Scientists Reveal That Jupiter Is Not What We're Beeing Told

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  • Опубліковано 16 чер 2023
  • Scientists Reveal That Jupiter Is Not What We're Beeing Told
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    In the vast reaches of our solar system, Jupiter reigns supreme as a gigantic mystery, captivating scientists and astronomers for centuries.
    Just when we think we understand the gas giant, this celestial behemoth shatters our assumptions. With its blend of unpredictable and often hostile behavior, mesmerizing storms with winds of up to 640 kilometers per hour [400 miles per hour] and the enshrouded mysteries of concealed metallic oceans within its core, Jupiter still leaves scientists puzzled.
    Join us on an extraordinary journey as we delve into the depths of this enigmatic world, uncovering its secrets.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,3 тис.

  • @absentia6164
    @absentia6164 9 місяців тому +913

    So in summary, Jupiter is exactly what we've been told...

    • @troydepauw5117
      @troydepauw5117 8 місяців тому +17

      Except no, because science is always changing. In the 70s, we learned that the estimated pressure "on" Jupiter would be 8+G.

    • @hankscorpio42069
      @hankscorpio42069 8 місяців тому +171

      @@troydepauw5117
      So in summary, Jupiter is exactly what we've been told...

    • @palupl
      @palupl 8 місяців тому +7

      indeed except the astroid belt on that, this docu is wrong for the rest its the same story jada jada if i haven't seen it with my eye's i don't believe stuff so xD

    • @absentia6164
      @absentia6164 8 місяців тому +8

      @@palupl lol Yeah always take things with a pinch of salt as they say

    • @franknapier963
      @franknapier963 8 місяців тому +51

      I’m not even going to bother watching the video now.

  • @brucemorris3830
    @brucemorris3830 10 місяців тому +1138

    The idea that our solar system is as stable as it is, with all the various gravitational forces and the fact that the whole thing is itself in motion, is just mind blowing, isn’t it?

    • @dennbliss6399
      @dennbliss6399 10 місяців тому +14

      Yes it is

    • @drewmadenew3000
      @drewmadenew3000 10 місяців тому +94

      Lol lots of time to get all the hissy fits out of the way! A few billion years ago this bish was a shooting gallery!

    • @flankspeed
      @flankspeed 10 місяців тому +24

      And yet not as stable as we thought

    • @flankspeed
      @flankspeed 10 місяців тому +6

      ​@@drewmadenew3000good point 👉

    • @R0GU351GN4L
      @R0GU351GN4L 10 місяців тому +29

      Well, it has had Billions of years to become stable. Eventually with enough time things tend to stabilise and even out. All energy moves towards a state of decay, the more energy that is "Lost" or more accurately dispersed outwards the more stable things become.

  • @robertredden2066
    @robertredden2066 9 місяців тому +434

    I remember taking an astronomy class years ago, and my instructor mentioning that the sun undergoes a heightened level of activity every 11 years. I mentioned that Jupiter’s orbit is also 11 years. I always wondered if there was more to that connection….

    • @macguyvahmacguyvah2833
      @macguyvahmacguyvah2833 9 місяців тому +14

      I suppose it wouldn’t be too difficult to see if they correspond in some way.

    • @PandaChan6876
      @PandaChan6876 9 місяців тому +41

      Sun's 11 year cycle is shaped by the gravitational pull of Venus, Earth, and Jupiter. I just pulled it from Google, so take it with a grain of salt probably

    • @sethbieber5127
      @sethbieber5127 9 місяців тому +40

      Well there's a possibility that Jupiter was supposed to become a star and make a binary star system with the sun.. it wasn't quite big enough so it never fully developed into a star.
      On another note, the moon is a quarter of the size of earth and it creates tides.. it's not hard to jump to the thought that it may be the same with Jupiter and the other planets

    • @xondominique2602
      @xondominique2602 9 місяців тому +2

      it's rather 12 years orbit

    • @RT-mv7df
      @RT-mv7df 9 місяців тому

      @@sethbieber5127 Agree, both Jupiter and the Sun would exert tidal forces upon each other. There is some theory and belief that tidal forces are partially responsible for being the final feather in the stacking of various tectonic plate forces that can set off earthquakes and the releasing of tension in the Earth's crusts as it flexes the earth's crust & either causes increase or decrease of the compressive forces between the tectonic plates. Keep in mind that it is not just the moon that causes tidal forces on Earth, but the Sun & Jupiter will have smaller tidal contributions, but larger when an alignment of planets, sun, & the moon happen in various adding & subtracting configurations to net together their individual contributions to the total tidal effect. Understanding this, and since most planetary orbits around the sun are not perfectly circular, but more elliptical with a point of closest approach once per orbit, it is not a far stretch to believe that Jupiter could have some partial contribution to the Sun's cycles.

  • @ralphralpherson9441
    @ralphralpherson9441 9 місяців тому +47

    So... Jupiter is pretty much exactly what I've always been told.

    • @Whaley96
      @Whaley96 27 днів тому +3

      So I can go ahead and dislike it without watching?

  • @setsunaes
    @setsunaes 10 місяців тому +291

    That last point about the barycenter between Jupiter and The Sun mesmerized me. I never had though or considered that Jupiter was NOT actually orbiting the sun, but both of them are orbiting around a pint in the space OUTSIDE the sun. That is amazing.

    • @caseyjames7339
      @caseyjames7339 10 місяців тому +47

      Whats crazy to think about as well with the beginning of the solar solar system, Had saturn been ejected or not existed where it was , Jupiter would most likely be where venus is and us, who knows. Crazy how saturn was enough to pull it back out and is technically the hidden MVP of all life.

    • @okidokidraws
      @okidokidraws 10 місяців тому +25

      They don't focus enough on Earth or Space in school they want you to know more about dead guys which is why i took last semester so i could take Astronomy at the planetarium Those dead guys in history arn't really of help to us now days XD I did mostly Art and Science in Highschool and JA Government and ecnomics. more important to me then history I can learn that in free time if i want.

    • @kushclarkkent6669
      @kushclarkkent6669 10 місяців тому +5

      @@okidokidraws I like the way you think!

    • @atlien1988
      @atlien1988 10 місяців тому +11

      ​@@okidokidraws a bunch of dead guys who were rarely brought anything, but death & oppression. Then the curriculum makes it seem like they were greater than they actually were.

