Something Powerful But Not a Black Hole Created Milky Way Bubbles

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  • Опубліковано 29 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 295

  • @richard--s
    @richard--s Рік тому +1

    When the outer "edge" (region, sphere, shell) of the bubbles represent supernovas happening, maybe it's because the bubble that was formed by the smbh (supermassive black hole) in the center of our galaxy expands into the normal matter that floats around in our galaxy (gas), that stuff that can clump together to form stars - and this may happen faster when such a bubble expands into this gas, it moves this gas away - almost like a snow plow that moves snow away - and by this it makes denser regions of this gas where stars can form - and the bigger stars explode rather early as supernovas.
    Well, everything is here. Bingo.
    Of course it's no prove, just something to think about, something to combine all clues in a simple way. The simpler the better, isn't it?

  • @robertruark4051
    @robertruark4051 Рік тому +6

    I love this kind of stuff. They get one question answered and five more pop up.

  • @sml2238
    @sml2238 Рік тому +3

    Hi Anton, I just wanted to say thank you for your wonderful channel and effort. I've learned more about space and science from this single channel than any other source out there. Some people might think that's a bad thing for me, but I just love the information and detail you give in a simple and digestible format. Your videos influence me to then go and research further which is amazing. Cheers!

  • @mcweather8995
    @mcweather8995 Рік тому +33

    You are by far the most entertaining UA-camr on the platform. Thank you for bringing us joy anton :)

  • @RogueBoyScout
    @RogueBoyScout Рік тому +18

    Every time I hear Anton's greeting my dopamine and oxytocin levels jump off the scale.
    Thank you Anton for being you 😊 🐨

    • @BriarLeaf00
      @BriarLeaf00 Рік тому

      Those chemicals sound harmful I only like organic responses to the videos I watch.

    • @thebeautyofuniverse5250
      @thebeautyofuniverse5250 Рік тому

      @@BriarLeaf00 no these are hormones and these that if released is what caused people to feel good

    • @cyrilio
      @cyrilio Рік тому

      @@BriarLeaf00 those chemicals are natural hormones produced by every human being. Without them you’d die.

  • @pahg
    @pahg Рік тому +4

    Thank you Anton to helps us all keep that open mind.

  • @oleksandrbyelyenko435
    @oleksandrbyelyenko435 Рік тому +5

    Cosmos is so fascinating

  • @gregorysmull8068
    @gregorysmull8068 Рік тому +8

    Both bubbles could be explained by an infalling gas cloud perhaps from a tidally disrupted dwarf galaxy. This gas could have produced a large number of massive stars at the same time resulting in a large burst of supernovas in a short period of time. Afterwards, matter continuing to fall in towards the SMBH could have then reached it, resulting in the second set of bubbles being formed.

    • @fyfaenihelvete
      @fyfaenihelvete Рік тому +3

      It can also be explained by the gravity well of your mother.

    • @tommy-er6hh
      @tommy-er6hh Рік тому

      If it was from in falling gasses, would it not be only on one side?

  • @petehafner3844
    @petehafner3844 Рік тому +2

    Nice to see you again thanks

  • @stevenkarnisky411
    @stevenkarnisky411 Рік тому

    Thanks again, Anton. Back to the science drawing board!
    An analogy, if I may:
    A man walking down a dark country road a week ago near my city was killed when he was struck by two cars. His cause of death was being struck by two, seperate cars. The first didn't kill him. It was the cumulative effect of the two cars striking him.
    The causation for the death relied upon the correlation of both cars being there at precisely the right moment that both should strike him.
    This whole galactic bubble mystery seems to be based upon odd circumstances occuring around the same time and causing seemingly similar outcomes! It should be almost impossible for these to be unrelated events, but the odds against that pedestrian and two different motorists coming together on the dark rural road seem insane, too!

  • @chrisgriffith1573
    @chrisgriffith1573 Рік тому +2

    I love the music at the end of your video, its awesome to listen to...

  • @-jeff-
    @-jeff- Рік тому +1

    TY Anton for showing us how some scientific theories get their bubbles burst.

