These posts are needed in classrooms around the country. Any country. They are clear and interesting. I had good instructor who did the same but you have that spark.
Very cool, Anton! I know we’re built from “billion year-old carbon” (Joni Mitchell) but that this carbon came from inter-galactic space truly blows my mind! ❤️
It’s mind blowing to think of all the processes involved that got a carbon atom that was flowing intergalactically billions of years ago to eventually end up as part of a strand of DNA in your body .
Cause of intergalactic particles in our body? Its interesting when you think about it. Ultimately every fundamental particle in the universe came from the same point at the big bang. So in a way its hard to argue why different particles should belong or originate in different galaxies. Through their entire journey they may be fused into another particle in a sun in one galaxy and split by a black hole in another before being flung to another galaxy to be lodged in a neutron star that blew up and shot the particle here to make up 1/1000000000 of my toenail. All we go by is their most recent journey since their last transformation.
My aunt had a first hand experience of a carbon travelling through her body. She took off her jewelry as she usually does to cook and a diamond earring inadvertently ended up in the salad that she ate.
Now I've got the Crosby, Stills and Nash song Woodstock (written by Joni Mitchel) on my brain, which I'm quite happy about ,,, and I DO have to get back to the garden, as it happens...
In pantheism we always believed the universe is God prima facie. Stardust. The signature of life, amino acids, can be found in the interstellar medium. Thanks Anton for this illuminating video.
When I look at the stars and consider their immense distances, it amazes me to think how many lifetimes it would take for us to travel far enough to reach another galaxy. Yet, within our Solar System, we encounter objects that visit from what seems like our local cosmic neighborhood, and sometimes from even farther away. Although it feels like we can't travel very far in our lifetimes, the recent evidence showing that the heavier elements forming our Solar System came from beyond the galaxy-farther back than 4.6 billion years ago-changes that perspective. The very elements within us have traveled across the universe, beyond our galaxy. In a way, we've already journeyed to those distant places, which is truly awe-inspiring.
This just backs up what I have said that we have always been here and will always be here transitioning from one state to the next as a part of a living universe. The entire thing is alive.
@@barbthegreat586 there’s a possibility that you are part of a data stream on a quantum consciousness throughout the universe. You’re just a set of packets.
@ Seek enjoyment and satisfaction where you wish and I will seek the same. I was merely setting the record straight and I believe the way Sagan actually said it seemed more poetic. I wanted others to know that.
Niiice. Im working on a very big ToE and this is one of the things Ive been looking for. Wasn't sure exactly what would be there but I was certain it would be.
👋 Hello, wonderful Anton To answer your question: No, i never wanted to travel THAT far. Very interessant, again. Fuel for my bored brain. Thank you for your exiting channel.
I seem to recall Joni Mitchell saying "we are stardust. We are golden, we are billion year-old carbon, and we've got to make our way back to the garden".
Humans rose from the ashes of dead stars. The light from those dead stars is still traveling to the other side of the universe. Just not visible by us.
The idea of transitioning from a money-based economy to a resource-based economy for collective goals, like colonizing the solar system, is a visionary and complex proposition Money serves as a universal incentive system, aligning diverse goals. Moving away from it would require redefining motivation and collaboration.
It's a bit of a come down to realise that the astonishing set of conditions that resulted in our existences has to be weighed against working at some rubbish job to pay bills.
Interesting questions arise though. How much is just general accretion from gas that fell back into and likely through the galactic plane vs how much is also picked up via accretion as the star system (and likely nebula that originated it) pass above and below the galactic plan vs galactic mergers dragging the gasses along in even greater bursts? Just for starters, then accretion rates at different stages of star system development and more.
Even if you know we're stardust, it's a mindblowing experience to just think about it for a while. Add to it cosmic mega-currents of charged particles and plasma physics, and you arrive at the Plasma Universe - I hope we're finally going to adapt some form of it and give more credit to Hannes Alfven.
@@douglaswilkinson5700 But lots of it is ionized - only then it can be influenced by electromagnetic fields. Space is filled with high energy photons and particles ionizing intergalactic matter to plasma, which allows forming filamentary structures.
