Spinning Black Holes

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  • Опубліковано 18 кві 2024
  • A pulsing black hole in the centre of a distant galaxy sheds light on black hole and galaxy formation. How fast are black holes rotating and how does that rotation change over its life-span?
    Huge thanks to Prof. Geraint Lewis and study author Dr. Dheeraj Pasham.
    A loud quasi-periodic oscillation after a star is disrupted
    by a massive black hole
    ve42.co/pasham
    Special thanks to Patreon supporters:
    Donal Botkin, James M Nicholson, Michael Krugman, Nathan Hansen, Ron Neal, Stan Presolski, Terrance Shepherd
    Music from epidemicsound.com "Colorful animation 4" "serene story 2" "To the stars 01" "Black Vortex
    Animations by Alan Chamberlain and courtesy of NASA

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @sk8ergrl2645
    @sk8ergrl2645 3 роки тому +4483

    I'm doing my PhD on black holes & I just finished doing an analysis of the black hole spin in GRS 1915+105 (it was actually the first BH in the table of spins you showed). I was super impressed by how accurate everything in your video was! I study all of this for a living right now lol. I also loved the animations - I always have trouble finding a good accretion disk animation which shows how the ISCO shrinks as the black hole spin increases. A fantastic & informative video.

    • @georgesanchez8051
      @georgesanchez8051 3 роки тому +168

      Badass

    • @Pa-1
      @Pa-1 3 роки тому +82

      Just a thought - anything that travels faster than light will disappear from all of the scientific instruments - or it will be detected as dark/black - since it is beyond the light spectrum... Think about the particles that appear & disappear in quantum fields... These stars & Sun are not mere objects in the sky, they are alive and in fact more alive than a human can comprehend... Many scientists in the past were rarely distracted by their instruments or theories and therefore they were able to bring out revolutionary concepts from the depths of their minds... The more you measure, the more you miss out on the detail... The way forward for the science is to go beyond the limitations of the light... This is possible from within and not without...

    • @jimvj5897
      @jimvj5897 2 роки тому +4

      Is it approximately correct to think of the energy released (as grav waves) when 2 black holes collide, as the difference in potential + kinetic energies before & after the collision?
      Do concepts like PE & KE apply in GR?
      Is any of that energy released as EM radiation?

    • @miguelchippsinteligente6072
      @miguelchippsinteligente6072 2 роки тому +7

      Tesla referenced human energy 🌬👻jesus christ referenced living waters 💎👨‍🎓👩‍🎓science described water memory 🌊🎭psalms16:24 k,j proverbs27:19 existence psychologically god bless fight the good fight 💖👻💎👨‍🎓👩‍🎓🗽🤍⚖🌪🌬

    • @Pa-1
      @Pa-1 2 роки тому +10

      @@miguelchippsinteligente6072 Why God is all about fighting? Good or bad, he/she is still destroying a part of his/her own creation...

  • @Holobrine
    @Holobrine 5 років тому +4776

    4:57 Should have chosen diameter, so it would be d_isco
    Edit: Please sign the petition in the replies if you support this cause

    • @veritasium
      @veritasium  5 років тому +1739

      I'll recommend that to the scientists ;)

    • @manuelbonet
      @manuelbonet 5 років тому +125

      That would have been a much better choice

    • @rodchallis8031
      @rodchallis8031 5 років тому +44

      r_isco kid was a friend of mine..... music fun is where you make it. :)

    • @fep_ptcp883
      @fep_ptcp883 5 років тому +118

      Haha, what a _funky_ idea...

    • @MrRolnicek
      @MrRolnicek 5 років тому +353

      It's spinning and giving off light, it HAS to be d_isco.

  • @dcterr1
    @dcterr1 2 роки тому +527

    It's pretty amazing to me that just 50 years ago, many scientists doubted that black holes existed, whereas now, not only have they been experimentally verified, but we're learning about many of their properties as well as their origins.

    • @Hi-sg4wt
      @Hi-sg4wt 2 роки тому +11

      50 years ago was the 1970’s

    • @AboveEmAllProduction
      @AboveEmAllProduction 2 роки тому +20

      @@Hi-sg4wt 100 years ago, when was that pls

    • @obssaasrat7781
      @obssaasrat7781 2 роки тому +2

      @AboveEmAllProduction It was the 1900's

    • @Deltexterity
      @Deltexterity 2 роки тому +18

      @@obssaasrat7781 no it was 1922. 22 years is a lot of years to round off. enough time for a world war to start and end.

    • @3starsburningbright
      @3starsburningbright Рік тому +3

      @@Hi-sg4wt Really????? I thought it was 1641! /s

  • @svenmedyona4649
    @svenmedyona4649 2 роки тому +233

    When I was 17, I listed all my dream jobs (there were 18 of them). Being a physicist was at the top of that list, teaching number two. Despite living that latter profession, I still enjoy videos like this. Thanks Veritasium for keeping my interest alive. I may not understand it all, but I love it regardless.

    • @J4ck7232
      @J4ck7232 Рік тому +6

      You have 69 likes. Thats all I am gonna say

    • @someone-ja
      @someone-ja 9 місяців тому +1

      How old are you right now?

  • @erenyalcn9393
    @erenyalcn9393 5 років тому +1848

    Big stars : "exist"
    Blackhole: Its free real estate

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday 5 років тому +5609

    My flight is taking off. I want to know about black holes!
    EDIT: HOLY COW MAN I can't imagine how much research you did for this! I've always wondered how star diameters are approximated. Thank you so much for this! Bravo!

    • @veritasium
      @veritasium  5 років тому +530

      go through the square people pipe Destin! I learned a lot about black holes in making this video...

    • @ViixoDesigns
      @ViixoDesigns 5 років тому +16

      @SmarterEveryDay Derek's talk about spin made me think about the toilet swirl - please make a video on black holes!

    • @abdalrahman3497
      @abdalrahman3497 5 років тому +16

      how about Uranus

    • @MParker8200
      @MParker8200 5 років тому +36

      I have a question for both of you...
      I have heard it said that, due to Relativity, if a person were to fall into a black hole, it would appear to an outside observer that the falling person would slow down and freeze in place at the point they reached the event horizon. If that is true, it would also suggest that time would appear to speed up for the falling person, looking back at the observers. This has made me wonder what the limitations of that time warp would be. Would relative observer time continue to get faster and faster as the person falling continued to get closer to the singularity? Would it be theoretically possible to witness the end of the universe as one fell into the black hole?

    • @austinbuck8108
      @austinbuck8108 5 років тому +2

      Sorry, Destin. I saw this before you... 😉

  • @joemomma4826
    @joemomma4826 3 роки тому +1854

    “Black holes are some of the simplest objects in the universe”
    I really really hate editing comments but it seems a good amount of you don't realize I was quoting him in the literal same video and have tried disagreeing

    • @amardiplokhande3736
      @amardiplokhande3736 3 роки тому +20

      Absolutely!!!

