Now _this_ narrator is one of the first I have heard on similar UA-cam documentaries that has truly earned his pay! Superb voice, and wonderful pace! Love it!
I agree, with the exception of one nonimportant-yet-funny caveat: If you play the videos in which he's the narrator at slower-than-normal speed, it sounds like he is severely, severely baked. And I unwittingly ended up 'power-washing' my nasal cavity with none other than Dr. Pepper as a result.
i love the phrase "space dust", in reality this "dust" can range from the size of a molecule to a fricking asteroid. But in relativity to the size of the universe, it makes sense to call something the size of an asteroid dust.
The dust lanes hide massive stars within. From such a distance, even massive stars become microscopic size dust particles in appearance. Think of how tiny each of us is in comparison. So insignificant, yet so rare and precious.
This is a wonderful documentary. I really marvel at the wonder of the intellect of scientists who use that intellect to puzzle out and solve cosmic mysteries such as black holes. This is science that enriches us all.
We must Iearn to "love everyone" because our life does require it. Love is the best thing in our Universe. We MUST love one another, there is no other choice.
Chris, I totally agree with you in principle. And I may have a way of getting there: spike everyone's drinks with pharmaceutical purity/grade MDMA. I'm confident it'll result in an unprecedented amount of hugging, wanting to dance, wanting to spend time with others, and wanting to chew gum. You may end up seeing a lot of glow sticks as well.
Don't try to develop your own theories based solely on the information you might learn from watching a video. You must do the hard work of research by reading the comment section first.
+Weldon Wood Weldon. Now that is truly mind boggling. Einstein once wrote.(paraphrasing) 'There are two things I know of that are infinite. The universe and human stupidity and I'm not so sure about the universe. Food for thought.
+Paul Stovall I think you missed weldon's sarcasm. Trying to to show how stupid someone sounds by sounding more stupid is hard to do in the comment section.
+Weldon Wood A lot more work than most people want to do. You gotta be reading all the latest papers and findings every month, in addition to all the work you're doing on your own stuff. Fuck that, am I right?
@Brad Watson We Don't have a picture of a black hole.. They used radio telescopes to scan the center of a galaxy and radio telescopes don't take images.. They collect data.. That picture you seen was created on a computer to represent the data collected.. So in theory they could have shown us a picture dog peeing on a tree and we would have to take their word for it
@Brad Watson Quit bringing the cancer that is religion into science. The day humanity sheds its need of an invisible man in the sky is the day humanity can truly reach for the stars.
@@lunamaria1048 NO. All digital cameras collect data. Whatever the length of the waves used to collect the data, images rendered represent real physical reality in the universe, even if it is not exactly how it would look through a telescope, which might not see anything at all. A dog peeing picture does not.
Andrea Ghez won the nobel prize in physics for her work in identifying and studying sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy. She's a bad ass.
im 14 years old and i have been working of the same thing since the last 4 years ive made my own telescope and been upgrading it myself and now im trying to make a small outer space telescope and im going to send it straight there to see much closer the black whole
For some reason, I would like to be introduced to this telescope of yours. It sure sounds like a complex labor of love. Best wishes in your future endeavors. Nurture that inquisitive mind of yours, my friend. It may take you on an unforgettable journey.
Very well documented and commented upon. We could learn more about our galactic centre as s super massive black hole. The dame concept if already documented in the Hindu Hym Purusha Shuktam and Natayana Shuktam written about 5000 years before christian era. Jayaram Mumbai.
I wonder why we haven't sent a probe to the center of the galaxy? Seems like something we could do fairly easily, assuming it's a night launch. I suppose the most difficult part would be generating enough thrust to get it out of the system.
What we’ve learned since this video was made: 1) Sagittarius A is indeed a super massive black hole and that it has several giant stars orbiting it in highly eccentric orbits 2) Sagittarius A is in fact beginning to increase in mass after being observed as stable since it’s initial observation 3) Gravitational waves have been detected coming from Sagittarius A 4) The Milky Way is actually a bar spiral galaxy
@@Robin-rn6ns no, it is a reupload, with original Dick Rodstein narrating. But thanks for reminding me to re subscribe. I guess they got their channel back.
