I appreciate the format of this video. No introductions, no waste of time, no openings, no anecdotes, just straight to the topic and bringing up the planets from the start of the video.
It's enjoyable and perfect to have runing in the background, the visuals are also well done and very watchable. But I'm irritated by the imperial measurements being the voiced default. I'm used to science channel's especially about astronomy accepting the metric as default, or doing both.
@@INeyxImetric is way simpler because it has base 10 which we’re very familiar with, but the imperial is like: 12 inches is 1 foot, and then theres yards and stuff
@thehaj5249 Theoretical means it's based on scientific knowledge. Which, btw, is also called theory for the same reason: we can't truly know anything in science is 100% correct. That said, I'm a lot more sure about any astrophysicist's calculations than I am about my own nation's leaders' sanity.
I like how, to the rest of the universe, WE'RE the anomaly, and everything like this is the norm. Really shows just how lucky a planet has to be to harbor life
But it's not true. This is a list of exceptions. 99% of planets are just a normal shape, and many of them have survivable pressure and temperature. We don't really know much about the air composition of many of those that have an atmosphere, either way, but we do know that the same 4 elements that are most present on our planet and in our atmosphere are *BY FAR* the 4 most common elements in the universe (that's because the simplest elements form more often than the complex ones). This means that the chance that other planets would have an atmosphere somewhat similar to ours are astronomically *high.* And that's compared to humans. Not to life. Life includes extremophiles that, on Earth, can survive extreme pressures and extreme temperatures... there is no reason to believe they wouldn't evolve on other planets as well.
@@happyslapsgiving5421 completely wrong. Of the 5k exoplanets discovered none of them have even 3 of the habitable zones. Only ours. The likelihood or carbon based advanced life like us, is infinitesimally small.
Imagine getting on a planet...and being like “hey...I’m a light this match here...” and as soon as you light that match the whole world bursts into flames...carbon planets seem terrible...
The saddest planet is Earth, because it is so rare and has everything perfectly aligned to produce life and yet its most advanced inhabitants are actively destroying it.
No we're not, you're just being lied to by people who want to line their pockets. The earth is so massive that there's no way 7 billion humans just messing stuff up like we are can really make a dent on a global scale
The gravity on venus is not 100 times stronger than the earth's, the surface pressure is just so strong that it feels like 100 times earth's gravity is pressing on you from all sides.
10/10 video 1. Bean is scariest planet we understand 2. No trash talk straight to point 3. no stupidass bot voiceover 4. Went to those planets to check how terrifying they are
Because there’s no direction in space up down left right straight forward backwards theres 360 degrees to find things All of which are moving excel stars
David, you're a poet. I have never seen a physicist describe the universe so eloquently and poetically as you do. Thank you for these videos. Keep them coming.
At 4:26 you mistakenly say that Venus' gravity is 100 times that of Earth. It's gravity is actually about 90% that of earth, since earth's mass is about 1.23 times that of Venus. I think what you meant is that the atmospheric pressure on the surface of Venus is about 92 times that of the earth due to Venus' thick, noxious atmosphere.
also like he says how a certain planet is going to evaporate soon and if that is right because of how far away it is it already has and he should have said that
I love learning about space. I think it is interesting to learn, and you can learn so much about it. In this video, there was a little mistake with the gravity of Venus, but it’s okay.
Don’t know timestamp but it’s in the first few minutes. They said gravity of Venus is 10x that of earth, which is incorrect. The pressure is roughly 10x earth so I’m guessing that is what they meant.
4:25 "...its gravity is almost 100x stronger than ours..." - Venus gravity is weaker than Earth's but atmospheric pressure is many (like 75) times higher
It pains me so deeply to have been born with the gift to understand this and further knowledge of space exploration (I'm thinking of studying astrophysics or something related) yet I was born in a period where I'll probably never know if we were right about all of this assumptions, y'know?
