I stared into the abyss and the abyss stared back... now we're mates and have a wonderful time stargazing while drinking whiskey, discussing Nietzsche's eternal recurrence, and listening to '90s Norwegian black metal.
If we were in the center of that void we wouldn’t have known about the rest of the universe existing until the Hubble Telescope was built. The void is so empty and vast that the few galaxies inside it are literally too far away from each other to be seen with the naked eye.
While I do believe the quantum fluctuation explanation makes the most sense, indeed, a random distribution of points leads to clumps and voids, I always like to think that maybe the voids are "scars" from where our universe bumped up against neighboring universes in the multiverse. When they bumped, the positive pressure pushed any matter to the edges.
What terrifies me is a simple question: if that’s what things were like billions of years ago…. What does everything between that and us look like… today?
I think it’s the writers’ responsibility to put pronounciation guides in their scripts. Factboy has more channels than there are galaxies in the observable universe, he can’t possibly fact check all the scripts.
@@Kurahaara86 In this case it was not needed as an umlaut was used to indicate that the two vowels are separate. Fortunately it was not Anglicised like many other words e.g. naïve versus naive. Never understood why we haven't adopted diacritics, but I guess our spelling is bad enough!
@@DarkHelixia I never saw anyone with english as their first language pronounce any of the letters Å, Ö, Ä, etc. correctly, so I’d assume they’ll need the help. Edit: Okay, I have in some videos when they’re trying to learn a new language. But that’s rare.
@@Kurahaara86 Tbh, I only know about umlauts because they're used in Dutch, which I'm learning! But as an native British speaker, whenever I see any diacritic (and have the time!) I always check the pronunciation! This said even knowing this, there are vowel and diphthongs that don't exist in English which we'll struggle with!
Basically all popular physicists agree that complex life is INCREDIBLY rare, though the galaxies may be filled with (extremely) basic life. To the point that its likely that we are the only COMPLEX life in this galaxy, at this moment. And further that it is likely that no intelligent life has ever visited other intelligent life in the history of the universe. It would be a miracle to even detect another civilization is what the Fermi paradox is telling us.
Nahhh…I‘m more like a optimistic Drake equation dude: their are a whole bunch of other civilizations waiting for us to grow out of our evolutionary kindergarden behaviors.^^
I describe them as 'institutional scientists': the ones that were strict taught 'to think like predecessors', funded by universities/gov. They're the ones that can't begin to bear the idea of Gen./Spec Relativity and Std Model being obsolete/false.
If the void were full of Dyson Spheres, we would still be able to detect them because they would radiate immense amounts of heat which our infrared telescopes could easily detect. Also, astrophysicists have determined that the plausibility of a complete sphere is impractical and therefore unlikely to exist. Stars are not stationary objects, they rotate around a common center of mass making them wobble, and any slight deviation in position will cause fluctuations in the gravitational force upon the structure of the sphere, making it collapse or buckle in on itself. Not to mention the necessary material needed to construct a complete sphere would require the demolition of an entire planet like Mercury. The updated version of this superstructure is known as a “Dyson’s Swarm.” This is a collection of smaller, individual structures that orbit the star independently and are able to move along with its orbital fluctuations, and requires much less material to construct. Anywho, the likelihood of the void being a result of giant alien superstructures is non existent. The feasibility of these objects being undetectable to infrared telescopes is just impossible.
Fairly recent theories suggest that our galaxy is within a small void with our nearest neighbours over 2.5 million lightyears away rather than the average 161000 lightyears.