What excites me most are the questions our brightest children a century from now will be asking about the origin of our species... a time when history and the development of alien species far older than ourselves influence our growth on planet earth. Shit, I wish I could be around for that !!!
Happens quite often in Astronomy. Back when discoveries are made not all evidence,data, observation etc is fully collected so names can be far from perfect. There is also Dark Star or in this case Galactic Nuclei ( only for black holes in center of Galaxy )
Recently the Milky Way's black hole flared to 75% its normal brightness. I would expect that the increased brightness had to do with an increase in the disintegration of matter as it interacts with the event horizon of the black hole. As mass is squeezed upon its own gravitational acceleration, liken to the spaghettification effect, its matter changes to allow for its disintegration via transmutation and the massive release of photons due to alpha decay and beta decay. This is the effect wherein mass is collected within the event horizon, into a plasma, increasing its photon density. The effect is like squeezing out the dark matter from mass, allowing for the baryonic matter to be reduced to its smallest constituent components. The dark matter is then absorbed into the black hole, and the remnant of baryonic matter is radiated out at high velocity back into the cosmos.It appears dark matter is the complement of baryonic matter, wherein the creation of baryonic matter induces a displacement in the dark energy medium of the space-time fabric. This displacement is known as dark matter, and it would appear that it provides baryonic matter with the ability to bond. And if the black hole is nothing but dark matter, it would also follow that dark matter can be accumulated, separate of baryonic matter. Or at least that is how it is presented in the book, The Evolutioning of Creation: Volume 2.
I gotta disagree. The rarity of intelligent life anywhere else in the cosmos is thus far considered an extremely unique occurrence. If you are talking about a normal humans day-to-day activities or weather patterns and such on Earth, then yeah, the forces acting in the cosmos are trillions and trillions of times more impactful and powerful than anything on Earth
Every times when I want buying a telescope I come watching documentary like this one say to myself the photo’s what i seen here are better than any telescope;)
I would be interested to see a Documentary that explored the possibility of a Black Hole at the center of all Galaxies, and the role they play in the formation of Galaxies.
David Jordan there's a lot of supposition involved as black holes eat light, hence the name. We have further trouble seeing our galactic center as we are within it's accretion disk and this obscures our view. We can look at other galaxies side on as it were but these are millions of light years further away. I would like to see a documentary that tries to explain how exactly black holes 200 billion times heavier than the sun come to be formed almost instantly (on a cosmological timescale) after the big bang... x
1" - longer than most before clicking off. If I sat around spewing out high energy gamma rays and grabbing hold of anything within several hundred light years, I think that would make my presence a bit obvious and stretch the term "lurking" to its breaking point. For the last time, BLACK HOLES DO NOT LURK!!!!! ARGH!
*In case you'll like to know that 18,000,000 Million Kilometers per hour equals 11,184681.4603 Miles per hour. Speed of light is actually 670,616,629 mph*
As a story writer with that ending credit music i would write a piece where humanity managed space travel but only within its own galaxy, but we have to get away from our galaxy for some [insert doomsday incident here] reason and developed a technology that would let us ride on such a BH outburst... damn that would be Mass Effect stuff :D
Question for all to think about...When mater falls in to a black hole and when it reaches the surface of the black hole are the atoms broken down to the point where the smallest partial possible is all that is left?
Answer: Probably not. Also depending on the size of the blackhole. To our current understanding, the bigger the black hole, the less "tidalforces" on the surface. This means that if you were to fall into a really big, supermassive black hole, probably you wouldn't even notice at first that you've crossed its surface (the event horizon) The total destruction in all black holes will presumably only take place in the center where the "singularity" or whatever resides
Hey you guys see that? @1:00 there is another galaxy in the background. It is at a 45 degree right angle near to the top left side of the center. You can see the spiral. It is almost in behind the big dark cloud. Andromeda Galaxy IS NOT our closest galaxy. There is one right behind our own. About a quarter size. Well whadayaknow.
One exists in every galaxy, like a sun/star exists in the centre of every solar system. When two galaxies collide, and their blackholes meet, the glow from the dual blackhole before forming a larger new blackhole of a new galaxy , often display as an extra "sun" on every single planet on every single solar system that exists in that galaxy, though it does not provide heat and warmth for those planets, but it provides light in the skies where the blackholes are positioned.