    • @abedgamer7773
      @abedgamer7773 3 роки тому +8

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @IluvatarEru
      @IluvatarEru 3 роки тому +7

      Duh I knew that

    • @umairbutt1355
      @umairbutt1355 3 роки тому +129

      From the perspective of general relativity, they are quite simple actually 😁 one of the simplest solutions to einsteins field equations.
      Conversely, real black holes with all their quantum weirdness that we don't really know much about, are probably the most complex things out there 😂

    • @FisTheDucc
      @FisTheDucc 2 роки тому +34

      outside, yes but inside HELL NO

  • @Lauren-hinrichsen
    @Lauren-hinrichsen 3 роки тому +316

    I really wanted to see a picture of the "naked singularity" and had it typed into google before I realized that's probably not gonna give me the exact results I want

    • @bobjones7908
      @bobjones7908 2 роки тому +11

      I think you were imagining a naked black hole.

    • @Leruster
      @Leruster 2 роки тому +35

      Did you try "I'm feeling lucky" option? ;)

    • @--.._
      @--.._ 2 роки тому +11

      Gave me a lame movie title :/ Rotten Tomatoes gave it 27% lmao

    • @leociresi4292
      @leociresi4292 2 роки тому

      If Tetrimidion and Invictus collided,

    • @DrakyHRT
      @DrakyHRT 2 роки тому +2

      I think the only chance we would get is if for some reason light escapes from the black holes when they collide, as the event would be quite chaotic.

  • @rfldss89
    @rfldss89 5 років тому +337

    These acronyms are getting better every year.

    • @NETkoholik
      @NETkoholik 5 років тому +32

      ASASSN is really dope IMO..

    • @mert-by1pe
      @mert-by1pe 5 років тому +29

      the reason that space exploration is so slow that NASA doesn't start a project if they can't find an acronym for it.

    • @Aleblood
      @Aleblood 5 років тому

      I know, right? I can't wait for the next season

    • @idontthinkso2431
      @idontthinkso2431 5 років тому

      I agree

    • @cosmicjenny4508
      @cosmicjenny4508 5 років тому +8

      +Rafael Santos Can’t wait for “THICC”: Thermal Hydrogen Instant Charge Conservation (no, I _don’t_ know what that means / if it means anything)

  • @joschkazimdars
    @joschkazimdars 3 роки тому +206

    I found black holes always scary, but finding out they spin at insane speed makes them so much awesomely horrifyingly more scary for me.

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache 3 роки тому +641

    I took up astronomy in college and they never talked about interesting stuff like this

    • @Mak2Grim
      @Mak2Grim 3 роки тому +17

      the teach u what ur not suppose to know lol

    • @tigerpjm
      @tigerpjm 3 роки тому +153

      Probably because astronomy and astrophysics are two very different things...

    • @SlashoftheGreatnessOfficial
      @SlashoftheGreatnessOfficial 3 роки тому +23

      astronomy and astrophysics go hand in hand

    • @tigerpjm
      @tigerpjm 3 роки тому +130

      @@SlashoftheGreatnessOfficial
      Yes.
      Maths and physics go hand in hand.
      But maths isn't physics and and physics isn't maths. I didn't learn Newtonian motion in maths class any more than I learnt Pythagoras theorem in physics class.
      Nor did anyone else.
      They're separate disciplines.... like astronomy and astrophysics.
      I would have hoped that someone who actually passed an Astronomy course would understand the difference by simple dint of having passed an Astronomy course...

    • @HassanAli-sy8yb
      @HassanAli-sy8yb 3 роки тому +10

      Why are you here

  • @Mark1Mach2
    @Mark1Mach2 Рік тому +35

    Vertasium, I can't thank you enough for these wonderful science videos. For engineers and science loving people like myself, it's very hard to find good quality content as freely available as you make them and on top of it you make them easy to understand, fun and damn interesting. Thank you so much and I hope you continue to make such wonderful videos.

  • @arifsyah46
    @arifsyah46 5 років тому +1910

    God really does know how to make extreme beyblades

    • @putyograsseson
      @putyograsseson 5 років тому +22

      lmao

    • @rozellgabriel6299
      @rozellgabriel6299 5 років тому +172

      Wonder if we're all just in a giant beyblade battle

    • @sachinshirke388
      @sachinshirke388 5 років тому +5

      @@rozellgabriel6299 you really deserve a like 😂

    • @samuel70315
      @samuel70315 5 років тому +10

      @@rozellgabriel6299 cues Bayblade team song while zooming out into the Galaxy, only to see god like beings battling with Milky ways

    • @disrupt94
      @disrupt94 5 років тому +1

      @Spiderman would that not require the angular momentum to be greater than the combined gravitational pull?

  • @micaiahweaver1346
    @micaiahweaver1346 5 років тому +682

    Derek should do a co-lab with Kurzgesagt on black holes.

    • @seanld444
      @seanld444 5 років тому +33

      Collab. And yes, I agree. I love their animations.

    • @castroploiin
      @castroploiin 4 роки тому +23

      Lè Kurzegesagt presents, Derek explains

    • @daos3300
      @daos3300 4 роки тому +5

      @Micaiah Weaver hmm.. nah.

    • @aedenthegreatyt
      @aedenthegreatyt 4 роки тому +5

      YES

    • @aaronseet2738
      @aaronseet2738 3 роки тому +8

      He needs to get his own bird avatar first.

  • @Xenon_811
    @Xenon_811 3 роки тому +176

    Aliens : sending some flashes in space to see if anyone is out there
    Scientist : Nah ! Its a black hole

    • @sageoverheaven
      @sageoverheaven 2 роки тому +2

      I was looking for this comment 💀

    • @emperorsascharoni9577
      @emperorsascharoni9577 2 роки тому +8

      Alien making some selfies at blackhole.

    • @AmitSharma-cg9gf
      @AmitSharma-cg9gf 2 роки тому +3

      I thought it was bill gates sending beams to harm humanity

    • @albussr1589
      @albussr1589 2 роки тому

      Wait, Bill Gates moved into a Black Hole now?

    • @antaress8128
      @antaress8128 2 роки тому +2

      Since regular pulses are common in the Universe and occur naturally, aliens, who are trying to contact another intelligent life, would have sent some flashes in a distinct pattern - like for example 1 flash at every prime number seconds.

  • @scottmanley
    @scottmanley Рік тому +156

    Perhaps I'm misunderstanding but isn't ISCO the wrong thing to focus on here regarding on the limit of the rotation, the ISCO is for matter orbiting the black hole. Photons departing radially outwards can escape for any point exterior to the event horizon regardless of the rotation. For a black hole with a rotational parameter of more than 0.28 photons can orbit prograde in the plane of rotation right down to the event horizon.
    Isn't the problem with rotation parameter > 1 the fact that the kerr metric would create a ring shaped singularity that had a radius larger than the Event horizon, and therefor expose a 'naked singularity'

    • @miguelangelowong6786
      @miguelangelowong6786 Рік тому +3

      Scott cawthon

    • @Brooksandwhich
      @Brooksandwhich Рік тому +2

      That's what I'm thinking 🤔

    • @DanielWSonntag
      @DanielWSonntag Рік тому

      Maybe

    • @NethanielShade
      @NethanielShade Рік тому +3

      Hey Scott, fancy seeing you here.
      I was wondering the same exact thing. the ISCO is for solid matter, we should be looking at the photon sohere, or the IBCO.