My suggestions about this field : The idea of a white hole as an alternative explanation for cosmic voids like the Boötes Void is an intriguing concept, even though it diverges from current cosmological models. Here’s a brief exploration of white holes and how they might relate to cosmic voids: ### What is a White Hole? 1. **Theoretical Concept**: A white hole is a theoretical object that is the opposite of a black hole. While a black hole pulls matter in with its strong gravitational field, a white hole would theoretically expel matter and prevent anything from entering it. White holes emerge from certain solutions to the equations of general relativity, particularly in the context of black hole physics. 2. **Time Reversal**: If a black hole can be thought of as a time-symmetric process, where matter falls in and cannot escape, a white hole would represent the reverse process, where matter is emitted, and nothing can enter. 3. **Cosmological Significance**: While black holes are well-supported by observational evidence, no white holes have been observed, and their existence remains purely theoretical. Their behavior would be counterintuitive based on our understanding of physics and thermodynamics. ### Voids and White Holes If we were to entertain the idea that a cosmic void could be linked to a white hole, several speculative points could be made: 1. **Matter Ejection**: If a white hole were to exist at the center of a void, it might explain a region where matter is expelled rather than accumulated. The lack of galaxies could potentially be attributed to matter being pushed outward, creating a low-density region in space. 2. **Dynamics of Space**: The presence of a white hole might imply unique dynamics affecting the distribution of dark matter and energy around it, leading to the formation of a void. However, such dynamics would require a reevaluation of current understanding of gravity and cosmology. 3. **Causality Issues**: The physics of white holes presents many challenges. For example, the laws of thermodynamics would be violated since a white hole would decrease entropy as it expels matter. This presents significant problems regarding causality and the foundational principles of physics. 4. **Lack of Evidence**: Currently, there is no observational evidence supporting the existence of white holes. The behavior of cosmic voids is largely explained through the gravitational dynamics of dark matter and cosmic expansion, which provide a coherent framework for understanding these structures. ### Conclusion While the thought of a white hole as an explanation for features like the Boötes Void presents an interesting thought experiment, it remains highly speculative and not grounded in current astrophysical evidence. The established theories of cosmology involving the expansion of the universe and the distribution of galaxies provide a robust framework for understanding voids. That said, exploring alternative explanations is part of the scientific process, and new discoveries could continue to challenge and refine our understanding of the universe.
Institutional physicists are always spouting theories about cosmology/cosmogony...and can't step away from idea of an Inflationary Era + Reionization. Which would seem to have never happened. Yet if they acknowledge the evidence about this, they'd have to throw out all their decades of effort...which they're willing to 180 on their theories. They're not 'true scientists': bcuz otherwise they wouldn't have issue with this. Even now they're just beginning to support the theory of Direct collapse for primordial BHs. Something I've wrote about for 10yrs w/ little support (due to lack of good peer review). They talk about extreme locations in the universe (post-stellar remnants, early dense/hot universe, black holes) and they struggle to begin taking into account time: rather treating it as 'situationally separate' from space...but when convenient its 'spacetime'. Once again, the truth of the situation appears to be radically diff from what they espouse...and the implications would create paradigm shift they desperately do not want.
Field galaxies are probably better places to look for advanced civilizations. Being left alone in your environment for billions of years is really helpful
lol... today i found out, brain blaze, astro graphics, places, megaprojects, side projects, warographics, decoding the unknown, casual criminalist, into the shadows and old channels xplrd, geographics, biographics, top tenz, highlight history
@@umbles7007 Think of words like “Noël” or “coöperate”. In English, this means that the second vowel begins a new syllable, and is not part of a diphthong. In other languages, two dots are an umlaut, which changes the pronunciation of a vowel, usually to more forward in the mouth.
16:00 i mean i know probably is extremely low but its definitely a curious thought because it is technically plausible. No matter how small the odds are they arent zero. But ya more then likely empty space lol but i like the curious thought
I wonder how many rogue worlds and lonely stars exist in that void, it’s not completely empty, just exceedingly less dense. That’s still likely trillions upon trillions of stars, worlds, and small rocky objects within the 300 million odd light years of the void. Not counting the 60 galaxies within it of course. Hell maybe even hundreds of trillions? More? Such information is hard to quantify.
