M21 - 8-million-year-old stars - Deep Sky Videos

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  • Опубліковано 3 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 114

  • @ELYESSS
    @ELYESSS 8 років тому +143

    "A naked top and a well populated bottom means you're old" -Brady John Haran 2016

    • @xiaoxiao01
      @xiaoxiao01 8 років тому +1

      im wondering, is that a bald dude with a lot of hair on his back or a bald dude with a big junk?... or hairy legs? :P

    • @ChaosPootato
      @ChaosPootato 8 років тому

      It's genius xD

    • @MusicalRaichu
      @MusicalRaichu 8 років тому +13

      and Mike replies about reading it "at a *crude* level".

    • @L0j1k
      @L0j1k 5 років тому

      Wew!

  • @omeshsingh8592
    @omeshsingh8592 8 років тому +61

    A non-boring video on an open cluster. Well done.

  • @d0themath284
    @d0themath284 8 років тому +2

    i love the sadness and disappointment in brady's voice!
    he got so excited, but then it was all taken away.

  • @xyz.ijk.
    @xyz.ijk. 4 роки тому +1

    That was one of the most effective presentations of any of these videos. And it was hilarious.

  • @TheVeryHungrySingularity
    @TheVeryHungrySingularity 8 років тому +5

    I love these videos. All the people involved with this and related channels are fantastic.

  • @terahlunah
    @terahlunah 8 років тому +36

    "Amas d'étoiles près du précédent " is French for "Heap of stars close to the previous one"

  • @MattiasCL
    @MattiasCL 8 років тому +2

    One of the more interesting videos in a while on deep sky videos! Keep em coming 😄

  • @paulebberson4884
    @paulebberson4884 4 роки тому

    Super video - lots of new science for me. The Q&A format is spot on too.

  • @philorkill
    @philorkill 8 років тому +1

    I just love the deep sky series! Keep it up!

  • @gumunduringigumundsson9344
    @gumunduringigumundsson9344 8 років тому +1

    weeee a new one!! made my day. Seen all deep sky videos at least 2 to 20 times. Like so much every single participant of deep sky videos particularly. Thank you.

  • @johnh539
    @johnh539 Рік тому

    This "find something interesting" approach just keeps teaching me fascinating detail I have never heard before.
    Really enjoying watching my way though the sett.😊

  • @marvelous1358
    @marvelous1358 4 роки тому

    These are the best videos on UA-cam

  • @celestialrangi3602
    @celestialrangi3602 8 років тому

    nice open cluster, I'm just getting started and I been watching u for a little while now, thanks mate subbed

  • @blshouse
    @blshouse 8 років тому +4

    Why is his shirt on inside out? It can't have gone unnoticed when he was miked.

  • @mrechonet
    @mrechonet 8 років тому +56

    Shirt inside out

    • @jayatherton8673
      @jayatherton8673 8 років тому

      I thought so!

    • @Deif88
      @Deif88 8 років тому +17

      probably because there are brand prints on the shirt and instead of spending hours in post-production to blur everything to avoid copyright issues or unintentional product placement he just turned the shirt inside out.

    • @peterbucek2136
      @peterbucek2136 8 років тому +1

      But why?😂

    • @frognik79
      @frognik79 8 років тому +2

      Like an inside out shirt and a well populated bottom.

    • @666Tomato666
      @666Tomato666 8 років тому +1

      +Peter Bucek BBC rules on advertising

  • @MountainFisher
    @MountainFisher 6 років тому +2

    I totally remember looking at pictures of star clusters in our encyclopedia when I was a kid in 1960. Pictures from the Wickes and Lowell observatories. I even talked my granddad into taking me to the Mt Wilson observatory not too far from where we lived, I was ecstatic, but alas I didn't get to look through one of their telescopes. I didn't become an astronomer, but did become a biologist working in the aerospace field. I'm retired now, but I did get to become a scientist.