It's a good question. All the space documentaries about Black holes show the black holes as if they're on a somewhat 3 dimensional but flat sheet.. It can be very misleading in actual real 4 dimensional space time.. Oh & they suck and blow lol. Just below event horizon, they suck. But just above it, they can blow out some of the extremely fast rotating matter that's getting sucked in because there's so much of it rotating/orbiting so fast some collides and gets blown out in the form of energy.. he explains it somewhere around 19:00
non rotating black black holes are (kinda per definition) 3 dimensional perfect spheres in space (to a co-moving observer) So if you are in a reference frame where the black hole doesn't move relative to you, its event horizon is the surface of a sphere. They don't suck and don't blow, things just fall inside basically, like they fall towards the earth for example The event horizon is not solid (if thats what you meant), you will be able to fall just through, even without noticing it if the black hole is large enough
These images of the stars and sky at night from these remote places look absolutely stunning. But when I look up do I get to see that?.. *Noooo...* I live in Western Sydney, All I can see is probably 100 or maybe 200 stars.. And Definitely no disk "centre of galaxy" running across the sky.. Frustrating that you have to be in the middle of nowhere to see the night sky flooded with stars, nebula's and Galaxies.. ☹️ Y'all feel me? Also who watches these documentaries to fall asleep lol 😌
By the amount of star dust left in the universe, where are we in relationship to total darkness. Is there enough hydrogen left to double the star quantity or are we approaching darkness?
It just goes to show how dangerous a little bit of knowledge can be.The core of our galaxy is the varey heart of our galaxy so energy in the core is at levels that nothing can survive but energy.
I has theory! If white holes do exist and i know we have a super massive Black Hole in the center of the galaxy, and its hypothesized that where there is a black hole there is always a white hole to spit out mass so i believe that the black hole could lead us to another galaxy?
I have a question related to blackholes. When an massive object collapses into the blackhole it warps space-time infinite. I assume that when a super-massive star which is limited mass collapses into the black hole it should warp space-time as much mass as it had when it was a star. Please enlighten me 😑
Uzay Ve Dünya not sure how likely this is because anything super massive has to be captured by the black holes event horizon otherwise it will just be deflected from its path...
I know I was just an animation but the beginning animation of the black hole almost looks like when a human egg cells start separating after fertilization
matter consumed by 'black holes' is the matter present at the creation of the universe. just like water that evaporates from an ocean is the very water that falls from the sky to replenish the ocean.
*[So You Think You Can See Us ¿]* Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī explains that Lord Balarāma’s conjugal pastimes took place in a small forest alongside the Yamunā, a place known as Śrīrāma-ghaṭṭa, which is far from the site of Śrī Kṛṣṇa’s rāsa dance.
okay so a few questions, arent black holes black? Then why is the one in the middle glowing so bright. Also, if it is a massive black hole, then wont it suck in the entire galaxy?
Think about a solar system. A Galaxy works just like one, the Supermassive Black Hole holds the entire galaxy together, just like the sun holds all the planets. The intense light is most likely given of the greater density of stars in the center;
Lucas Ferreira Yes I understand what you mean but the difference between the Sun and a Black hole is that the Sun doesn't pull objects inside of it. So my main question is that wont that massive black hole just eat away at the entire Galaxy?
Why would you call a mass, a hole? It is the gravitational properties that everything sticks to it there is no explosion to send out light. I would think a Gravatar would be more fitting.
I have a question though....so in reality the space, star, space or whatever it is (even planet) are actually dark ? And it is the computerization interpretation that make it bright before being presented to us in video?
Well "in theory" if we were standing on the moon looking towards Earth, *BUT* The Sun, "Again in theory" does not exist, No we probably wouldn't be able to see the Earth. Stars give off light and energy. Without stars Everything is just dark.. *Everything in the Universe, including entire planets & us, revolve around Stars!!...* They give us light, energy, & life.. And also take it away. But black holes, are invisible. You only see the stuff "which is reflected from stars" getting sucked inside to the black hole.
or push or speculation to another level?? but I was wondering a sign is supposed to occur at the coming tribulation and the end of days ...would this star tear or explode before swalloed... or is there a supernova fixing to occur. please any information would be greatly appreciated.... I had heard 13 years ago a star was getting ready to explode????? or something like that ...Thank you.