I'd prefer to argue that "nothing" is impossible.It must be made up of something.There isnt anywhere we can look,where there isnt something.Even if it appears "empty" and looks like "nothing is there",i cant imagine theres ACTUALLY nothing there.
Is it the center of the universe? If there was a big bang, and everything is expanding outward, then there'd be a big old void where everything came from. Also, it doesn't have to be a big black hole filing the entire void. Just big enough that everything in its orbit has been sucked in. Of course, those sixty galaxies would have to be kind of in a circle around the black hole.
"If the Milky Way had been in the Bootes Void we wouldn't have known other galaxies existed until the 1960s" only sounds dramatic until you remember that we didn't know other galaxies existed until the 1920s.
The bootes void is dark matter. Vacuum is dark energy, and there isn't a black hole there to do the conversion and the weight/gravity of all the clusters around condensed that area.
I wonder if it is related to dark matter/energy. I know that dark points to unseen rather than black, but if there was something there that we can not see, for some reason, it would take the space and clear the area.
@Hillbilly001 those usually involve different characters. Arguably, BB would be the only channel I'd consider more of a different "character" enough to qualify as a crossover. And for that maybe we'd need some old school script slapping. This Simon and Astro Simon are similar enough it just feels like it was uploaded to the wrong channel. A crossover is when two different shows or sets of characters do it. That's not this.
so... do we have any proof that the random empty areas we cant explain arnt starless due to unrealistic amounts of dyson spheres absorbing all the light from all the stars in the voids?
I mean OK, let's agree that science says this area is kind of lacking galaxies, but it's not really empty since it has several galaxies, my brain forgets how many like 30 or 60 or something, but that makes me ask has our newest best telescope actually spend an hour or more staring at the zone yet? I ask because as I recall someone once pointed a telescope at a dark chunk of space and when the telescope finished its look they had found hundreds or more galaxies in the area like it was packed with stuff, so as a stupid human it makes me want to know if anyone really looked lately? bye.
Bootes takes up 2% the volume of the universe and would normally have 2000 galaxies in that volume, yet there are 2 trillion (2 thousand billions) galaxies in the observable universe so the numbers don't add up?
nothing cant exist. even in the absence of matter there is still time and space. nothing is literally impossible. it's my theory as to why a universe happened at all.
I stared into the abyss and the abyss stared back... now we're mates and have a wonderful time stargazing while drinking whiskey, discussing Nietzsche's eternal recurrence, and listening to '90s Norwegian black metal.
“Could you imagine that nothing? No light no dark no up no down, no life, no time without end.” ~ The Doctor
Didnt he leave one of the Family of Blood there?
Here! In the 3rd rock from the sun, where the only void I am afraid of is the growing emptiness of my bank account.
your bank account < my soul
@@bmxerkrantzyour soul < my self confidence
Mate the dude can speak for hours without sayin a single new interesting thing
Crawl out of your hole!! (You said *"IN* the 3rd rock...." and I couldn't resist)
Live well
Simon, my dude, now your making videos about nothing. Literally.
Simon makes so many shows, it's impressive. But there is a point here.
😂
I see what you did there… touché good sir touché
And gettin PAID for it too! 💸🤑💸 That takes a certain type of hustler. 🤘
Maybe he should make one about spelling and grammar
No light means you can’t see. So it’s the same sensation as being in a sensory deprivation chamber.
>Boötes Void, also called the great nothing.
>Look inside.
>60 galaxies.
If we were in the center of that void we wouldn’t have known about the rest of the universe existing until the Hubble Telescope was built. The void is so empty and vast that the few galaxies inside it are literally too far away from each other to be seen with the naked eye.
60 galaxies in a space that size is basically empty - statistically speaking
fun related fact - the average density of stars outside of a galaxy is 1/10 of what it is inside - so you can star hop between galaxies "easily".