  • @gravitonthongs1363
    @gravitonthongs1363 Рік тому +2

    This combination of effects from anticipated events given standard central bulge activity would be difficult to distinguish in foreign galaxies, but a likely structure of most spiral hosts.

  • @tonyedmonds1538
    @tonyedmonds1538 Рік тому +1

    Awesome channel bruv ,I can really see after the last couple of years your unique and so informative 😎🤗

  • @tyreekfennessee2130
    @tyreekfennessee2130 Рік тому +1

    Anton your going to the be the first person to crack the mystery of the Center of a galaxy your so close 👏

  • @seamusarch2192
    @seamusarch2192 Рік тому +3

    Hey Anton, have we ever witnessed a binary star system ever get too close to a central black hole? Since most of the star systems in our galaxy are binary. If so, could you perhaps make a video about them?
    ( Most of the simulations you show have only one star being ripped apart)

  • @steelgreyed
    @steelgreyed Рік тому +7

    I want to point out something in causality.
    Star formation is created by disturbing molecular clouds by some colossal event, most commonly "associated" with Super Nova. Just gonna point out, nothing says disturb local space quite like a SMBH polar jet winking directly at you. That to me looks like the after-effect of the shock-wave. Star formation. This "might" be how Galaxies evolve from disk shaped to sphere shaped. (I always just assumed they had aggregate SMBH's making "a" central plane meaningless, even if merged their entourage doesn't know that.) The Jets spreading material directly up and down, instead of just "spun off" the accretion disk. Might also explain the bulge in general. Stars formed "off" the galactic plane by disturbances in the polar jet area then gravitationally "fall" into rotation that much closer to the central SMBH. Also the most likely spot for stripping to occur of orbital micro-galaxies, about those entourages. Get flung into non-galactic space, suck up a bunch of gas, with their own smbh (much smaller) still randomly spewing polar blasts to spawn even more stars. Orbit in, get stripped, get flung back out again to repeat the process. And why the spheres are largely dying. They've gotten too large for either mechanism to work to bring in new gas.

  • @roboslug7582
    @roboslug7582 Рік тому +1

    My theory is that, around 2.5 million years ago, a bunch of Taco Bell Crunchwraps and an order of Nacho Fries fell into the central black hole, and a short time later, as is usually the case after a large Taco Bell meal, the black hole started violently erupting from both ends. It's the only explanation that makes sense.

  • @chugg159
    @chugg159 Рік тому

    Anton is seriously the realest one.

  • @williammcginley3004
    @williammcginley3004 Рік тому

    Keep your eyes and your mind wide open! Thank you for your studies and interesting videos!

  • @willinwoods
    @willinwoods Рік тому

    Love that new(ish) and prolonged end sequence, it's so dreamy!

  • @chrislaezur730
    @chrislaezur730 Рік тому +1

    So Spinzaku went on to become a telescope. So proud. What a guy.

  • @pcproffy
    @pcproffy Рік тому +27

    The Mars company needs to do something about these Milky Way bubbles! FYI, did you know Milky Way is their oldest chocolate bar? Almost 100 years!

    • @MaryAnnNytowl
      @MaryAnnNytowl Рік тому +2

      And being named after a zillion balls of plasma and a whooooole lot of empty space isn't the best thing for a candy bar. 😂 Good thing they're tasty!

    • @valerieann8007
      @valerieann8007 Рік тому +2

      Which one was the dark chocolate one?

    • @lindaseel9986
      @lindaseel9986 Рік тому +1

      ​@@valerieann8007 Bok globules

    • @stevenweller1673
      @stevenweller1673 Рік тому +2

      I'm thinking it's a good thing we didn't name our galaxy "Snickers"...although the Universe *is* laughing behind our backs...
      S.W.

    • @BandaidYT
      @BandaidYT Рік тому +1

      @@stevenweller1673 no the milky way is not real it is a figment of our imagination :P

  • @efdangotu
    @efdangotu Рік тому +2

    Well done Anton! The toroidal current shows itself.

  • @joaodeoliveira336
    @joaodeoliveira336 Рік тому

    It's always the same "problem":
    "The scientists didn't know.....", "We have never seen before.....", "it's happening strange movements....", "it's acting differently...."
    Like i said before, we are monkeys trying to understand the universe!
    By the way, your channel is amazing, keep your good work!