Brothers and sisters - its an honour to live on planet earth with you. What a ride!
Same to you sir. It's been a great ride orbiting our supermassive black hole!
right back at you brother, and the honor is all of ours! (except flat earthers, fuck those guys!!)
Tell it to kids dying of cancer, rape and murder victims, those drowned by tsunamis or crushed to death in traffic accidents
I will tell it to them :)
Take the hoodie off. You are a whitey
Now _this_ narrator is one of the first I have heard on similar UA-cam documentaries that has truly earned his pay! Superb voice, and wonderful pace! Love it!
I agree, with the exception of one nonimportant-yet-funny caveat: If you play the videos in which he's the narrator at slower-than-normal speed, it sounds like he is severely, severely baked. And I unwittingly ended up 'power-washing' my nasal cavity with none other than Dr. Pepper as a result.
@@ro4eva lol
@@ro4eva ouch, that probably smarted
i love the phrase "space dust", in reality this "dust" can range from the size of a molecule to a fricking asteroid. But in relativity to the size of the universe, it makes sense to call something the size of an asteroid dust.
The dust lanes hide massive stars within. From such a distance, even massive stars become microscopic size dust particles in appearance. Think of how tiny each of us is in comparison. So insignificant, yet so rare and precious.
This is a wonderful documentary. I really marvel at the wonder of the intellect of scientists who use that intellect to puzzle out and solve cosmic mysteries such as black holes. This is science that enriches us all.
How utterly smart these scientists are, thank you for this presentation
We must Iearn to "love everyone" because our life does require it. Love is the best thing in our Universe. We MUST love one another, there is no other choice.
Kkk
Chris, I totally agree with you in principle. And I may have a way of getting there: spike everyone's drinks with pharmaceutical purity/grade MDMA. I'm confident it'll result in an unprecedented amount of hugging, wanting to dance, wanting to spend time with others, and wanting to chew gum. You may end up seeing a lot of glow sticks as well.
Don't try to develop your own theories based solely on the information you might learn from watching a video. You must do the hard work of research by reading the comment section first.
+Weldon Wood "assumptions" ... not theories
+CeaoS See, see. That's right. Your research not only pays off for yourself but I stand humbly corrected. I think we're getting somewhere. Thanks.
+Weldon Wood
Weldon. Now that is truly mind boggling. Einstein once wrote.(paraphrasing) 'There are two things I know of that are infinite. The universe and human stupidity and I'm not so sure about the universe. Food for thought.
+Paul Stovall I think you missed weldon's sarcasm. Trying to to show how stupid someone sounds by sounding more stupid is hard to do in the comment section.
+Weldon Wood
A lot more work than most people want to do. You gotta be reading all the latest papers and findings every month, in addition to all the work you're doing on your own stuff. Fuck that, am I right?
THERE'S NOTHING MORE AMAZING THAN THESE SPACE DOCUMENTARIES
SPACE RIP SAVED MY LIFE
Humanity is the most advanced species throughout all time and space
you made me get excited for nothing. I've seen this 20 times already. oh well. I guess I will watch it again. you guys make the best space docs ever.
yeah, they really do make the best vids ever.
Incredible graphics!
Yes! Was waiting for another one of these fine documentaries. Thank you SpaceRip!
This video was published in 2015. its 2019 and we officially have the first picture of a black hole
@Brad Watson We Don't have a picture of a black hole.. They used radio telescopes to scan the center of a galaxy and radio telescopes don't take images.. They collect data.. That picture you seen was created on a computer to represent the data collected.. So in theory they could have shown us a picture dog peeing on a tree and we would have to take their word for it
@@lunamaria1048 moron
This is, I think, is the same show that's posted under about two dozen other names
@Brad Watson Quit bringing the cancer that is religion into science. The day humanity sheds its need of an invisible man in the sky is the day humanity can truly reach for the stars.
@@lunamaria1048 NO. All digital cameras collect data. Whatever the length of the waves used to collect the data, images rendered represent real physical reality in the universe, even if it is not exactly how it would look through a telescope, which might not see anything at all. A dog peeing picture does not.