And while exploring them myself to check out their intricate works and differences to our planet would be more than a dream come true, I wish I could at least get a mere crumb of confirmation, a sign, that we were right, a way of studying them more closely and hoping that maybe some day my species will be there, but in this short human life I'll probably not even get that
@@datboii2877 Perhaps...or perhaps you could. Technically is advancing perpetually fast, increasing going faster. Maybe humans will make tech that support us humans longer than before :)
We wouldn't be worried about that if we indeed lived on some other planet because our bodies would have adapted to the climate and environment of said planet. Humans are the way they are because of the way the Earth is. Had we lived on a different planet, we'd be completely different beings.
Impressive video, introducing the concept of boundaries in our infinite universe. The idea that there might be something beyond what we're accustomed to seeing is intriguing. A mind-boggling shift in our perception of the world if it were proven that everything has its limits
Since most planets we see are many light years away, that also means that what we see are also what was in the past. So maybe once we get closer, it' may be completely different.
Exactly. Who's to say some Earth-like planet at least several hundred lightyears away isn't at the exact same technological and civilizational level as earth, yet we can't see each other precisely because of that distance?
That video was very interesting! It's amazing to me how there's ice on the planets even though it's hot there and the thought that there could be big seamonsters is very cool but also scary😱
Silica rain sounds interesting, or a planet covered in fiery tar. For some reason the ocean planets are the most terrifying to me. Theres just something about 60 miles of water + crushing pressure
The more and more exo planets we find. The more lucky we are to be here. Yet we are irrelevant if we were here or not. The universe would continue on with it's riegn of chaos.
@tigerlilysapphire they don't know all these things. It's all assumptions. Look up the method they use to find planets and tell yourself how are they able to tell these things.
Scientists really do be finding the best or most fascinating things about a planet, not giving a name about the characteristics, and instead slam on the keyboard to decide their names
You're crazy if you really think we know more about these other planets than we do our own ocean. These other planets have oceans as well that we will never know or understand because we can't even understand our own ocean. 🤦
because once you get to the depth of the titanic you explode. whereas we have multiple telescopes floating throughout space sending pictures and multiple telescopes on earth that can view into space way further
A Pulsar Star is really just a Neutron Star spinning at super fast speeds while emitting electromagnetic waves, and I believe the intense gravity of the star is also to blame for the planets being slowly destroyed.
i dont understand how we know that these exist but can never travel to them (the ones that are light years away) but we somehow know so much about them
Because it's all assumptions. They have no idea about a lot of these. Like raining glass? No way they can tell it has raining glass when the only way they can find these planets is when they look at a star and see how many times an object passes it
9:00 I imagine the first to be found would probably be appropriately named Hades if they don't wanna immediately designate a serial number to the first...
Imagine if the life in some of these places can still exist regardless of pressure and missing minerals and all that. Probably has to have very specific genetics to even live in some of these places
I wish they would've been more true to the thumbnail, I haven't even watched it yet but I'm very sure it's an impossible existence yet that's what makes it so interesting to me.
That comment aside, I LOVE you guys' videos. Very educational! I love astronomy and planetary science. Keep it up, I can't wait to see what you do next!
This is sooo niche but the narrator reminds me of that AI in the form of that old gentleman from Star Trek discovery (the one that interviewed Michelle yeoh’s character) 👌🏾💜
Just found this channel! This voice has given me Mythbusters and how it's made flashbacks 😂 Might be a completely different actor but it's a great voice regardless
What’s crazy to think about, is that these places are existing RIGHT NOW. Like currently as you read this there is lightning striking on one of these planets. Likely somewhere there is somewhere that has something like grass, it’s morning and the there is dew on it. That’s happening right now.
@@Dr.MyfatBALLSinOhio I don’t fear them at all, it’s just crazy to think it’s actually out there. We get so involved with what’s going on with our lives, personally to me I only really think about space at night when I see the stars. It’s just trippy to think that right now as we speak there is probably a beautiful green planet with grass waving in the wind. Maybe only plant life blossomed there. Never an animal or humanoid set foot. It’s there right now.
