Lila Reacts to Incognito Mode | space.

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  • Опубліковано 7 тра 2023
  • Today, we're watching Incognito Mode (space.)! Share your reaction video ideas in the comments. Hi! I'm Lilaofthewind, a VTuber on UA-cam and Twitch. ✨
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    ✨ ABOUT ME ✨
    LilaoftheWind is an American VTuber that started streaming on Twitch on August 22, 2022 and starting taking UA-cam seriously in February 2023. Her fans consider her chill, wholesome, funny, and wise... with some ADHD to boot! She loves making reaction content, playing video games, and producing creative projects like voice overs, animation, and music.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 277

  • @LilaoftheWind
    @LilaoftheWind  Рік тому +15

    thank you for everything! here's how you can support my content:
    Subscribe ▷ ua-cam.com/users/LilaOfTheWind
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  • @TheForsakenEagle
    @TheForsakenEagle Рік тому +263

    A popular theory is ships are broght down by rogue waves and sailors assumed these waves were made by sea monsters.

    • @theshamurai32
      @theshamurai32 Рік тому +59

      That and the classic "Is it a sea monster or is it a whale penis breaching the surf" no joke.

    • @VarvasNukka
      @VarvasNukka Рік тому +34

      And there's plenty of marine life that work as great inspiration for monsters, deep sea ones especially if one those washed up on your beach. The giant squid and the Kraken being probably the most obvious connection.

    • @EddieB-ready
      @EddieB-ready Рік тому

      Ofc it had to be the chaotic neutral rogues fucking it up for everyone

    • @gregorymunoz8089
      @gregorymunoz8089 Рік тому +15

      ​@@VarvasNukkadon't forget the oarfish

    • @Skyte100
      @Skyte100 Рік тому +25

      Describe a whale to someone who doesn't know what it is and it sounds like a monster.

  • @gregthesovereign7525
    @gregthesovereign7525 Рік тому +219

    "I'm escaping to the only place that hasn't been corrupted by capitalism.
    SPACE" - Tim Currey, Red Alert 3

    • @1wayroad935
      @1wayroad935 Рік тому +27

      The smile on his face as he said that line is just the best

    • @PrabhablyAGoodYouTuber
      @PrabhablyAGoodYouTuber Рік тому +8

      "You are made of stupid!" - George Takei, Red Alert 3

    • @hawkeye5955
      @hawkeye5955 Рік тому +4

      "SPAAAAAAAACCCCCCCCEEEEEEE!"

  • @mifiwi3438
    @mifiwi3438 Рік тому +161

    That one pirate clip reminded me, Incognito Mode made a feature length video about "the Gentleman Pirate". I highly recommend you that one for a reaction! It's the same quality as the other main channel videos but presented more like a story.

    • @KodakanLP
      @KodakanLP Рік тому +7

      Big +1.. that's probably my favorite video that he did

    • @serknet3042
      @serknet3042 Рік тому

      @@KodakanLP literally this!

    • @aphelion2902
      @aphelion2902 Рік тому

      Agreed

  • @archonofplagues1329
    @archonofplagues1329 Рік тому +52

    Fun Fact: The 1st sci-fi story was a novella called "A True Story" by Lucian of Samosata. From what I've heard, reading it feels like a fever dream.

    • @dracocrusher
      @dracocrusher Рік тому +14

      Oh yeah, if that's the one I'm thinking of, it's pretty great. Basically, Greeks would put out these autobiographies where they'd write about their adventures, but because you can't really fact check anything they said people would just make shit up and people would just believe it. Because the world's a big crazy place, so what if it's true, right?
      So what this guy did is he made an intentionally absurd fake autobiography that opens like "Everything in this book is about as real as other people's stories, which is to say not at all" and then the entire book is about how he just went around the world, got launched into space by a gust of wind, landed on the moon, and then helped the Sun Aliens defeat the Moon aliens in a huge crazy territory war before returning to get eaten by a 200 mile long whale with a bunch of fish people inside that they have to fight against for survival!
      It's honestly kind-of great.

    • @ndaemon1718
      @ndaemon1718 Рік тому +4

      @@dracocrusher id watch a movie of that :)

    • @tachyon8317
      @tachyon8317 5 місяців тому

      Wasn't there a space opera written in ancient Sumeria?

  • @PhaZeUnleashed
    @PhaZeUnleashed Рік тому +41

    The new model’s smile is adorable.

  • @fruity_tooty1412
    @fruity_tooty1412 Рік тому +38

    Incognito mode needs more love, I could watch them talk all day.