    • @anon69_q
      @anon69_q Рік тому +3

      So this vid is popping into everyone’s recommended now lol

  • @Viper6-MotoVlogger
    @Viper6-MotoVlogger 5 років тому +384

    Black holes are both amazing and scary at the same time.

    • @Krisztian5HUN
      @Krisztian5HUN 5 років тому +33

      but gloryholes are just simply amazing, not scary...

    • @SnoopyDoofie
      @SnoopyDoofie 5 років тому +1

      He's learning black magic.

    • @zodiacfml
      @zodiacfml 5 років тому +5

      Our universe is a black hole

    • @benbooth2783
      @benbooth2783 5 років тому +2

      @@zodiacfml White hole not a black hole as we are moving away from the singularity not towards it.

    • @benbooth2783
      @benbooth2783 5 років тому +10

      If you pass through the event horizon of a black hole, the reason you cant escape is that the space-time curvature is so extreme that all paths leads to the singularity, which ever way you looked you would see the singularity, it would look like it was smeared into a shell around you.
      The big bang is a singularity, as we look farther away we look further back in time, look far enough and we can see back to the big bang (we are stopped from being able to see it due to the surface of last scattering), you would see the big bang in any direction you looked, it would be smeared into a shell around you. The only difference is that we are moving away from the singularity, like a black hole going backwards in time, which is called a white hole.

  • @alberteinstein6040
    @alberteinstein6040 5 років тому +1849

    The real question is
    Does the universe spin

    • @cloudpoint0
      @cloudpoint0 5 років тому +157

      No, it is stuck facing one direction, the outside.

    • @cloudpoint0
      @cloudpoint0 5 років тому +267

      ​@@davidroyer8516
      Angular momentum can only be assessed relative to something else around it that you consider stationary. Ultimately you run into the need to either 1) have an outside as a reference, which doesn’t exist for the universe, or 2) to define the universe itself as stationary, in which case the total angular momentum must add to zero (unless you can find a way to violate the conservation of angular momentum law).
      Either way, the universe does not spin.

    • @cloudpoint0
      @cloudpoint0 5 років тому +58

      @Liam Boyle
      Yes there is galactic spin, but the central black hole is not exactly at the center of the Milky Way (just close). The galaxy as a whole has some kind of slow spin about its true center. The gas, stars and the central black hole all orbit around this true center at a faster speed than the galaxy as a whole spins, but with different speeds for each object, slower as you move away from the center. This means objects pass into and out of the galaxy’s spiral arms over time. Other galaxies all spin at different rates and in different orientations to our galaxy. Same for planetary systems within our galaxy. Some stars even orbit within smaller circles inside their big circle around our galaxy. It’s evidence of an unpredictable universe designer.

    • @ArcaneTurbulence
      @ArcaneTurbulence 5 років тому +38

      It's all relative.

    • @MrMdb81
      @MrMdb81 5 років тому +23

      @Liam Boyle You're absolutely right! :) The European Southern Observatory in Chile watched stars orbiting the the black hole at the center of the Milky Way this past year, viewable here: ua-cam.com/video/TF8THY5spmo/v-deo.html ... The folks here though are wondering about whether the universe in general is rotating, which maybe remains an open question. I suppose it depends on whether the Milky Way and other galaxies rotate about some universal center. As I understand the Big Bang Theory, there is no implied center to the universe. Expansion doesn't so much radiate out from a single point, rather it is as if we are on the surface of an expanding balloon. I would also suppose that we have much to learn still about the nature of the expansion of the universe, the distribution of dark matter, why the higgs is lighter than expected, the specifics of quantum gravity, and a host of other questions before we can make any declarations. It's fun to think about though :)

  • @kanmedlife2494
    @kanmedlife2494 3 роки тому +12

    3:45 Who else loves this iconic background sound !

  • @Cybernaut551
    @Cybernaut551 3 роки тому +13

    I am in awe of your videos and how you masterfully explain them by not only teaching a class but the whole internet.

  • @pro_wie8299
    @pro_wie8299 5 років тому +1202

    *So this happened 290 million years ago ?*

    • @zionn3538
      @zionn3538 5 років тому +131

      Yes

    • @randombrownguy1519
      @randombrownguy1519 5 років тому +161

      Ah, the Permian period

    • @DEFIB7
      @DEFIB7 5 років тому +72

      Random Brown Guy I know how to google too!

    • @asterales0088
      @asterales0088 5 років тому +18

      @@randombrownguy1519 holy LMAO

    • @astridpinel6333
      @astridpinel6333 5 років тому +7

      Pro_wiE hhahahahha yes 😂😅

  • @EventHorizon7
    @EventHorizon7 5 років тому +145

    Not only a new veritasium video, but a new one about BLACK HOLES? is it my birthday?

  • @becca4143
    @becca4143 2 роки тому +14

    Your channel is one of the biggest reasons I’ve decided to finally go back to school, and for certain. No more maybe in a year or maybe next years, I’m going this fall for certain :) . I’m planning on getting a bio-engineering degree, but if I can have it my way instead of time’s way, I hope to get many different scientific degrees, as theres no single subject I can just dedicate my only KNOWABLE life to. Thank you for all the videos you’ve released, and for reminding me of why I fell in love with science as a kid. It’s like I found my passion after all these years, after school and general life circumstances seemed to just be determined to beat it out of me 😭 I will come back to this channel one day!! When things are different, but for the better.

    • @kiiturii
      @kiiturii 9 днів тому

      how's it going now

  • @rameenana
    @rameenana Рік тому +8

    This is the coolest thing I’ve learned about space in a while. Thanks man. You and your team do a pretty cool job.

  • @Cheranetube
    @Cheranetube 5 років тому +556

    I am curious how someone could dislike this video. Perhaps they have trouble understanding it, the burden of knowledge is too much for them, or perhaps they too, are really uncomfortable with naked singularities.

    • @shaunjames1414
      @shaunjames1414 5 років тому +10

      Why not both?

    • @macaroane
      @macaroane 5 років тому +84

      They believe the earth is flat and the sky is a dome hologram

    • @michaelwicker9538
      @michaelwicker9538 5 років тому +14

      @@macaroane don't forget that Geniuses days the Earth 5.8k years old, meaning we couldn't possibly see further than that many light years.

    • @shaileshs8242
      @shaileshs8242 5 років тому +2

      Or flat earthers..