The person that's narrating these videos has like the perfect voice for it
The best narrator ever.
Another wonderful and interesting video. Thanks so much
Black Holes really are destructively fascinating
This channel is the best
Andrea Ghez won the nobel prize in physics for her work in identifying and studying sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy. She's a bad ass.
Wonderful
Humanity is the most advanced species throughout all time and space.
We are capable of infinite knowledge and love even while in human form..
What is the music starting at around 7:30? It is used in a few of these space docs and I love it.
Watched this 5 years ago and here I am again 😅🌌
Interesting facts mrNelson1963 congratulations
im 14 years old and i have been working of the same thing since the last 4 years ive made my own telescope and been upgrading it myself and now im trying to make a small outer space telescope and im going to send it straight there to see much closer the black whole
Lazy Bryan any updates
First learn how to spell, it’s a black hole, not whole, and you might have a few problems getting that telescope into space but good luck.👍
For some reason, I would like to be introduced to this telescope of yours. It sure sounds like a complex labor of love. Best wishes in your future endeavors. Nurture that inquisitive mind of yours, my friend. It may take you on an unforgettable journey.
555є655є8 єєє єī єī 5 ๔гє єī3є8є6655 5єรςђђєก в555-6y๏600 pipipiг ù มр %ұ๏ұұ5;6 y
12:35 that's something you don't wanna see at all
The Dark Sign.
Very well documented and commented upon. We could learn more about our galactic centre as s super massive black hole. The dame concept if already documented in the Hindu Hym Purusha Shuktam and Natayana Shuktam written about 5000 years before christian era. Jayaram Mumbai.
Loved this video, God is real,and all powerful.
I wonder why we haven't sent a probe to the center of the galaxy? Seems like something we could do fairly easily, assuming it's a night launch. I suppose the most difficult part would be generating enough thrust to get it out of the system.
I suppose you're supposedly onto something.
What we’ve learned since this video was made:
1) Sagittarius A is indeed a super massive black hole and that it has several giant stars orbiting it in highly eccentric orbits
2) Sagittarius A is in fact beginning to increase in mass after being observed as stable since it’s initial observation
3) Gravitational waves have been detected coming from Sagittarius A
4) The Milky Way is actually a bar spiral galaxy
Sag A* is also where the Collectors chose to stash their evil lair, IIRC.
love these long vids. keep it uppp:)
A direct image of a black hole? One thing I am sure about this, it gonna be scary.
Well, we finally have that image now.
What's to say after this incredible episode?
I'm pretty sure I've seen this one..
I'm sure I've seen this as well
+Felix ‘VanDeKappz’ Antonello I'm sure I've read that comment before
Just face it we have all seen them all. Something new please
Nope you haven't seen it, I would know
@@Robin-rn6ns no, it is a reupload, with original Dick Rodstein narrating.
But thanks for reminding me to re subscribe. I guess they got their channel back.
What excites me most are the questions our brightest children a century from now will be asking about the origin of our species... a time when history and the development of alien species far older than ourselves influence our growth on planet earth. Shit, I wish I could be around for that !!!
Old video, but was nice watching it again...
The more I learn from black holes, the more I understand how bad and misleading their names is.
Happens quite often in Astronomy. Back when discoveries are made not all evidence,data, observation etc is fully collected so names can be far from perfect. There is also Dark Star or in this case Galactic Nuclei ( only for black holes in center of Galaxy )
Recently the Milky Way's black hole flared to 75% its normal brightness. I would expect that the increased brightness had to do with an increase in the disintegration of matter as it interacts with the event horizon of the black hole. As mass is squeezed upon its own gravitational acceleration, liken to the spaghettification effect, its matter changes to allow for its disintegration via transmutation and the massive release of photons due to alpha decay and beta decay. This is the effect wherein mass is collected within the event horizon, into a plasma, increasing its photon density. The effect is like squeezing out the dark matter from mass, allowing for the baryonic matter to be reduced to its smallest constituent components. The dark matter is then absorbed into the black hole, and the remnant of baryonic matter is radiated out at high velocity back into the cosmos.It appears dark matter is the complement of baryonic matter, wherein the creation of baryonic matter induces a displacement in the dark energy medium of the space-time fabric. This displacement is known as dark matter, and it would appear that it provides baryonic matter with the ability to bond. And if the black hole is nothing but dark matter, it would also follow that dark matter can be accumulated, separate of baryonic matter. Or at least that is how it is presented in the book, The Evolutioning of Creation: Volume 2.