  • @ericpeterson8732
    @ericpeterson8732 Рік тому +1

    "Now we're back to not knowing...." That's science for you.

  • @janvanginneken6599
    @janvanginneken6599 Рік тому

    Mmm... I got a possible hypothesis;
    It's a rough black hole who didn't have the velocity while is what's thrown out. And it's just a long trail.
    Thanks Anton! Love your videos!

  • @axle.australian.patriot
    @axle.australian.patriot Рік тому

    1:20 And there you have it! A visualization of the toroidal universe, also a black hole. When you cross the event horizon you emerge from what may appear the central region in a 3D description, or what may appear as the central region in 3D space. Time, or what we refer to as time allows this to occur. Time/space flips states.
    >
    Didn't mean for that to sound like an assertion, but couldn't be condensed without stating it like that :)
    P.S. Where did you get this animation Anton? I have been looking for something like this for a while. I could tweak this to add time dilation to the field lines :P

  • @tommy-er6hh
    @tommy-er6hh Рік тому +1

    What i wonder - do the Fermi and Erosita bubbles interact with the nearer galactic Halo? They cover a lot of the same area.

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl Рік тому +26

    I love a good science mystery! Knowing everything would be horribly boring, anyway. 😊
    Thanks, Anton, for all you do! Here's a sacrificial like and comment for the Almighty Algorith!
    ❤❤

    • @arnokosterman231
      @arnokosterman231 Рік тому +1

      Knowing everyting is resisting understanding❤
      Knowing is calculating and depending on pre leurned expectations valuation❤
      Understandings than there are no mysterys.
      And our totaal universe becomes our playground❤
      Than the wurd boring dus not exits anymore ❤💢💜
      🛸

    • @jimmyjasi-
      @jimmyjasi- Рік тому

      Long Live Sir Roger Penrose!
      I'm sure one thing. Whatever Black Holes are and what are they serving Lee Smolin is wrong about them!
      Hawking Radiation and Boltzmann Brain paradox aa to creation of such "new Universe" refuts it.
      But wherever they are it's beyond our understanding.
      I like to imagine that they are kind of cosmic engines that are serving some mysterious purposes to some ridiculously advanced civilizations that are not interested in us!

    • @ThePowerLover
      @ThePowerLover Рік тому +3

      And that's why we're not omnipotent...

    • @arnokosterman231
      @arnokosterman231 Рік тому

      O jes we are we are in the imige onle have to move away from wat we have programed to see🌹

    • @arnokosterman231
      @arnokosterman231 Рік тому

      We oll are able to jed we do not jad oll understand how🙏 🎁🙏
      Wen we se we can't we programing ourself with self suggestions we are not and never able to

  • @mirage1500
    @mirage1500 Рік тому +1

    Thanks Anton, Fascinating stuff, Do galaxy's have goldilocks zones ? It appears to be pretty hellish toward the center of the milky way.

  • @movax20h
    @movax20h Рік тому +1

    Are there some estimates how much gas is there in these bubbles? Also, i doubt the glow is a remnant of some past activity. Any glow would ceed after sucg effect, so what is the mechanism if the emission? It eithe is somejow scatered emission from central region of milky way, or emits on its own due to colissions and/or magbetic field. Other option could be anihilation with antimatter, but that usually has easy to recognize signature.

  • @PhysicsNative
    @PhysicsNative Рік тому

    There is recent research indicating jet emissions are not caused by a “central black hole,” M87 for example. Better imaging and other measurements of the central area is obviously needed, not more speculation.

  • @davidtatro7457
    @davidtatro7457 Рік тому +6

    Fascinating. I have to wonder if the gas in the bubbles was initially produced by supernova nebulas, but was then projected and shaped by the magnetic fields at the center of the galaxy. It will be very interesting to follow this as more papers are published.

  • @cyrilio
    @cyrilio Рік тому +7

    Could you do a video about the Erosiita telescope? I’ve never heard about it and would love to learn how it works.