@koczisek It all began with Anton saying stardust. In astrophysics dust consists of silicon, iron, various molecules, etc. Carl Sagan said -- in 1973 -- that we are made of starstuff which includes hydrogen, oxygen and a few other gasses. In day to day conversation it makes no difference. In astrophysics it does. Definitions matter.
Galactic scale, time and mind expansion, how wonderful! So a few detectable elements hint that halo gas-matter circulation is great importance to galactic evolution, and our biology. What is the full composition of halo matter, how does this relate to hypothesized "Dark Matter" of gravitational anomaly fame?
I am seeing a lot of convergent information about how the cosmos evolved, and it is my belief that the the POP 3 stars were hardly around for more than a few seconds, and most of the matter and atoms in the cosmos were formed as the first energy began to cool, falling into massive clumps that had just enough space to rebound into the accelerating dimension of space forming as all of matter began to react to itself- like popcorn in a huge popper it blew itself everywhere as the heat had new space to grow into.
Could it be that the places such as astro physical jets and the super heated periphery close to the rim of a super massive black hole, where we know that conditions are so extreme as to cause the dissolution of matter, are the source of galactic recycling? Somehow, matter, having been decomposed, can somehow condense into the simplest element, hydrogen, as building material for new stars.
Holy Halo! Our winds strive trough the stars and propell all worthy along The Golden Path trough Order and Chaos, Expansion and Decay, Live and Death. A Holy Halo. A Beacon bright. Never starting, never ending... Allways present. 💛🖤
See, that’s the bean consuming flora in your gut controlling your behavior, telling you to eat more beans and make juvenile fart jokes. Science has proven fart jokes are created by legume preferring bacteria that have hijacked your brain to make you less disgusted by flatulence so you eat more beans. 🤔
The early super giant blue stars use the CNO (carbon-nitrogen-oxygen) fusion cycle. Since they have relatively short lifespans compared to the main sequence stars, they end up going supernova. Without them doing that, we wouldn't have the heavier elements. Kinda makes one wonder if the very early universe would sound like popcorn popping with those super giant stars going pop-pop-pop (providing, of course, if the energy bursts could be translated into sound waves that we could hear and also sped up so that what happened over hundreds of millions, if not billions, of years could be listened to).
Well, you need to replay the video and listen carefully. He does offer a pretty good explanation. Remember too, he reporting science news, and not necessarily endorsing the findings published.
@@stargazer5784 To clarify, that was a comment I made before listening the video. I was writing this to tell what interested me in clicking the video in the first place. I didn't intend to imply it did not answer my question
Isaac Arthur has an excellent video about the phosphorus problem. In a Type II supernova a just created (by the r-process) silicon-31 atom must absorb a neutron in exactly the right spot. This neutron is unstable and emits an electron thus making it a proton creating stable phosphorus-31. Because of this phosphorus is rare.
I respectfully suggest you might need to think about time in a different way, not only in Einsteinian terms of gravity effects but also that it's "flow" is not necessarily linear.
Not surprised really, I assume extremely diffuse material, including carbon, in between galaxies eventually gets attracted into the galactic magnetic fields.
What if all that carbon is being used to make graphene space stations by aliens hiding on the outskirts of the galaxy...I mean its not particularly reflective and would just look like a cloud dust that periodically forms stars!
It would be interesting if you could take any random atom in your body and trace its history into the past, through whatever star or stars it came from, all the way back to the beginning of the universe.
You’ll never come up with an answer. Any answer that you can come up with would only be a concept. You would have to ask yourself who, or what you were before the appearance of a galaxy, and before the appearance of whatever substance makes up a galaxy
@@Koort1008 I"m not sure what you mean. I don't think I existed before my conception. I'm talking about the atoms my body is made of. I think it would be interesting to know what all any given atom has been through since the beginning of the universe. I imagine it started off during the period of re-ionization when electrons and protons were first able to form stable atoms. Actually, if you take any atom in my body that's not hydrogen, then it probably originated from multiple hydrogen atoms that came out of re-ionization. At some point it became part of a galaxy. Then it coalesced into a star. It might've fused with another hydrogen atom to make helium, which in turn, fused into Lithium, Berelium, etc. Or maybe it survived as hydrogen in that first star, and when that star exploded, it eventually found its way into another start where the fusion happened. Maybe it has been part of three or four stars since the beginning of the universe. At some point, it was part of the last start before our solar system formed. Then it became part of the earth. It probably had a long 4.5 billion year history here on earth. Maybe it was part of a cloud, or maybe it was part of another animal or plant. Maybe it was once buried in the earth or came to the surface through a volcano. Eventually, it found its way into me. I just think it would be really interesting to know. I don't think it's ever possible to know the complete history of any particular atom. I just think it would be interesting to know.
