Quasar Spotted in the Milky Way!

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  • Опубліковано 15 тра 2024
  • Radio Astronomers discovered hundreds of Quasars hiding in our galaxy. Use our link to get your hands on this floating Moon lamp: bit.ly/3UuE2Xa
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    References:
    H.E.S.S. Collaboration • F. Aharonian (Dublin Inst. and Air Force Cambridge Research Lab and Heidelberg, Max Planck Inst.) et al.
    L O'C Drury 1983 Rep. Prog. Phys. 46 973
    Credits:
    Writer: David Shlivko
    Editor: Pavel Slavin
    Narrator: Alex McColgan
    #astrum #quasar #astronomy #space #radioastronomy

КОМЕНТАРІ • 710

  • @astrumspace
    @astrumspace  20 днів тому +22

    Transform your space with the floating Moon lamp! Grab yours at bit.ly/3UuE2Xa

    • @imnotabearr
      @imnotabearr 20 днів тому +3

      no thanks im full

    • @brown2889
      @brown2889 19 днів тому +2

      Thank you Alex and the Astrum team for making this video.
      SS 433 blows my mind. I’m going to support everyone’s efforts, thank you.❤

    • @ickebins6948
      @ickebins6948 17 днів тому +1

      Not interested!

    • @ashleyking6743
      @ashleyking6743 15 днів тому +1

      @@sssnake1654What? The moon does rotate. It rotates at the same speed as it orbits the planet which is why we only see the one face. It takes 27 days to rotate on its axis and 27 days to orbit the earth

    • @sssnake1654
      @sssnake1654 15 днів тому +2

      @@ashleyking6743 Huh! I stand corrected. Thank you Ashley.

  • @modalmixture
    @modalmixture 21 день тому +361

    “Dad, I want a quasar, all the other galaxies have one.”
    “We have quasars at home son.”
    The quasars at home:

    • @Psillytripper
      @Psillytripper 21 день тому +3

      lolllllllllllllllllllll sgr a* thrifty af aKA cheap

    • @rootbeer4888
      @rootbeer4888 21 день тому +4

      dont aggro the universe dude.

    • @timgrant8729
      @timgrant8729 21 день тому +1

      Hilarious! Best analogy! 😄😎

    • @Stickyybenzz
      @Stickyybenzz 21 день тому +1

      Ah, i love ordering a quasar from mcdonalds

    • @drewtheceo9024
      @drewtheceo9024 21 день тому +4

      Funny stuff 😂😊We are blessed to not have an ”eraser” nearby. 🤭

  • @dansimpson6844
    @dansimpson6844 21 день тому +165

    We had a Quasar in our living room when I was a kid.

    • @hherpdderp
      @hherpdderp 21 день тому +19

      Billions die as a relativistic stream of matter obliterates their planet.
      "It's a girl!" 🎉

    • @denizen9998
      @denizen9998 21 день тому +6

      I remember " works in a drawer".

    • @RamesGamesLC
      @RamesGamesLC 21 день тому

      ​@hherpdderp your comment needs more attention. Gender reveals are this stupid it wouldn't surprise me if an offshoot of the human race in the year 5000 destroyed their planet with a pink or blue mini quasar.

    • @SpicyMang0s
      @SpicyMang0s 18 днів тому +1

      Lmao 💀

    • @dansimpson6844
      @dansimpson6844 18 днів тому +1

      @@SpicyMang0s Now I understand why Mom always told us not to sit so close! 😳

  • @mikeguilmette776
    @mikeguilmette776 21 день тому +104

    I want a T-shirt with the Andromeda Galaxy on it with a caption that reads "IT'S COMING RIGHT FOR US!!"

    • @DarrylSrFritz
      @DarrylSrFritz 19 днів тому +1

      Could that also be a very small form of matter mixing into the gamma rays?

    • @DarrylSrFritz
      @DarrylSrFritz 19 днів тому +1

      Me too

    • @travisjohnson622
      @travisjohnson622 19 днів тому +1

      Have we ever captured pictures of two stars colliding?

    • @cykkm
      @cykkm 18 днів тому +1

      Oh, nothing to worry about really! As does any main sequence star, the Sun heats up over time. Multicellular life on Earth has ≈500 million years to go, and single-cellular no more than 10⁹ years, when oceans will boil off. Andromeda won't get even much closer in that time, so we'll certainly escape it!