@@xBINARYGODx i guess there is something lost in simplification here because i just don't believe that at all
I love when Simon explains things he doesnt understand:)
Ooh! An Astrographics X-over! 😊
8:29 Looks like Simon's hand entered the Boötes Void!
The actual location of the Writers Basement.
While I do believe the quantum fluctuation explanation makes the most sense, indeed, a random distribution of points leads to clumps and voids, I always like to think that maybe the voids are "scars" from where our universe bumped up against neighboring universes in the multiverse. When they bumped, the positive pressure pushed any matter to the edges.
Take me out into the black, tell them I'm not coming back...
What terrifies me is a simple question: if that’s what things were like billions of years ago…. What does everything between that and us look like… today?
"all the money converted to pennies" is one helluva random unit of measurement.
Silence you say? That sounds nice...
Time for Sailor Saturn? Okies ill go wake up Hotaru.
Your videos are all sooooooo informative! Thank you!
I think my dad once had a shirt similar to the one worn by the presenter.
I really enjoy my daily dose of lhe Wistler 👍
"Poor Boötes, doomed to circle forever in a vast sea of nothing. A fate...worse than death.
Anyway-"
"Oh no! Anyway-"
I knew I wasn't the only one that found humor in that 😂😂
Fun video. Nice breath of fresh air to visit something different from usual.
Is a void a place? My brain hurts.
Avoid!
Thank you for the reference Simon..love you..your one of my heroes ☺️❤️
There's a Lemon Jelly song called "Page 1" that encourages you to imagine nothing.
It's sick af.
It's pronounced boo-OH-tees, not boots.
Thank you. I was wondering if I had learned it wrong.
I think it’s the writers’ responsibility to put pronounciation guides in their scripts. Factboy has more channels than there are galaxies in the observable universe, he can’t possibly fact check all the scripts.
@@Kurahaara86 In this case it was not needed as an umlaut was used to indicate that the two vowels are separate. Fortunately it was not Anglicised like many other words e.g. naïve versus naive. Never understood why we haven't adopted diacritics, but I guess our spelling is bad enough!
@@DarkHelixia I never saw anyone with english as their first language pronounce any of the letters Å, Ö, Ä, etc. correctly, so I’d assume they’ll need the help. Edit: Okay, I have in some videos when they’re trying to learn a new language. But that’s rare.
@@Kurahaara86 Tbh, I only know about umlauts because they're used in Dutch, which I'm learning! But as an native British speaker, whenever I see any diacritic (and have the time!) I always check the pronunciation! This said even knowing this, there are vowel and diphthongs that don't exist in English which we'll struggle with!
This is the channel for smart people. Love it.
It's crazy to think that the Milky Way is near the center of KBC.
Basically all popular physicists agree that complex life is INCREDIBLY rare, though the galaxies may be filled with (extremely) basic life. To the point that its likely that we are the only COMPLEX life in this galaxy, at this moment. And further that it is likely that no intelligent life has ever visited other intelligent life in the history of the universe. It would be a miracle to even detect another civilization is what the Fermi paradox is telling us.
Nahhh…I‘m more like a optimistic Drake equation dude: their are a whole bunch of other civilizations waiting for us to grow out of our evolutionary kindergarden behaviors.^^
@@mikehundeshagen5995As you outline a kindergartner’s perspective
I describe them as 'institutional scientists': the ones that were strict taught 'to think like predecessors', funded by universities/gov.
They're the ones that can't begin to bear the idea of Gen./Spec Relativity and Std Model being obsolete/false.
They only know what they think they know. Rare only because they think so.
Nice. Butterfly's in the early universe. Dyson spheres, von Neumann probes, dust, cavitation bubble.