@@philochristos birth, death, beginnings, endings, names, form, time and space are all mere appearances. It’s all an illusion. Any answer you find is within the illusion.
@@Koort1008 Are you an illusion? Is your statement an illusion? If I agree with you that all these things are illusions, then it would seem to follow that my cognitive faculties are completely out of whack because my cognitive faculties are telling me that birth, death, beginnings, etc., are all real. But if they're not real, then my cognitive faculties can't be trusted. If my cognitive faculties can't be trusted, then neither can I trust them to tell me that all these things are illusions. In fact, there's no way for me to adjudicate between what's real and what isn't. So why say anything at all? I might as well be a vegetable.
Recycle!! The miracle of life, maybe not even possible without these elements. I love science.--Second thoughts on this subject seems to imply that there is no way we are the only ones, this process is universal. There MUST be other life out there.
This episode was as well done as any of yours, but the mind-bombs were turned up to eleven. Firstly, it seems researchers are slicing away significant portions of the missing mass that justifies the existence of dark matter. Is the Emperor wearing no clothes? There's no way of knowing at this point, but it's exciting to see this unfold. Second, the question of the relationship between a gas cloak and the health of its galazy seems to raise questions. Which is the cause, and which is the effect? Is the abundance of gas keeping the galaxy healthy, or does a thriving galaxy simply feeding the gas cloak? I had to spend thirty minutes cleaning my desk and monitor, after my head exploded. Thank you, Anton. Happy birthday. Keep breathing.
This is remarkable. To think that all the carbon atoms in us have been around for longer than the solar system. The photons from the sun are about a million years old + 8 minutes.
@@ruudh.g.vantol4306 I had a friend that considered he was literally a dinosaur in a previous life, the thing is he did look and move like a diplodocus. 🐊
Happy birthday Anton!
Is it actually his birthday? I’d didn’t know!
@Milark it's a realy bad relativity joke
birthday!!!
I have always suspected that I was an intergalactic being. My mother frequently said, "What the hell is wrong with you?" This explains a lot.
Oh crap. Is that all she has to say? Well then hello brother.
even intergalactic beings can be utter disappointments to their families.
NANOO NANOOOO!!🖖
An alien more like ‘klaatu barada nikto’ 😂
These posts are needed in classrooms around the country. Any country. They are clear and interesting. I had good instructor who did the same but you have that spark.
Your posts are consistently helpful, providing insights, and prodding me to learn more! Thank you!
$20 ❤ you suck
Very cool, Anton! I know we’re built from “billion year-old carbon” (Joni Mitchell) but that this carbon came from inter-galactic space truly blows my mind! ❤️
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, WONDERFUL ANTON!🥳🍕🍰🍻
🎶"...All we are is dust in the wind."🎶
"And you think you have it still, carbon inside you"
69 dude !!!
star dust!
Actually I was thinking "We are stardust, we are golden...." from the song "Woodstock" by C.S.N.Y!!!
It’s mind blowing to think of all the processes involved that got a carbon atom that was flowing intergalactically billions of years ago to eventually end up as part of a strand of DNA in your body .
Great stuff Anton,
Making scientific research accessible for us all 🙂
It's not Aliens... because WE ARE the aliens! 😂😂
During the vietnam war and ww2, Cheeze Pizza was legal in the USA but was illegal in the Soviet Union. I wished we were still the good guys🐣📸
Cause of intergalactic particles in our body? Its interesting when you think about it. Ultimately every fundamental particle in the universe came from the same point at the big bang. So in a way its hard to argue why different particles should belong or originate in different galaxies. Through their entire journey they may be fused into another particle in a sun in one galaxy and split by a black hole in another before being flung to another galaxy to be lodged in a neutron star that blew up and shot the particle here to make up 1/1000000000 of my toenail.
All we go by is their most recent journey since their last transformation.