  • @DEATHBYFIRE09
    @DEATHBYFIRE09 Рік тому +31

    The seas are dangerous. Even today, ships go down with all hands and we have no idea what happened. So when a ship doesn't show up to port, and is never heard from again - monsters! Ofc nowadays we can make some decent guesses as to what happened - rogue waves, pooor weather, issues with construction, insufficient maintainance (or more likely, a combination of a lot of factors), but back then, people would shrug and assume the monsters gottem.

    • @Wayra_
      @Wayra_ Рік тому +1

      ive been binging the maritime horrors channel and it makes me want to never boat ever again

    • @DexDexter0
      @DexDexter0 4 місяці тому

      It don't help that the ocean is filled with all kinds of horrible creatures

  • @FioreFire
    @FioreFire Рік тому +26

    The funniest space travel hypothetical to me is, what if you take the cryosleep journey to a far off star, but when you get there, there's already an established and extremely advanced human civilization who got there before you using faster travel tech that was developed right after you left? They'd just point and laugh at the dumb ancient caveperson, like, "girl, cryosleep pods are SO last century!"

    • @Nyx_2142
      @Nyx_2142 Рік тому +2

      In the lore of the TTRPG Lancer, this is a legitimate issue. People left for worlds on generation ships, some taking hundreds of years to arrive, only to see automated colony ships sent out centuries after they first left had gotten there first. It is the cause of large property and human rights issues for the central government because those "first" colonists formed generations of culture around settling that world and they have rights to the planet but so would the people currently living on it. Sometimes the worlds are shared, partitioned, or sometimes millions/billions of people are resettled so the initial colonists can have the world.

  • @IgnorantBoot
    @IgnorantBoot Рік тому +5

    "Let's just call them the big planets and the small planets."
    You mean... Like planets and dwarf planets? Lol that's already what we're doing.

    • @malpheus4299
      @malpheus4299 Рік тому +1

      He meant the "BIG" planets in reference to the "main" 9 and not really by size.

  • @mythoceanas8874
    @mythoceanas8874 Рік тому +21

    Imagine you wanted to travel to a planet and the trip takes 200 years, but 50 years after you leave they discover travel that can make the trip in 20-50 years.

    • @SamGrant-jm6mz
      @SamGrant-jm6mz Рік тому +2

      You'll be asleep

    • @mythoceanas8874
      @mythoceanas8874 Рік тому +4

      @@SamGrant-jm6mz and when you wake up thinking you would be discovering a new world. You realize your 100 years to late.

    • @SamGrant-jm6mz
      @SamGrant-jm6mz Рік тому

      @@mythoceanas8874 at least the world will be kinda set up. In 100 years the first colonizers won't be able to see and travel everywhere, but they will have the first city set up

    • @toospooky051
      @toospooky051 3 місяці тому

      ​@@mythoceanas8874I mean I guess it's kind of cooler to kind of show up to an already living planet instead of having to make one yourself.

  • @EragoEntertainment
    @EragoEntertainment Рік тому +42

    Just look at colossal squids, whales, deep sea sharks and Oarfish. Obviously when people see them they think of sea monsters.

    • @chaty9903
      @chaty9903 Рік тому +4

      Yeah. The giant deep sea octopus and squids are freakishly large. We know marine creatures are not evil, but they must have been terrifying for sailors of old.

  • @mifiwi3438
    @mifiwi3438 Рік тому +56

    Dwarf planets have much more in common with asteroids than other planets. The main eight planets all have similar features: The four smaller inner planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars all have seperate layers (core, mantle, crust), had a history of geological activity, and are much much larger than even the largest dwarf planets. The four outer planets are all gaseous planets, the gas giants Jupiter and Saturn, and the Ice Giants Uranus and Neptune. These are massiv enough to hold dense atmospheres of hydrogen gas (which is so volatile and lightweight that it will get blown off any smaller planets within just a few million years), and have cores of ice and metallic hydrogen.
    in contrast, dwarf planets have nothing. They do have seperate layers, but not because of geological activity, and they do not hold atmospheres (except possibly very thin ones). The only thing that differentiates them from regular asteroids (of which there are millions, not to count Oort cloud comets which number in the trlllions) is their size and shape. As such, the term "big asteroid" might fit them even more than "dwarf planet". And because there are just so many dwarf planets, they decided to not include any dwarf planets in the "planet" classification, because they are nothing alike. Pluto, unfortunately, shares that fate as it is just a ball of ice and rock, like most comets. Also, Pluto not only has a moon that is almost as larg as itself, but it's orbit literally crosses that of Neptune (it's tilted tho so the two will not collide anytime soon). So in a way, Pluto is the worst offender of any dwarf planet.