    • @petr79
      @petr79 10 місяців тому +5

      @@okidokidraws Students are too innocent to be taught about politics

  • @Oshaoxin
    @Oshaoxin 11 місяців тому +326

    Wait, so Jupiter is not a big huge gas giant made of a soup of gasses and metals both gaseous and liquified, with up to 95 moons, that basically protects our solar system from the dangers of space? This I have to see.

    • @RK19-89
      @RK19-89 11 місяців тому +19

      😂😂

    • @dimensionexo.
      @dimensionexo. 10 місяців тому +14

      Up close and personal ?

    • @Oshaoxin
      @Oshaoxin 10 місяців тому +25

      @@dimensionexo. Very up-close and personal.

    • @dimensionexo.
      @dimensionexo. 10 місяців тому +3

      @@Oshaoxin - 😹

    • @AugustDreamScape
      @AugustDreamScape 10 місяців тому +15

      One of those moons may have life in them.

  • @frankrizzo2724
    @frankrizzo2724 9 місяців тому +15

    So how is it we really don't know anything about jupiter but then they turn around and tell us what planets are like light years away from us?

    • @Diavire
      @Diavire 9 місяців тому

      Everything they say about planets outside our solar system are extreme extrapolations from very little data. Like details in the spectra from the little light they can catch that move from their sun through their atmosphere. Wild guesses basically.

    • @LordTalax
      @LordTalax 8 місяців тому

      Don't know anything? Watch the video again.

    • @manbeast47
      @manbeast47 5 місяців тому

      ​@@LordTalaxoof

    • @jbx1967
      @jbx1967 13 днів тому

      ​@@LordTalax
      No.*
      *for more information reread this message

  • @matthewexline6589
    @matthewexline6589 9 місяців тому +33

    I never would have guessed that Jupiter's gravitational influence compared to the Sun could be so massive. The fact that their shared gravitational center is way out where this video listed it as astounds me.

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 8 місяців тому +3

      well she is still big even though small compared to the sun and thus she still has immense gravity due to that mass make's you wonder how much mass she is missing to become a small star from the commencement of fusion processes like the sun has that would be fun to find out if we could fire asteroids and comets at her till it started to occur we could learn a lot from doing that one to Jupiter since she is the largest gas giant in the system

    • @bladerj
      @bladerj 8 місяців тому +3

      @@raven4k998 or we would die from a star so close......ever though of that

    • @Alec0124
      @Alec0124 8 місяців тому +4

      @@raven4k998 Wouldn't Jupiter become a brown dwarf before a star?

    • @Alec0124
      @Alec0124 8 місяців тому +4

      @@bladerj I think Jupiter is like 2/3rds of the solar systems mass. (edit: not including the sun ofc) so we could only increase it's mass by about 50% if we there everything including earth into it. To become a brown dwarf Jupiter would need 75 times it's current mass. (per google search, but regardless, I'm sure that a 50% increase wouldn't do it.)

  • @gobeklipepe
    @gobeklipepe 9 місяців тому +21

    Thank you Jupiter for taking one for the team.

  • @deathsnitemaresinfullust2269
    @deathsnitemaresinfullust2269 8 місяців тому +12

    When I was young I always had an issue with envisioning "gas giants" because I would only think of gases in their vapor forms and forget that gases can be condensed into liquids, then realizing it takes absurd amounts of temperature and pressure especially when you consider it's happening just all around as opposed to only being in controlled containers on our planet.
    Space is So interesting.😄👍

    • @mikefran1992
      @mikefran1992 7 місяців тому +1

      Yeah, as a kid, I never understood that either. It wasn't until early college I realized what you just said.

  • @slomomkii5086
    @slomomkii5086 9 місяців тому +37

    Interesting all together and that's the first time I've actually been enlightened on the fact that Jupiter and the Sun actually share a different orbit than all/most other planets in our solar system. It makes total sense that Jupiter, having the mass it does, that it would act the way it does with the sun. And then, you can assume actually, everything else moves fractionally against the sun, in orbit. So their orbits would in theory look like a sine wave, if you were able to see them defined in anything other than a circle or oval.

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 8 місяців тому

      yeah Jupiter is still a mystery they say they know everything about it but they really don't she has many secrets that baffle scientists to this day even

    • @TwoTreesStudio
      @TwoTreesStudio 8 місяців тому +2

      a sine wave is literally defined by putting an object in circular motion tracking its X or Y position, einstein...y'all really should take a physics class instead of watching random UA-cam videos, you might learn something

    • @repubseatdick
      @repubseatdick 8 місяців тому

      Yeah, what the fish bowl guy said !

  • @jessehansen10
    @jessehansen10 9 місяців тому +8

    It’s so cool to know everything about not only our planet, but everything in the universe.

    • @friedmandesigns
      @friedmandesigns 8 місяців тому +5

      The source coder(s) of the current construct we're in would like a word with the first sim who knows everything about it. ;)

    • @jakesusnik5038
      @jakesusnik5038 8 місяців тому +1

      Yup, almost like they have been to these planets and the sun and have dug to the cores to have this knowledge they teach like it is factual.

    • @Vaidelotelis
      @Vaidelotelis 8 місяців тому +4

      Everything in the universe? We don't even know everything about our planet or our solar system, let alone our galaxy. There are parts of the universe expanding away from us faster than the speed of light, which we'll never be able to observe. We can try to find out as much as possible but if you want to know everything, you're in for a big disappointment

    • @Vaidelotelis
      @Vaidelotelis 8 місяців тому +2

      @@jakesusnik5038 however, the calculations still keep planes in the air and can send spaceships into precise orbits. Meanwhile your people teach that there is a god who sacrificed himself to himself to create a loophole for the rules that he had created even though you have never drilled to the core of this god or taken any measurements

    • @Digitalsapien
      @Digitalsapien 8 місяців тому

      @@Vaidelotelis Bernoulli's principle is testable, which is why we can engineer airplanes that are able to fly. None of this hypothetical nonsense is remotely testable. The fact that you conflate observational science with theoretical and historical science to enforce your atheistic worldview would be comical if it weren't so tragic. Enjoy your life, little puppet. What comes after will be something else. Science is no friend of the atheist world-view. All testable, observational science suggests the existence of governing intelligence. Search on youtube for "Mandelbrot Set".

  • @SandsOfArrakis
    @SandsOfArrakis 10 місяців тому +168

    The best example in the Solar System to describe the barycenter is Pluto and its moon Charon.
    Charon is far closer mass wise to Pluto compared to the Sun and Jupiter.
    So its barycenter is quite far outside of Pluto.
    Another fun fact. Pluto and Charon both have a rotation of 6.4 days. And they also orbit each others barycenter in 6.4 days.
    Which means that from Pluto you can only see Charon in certain locations and its always in the same place in the sky as well.