    • @MrSir-rq8qt
      @MrSir-rq8qt 5 років тому +2

      That's the oldest trick in the book. Trying to insult the intelligence of others to discredit them and humiliate them into going along with whatever lame MS says. Not really any more though, every will know soon

  • @javimsfc
    @javimsfc 5 років тому +558

    I miss free Vsauce vídeos
    Edit: I already now that DONG exists, thanks

    • @wabbasMEpern
      @wabbasMEpern 5 років тому +25

      His content is worth paying for. No?

    • @rexregisanimi
      @rexregisanimi 5 років тому +114

      @@wabbasMEpern Just because something is worth the price doesn't mean a particular person can pay for it (or that they should even be charged for it).

    • @alsayedjalal
      @alsayedjalal 5 років тому +98

      Is that what he's been doing?! Man, i just thought he stopped making videos.

    • @javimsfc
      @javimsfc 5 років тому +2

      Jalal M yes 😓

    • @javimsfc
      @javimsfc 5 років тому +13

      Christopher Bross exactly, i cant pay 3€ for each video

  • @TheDirtyRodriguez
    @TheDirtyRodriguez 2 роки тому +20

    Thank you so much for this content and all the other stuff your channels brought to me/us! With all the chaos in the world and our small little habitats these small lessons soothe me down and bring back a smile on my face. Only my kids and music have a similar effect on me.

  • @tykobray4132
    @tykobray4132 3 роки тому +33

    People on earth: "The sun doesnt go around the earth! The earth moves around the sun!"
    People on blackholes:

  • @quahntasy
    @quahntasy 5 років тому +95

    These acronyms are getting better every freakin year.

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid 4 роки тому +173

    "This is called a naked singularity and it makes a lot of scientists uncomfortable." Prudes!

  • @thelunaticcultist5157
    @thelunaticcultist5157 2 роки тому +14

    Time: Is linear and always passes at the same rate
    The Ergosphere: *_”I’m about to end this man’s whole career”_*

  • @StxrryNight
    @StxrryNight 3 роки тому +4

    that event already happned, but the light reached us after millions of years.

  • @viper8588
    @viper8588 5 років тому +352

    2:18 that moment when you can't understand the simplest objects in the universe

    • @Sam-sf8by
      @Sam-sf8by 4 роки тому +15

      Welcome to phisics lol

    • @chargen7224
      @chargen7224 4 роки тому

      in set theory, you have sets of this , Ruyssels and so this disturbs me even more

    • @loraine8778
      @loraine8778 4 роки тому

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @Kaos1382
      @Kaos1382 4 роки тому +3

      The reason they're "simple" is because it's just pure mass. In theory of course.

    • @aaebsssb9914
      @aaebsssb9914 4 роки тому

      Kaos1382 Everything is pure mass except things that move at the speed of light, like photons which have no mass

  • @connarcomstock161
    @connarcomstock161 5 років тому +179

    *Maximum Spin* sounds like an 80's anime

  • @trappedmoss1172
    @trappedmoss1172 9 місяців тому +3

    So that star was blinking every 131 seconds means that it was revolving around black hole every 130 seconds??😮😮

  • @franktothemax
    @franktothemax 3 місяці тому

    With 15m subs I feel like this goes without saying-but this channel has changed my life. I once felt rudderless because our education structures did not inspire me to think critically or try to look outside the box, let alone understand it. Meditation has inspired questions that don’t have intrinsic answers, questions that lead me to channels like this. Channels that offer the opposite of the education system I grew up with. With every video I watch, I’m inspired as much as I am curious, and this only fuels the burning desire in me to help others somehow. In making these videos, you’ve undoubtedly inspired so many people to be great and I freaking love that about this platform and your journey through this short life we lead. I’m happy that people like you exist my friend. Thank you for this.

  • @TheExoplanetsChannel
    @TheExoplanetsChannel 5 років тому +281

    Love your videos about space !

    • @pauljohnson5472
      @pauljohnson5472 5 років тому +2

      me too!

    • @Killatomate85
      @Killatomate85 5 років тому +1

      love all these idiots believing NASA's lies.

    • @alwaysvon1085
      @alwaysvon1085 5 років тому

      You would love David La Point his video for a better understanding of space

    • @_K3PLR
      @_K3PLR 5 років тому +1

      @@Killatomate85 Love watching you being an idiot

    • @Mark-Wilson
      @Mark-Wilson 2 роки тому

      @@Killatomate85 love all those idiots believing we're in a space snowglobe

  • @Eudomac99
    @Eudomac99 5 років тому +280

    Why are you in Dumbledore's study?

    • @indigofenrir7236
      @indigofenrir7236 5 років тому +13

      Checking out all those reused phonebooks.

    • @C345OFR
      @C345OFR 5 років тому +1

      What's interesting to me is that - at my rate of reading - that's a lifetime's worth of books. Hope there are no boring ones!

    • @TheBankaiMusic
      @TheBankaiMusic 5 років тому +4

      That's
      The John Rylands Library in Manchester UK

  • @JimmyHey
    @JimmyHey 2 роки тому +36

    Damn, that Black Hole spaghettified that star real good

    • @UrNewStepdad91
      @UrNewStepdad91 2 роки тому +3

      Starghetti

    • @leociresi4292
      @leociresi4292 2 роки тому

      So why didn’t Cooper become S’ghetti?

    • @costco_pizza
      @costco_pizza 2 роки тому

      @@UrNewStepdad91 Yeah but what about UY Scuti?? I bet these black holes won't look so menacing next to the colossal UY Scuti!

    • @quantumblauthor7300
      @quantumblauthor7300 2 роки тому

      @@leociresi4292 larger, more gentle black hole + creative liberties

  • @martinp.617
    @martinp.617 2 роки тому +1

    As always, great explanation and animation. Keep it up.

  • @nilessamaniego2783
    @nilessamaniego2783 5 років тому +41

    if a lot of black holes are dormant, traveling through space is like playing mine sweeper lol

    • @penguinexpress12
      @penguinexpress12 5 років тому

      Niles Samaniego Black holes are really tiny though

    • @christopherjones7191
      @christopherjones7191 5 років тому +1

      @@penguinexpress12 their effects aren't

    • @huaen8880
      @huaen8880 5 років тому +3

      @@christopherjones7191 They aren't. Not if you are travelling through space, anyway. Black holes are extremely uncommon compared to other stellar objects. This means it's already very unlikely to find one, especially since space is so incredibly empty in the first place. After you find a black hole, you need to get extremely close to it to experience its tidal forces. Even if you approached a sun-mass black hole at 1au, you would experience nothing more than the gravitational pull our Earth experiences. For stellar-mass black holes, you would need to get very close - probably within the radius of the sun - to start experiencing tidal effects that can be seriously harmful.

    • @christopherjones7191
      @christopherjones7191 5 років тому +1

      @@huaen8880 I agree with you.
      My intention for that sentence was that while the black hole itself was infitesimally small, its gravitational effects were still much greater than their small size would suggest.

    • @penguinexpress12
      @penguinexpress12 5 років тому

      Christopher Jones but it would only be the same gravitational pull as a star of the same mass

  • @Mastr1ani
    @Mastr1ani 5 років тому +7

    Thank you for providing content that is quite possibly the best available anywhere on this platform. Well done and greatly appreciated.