We EVOLVED on Earth, that is why we are suited to it. We weren't placed here and just luckily adjusted. So many people see our planet as proof of design - it is so frustrating that they stop short of understanding evolution.
I was wondering, with the constantly increasing pressure of the water planets depths would it eventually become so pressurized that the water would take on the form of a solid without being ice like a wall of water? Just wondering
15:39 the planet being mentioned here, from just the generalized info given and keeping to circular orbit for simplicity, would be orbiting in this system at about 36% the speed of light... I have so many questions about how things would look to an observer on this planet.
I have no science background whatsoever, but I wonder how an orbit that speed would affect aging and/or the passage of time? Or how time is perceived to "people" living there?
Water world definitely fascinate me, i totally feel like their could be life under that ice some how. Kinda like how our deep oceans have volcanoes providing since the sun cant reach that deep idk
Some visible stars are tens of thousands of light years away, and have been confirmed having planets around them, and even the size of the planets can be determined, based on the dimming of the star on regular intervals with respect to the known size and brightness of the type of star. All of these planets whether single light-years away or tens of thousands of light years away are analyzed the same. Even the close star planets can't actually be seen. Only determined they are there using other scientific means.
This video started like a typical superficial clickbait video and somehow suddenly turned super interesting and scientific towards the middle, I actually really enjoyed everything after the "scary" list, so great job lol
Im immensely confused how we just happen to know what’s on the planets and gas giants so far away like what they’re made of, their actual size, what their depth of an ocean is. It’s mostly all theory but like how would we know about the carbon planet if we can’t physically observe it
Dr. Becky talks about some of the science behind it. A too short, I'm not a scientist version, is that light we observe carries a lot of information and light has a huge spectrum. Also math and models based on our solar system I'd imagine and extrapolating. It sounds hard to know depth but we can tell what did is made of by light and gravity probably tells us density of the planet by size so we can estimate how much liquid, rock, etc would fit the size. Don't repeat this like it's a fact. It's from memory and I'm not a scientist and made some educated/ intuitive guesses from what I've learned.
Great video, but a couple of errors I noticed. TOI 1452b is 70% bigger than Earth, not "7 times bigger" (which is 700%). Secondly, the planet is 0.061 AU (5.7m miles) from its star, not "2.5 times Pluto to the sun" (7.4 billion miles) which is in fact the distance between the star's binary partner star. Sorry to nerd out!
I appreciate the format of this video.
No introductions, no waste of time, no openings, no anecdotes, just straight to the topic and bringing up the planets from the start of the video.
It honestly took me by surprise lol. I was like "has the video started yet??"
It's enjoyable and perfect to have runing in the background, the visuals are also well done and very watchable.
But I'm irritated by the imperial measurements being the voiced default.
I'm used to science channel's especially about astronomy accepting the metric as default, or doing both.
Why is there ice on the planet gliese?
@@convertiblebert591 because strong gravity keep the ice in solid form. Think dry ice.
@@INeyxImetric is way simpler because it has base 10 which we’re very familiar with, but the imperial is like: 12 inches is 1 foot, and then theres yards and stuff
I love how every new planet discovered is the scariest planet ever discovered
Earth so far seems to be the safest for us, and it's terrifying too!
@@existentia1krisis *80% of the ocean is unexplored.*
@@ShockInazuma you don't find that terrifying?
@@existentia1krisis I find it intriguing.
@@ShockInazuma I used to find it intriguing. Then I visited the ocean for the first time. At night, while tripping heavily.
Water worlds fascinate me. I have minor thalassophobia, but the idea that an Atlantis-like planet with solely water-based life in it would be amazing.
I’m thinking subnautica 😂 4546b
I think those planets are just full of mermaids and Atlantian type beings and of course animals.
Im more of an astronomy guy, but yes. It is quite interesting, I wonder if we will ever reach the end of the ocean?
If you play video games and like the thrill of exploring your fears, I would highly recommend Subnautica💙
I loved the film Europa Report.