  • @torguy5763
    @torguy5763 10 місяців тому +6

    Jupiter to Earth: I got you bro.

  • @MidniteBluDragon
    @MidniteBluDragon 9 місяців тому +4

    Imagine looking up at the night sky and seeing Jupitar instead of our moon? That be a beautiful site to see indeed.

    • @Matt92Machine
      @Matt92Machine 8 місяців тому +2

      It would also be the last thing you ever saw as the immense gravitational pull would rip the Earth apart.

  • @DS-xh8iv
    @DS-xh8iv 8 місяців тому +3

    Uhhh, what do you mean “… not what we’re being told.” What a misleading title.

  • @djbeatz3
    @djbeatz3 10 місяців тому +35

    It's not what we're 🐝-ing told!

  • @matthewatteberry8711
    @matthewatteberry8711 11 місяців тому +27

    Can't wait until Starfield. The closest I'm getting to exploring the solar system. Haha.

    • @jamesc8259
      @jamesc8259 11 місяців тому +3

      Wait a month after release to buy. Probably gonna need a patch n see what the missions are like for all the plants. Hopefully not generic and copy pasta

    • @Nathanyel
      @Nathanyel 10 місяців тому

      Elite Dangerous has been out for years. Although you gotta earn the right to enter the SOL system (but if you know how, it's just a couple hours of grinding)

  • @SpillTheTEEjabber
    @SpillTheTEEjabber 9 місяців тому +1

    Scientists: JUPITER WE KNOW YOUR SECRETS!
    Jupiter: nuh uh

  • @The_Server_ong
    @The_Server_ong 9 місяців тому +1

    What blows my mind more than anything is the amount of people who are writing off this phenomenon as “expected” and “well no duh it’s had billions of years to stabilize broh”

  • @johntheherbalistg8756
    @johntheherbalistg8756 10 місяців тому +17

    Jupiter: the hero we didn't know we needed

    • @majkul512
      @majkul512 5 місяців тому

      it didn't workout for the dinasaurs did it?

    • @jessicab831
      @jessicab831 3 місяці тому

      ​@@majkul512 Ayy, even the best of heros make mistakes.

  • @jlomesou
    @jlomesou 10 місяців тому +10

    I suspect that when those asteroids hit Jupiter years ago, it probably had very little effect on Jupiter. It was more of a unfortunate situation for the damn rocks than Jupiter, 😅

  • @samanthaanne246
    @samanthaanne246 9 місяців тому +6

    Being that Jupiter was "almost a star" makes the barycenter of gravity make more sense. Before this video, I assumed that the sun was a fixed anchor point in our solar system. Therefore after seeing this video, and the discovery of the off center /COG; this means that the Sun actually wobbles in it's path around the COG of the Milky Way. Which should also indicate that the COG of the Milky Way does the same thing , on it's path through this Universe !

    • @mindoverbody7647
      @mindoverbody7647 9 місяців тому +3

      Nothing stays still. The universe itself is in motion

    • @robappleby583
      @robappleby583 8 місяців тому

      Wut. The milky way isn’t orbiting anything.

    • @offsidev6059
      @offsidev6059 8 місяців тому +1

      @@robappleby583 Nobody said it is.

    • @stormkeeper1741
      @stormkeeper1741 11 днів тому

      Why do people think Jupiter was almost a star? It would need another 80 jupiters to give it enough mass to be a red dwarf. It's nowhere close to being a star.

  • @jenv9782
    @jenv9782 8 місяців тому +3

    Thank you for this informative video on our gas giant protector. I was captivated from beginning to end!

  • @i_c_y_u_n_v_me
    @i_c_y_u_n_v_me 10 місяців тому +19

    I feel a little more safer now knowing Jupiter help protect us

    • @stormkeeper1741
      @stormkeeper1741 11 днів тому

      don't lol, Jupiter has also flung multiple objects into the inner solar system and likely was the culprit behind some of the asteroids and comets that have hit earth in the past.

  • @Paul-ik8fm
    @Paul-ik8fm 10 місяців тому +40

    It never ceases to amaze me how they can take some photos and then tell us how much they know about the universe. When there are so much they don't know about things on earth where they can study things more closely.

    • @inthem-a-king
      @inthem-a-king 9 місяців тому +1

      😅 Thank you, fellow logical thinker.

    • @mrmarr8308
      @mrmarr8308 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@inthem-a-kingScientists actually explore the ocean way more than outer universe, but the universe is incredibly vast and way more interesting

    • @Joyboy0101
      @Joyboy0101 9 місяців тому

      Earth is more complex than these, and we still dont know everything about Earth. Thats not to say they know everything about the planets in our solar system either though.

    • @manbeast47
      @manbeast47 5 місяців тому

      Good point

  • @ryans3199
    @ryans3199 7 місяців тому +3

    Isn't there speculation that Jupiter is a failed or dead star? It seems to have quite a number of the characteristics in line. But the truly fascinating thing is the liquid metal hydrogen. I was taught in school that each element only has 3 or 4 states: Gas, liquid, solid, and plasma? But I never learned much about plasma, so mostly it was 3. But to find that there can be such drastic differences in the characteristics, or that there can be more than 1 liquid form, that's really interesting.

    • @raycar1165
      @raycar1165 18 днів тому

      If you're ready, Welcome to your Electric Universe.

  • @disgruntledtoons
    @disgruntledtoons 8 місяців тому +2

    In *all* cases of one body orbiting another, they both orbit the barycenter of the two bodies. It is simply the case that when one body is much more massive than the other, and the distance between them is not that great, the barycenter will be within the larger of the two bodies.

  • @empurress77
    @empurress77 11 місяців тому +13

    Great explanation of a barycenter! I will be able to explain that much better now, thank you.

  • @elleni-41
    @elleni-41 11 місяців тому +10

    Love videos about Jupiter..
    This channel is my favorite..the voice is soo perfect..👌👌

  • @paratracker
    @paratracker 9 місяців тому +1

    Four years before this video was released, Jupiter was known to have 79 moons, with Saturn leading at 82, so Jupiter no longer has the most moons in the solar system. Two errors in one sentence.

  • @aa-ze5cz
    @aa-ze5cz 9 місяців тому

    Jupiter: "Why you Earth scientists gotta do me like this?"