    • @martinpickard6043
      @martinpickard6043 5 років тому

      Nice. A lucky young lad got to follow through on his dreams.
      I hope his grandad got to know how he helped shape a young boys dreams into a lifelong ambition.
      Hope you got the chance to pass it on.

  • @Slywolf1992
    @Slywolf1992 7 років тому

    Very good explanation

  • @MrPostm
    @MrPostm 8 років тому +3

    I love Brady's chain of reactions in the beginning...

  • @ckmishn3664
    @ckmishn3664 8 років тому +1

    I know this channel doesn't tend to get updated all that often or deal with astronomical news but I would be interested in getting the take of the regular contributors to your videos on the news of a potentially habitable planet being found orbiting Proxima Centauri (the star that is second-closest to the Earth).

    • @fatsamcastle
      @fatsamcastle 8 років тому

      The one thing about every planet that's thought to be habitable, no ones got a clue about it.

  • @ashcole223
    @ashcole223 8 років тому

    SO GOOD!! LOVE THESE VIDEOS!

  • @iagocasabiellgonzalez7807
    @iagocasabiellgonzalez7807 8 років тому

    Hey, this was a very interesting piece of science. Thank you

  • @gkelly34
    @gkelly34 3 роки тому

    What triggered the formation of all these stars at the same time? What switched it on?

  • @DavidOfWhitehills
    @DavidOfWhitehills 6 років тому

    Q. Does the helium 3 act as a firestarter for the hydrogen fusion?Q. Do all the stars form at the same time by a process of chain reaction - the first exerts radiation pressure on the surrounding gas and dust sufficient to trigger gravitational collapse all around it and so on?

  • @jimidybobidybo
    @jimidybobidybo 8 років тому +4

    So what happened 8 million years ago to set off all this star creation?

    • @floodychild
      @floodychild 8 років тому +1

      Interesting question. This maybe be the answer is found:
      Star Clusters. When stars are born they develop from large clouds of molecular gas. This means that theyform in groups or clusters, since molecular clouds are composed of hundreds of solar masses of material. After the remnant gas is heated and blow away, the stars collect together by gravity.

    • @briandeschene8424
      @briandeschene8424 8 років тому +3

      Caleb Engineering, LLC Any proposed explanation would start off as and remain a "story" if it cannot be or is not tested against observed data. In scientific terminology, it would be described as a postulation. However, if the "story" repeatedly agrees with more observed data vetted by peers, it becomes accepted as a theory. This status will remain until new observations/data create a need for adjustment or replacement with a different "story" (theory). Eventually an accepted theory is considered factual after standing the test of time. This is known as the scientific method. And thus the human race takes another step forward. Repeat.

    • @mrspidey80
      @mrspidey80 8 років тому

      Maybe the shockwave of a near supernova hit the primordial Hydrogen/Helium-Cloud and caused it to collapse into stars.
      That's usually how it happens.
      One way to tell is to look at the metallicity of the stars. If there are traces of heavy elements (anything above Lithium), it's a sign that a supernova was involved.

    • @ronaldderooij1774
      @ronaldderooij1774 6 років тому

      Gravity.

  • @Jerome...
    @Jerome... 8 років тому

    8:00 White 8:10 Red.

  • @ZachariahNelson
    @ZachariahNelson 8 років тому +3

    why is his shirt inside out?

    • @UnicurnFurts
      @UnicurnFurts 8 років тому +1

      Too busy being a scientist lol

  • @panthershockey4453
    @panthershockey4453 8 років тому +24

    "naked top with a well populated bottom"
    sounds like my ex girfriend

  • @nikolaos9175
    @nikolaos9175 8 років тому

    Thanks

  • @fobusas
    @fobusas 8 років тому

    I wonder what's the distance between stars in that cluster? btw, wikipedia says it's age is more like 4.6M, i wonder which one is right.

    • @pseudorandomly
      @pseudorandomly 8 років тому

      And just to illustrate how understanding can change, the OPENCLUST database lists the age of NGC 6531 as about 11.7 million years. This database was last updated January 2013.

