One cool thing I learned about rogue planets is that their cores can stay warm for millions of years after leaving the gravity of their host star. That means technically it’s possible for life to exist below their surface.
@@justsam7919Typical Earthling view. You get used to extreme low atmospheric pressure and a flood of photons and you think everyone else in the universe must want that. 😛
Some of the leading origin of life theories don't require light from a star, such as those relating to hydrothermal vents (white smokers and black smokers). One theory even involves a Hydrothermal Sedimentary setting. If there two rogue planets orbiting each other in such a way that tidal forces cause their mantels or cores to move, create heat, and to be liquid, then the interaction between volcanoes, an icy surface, and a liquid water sub-surface could create hydrothermal vent-like conditions. Maybe that life would evolve to have bioluminescence and when Joe approaches in his spaceship, there might be more than just a black void.
Thank Saturn , from simulations I've seen, Saturn apparently prevented Jupiter from creeping closer to the sun an kicking out the inner planets like an abusive psychotic big brother.
Can I just say how refreshing and calming it is to watch a Joe Scott video. There is just so much anxiety inducing, rage baiting, and polarizing content out there. Joe please keep it going.
I agree but I HATE the woo-woo alarm. I would be embarrassed to have colleagues know that I watch videos with a woo-woo alarm in them. But Joe himself is good. He does not need a gimmick.
@theophany150 Ass woo-woo grifters skyrocketed and deceive uneducated internet users in masse lately, such an alarm is fully justified. It's a justified label for simple-minded folks, even if the deceived ones will refuse to change their minds.
"There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened." - Douglas Adams
I wouldn't dismiss rogue planets off so easily. They could harbour life on sub-surface oceans. They are fascinating objects wandering in the dark void.
We have recently re-evaluated our galaxy and found out that it has less mass than we thought, so our galaxy has a lower density than a galaxy our size should have. So we live in a quiet place just right for life. Anton Petrov covered this lower than expected mass on one of his recent videos.
Reminds me; when are two of our favorite geeks going to do a crossover? I want Joe to interview wonderful Anton about living in the alternate cyberpunk capital of the world
Feels like this just leading to a redefining of what "should" be there. Like the measurements that tell us that 98% of the universe is invisible matter and energy, says to me the models are wrong is all, and we need to keep working on them.
@@SFELNMOD entirely possible. But then again we're all individually and collectively incredibly stupid, so discovering these while still being alive in the next 50 to 100 years will be difficult. The consequences of the Exxon deal are just starting to roll into town like a merry band of outlaws that learnt there's no sheriff, but plenty of booze and women.
Thank you Joe!❤ In January this year, I got promoted to senior physician in our department and soon after my boss had to leave for an extended time due to an injury. Your words on how you had to structure your "department " is reminiscent of what I'm going through now. You may have not noticed it, but your answers helped me for I dee what you mean, when suddenly in leadership position. Especially the bottle neck-ing and learning to delegate... not dump work on others, but delegate.
There are unfortunately no rogue planets in No Man's Sky, they are all bound to one star system or another. In the homebrew planetarium simulator known as Space Engine, however, there are rogue planets. From my experience, there is enough starlight to make out basic shapes. It was one of my early amazing VR experiences to stand on a mountaintop on a rogue planet high above the galaxy disc and gaze out over the Milky Way.
@@lavasharkandboygirl9716 It's on Steam and (I think) some other platforms as well, works with VR and flatscreen and it's basically a simulation of the known universe with all of the current data on the universe plugged into it. Everything else that we don't know is procedurally generated based on our current understanding of physics and how the universe works so it can fill in the gaps and you can basically go wherever you want. Highly recommend checking it out if you can run it, it's an absolutely insane accomplishment.
Thanks Joe for all that you do. Some of your videos helped me get through some tough times. Helped me keep my mind occupied. I'll always be grateful for that. Thank you!