  • @Llnstead
    @Llnstead Рік тому +5

    Viking lore is similar to the flat earth he described. They believed a giant sea serpent (Jormungandr I believe) was out in the far reaches of the ocean and that the world just ended in a giant waterfall into space (sort of like how asgard is portrayed in the marvel movies). It was until Leif Ericson sailed the Atlantic and came across Canada and the natives that lived there, naming it Vinland. Leif actually discovered North America before Colombus did, but I think the journey was too far for them to ever colonize it and not very many people settled there.

  • @mpg272727
    @mpg272727 Рік тому +10

    "If you had a box and you put it on a Satellite to send to an alien planet what items would you put in it to represent human civilization?" Oh that's easy I just put in a radio playing vinesauce joels anti alien alarm on repeat

  • @Jayz457
    @Jayz457 Рік тому +9

    I have an Alexa next to my living room TV where I watched this video. DAMN you Internet Historian!

  • @Wanton110
    @Wanton110 Рік тому +22

    My fav CokeCola story is when they were sued by someone who said they found a rat in their drink, but cokes defence was if a rat had been in CokeCola for as long as it would need to have been to get bottled and send to a store it would have dissolved

    • @fakename712
      @fakename712 Рік тому +9

      I had heard this was a mountain dew story. Honestly I wouldn't be surprised it was a well spread myth anyways

  • @EnterNameHere22
    @EnterNameHere22 Рік тому +5

    BTW Ceres used to be considered a planet before the asteroid belt was discovered, along with a bunch of other asteroid "Dwarf planets." Then they realized there were uncountable thousands of asteroids around it that were similar, which is when they realized it wasn't a planet but just a large asteroid in the belt. Same thing with Pluto, it's just an icy asteroid in the keiper belt surrounded by more icy asteroids, some larger, some smaller. That's what the last rule is for. The planets used to also exist in debris rings around the sun, but slowly gained mass and a spherical shape by clearing out their local debris rings.

  • @tiikerihai
    @tiikerihai Рік тому +7

    Well, in the old days if someone went out to the ocean, they very rarely returned home. It's only in the late middle ages that crossing the oceans became something that people did and then also returned to the origin port. With nobody returning, it's hardly surprising there was a lot of fear.

  • @Darktotaled
    @Darktotaled Рік тому +9

    we all want a moonbase so we can go there and scream john madden

  • @pincopallino36
    @pincopallino36 Рік тому +8

    You new model is really cute, it smiling makes me smile too

  • @rudeboyspodcast
    @rudeboyspodcast Рік тому +4

    The channel is popping off and I couldn't be happier.

  • @vodrake
    @vodrake Рік тому +2

    The building up speed by going round and round then going up is actually a legitimate solution.
    And yes we could physically handle high speeds, we can't handle high acceleration.

  • @gudstuff_uwu3854
    @gudstuff_uwu3854 Рік тому +24

    I really enjoy this reaction videos. Keep up the great work!

  • @theshamurai32
    @theshamurai32 Рік тому +17

    Yay, space time! I was just working on my scifi story, so this is weirdly perfectly timed.

    • @boingboingresearcherph.d.2871
      @boingboingresearcherph.d.2871 Рік тому +2

      Ooh .. a sci Fi story!? Nice...
      I tried it once, I found it difficult since even if your doing something out of your imagination, it needs to follow the laws of the universe and real physics...
      I just stick to fantasy... Because magic can explain everything... 😂 Way lot easier....

    • @theshamurai32
      @theshamurai32 Рік тому +1

      ​@Boing Boing Researcher (Ph.D.) To be fair, when I say scifi, I'm talking scifi so soft you could spread it like butter, borderline science fantasy in parts. I like to read up on the principles behind the science and apply a reasonable explanation when possible, but I know my limits as a layman and sometimes it's as simple as, "Because putting jump jets in your cyberlegs is really cool." Lol
      I have the opposite problem with fantasy. Tried to write a fantasy novel for years, but as a history student with a fixation on medieval Europe and the Middle East, I'd get too bogged down in worldbuilding. What's your story about?

  • @idontknowleavemealoneplease
    @idontknowleavemealoneplease Рік тому +2

    Google oar fish. The sea monster sightings make total sense when you take into account the fact that there are sea monsters to sight. The resemblance to the long serpent sea monster that you see in depictions of old pirate maps is crazy. Occasionally they'll swim up to the surface (for sun or food probably) and people at sea will catch a quick glimpse of something that you can't blame them for reporting a sea monster. It's just uncommon enough to make for a good cryptid-like story.