The fact that your video started immediately without some annoying intro was so refreshing. Subbing just for that alone
It's nice but i thought i must of watch this before bcuz the way it played it looks like it played where I left off lol
@@dianamorales7335 must have*
@@AdminAbuse "Actually it's must have 🤓"
@@novaboom5229 just turn the "actually" into "ACKSHUALLY"
They ain’t wasting time dear. We’re here for it
I looked at the thumbnail and the only thing that came up to my mind was "B E A N"
the Samsung earbuds hehe
Same
Are you dani
A peanut
With a ring
the fact that us humans have so much available data about space at our fingertips is astonishing and amazing
Our human knowledge is limited about space time we only know about our solar system so far
Agreed
But yet we can't figure out our own planet. Like how to get along.
Much of this is wrong. For example, Venus does not have 100 times earths gravity. It's about 9/10ths. Interesting video tho.
@thehaj5249 Theoretical means it's based on scientific knowledge. Which, btw, is also called theory for the same reason: we can't truly know anything in science is 100% correct.
That said, I'm a lot more sure about any astrophysicist's calculations than I am about my own nation's leaders' sanity.
I like how, to the rest of the universe, WE'RE the anomaly, and everything like this is the norm. Really shows just how lucky a planet has to be to harbor life
it's unfortunate not lucky.
Luck or design?
But it's not true.
This is a list of exceptions.
99% of planets are just a normal shape, and many of them have survivable pressure and temperature.
We don't really know much about the air composition of many of those that have an atmosphere, either way, but we do know that the same 4 elements that are most present on our planet and in our atmosphere are *BY FAR* the 4 most common elements in the universe (that's because the simplest elements form more often than the complex ones). This means that the chance that other planets would have an atmosphere somewhat similar to ours are astronomically *high.*
And that's compared to humans.
Not to life.
Life includes extremophiles that, on Earth, can survive extreme pressures and extreme temperatures... there is no reason to believe they wouldn't evolve on other planets as well.
How is it luck when it was designed this way over billions of years..?
@@happyslapsgiving5421 completely wrong. Of the 5k exoplanets discovered none of them have even 3 of the habitable zones. Only ours. The likelihood or carbon based advanced life like us, is infinitesimally small.
Imagine getting on a planet...and being like “hey...I’m a light this match here...” and as soon as you light that match the whole world bursts into flames...carbon planets seem terrible...
On the other hand, US would be like "free real estate"...
Why are you going to space without a flashlight?
That planet needs oxygen to burst into flames and it needs a lot of it
@@roselight4321 Nah dude just bring a tiny house plant
*"Let there be light."*
The saddest planet is Earth, because it is so rare and has everything perfectly aligned to produce life and yet its most advanced inhabitants are actively destroying it.
Boooooo
We can't do anything to destroy it
Mf we have been doing the same "harmful" deeds for the last 100 years, nothings changed, you are a traitor to the race of earth ya know that.
No we're not, you're just being lied to by people who want to line their pockets. The earth is so massive that there's no way 7 billion humans just messing stuff up like we are can really make a dent on a global scale
Blame zionist for that
The gravity on venus is not 100 times stronger than the earth's, the surface pressure is just so strong that it feels like 100 times earth's gravity is pressing on you from all sides.
Are you a nerd or something?
Thank you for correcting that. When he said it's gravity was almost 100 times ours I knew that couldn't be right.
@@jeffgarncarz3729every planet: gets yanked to Venus
Yeah, I picked up on that straight away. Atmospheric pressure, not gravity...there's a difference.
Just came to upvote this, apparently "Bright Side" wants to put 3 and half suns in Venus orbit.
I love the narrator's voice
Sounds so positive when talking about devastating conditions of planets
I love that this video just jumps rite in. I get tired of skipping 60-300 seconds to find the actual content. Thanks!
10/10 video
1. Bean is scariest planet we understand
2. No trash talk straight to point
3. no stupidass bot voiceover
4. Went to those planets to check how terrifying they are
Why you said stupidass☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️👉☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️😳☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️😳☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️
it’s epic how big the space is and really beautiful but deadly
Э̶
More planest out there then grains of sand on earth......Just imagine what we haven't seen yet.