You’re the best Joe. Thanks for your videos. Always unique topics, you make it interesting. You’ve built one of my favorite channels. There’s a short list of UA-camrs I often send people, like, “you gotta watch this channel, this video, etc.,” you’re definitely on there.
In fact there might be more chance of life in rogue planets than orbiting planets. The reason is simple; stability! Millions, if not billions of years without the risk of dangerous solar pulses nor planet killer asteroids, that are usually coming from the star system. A giant gas planet with large moons could perfectly host life in inner oceans, like Europa might be.
You know what else are stable? Asteroids flung out into the void of space, with no parts of their orbits close to stars or blackholes. Life however requires energy flow. Now if that is provided from an active core and released through plate techtonics or similar, sure, there is a possibilty.
@@dhayes5143 I read once that if earth suddenly became rogue planet, all life on land would die, as almost all ocean life, and oceans would be covered by kms of ice, but around hydrothermal wants (where we believe were the best conditions for abiogenesis), anaerobic life would continue for billions of years using energy of the sulphides to fix carbon, totally independent of solar energy, based on the energy of leftover heat and nuclear decay in earth interior.
Loving the content, Joe. I'm still very much enjoying your presentation style over the years. So glad to have found your channel. Keep up the great work with your team!
Captain's log #245 year 3078 " we've finally set our feet on a yeet. Suitable yeet for planting beet. Perfect amount of heat. I've found a dirt seat. After all the work I'm beat. Skeet skeet. Captain Sidjeet out."
Recently there was a paper on rogue planets detected by the JWST. They are Jupiter size and are thought to be sort of failed stars. One of the most intdresting highlights is some of them are binary systems - two planets orbiting around each other.
@@thierrymad9743 He never said those were representative of all rogue planets, though. Just that those were the features of the specific ones detected, which are interesting in their own right.
I wonder if the missing mass of galaxies isn't dark matter it's just a bunch of debris like rogue planets and asteroids and black holes that just don't show up on telescopes. Especially a shit ton of stellar mass black holes, more than there are stars in a galaxy. Isn't that the simplest explaination? And that's the answer to the fermi paradox, too many black holes to hit for interstellar travel. Like if we made the background of space white instead of black a whole shit ton of black holes would just show up in between the stars.
I thought this too, but apparently our non light emitting matter in our solar system is only a fraction of the mass compared to the sun, like 1% So even if all the solar systems lost their planets, thats still only a tiny fraction, which is not the huge fraction they're saying is missing. I think the math is just wrong but thats easy for me to say i dont have any better maths to help them with. But I dont think there is a fermi paradox, you cant say "we dont see aliens" when you dont even have eyes, as JWST is finding biosignature even next door (proxima b) i think its stafe to say we finaly have some eyes and we are seeing the possibiliy of life everywhere. Still just a possibliity and you can argue the JWST really isnt eyes, yet, but its better then being blind and making these assumption of the universe. @@GodofWhoopass
I remember watching an early SciFi movie when I was a kid called "When Worlds Collide"....this means that this is a possibility, hopefully a remote possibility. It was actually a pretty decent movie, where they are building a spaceship to land on the new planet as it forces the Earth out of its current orbit (or something to that effect). They do a lottery to select folks to be on the new spaceship, mostly younger couples.
When I was a teenager I read a good book, which may be the one that inspired the movie. A pair of rogue planets were detected, one would collide with Earth and the other would pass nearby and be the only hope of escape. It was written before space travel, so the problems were not well understood. They lined the hull with books, to preserve Earth's knowledge and to insulate against the cold of space. They were most concerned about finding a metal to withstand the heat of the rocket's exhaust. But an entertaining story. Have to look up the movie.
@@EinsteinsHair It used to show on a station out of Chicago - called Family Classics. It actually won an Oscar (according to IMDB). A decent movie for its time.
I remember a sci fi story in which we needed to flee the system before Sol went red giant. Their solution was to turn Luna into a sort of gravity tug. The engines would face towards Earth so that it’s light (and radiation) would shine on Earth giving us a false sun and keep a 24 hour (ish) day, while our gravitic attraction would let the “tug” pull our “spaceship” out of the system, or at least to a safer orbit.