  • @skylordthe1st
    @skylordthe1st Рік тому +8

    God I love how they come up with crazy ideas for things. But it somehow makes sense

  • @theianeia
    @theianeia Рік тому +5

    10:00 Yeah, everything would probably just disintegrate at that speed, including the spaceship lol
    Unless we have one of those energy shield from SF movies.

    • @hdnfbp
      @hdnfbp Рік тому

      Also, how you move the tube faster than the object inside of it so the projectile don't hit the tube itself?

  • @finnishamericanstudies3956
    @finnishamericanstudies3956 Рік тому +9

    So fresh! I kinda miss the old model, but if this is more your speed I can dig it.

  • @hermannlagrange803
    @hermannlagrange803 Рік тому +1

    Interesting bit of info: Helium 3 is used for Nuclear Fusion, which is different from Nuclear Fission. For starters, there's no waste by product and there's no lethal radiation either. The Moon has a serious butt load of Helium 3 where as Earth has extremely little.

  • @demurawatanabe8665
    @demurawatanabe8665 Рік тому +6

    She back!

  • @Tenroshou
    @Tenroshou Рік тому +4

    The Kraken came to be, because they probably saw a giant squid and thought to themself. Oh probably there is a creature out there that is even bigger. Hence, the Kranken was born

  • @Dan-B
    @Dan-B Рік тому +4

    Earth falling towards to sun is a part of its natural orbit, Earth’s sideways momentum means that it misses 😛

  • @Mystikus2
    @Mystikus2 Рік тому +3

    As a kid, there was a storybook with images about a sea monster devouring everything that I really liked. 10 years later I randomly came across the oarfish in a video and it was literally that sea monster, but smaller.
    Also the corpses of whales and krakens sometimes wash up on shore and are so malformed and partially eaten that even nowadays it can be hard to tell what it was originally.
    Edit: Gravity forces planets to be spherical in shape, which is why the rule is in place. Planets are also really hot and thus a lot of liquid in their formation stage.
    If you really want to get controversial in Celestial indentifiers, take a look at Moons. Technically, every small rock in the Rings of Saturn is a Moon.
    Further edit: We don't actually know what is at or behind the "edge". Due to the lightspeed restriction, it is impossible to figure out by direct observation. This is also the reason we sometimes call it "The observable universe"

  • @boishutyoahhup
    @boishutyoahhup Рік тому +11

    Hope I feelin better , watching your vid before going to sleep became a tradition for me
    Ya voice is hella smooth
    Kisses from France Lila

  • @birdrun4246
    @birdrun4246 8 місяців тому +3

    As an Engineer, I can confirm we do, in fact, use our knowledge for not-practical fun things. The Mars rovers are programmed to sing "Happy Birthday" to themselves. The whole 'spinning things really fast to launch to orbit' thing is in active development, too.

  • @gidi3250
    @gidi3250 Рік тому +2

    "where did these things come from" mostly likely the classic thing of a bunch of guys bored on a ship in the middle of the ocean trying to make their voyage seem more interesting to tell people back home, the suddenly whale penis looks like sea monster, amd mix in some heat and lack of decent meals and some alcohol and boom.

  • @reporterid
    @reporterid Рік тому +4

    20:54 I read recently that some scientists are starting to seriously consider the possible effects of zero gravity on a fetus in space because in the near future space tourism will become common and people will obviously take the chance.
    30:50 It's easier to divide big objects in space between planets and dwarf planets than to say they're all full on planets. At the end of the day it doesn't matter but, if you have to classify them and make a comprehensive list, it's probably more convenient the way they did.
    31:59 I might not remember correctly but it isn't about the universe growing: it's the distance between every planet/star/galaxy that is increasing. The universe is infinite and the stuff inside it is getting further away from each other. Also, there isn't what we can call an edge: at some point (arguably) there'd be infinite emptiness.

  • @iron_side5674
    @iron_side5674 Рік тому +1

    10:33
    That is somewhat correct, appearently at the speed of light an Atom would produce a Shockwave in Air that would instantly explode not just the Atom, but the entire earth, and probably at least the moon as well.

  • @gidi3250
    @gidi3250 Рік тому +1

    The big thing for pluto was the fact that it's locked into facing one way with it's moon, it can't turn around like any other planet in the 9, they made a big stink of it. And the big issue with doing anything on the moon is the space dust, there's so much and it's always floating around, they even sent apollo missions with vacuums to get rid of some of the dust, but it didnt work out like that, unlime earth where theirs more air than dusy/dust drifts to the floor, on the moon it just kinda sits in the air not really moving away, and as the apollo crews found out, gets everywhere, on them, on their suits, in their equipment and destroys them.