    • @mikeguilmette776
      @mikeguilmette776 18 днів тому

      @@travisjohnson622 Astronomers have observed contact binaries - stars with connected gas envelopes.

  • @brandon2755
    @brandon2755 21 день тому +82

    Title: do we need to worry about quasars?
    Space: if you can see it, you’re already dead.

    • @TehAntiSpammer
      @TehAntiSpammer 21 день тому

      So we die every time we see a star?

    • @brandon2755
      @brandon2755 21 день тому

      @@TehAntiSpammerwe’re talking about quasars not stars

    • @TehAntiSpammer
      @TehAntiSpammer 20 днів тому +1

      @@brandon2755 Even thats wrong but alright. seeing them doesnt mean you're dead. If they are pointing directly at you AND they are close enough.

    • @buckmurdock2025
      @buckmurdock2025 20 днів тому +1

      Make one yourself. The sky's the limit nowaday. If necessary, bio- or 3D print one. It took me 5 years but my replicator's finally finished.

    • @isaackitone
      @isaackitone 19 днів тому +1

      Look at it and confirm.

  • @GoldenJackalTutorial
    @GoldenJackalTutorial 21 день тому +158

    I am an amateur astrophotographer and I always find many quasars in my photographs, some that go up to 9 billion light years in distance. Yes, I have some of those in my space photos shot in my backyard with my large telescope. It's dope, they are just dots, nothing fancy but their light is there and it's amazing.

    • @matthewboire6843
      @matthewboire6843 21 день тому +2

      That would be amazing

    • @flow5718
      @flow5718 21 день тому

      So you found tiny black holes around these quasars too?

    • @djvapid
      @djvapid 21 день тому

      @@matthewboire6843 what "would be" amazing? The op didn't speculate about anything theoretical.

    • @The_Bink14
      @The_Bink14 21 день тому +12

      ​​@@djvapid being able to afford/enjoy the same hobby for themselves? Amateur astronomy beyond a simple small telescope or binocs isn't cheap and can't be done by those of us living in bright cities. I'm quite a few miles out of downtown in my city, and still can only see less than 100 stars any given night. Sometimes it's as low as 20. I'll never forget stargazing when I took a cruise as a teenager. I was truly stunned in awe for hours & spent every night up there on the top deck just chillin with my other nerd friends finding constellations we knew were supposed to be there but had never seen before.

    • @matthewboire6843
      @matthewboire6843 21 день тому +2

      @@djvapid to see the pictures

  • @moogfooger
    @moogfooger 21 день тому +32

    There was a TV manufacturer back in the early 60's called Quasar. Their slogan was "Works in a drawer". You could literally open a little drawer with the circuit boards inside! It was the first high tech TV set. Every time I hear the word Quasar now, I hear that commercial in my head. Probably an off shoot of the space program. Pardon the pun. Cheers

    • @ValkyrieofNOLA
      @ValkyrieofNOLA 21 день тому +3

      Omg! I remember these televisions being around in the eighties! I completely forgot about them until now! I think my small television in the garage was a Quasar brand…thanks for the walk down memory lane though!

    • @moogfooger
      @moogfooger 20 днів тому

      @@ValkyrieofNOLA ❤

  • @dromnispank4723
    @dromnispank4723 21 день тому +25

    I've been waiting for the day Mario Kart would be used in a physics analogy! 🙏🫶

  • @delskioffskinov
    @delskioffskinov 21 день тому +19

    One of my favourite voices on youtube! Alex you describing anything grips my ears and makes me fall into the world your describing! i'm 53 and have documentary's my whole life (Attenborough my God) and your narration style is up there with best on youtube hands down! Continue your work son you've nailed it!

  • @rickhobson3211
    @rickhobson3211 21 день тому +15

    Very interesting episode! Thanks to you and your team for producing these!

  • @evergreenthuja5275
    @evergreenthuja5275 21 день тому +18

    💫 In my youth (1970s ) I saw quite a few Quasar TVs 📺 At the time I had no idea what the Quasar name & simplistic logo ---|--- represented .
    .
    From what I've read, use of the name Quasar began in the mid 1960s

  • @dynad00d15
    @dynad00d15 21 день тому +74

    Didn't we know about this quasar? There were articles about detecting massive radiowave beams, a few years ago.