  • @manco828
    @manco828 3 роки тому

    The Trifid Nebula is famous for its use on Star Trek original series.

  • @sl9guitar
    @sl9guitar 8 років тому +10

    Anyone else notice his polo is on inside out? :)

    • @bouwmr
      @bouwmr 8 років тому +4

      And as I recall, not the first time that has happenened :-)

    • @symetryrtemys2101
      @symetryrtemys2101 8 років тому +8

      That way, you don't have the seams of the shirt against the skin. Utterly logical!

    • @Starclimber
      @Starclimber 8 років тому +1

      Exactly why I do the same thing with particularly seamy garments!

    • @ZachariahNelson
      @ZachariahNelson 8 років тому +1

      But the buttons are inside out! It's so inconvenient!

    • @symetryrtemys2101
      @symetryrtemys2101 8 років тому +1

      Buttons, schmuttons!

  • @Kavetrol
    @Kavetrol 8 років тому

    Do big stars fuse hydrogen very quickly, or do they die quickly because they can only fuse small fraction of it before they blow up ?

    • @pipertripp
      @pipertripp 7 років тому

      Kavetrol it's both. To remain in hydrostatic equilibrium, high mass stars must fuse hydrogen quickly. They are also less opaque than low mass stars, so they radiate more efficiently... which means that they must fuse more quickly to stay in hydrostatic equilibrium. They're also not fully convective like low mass stars, so like you said, they have proportionally less fuel to work with as well.

  • @NeonsStyleHD
    @NeonsStyleHD 8 років тому

    What happens when a star moves from the hung up stage on the right to the main sequence? If you were in that system, would there by some visible reaction of the star as it's colour and brightness increase? Would it be sudden? Gradual? Flash?

    • @HillbillyHades
      @HillbillyHades 8 років тому +1

      By human timescales everything in the cosmos is gradual.

    • @NeonsStyleHD
      @NeonsStyleHD 8 років тому

      ***** You think that up all by yourself? How long did you sit on it? lol Sheesh.,

    • @HillbillyHades
      @HillbillyHades 8 років тому +1

      Is the word cosmos too intelligent for a UA-cam comment? Should I have used like space or something?

    • @NeonsStyleHD
      @NeonsStyleHD 8 років тому

      ***** Your original comment was stupifyingly obvious. Everything is gradual everywhere.

  • @assalane
    @assalane 8 років тому +3

    An ad about the "hollow earth" in a DeepSkyVideo... Why do those people even exist?

  • @VDeshm
    @VDeshm 8 років тому

    where is the m8?

  • @brochan11
    @brochan11 7 років тому

    Look up the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.

  • @UAPJedi
    @UAPJedi 6 років тому

    So, will these stars have young planets around them?

    • @martinpickard6043
      @martinpickard6043 5 років тому

      Possibly. It is believed after star formation, proto-planetary disc of remnant matter forms in rotational plane and coalesces into planets.

  • @TimmacTR
    @TimmacTR 8 років тому +4

    This is becoming Messier..

    • @carschmn
      @carschmn 6 років тому

      TimmacTR the stated original purpose of the channel was to go through all 110 Messier objects.

    • @martinpickard6043
      @martinpickard6043 5 років тому

      ...ouch!
      That pun hurt 🤨

  • @bazpearce9993
    @bazpearce9993 Рік тому

    So basically a cluster pulls it's pants up and thinks "This shirt doesn't go with these." Goes back to wardrobe for a better looking shirt.

  • @willwatson1929
    @willwatson1929 8 років тому

    yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeessssssssssssss brady!

  • @Zw1d
    @Zw1d 8 років тому

    moree

  • @Stadtpark90
    @Stadtpark90 8 років тому +1

    25 years ago, when I was in school, I had a schoolmate wearing things inside out as a form of protest / showing how non-conformist he was...