We are insignificant in comparison to the events going on in our universe.
I gotta disagree. The rarity of intelligent life anywhere else in the cosmos is thus far considered an extremely unique occurrence.
If you are talking about a normal humans day-to-day activities or weather patterns and such on Earth, then yeah, the forces acting in the cosmos are trillions and trillions of times more impactful and powerful than anything on Earth
so so so much better at 1.25 speed.
Dude, shhh. Your genius is showing.
Thanks mate, you are genius :)
:D
What they said.
Paul:
Thanks:))
It works good!
😊
Every times when I want buying a telescope I come watching documentary like this one say to myself the photo’s what i seen here are better than any telescope;)
31 minutes 28 ads. Just great!
@@nobody_somewhere Yea. Thanks for telling me what my 1 month old already knows. I'm on mobile. Get with the program.
Several years ago I'd find this Black Sun rising terrifying. 12:12
I would be interested to see a Documentary that explored the possibility of a Black Hole at the center of all Galaxies, and the role they play in the formation of Galaxies.
David Jordan there's a lot of supposition involved as black holes eat light, hence the name. We have further trouble seeing our galactic center as we are within it's accretion disk and this obscures our view. We can look at other galaxies side on as it were but these are millions of light years further away. I would like to see a documentary that tries to explain how exactly black holes 200 billion times heavier than the sun come to be formed almost instantly (on a cosmological timescale) after the big bang... x
1" - longer than most before clicking off. If I sat around spewing out high energy gamma rays and grabbing hold of anything within several hundred light years, I think that would make my presence a bit obvious and stretch the term "lurking" to its breaking point. For the last time, BLACK HOLES DO NOT LURK!!!!! ARGH!
Totally feel your frustration. Ain't no dang black hole just lurking. 😂
I like the way he says milky way. Milky way and black holes.
*In case you'll like to know that 18,000,000 Million Kilometers per hour equals 11,184681.4603 Miles per hour. Speed of light is actually 670,616,629 mph*
As a story writer with that ending credit music i would write a piece where humanity managed space travel but only within its own galaxy, but we have to get away from our galaxy for some [insert doomsday incident here] reason and developed a technology that would let us ride on such a BH outburst... damn that would be Mass Effect stuff :D
Glaciers melting in the dead of night
And the superstar's sucked into the supermassive
It's blackbird singing in the dead of night, duh.
8:17 holy shit that's Lisa's music teacher!
Question for all to think about...When mater falls in to a black hole and when it reaches the surface of the black hole are the atoms broken down to the point where the smallest partial possible is all that is left?
Look up Hawking Radiation.
Answer: Probably not.
Also depending on the size of the blackhole.
To our current understanding, the bigger the black hole, the less "tidalforces" on the surface.
This means that if you were to fall into a really big, supermassive black hole, probably you wouldn't even notice at first that you've crossed its surface (the event horizon)
The total destruction in all black holes will presumably only take place in the center where the "singularity" or whatever resides
Truly epic. We have come a long way with telescopes and soon we will have even more figured out!
The Collector Base is in the Galactic Center.
Yes, indeed. I wish they would remaster that trilogy.
Hey you guys see that? @1:00 there is another galaxy in the background. It is at a 45 degree right angle near to the top left side of the center. You can see the spiral. It is almost in behind the big dark cloud. Andromeda Galaxy IS NOT our closest galaxy. There is one right behind our own. About a quarter size. Well whadayaknow.
Andromeda is the closest MAJOR galaxy. You’re probably thinking of the Small Magellanic Cloud or the Large Magellanic Cloud.
One exists in every galaxy, like a sun/star exists in the centre of every solar system. When two galaxies collide, and their blackholes meet, the glow from the dual blackhole before forming a larger new blackhole of a new galaxy , often display as an extra "sun" on every single planet on every single solar system that exists in that galaxy, though it does not provide heat and warmth for those planets, but it provides light in the skies where the blackholes are positioned.