Mind blown at minute 3:00 now i need a nap
If the void were full of Dyson Spheres, we would still be able to detect them because they would radiate immense amounts of heat which our infrared telescopes could easily detect. Also, astrophysicists have determined that the plausibility of a complete sphere is impractical and therefore unlikely to exist. Stars are not stationary objects, they rotate around a common center of mass making them wobble, and any slight deviation in position will cause fluctuations in the gravitational force upon the structure of the sphere, making it collapse or buckle in on itself. Not to mention the necessary material needed to construct a complete sphere would require the demolition of an entire planet like Mercury. The updated version of this superstructure is known as a “Dyson’s Swarm.” This is a collection of smaller, individual structures that orbit the star independently and are able to move along with its orbital fluctuations, and requires much less material to construct.
Anywho, the likelihood of the void being a result of giant alien superstructures is non existent. The feasibility of these objects being undetectable to infrared telescopes is just impossible.
My God man, how many channels do you have? And why are they all great.
Fairly recent theories suggest that our galaxy is within a small void with our nearest neighbours over 2.5 million lightyears away rather than the average 161000 lightyears.
My suggestions about this field : The idea of a white hole as an alternative explanation for cosmic voids like the Boötes Void is an intriguing concept, even though it diverges from current cosmological models. Here’s a brief exploration of white holes and how they might relate to cosmic voids:
### What is a White Hole?
1. **Theoretical Concept**: A white hole is a theoretical object that is the opposite of a black hole. While a black hole pulls matter in with its strong gravitational field, a white hole would theoretically expel matter and prevent anything from entering it. White holes emerge from certain solutions to the equations of general relativity, particularly in the context of black hole physics.
2. **Time Reversal**: If a black hole can be thought of as a time-symmetric process, where matter falls in and cannot escape, a white hole would represent the reverse process, where matter is emitted, and nothing can enter.
3. **Cosmological Significance**: While black holes are well-supported by observational evidence, no white holes have been observed, and their existence remains purely theoretical. Their behavior would be counterintuitive based on our understanding of physics and thermodynamics.
### Voids and White Holes
If we were to entertain the idea that a cosmic void could be linked to a white hole, several speculative points could be made:
1. **Matter Ejection**: If a white hole were to exist at the center of a void, it might explain a region where matter is expelled rather than accumulated. The lack of galaxies could potentially be attributed to matter being pushed outward, creating a low-density region in space.
2. **Dynamics of Space**: The presence of a white hole might imply unique dynamics affecting the distribution of dark matter and energy around it, leading to the formation of a void. However, such dynamics would require a reevaluation of current understanding of gravity and cosmology.
3. **Causality Issues**: The physics of white holes presents many challenges. For example, the laws of thermodynamics would be violated since a white hole would decrease entropy as it expels matter. This presents significant problems regarding causality and the foundational principles of physics.
4. **Lack of Evidence**: Currently, there is no observational evidence supporting the existence of white holes. The behavior of cosmic voids is largely explained through the gravitational dynamics of dark matter and cosmic expansion, which provide a coherent framework for understanding these structures.
### Conclusion
While the thought of a white hole as an explanation for features like the Boötes Void presents an interesting thought experiment, it remains highly speculative and not grounded in current astrophysical evidence. The established theories of cosmology involving the expansion of the universe and the distribution of galaxies provide a robust framework for understanding voids. That said, exploring alternative explanations is part of the scientific process, and new discoveries could continue to challenge and refine our understanding of the universe.
Institutional physicists are always spouting theories about cosmology/cosmogony...and can't step away from idea of an Inflationary Era + Reionization.
Which would seem to have never happened. Yet if they acknowledge the evidence about this, they'd have to throw out all their decades of effort...which they're willing to 180 on their theories. They're not 'true scientists': bcuz otherwise they wouldn't have issue with this.
Even now they're just beginning to support the theory of Direct collapse for primordial BHs. Something I've wrote about for 10yrs w/ little support (due to lack of good peer review).
They talk about extreme locations in the universe (post-stellar remnants, early dense/hot universe, black holes) and they struggle to begin taking into account time: rather treating it as 'situationally separate' from space...but when convenient its 'spacetime'. Once again, the truth of the situation appears to be radically diff from what they espouse...and the implications would create paradigm shift they desperately do not want.