  • @davidtrottier8963
    @davidtrottier8963 10 місяців тому +56

    Amazing how little we truly know about the planets in our own solar system. Same can be said for our own oceans.

    • @kubel83
      @kubel83 10 місяців тому +5

      We know less of our oceans than the universe.
      Or so I heard.

    • @shaunoboyle238
      @shaunoboyle238 10 місяців тому +6

      @@kubel83that’s not true mate

    • @hungryowl1559
      @hungryowl1559 10 місяців тому +1

      Oceans are just the planets dumpster

    • @davidtrottier8963
      @davidtrottier8963 10 місяців тому +3

      @@shaunoboyle238 As of December 15 2022, humans have only explored 5% of the earths oceans yet we discover 2000 new species of aquatic life every year. The majority of lifeforms on the planet resides in the earths oceans. Just a little bit of clarification for you.

    • @shaunoboyle238
      @shaunoboyle238 10 місяців тому +4

      @@davidtrottier8963 I was not speaking to you, I’m saying we know less about our universe than our oceans.

  • @eddiehitler9822
    @eddiehitler9822 9 місяців тому +5

    First time i saw the polar storms i was terrified.
    It was frickin' awesome.

  • @jennodine
    @jennodine 8 місяців тому

    Jupiter was considered a gas giant when I was in school in the late 1970s. I wasn’t even aware that they ever thought it was a terrestrial planet.
    And Jupiter does not have the largest magnetosphere in the solar system - the sun does.

  • @martyfest6120
    @martyfest6120 8 місяців тому +3

    I always thought that if Jupiter had been larger it would have had a chance to become a star

    • @user-yp7rn6tb2t
      @user-yp7rn6tb2t 8 місяців тому

      All that pressure
      Probably a fusion reaction at centre
      God help us when it goes nova

  • @j.d.4697
    @j.d.4697 10 місяців тому +36

    What a cool place!
    One could only imagine what life might look like that managed to form in a place like that.

    • @user-co6lt6nc3i
      @user-co6lt6nc3i 10 місяців тому +9

      Non existent.

    • @j.d.4697
      @j.d.4697 10 місяців тому +8

      @@user-co6lt6nc3i
      Just like your imagination.

    • @kushclarkkent6669
      @kushclarkkent6669 10 місяців тому +3

      Maybe in the clouds!

    • @PREDATOR07
      @PREDATOR07 9 місяців тому +2

      Uranus was explored once. Never again.

    • @SallyWilliams
      @SallyWilliams 9 місяців тому +1

      @@user-co6lt6nc3i you know nothing, Jon Snow. it could be so different from life on our planet, based on other components

  • @davedouglas8914
    @davedouglas8914 10 місяців тому +9

    Excellent video. I thought I knew a lot about Jupiter but this has added a lot of newer information that I was unaware of.

  • @ducknorris233
    @ducknorris233 9 місяців тому

    That the giant red spot has changed in my lifetime blows away my concept of the big picture of time.

  • @vikingghost117
    @vikingghost117 9 місяців тому +3

    Makes me wonder if in 100s or thousands more years humans will develope the technology to send something to the surface that can syrvive and travel about to see what's really going on under there.

    • @blucat4
      @blucat4 9 місяців тому +1

      There's not really a surface to send it to, and if you materialised there the immense gravity would immediately flatten you into a pool of goo about the thickness of a human hair.

  • @notamusician8621
    @notamusician8621 11 місяців тому +29

    I feel really lucky to find your channel guys. Enjoying each video you've made, waiting for the next one. Thank you

    • @include7614
      @include7614 11 місяців тому +2

      exactly they deserves an appreciation

    • @include7614
      @include7614 11 місяців тому +3

      their presentation always made me satisfied

    • @hemant_films
      @hemant_films 10 місяців тому +3

      Bro they copied the content

    • @notamusician8621
      @notamusician8621 10 місяців тому +1

      @hemant_films If the initial source has better quality, I'm always ready to subscribe to them as well :)

    • @Stiffs8000
      @Stiffs8000 9 місяців тому +3

      Bro there are hundreds of these channels uploading content every 12 hours and be real, its ai spitting out random content

  • @Pleiades721
    @Pleiades721 11 місяців тому +27

    3:25 This is not how orbital mechanics works. If its trajectory was on the solar side of Jupiter, it would be flung out of the solar system, not drawn in. The trajectory should be on the exact opposite side of Jupiter as shown. It shows the difference between understanding orbital mechanics versus just talking about them as though understood. Animation is wrong.

    • @Pleiades721
      @Pleiades721 11 місяців тому +9

      4:48 This animation is wrong in the exact same way. Gravity does not repel objects, ever.

    • @ThePanesar
      @ThePanesar 11 місяців тому

      Have you ever heard about the negative gravity? /s

    • @cheezuschrist1102
      @cheezuschrist1102 10 місяців тому +1

      Give it a break, this video is entirely made by ai
      There’s dozens of channels like these

  • @justusgeorge4080
    @justusgeorge4080 8 місяців тому +1

    Now I really know what scientist are not telling us about Jupiter.

  • @AGWittmann
    @AGWittmann 8 місяців тому +1

    Jupiter has so far 95 moons (Juny 2023) ... but Saturn got 145 moons since May 2023.

  • @mikestaihr5183
    @mikestaihr5183 10 місяців тому +5

    I don't understand the graphics showing objects being repelled by Jupiter. That would seem counterintuitive as gravity should attract objects rather than repel them. I could understand deflections created in the path of an object or even a rare slingshot around Jupiter but not the uturn made by the object as it heads toward the planet.

    • @censorthis-uu6cc
      @censorthis-uu6cc 9 місяців тому

      The objects are in reality passing around the outside of Jupiter and being pulled into a new trajectory. My guess is that they used such an oversized representation of Jupiter that modelling this interaction would see the objects crashing into/passing thru their overblown picture of Jupiter, and they thought misrepresenting the trajectories instead was a preferable compromise. Or maybe the animators just had no idea about what they were supposed to be modelling.