  • @Sirinwara
    @Sirinwara 3 роки тому +5

    1:21 I just laughed out loud when the heroic music came in, given the context
    Really informative video btw!

  • @marinaramarcato7615
    @marinaramarcato7615 4 роки тому +8

    I love your videos, thank you so much for the time and effort put into creating them. They are great for communicating science people wouldn't know otherwise!

    • @miguelchippsinteligente6072
      @miguelchippsinteligente6072 2 роки тому

      Tesla referenced human energy 🌬👻jesus christ referenced living waters science 💎👨‍🎓👩‍🎓science described water memory 🌊🎭psalms16:24 k,j proverbs27:19 existence psychologically god bless fight the good fight 💖👻💎👨‍🎓👩‍🎓🗽🤍⚖🌪🌬

    • @nickwilcox3648
      @nickwilcox3648 2 роки тому

      @@miguelchippsinteligente6072 ... what...?

  • @ishab.6798
    @ishab.6798 5 років тому +50

    lol. the rendition at 1:24-1:25 has been my computer background for years :D I also put my bin at the black hole with all the shortcuts around it.

    • @feynstein1004
      @feynstein1004 5 років тому +1

      That's really clever 😂

    • @michaelbuckers
      @michaelbuckers 5 років тому

      That's not what black holes look like. Your life have been a lie.

    • @ishab.6798
      @ishab.6798 5 років тому

      @@michaelbuckers Do black holes really 'look' like anything if we can't see any light bouncing of them? (also: *has been a lie.)

    • @michaelbuckers
      @michaelbuckers 5 років тому

      @@ishab.6798 You thought that was a smart remark, but joke's on you, black holes emit hawking radiation so they do look like something! Also clearly it was about surroundings of the black hole and the shape of its shadow. None of these images in the video are accurate.

    • @ishab.6798
      @ishab.6798 5 років тому

      @@michaelbuckers What do you mean with the shape of its shadow? Also, of course I knew it wasn't a real picture. He even mentioned it too in the video that they are artists' renditions.

  • @Gamer-wu3ty
    @Gamer-wu3ty 5 років тому +244

    Our sun: Level 1 crook
    Spinning black hole: level 99 mafia boss

  • @utgfy
    @utgfy 2 роки тому +15

    Quick questions from a know-nothing: I'm confused about the dwarf star orbiting the black hole, the one that you described as always there but not visible until the star was sucked in to the black hole. I assume that its orbit is in a place of equilibrium where the gravitational force pulling the dwarf star in matches the centripetal force of the spin pushing it out. But then a star gets sucked into the black hole. Wouldn't that massively change the gravity of the black hole? According to your explanation, such an event would also increase the spin, but are we saying that increase in mass and increase in spin are equivalent somehow? Or did the dwarf star change its orbital pattern after this event? I guess we can't compare before & after, but is it in any way possible that it DIDN'T change its orbital pattern after such a dramatic event? How would a star getting sucked into a black hole change the trajectory of an object already in orbit around that black hole? Wouldn't it disturb the orbital pattern greatly in the short run, then, settling down, cast the dwarf star into a new long-term orbital pattern? The bigger implication of what I'm asking is whether the dwarf star was actually there and orbiting in that manner before the event, or if the event introduced the dwarf star into orbit or somehow dramatically changed its orbit. Thanks for the time, and thanks especially for the great videos.

  • @snowarist
    @snowarist 3 місяці тому

    I see black holes I get this eerie feeling... They are just so mysterious. Thanks for clearing some of the mystery, Derek.

  • @MagnakayViolet
    @MagnakayViolet 5 років тому +13

    At some point, I lost focus of the terminology and was sucked into his voice. Then I hit the isco and pulled myself back together. I feel brighter now.

  • @bilimbilin
    @bilimbilin 5 років тому +342

    So can we assume the black hole "gargantua" in interstellar fed on a star at some point too?
    Cool. Great video by the way ^^

    • @motosbkbr
      @motosbkbr 5 років тому +23

      Yes!

    • @NukeMyHouse
      @NukeMyHouse 5 років тому +90

      Yup, and Gargantua was also a spinning black hole! Movie logic dictated that it spun at near the theoretical maximum (as that's the only way time would have worked like it did on Miller's planet... that, and Miller's planet being much closer than was depicted), but the final on-screen render showed the black hole rotating at 60% of the maximum instead, as 99% would have caused Gargantua to look a bit lopsided and distorted, which may have confused viewers (as opposed to looking only slightly lopsided).

    • @amber1862
      @amber1862 5 років тому +76

      Gargantua fed on love. It is believed the spin of Gargantua was exponentially fuelled by Christopher Nolan's ego.

    • @srsjackson
      @srsjackson 5 років тому +37

      @@NukeMyHouse I see someone have read "The Science of Interstellar".

    • @NukeMyHouse
      @NukeMyHouse 5 років тому +26

      It was a great read for sure.

  • @tlwmdbt
    @tlwmdbt Рік тому +2

    I imagine risco like the whirl in a toilett or bathtube in 3D, as faster it spins (as faster the water floates down the pip/fermions and bosons go down the hole) as steeper and more sharpened the whirl walls are. 😅 You did a very good job in explanation!

  • @nicklaskaridis
    @nicklaskaridis 3 роки тому +30

    Derek: This is called a naked singularity.
    Me: Hehe... *nAkEd*

    • @voxelamateur
      @voxelamateur 3 роки тому +1

      what's so funny? have you never seen a naked hole?

    • @Harlem55
      @Harlem55 3 роки тому

      @@voxelamateur lol, just not your naked hole.

  • @nikkoa.3639
    @nikkoa.3639 4 роки тому +1712

    "This is called a naked singularity and it makes a lot of scientist uncomfortable" *GEE I WONDER WHY*
    Edit: Btw, the replies to this comment are mostly about one guy arguing that the earth is flat. Shame isn't it?
    Edit: FREEEDOOOOM HE'S GONE! WHAT A NEW YEAR MIRACLE

    • @lukesmith8896
      @lukesmith8896 4 роки тому +166

      ew i can se ur singalaraty thats not even thereticly posibal

    • @peapopea
      @peapopea 4 роки тому +28

      @@lukesmith8896 dude i love you

    • @canuckeraust
      @canuckeraust 4 роки тому +42

      ^
      ||
      ||
      Gay

    • @sansimportance863
      @sansimportance863 4 роки тому +90

      @Flearther McPlane yeah that had been said about 2001, 2002, 2003, … and 2019 before that, still waiting.

    • @diwakardayal954
      @diwakardayal954 4 роки тому +21

      @Flearther McPlane sry i didnt get u are u tryn to say earth is flat?

  • @the_hanged_clown
    @the_hanged_clown 5 років тому +26

    amazing what one can tell simply from the light emitted from distant objects

    • @mr_brown5974
      @mr_brown5974 5 років тому +1

      And a 1000 years of science

    • @jonathankehn9202
      @jonathankehn9202 5 років тому +1

      Or the lack thereof...