    • @toddkurzbard
      @toddkurzbard 21 день тому +22

      You might have, but I didn't. And I'd suspect most of the world didn't. We are not ALL astrophysicists.

    • @efdangotu
      @efdangotu 21 день тому +3

      Can you accept that quasars are newborns from host galaxies? The redshift anomaly is from their unique plasma density. They are not distant.

    • @dynad00d15
      @dynad00d15 21 день тому +7

      @@efdangotu I can accept it, I was just asking a question. Why would you assume that i wouldn't accept that fact?

    • @macblastoff7700
      @macblastoff7700 21 день тому +4

      ​​@@dynad00d15, not an apologist for bad attitudes, but reddit has taught me that the majority of English speakers--more so native than non-native--have very little depth when it comes to context of their word choice.
      I'd expect different in a thread about quasars, but then, astro-physicists and their fan boys aren't necessarily known for their people skills.

    • @twobrainedserpent
      @twobrainedserpent 21 день тому

      ​@@macblastoff7700 I can understand your frustration, but It's incredibly presumptuous and arrogant to generalize an entire group of people, especially based on a limited experience or exposure like Reddit comments. Implying that English speakers, particularly native speakers, lack depth in their word choice is not only ignorant but also generally insulting.
      Furthermore, insinuating that astrophysicists and enthusiasts lack people skills is just plain disrespectful. These are individuals who dedicate their lives to understanding the complexities of the universe, often communicating their findings with precision and clarity.
      What really gets to me is how utterly pointless this comment is. It doesn't add anything constructive to the conversation about quasars or anything else. Instead, it just spreads negativity and reinforces harmful stereotypes. And let me tell you, it's exhausting to come across comments like this when you're genuinely trying to learn and engage in meaningful discussions.
      But what really baffles me is why someone would mention their expectations just to knock down the same thing they're trying to stand for. It's like shooting yourself in the foot. If we're advocating for understanding and respect, let's actually embody those values instead of undermining them with thoughtless remarks. We need to create spaces where everyone feels welcome to share their insights without fear of being dismissed or belittled. That's how we can truly foster a culture of learning and mutual respect. Peace and love.

  • @brown2889
    @brown2889 19 днів тому +3

    RIGHT ON! SO Excited to see this done by Astrum and narrated by you Alex.
    Thank you.

  • @Ghost_Hybrid
    @Ghost_Hybrid 21 день тому +34

    Honestly we shouldn't be worried about any astronomical events. If a cosmic extinction-level event is coming it's probably better not to know.

    • @MrRugbyloosehead
      @MrRugbyloosehead 21 день тому

      Nor would NASA or the powers that be would tell us? For obvious reasons!

    • @ChristophersMum
      @ChristophersMum 21 день тому +4

      There is no use burying your head in the sand...

    • @twobrainedserpent
      @twobrainedserpent 21 день тому +3

      While your sentiment might reflect a common fear of cosmic extinction-level events, it's crucial to approach such assertions with a careful consideration of scientific evidence and preparedness measures.
      Firstly, dismissing concerns about astronomical events, including the potential impact of asteroids, could undermine proactive efforts to safeguard against such threats. Initiatives like NASA's planetary defense programs, including recent trials aimed at redirecting asteroids from collision courses with Earth, demonstrate proactive measures to mitigate potential risks. For instance, NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission aims to test the effectiveness of redirecting an asteroid's trajectory by impacting it with a kinetic impactor.
      However, it's essential to recognize that while these efforts demonstrate technological capabilities, they do not eliminate the need for ongoing monitoring and preparedness. The impact hazard from asteroids and other celestial bodies remains a real and significant concern, and continued investment in detection, tracking, and mitigation strategies is essential for ensuring the safety and security of our planet.
      Regarding the suggestion that it might be better not to know about a cosmic extinction-level event, such a stance raises ethical and practical considerations. While uncertainty and fear surrounding catastrophic events are understandable, informed decision-making and preparedness are critical for minimizing potential impacts. Ignorance of impending threats would leave humanity unprepared and vulnerable, with potentially devastating consequences.