Recycled aliens.
Interesting notion 🤔
We are made of star dust
Indeed, a classic, we have gold and star material in our blood.
The actual quote is “We are made of star stuff”.
@ejd53 😂
Actually everything is made of star stuff
AKA nuclear waste
Happy birthday anton hope the best for you and for many years
No,
@@Atok595 ?
@@isadoremizell-qs7nk Apparently, everyone was wishing him a happy birthday yesterday. 🤷♂️
Oh I was probably late😅
Hello wonderful Anton 😊
Galaxies just breathing dude
Happy bday Anton!
This is the best galaxy action show, thanks.
I finished my intergalactic spaceship. There's only room for me and my dog though. I'll send you guys a postcard.
:) I feel You!
Don't forget to bring your towel!
@ I guess you never saw the original Star Trek series...
@ Captain Kirk got the purple alien ladies going.
@ :) still waiting for that Zoe Saldana Guardians/Trek crossover that has been in my mind ever since the Kelvin timeline became a thing...
Joni Mitchell sung we are made of stardust (1969). Carl Sagan said we are made of star stuff (1973).
Joni was a much better poet than Carl. But Carl was very engaging, the Cosmos series and “Contact” ware excellent
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. 👍😎
Happy Birthday! This post reminds me of a song ... 🎵 We are stardust 🎶🎵😊
Great Joni Mitchell song
Happy birthday Anton!
Happy birthday!
So, galaxies are a lot bigger than we thought. They're kind of wispy at the edges, though.
Thanks so much for your daily videos Anton. Fascinating stuff, all the time! Star dust, yesss! ✨🌟💫🌠✨⭐️💫🌠
"intergalactic traveler" reminded me of that david bowie quote in "The man who fell to Earth":
- what do you do for a living?
- oh, i'm just visiting
Sod the carbon Anton, it's the iron in our blood that impresses me ! 🌞
Love watching your videos I'm always learning something everybody should do that at least once a day learn something new
My aunt had a first hand experience of a carbon travelling through her body. She took off her jewelry as she usually does to cook and a diamond earring inadvertently ended up in the salad that she ate.
I don't know why, but 'that smile' gets me smiling every time.
"Good evening ladies and gentlemen... My carbon travelled here from Andromeda, and boy, are my electron shells tired!
Now I've got the Crosby, Stills and Nash song Woodstock (written by Joni Mitchel) on my brain, which I'm quite happy about ,,, and I DO have to get back to the garden, as it happens...
I'm hearing the same ear worm and it's great! We are billion year old carbon
Thanks for another great vid, Anton! Hope your birthday was great 🎉🎉
Anton found your channel again after being on the other side of the planet without UA-cam for years, hope you are doing doing better brother x
So we’re from a long time ago in a galaxy far far away?
1:57 “We are star stuff” Sagan said stuff.
That can't be because I'm stuff
The stars are matter, we are matter, but it doesn't matter- Dan V Vliet (aka cap'n Beefheart).
In pantheism we always believed the universe is God prima facie. Stardust. The signature of life, amino acids, can be found in the interstellar medium. Thanks Anton for this illuminating video.
I love how long u have been doing this vlog.🎉
When I look at the stars and consider their immense distances, it amazes me to think how many lifetimes it would take for us to travel far enough to reach another galaxy.
Yet, within our Solar System, we encounter objects that visit from what seems like our local cosmic neighborhood, and sometimes from even farther away.
Although it feels like we can't travel very far in our lifetimes, the recent evidence showing that the heavier elements forming our Solar System came from beyond the galaxy-farther back than 4.6 billion years ago-changes that perspective. The very elements within us have traveled across the universe, beyond our galaxy. In a way, we've already journeyed to those distant places, which is truly awe-inspiring.
Great video, very interesting, thanks👍❤
This just backs up what I have said that we have always been here and will always be here transitioning from one state to the next as a part of a living universe. The entire thing is alive.
The things we mostly thought of as not alive were actually alive as us.
True but we aren't always the same consciousness.
All is an appearance appearing to an appearance that appears to appear.
@@barbthegreat586 there’s a possibility that you are part of a data stream on a quantum consciousness throughout the universe. You’re just a set of packets.
Agreed but this wasn't your original idea.