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse Рік тому +1

    I wonder if there is still a connection, but an indirect one.
    Sagittarius A* had a period of activity which produced one or more shockwaves that precipitated cloud collapse leading to a burst of star formation, quite likely very big stars given the amount of collapsing gas could be huge... lots of very large stars then running through their lives quickly leading to a mass of Supernovae in turn creating the newly found bubbles through their coincidental shock waves adding up.
    Well, it's a neat story. But is it true?

  • @pahg
    @pahg Рік тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @gavinweaver5517
    @gavinweaver5517 Рік тому

    Love your vids Anton, keep it up

  • @jessen00001
    @jessen00001 Рік тому +1

    ❤ Hello Wonderful People ❤

  • @sparking023
    @sparking023 Рік тому

    I like how the emission mapping looks like an electron orbital

  • @TheMemesofDestruction
    @TheMemesofDestruction Рік тому

    Welcome Wonderful People! ^.^

  • @PaulA-zp7hn
    @PaulA-zp7hn Рік тому

    "Milky Way Bubbles" damn, I'm about to go to sleep this channel is making me think of chocolate bars!!

  • @hikarustarr
    @hikarustarr Рік тому

    have you decreased the contrast setting of your camera and/or editing software recently?

  • @mario_actually
    @mario_actually Рік тому

    Thanks Anton

  • @genejeffries2888
    @genejeffries2888 Рік тому

    You know what would be really refreshing. If astrophysics stopped using the phrase "we know..." that would be so cool.

  • @yvonnemiezis5199
    @yvonnemiezis5199 Рік тому

    Fascinating, very interesting, thanks 😊

  • @DoreenBellDotan
    @DoreenBellDotan Рік тому +1

    Rule of Thumb: If you come to a quick conclusion about the Universe, you're probably very mistaken.

  • @johannageisel5390
    @johannageisel5390 Рік тому

    The Milky Way has been gobbling up dwarf galaxies for a long time, maybe this was just another one?

  • @jamesgreenler8225
    @jamesgreenler8225 Рік тому +1

    Our current level of understanding has everything to do with the age of our civilization. Its likely we aren't the smartest nor the least intelligent.
    Why would there be only 1 place in this galaxy where life happened ? Nature repeats itself too much to paradox itself. Thats just something we do to help us solve mysterious things.

  • @crazygamer56
    @crazygamer56 Рік тому

    Sag A*. Was it formed directly from collapsing material or was it first a supermassive star that went supernova? Perhaps a supernova that left behind the pretty bubbles we are seeing?

  • @danhnguyen-fn9eb
    @danhnguyen-fn9eb Рік тому +2

    At one time those were called Fermie bubbles. And it looks like there are 2 or three sets of them. At one time it was thought that the bubbles were the after effect energy left over from some of those S and G objects that "SAG A" star stole when they got too close.

    • @jimmyjasi-
      @jimmyjasi- Рік тому

      Long Live Sir Roger Penrose!
      I'm sure one thing. Whatever Black Holes are and what are they serving Lee Smolin is wrong about them!
      Hawking Radiation and Boltzmann Brain paradox aa to creation of such "new Universe" refuts it.
      But wherever they are it's beyond our understanding.
      I like to imagine that they are kind of cosmic engines that are serving some mysterious purposes to some ridiculously advanced civilizations that are not interested in us!

    • @tommy-er6hh
      @tommy-er6hh Рік тому

      you need to re-watch, Anton said there were at least 2 sets of bubbles, one inside the other. The inner set was Fermi and the surrounding set was eROSITA bubble.

    • @danhnguyen-fn9eb
      @danhnguyen-fn9eb Рік тому +1

      @@tommy-er6hh No need, whatever name is given it doesn't change why they are there.

    • @jimmyjasi-
      @jimmyjasi- Рік тому

      @@danhnguyen-fn9eb Beautifull

  • @redshiftdrift
    @redshiftdrift Рік тому

    I can't believe that two independent explosive events produced these two layers of bubbles. The fact that these bubbles are centered on an axis perpendicular to the plane of the galaxy is a big clue. Instead of assuming explosive events, this is probably caused by infalling charged particles which hit the gas with higher density near the galaxy. The pattern "gamma outside, X-ray inside" points to particles of higher energies interacting first with the lower density gas.
    The idea of infalling particles must be studied more seriously.