    • @Ghost_Hybrid
      @Ghost_Hybrid 21 день тому +18

      @@twobrainedserpent Thanks, ChatGPT

    • @rootbeer4888
      @rootbeer4888 21 день тому +1

      @@ChristophersMum I bet this persons head is firmly planted already.

  • @tjrobards
    @tjrobards 21 день тому +25

    "Shedding light on the production of photons." I see what you did there :)

  • @EnkiduIX
    @EnkiduIX 21 день тому +10

    So, they're scattered straight _into_ Compton 🤔

    • @shaeVettori
      @shaeVettori 18 днів тому +1

      Real Muthuphukkin Squeez ...

  • @bretfisher7286
    @bretfisher7286 19 днів тому +3

    I must say that your narration-- your voice-- are very enjoyable to me and I'm sure many others. A real intelligence and sincere eagerness for this material shines through.
    Very nice! Thanks very much.

  • @nanyubusnis9397
    @nanyubusnis9397 18 днів тому +2

    5:33 Man, I forget how incredibly vast the galaxy is at times. To think an entire galaxy is rotating around such a small dot in the center is just mind blowing.

  • @rakheldandy5339
    @rakheldandy5339 21 день тому +3

    Thank you for introducing me to the charming aspects of space!

  • @just_kos99
    @just_kos99 21 день тому +3

    When I was a little girl I got an astronomy dictionary, and I don't recall it saying "quasar" was a "quasi-stellar radio source," it said "quasi-stellar object." I didn't know that the radio part of the e-m spectrum was important for a quasar till I watched "The Quasar Enigma" from "How the Universe Works," prolly my favorite episode of all (I've seen it innumerable times!)

  • @Vesper_6
    @Vesper_6 21 день тому +3

    Loved it…. Thanks for creating Alex and team… 😎

  • @Ciech_mate
    @Ciech_mate 17 днів тому

    I rewatch your videos they are that good, some bring me nostagia from treasured times in my life, so thank you for that!

  • @kayinoue2497
    @kayinoue2497 21 день тому +3

    Also I love the irony that we detected the first microquasars within a year of discovering Cygnus X-1 but it would be about 14 years before there was concensus that it was '95% change it's actually a black hole' (quoting Prof. Hawking haha). Science is fun like that sometimes.

  • @carbon_no6
    @carbon_no6 10 днів тому +2

    Inverse Compton Scattering..
    Straight Out Of Compton!

    • @deebee201
      @deebee201 3 дні тому

      The boys in the hood are always hard

  • @BorosTheGamer5021
    @BorosTheGamer5021 21 день тому

    This was a fun & interesting video, keep up the awesome work.

  • @nyyue
    @nyyue 21 день тому +406

    I miss when astrum wasn't a clickbait content farm

    • @DataC0llect0r
      @DataC0llect0r 21 день тому +49

      Weird take

    • @TheWatcherxx99
      @TheWatcherxx99 21 день тому +52

      The should we be worried was unnecessary

    • @thomasvnl
      @thomasvnl 21 день тому +16

      ​@@DataC0llect0rnot at all

    • @Yinzermakesvids
      @Yinzermakesvids 21 день тому +30

      It's yourube as a whole, everyone has some sort of clickbait title

    • @kipsned
      @kipsned 21 день тому

      It should be clarified that a thing is considered clickbait it is when it promises one thing and delivers another …this video is technically clickbait. There are NO ACTIVE QUASARS in the Milky Way. There are X-ray binaries which are NOT QUASARS but a small stellar mass black hole accreting matter. So yes this is clickbait

  • @citizen-erased
    @citizen-erased 20 днів тому +2

    Fantastic video. I'm currently doing my honours thesis on observations of TeV gamma rays from AGNs and GRBs. The only thing I would have added is the contribution of synchrotron to charged particle acceleration within the jets, especially as it tends to be more dominant than Inverse Compton within AGNs. Otherwise, you covered everything necessary. Great work.

  • @TWEEMASTER2000
    @TWEEMASTER2000 21 день тому

    Woah a lot of this is new information to me ( minus regular quasar stuff ) great video

  • @tonyc.4392
    @tonyc.4392 21 день тому +11

    JWST has been SO worth the trouble.