  • @Voxrar
    @Voxrar Рік тому +2

    I remember a theory about the sea monsters being people didn't understand the Earth was curved. So when ships went over the horizon it looked like they sank at the same distance every time.

  • @BtheLee11
    @BtheLee11 Рік тому +1

    We can barely handle a few G's of force before we start to black out lool. The main issue is veinous blood return (your heart pumps blood into the arteries but veins lead back to the heart). Veins are inherently a low pressure system being so far away from the "pump", so a lot of the time you have to manually "squeeze" the blood back to the heart, like a gogurt. That's why stretching is so very important, especially in the morning or after long periods of sitting, it's to literally get the blood flowing back to your heart. You'll feel much less tired in the morning after a nice big stretch, especially in your legs (since that's the furthest from your heart).

  • @kingofflames738
    @kingofflames738 Рік тому +1

    People were mad that Pluto's a dwarf planet since then, but ignore that Uranus and Neptune were reclassified as Ice Giants. Why is that not a point of controversy?

  • @_ASK_
    @_ASK_ Рік тому +1

    A space elevator is actually more efficient than sending rockets to space

  • @Ayrim_
    @Ayrim_ Рік тому +8

    I think IH reuploaded a man in the cave, so looking forward to your reaction
    Edit: I checked the channel and couldn’t find the video. Did it get taken down again?

    • @LilaoftheWind
      @LilaoftheWind  Рік тому +3

      sadly, it was. i can only imagine how annoying it is to internet historian for this to keep happening. hope he finds a solution soon.

  • @bystander9028
    @bystander9028 Рік тому +1

    food + Lila vid = good time

  • @slyguythreeonetwonine3172
    @slyguythreeonetwonine3172 Рік тому +1

    (23:39) Alpha Centari is ~4.4 LIGHT YEARS away. Light YEARS. So it takes light, at the speed of light, 4.4 years to get here.
    We don't move anywhere near that speed. It takes 9 MONTHS just to one way trip to Mars. Our next door neighbor. 21 months round trip. In order to wait for the transfer window. If you miss the transfer window where Earth and Mars will be closest, it would take even longer.
    So essentially it takes us, currently, almost two years to cross the street. Half the time it takes light to travel from Alpha Centari to Earth.💀 Just to go next door.
    The Voyager probes launched in the 70s only in the last decade, reached what we consider the "edge" or "end" of our Solar System(This is also being debated and potentially redefining what is considered the end of the Solar System, so is subject to change.). So ~40 years to leave town.....
    But I'm down with all that so long as the first ship we do that with is named ENTERPRISE!
    Hopefully it won't happen during this woke cancer, or it'll be called like Click-Klak-Plep or some horrific "International" name.💀

  • @Dodsodalo
    @Dodsodalo Рік тому

    13:45 Fun fact, this more the plotline of Infinite Undiscovered a JRPG for the 360 moreso than Majora's Mask.
    And it gets so much weirder the more lore you dive into.

  • @leguan278
    @leguan278 Рік тому +1

    2 things:
    1: People can not go that fast, they would turn to much before getting near it.
    2: nothing can do it, the moment they get to the speed of light they are no longer mass but becomes energy.

  • @Hekatt1
    @Hekatt1 Рік тому +2

    Yesss, I love your reactions

  • @user-sq8uv1bb2p
    @user-sq8uv1bb2p Рік тому +1

    Love to have you back!

  • @thetalkingbear
    @thetalkingbear Рік тому +3

    I think he means to say the firmament. It's a Bible and a flerfer thing.

  • @JayTohab
    @JayTohab Рік тому +1

    Doing good! Great to have you back. ✨

  • @jargontrueseer
    @jargontrueseer Рік тому

    Bro, this was posted while I was watching another one of your videos 😂

  • @daunodolmint
    @daunodolmint Рік тому

    Welcomeback !!!! Finally really miss your voice

  • @lucky-segfault4219
    @lucky-segfault4219 Рік тому +3

    Proxima Centauri B is a great planet

  • @malpheus4299
    @malpheus4299 Рік тому +1

    I am pretty positive that humanity's legacy will begin and end on earth. We just don't have fantastical enough materials or means to achieve any real level of colonisation and get further and further out.
    Maybe Mars? But at that point you would need infinitely renewable oxygen, food and water supplies and somehow similar minerals and material to earth to continue progressing and essentially "daisychaining" to more and more planets.

  • @brendanjrice7307
    @brendanjrice7307 Рік тому +1

    So the whole universe infinite thing that ordinary things mentions as a big bike wheel, relates to the idea that since the universe is infinite, but there are not infinite possibilities, that eventually it will begin to repeat itself.

    • @botwhy
      @botwhy Рік тому

      So you don't literally end up where you began, but in an identical place? Like a pattern that repeats itself over and over?