Yup 🤗
very interesting research, thank you.
This science news is incredible.
Sagan actually said we are all 'star stuff'.
Life is more fun when you're not a pedant 😙
@ Seek enjoyment and satisfaction where you wish and I will seek the same. I was merely setting the record straight and I believe the way Sagan actually said it seemed more poetic. I wanted others to know that.
@@realzachfluke1Carl Sagan said, "Star stuff" because there is an important difference between "star stuff" and "star dust."
Happy birthday Anton.
Niiice.
Im working on a very big ToE and this is one of the things Ive been looking for. Wasn't sure exactly what would be there but I was certain it would be.
👋 Hello, wonderful Anton
To answer your question: No, i never wanted to travel THAT far. Very interessant, again.
Fuel for my bored brain.
Thank you for your exiting channel.
Happy birthday Sir Anton🤝
I look forward to seeing all the people with the response "nuh uh, because I said so"
Nuh uh, because I said so!
Stopit
100% xD
Don't tell me what to do 😂
@@PikkuKani Good, now I can look backward.
I seem to recall Joni Mitchell saying "we are stardust. We are golden, we are billion year-old carbon, and we've got to make our way back to the garden".
We live inside a cosmic pool game. Nothing really matters. It's a symphony of possibilities some can figure out. Thanks Anton.
Humans rose from the ashes of dead stars. The light from those dead stars is still traveling to the other side of the universe. Just not visible by us.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
Intergalactic planetary
Planetary intergalactic
@@esbee666 ....and you wish you had it still, carbon inside you..
Yratenalp citcalagretni
That's right, a Star died for us... SO, thank your lucky Stars! 🤩🌞
I. Azimov, “The Currents of Space”, 1952
Yes Happy Birthday 🎉 😊 enjoy your time 😊
No wonder I’m so tired
Same, this explains everything. Gonna tell my doc that I think this is why I have hypersomnia.
The idea of transitioning from a money-based economy to a resource-based economy for collective goals, like colonizing the solar system, is a visionary and complex proposition
Money serves as a universal incentive system, aligning diverse goals. Moving away from it would require redefining motivation and collaboration.
Wow. Amazing discovery. Wonder what happens if/when our atoms are quantumly entangled with other atoms in other beings?
Quantum entanglement is a state that's _easily_ broken. Any particle interacting with life will lose entanglement as soon as its perturbed.
so cool!
It's a bit of a come down to realise that the astonishing set of conditions that resulted in our existences has to be weighed against working at some rubbish job to pay bills.
Interesting questions arise though.
How much is just general accretion from gas that fell back into and likely through the galactic plane vs how much is also picked up via accretion as the star system (and likely nebula that originated it) pass above and below the galactic plan vs galactic mergers dragging the gasses along in even greater bursts?
Just for starters, then accretion rates at different stages of star system development and more.
thanks Anton
I wonder how this impacts galaxy formation and cohesion. Can this material account for some of the mass that helps keeps galaxies together?
Even if you know we're stardust, it's a mindblowing experience to just think about it for a while.
Add to it cosmic mega-currents of charged particles and plasma physics, and you arrive at the Plasma Universe - I hope we're finally going to adapt some form of it and give more credit to Hannes Alfven.
Sagan said, "Star stuff." Most is hydrogen gas.
@@douglaswilkinson5700 But lots of it is ionized - only then it can be influenced by electromagnetic fields. Space is filled with high energy photons and particles ionizing intergalactic matter to plasma, which allows forming filamentary structures.
@@koczisek 90% of all matter in our galaxy is hydrogen: neutral hydrogen, molecular hydrogen & ionized hydrogen.
@@douglaswilkinson5700 That sounds just right, but why is it so important considering what I mean here?
@koczisek It all began with Anton saying stardust. In astrophysics dust consists of silicon, iron, various molecules, etc. Carl Sagan said -- in 1973 -- that we are made of starstuff which includes hydrogen, oxygen and a few other gasses. In day to day conversation it makes no difference. In astrophysics it does. Definitions matter.
So when supernovae happen, the heavy elements get ejected from the main disc and then return through the halo flow. Very cool
Galactic scale, time and mind expansion, how wonderful! So a few detectable elements hint that halo gas-matter circulation is great importance to galactic evolution, and our biology. What is the full composition of halo matter, how does this relate to hypothesized "Dark Matter" of gravitational anomaly fame?