    • @the_hanged_clown
      @the_hanged_clown 5 років тому +1

      arguably less considering the public fear of science for eons, pushed by religious institutions

    • @thehoovah
      @thehoovah 5 років тому +1

      It's easy to form theories about things that no one can physically verify... There have been hundreds of scientific theories disproven over the years. This information is no less susceptible.

    • @9308323
      @9308323 5 років тому

      ​@@thehoovah It's part of its charm. Of course, we can't really say ANYTHING 100% for sure (this could all be just the matrix and we wouldn't know) but we still try to understand the universe around us with the current information we have. If, however, this is proven to be incorrect, then that just meant that there's a better explanation that we have yet to find and the journey to learning about this phenomenon begins anew. This time, we are equipped with a better understanding than last time (since we DID disprove the previous theory and what made that possible didn't come from nowhere).

  • @gaetanlb
    @gaetanlb Рік тому +1

    Thank you for the explanations. Great work thank you

  • @SMG043
    @SMG043 Рік тому +1

    Excellent presentation as always, thanks for the education.

  • @BabakoSen
    @BabakoSen 5 років тому +65

    Just FYI, redshift can only be used to calculate distance at very large extra-galactic distances where the expansion of the universe accounts for most of the object's observed motion. At distances where we can resolve individual stars from stellar clusters (as opposed to resolving individual stellar discs), which we can only do within our galaxy and some members of the local galactic group, cosmological redshift can't be used because the Doppler shift primarily traces the stars' peculiar motions within their galaxies or of their host galaxies through their group or cluster. We can use stellar spectra to gauge a star's distance, but to do so we have to compare the spectra to stellar evolutionary models to distinguish dwarfs and giants of the same temperatures and estimate the star's intrinsic luminosity at that stage in its life. For isolated stars (not part of a multiple system or cluster but free-moving in the galactic potential), stellar evolutionary models are often the best distance-estimating tools available, and that's not saying a whole lot.

    • @m.c.v.a.8586
      @m.c.v.a.8586 5 років тому +5

      I kind of understood the first half of your comment, then I got lost :(.... men I wish I could have studied astrophysics *sigh*

    • @tampauser6879
      @tampauser6879 5 років тому

      "Free-moving in the galactic potential..." what a beautiful idea. What a lovely turn of phrase. Did you make that up?

    • @BabakoSen
      @BabakoSen 5 років тому +3

      @@tampauser6879 it's a succinct definition of the term we'd use, "field star", although I evidently sacrificed too much clarity for brevity. "Galactic potential" was short for the potential well of the Milky Way. We use the term "potential well" a lot in the field to describe the gravitational sphere of influence of a mass or (more often) group of n masses where n may be a large number. "Potential" comes from "gravitational potential energy", and the "well" part comes from the way we often try to describe intuitively how massive objects deform space according to relativity. The usual metaphor is a bowling ball on a tautly stetched sheet: the ball creates a depression or "well" that makes smaller objects dropped on the same sheet fall toward it.

    • @PaskalS
      @PaskalS 5 років тому +1

      Are there galaxies from the local group from which we can identify individual stars? I thought that's only possible for within the Milky Way...

    • @BabakoSen
      @BabakoSen 5 років тому +3

      @@PaskalS some particularly massive stars can be picked out in the Magellanic Clouds and the sparse outskirts of the Andromeda and Triangulum galaxies. It's hard af, though.

  • @tghilkrad8012
    @tghilkrad8012 5 років тому +191

    Ah finally a Challenge for my *BEyBlAdE*
    Our battle will be legendary

    • @SupereKrakersik
      @SupereKrakersik 3 роки тому +4

      funniest comment here

    • @Shrooblord
      @Shrooblord 3 роки тому +1

      Hahaha I laughed more at this than I thought I would've thx

  • @AscendtionArc
    @AscendtionArc Рік тому

    Thanks for this.

  • @daserfomalhaut9809
    @daserfomalhaut9809 5 років тому +137

    Oh my Christ. Thank you for showing how we measure these distant objects!

  • @DANGJOS
    @DANGJOS 5 років тому +23

    This is the content I subscribed for haha.

  • @PAWiley
    @PAWiley 2 роки тому +1

    Out of all the channels I don't understand, this one is my favorite.
    I'm partially kidding, of course; much of the math is beyond me, but Muller does brilliantly to help make complex science more accessible for those of us without a significant background in physics and mathematics, but no lack of curiosity.

    • @plica06
      @plica06 11 місяців тому

      And *Dereks* genius is to keep you watching even when you have no idea what he is saying.

  • @fatmagafr
    @fatmagafr Рік тому

    srsly these videos are so amzing tysm!!

  • @amitavm8099
    @amitavm8099 5 років тому +5

    Love your work man!

  • @johnhammer8668
    @johnhammer8668 5 років тому +3

    Always wondered how scientists were able to come to conclusions. Would love to see more of this type of videos. Thanks

  • @AsgerAlstrupPalm
    @AsgerAlstrupPalm 9 місяців тому

    Amazing video BRAVO mate🎉

  • @earthdenier1009
    @earthdenier1009 2 роки тому +5

    5:17 comedy gold

  • @domainofscience
    @domainofscience 5 років тому +35

    Sweet library dude!

    • @TheBankaiMusic
      @TheBankaiMusic 5 років тому +1

      That's
      The John Rylands Library in Manchester UK

    • @TucsonDude
      @TucsonDude 2 роки тому +1

      LOL...it's a custom background image.

    • @jaydutta7711
      @jaydutta7711 2 роки тому

      @@TucsonDude 😂😂😂🤣

    • @user-xt7kc4tq1q
      @user-xt7kc4tq1q Місяць тому

      @@TheBankaiMusic djr gvvvv. ؤرؤؤللللالشبببييقلللبللببللءؤؤؤرررليبققفاغفقثضصىىىىتننوةنننم alhamdulla

    • @user-xt7kc4tq1q
      @user-xt7kc4tq1q Місяць тому

      @@jaydutta7711 siuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuUuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu
      Uuuuuuuuuuuu

  • @ashermangel5668
    @ashermangel5668 5 років тому +70

    So your telling me the flashes were caused by a white dwarf star, something unimaginably huge, going half the speed of light, unimaginably fast... I feel small.

    • @paolo8339
      @paolo8339 5 років тому +19

      In fact white dwarfs are small (still aproximately the size of earth) but they are unimaginably dense, because there mass are comparable to the sun.

    • @greypotter1005
      @greypotter1005 5 років тому +25

      A star circled a black hole once every TWO. MINUTES. It takes Mercury freaking 88 days to trundle around our star. But this white dwarf, only a little smaller than the FREAKING SUN. Friggin zips around a SUPER MASSIVE BLACK HOLE. In TWO. MINUTES.

    • @ashermangel5668
      @ashermangel5668 5 років тому

      @@paolo8339 Oh I didn't know that! Thanks for the info!