  • @Cecil97
    @Cecil97 Рік тому +1

    10:10 we are already moving through space at incredible speeds, the issues it not the speed but extreme acceleration and deceleration. Going around a circle will cause a centripetal force meaning human go squish at extreme high speeds in a small circle.

  • @JohnDoe-yp3zv
    @JohnDoe-yp3zv Рік тому +1

    10:00 I'm not a physicist, but I do know my physics. Velocity (under normal circumstances) wouldn't be the issue, it's acceleration that's the issue. Given no friction or irregularity to movement, we wouldn't feel anything so long as the velocity is constant. But speed up, slow down, or change direction, and now you're fighting inertia and your organs will want to continue at your original velocity, and that's something you'll definitely feel.
    Also, you can't go the speed of light. Light can only go that fast because it has no mass. Otherwise, for anything with mass, it takes infinite energy to accelerate to the speed of light. You'll also be dealing with relativistic effects at significant enough fractions of the speed of light, things like time dilation and such. Basically, our perception of time and length depends on how we perceive light, and at significantly high speeds things start to get weird. If you do manage to go faster than light, the time dilation equation that I know (special relativity, so implies constant velocity) suggests that you'll begin traveling perpendicular to time (the equation pops out an imaginary number when v is greater than c).

  • @theconfusedcrow
    @theconfusedcrow Рік тому +1

    Pluto must come back as a planet. It’s the best one

  • @winchcable2282
    @winchcable2282 Рік тому +2

    their idea of using cern to launch a item into space is real. cern has a gate where they shoot neutrinos at a target in gran sasso Italy. it was big news cause they thought they broke the speed of light doing it but it was a measurement error. also you don't need the speed so SpinLaunch is a smaller one to put satellites into space. still in testing but they have built them.

    • @malpheus4299
      @malpheus4299 Рік тому +1

      Essentially a similar concept to the launch tunnel for payloads in the underwater setting of SOMA.

  • @cerberus0225
    @cerberus0225 Рік тому

    The thing about the spherical shape for planets is that, once an object accumulates enough mass, it will be compressed by its own gravity into a spheroid. It won't be a perfect sphere, but it'll be close enough, and the main deviation will be how 'squashed' it is, so to speak. This is caused by its rotation speed; the poles of the body are closer together than any two opposite points on the equator. This is true with all the planets and dwarf planets, including the Earth, but it's usually not noticeable unless you get to an extreme like Haumea. Objects that have enough mass to experience this are called GRO's, 'gravitationally rounded objects'.
    Theoretically, other shapes are possible that would be gravitationally stable, such as a torus (donut shape) but there's no known way for such a shape to form naturally here. So, unfortunately, cube and pyramid planets and so on are just out. Even if you artificially made one, if it's large enough to qualify as a planet, it'll automatically start to collapse those peaks and edges, pulling them down and smoothing them out, on the timespan of millions of years.
    Another thing to consider is the history of what has been considered a planet, and has not, and why. Originally the planets were stars we could see with the naked eye who moved in the sky relative to other stars (the name 'planet' literally derives from a Greek word for 'wanderer', planemos). When Ceres was initially discovered in the days of early telescopes, it was assumed to be a new planet between Mars and Jupiter. But, when the rest of the asteroid belt was discovered, with hundreds upon hundreds of objects similar to Ceres with Ceres simply being the largest among them, she was relegated to being just another asteroid (hence why you never hear about her). Basically the same thing has happened with Pluto. Going back to the discovery of Pluto, basically, people used some math to predict where there would be another planet in the solar system, and used that to find Uranus. They then repeated the process and found Pluto, except it turned out their math was entirely incorrect for reasons too complicated to get into, and them finding Pluto near the place they predicted was just a massive, strange coincidence. Now, with the refinement of telescopes and the discovery of many more Kuiper Belt objects, the scientific community started to worry about Pluto, but were able to reconcile that it was still worthy of planet status as the largest Kuiper Belt object. But then they found Eris, which has more mass than Pluto and Charon combined, so either they had to change the definition and name Eris as a new planet alongside however many dozens of known and hundreds of hypothetical objects with similar mass to Pluto, or they had to change the definition of planet and create a new category of 'dwarf planet' for all the others.
    And that's not to even mention all the bizarre qualities that Pluto had when considered as a planet, like it's orbit actually intersecting with Uranus's orbit (the two are stable due to an orbital resonance), or being a binary planet of Pluto-Charon, or its high degree of orbital inclination, or etc. All of which fit much more neatly with other Kuiper Belt objects and even with asteroids!
    That said, I do think the nomenclature could be better. There's a bit of a debate ongoing over whether or not 'dwarf planet' should simply be a subcategory of 'planet', as the name would seem to imply. In that case, the 'true' planets would have to be in their own subcategory alongside the dwarf planets, but we already have a few of those. For example, 'terrestrial planet' or 'inner planet' already refers to Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. I'm not sure what you'd want to call the eight planets collectively, perhaps 'true planets'?