  • @AugustDreamScape
    @AugustDreamScape 10 місяців тому +39

    Huge fan of this channel & the content provided! Ive always been passionate & fascinated with the Cosmos & all its celestial bodies & mysteries. Thank you for providing this educational & entertaining videos on my favorite scientific subjects! Cheers! 🍻 🎉

  • @singularity4049
    @singularity4049 9 місяців тому

    Scientists: Tell, Tell Tell.
    Scientists: Now I reveal its not what I told.
    Meanwhile, Jupiter: 😂😂😂

  • @robk5865
    @robk5865 6 місяців тому

    Shoemaker Levy 9 was the beginning of my fascination with Jupiter and space in general. Decades and much reading later, I now have a much better understanding of job security....
    "Lets build an awesome space telescope to answer some of our questions".
    Years later..."we have waaay more new questions than answers. We need to build a newer, better telescope to create and endless supply of questions".
    Bravo to the teams behind Hubble and the JWT for keeping the world fascinated with each new discovery made. Incredible.

  • @chanfonseka8051
    @chanfonseka8051 9 місяців тому +5

    I always suspected that Jupiter was in fact a Death Star.

    • @berretta9mm17
      @berretta9mm17 9 місяців тому

      Yarth Middederp created it all by itself, and It's why we all celebrate Middlederp Day every 10 billion years - we blew up 3 worlds, and I got so drunk I didn't wake up for 3 thousand years!

  • @okidokidraws
    @okidokidraws 11 місяців тому +46

    I think we need to reclassify Asteroid moons if pluto gets a reclassification because I think only the Galileo moons should be considered as Moons. Moons need to be seperated for Moons / Satellites / Man Made Satellites because its silly to call those specs moons.

    • @ashh8019
      @ashh8019 10 місяців тому +1

      Agreed

    • @elliotlevy8610
      @elliotlevy8610 10 місяців тому +2

      I can definitely agree. Another tricky part though is that our own moon might actually be too big to qualify as a moon in relation to earth. It's relative size and distance are such that it's path through the solar system is ever so slightly more centered around the sun than it is Earth. Where all other moons clearly curve away from the sun at times, Earth's moon never does.

    • @okidokidraws
      @okidokidraws 10 місяців тому +4

      @@elliotlevy8610 Easy fix binary planet system children now days are way smatter then people give them credit for they are far more accepting of change. I believe in the Sumerians too who said the Asteroid belt was a planet before.

    • @ojjuiceman
      @ojjuiceman 10 місяців тому +1

      Agreed

    • @huntster1701
      @huntster1701 9 місяців тому +2

      Rather than getting overly complicated, the IAU should simply define "moon" and "moonlet". I think one of the primary defining points should be that a moon has enough mass to be spherical, whereas a moonlet would not.

  • @user-bt8dq7zj2e
    @user-bt8dq7zj2e 9 місяців тому

    The way he said laboratory was just.. Great lol

  • @kevino2783
    @kevino2783 9 місяців тому

    A video titled "Jupiter is not what we're beeing told" can be safely ignored

  • @cloud1stclass372
    @cloud1stclass372 10 місяців тому +25

    The odds of all of these occurrences being so precise to allow life on earth is absolutely astounding.

    • @meacadwell
      @meacadwell 10 місяців тому +5

      Life evolves where it can, whether that life is around for a shorter (e.g. omeoba) or longer period of time (intelligent species). It has nothing to do with "precise occurances" which only lets the life on a planet to keep going for a longer period of time.

    • @cloud1stclass372
      @cloud1stclass372 10 місяців тому +12

      @@meacadwell You’ve obviously never read, heard of or understood the Drake equation or any other probabilistic arguments for life. Anyone who says life has nothing to do with “precise occurrences” is willfully ignorant. The odds of life emerging in the universe are so unbelievable that it transcends human comprehension.

    • @meacadwell
      @meacadwell 10 місяців тому

      @@cloud1stclass372 Lol, I was reading about the Drake equation over 30 years ago and do understand it.
      Let me put it in a way you will understand things: Life will show up where it can. Full stop.
      We find life in places on Earth experts originally didn't think could harbor life (glaciers in Antarctica, heat vents at the bottom of the ocean, lava microbes, etc.)
      If life develops on a planet then it could possibly evolve from a microbe to intelligent life over time. Or it could be annihilated by a violent asteroid collision at the microbial stage.
      Where carbon life forms aren't viable another type of life might thrive. Perhaps silicone based. If it's not silicone it would be something else.
      Then scientists use intelligence to piece together why life appeared at that particular location/planet/etc.
      It's all chance occurance.
      And life in the universe, per the Drake equation, there are probably between 1000 and 100,000,000 planets with civilizations in the Milky Way Galaxy....although it may not be what we would recognize as life and it may not be intelligent life.
      Take your willful ignorance and arrogance elsewhere.

    • @tejasshetty519
      @tejasshetty519 10 місяців тому +3

      ​@@cloud1stclass372true the universe is soo vast that there's probably of every possible similar planet being in the same solar system and in different arrangements, it just happened so that in our solar system the particular arrangement was suitable for life, it's nothing but probability like you said

    • @ReiseLukas
      @ReiseLukas 10 місяців тому +7

      ​​@@cloud1stclass372Wouldn't that imply that life forming naturally is near impossible without some powerful intelligence behind it?

  • @geoffoverfield37
    @geoffoverfield37 9 місяців тому +13

    For the record - Juno mission ended a couple years ago. Final pass, they sent it in to the planet and sent back data from the atmosphere before it got crushed from Jupiters immense gravity and overall hostile conditions.

    • @Talal189
      @Talal189 9 місяців тому +8

      No no no. You messed up a little. It was Galileo that got crushed 10 yrs ago. Juno is still working. Common there are 1000s of people today including me who take photos every 6months before it orbits away for 6 months.

    • @geoffoverfield37
      @geoffoverfield37 9 місяців тому +8

      @@Talal189 you’re right. I was thinking of Cassini & Saturn. My bad.

    • @AlFredo-sx2yy
      @AlFredo-sx2yy 9 місяців тому

      @@geoffoverfield37 clearly a skill issue

  • @davidlloren
    @davidlloren 8 місяців тому +1

    "Scientists learn new information and update what we know accordingly" there fixed your title for you

  • @animatedrabbit
    @animatedrabbit 9 місяців тому

    Let’s bee friends. And look there’s a bee on it.

  • @GradyPhilpott
    @GradyPhilpott 11 місяців тому +8

    I thought the narrator said that the planets' orbits are circular. It's been my understanding that they are elliptical. 🤔

  • @juni674
    @juni674 10 місяців тому +4

    Jupiter is basically the Sol systems baseball mitt.

  • @TuzeTea
    @TuzeTea 9 місяців тому

    Jupiter cyclops winks at me, yeah he knows who's driving.