I actually had one of those days where I couldn't concentrate because I read an article suggesting that the best way to find aliens is to observe systems where planets may be been moved. It would be much more efficient to capture a rogue planet and use it for resources or another home than say, building a Dyson sphere.
Not sure if anyone else has mentioned it, but Eris is the Greek goddess of strife and discord. She was the sister of Ares (in some tales) and known for causing problems and stirring up trouble (as she does with the Apple of Discord, that leads to the fall of Troy).
Humble newbie photoshop user here (tend to stick more to lightroom as I bulk shoot) and honestly, after not using it since about 2009, it's insane, the new fill things just blow my mind. It's actually scary how good it is/will become. Coupled for me personally with another prog that filters out blurry pictures/closed eyes and can import straight into Adobe and oh my gosh, my life compared to 10 years ago is so much easier. I'm really excited to see where they take the technology forward in 10 years time.
And anyone who is a fan of the Stargate series will know the story about the rogue scientist who sought to treat aging and succeeded but it affected an entire population and everyone lost their memory.
Oh, but Joe - Neil deGrasse Tyson says that there are probably rogue planets that are large enough to have their own heat, and among those, there are probably rogue planets that have life on them. These planets have no regular day/night, no year, no seasons. The stars in the sky would be constantly changing, and have no repeating cycles/patterns.
There's an old science fiction story called A Pale of Air about a family struggling to survive after the Earth is pulled from orbit around the Sun. Not only are they in perpetual moonless night but the atmosphere itself has frozen solid. They exist with warmth from a small nuclear reactor, the father was a scientist and saw the disaster coming and took steps to survive. They replenish their oxygen by carving out a solid block and bringing it inside while wearing environmental suits. It was a radio play on X Minus One back in the 50s. It's available here on UA-cam. A very unique story.
I think you’re doing great joe and I think your channel is great too. I used to watch a ton of science content but now I only watch you and Isaac Arthur. You just have a great variety and it’s always wonderful content. You make it fun as well as interesting and I’m a lifer because of it!
I'm so glad you a breaking your comfort zone my friend. Good job on you! It's always hard going to a different chapter but it is worth it. Keep up the great work!
Going from a sole proprietorship to a multi-personnel company is difficult. Especially if it's your baby and you think you need to be hands when you don't. The hardest part is to let it go but you have to make it grow. You don't want to be hands-on in 20 years and you don't want your channel to stop if you get sick for any reason so you have to manage.
Not mentioned in the headlines, but besides Trillions of Rogue Planets, there's also billions of Scofflaw Planets, Zillions of Ne'er Do Well Planets, but only dozens of Jackanapes Planets.
Congratulations, Joe, you're the first person that I've actually paid for what they're sponsoring (and one of the first things I've bought online, period). I used to have a cartridge razor, but lost it a long time ago and have been using the cheap-o disposables ever since, but I've been getting progressively more frustrated with them since these days I can only get a couple of good shaves out of them before I have to spend nearly ten minutes going over the same spot to cut everything that needs cut. Gotta admit it's a hefty down payment for the handle, but with the price of the 100 pack, well worth it to go with them instead of these stupid disposables that clog up so damn quick. Anyhow, thanks for being a reliable source for quality content, and someone who I feel I can trust with their sponsors!
Similar to the Photoshop thing, in the audio production sphere using AI to separate audio sources (stem separation) and even to aid in mixing is making huge strides. I really blew me away on how well it did with certain audio.
you should definitely check out the "Helliconia" series by Brian Aldiss. It's about a planet orbiting a star that orbits a star. Amazing. I simply cannot understand why it hasn't been made into a series or movies.