  • @Killerbee_McTitties
    @Killerbee_McTitties Рік тому +2

    The Loch Ness monster isn't really "out there", it lives in a lake (which isn't even that big).

  • @Null_Experis
    @Null_Experis Рік тому

    I mean, people use water as a cleaning agent all the time, and it also works.
    It's actually a very powerful solvent.

  • @deathninja16
    @deathninja16 Рік тому +1

    i dont think speed of light is so much a thing that we can attain, but going through different dimensions seems more plausible through gravity drives or ion drives. using a slingshot around the sun .

  • @monkcho7934
    @monkcho7934 Рік тому +1

    I used to be in the navy . Stationed on a destroyer(small boy). I won’t lie after a while at sea your eyes see things you can’t explain. 😂

  • @BioClay88
    @BioClay88 Рік тому +1

    i like the new model, looks neat.

  • @tsuaririndoku
    @tsuaririndoku Рік тому +1

    To be fair. The reason why we humans can’t handle a lot of G force is because of the acceleration. If we calculate this correctly slowly accelerating without mess up too much Gforce. We can eventually reach speed of light and you still going to survive.

  • @Niper777
    @Niper777 Рік тому +2

    Just in time to the reacts on this channel to Internet Historian.

  • @Unethical.Dodgson
    @Unethical.Dodgson Рік тому +1

    12:15 "That sounds very inefficient, too!"
    You couldn't be more wrong. A space elevator, if built, would be the MOST efficient means of leaving the atmosphere.
    "Raycons! They're half the price of premium brands but still sound pretty good!"
    They're more than triple the cost of entry level sennheiser or sony earphones and sound less than half as good. I love Raycon ads. They're so shit.

  • @ivangood7121
    @ivangood7121 Рік тому +1

    2:42 jacob geller made a good video on the topic "fear of big things under water"

  • @aidaid3962
    @aidaid3962 Рік тому

    fun times. great reactions. I love your commentary.

  • @kuuluna
    @kuuluna Рік тому

    This is really nice to watch at 3 am.
    Science and space is really a big wonder

  • @Mare_Man
    @Mare_Man Рік тому

    Coke can't melt pennies, but 15 months in a can of Mountain Dew will dissolve a mouse

  • @Dieskull1000
    @Dieskull1000 Рік тому

    The forces of gravity acts and extends out in the shape of a sphere (at any point of the same radius from the center the forces would be equal) which is why all the celestial bodies known right now are spherical.
    Also the moon base... *queue I Really Want to Stay at Your House*

  • @chaosyeshua1137
    @chaosyeshua1137 Рік тому

    We'll have our own mobile suits by the time we start colonizing space at this rate.

  • @Zeropubz
    @Zeropubz Рік тому

    i've grown to love space stuff myself, our own solar system got alot of intresting facts about them. And i wouldn't mind seeing more space related stuff as reactions.

  • @SigurdStormhand
    @SigurdStormhand Рік тому

    "World War III in space" was a computer game called Starlancer from 2000 - the Russians and Chinese were the bad guys. That was considered silly at the time - less so in retrospect.

  • @DisFungi1337
    @DisFungi1337 9 місяців тому +1

    Giant squids are a thing, and scientists pretty sure that there can be more giant living on ocean floor

  • @Logoslab2
    @Logoslab2 Рік тому +1

    According to relativity, if we aren't in atmosphere, going the speed of light wouldn't be dangerous to humans (outside of the possibility of hitting something). Its acceleration that's dangerous, not speed.
    ...Even then, accelerating at a low constant rate also is no harm. If you accelerate at ~9 m/s^2 it'll just feel like standing on earth - and eventually you'd 'approach' the speed of light, though it does act as a limit, so you'd never actually get to the speed of light. That being said the cern idea would probably still kill you.

  • @Vulpes_Umbra
    @Vulpes_Umbra Рік тому

    I remember that in 2011, (when I was 11) my parents bought me a hard paste book with really good pictures (cause it's a juvenile made book) about space. And it blew my mind, because it introduced me to things I didn't know: such as Ceres, the dwarf planet that was mentioned in the video; the Kuiper belt, wich is between Pluto and Neptune; how black holes work; why the comets have leave behind a tail of light, etc.
    More often I used to watch documentaries on discovery channel, animal planet, history channel or national geographic on tv. And by that time no other source was talking about those topics.