  • @bobjackson6669
    @bobjackson6669 21 день тому +2

    Loved the show. Thank you for the 411.

  • @alphaomega154
    @alphaomega154 21 день тому +5

    you are most likely seeing a typical neutron star. neutron stars tend to have appearances similar to quasar. with electrons forming a halo around it(because they cant go between the neutron star core body anymore technically making it a gargantuan single atom). and the gravity emission at the polars excites the electron ring that are lit by it and produce a visible weird light pillar effect. which again, makes it looks like quasars. but its not.
    mind you quasars dont start small.

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 21 день тому

      No, these are stellar mass black hole microquasars.

    • @alphaomega154
      @alphaomega154 21 день тому

      @@tonywells6990 you are making things up from picture that being taken from far away. its a neutron star you are seeing. there is a massive blackhole in the center of the galaxy, quasar doesnt start close to a giant black hole. and distance from witnessed quasars from nearest galaxy/nebula victims must be nearly twice the nebula's own diameter. its so easy to see space picture and making wild claims. bad habit of earth astronomers of calling things they saw whatever they want like people who spy on other people on a building a kilometer away using a telescope and making up story and assumptions about the person they spy on without knowing their lives.

  • @araarashinigami
    @araarashinigami 21 день тому +22

    Having two sets of jets is even more counterintuitive as Hawking radiation originating light years away from a black hole's event horizon. Strange and interesting.

    • @efdangotu
      @efdangotu 21 день тому +5

      Electromagnetism explains a lot.

    • @TheWizardMyr
      @TheWizardMyr 21 день тому +1

      Two jets is just conservation of angular momentum. If it was one sided it would accelerate the black hole no? Jets have nothing to do with Hawking Radiation (We think; No one actually KNOWS what causes jets because only radio loud feasting black holes make them. Why are some feasting black holes radio loud? 🤷‍♂). Hawking radiation is the hypothetical black body radiation of a black hole and it required a math trick.
      All objects that have temperature emit light. We humans emit infrared. Figuring out "why hot thing glow that color" was a huge step in our understanding of quantum mechanics. Hawking "found" this radiation by examining quantum fields infinitely far away from the black hole. Basically a limit if you're familiar with basic Calculus.

    • @araarashinigami
      @araarashinigami 21 день тому

      @@TheWizardMyr Did you even watch the video? No calculus required. There are two SETS of jets, one set starting at the event horizon that end a few light years distance and a second set that start 25 light years away from the black hole, extended to 300 light years.

    • @TheWizardMyr
      @TheWizardMyr 21 день тому

      @@araarashinigamiListen to what he says after he describes that. No one knows whats goin on with jets. We may just not be able to see what's happening in the supposed space between because of something as simple as dust between us and this quasar obscuring this part of the jet. Notice it is this specific quasar that this is occuring at, not a set of quasars that we've observed this at?
      I'll admit I probably misunderstood your comment, however, the topic of jets in general is something that is not well understood and is an field of active study. Could you clarify what you were suggesting? Were you suggesting that the secondary jet supposedly starting farther away is Hawking Radiation?

    • @mcsquared5005
      @mcsquared5005 21 день тому

      ​@@TheWizardMyr That makes so much sense, I never thought about it that way. Without the counter balance of the two jets. Black holes would be traveling. Maybe even reaching velocities a fraction of C or more

  • @kuarifu
    @kuarifu 21 день тому +1

    What a beautiful universe we live in... Cannot be amazed enough by all of this.. Great video as always! 🔥🌟

  • @kraythe
    @kraythe 21 день тому +1

    As usual, excellent vid.

  • @recterbert
    @recterbert 17 днів тому +2

    If you want to see the image of the "spotted" quasar, go to a different video. Alex won't show us.

  • @rustyshackleford5166
    @rustyshackleford5166 21 день тому +2

    I'm seeing it more and more lately, creators are using the screen to ask for things like patron or show ads and I don't mind it. It's far less disruptive than halting an interesting video to do an ad or ask for memberships.
    This is an improvement. I just hope other creators don't take it to the extreme and make it invasive like ads of the past.