  • @Rolatnor
    @Rolatnor Рік тому +1

    Not what I was expecting

  • @jimcurtis9052
    @jimcurtis9052 Рік тому +1

    Wonderful as always anton. Thank you. 🙂👍

  • @douglasdea637
    @douglasdea637 Рік тому +1

    So I see photos of these jets in other galaxies. I wonder: how powerful are these jets? If a star with planets passed through one what would be the effects? If you flew a starship into one and took readings what would you find?

    • @tommy-er6hh
      @tommy-er6hh Рік тому +1

      Welp, we on earth are kinda in that situation - there is an emission nebula of hot plasma called the Local Cloud all around us as the nebula heads out of the galaxy, while we circle around it (kinda). We are partly protected by the Sun's Heliosphere from all the nasty radiation, the rest by earth's atmosphere. The Sun is not being pulled out of the galaxy by the nebula.
      Now i think the Local Cloud is not quite as strong of a radiation source as the eRosita or Fermi bubbles, but it is comparable.

  • @PoorMansChemist
    @PoorMansChemist Рік тому

    2:58 How do you have X rays that are more energetic than gamma rays?

  • @ruebenmikoch
    @ruebenmikoch Рік тому +2

    Would it be fair to call a black hole a masshole? Just a big masshole?

  • @lightend100
    @lightend100 Рік тому

    I watch these just to be called a wonderful person.

  • @johnjosephondrick699
    @johnjosephondrick699 Рік тому

    You mentioned the huge supernova activity, why not an artifact of outgassing

  • @FM-lo9vv
    @FM-lo9vv Рік тому +1

    If I were to use common sense and paint a simple picture as for what happens, I would guess that every now and then a large stream of gas and stars funnel into the central supermassive black hole. As the stars fall into the accretion disk, probably many go supernovae and that would create an incredibly rich and violent environment where lots and lots of material gets ejected with the relativistic jets.

  • @torinmorris6648
    @torinmorris6648 Рік тому

    Cosmologists will probably be wrong or unsure about everything they could possibly be for at least 150 years

  • @markhuebner7580
    @markhuebner7580 Рік тому

    Go Anton, go!

  • @jamesgreenler8225
    @jamesgreenler8225 Рік тому

    Perhaps its not that black holes are the gateway to other dimensions but its the phenomenon associated with why they aren't visible that is the key to isolation of a bubble of space time. Its likely this particular universe we exist in is also spherical. The curvature of light prevents us from seeing the horizon maybe. 🤔

  • @BubbleOnPlumb
    @BubbleOnPlumb Рік тому

    How about a belched emission from a white hole?

  • @streetsbolt
    @streetsbolt Рік тому

    Fermi bubbles or Rolling Stones logo?

  • @bobsjess
    @bobsjess Рік тому

    They might be as simple as the black hole swallowed a star that was on the verge of a supernova and since nothing escapes a black hole it only allowed these bubbles to escape.

  • @JKDVIPER
    @JKDVIPER Рік тому

    0:37 fermi bubbles?

  • @OmegaWolf747
    @OmegaWolf747 Рік тому

    Just when they thought they had it all figured out.

  • @marcrettew8284
    @marcrettew8284 Рік тому

    Whoever smelt it dealt it...

  • @simohayha6031
    @simohayha6031 Рік тому

    The bubbles looks like a cell splitting in two. Whatever that process is called.

  • @spekenbonen72
    @spekenbonen72 Рік тому

    Thanks for another interesting video!!!!
    I imagine space as a glass of sparkling soda... with bubbles floating to the top and bursting.
    But hey, that is NOT based on any theory whatsoever.
    Just my imagination.

  • @bulletinmyleg
    @bulletinmyleg Рік тому +1

    galactic collision maybe.

  • @stephencoppins9467
    @stephencoppins9467 Рік тому

    So we have Aero bubbles in the middle of our Milky Way?

  • @oleksandrbyelyenko435
    @oleksandrbyelyenko435 Рік тому +2

    I am early and still see 6 comments before me.