Because there’s no direction in space up down left right straight forward backwards theres 360 degrees to find things All of which are moving excel stars
David, you're a poet.
I have never seen a physicist describe the universe so eloquently and poetically as you do.
Thank you for these videos.
Keep them coming.
These kind of videos really help me sort out my priorities and appreciate where I live.
At 4:26 you mistakenly say that Venus' gravity is 100 times that of Earth. It's gravity is actually about 90% that of earth, since earth's mass is about 1.23 times that of Venus. I think what you meant is that the atmospheric pressure on the surface of Venus is about 92 times that of the earth due to Venus' thick, noxious atmosphere.
The world needs us nerds!
@@samuellarsson3842 bro liked his iwn comment
@@samuellarsson3842 nerd is nit an insult and nerds are not like this: 🤓
@@1lk3fr0gs bro can’t spell 😭
Yes! Thank you for correcting this :)
I'm convinced the water planets have terrifying creatures
BTW SORRY MY SOOONNNN WAS SPEAKING IM VERY SORRY.
Love how they know all this just by looking at a few shadows from the planets as they pass the stars 100s of light years away
also like he says how a certain planet is going to evaporate soon and if that is right because of how far away it is it already has and he should have said that
The amazing power of science, conjecture and a lot of guessing. 👍
@@LoneTiger Not quite guessing, you can deduce a lot from the parent sun, orbits, spectral signatures and planetary masses.
@@peterbreis5407 Educated guessing.
It is more than that
I love learning about space. I think it is interesting to learn, and you can learn so much about it. In this video, there was a little mistake with the gravity of Venus, but it’s okay.
That's a fair statement, and was probably said that way to make it easier to understand for the average intelligence viewer.
@@lukeporter6321 It's wrong anyways and should not be said to people of any level of IQ.
Timestamp for the mistake pls?
Don’t know timestamp but it’s in the first few minutes. They said gravity of Venus is 10x that of earth, which is incorrect. The pressure is roughly 10x earth so I’m guessing that is what they meant.
@@kittyylovescats 4:25
Who tf named these 💀
Me
@@oxy-us5gy makes sense
Elon
Some guy in my basment
@@JurassicDragon1k its actually me 🥰
4:25 "...its gravity is almost 100x stronger than ours..." - Venus gravity is weaker than Earth's but atmospheric pressure is many (like 75) times higher
His tongue got twisted ig
Best 26 minutes I spent on UA-cam this week, thank you for all the work you put into making this video.
lost media youtubers talking about a missing episode of peppa pig: 🗿
this guy talking about real existental horrors in our own universe: 😇
Kids watch cartoons that’s what they do tons of kids watch UA-cam. There’s something for everybody on here.
I love the “whose name I won’t even try to pronounce” when all the names are just a series of letters and numbers read one at a time.
Hats off for the camera man 🫡
This time I personally flew to shoot
@@brightside_series no you have animated it
@@dholekisan8445 it was a joke, man
@@brightside_series how did you survive please tell me how.
@@elinahkobusingye7707 its a joke
It pains me so deeply to have been born with the gift to understand this and further knowledge of space exploration (I'm thinking of studying astrophysics or something related) yet I was born in a period where I'll probably never know if we were right about all of this assumptions, y'know?
And while exploring them myself to check out their intricate works and differences to our planet would be more than a dream come true, I wish I could at least get a mere crumb of confirmation, a sign, that we were right, a way of studying them more closely and hoping that maybe some day my species will be there, but in this short human life I'll probably not even get that
@@datboii2877 Perhaps...or perhaps you could. Technically is advancing perpetually fast, increasing going faster. Maybe humans will make tech that support us humans longer than before :)
Yeah Fr ❤
If you think about it (especially if u have astraphobia), anything that is in space would be scary.
ah, so there's a word for it..
@@existentia1krisis yup
Just imagine u were floating in space and didn't realize one of these planets is where u heading towards.
@@ujayet welp goodluck
space gives me chills but its my only interest
We’re so lucky to be on Earth 🌎
Where else could we be?