I can explain that. I first encountered the heliconia series about 30 years ago. And its super attractive. Until you try to read it. I have not yeat finished the first book but i am almost done and it seems like its gonna get more exciting and i like dull things. Primer. The man from earth. Atlas shrugged. Watership down. (That took 20 years to finish and im an avid reader and i watched the animated feature. Im listening to the audble verison of the Heliconia series and am hoping the next 2 books are better. Thats why its not been adapted. Its dreadfully dull and amazingly attractive. 😜
@@metamorphicorder20 years to read Watership Down!? Thats not avid, it’s glacial lol. The Helliconia series was brilliant featuring an entire planetary ecology and also a society built around a thousand year long cycle of seasons. (Probably why it’s not a series tbh) anyway if you want to read some novels by Brian Aldiss that are less “dull” and considerably shorter I’d recommend both “Hothouse” and “Nonstop” … absolute masterpieces and real page-turners. You should be able to complete at least one of them by the end of the decade! 👍🤪😜
I got covid for a second time a couple of months ago and it was 100 times worse than the first, I actually thought I was going to die and wondered why I never sorted a will lol. Long healed from covid but I'm still suffering from Parosmia, Tinnitus and Labyrinthitis. Sucks balls I tells ya.
I enjoy your channel. Almost every episode brings new ideas for me to contemplate. But the commercial this episode - pure genius. So well scripted, so well produced. I really enjoyed watching your skill doing this commercial.
I wonder if there's any chance that one or more of the planets/dwarf planets in our solar system was once a rogue planet before being captured by the sun's gravity.
Venus and Uranus have mysterious rotation characteristics. And our moon and others are certainly candidates. Pluto is highly inclined to the plane of most planets. There's a lot of chaos right here in the solar system. I wonder how a captured rogue planet could be conclusively determined?
@@StevenLMaldonado What about the other candidate like Venus? If I'm not mistaken, Venus is the only planet that orbits the sun in clockwise. While others move counter clockwise (or maybe it's the other way around. Have to check that later). Edit: I was wrong about the Venus' orbit. It's actually Venus rotation that is retrograde. While Venus orbit the sun in counter clockwise, its rotation is clockwise. But still.
@@harbingerofabsolutemadness6968 The sunsets on Venus are stunning , well, for the first few months, then it starts getting a bit tedious. I once met a Plutonian, he left Pluto because on Pluto you can live your whole life without getting a single birthday present, which is very rude.
Sick and tired of 'uranus' jokes, the International Asstronomical Union has voted to rename 'Uranus'. In future, the planet will be known as "Urectum".@@StevenLMaldonado
The WISE spacecraft ruled out Jupiter sized planets out to a little less than 1 light year from us and Saturn sized planets out to about 1/3 of a light year. So, there is no one really close to us, at least no big one.
If I remember the coverage from the time correctly Joe got the covid variant severity wrong. Delta was more deadly and virulent than Alpha or Beta, but Delta was out-competed by Omicron which was even more virulent but far more mild.
Hi Scott, coincidentially I was planning on commenting here to let you know my fiancé and I just got a henson shaver, came in the mail yesterday and we already used it. We are THRILLED with the results. And I don't say that lightly. lol I'm practically immune to advertising, I don't buy stuff simply cuz somebody on the internet or TV is recommending it, I'm one of those commercial hating people, but I've been SO curious about Henson Shaving for a while now and you're actually one of the few UA-camrs I trust to be honest about these things. All your sponsors have been useful and effective from what I can tell, so just a big thanks to you, and letting you know you're the very first person that got me to buy something simply cuz I had seen it in an advertisement, thought that was kinda funny XD
Good point about the darkness and cold of interstellar space. It's weird how people think you can use solar power while traveling between stars or to rogue planets. Even at 1/1000th the way to the nearest star it is too dark to use solar cells for power even if they are 100% efficient and as big as a house.
Already on our backyard on Mars solar efficiency drops significantly. Going beyond the asteroid belt solar power is becomes too weak yet we're only about half way within our star system...
Interesting 4.4 percent on life expectancy for my age takes me from 83 to 86.5. that's good if that's an extra 3.5 years of being healthy not in a room dribbling and unable to think or control my bladder.