  • @MrN1c3Guy100
    @MrN1c3Guy100 8 років тому

    Baby Stars.... soooo cute O_O

  • @ThermalSpace
    @ThermalSpace 8 років тому

    his shirts inside out..

  • @DrogoBaggins987
    @DrogoBaggins987 7 років тому

    So if this is how pretty much every star is formed then all stars like our sun and smaller are pretty close to some high mass stars that go super nova when they are very young. I wonder if that could have something to do with life starting chemistry. Thought from any of you super smart egg heads?

  • @StanleyKingChan
    @StanleyKingChan 8 років тому

    pretty young star

  • @wilfredswinkels
    @wilfredswinkels 6 років тому

    Boys will be boys :-) :-) 8:03

  • @oldi184
    @oldi184 8 років тому

    Stars are electric driven not gravity driven. Its not nuclear oven. Sun surface temp is 5000 C, Chromosphere is 10000 C and Corona more than 1000000 C.
    If the nuclear oven model was correct the closer to the oven the hotter it gets but its completely opposite.

    • @Edenssunlight
      @Edenssunlight 8 років тому

      you must be a fan of the electric universe model. I have to agree that many of their theories are intriguing and deserve further study there is no doubt about that. following your comment I find fault in what you say. It may be in the wording etc. but it does get hotter as you get closer it's all a matter of perspective I would guess as you approach the sun the temp does increase and as you pass it's outer atmosphere it will decrease according to its relative distance from the surface itself.

    • @dippingbird7533
      @dippingbird7533 8 років тому +5

      The main source of energy put out by the sun is by the process of nuclear fusion, and it is thought that the Corona and Chromossphere are so hot because of induced currents by the changing magnetic field of the sun, however they are very faint and thin compared to the Photonsphere. And below the Photonsphere the nuclear oven model generally holds true.

    • @samvimes5124
      @samvimes5124 8 років тому +18

      Make sure to let everyone know when your first research paper passes peer review.

    • @DevAngelo
      @DevAngelo 8 років тому +1

      lmao... good one m8

    • @oldi184
      @oldi184 8 років тому

      Robert B
      Yes. Electric sun model is more simple and elegant than old and complicated nuclear oven model.

  • @TheAutoban1
    @TheAutoban1 8 років тому

    So I guess he's estimating from the chart to say it's 8 million years old, m21 is 4.6 million years old, I guess this is one of those "within an order of magnitude" type questions

    • @pseudorandomly
      @pseudorandomly 8 років тому

      To be fair, the paper he's reading from is from 1993-4, and observational precision improves as time goes on. One thing in particular is that distance estimates get better, and that has an effect on the perceived properties of stars, hence an effect on age estimates. It may well also be due in part to an improved theoretical understanding of stellar interiors.

  • @seethegalaxy
    @seethegalaxy 7 років тому

    Man you all love to dis open clusters.

  • @michaelexman5474
    @michaelexman5474 3 роки тому

    systemic not sistomatic

  • @vasudevans1224
    @vasudevans1224 8 років тому +2

    Naked top well populated bottom
    LMAO

  • @auto_ego
    @auto_ego 6 років тому

    You can always trust an aussie to get to the root of the matter.

  • @ssj3gohan456
    @ssj3gohan456 8 років тому

    Just saying; the view counter was at 43 when I started the video.

    • @guitarplayer1071
      @guitarplayer1071 8 років тому

      do you want a prize?

    • @ssj3gohan456
      @ssj3gohan456 8 років тому +1

      Can I have a prize? Maybe pizza?

    • @Twitchi
      @Twitchi 8 років тому

      It's pretty easy to win a cookie.. maybe you should ask for that

    • @fulkthered
      @fulkthered 8 років тому

      "*"

  • @dragonman5869
    @dragonman5869 8 років тому

    Yeah 3rd like

  • @D351R48L3
    @D351R48L3 8 років тому

    this is wrong the world was only invented 6 thousand years ago