  • @waynewilliamson4212
    @waynewilliamson4212 Рік тому

    just wondering if a super massive blue giant was drawn in the central black hole accretion disk that contained the gas of several thousand stars, and the blue giant went super nova, what would happen....

  • @butter7734
    @butter7734 Рік тому

    My guess is that it's created when a star that is about to be eaten by the black hole goes supernova right before being eaten.

  • @archangelgabriel5316
    @archangelgabriel5316 Рік тому

    Oreo Cookies were making bubbles in the milk.

  • @BabaBabelOm
    @BabaBabelOm Рік тому

    smbh outbursts generate star formation… they are connected, just not the same event.

  • @niltmp7126
    @niltmp7126 Рік тому

    What exactly happens to all the mass n energy absorbed into a black hole?

    • @KnightspaceORG
      @KnightspaceORG Рік тому +1

      Well, short answer is that we don't know.
      Region of singularity is a point of infinite density, which means that classical and relativistic physics fails to explain what actually happens at this point of space. Singularity be weird.
      But that's not all, Black Holes are so bizzare and unbeliveably extreme, information about it's properties, besides mass, charge and angular momentum which is emitted as a black hole dissapates due to Hawking radiation, is permanently lost, which is a behaviour not even quantum mechanics can currently solve.

  • @ClosestNearUtopia
    @ClosestNearUtopia Рік тому

    Nintendo knew this all along ant hinted with metroid.

  • @kpetro1675
    @kpetro1675 Рік тому

    The electric universe theory can explain all this stuff without theoretical dark matter, dark energy, neutron stars and black holes.

  • @mbterabytesjc2036
    @mbterabytesjc2036 Рік тому

    How are these gas jet echoes visible above the milky way unless the energy is redirectedtoward earth telescopes by an impact with a particle already in the space above the milky way?

  • @YathishShamaraj
    @YathishShamaraj Рік тому

    You know, come to think of it, the galaxy with its Fermi bubble looks just like a Shiva lingam, probably it might have been the inspiration behind the design of the Linga in temples.

    • @KnightspaceORG
      @KnightspaceORG Рік тому

      How, if those features were only recently discovered by incredibly sophisticated technology?

    • @YathishShamaraj
      @YathishShamaraj Рік тому

      @@KnightspaceORG they have been there for 2.5 million years right, now we don't know how advanced civilizations wee in the past, as most of those ancient cities were destroyed by natural calamities, and in ancient Hindu scriptures, they have clear concepts of time dilation and multiverse phenomenon...
      The South Indian horoscope chart is a top down view of our solar system.
      Imagining these things and concepts without information and technology is out of question...
      We just don't give enough credit for those ancients.

    • @KnightspaceORG
      @KnightspaceORG Рік тому

      @@YathishShamaraj Well... i know hindu beliefs are an important part of a culture in some parts of the world, but it's erroneous to think people living hundreds of years ago knew more than scientists today.
      I'm not saying they were stupid, not at all, they just didn't know what we know today. And if you see something that lookd similar to modern discoveries, it's most likely a coincidence. Yeah, their achievements were vast, but what they didn't know was supplanted with myths, which happened literally everywhere in the world.

    • @YathishShamaraj
      @YathishShamaraj Рік тому

      @@KnightspaceORG those who knew, don't exist anymore and their works were destroyed by islamic invaders in the name of jihad, we had world's first international Universities where students from Egypt, China and other places used to come to learn stuff, it is known that the University was burning for two months continuously 😳...
      Once we lose everything, of course we have to start all over again.. so here we are...
      No comparison with the ancients... We still don't know how they built monuments with machine level accuracy for which we use laser these days, but still can't make chains out of granite stones..

    • @KnightspaceORG
      @KnightspaceORG Рік тому

      @@YathishShamaraj Eh? We DO know how ancient structures were made, why do you think we don't?

  • @trebell885
    @trebell885 Рік тому

    Every galaxy is like a finely tuned, watch, or engine. With gear's & break's??