  • @Yixuidhalbh
    @Yixuidhalbh 19 днів тому +2

    Space is the most fascinating thing to me. The mind bending phenomena out there make me so excited to learn more. This is truly what I want to do with my life; I want to learn everything there is to know about the mysteries of space. Especially black holes, they are the most enigmatic and fascinating objects in the universe to me

  • @MyChrisable
    @MyChrisable 21 день тому +2

    Good stuff! 👌👌👌

  • @Herkolesboi
    @Herkolesboi 21 день тому +12

    i be lookin at scary space news and being scared for the entire day and forgetting about it in a day

  • @HoTrEtArDeDcHiXx
    @HoTrEtArDeDcHiXx 21 день тому +4

    Outrageous 😮

  • @eunomiac
    @eunomiac 17 днів тому +1

    I thought a quasar was specifically defined as an active galactic nucleus? Have they expanded the definition to cover any active black hole?

  • @Wassup-Doc
    @Wassup-Doc 21 день тому

    Great channel, subbed

  • @anton4ul
    @anton4ul 16 днів тому

    I can bet on my life, that in 10 years nothing in this video will be relative anymore.

  • @dalegreen8151
    @dalegreen8151 21 день тому +3

    First time hearing about mini quasars in the milky-way 🌌

    • @guypainter
      @guypainter 21 день тому

      That's because it's complete nonsense.

  • @Thunder_Dome45
    @Thunder_Dome45 21 день тому

    I just finished taking a long exposure of the Needle Galaxy and saw a few Quasars identified in the area. I didn't know they were in our galaxy but I can see why they would be since a black hole can form near a companion star. I guess a gamma ray burst is a black forming inside a massive star before the outer layers are blown away. That black hole is eating the star before it even fully explodes.

  • @Velocikektor
    @Velocikektor 2 дні тому

    We got Quasars in our galaxy before GTA6

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 20 днів тому +2

    Fascinating!

  • @x73.
    @x73. 20 днів тому +1

    Basically, all existence, for us, is an explosion slowed down to a near standstill and all of the debris in the explosion is acting according to physics. Our entire existence begins and ends in a minute fraction of time within our reality and as a blink in the big bang explosion. Since our lenght of time is so extremely finite, do we really exist?

  • @robbierobinson8819
    @robbierobinson8819 20 днів тому

    Fascinating episode, wonderfully narrated. Magnetic pulses are something new to add to behaviour of particles in space.

  • @cheradenine1980
    @cheradenine1980 21 день тому +1

    Tiny quasars?
    We’d be dead or never extant if there was an actual fucking quasar hosted in our galaxy.
    What’s going on with Astrum these days 🤨🤨🤨

  • @General_Confusion
    @General_Confusion 21 день тому +13

    I wonder how fast one of those micro Quasars could cook a Chicken? Just trying to think of a practical application for them.

    • @ShadowLegend300
      @ShadowLegend300 21 день тому +5

      Finally somebody is asking the real questions!

    • @delatroy
      @delatroy 21 день тому

      570quadrillion years

    • @WaywardBrigand
      @WaywardBrigand 21 день тому +2

      How hot is a quasar in terms of slaps per second?

  • @dawesome_sauce
    @dawesome_sauce 21 день тому

    I always saw quasars as these overwhelmingly powerful objects. So to learn you can have scaled down versions in our own cosmic neighborhood was quite a surprise.

  • @Kudeghraw
    @Kudeghraw 20 днів тому

    If it ends up being a Quasar dragon we should prepare for the end.

  • @jordanwilliams4958
    @jordanwilliams4958 20 днів тому

    Here after 23 hours this video was posted, James Web discovered 2 black holes merging lol

  • @ajkulac9895
    @ajkulac9895 20 днів тому

    Expectation: alien radio
    Reality: nature's death ray

  • @Pleiades721
    @Pleiades721 21 день тому +2

    Further is a measure of degree. Farther is a measure of distance. More light years away would be farther, not further. Not only on this channel, but others as well, I've been pained hearing this repeatedly for years.

  • @Crumbling_Vortex
    @Crumbling_Vortex 17 днів тому

    Bro electrons learned how to backwards long jump 💀

  • @LegionTacticoolCutlery
    @LegionTacticoolCutlery 20 днів тому

    Nothing to worry about. Nothing has happened till now and that quasar has been around for as long as the galaxy we revolve in.