  • @dennisengelen2517
    @dennisengelen2517 8 місяців тому

    Definition solar system: The collection of eight planets and their moons in orbit round the sun, together with smaller bodies in the form of asteroids, meteoroids, and comets.
    Destiny: Well, yes but actually no.

  • @empurress77
    @empurress77 11 місяців тому +10

    So the arc paths of the comet deflection is on the wrong side of the planet.
    Just saying.
    If the paths were the way shown, they would have to have been reflected.
    Deflection happens on the opposite side of the trajectory.

    • @enochheckman5586
      @enochheckman5586 9 місяців тому +2

      I noticed that too! Figured it's just one of those breakdowns between animators and the experts providing the information.

    • @danielbaker212
      @danielbaker212 9 місяців тому +2

      Yup.. I was searching the comments to see if this was mentioned.....

    • @manbeast47
      @manbeast47 5 місяців тому +1

      YES! Thank you

  • @davidgriego278
    @davidgriego278 9 місяців тому +4

    I remember how the Gas Giant Jupiter, when I attended Science Classes back in 1950's, and 60's. The amount of knowledge, since then, is Mind Boggling!! This a such a Educational Video for us Science Geeks! What an Incredible Universe We exist in!!!

    • @jgrab1
      @jgrab1 8 місяців тому +1

      You forgot to capitalize Knowledge.

    • @davidgriego278
      @davidgriego278 8 місяців тому

      @@jgrab1 Gimme a Break!! Ha!ha!ha!

    • @manbeast47
      @manbeast47 5 місяців тому

      Oof

  • @jabbagong
    @jabbagong 8 місяців тому

    Was hoping for a secret alien nightclub in the core of Jupiter, but this was interesting too.

  • @sophdog1678
    @sophdog1678 8 місяців тому

    Cool to see those asteroids (figuratively) settling into L4 and L5 points either side on Jupiters orbit.

  • @iooi1181
    @iooi1181 11 місяців тому +5

    our sun rides on the galactic wave, the planets in our solar system spiral after it.

  • @ChairmanMeow1
    @ChairmanMeow1 10 місяців тому +4

    Good guy Jupiter protecting us all

  • @WolfmanArt
    @WolfmanArt 9 місяців тому

    I've always been intrigued by Astronomy

  • @destinytatum9271
    @destinytatum9271 8 місяців тому

    I think that us as humans need to start studying Jupiter and Saturn a lot closer and try to start finding ways to see more on these planets..and also studying Jupiter's moons...what yall think on an intellectual level?

  • @Lucifehr
    @Lucifehr 10 місяців тому +5

    quick question: what does "beeing" mean?

    • @SpencerPhreak
      @SpencerPhreak 10 місяців тому +2

      Jupiter is actually a beehive

    • @prime12602
      @prime12602 10 місяців тому

      🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝

    • @companylovesmisery1463
      @companylovesmisery1463 Місяць тому

      I'm glad someone else noticed that, but I guess no one is going to give a serious answer as to why a science channel seemingly mispelled one of the simplest words.

  • @tooldaniellateralus9298
    @tooldaniellateralus9298 9 місяців тому +3

    They don't know....they are guessing
    Just like with most of space.

    • @raycar1165
      @raycar1165 18 днів тому +1

      There's another theory of cosmology, that the standard model supporters would rather ignore...

  • @VivaanMC
    @VivaanMC 9 місяців тому +1

    Scientists reveal that jupiter is not what we're 🐝ing told
    how did no one realise..

  • @BrasspineappleProductions
    @BrasspineappleProductions 9 місяців тому

    The core of Jupiter is Molton elements of mixed proportion held together by it's heavy gravitational force upon itself. Most of the atmosphere is very large in mass consisting of various gasses.
    The thumbnail is not an accurate depiction of the gas giant planet.

  • @nibzizintit
    @nibzizintit 10 місяців тому +3

    Fascinating thanks 🙏

  • @RechtmanDon
    @RechtmanDon 10 місяців тому +8

    The red and blue spots and other phenomena are a consequence of an inner elongated, cigar- or boomerang-shaped solid substance that is a little more than half as long as Jupiter's radius. Because its density is close to that of the inner compressed gases, it remains difficult to map out by Juno and other probes. 😜

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 8 місяців тому

      why did no one tell me Jupiter had a huge blue spot on it

  • @Skitzotech
    @Skitzotech 7 місяців тому

    I have a question... Does the Peltier effect occur with liquid metals?
    So if liquid metals behave like... well liquids... If there is a denser liquid metal and a less dense one mixed together then they would separate themselves similar to how oil and water would separate?
    So for example. Taking a cup of water and pouring in a few drops of cooking oil. There would be a cup of water with a blob of cooking oil floating on it.
    Now if this was a "sea of metal" with an island sized blob of "differing metal" floating in it... And say... I dunno... A giant lightning storm keeps pelting the liquid metal oceans with lightning... Could one metal get really hot and the other get really cold?

  • @qotsa2k4
    @qotsa2k4 9 місяців тому

    I never see or hear anyone mention pressure when talking about water. Water only boils at 212 at sea level on earth. This I assume would be due to pressure and temperature. If the upper atmosphere of Jupiter has a pressure similar to ours, couldn’t liquid water form, or is there more to it than those two variables?

    • @jgrab1
      @jgrab1 8 місяців тому

      There is and it isn't and it couldn't.

  • @erin22222
    @erin22222 11 місяців тому +8

    “Beeing” told? please don’t tell me it’s full of bees

  • @thehowls4918
    @thehowls4918 10 місяців тому +9

    Ive always Wondered if the red spot, being a giant storm, isn't moving around an enormous crater on the surface. Or if there is no surface, a moon or other body that has been swallowed by the gas giant. Maybe it has something to do with the magnetic interference...

    • @osidius77
      @osidius77 10 місяців тому +2

      It's a gas planet, there is no solid surface

    • @helpdeskjnp
      @helpdeskjnp 9 місяців тому +3

      There’s an electrical influence going on I believe, as there are storms/marks in the clouds that correspond to the orbits of its moons.

    • @helpdeskjnp
      @helpdeskjnp 9 місяців тому +3

      If it’s a “gas” planet, why did the pieces of the comet Shoemaker Levy 9 explode on the surface leaving marks where they hit, vs passing deep into the planet just absorbing them. Especially considering the size of the comet fragments compared to the size of Jupiter. And why did the fragments explode? If it were a gas, it would have just passed into it possibly go thru the other side. The pieces clearly blew up really close to the surface.