@@A-non-theist mars
We wouldn't be worried about that if we indeed lived on some other planet because our bodies would have adapted to the climate and environment of said planet. Humans are the way they are because of the way the Earth is. Had we lived on a different planet, we'd be completely different beings.
We'd be no beings but the talk of other beings on livable planets.
Impressive video, introducing the concept of boundaries in our infinite universe. The idea that there might be something beyond what we're accustomed to seeing is intriguing. A mind-boggling shift in our perception of the world if it were proven that everything has its limits
Since most planets we see are many light years away, that also means that what we see are also what was in the past. So maybe once we get closer, it' may be completely different.
Yup. In mass effect Andromeda that happens and screws everything up
It's crazy how that works, be far enough away, and you'd see dinosaurs on earth
Exactly. Who's to say some Earth-like planet at least several hundred lightyears away isn't at the exact same technological and civilizational level as earth, yet we can't see each other precisely because of that distance?
im curious, how would this work?
@@naikoruu_I’m curious about that too.
I love listening and Learning about planets in our galaxy I think it’s insane but awesome at the same time
And that's just the observational galaxy there's more we don't have to tech to see
Absolutely, I agree, but some of these were not from our particular Milky Way galaxy. 😉 Which makes all of this even more interesting. 🙃
Me too.
My toxic trait is believing I could live on these planets.
That video was very interesting! It's amazing to me how there's ice on the planets even though it's hot there and the thought that there could be big seamonsters is very cool but also scary😱
There are big sea monsters on earth, ever heard of a colossal squid?
@@Qualicabyss Sounds very incredible!
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
@@gastonadrien2692 y khoa cv🏛️jy4wn b wyq wtetetweew&|||wc cgqvg😊😊
😊
I get anxiety from this, but couldnt stop watching. Great video ☀️
Silica rain sounds interesting, or a planet covered in fiery tar. For some reason the ocean planets are the most terrifying to me. Theres just something about 60 miles of water + crushing pressure
And ones that rain iron and glass.
i shall give thanks to the cameraman who were able to see all of these weird planets
overworked and underpaid for sure
clearly didnt see them if he was behind the camera
The more and more exo planets we find. The more lucky we are to be here. Yet we are irrelevant if we were here or not. The universe would continue on with it's riegn of chaos.
This was worded so… well? Lol I liked it. Thanks.
I think the universe ftmp is pretty peaceful. Things stay in orbits for billions of years.
I like this kind of video. Unbiased, some humor, and straight into explaining things.
Hatsoff to the cameraman for taking this video from across billion light years 😹
Typical
Wormholes are the real heroes here
who's gonna tell them..
uhhh
I will fist fight you in the parking lot 🧐
POV : Your brain trying to figure out how they know the exact temperatures and wind speeds if no one has actually landed on these planets 🤔👁️👄👁️
Machines with sensors....
Its cap
I am so glad I’m not the only one thinking this.
I must confess, I LOVE BRIGHT SIDE Series ( especially these videos 😀)
btw, 1:08 🤔
Well which one is it? HD 189 377B or HD 189 733B?
i love learning about planets and how they work. it's so interesting
Amazing how scientists can know so much about these strange planets.
they dont 💀
@@kalebbailey8853Wdym bru
@@kalebbailey8853 For not being on them, yeah its incredible how we can know so much about it.
@tigerlilysapphire they don't know all these things. It's all assumptions. Look up the method they use to find planets and tell yourself how are they able to tell these things.
I was watching videos about Astrophobia to scare myself and now I'm extremely interested in all of this😭
That bean planet will come in my nightmare
B E A N
Scientists really do be finding the best or most fascinating things about a planet, not giving a name about the characteristics, and instead slam on the keyboard to decide their names
Why do we know so much about such dangerous planets, but we know so little about our own oceans?
Boredom.