  • @Laurie473
    @Laurie473 16 днів тому

    Really enjoyed this Video Guys, well done !

  • @bwmcelya
    @bwmcelya 16 днів тому

    As a boatman, it’s the blow-holes I’m worried about.

  • @theelephantintheroom69
    @theelephantintheroom69 18 днів тому

    300 light year long jets is insane

  • @Kyleplier
    @Kyleplier 16 днів тому

    Learning there’s quasars in the Milky Way made me think of that one episode of Star Trek The Original Series when the Enterprise was investigating Murasaki 312 in the TOS episode The Galileo Seven.

  • @romado59
    @romado59 21 день тому

    A list of the other micro-Quasars would be nice.

  • @L3eh123
    @L3eh123 21 день тому +2

    Quasar tax incoming

  • @abrahamacosta1056
    @abrahamacosta1056 21 день тому

    Never worry about something you can't control.

  • @the_flushjackson
    @the_flushjackson 9 днів тому

    I generally run around in fear of what lurks in the cosmos -- human beings topping my list, of course.

  • @philliptaylor8270
    @philliptaylor8270 21 день тому +1

    I was intrigued to find out that the energy increases as it leaves and that it increases hypothetically ,to presumably, greater than the speed of light . What a concept!

  • @Dmidnightmachine
    @Dmidnightmachine 21 день тому +5

    The F are you going to do?! Should we be worried, pfft, LOL!

  • @CLipka2373
    @CLipka2373 20 днів тому +2

    Yeah, no.
    There are no quasars in the Milky Way.
    Microquasars - although carrying a similar name and probably being based on similar mechanisms - are not Quasars.
    They're tiny cousins - nephews, if you will - of Quasars, but they do not belong in the Quasar category.
    (For starters, they don't appear as point-like objects, so don't qualify as Quasi-Stellar.)

  • @oysteinsoreide4323
    @oysteinsoreide4323 20 днів тому

    I got surprised by how clickbaity this video was. A quasar is made by supermassive black hole.

  • @Ar1AnX1x
    @Ar1AnX1x 20 днів тому

    "would you believe me when I tell you we have the best of both worlds, quasars in the milky way that we can see and study without it destroying us, but you might ask *how can that be possible?!* it is possible, thanks to our sponsor Quasardash, bring it right to your doorstep"

  • @kirbymarchbarcena
    @kirbymarchbarcena 21 день тому

    I wonder why some mentioned that this video is a "clickbait" when Alex actually discussed Quasars?

  • @FrancisFjordCupola
    @FrancisFjordCupola 21 день тому

    I think the most surprising thing is actually how far we have come from not knowing to building an understanding of quasars.

  • @deisisase
    @deisisase 6 днів тому

    SagA* wouldn't pose any threat to Earth if it was a Quasar. It wouldn't have even been discovered until all the other Quasars were found. It would have to be within 33 light-years, where it would look like a second sun, to pose any harm at all.

  • @nickjc1999
    @nickjc1999 18 днів тому

    The main thing I notice from the first image is the big showing of the PSF, which sends me into a stress spiral because the PSF for the MIRI MRS is STILL broken and 50% too small ;-;

  • @darrkstarg
    @darrkstarg 21 день тому

    I am a Quasar. It's literally in the name :-D
    This was a great video. Quasars that we can study closely? Ohh Yeah! Thats HUGE!
    We can learn so much about how the process works and reveal how quasars from supermassive black holes work.

  • @orionxingu1758
    @orionxingu1758 19 днів тому

    So does it mean that ultimately the entire universe is doomed due to these massive voracious black holes?

  • @ChosenOne41
    @ChosenOne41 20 днів тому

    I would have named Quasars "radio stars", lol

  • @WarrenLacefield
    @WarrenLacefield 17 днів тому

    Can diffusive shock acceleration be utilized in a spacecraft engine? This seems similar to a laser - a gamma ray laser?

  • @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394
    @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394 21 день тому

    Shoot, we had a Quasar when I was a kid. It was a 19 inch black and white.

  • @nihalpushkar3315
    @nihalpushkar3315 20 днів тому

    hi, could you please explain more about why the we observe the shock zone with complicated magnetic field? I mean why we have such magnetic field?

  • @grayaj23
    @grayaj23 21 день тому +1

    Milky Way got its SMBH from Teemu.