Space is literally
Out of this world.
Field galaxies are probably better places to look for advanced civilizations. Being left alone in your environment for billions of years is really helpful
Maybe it's like the eye of the storm of some massive cosmic scale formation.
This sounds exactly like the crevice between the driver’s seat and the center arm rest in my car
When does this guy sleep? All this content across at least five channels that I know of, damn!😮😊❤
lol... today i found out, brain blaze, astro graphics, places, megaprojects, side projects, warographics, decoding the unknown, casual criminalist, into the shadows
and old channels xplrd, geographics, biographics, top tenz, highlight history
@IvoKintobor NINE channels then, wow. 😳👍
@@scottbullock3045 10 current, 5 past
Note the dieresis mark in “Boötes”. It’s pronuonced “bo-oo-tes”, not “boots”.
Thank you. And for our friends from the US……the o is pronounced like the o in Doh (Homer Simpson)
I had to look it up, because I was still lost. It sounds like "bow(like a bow and arrow)-oat(like the food)-ees(like just the letter "e" but plural)"
@@umbles7007 Think of words like “Noël” or “coöperate”. In English, this means that the second vowel begins a new syllable, and is not part of a diphthong. In other languages, two dots are an umlaut, which changes the pronunciation of a vowel, usually to more forward in the mouth.
It's more like boo oh tees
Its not about the boots, its the booties😂
There is a void in my bootes
Underrated comment
"Somebody's poisoned the supermassive black hole!"
Very much love the set, maybe animate a rock to move a bit or clack when Simon says ... omg sorry I promised I wouldn't say Simon says
16:00 i mean i know probably is extremely low but its definitely a curious thought because it is technically plausible. No matter how small the odds are they arent zero. But ya more then likely empty space lol but i like the curious thought
I wonder how many rogue worlds and lonely stars exist in that void, it’s not completely empty, just exceedingly less dense. That’s still likely trillions upon trillions of stars, worlds, and small rocky objects within the 300 million odd light years of the void. Not counting the 60 galaxies within it of course. Hell maybe even hundreds of trillions? More? Such information is hard to quantify.
i like the dark energy/antimatter theory
Thanks a lot for that Peter F Hamilton Commonwealth series mention...now I'm off to read it again for the third time. A great escape.
great series
MorningLightMountain is one of the most intriguing aliens i've ever read of
@LoPhatKao agreed!
WE ARE INDEED INSIDE A VOID NAMED “THE KBC VOID” …, I personally just think we’re in our black whole but what do I know? 😏
Looking into the fridge... Is there nothing inside or truly nothing...?
Probably just interstellar parking regulations. Fills-up quickly during Boörning Man festival
I'd prefer to argue that "nothing" is impossible.It must be made up of something.There isnt anywhere we can look,where there isnt something.Even if it appears "empty" and looks like "nothing is there",i cant imagine theres ACTUALLY nothing there.
Is it the center of the universe? If there was a big bang, and everything is expanding outward, then there'd be a big old void where everything came from.
Also, it doesn't have to be a big black hole filing the entire void. Just big enough that everything in its orbit has been sucked in. Of course, those sixty galaxies would have to be kind of in a circle around the black hole.
"If the Milky Way had been in the Bootes Void we wouldn't have known other galaxies existed until the 1960s" only sounds dramatic until you remember that we didn't know other galaxies existed until the 1920s.
Please...no more side head shots.......awesome video as usual :)
BOO OH TEES - fuck sake Simon! :)
Lay down all thoughts, surrender to the void
The bootes void is dark matter. Vacuum is dark energy, and there isn't a black hole there to do the conversion and the weight/gravity of all the clusters around condensed that area.
I wonder if it is related to dark matter/energy. I know that dark points to unseen rather than black, but if there was something there that we can not see, for some reason, it would take the space and clear the area.