  • @marcoganz6276
    @marcoganz6276 Рік тому

    The Fermi bubbles you mean

  • @williammcginley3004
    @williammcginley3004 Рік тому

    Perhaps a shield from dangerous rays emitting from the sun or other various dangers lurking out there in space... how is that for defense, cool theory huh?

  • @James_T_Quirk
    @James_T_Quirk Рік тому

    The more we find out, the less we know ..

  • @Khannea
    @Khannea Рік тому +2

    It is so obvious. Occasionally Azathoth wakes up.

    • @lightreign8021
      @lightreign8021 Рік тому

      who gnaws hungrily in inconceivable, unlighted chambers beyond time and space amidst the muffled, maddening beating of vile drums and the thin monotonous whine of accursed flutes.

  • @angelalewis3645
    @angelalewis3645 Рік тому

    Wow!

  • @rogerhill138
    @rogerhill138 Рік тому

    So West Ham at the centre of the galaxy!!

  • @g.gordonwoody645
    @g.gordonwoody645 Рік тому

    I thought these were called Fermi Bubbles

  • @geofflewis8599
    @geofflewis8599 Рік тому

    ..Sounds like the best gas..

  • @Nobody-cw4wm
    @Nobody-cw4wm Рік тому

    I know Aero has bubbles, didn’t know Milky Way had….huh.

  • @DeltaVTX
    @DeltaVTX Рік тому +105

    My mom gets mad when I blow bubbles in my chocolate milk.

    • @kathyorourke9273
      @kathyorourke9273 Рік тому +14

      I wasn’t allowed either! I’m 74 and I still remember that. Thanks.

    • @lindagates9150
      @lindagates9150 Рік тому +7

      @@kathyorourke9273 I am 72 my Mum probably would have blow bigger bubbles I don’t remember her saying that I shouldn’t

    • @Eireman_on_Twitch
      @Eireman_on_Twitch Рік тому +12

      Blowing bubbles is an extrapolation of surface tension under inserted gas pressure. It's SCIENCE, Ma!

    • @vols2005
      @vols2005 Рік тому +3

      I'm 63 and two habits I was never able to break was, picking my nose and eating it, and blowing bubbles in my chocolate milk.

    • @kathyorourke9273
      @kathyorourke9273 Рік тому +1

      @@lindagates9150 lucky!

  • @sethseymour2917
    @sethseymour2917 Рік тому

    What happened was I ate a huge burrito from Special K.

  • @freefall9832
    @freefall9832 Рік тому

    An attempt to rework the theory to fit the idea that the black hole jet is facing earth. It is funny to watch scientists squirm and rewrite to hodgepodge things together.

    • @KnightspaceORG
      @KnightspaceORG Рік тому

      By all means, show us more of your ignorance

    • @MarsStarcruiser
      @MarsStarcruiser Рік тому

      Wouldn’t that be a separate issue?

    • @freefall9832
      @freefall9832 Рік тому

      @Martian Prince I see where this is going. The pictures from the big hole a couple of months back is the motivation.

    • @MarsStarcruiser
      @MarsStarcruiser Рік тому

      @@freefall9832 Have they not learned from centarus galaxy’s blatantly wobbling stream going all over the place. Our situation is likely much worse, and why we get an overall field effect, rather than a focused stream.

  • @MrVontar
    @MrVontar Рік тому

    It was me

  • @azorian888
    @azorian888 Рік тому

    funny how inside thoses bubbles they see the same thing two bubbles of gaz

  • @godoftwinkies574
    @godoftwinkies574 Рік тому

    Does anyone else gets a bit upset that our Super Massive Black hole (Sagitarius A Star) is refered as a "star"?

    • @elijahphelps3117
      @elijahphelps3117 Рік тому

      i mean its just an old star

    • @godoftwinkies574
      @godoftwinkies574 Рік тому

      @@elijahphelps3117 true but now it has no star like characteristics. Like, i was once a baby. I'm no longer one.

    • @Top-Code
      @Top-Code Рік тому

      Well its written as A*
      The A is because it was the brightest, the asterisk was added on because they were like “damn this pretty weird we need to mark it for later”

  • @missfriscowin3606
    @missfriscowin3606 Рік тому +3

    Electric ⚡️ Universe