    • @ashermangel5668
      @ashermangel5668 5 років тому +2

      @@greypotter1005 I was thinking the same thing 2 minutes for that to happen... WOW!!!

    • @medexamtoolsdotcom
      @medexamtoolsdotcom 3 роки тому +2

      White dwarf stars aren't unimaginably huge, unless the Earth is too huge for your imagination, since that's about how big a white dwarf star is. Though it's about a million times more massive than the Earth.

  • @hrishikeshdutta3063
    @hrishikeshdutta3063 2 роки тому

    I love watching your videos. I am not a student of science but I love science. I want knowledge and your channel is the place to acquire knowledge.

  • @kabyamtalukdar3066
    @kabyamtalukdar3066 3 роки тому +40

    Why on earth are there so many dislikes.....did the dislikers misheard "Naked singularities" with "NAKED SINGLE LADIES" ???

    • @Helicopterpilot16
      @Helicopterpilot16 3 роки тому +1

      Both make men uncomfortable, when they're nerds XD

    • @monkeyojacko
      @monkeyojacko 2 роки тому +5

      Probably cuz they thing black holes are racist

    • @abisgamer4825
      @abisgamer4825 2 роки тому

      @@monkeyojacko why do you guys have to bring your shitty agenda into everything

    • @darksecret6050
      @darksecret6050 2 роки тому +1

      @@abisgamer4825 I think he's *against* it tho

    • @Madara_Uchiha69420
      @Madara_Uchiha69420 2 роки тому

      😂😂😂😂, makes sense though

  • @andriyt9180
    @andriyt9180 4 роки тому +4

    Thank You for a great video, big fan of this channel. I do have a question though and I apologize for potential ridiculousness of it as astro-physics or or really any physics is very far from being my daily subjects of involvement but are much of personal curiosity. So if the massive star that got eaten by the black hole actually got consumed while passing by the black hole then wouldn't it's trajectory have to intersect with the actual event horizon of the black hole in order to be effected or is the animation just not correct? Also wouldn't the mass of the star that got eaten have to be smaller than that or the dwarf star that is apparently circling the black hole emitting those x-rays in order to experience effect of the gravity since the dwarf star manages to circle around without the experience of the same effect? and lastly how come there is any light or debris left circling the black hole? by my logic if the large massive start got engulfed while passing by then there really shouldn't be anything left from it and only hawking radiation would get emitted according to some earlier videos from this channel. Greatly appreciate any potential relative responses :)

  • @empty_user6159
    @empty_user6159 5 років тому +3

    Wow. This was a really good video. I like it! Keep being awesome!

  • @junaidahmadj
    @junaidahmadj Рік тому

    Very nicely presented. Thank you for this video.

  • @geniusstuffwithujan856
    @geniusstuffwithujan856 2 роки тому +1

    This man deserves a Nobel Prize. His videos are the ones which have motivated me to understand science , not memorize it.

  • @grenzviel4480
    @grenzviel4480 5 років тому +41

    I understood... some of it

    • @adeshpoz1167
      @adeshpoz1167 5 років тому +1

      Hel yeah me too. 😂

    • @cloveramv
      @cloveramv 5 років тому

      Whatever he told about was simple Physics that you usually study in school, he wasn't talking of higher level concepts, so if you are a kid you will soon read the formulas and terms he used.
      :) it's not that hard.

    • @adeshpoz1167
      @adeshpoz1167 5 років тому

      @@cloveramv Not really. Many concepts were higher level. I was never taught about black holes or anything about black body radiation or the acretion disk in school. I learned it all myself.

    • @MoPoppins
      @MoPoppins 5 років тому

      More than I did...and yet I optimistically watch.

  • @II-tj5eg
    @II-tj5eg 5 років тому +309

    This is what Vsauce should've always been like: free for everyone.

    • @Roxfox
      @Roxfox 5 років тому +50

      Because if someone is good at something, they should always do it for free...?

    • @matguimond92
      @matguimond92 5 років тому +20

      @@Roxfox yeah not paying a conceited douchebag a monthly fee to watch youtube videos

    • @Roxfox
      @Roxfox 5 років тому +5

      @@matguimond92 I don't know why you think I care, but that's fine. It's your decision, and a sensible one as far as I'm concerned, if you were looking for validation.

    • @SeldomPooper
      @SeldomPooper 5 років тому +44

      @@matguimond92 what is with the entitlement ? Its his content, he can charge for it if he wants to.

    • @Actheman1978
      @Actheman1978 5 років тому +24

      Roxfox you make it sound as if he wasn’t getting paid at all. Monetization on UA-cam works like network television. VSause had a lot of subscribers and views so the advertising revenue should have been pretty substantial. This doesn’t even mention the ability to sell merchandise, obtain episode sponsors and Patreon. You’re ultimately right though, it’s Michael’s choice, but he wasn’t doing it for “free”...not anymore than NBC, CBS, Fox etc.

  • @luiggiphilipi
    @luiggiphilipi 2 роки тому +1

    School should teach this way.
    Awesome video as always.

  • @mr88cet
    @mr88cet 3 роки тому +39

    I sure am glad they don’t express it as diameters, or it would be a disco!

  • @kitsunekaze93
    @kitsunekaze93 5 років тому +118

    next video: can dark matter be made with strong enough coffee?

    • @Callie_Cosmo
      @Callie_Cosmo 4 роки тому +8

      Brown matter could be made with strong enough coffee, *but that’s for a different video* 👀

    • @equenos
      @equenos 3 роки тому +1

      Black matter *is* strong enough coffee

    • @medexamtoolsdotcom
      @medexamtoolsdotcom 3 роки тому +2

      Only if nibbler eats it.

    • @fallenphoenix148
      @fallenphoenix148 3 роки тому

      @@medexamtoolsdotcom lol

    • @waharadome
      @waharadome 3 роки тому

      "There's coffee in that nebula!" - captain janeway

  • @BaterieCZ
    @BaterieCZ 5 років тому +162

    Or the blinking is just alien lighthouse and we are making those theories here :D

    • @zapcrossworld4036
      @zapcrossworld4036 3 роки тому +10

      @Sir Woof trump

    • @pfft3158
      @pfft3158 3 роки тому +3

      They would be extinct by now as this happened millions of years ago.

    • @ornessarhithfaeron3576
      @ornessarhithfaeron3576 3 роки тому +3

      @Sir Woof This is the stupidest thing I've ever heard

    • @sounakrakshit7312
      @sounakrakshit7312 3 роки тому

      @@zapcrossworld4036 dafuk 🤣

    • @Silver-FoxYT
      @Silver-FoxYT 3 роки тому +3

      @Sir Woof what makes you think they're not?

  • @PhilipAdair
    @PhilipAdair 2 роки тому +1

    5:17 "This is called a naked singularity, and it makes a lot of scientists uncomfortable" 🤣 🤣 🤣 an underrated pun. Kudos and congrats 👍🏾

  • @Gr8Layks
    @Gr8Layks 3 роки тому

    Very nicely presented. Lucid and understandable.