Maybe these are just physics theories
You're crazy if you really think we know more about these other planets than we do our own ocean. These other planets have oceans as well that we will never know or understand because we can't even understand our own ocean. 🤦
because once you get to the depth of the titanic you explode. whereas we have multiple telescopes floating throughout space sending pictures and multiple telescopes on earth that can view into space way further
Because these are just theories. Educated guess.
A Pulsar Star is really just a Neutron Star spinning at super fast speeds while emitting electromagnetic waves, and I believe the intense gravity of the star is also to blame for the planets being slowly destroyed.
Also, if a planet is without a star, it's called a Rouge Planet, meaning that it's just floating around in space with no heat and/or light source.
Meanwhile on Kepler 186F: "Wonder what kind of 'intelligent' life there's on Earth".
i dont understand how we know that these exist but can never travel to them (the ones that are light years away) but we somehow know so much about them
Because it's all assumptions. They have no idea about a lot of these. Like raining glass? No way they can tell it has raining glass when the only way they can find these planets is when they look at a star and see how many times an object passes it
9:00 I imagine the first to be found would probably be appropriately named Hades if they don't wanna immediately designate a serial number to the first...
17:46 Bro just roasted the entire human race.
Let's not forget. Distant celestial bodies are seen in the past. Most of the planets mentioned here have already met their fate.
And it's all assumptions
Imagine if the life in some of these places can still exist regardless of pressure and missing minerals and all that. Probably has to have very specific genetics to even live in some of these places
That planet with the flying glass is insane is like a giant blender
Ein witziger Planet Interesante Videos auch mit keppler 22b ...usw. stark☃️☃️☃️☃️
I wish they would've been more true to the thumbnail, I haven't even watched it yet but I'm very sure it's an impossible existence yet that's what makes it so interesting to me.
The clickbait got us
It's actually possible for an exoplanet to have that form, caused by the pulling of its sun
Seeing soemthing like this makes me smile because I love space and learning about it!
That comment aside, I LOVE you guys' videos. Very educational! I love astronomy and planetary science. Keep it up, I can't wait to see what you do next!
Thank you, and we love you too ❤️
Hello brightside😊
This is sooo niche but the narrator reminds me of that AI in the form of that old gentleman from Star Trek discovery (the one that interviewed Michelle yeoh’s character) 👌🏾💜
Just found this channel!
This voice has given me Mythbusters and how it's made flashbacks 😂
Might be a completely different actor but it's a great voice regardless
What’s crazy to think about, is that these places are existing RIGHT NOW.
Like currently as you read this there is lightning striking on one of these planets. Likely somewhere there is somewhere that has something like grass, it’s morning and the there is dew on it. That’s happening right now.
Why fear them when they don't affect you?
@@Dr.MyfatBALLSinOhio I don’t fear them at all, it’s just crazy to think it’s actually out there. We get so involved with what’s going on with our lives, personally to me I only really think about space at night when I see the stars.
It’s just trippy to think that right now as we speak there is probably a beautiful green planet with grass waving in the wind. Maybe only plant life blossomed there. Never an animal or humanoid set foot. It’s there right now.
It's all just assumptions
Really cool I enjoyed that!
Ok furry loser
I like the one where it rains glass sideways !
I really enjoyed this video. Excellent narration with just the right amount of humor. Fascinating information. New sub!!
I like this video. no unnesessary info. right to the point, and engaging. :)
At first we willingly bring beans into our homes, shelter them. But as we were slowly piece together the puzzles…
*we found their home planet*
Excellent vide6.
Thanks for teaching me about our extremely beautiful and mysterious universe
8:47 Uncle Sam: Wait ..... what. ... Oil??? (Fortunate son plays in background)
Original joke
We EVOLVED on Earth, that is why we are suited to it. We weren't placed here and just luckily adjusted. So many people see our planet as proof of design - it is so frustrating that they stop short of understanding evolution.
I think about this all the time. Like what other life is out there on a planet deemed “uninhabitable” for humans because they adapted to it?
Did you know?:
That Neptune and Uranus both have diamond rain?
Interesting. Do you know why?