The Biggest, Emptiest Thing that we know of, the Universe it a very very big place.
Star Trek Voyager had an issue like this
Doesn't this belong in Simon's Astrology UA-cam channel since that's the channel that covers space topics?
Shouldn't this be on the Astrographics channel? 😅
It's fine here 😅
Honestly, yeah
That's what I thought too.
Ever hear of crossover?
@Hillbilly001 those usually involve different characters. Arguably, BB would be the only channel I'd consider more of a different "character" enough to qualify as a crossover. And for that maybe we'd need some old school script slapping.
This Simon and Astro Simon are similar enough it just feels like it was uploaded to the wrong channel.
A crossover is when two different shows or sets of characters do it. That's not this.
Fantastic
Recent scientific speculations say that these voids are proportionnal to Simon's conspirational and paranormal denaels 😆😂
Empty space isn't nothing. It has dimensions. So nerrr.
How many channels does this guy have?!?!
One wonders what time means in the big voids like that. Does time have any meaning, when there is no mass?
So... Conflicted...
This is about space, so it should be on astrograpgics.
But its about a place, so it belongs here...
That's where Saitama threw a punch at Garou.
What ya think door dash would charge to deliver there?
Simon has obviously never been to Kansas
How many channels does this guy have??
Depends when you ask
What above said
so... do we have any proof that the random empty areas we cant explain arnt starless due to unrealistic amounts of dyson spheres absorbing all the light from all the stars in the voids?
If you want a place to get away from it all, here it is.
There is stuff there and also a few things.
6:49 " in our own universe " ah ok.
I mean OK, let's agree that science says this area is kind of lacking galaxies, but it's not really empty since it has several galaxies, my brain forgets how many like 30 or 60 or something, but that makes me ask has our newest best telescope actually spend an hour or more staring at the zone yet? I ask because as I recall someone once pointed a telescope at a dark chunk of space and when the telescope finished its look they had found hundreds or more galaxies in the area like it was packed with stuff, so as a stupid human it makes me want to know if anyone really looked lately? bye.
Bootes takes up 2% the volume of the universe and would normally have 2000 galaxies in that volume, yet there are 2 trillion (2 thousand billions) galaxies in the observable universe so the numbers don't add up?
Damn Simon, another channel???
Bootes void? more like its just yo mama...So massive she blots out the light from stars in a whole region of the night sky. XP
What happened to cause the Bootes void? I don't want to talk about it, I didn't do it, I was off sick that day.
Vhy vis vhis vast void vere!?
Certainly intellectual Brits can see oö and know it had to sound different than ōō
3rd planet from the sun.. Turns out because of the goldilocks zone, may not be the defining characteristic of our solar system if life finds us.
Editor. Stop the damn dots overlay FFS.
No lol Go f yourself,and make your own content if you're unhappy.I would like to see your small brain try lol
A place that's so vast and so empty...
Angies mind?
Maybe they didn’t develop a Covid vaccine as good as ours
Boe - atus
I’m surprised this isn’t on astrographics
Looking around and seeing only darkness... Let me introduce you to treatment resistant depression 😂😢
bro, its turtles all the way down :p
Of course the universe has a giant hole in its Boötes.
But why are we converting money/pennies to volume and making a comparison?
nothing cant exist. even in the absence of matter there is still time and space. nothing is literally impossible. it's my theory as to why a universe happened at all.
Like your shows but the AI Depictions here were rubbish and added nothing apart from the one that's a map of the voids.
0:33 Imagine something complete black --- apparently you can't there are white worms everywhere
The pronunciation of the Bootes Void is correctly given as boh-OH-teez, not really like the things you might find on your feet...
Funny how these filaments look like neural connections.
The umlaut over the second "o" in Boötes means that it is pronounced. Thus, not "boots" but ".bo-otes"
i like the part where simon is bald
his bald head is hiding the Boötes void
Krikkit.
Jiminy?
Tim is in the void