  • @lingling1797
    @lingling1797 5 років тому +134

    Umm this happened 250milion years ago
    Step up ur game guys.

    • @Danny-oi8yl
      @Danny-oi8yl 5 років тому +4

      Patience.

    • @benbarrett452
      @benbarrett452 5 років тому +7

      That's actually got me trippin lol

    • @penguin44ca
      @penguin44ca 5 років тому +12

      Or does it only occur when we view it? It's all relative

    • @eattoast6378
      @eattoast6378 5 років тому +7

      @@penguin44ca that's not how light works

    • @tirthajrikame1052
      @tirthajrikame1052 5 років тому +5

      @@eattoast6378 BUT THATS HOW MAFIA WORKS

  • @krithiksankar2081
    @krithiksankar2081 5 років тому +41

    Just curious....If the galaxy is 290 million light years away and we are detecting this event now, does that mean the event actually happened 290 million years ago ? since the information would have taken that much time to reach us.

  • @onderozenc4470
    @onderozenc4470 3 роки тому

    Thanks a lot for this video. That spinning phenomenon looks to be due to the coriolis force.
    I would like to know about the black holes magnetic fields too.

  • @danieleleuteri107
    @danieleleuteri107 3 роки тому

    I swear this is the most interesting black holes video on YT

  • @hobog
    @hobog 5 років тому +36

    9:47 what's the fissure artifact that just popped up at top right of screen?

    • @natejohnston480
      @natejohnston480 5 років тому +7

      Looks like an eye lash lol

    • @shekelboob
      @shekelboob 3 роки тому +1

      space worms

    • @GetMoGaming
      @GetMoGaming 3 роки тому +1

      space worms lol. Looks like a green screen error.

  • @photonicpizza1466
    @photonicpizza1466 5 років тому +37

    "This is called a naked singularity, and it makes a lot of scientists uncomfortable"
    Not the only naked thing that makes them uncomfortable

    • @hamstsorkxxor
      @hamstsorkxxor 5 років тому +11

      Yeah, your mom has that effect on people.

  • @factorbit5781
    @factorbit5781 4 роки тому

    Wow.. nice explanation !!!

  • @TheGodlessGuitarist
    @TheGodlessGuitarist 3 роки тому +12

    Hey Derek, what exactly is spinning i.e. what is there to spin if it is really a singularity?
    Also, if you have 2 black holes of indentical size, in close proximity, with acretion disks on precisely the same plan, but one is inverted wrt the other (so that they are spinning opposite to each other), if matter in both acretion disks is moving at >.5c, what happens when matter from one disk collides with matter from the other as the blackholes spiral in to each other?

    • @Victor_Marius
      @Victor_Marius 2 роки тому

      My guess is that some matter will be exchanged between the two black holes and some will escape their stable spinning orbit.

    • @TheGodlessGuitarist
      @TheGodlessGuitarist 2 роки тому

      @@Victor_Marius The question was about matter impacting matter where their closing speed is > c

    • @jdotoz
      @jdotoz Рік тому

      It seems that spinning black holes are thought to form tight rings rather than points - a "ringularity."

  • @everydayvideoos
    @everydayvideoos 5 років тому +31

    10 April 2019 first ever image of black hole seen by public.

    • @goji_crafter
      @goji_crafter 4 роки тому +8

      @Claudia Juarez dude it was a multinational project that started at least in 2017, it had multiple petabytes of data to construct, it took the largest radio array ever made to image it. Shut up if you don't know what you're talking about.

    • @Amy-dq2lg
      @Amy-dq2lg 4 роки тому +14

      @Claudia Juarez i conclude you are a very smart flat earther, tell me if i'm wrong

    • @strokey5284
      @strokey5284 4 роки тому

      Ok, I think you'll stop saying your opinion on the internet, and think about that people can always disagree with ya, but tho bruh I think it's real smh

    • @goji_crafter
      @goji_crafter 4 роки тому +6

      @Claudia Juarez The distance and obstruction: WHY DO YOU THINK THEY HAD TO USE AN ENORMOUS ARRAY OF TELESCOPES ACROSS THE GLOBE? FOR FUN?

    • @thederpinator6636
      @thederpinator6636 4 роки тому

      Conclusion: you are one of those conspiracy theorists on the history channel at 3:46AM

  • @simoneesposito5166
    @simoneesposito5166 5 років тому +14

    I love your content :)) keep making videos

  • @ZMacZ
    @ZMacZ Рік тому

    9:00 A neutron star core or neutron star core remnant could also apply.
    If the perceived emission has both rise and fall, instead of being near
    instantaneous (which is arguable upon framerate of perception)
    It's probably an orbiting emission.
    I'd also check for other spectral outputs, to see if these would too
    exhibit the same rise and fall in similar period.
    In fact, when considering any other type of star, the part facing
    the black hole would have attracted more, which would allow
    falling into the black hole, as teh surface gravity of such a remnant
    can't keep up with the lower orbit speed that's neccesary to keep it
    in orbit.
    The outside would have to have a greater gravity or cohesion in combination
    with the centrifugal force to stay intact, or be pulled apart.
    When the orbit speed + cohesion through surface gravity is exceeded
    the orbiting mass spaghetties into the black hole.

  • @statelyelms
    @statelyelms 3 роки тому

    just a few months later, and you'd have been able to show an *actual picture of a black hole*. incredible.

  • @weaseltunnelerinokripperin8888
    @weaseltunnelerinokripperin8888 5 років тому +4

    0:20
    "It's as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced"

  • @YoungEducationUSA
    @YoungEducationUSA 5 років тому +7

    Will you ever do another collab video with someone where both videos are meant to be played together simultaneously? Like the toilet flushing video.

  • @dhruvikaaa7903
    @dhruvikaaa7903 2 роки тому +20

    There’s my exam tomorrow but this seemed important

    • @miguelchippsinteligente6072
      @miguelchippsinteligente6072 2 роки тому

      Tesla referenced human energy 🌬👻jesus christ referenced living waters 💎👨‍🎓👩‍🎓science described water memory 🌊🎭psalms16:24 k,j proverbs27:19 existence psychologically god bless fight the good fight 💖👻💎👨‍🎓👩‍🎓🗽🤍⚖🌪🌬

    • @AD-kv8iu
      @AD-kv8iu 2 роки тому

      Seems like your running behind excellence .
      Success will flow soon😀😀

    • @AD-kv8iu
      @AD-kv8iu 2 роки тому

      Am inspired by 3 idiots .
      Just as in the movie a student should take liberty of dabbling in subjects not immediately his own to mentally fire him and keep him engrossed .
      Anyways your name is quite unique 😀
      ( Google name obviously)

  • @_34_Lies
    @_34_Lies 2 роки тому

    Impressive, as always.

  • @luckycobble935
    @luckycobble935 5 років тому +9

    I'm doing a presentation on this so thanks for the info :)