    • @osidius77
      @osidius77 9 місяців тому

      @@helpdeskjnp it's been widely accepted over the past several decades that the outer planets are gas, except pluto (which was demoted as a planet) but I've never been there so I guess i cannot 100% confirm this. Shoemaker levy looked like it passed into the clouds, and the spots eventually cleared, never heard of exploding fragments, but again, I haven't studied it in years. But that's interesting so I'll read up on that. I do remember that the largest thing in the solar system is actually Jupiter's magnetosphere, and without that large planet we would be more regularly bombarded by larger meteors and debris, possibly negating the evolution of higher intelligence on this planet. But these are things I retained from college years ago and I could be wrong, but I personally believe they still hold true. But i'm an amateur astronomer, not a "real" one.

    • @gjhenry955
      @gjhenry955 9 місяців тому +6

      @@helpdeskjnp the velocities and pressure mediation involved effectively make Jupiter a solid surface. Like when comets below a certain size impact our atmosphere only and ‘explode’, happened recently in Siberia

  • @DesoloZantas
    @DesoloZantas 8 місяців тому

    In a couple of years, "we wear even MORE wrong"

  • @smithpauld1501
    @smithpauld1501 8 місяців тому

    This is very nice. Now, about the “headline.”

  • @Aces77777
    @Aces77777 11 місяців тому +17

    I have a feeling that there are sources on Jupiter that can be a good source of fuel to power the Earth

    • @nffclacey
      @nffclacey 11 місяців тому +11

      Imagine it's really just a giant petrol/gas station

    • @Aces77777
      @Aces77777 11 місяців тому +2

      @@nffclacey 👍🏻

    • @SandsOfArrakis
      @SandsOfArrakis 10 місяців тому +5

      @@nffclacey don't give the Shell's, BP's etc of this world any fancy ideas. 😅

    • @martinfidel7086
      @martinfidel7086 10 місяців тому +2

      @@nffclacey hold on ! how is a planet made of fossil fuels ?

    • @MadDog-1961
      @MadDog-1961 10 місяців тому

      @@martinfidel7086
      Because it’s not “fossil fuel”.
      “Fossil fuel” is a theory!
      Even though they teach us it’s science fact!
      Based on certain biological markers found in crude…
      Decades ago Russian scientists concluded it’s a natural byproduct of earths cooling.
      A far more plausible theory but largely ignored by western scientists probably…
      Well because it’s Russian?

  • @Bhaltair
    @Bhaltair 10 місяців тому +4

    Well if there are bees there.. Certainly not!

  • @Sammy554
    @Sammy554 9 місяців тому +1

    No one ever travelled to jupiter but human can really explain the inhabitants of other planet with ease.

    • @LordTalax
      @LordTalax 8 місяців тому

      There are no inhabitants. All data is from probes and telescopes.

  • @johnkrappweis7367
    @johnkrappweis7367 21 день тому

    I remember a movie called “Jupiter Ascending”. Space aliens were using Jupiter’s red spot as a massive Stargate to hyper-shunt between star systems.

  • @buckfuddy79
    @buckfuddy79 9 місяців тому +10

    As a human Beeing this is un-bee-lievable. I was just over here, "beeing" and Jupiter just went and turned my whole beeing on it's head.

    • @jgrab1
      @jgrab1 8 місяців тому

      W-what?

    • @LordTalax
      @LordTalax 8 місяців тому

      Beeing? Wtf

    • @joelbailey7402
      @joelbailey7402 8 місяців тому +1

      i was like "why is no one talking about this misspelling?" haha. yours is the only comment ive found

    • @joelbailey7402
      @joelbailey7402 8 місяців тому

      @@LordTalax the title is misspelled. should be "Being Told"

  • @waltthebard7637
    @waltthebard7637 10 місяців тому +19

    With a magnetic field that powerful, Jupiter might potentially serve as a semi perpetual power source that could outlast our Sun going nova. Those 90 plus moons should be investigated for alien technology.😎

    • @NoName-mk4wv
      @NoName-mk4wv 10 місяців тому

      The sun is too small to go nova. You have the sum total of all human knowledge at your fingertips and still say wrong shit with your whole chest

    • @mindoverbody7647
      @mindoverbody7647 9 місяців тому

      And for oil 😎 🇺🇲

  • @hemaccabe4292
    @hemaccabe4292 9 місяців тому +1

    One must remember that Jupiter gets whacked a lot. A big nickel iron asteroid could do all sorts of funny things to her magnetic field.

  • @elong6160
    @elong6160 8 місяців тому

    Are you sure about the water/ ammonia content, water dose not like pressure unless it exerted tremendous alternative pressure. But I cannot say that happens, please advise 😊

  • @SameAsAnyOtherStranger
    @SameAsAnyOtherStranger 11 місяців тому +15

    I like how this video mention a lot interesting facts, but I don't like how it makes pointless conclusions. The fact that Jupiter's gravity effects comets is very interesting, but it's a rather wild assumption to say that by anything other than random chance, Jupiter protects Earth from comets.

    • @thebatman07
      @thebatman07 11 місяців тому +8

      This video is made by ai that's why

    • @arucarddimples1944
      @arucarddimples1944 10 місяців тому +11

      Of course it's random or considered by some to be fate when comets go flying towards Jupitor. Or do you mean to say that someone is purposefully throwing comets at the planet? What they are pointing out is that due to Jupitor's ridiculous size those random comets are affected by its gravity in such a way that it could be considered to be protecting the Earth.

    • @johnzuijdveld9585
      @johnzuijdveld9585 10 місяців тому

      @@thebatman07 You have any evidence? or are you just ASS-uming?

    • @johnzuijdveld9585
      @johnzuijdveld9585 10 місяців тому +5

      What difference does that make? No-one said that it has a conscious intent, it's just that as it lies in its orbit it intervenes in random asteroids trajectories thereby deflecting most away from the inner circle of planets.

    • @johnzuijdveld9585
      @johnzuijdveld9585 10 місяців тому +3

      @@arucarddimples1944 Good response

  • @destiny.on.the.phone.
    @destiny.on.the.phone. 9 місяців тому +5

    This video actually delivers on what it promises. I actually learned a lot of new things, and I am very grateful for this. Thank you, and keep it up, videos like these inspire quality ⚡😎

    • @absentia6164
      @absentia6164 9 місяців тому +4

      Except it promised to reveal that it's not what we've been told, yet it's exactly what we've been told.