  • @mrhassell
    @mrhassell 21 день тому

    Quasars aren’t supposed to exist this close to Earth, even worse they aren't even stars.

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 21 день тому

      The nearest quasar is 581 million light years away. These are microquasars.

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk 19 днів тому

    I had no idea quasars came in Fun Size!

  • @auntvesuvi3872
    @auntvesuvi3872 21 день тому

    Thanks, Alex! ✴

  • @mattscott8961
    @mattscott8961 21 день тому

    I thought quasars were active galactic nuclei. Thanks for clarifying that they are really just a weird radio astronomy observation...and can be 'mini'. I didn't know that...

  • @scottfox543
    @scottfox543 20 днів тому

    I have to be honest, the most surprising thing I found in this video was that full sized quasars aren’t even present in our galaxy. Much less ubiquitous, relatively speaking of course. That was cool to learn. But this is the first time I’ve heard of mini quasars.

  • @mmhuq3
    @mmhuq3 21 день тому

    Awesome video

  • @Meshalleez
    @Meshalleez 21 день тому +10

    Bro never disappoints🤗👍 thanks for sharing 🙏

  • @paulwoodford1984
    @paulwoodford1984 20 днів тому

    We should be more concerned with the neutron star heading our way.

  • @AstaStaria-li1pe
    @AstaStaria-li1pe 21 день тому +241

    What surprised me was the click bait here and the fact that people only just realised there are small quasars in the Milky Way. There are a lot of small everything’s in most galaxies, and I thought it was gonna be a decently sized quasar, but no.

    • @pessimistkai5569
      @pessimistkai5569 21 день тому +9

      Well said

    • @tomholroyd7519
      @tomholroyd7519 21 день тому +30

      i feel like unsubscribing

    • @galmud1508
      @galmud1508 21 день тому +27

      I didn't mind being "click baited" into learning about these micro-quasars. I sort of guessed it had to be about tiny quasars from regular stellar-mass black holes.

    • @tyresefarrell
      @tyresefarrell 21 день тому +22

      yeah i was thinking the same , he calls them quasars but they are just small active black holes, quasars are specifically entire galaxies with active nuclei.

    • @lostinfrance9830
      @lostinfrance9830 21 день тому +33

      Meanwhile there are 8 billion human beans on Earth and 90% of them are still learning about todays understandings of space. get over yourselves

  • @44excalibur
    @44excalibur 21 день тому

    Should we be worried? This is real life, not a John Carpenter movie.

  • @kayinoue2497
    @kayinoue2497 21 день тому

    Whenever active galactic nuclei are mentioned we're contractually obligated to ping Dr. Becky Smethurst lol.

  • @kaladore1982
    @kaladore1982 20 днів тому

    We are nothing but a spec of dust in a hurricane

  • @OrgusDin
    @OrgusDin 21 день тому +1

    quaze it up, we did it milky way bros

  • @cameroncorrosive925
    @cameroncorrosive925 21 день тому

    you know the simulation @11:30 reminds me of what a cell dying under a microscope looks like. it slowly stops moving, and its cell wall bursts open spewing everything outward. just with space the reactions are on such a large scale.

  • @baystated
    @baystated 21 день тому

    How is stellar fusion affected in the giant stat when it has a massive (stellar or collapsed) partner? What constitutes the center of fusion when there are tidal effects? How does a stellar object's fluidic body orbit its center when that center is offset by a massive companion? Does that offset have impacts on the growing layers of fused materials as the star ages and passes through age-phases?

  • @Danchell
    @Danchell 15 днів тому

    We had better find a way to another galaxy.

  • @GoreJizz
    @GoreJizz 20 днів тому

    I love things about space but if I watch too much about it it gives me the Heebie-jeebies.

  • @agathoklesmartinios8414
    @agathoklesmartinios8414 21 день тому +1

    So, how are these microquasars different from regular black hole action? Is every black hole scarfing down stellar matter a (micro)quasar? Or is there a difference?

    • @itsalily_lei_lei
      @itsalily_lei_lei 20 днів тому +2

      Quasars tend to have very active accretion disks and their characteristic relativistic jets. Blackholes with less active accretion disks (or no accretion disk) and no relativistic jets are not quasars.