SO... Nothing NEW under the Sun...
So how old are we ? We are space travelers? Fascinating material.😮 Thankyou.
That's strange, I don't remember being on a trip like that.
I am seeing a lot of convergent information about how the cosmos evolved, and it is my belief that the the POP 3 stars were hardly around for more than a few seconds, and most of the matter and atoms in the cosmos were formed as the first energy began to cool, falling into massive clumps that had just enough space to rebound into the accelerating dimension of space forming as all of matter began to react to itself- like popcorn in a huge popper it blew itself everywhere as the heat had new space to grow into.
Stellar astrophysicists have calculated that population III stars lived a few million years no seconds.
Could it be that the places such as astro physical jets and the super heated periphery close to the rim of a super massive black hole, where we know that conditions are so extreme as to cause the dissolution of matter, are the source of galactic recycling? Somehow, matter, having been decomposed, can somehow condense into the simplest element, hydrogen, as building material for new stars.
Holy Halo! Our winds strive trough the stars and propell all worthy along The Golden Path trough Order and Chaos, Expansion and Decay, Live and Death. A Holy Halo. A Beacon bright. Never starting, never ending... Allways present. 💛🖤
I have a theory. No oxygen nor carbon means no beans. No beans, no gas. No gas, no life. Eat more beans to keep life going.
See, that’s the bean consuming flora in your gut controlling your behavior, telling you to eat more beans and make juvenile fart jokes. Science has proven fart jokes are created by legume preferring bacteria that have hijacked your brain to make you less disgusted by flatulence so you eat more beans. 🤔
That's a terrible theory.
I love it.
Beans are indeed an empirically magical fruit.
I don't know what you are talking about but I agree and liked your comment.
@friedrichjunzt I don't know what I am talking about, either. I guess I need to go to a psychiatrist for some serious help.
The early super giant blue stars use the CNO (carbon-nitrogen-oxygen) fusion cycle. Since they have relatively short lifespans compared to the main sequence stars, they end up going supernova. Without them doing that, we wouldn't have the heavier elements. Kinda makes one wonder if the very early universe would sound like popcorn popping with those super giant stars going pop-pop-pop (providing, of course, if the energy bursts could be translated into sound waves that we could hear and also sped up so that what happened over hundreds of millions, if not billions, of years could be listened to).
So I clicked on the video, not because I was surprised by the conclusion, but how in the seven hells can they make that claim?!
Well, you need to replay the video and listen carefully. He does offer a pretty good explanation. Remember too, he reporting science news, and not necessarily endorsing the findings published.
@@stargazer5784 To clarify, that was a comment I made before listening the video. I was writing this to tell what interested me in clicking the video in the first place. I didn't intend to imply it did not answer my question
Lack of Phosphorus in space then expected is either evidence against life in the universe or evidence of life . If something obsorbing it
Isaac Arthur has an excellent video about the phosphorus problem. In a Type II supernova a just created (by the r-process) silicon-31 atom must absorb a neutron in exactly the right spot. This neutron is unstable and emits an electron thus making it a proton creating stable phosphorus-31. Because of this phosphorus is rare.
Joni Mitchell got it right!
They now think a lot of heavy elements actually come from neutron star mergers with only some from supernova.
Has the mass of the surrounding cloud of dust been factored into when using dark matter to explain the galaxy rotation speed anomaly?
Just....... WoW.
So from the perspective of the star forming galaxy, what’s driving the structure of this, is it related to the central black hole?
Little nit-pick: Carl Sagan didn't say "we are stardust". He said "we are star stuff". Joni Mitchell said "we are stardust".
Dig that smile 100%
Fascinating!
But sometimes I wonder if 13.8 billion years was really enough for all this to happen...
(It must be, but still...)
I respectfully suggest you might need to think about time in a different way, not only in Einsteinian terms of gravity effects but also that it's "flow" is not necessarily linear.
Not surprised really, I assume extremely diffuse material, including carbon, in between galaxies eventually gets attracted into the galactic magnetic fields.