I was wondering, with the constantly increasing pressure of the water planets depths would it eventually become so pressurized that the water would take on the form of a solid without being ice like a wall of water? Just wondering
Yes. It probably would be some sort of ice-like crystal
Water under pressure becomes ice. Try squeezing an ice cube. It'll refreeze for a short time.
9:07 I mean yeah ofc, Crude Oil? Gasoline rain? That planet better start running, it would be impossible to survive if the U.S found out about it
Finally a straight to the point video with no introduction 👍
It's crazy how many hells are in the universe but no heavens
Earth seems like heaven compared to these
Earth
15:39 the planet being mentioned here, from just the generalized info given and keeping to circular orbit for simplicity, would be orbiting in this system at about 36% the speed of light... I have so many questions about how things would look to an observer on this planet.
I have no science background whatsoever, but I wonder how an orbit that speed would affect aging and/or the passage of time? Or how time is perceived to "people" living there?
@hiimterry2009 it definitely would the iss experiences time dilation as well
Water world definitely fascinate me, i totally feel like their could be life under that ice some how. Kinda like how our deep oceans have volcanoes providing since the sun cant reach that deep idk
1:40 Fastest wind speed ever recorded globally by humans was in Moore, Oklahoma 1999 May, 03 301 mph!! 487 kph!!
Who is here in 2025?
me but thank you for saying🎉❤
I'm here in 2025!
Me
Me Me Me 2:22
Did anyone else notice at 1:08, the number on the screen is “HD 189733 b,” he says “HD 189377 b”?
Some visible stars are tens of thousands of light years away, and have been confirmed having planets around them, and even the size of the planets can be determined, based on the dimming of the star on regular intervals with respect to the known size and brightness of the type of star. All of these planets whether single light-years away or tens of thousands of light years away are analyzed the same. Even the close star planets can't actually be seen. Only determined they are there using other scientific means.
This video started like a typical superficial clickbait video and somehow suddenly turned super interesting and scientific towards the middle, I actually really enjoyed everything after the "scary" list, so great job lol
very nice and informative! fantastic sharing my friend!
Im immensely confused how we just happen to know what’s on the planets and gas giants so far away like what they’re made of, their actual size, what their depth of an ocean is. It’s mostly all theory but like how would we know about the carbon planet if we can’t physically observe it
Dr. Becky talks about some of the science behind it. A too short, I'm not a scientist version, is that light we observe carries a lot of information and light has a huge spectrum. Also math and models based on our solar system I'd imagine and extrapolating. It sounds hard to know depth but we can tell what did is made of by light and gravity probably tells us density of the planet by size so we can estimate how much liquid, rock, etc would fit the size.
Don't repeat this like it's a fact. It's from memory and I'm not a scientist and made some educated/ intuitive guesses from what I've learned.
It's just all assumptions. They have no idea
My brain: hmm backrooms as planets???
Respect for the camera man 🫡
Saturn: My planet has rings!
J1407b: My rings have a planet?!
Someone should let OP know that we can’t ‘swim’ to the bottom of the ocean here either. 😅
Great video, but a couple of errors I noticed. TOI 1452b is 70% bigger than Earth, not "7 times bigger" (which is 700%). Secondly, the planet is 0.061 AU (5.7m miles) from its star, not "2.5 times Pluto to the sun" (7.4 billion miles) which is in fact the distance between the star's binary partner star. Sorry to nerd out!
i'll be waiting for a planet that's habitable to be called Reach
Its amazing and scary how these planets are so very hostile to us!
Watching these kind of videos of different planets and their specialities of totally filled with fire water or wind make me suffocate and breathless😖
Fun vid, I gotta ask @4:25 when you said gravity did you mean temperature? I though Earth has the highest gravity of the rocky world's in Sol
2:24 schlowly
Who’s watching this in 2024
👇
What if we accomplished making Antimatter Spacecraft that can travel upto 72million mph which of the super earth should we really go to?
I love how he calls some of the planets cute
Thanks for the new information! I love it, SUBSCRIBED!
0:46 no way kankri homestuck i love that guy