+Hi im a very amateur youtube skeleton nevermind.....
Oh I love Space Rip channel. Really appreciate your great videos.
The previous upload got sucked into a super massive youtube black hole.
lol. hilarious!
Refreshing, a sense of humor. If more You Tube scientist had one what a wonderful World it would be.
Because if we get close to it, we'll just be swimming in energy candy. The thumbnail PROMISED ME
Are black holes flat or spherical? Do they suck or blow? Are they solid or doors?
It's a good question. All the space documentaries about Black holes show the black holes as if they're on a somewhat 3 dimensional but flat sheet.. It can be very misleading in actual real 4 dimensional space time..
Oh & they suck and blow lol.
Just below event horizon, they suck. But just above it, they can blow out some of the extremely fast rotating matter that's getting sucked in because there's so much of it rotating/orbiting so fast some collides and gets blown out in the form of energy.. he explains it somewhere around 19:00
non rotating black black holes are (kinda per definition) 3 dimensional perfect spheres in space (to a co-moving observer)
So if you are in a reference frame where the black hole doesn't move relative to you, its event horizon is the surface of a sphere.
They don't suck and don't blow, things just fall inside basically, like they fall towards the earth for example
The event horizon is not solid (if thats what you meant), you will be able to fall just through, even without noticing it if the black hole is large enough
very good
You guys should totally use Universe Sandbox 2 when you're simulating something, like the supernova :D
+Christian “Kowita” Schriver Who pays them for the Production of these space videos? How do they make their revenue from them?
+Sound Judgment (Soundjudgment) Ads
The simulations in that game aren't totally accurate. I've played it a lot and there are errors.
@@l1ghtd3m0n3 -- You're right about that. Still, it's a gorgeous app which I would definitely recommend if it's part of a major sale.
Dick Rodstein is one of my favorite narrators.
These images of the stars and sky at night from these remote places look absolutely stunning. But when I look up do I get to see that?.. *Noooo...*
I live in Western Sydney, All I can see is probably 100 or maybe 200 stars.. And Definitely no disk "centre of galaxy" running across the sky.. Frustrating that you have to be in the middle of nowhere to see the night sky flooded with stars, nebula's and Galaxies.. ☹️
Y'all feel me?
Also who watches these documentaries to fall asleep lol 😌
You must go away from light pollution.
@@michaelmallal9101 Yeah I know...
But away from light pollution is far away from here... Can't just suddenly pack up and take a road trip lol 😉
we ain't alone here
At this point or discrete partition of spacetime, I believe we are alone, bro
What a way to go, blackholed. Nothing beats that.
It's all-encompassing and resistance is futile.
I like the narrators voice. It sends me to sleep
By the amount of star dust left in the universe, where are we in relationship to total darkness. Is there enough hydrogen left to double the star quantity or are we approaching darkness?
It's a question no one really knows. They still think we are made up of junk DNA after all
That thumbnail is a piss poor black hole effort
Please, does anyone know the name of the music 31:12?
Dutch Astronomer Remo Tilanus is working on this, together with an international team..
that Blackhole Rise at 12:18 is the creepiest thing ever
Yeah, it is.
I'm guessing something happened to the old video?
+Maushroom Probably copyrighted music.
+Maushroom it did not have the logo on the right bottom
How deep is a black hole ? We only seem to observe the "topside", or accretion disk.
Asked for science, recived history.
It just goes to show how dangerous a little bit of knowledge can be.The core of our galaxy is the varey heart of our galaxy so energy in the core is at levels that nothing can survive but energy.
Very interesting. Does anyone know what happened to the "watch later" icon? I wanted to click it, but it's not there. Did YT take it away?
+skylilly1 It's under the "add to" icon...click on that.
Thank You.
I has theory! If white holes do exist and i know we have a super massive Black Hole in the center of the galaxy, and its hypothesized that where there is a black hole there is always a white hole to spit out mass so i believe that the black hole could lead us to another galaxy?
*****
Im going now!
*****
Whos to say they are in the Milky Way?
*****
Ill send a postcard!
+Vivian H so what is your theory...
+ThatTechGuy its funny cuz. recently steven hawking had a theory that blackholes transfer information from one universe to another.