What if all that carbon is being used to make graphene space stations by aliens hiding on the outskirts of the galaxy...I mean its not particularly reflective and would just look like a cloud dust that periodically forms stars!
Another fun fact is that somewhere between 30 and 50% of the water we drink comes from the interstellar medium and predates the birth of the sun.
🙋🏽♀️anton everyday
Hmmm, closer & closer to MJ-12 and "J-Rod", strangely that this stories kinda continued by leaks till today.
It would be interesting if you could take any random atom in your body and trace its history into the past, through whatever star or stars it came from, all the way back to the beginning of the universe.
You’ll never come up with an answer. Any answer that you can come up with would only be a concept. You would have to ask yourself who, or what you were before the appearance of a galaxy, and before the appearance of whatever substance makes up a galaxy
@@Koort1008 I"m not sure what you mean. I don't think I existed before my conception. I'm talking about the atoms my body is made of. I think it would be interesting to know what all any given atom has been through since the beginning of the universe. I imagine it started off during the period of re-ionization when electrons and protons were first able to form stable atoms. Actually, if you take any atom in my body that's not hydrogen, then it probably originated from multiple hydrogen atoms that came out of re-ionization. At some point it became part of a galaxy. Then it coalesced into a star. It might've fused with another hydrogen atom to make helium, which in turn, fused into Lithium, Berelium, etc. Or maybe it survived as hydrogen in that first star, and when that star exploded, it eventually found its way into another start where the fusion happened. Maybe it has been part of three or four stars since the beginning of the universe. At some point, it was part of the last start before our solar system formed. Then it became part of the earth. It probably had a long 4.5 billion year history here on earth. Maybe it was part of a cloud, or maybe it was part of another animal or plant. Maybe it was once buried in the earth or came to the surface through a volcano. Eventually, it found its way into me. I just think it would be really interesting to know. I don't think it's ever possible to know the complete history of any particular atom. I just think it would be interesting to know.
@ you could give Creedence to any of your ideas but only apparently.
@@philochristos birth, death, beginnings, endings, names, form, time and space are all mere appearances. It’s all an illusion. Any answer you find is within the illusion.
@@Koort1008 Are you an illusion? Is your statement an illusion? If I agree with you that all these things are illusions, then it would seem to follow that my cognitive faculties are completely out of whack because my cognitive faculties are telling me that birth, death, beginnings, etc., are all real. But if they're not real, then my cognitive faculties can't be trusted. If my cognitive faculties can't be trusted, then neither can I trust them to tell me that all these things are illusions. In fact, there's no way for me to adjudicate between what's real and what isn't. So why say anything at all? I might as well be a vegetable.
Recycle!! The miracle of life, maybe not even possible without these elements. I love science.--Second thoughts on this subject seems to imply that there is no way we are the only ones, this process is universal. There MUST be other life out there.
You had it❤
This episode was as well done as any of yours, but the mind-bombs were turned up to eleven.
Firstly, it seems researchers are slicing away significant portions of the missing mass that justifies the existence of dark matter. Is the Emperor wearing no clothes? There's no way of knowing at this point, but it's exciting to see this unfold.
Second, the question of the relationship between a gas cloak and the health of its galazy seems to raise questions. Which is the cause, and which is the effect? Is the abundance of gas keeping the galaxy healthy, or does a thriving galaxy simply feeding the gas cloak?
I had to spend thirty minutes cleaning my desk and monitor, after my head exploded. Thank you, Anton. Happy birthday. Keep breathing.
This is remarkable. To think that all the carbon atoms in us have been around for longer than the solar system. The photons from the sun are about a million years old + 8 minutes.
And with every breath, you take in an atom of anyone that ever lived before you. And when people say literally, they mean statistically.
@@ruudh.g.vantol4306 I had a friend that considered he was literally a dinosaur in a previous life, the thing is he did look and move like a diplodocus. 🐊
Were it not for carbon we would all be only figments of each other's imagination
Yay! Now I can legitimately claim I don't look my (stardust) age!!
Soooo, dark matter isn't needed any more? (to explain the rotation speed)
Maybe.
@rafsandomierz5313 exciting 🥳
That is so lonely traveling for so long and far.
I mean, if he extrapolate far enough, we're all probably made of stuff from many ancient galaxies and matter that originated at the big bang