anything after Starlink, was the only one thats in earth orbit, right?
There are no g forces, the satellite travels at constant speed and gravity is pulling it towards the earth, but it's going fast enough that it does not collide with the earth. That is an orbit. From the inertial frame of reference of the satellite, you would not feel any movement at all. And of course this would be way above atmosphere, not like the video shows, otherwise it would get disintegrated from atmospheric friction or loose speed until it collides with the ground.
@@Alepap. yea, at the level these videos show, they are traveling well above orbital speeds, and to maintain their proximity with the earth they would need a high negative G "pushover" or nose down. Suborbital velocity youll hit the earth, superorbital velocity youll go away, unless you experience negative (upwards) G to keep you there.
the fact that the RS6 is the fastest car on ice, is probably because its also the fastest way to die in Germany
I think my brain just committed suside 🫨😵
Amazing, both the metrics and the graphics engine have been spectacular.
ngl. hey. these are videos from the future. you have no clue how advanced and ahead of its time it is. i genuinely never expected to see such good quality nowadays. just excellent. i love you and everyone that helped work on this master piece.
😇😇😇
@@REDSIDEofficialcan you make a video about a speed comparison of animals,Cars,Trains,Planes, Watercraft, missiles and satellites
You made a video about tornadoes and hurricanes 6 years ago. It would be insane if you did a pov experience of those two next time.
Can you image hoping in the SSC Thrust and seeing 750MPH on the speedometer😂
No wonder the SSC Ultimate Aero and SSC Tuatara are threats on the street. WOW LOL
I didn't know that once an aircraft hits SR71 speeds it starts cursing.
3:14 what bro's doin there 💀
I love these videos, thanks for sharing them, but could you possibly not make the vehicle descriptions microscopic?
You should do one showing speed around the world. Like show how fast the parker solar probe would take to go around the earth and compare it to how far the rest would make it in that time.
that's a good one!
Sounds great!
I'm surprised to not see the voyager spacecrafts on this list, as they're the only INTERSTELLAR craft to EXIT the solar system entirely.
Not to mention the literal manhole cover that was welded over a pit that we turned into a hyper sized potato gun by setting off a nuke under concrete (that was vaporized and pressurized), and left the atmosphere in A SECOND.
The apollo lunar lander did 18 kph . Today nasa would dial that back to 0.02 kph - just for safety
Not the lander but the _rover_ that was brought there by the last three missions (Apollo 15, 16 and 17).
@@fromnorway643 i stand corrected.👍🏻
Driving an M113 that fast would be absolutely terrifying. The vibrations from the tracks would be insane, and the possibility of throwing track would be huge, and so very dangerous. -Someone who has driven M113s a bunch, in the Army.
At 1:50 the Horonuku sail has New Zealand written on it is extra cool 😎😎😎, Great job as always RS !
That's the longest straight road I've ever seen
feel like playing video games
Suggestion: add the year to when these things became “the fastest”. I think it would be a cool little feature and would be surprising to see how long ago some of these records were set and remain unbroken!
The winner, the Parker Solar Probe, will improve its speed record to 690,000 km/h next year when its minimum distance to the Sun is reduced even more.
@@fromnorway643 absolutely bonkers!
Yo, what he doin there.... 3:14
I love this channel and its videos.
Captions bigger pls
That's such an incredibly demonstration of speed, if anyone seeing this knows someone who've worked on these vehicles, you should share with them
Make the text a little bigger.
Who knew Go Pros were so well built to handle those insane speeds! 😂
I feel like I circled the Earth and went nowhere at the same damn time.
We all did
Beautiful work, thank you.
Just for context: the earth is orbiting the sun at nearly 67,000 mph, roughly Mach 88, so ALL of us are traveling through space at a mind numbing rate of speed already…
А где ёжик Соник?)
One of the things that I have recently found fascinating is the space probe Voyager 1, the most distant manmade object from earth. It was launched in 1977, getting near 50 years ago. It is now 24.7 billion kilometers from earth and far outside the most distant planet in the solar system, 30 billion miles away. All that would be interesting enough, but the space craft is still sending data back to earth, all that distance away, after all those years in space.
I am scared of driving at 180kmh
7:41 : Stanley on his way on pretzel day 😂
Imagine in Parker Solar Probe and you see a fly sitting on the windscreen 😂
Part of me was waiting for a brick wall to flash from out of nowhere to smash the camera.
During its 20 seconds on screen, the Parker Solar Probe covered a distance of 2,177 miles (3,527 kilometers).
You should include the fastest ever wind-broken bicycle record of 296 km/h, set by Denise Mueller-Korenek in 2018
Wow, your graphics is better than any other game!
I'VE PLAYED ENOUGH Arma to know that an m113 going 75mph is fucking terrifying 🤣🤣🤣
DAMN! so what do all these speed of light characters like flash see when they run/fly?
i'd say nothing because they travel at the same speed of "information", so they live constantly in the past, in my opinion but can't verify that obv
@@BRU-TALE or it could be like how they portray it in X-men with quicksilver seeing everything around him slowed down giving him plenty of time to do things. But then again your argument holds up in the real world as light rays would also be slowed down.
@@Knownasnemoo interesting, well a velocity of light the theory of relativity comes up, so sincerely don’t know what precisely would happen
@@BRU-TALE i suppose.. since space-time is one, if time is slowed down relative to the speedster, space must be as well. So all lightrays are also basicly frozen in time. I see 2 major issues here the speedster will encounter. One being there would probably be a shift of light where everything the person sees will shift in colors of objects very rapidly in relation to the distance of the object. And two, air molecules are not moving so he'll basicly run through a lot of resistance and ignite the air around him like anything going through the atmosphere.
@@Knownasnemoo yeah, this makes sense. Also the lightray will travels at the same speed of you, so you live in darkness because you see when the lightray is absorbed by the eye…interesting, i’m sure somebody made a video about it
Props to the cameraman
Yes sir
Thanks for the black screen at the end
That will cool my mind after travelling so fast 😂