Is this an original video, or a repost of a BBC or Nova show? The end credit only says (c) TLP
I have a question related to blackholes. When an massive object collapses into the blackhole it warps space-time infinite. I assume that when a super-massive star which is limited mass collapses into the black hole it should warp space-time as much mass as it had when it was a star. Please enlighten me 😑
Uzay Ve Dünya not sure how likely this is because anything super massive has to be captured by the black holes event horizon otherwise it will just be deflected from its path...
I know I was just an animation but the beginning animation of the black hole almost looks like when a human egg cells start separating after fertilization
0:52 tai lopez? why you are not in your lamborighin?
Around the 26 minute mark you can see the classic UFO in the 3D vesica piscis.
matter consumed by 'black holes' is the matter present at the creation of the universe. just like water that evaporates from an ocean is the very water that falls from the sky to replenish the ocean.
Subtitle in english would be amazing
*[So You Think You Can See Us ¿]*
Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī explains that Lord Balarāma’s conjugal pastimes took place in a small forest alongside the Yamunā, a place known as Śrīrāma-ghaṭṭa, which is far from the site of Śrī Kṛṣṇa’s rāsa dance.
It'll be fireworks when Andromeda and Milky Way black holes collide. Maybe they'll revolve around each other?
A black hole morphing into a quasar seems like "The Big Bang Theory" in miniature, just like an atom is a small example of our solar system.
okay so a few questions, arent black holes black? Then why is the one in the middle glowing so bright. Also, if it is a massive black hole, then wont it suck in the entire galaxy?
Black holes are black because they suck in even light. The middle glows as the eruptions come out and then orbit it. Can't speak on your last point
Think about a solar system. A Galaxy works just like one, the Supermassive Black Hole holds the entire galaxy together, just like the sun holds all the planets. The intense light is most likely given of the greater density of stars in the center;
Lucas Ferreira Yes I understand what you mean but the difference between the Sun and a Black hole is that the Sun doesn't pull objects inside of it. So my main question is that wont that massive black hole just eat away at the entire Galaxy?
Sven Rudolf black holes dont suck things in, thats a misconception
Do black holes move or are they stationary?
+NobbyKNobbs They move. Ignore above comment.
Nothing is stationary. Nothing.
+NobbyKNobbs It's relative, innit, corporal? E.g. galaxies (and their central black holes) move in relation to each other.
enleuk lol ty
+NobbyKNobbs they call a cab at 1600h to go home to their wives
Why would you call a mass, a hole? It is the gravitational properties that everything sticks to it there is no explosion to send out light. I would think a Gravatar would be more fitting.
8:48 PRAISE KEK 🐸
I have a question though....so in reality the space, star, space or whatever it is (even planet) are actually dark ? And it is the computerization interpretation that make it bright before being presented to us in video?
Well "in theory" if we were standing on the moon looking towards Earth, *BUT* The Sun, "Again in theory" does not exist, No we probably wouldn't be able to see the Earth.
Stars give off light and energy. Without stars Everything is just dark.. *Everything in the Universe, including entire planets & us, revolve around Stars!!...* They give us light, energy, & life.. And also take it away.
But black holes, are invisible. You only see the stuff "which is reflected from stars" getting sucked inside to the black hole.
@@wildone8397 -- You are devilishly clever, my dear.
@@ro4eva lol thanks 👍
awesome
This is ok in theory. But what comes out the other end...WHAT.A GIGANTIC RECYCLING MACHINE
A neutron star has a core of nuclear pasta, gluons and quarks, etc. Is a singularity a fluid in nature? Is it like tiny bowling ball?
Can you give out a list of the music used for this documentary? Thank you.
or push or speculation to another level?? but I was wondering a sign is supposed to occur at the coming tribulation and the end of days ...would this star tear or explode before swalloed... or is there a supernova fixing to occur. please any information would be greatly appreciated.... I had heard 13 years ago a star was getting ready to explode????? or something like that ...Thank you.
i guess the nights are always clear on top of Mt.Everest
Aren't black holes just holes in space time caused by the mass of a collapsed star rather than an object itself?
One and the same..
I like
Will light up only a tiny region of the universe....
Elite: Dangerous.
Yes, the elite are dangerous folks.
/wink