    • @jakesusnik5038
      @jakesusnik5038 8 місяців тому +1

      But then you use critical thinking .... how could they possibly know this? Have we even been to the planet much less somehow got to the core to take samples so they would have some sort of factual data to make claims like this?

    • @absentia6164
      @absentia6164 8 місяців тому +3

      @@jakesusnik5038 That's not really critical thinking that's more skeptical thinking, letting go of a hammer and not seeing it hit the floor, you would use critical thinking to know that it has hit the floor, without the physical evidence that it has done so, skeptical thinking is the kind of thinking you're suggesting, I didn't see it hit the floor so how do I know it hit the floor, sure there's that one in a billion chance that someone decided to catch the hammer before it hit the ground, but unlikely, what we know about Jupiter is exactly the same thing, except with methods of much greater complexity then a rudimentary understanding of gravity.

    • @DmitrySholokhov
      @DmitrySholokhov 8 місяців тому +2

      Where's the hole from the thumbnail?

    • @manbeast47
      @manbeast47 5 місяців тому

      Must be a next level joke because the title and thumbnail were a complete lie. If true, i applaud you.

  • @intotheaether9022
    @intotheaether9022 8 місяців тому +1

    I love how they claim to know all of this stuff without any actual first-hand experience. They're looking at things and taking guesses. After all, how are they going to know what the core of other planets are when we've not dug any deeper than 10 miles on our own planet?

    • @JasonJohnson-lh9ei
      @JasonJohnson-lh9ei 8 місяців тому

      Isnt that what science is..and does..😂

    • @intotheaether9022
      @intotheaether9022 8 місяців тому

      @@JasonJohnson-lh9ei science is testable and repeatable by is nature. Much of modern-day science is pseudoscience because it cannot be tested, it is theoretical but being presented as absolute fact instead of theory.

    • @wonderwall989
      @wonderwall989 8 місяців тому

      @@intotheaether9022 Are you a flat earther? Science isn’t rigid like you falsely claim.

    • @intotheaether9022
      @intotheaether9022 8 місяців тому

      @@wonderwall989 I don't like being grouped in with a lot of those people, I'm specifically a biblical cosmetologist. I do not believe in the mainstream globe model however, and I think a lot of mainstream science has lost its way. Too much theory is being presented as fact and that is dishonest. Present it as theory and let's do some tests!

  • @RobbedPierre
    @RobbedPierre 8 місяців тому

    Can we give Jupiter props for watching our six? 👏👏👏

  • @parapitro8828
    @parapitro8828 10 місяців тому +8

    Jupiter is indeed a very mysterious planet. Its mass is 318 times that of the Earth, but its volume is 1000 times that of our globe. It shows a very low density of 1.3g per cubic centimeter, or a quarter of that of the Earth, but according to John Lear, Jupiter is not a gas giant, only NASA is a gas giant. It is therefore hollow. But in these hollows, what happens?

    • @lovelight9261
      @lovelight9261 10 місяців тому +2

      You have to watch out for the hollows Things happen improbable the creature Foggy Bottoms.

    • @5m0k3cz
      @5m0k3cz 9 місяців тому

      U better not trust those NASA data.. what is it's mass according to John Lear? or you? It must be way higher density with all alien civ inside.. just think about it, bro.

  • @sneggzooka
    @sneggzooka 11 місяців тому +4

    I love Jupiter.

  • @dreamingforward
    @dreamingforward 8 місяців тому

    It's (near) impossible for Jupiter to have striations of atmosphere without a solid mass underneath it providing friction. How would they even know it was gaseous anyway? From some speculative equations of Copernacus?

  • @heidiengellenner9651
    @heidiengellenner9651 9 місяців тому

    Jupiter has what is called "Solubale salvage"// We ported things to Isadore from Jupiter, that we wanted to save and portal back to Isadore.. That might be what your scientist call a matelic ocean.. Jupiter has some uique metals because of the solubale salvage capabaility..

  • @TheMightyCookieShow
    @TheMightyCookieShow 10 місяців тому +5

    I actually have been curious about this little unrelated Jupiter but our own Moon here on Earth is that not technically inside the the protective magnetic field of the earth puts out?

    • @redman7775
      @redman7775 10 місяців тому +3

      Yes, but because magnetic fields get exponentially weaker the further from the source they are, the field is nowhere near strong enough to protect the moon from the sun's intense radiation

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj 9 місяців тому

      The Earth's magnetic field is also not spherical, because the solar wind is constantly pushing on it.

    • @manbeast47
      @manbeast47 5 місяців тому

      Try again. Don't hurt yourself.

  • @cornbreadrl2430
    @cornbreadrl2430 9 місяців тому +7

    imagine if we stopped fighting wars and put aside our petty differences and actually concentrated on space exploration. We would be so much further along than we are. Think of the man power and time that has been put into cell phone technology alone. If we put that kind of power into space exploration for the past 40 years we would probably have a lot more answers during most of our lifetimes right now

    • @jimosullivan1389
      @jimosullivan1389 9 місяців тому

      And how would those answers help mankind....More water, food, . How about concentrating on earth...'cos we aint getting off of it.

    • @paradoxxor7770
      @paradoxxor7770 9 місяців тому

      ​@@jimosullivan1389
      The very act of space exploration now has satellites orbiting Earth, benefitting mankind.

    • @jimosullivan1389
      @jimosullivan1389 9 місяців тому

      @@paradoxxor7770 USA has spent 10 BILLION dollars on the James Webb scope. To get better polaroid pics of things that may no longer exist.
      We could have developed the satellites without the hundreds of billions of dollars.

    • @philorlowski2681
      @philorlowski2681 9 місяців тому

      Silence !! You will never make President !!

    • @breeinatree4811
      @breeinatree4811 9 місяців тому

      ​@@jimosullivan1389 there are a lot of ores and gasses that we are running out of on earth. For example, helium. Earth's supply is so low that's its starting to be rationed. Our earth can't make more helium but there is plenty in space.

  • @Hernal03
    @Hernal03 9 місяців тому +2

    So, Jupiter is not what we are *_Beeing_* told huh. Is that the latest scientific _buzz?_

  • @cresscressington714
    @cresscressington714 9 місяців тому +1

    Wouldn't a very cold spot with the heat of the massive pressures be a solid hypothesis for the large storms? I am baked and expressing myself as a 5 year old and im sure if I thought of it scientists already have, but right?