  • @LWolf12
    @LWolf12 3 місяці тому

    From my understanding, and what I've heard the universe has a tendency to expand and contract along branches that look similar to lung tissue.

  • @CartoonHangout
    @CartoonHangout Рік тому +1

    That dwarf planet with boobs proves we'll lewd anything lol.

  • @PhaZeUnleashed
    @PhaZeUnleashed Рік тому +1

    I’m starting to think we are alone in the universe. Even if aliens exist, if we never see them, they might as well not exist.

  • @ericgolightly8450
    @ericgolightly8450 23 дні тому

    9:31 This idea could work super well if it was built circling the equator in space. This would mean less g-forces, and enough time to switch the track to shoot the spacecraft away with enough speed to reach any destination (but relatavistic speeds would need something entirely different).
    12:08 You could balance the centrifugal force with the Earth's gravity to reduce the tension, this would work better if it was built with a cable rather than a rigid structure. It would need to be at least 35,800 km above the Earth, with the top in geostationary orbit.
    17:30 The Golden Record, on both Voyager 1 & 2.
    32:09 We don't know, because we can only see the light that has reached us, we can't see or detect anything further than about 46 billion light-years away. The universe might be infinite; And if it's not it still wouldn't have an edge, the same way the Earth surface doesn't uave an edge. The theory of cosmic inflation says the universe is mostly empty (and rapidly expanding) space, with "bubbles" of space where expanaion slowed down and matter can exist.

  • @starcraftre
    @starcraftre Рік тому

    Ceres actually makes a better case for being a planet than Pluto does. Ceres is about 40% of the total material in the asteroid belt, while Pluto is only about 7% of the material near its orbit.

  • @bellicose4653
    @bellicose4653 Рік тому

    Regarding Pluto, Ordinary Things had the perfect suggestion. Big Planets and Small Planets.
    Which happens to be literally what they did. We have Planets and Dwarf Planets.

  • @Wayra_
    @Wayra_ Рік тому +2

    i mean we use water to clean and we drink that too. by my math it just means soda is super water 😌

  • @willmarsden7657
    @willmarsden7657 2 місяці тому

    18:55 - the timing of this is quite funny, you watched the source of this discussion a few months after this one.

  • @patbracken
    @patbracken Рік тому

    "Why don't you just call them the big planets and the small planets?"
    That's... what they did. People are just upset that Pluto fell under the 'small planet' category.

  • @TheCsel
    @TheCsel Рік тому

    People catch big fish, see whales, squids, and sharks. Then fireside stories and bored sailors are bound to get creative and the stories get bigger and bigger

  • @drthmik
    @drthmik Рік тому +2

    Actually a surprising number of homeless people have cell phones
    and often Cars too
    Turns out those are cheaper than a house or even Apartment Rent payments

  • @tlk889
    @tlk889 Рік тому

    There's no "edge" to the universe (as it is thought of). The universe expands into itself. Think about it as the universe being on a grid, and every second you divide all cells in that grid in half, but all the cells (somehow) maintain their size. That's a brutal simplification, but it's not like the universe is "growing" like a sphere in all sides.

  • @wurststar9023
    @wurststar9023 Рік тому

    28:14 The reason why it has to be spherical is because at a certain point the mass and therefore the gravity is high enough that every point of the object is pulled into the center and then is forced into a sphere. So a cube or triangular Planet is impossible exept the body is out of a material that is nearly indestructible and highly intelligent and bored extraterrestial life is somewhere close.

  • @MrJobocan
    @MrJobocan Рік тому

    Imagine the aliens get the box of coca-cola, and they end up using it as a highly efficient and powerful fuel source for their warp-capable spaceships, and we're just too stupid to realize what we made.

  • @Pet_Hedgehog
    @Pet_Hedgehog Рік тому

    10:02 yes the human body can handle traveling at the speed of light, the problem there is not the speed but the centrifugal acceleration not to mention the energy required to reach such a speed with such a mass and not counting the instant air resistance when exiting the tube that would pulverize you in a flash.

  • @chill-lady-brook
    @chill-lady-brook Рік тому +3

    homeless people can have phones the same way they can have cars. they’re so much cheaper than houses so it isn’t that uncommon.

  • @splagie9160
    @splagie9160 Рік тому

    IH man in a cave has been re uploaded and is VERY good!

  • @acmenipponair
    @acmenipponair Рік тому +4

    "You cannot make kids learn the names of thousand of planets" - we talk about kids that have no problem remembering 1000 pokemon with all their stats and attacks!