Top 10 ad gag, right there. It got across everything the rest of the ad read did quick and funny. (And since I'm commenting, I'll add "Hey Joe, thanks for all the infotainment!")
Joe did you see the recent "nod" to you from "The Why Files" where he made a little joke that in an alternate universe he may be you... he didn't specifically say you, but it's your music and he does the chair spin LOL
At my work, the company paid for us all (on a vlonutary basis) to get a Flu shot, a new Covid shot and a Pnuemonia shot (again, if we want it) I got all three because science. In regards to AI, I highly recommend developing the habit of being polite to your AI nased vocal interface devices. I have no doubt that they will remember everything. Open the Pod bay door please HAL. I'm sorry Dave, I can't dp that. Damn it Joe, your imaginative theatrics hooked me into watching your Henson Shaving commercial (and I have no need for that product at all). I was entertained there for a bit. Don't get a big head or anything, but that displayed talent on your part in my opinion.
I love your take on AI-creep and I'm definitely with you. No reason to be afraid of it, but to use AI in general, one has to make sure it's reliable to the point that double-checking isn't necessary anymore. And where you draw the line is obviously based on how important your project is. Anyways... long-time fan, as I bet most of your subscribers are. This time I thought I'd mention I'm on my 4th blade since Christmas. So in my case that's 20 years of shaving.
Rogue planets do have a remote possibility of life as we imagine, if they have liquid water under shell of ice, and some sort of internal heating (e.g., via nuclear decay) inside the core keeps it that way.
As often as the AI model used for language in a video misreads "happiness", and as often as the content-aware AI misflags a video, we're definitely a long way off from being able to just trust AI to make decisions or write things for us. But companies like UA-cam are doing it anyway and I really, really hope it causes a massive financial loss to one of them before them getting away with it results in a massive loss of life from other industries following their lead. Like most new things, AI is a powerful tool when used for what it's good at and monitored to make sure it's doing it. Old technology, like factory stamping machines that repeat the same task over and over endlessly have active and passive quality monitoring because factories learned the hard way that things can get out of whack without anyone noticing until it's too late. We have started doing that for software. And we're going to have to do that with AI as the disasters start to show up from over-eager people trusting them blindly. Your skeptical acceptance of AI into your process is the right reaction. We do have to move forward but we also have to keep our foot near the brakes just in case.
The problem I see occuring is in 20 or 30 years time. We see the schmozzle of knowledge that is occuring now thanks to less ethical bloggers, cheap "citizen" journalists, and corporate infiltration of media and its biases. This jumbling of truth and opinion is already happening with Al generated articles and videos. Over time, commonly accessible knowledge could become so muddied that no one can verify any truth. Coupled with the declining trust, amd division, with the institutions who are supposed to be trusted for knowledge, we have a recipe for disaster for common people and a recipe for success for control over the population by institutions who can claim to have hardcopy of knowledge from preAl. Knowledge is power. Those who have the knowledge will have power over all. ❤
Hey joe! Love your content! Im a earbud user and i got you turned up to max. Still kinda quiet. Turn up the gain a couple notches! Keep the content flowing! Love you thanks!
It's theoretically possible, but I guess the rogue planet would have to pass relatively close to the star without having escape velocity from that system. And as it's been flung out of its parent system (reaching escape velocity) in the first place then what are the chances it'll pass close enough to a star massive enough to be captured. Most probably it'll use the star's gravity to speed up even more and just shoot off - what's it called, gravitational acceleration or slingshot?
Yes it can. But it will either fling something else out OR change orbits of planet(s) considerably. Reason being: it needs to shed momentum to stay in the system. It can do it by gravity "assist" by tugging on something or by crashing into something. All other actualities will leave the planet be an (un)welcome temporary visitor
according to countless surveys over decades, delegation is said to be THE hardest part of transforming from a one man band into a SME . 'trusting someone else with my baby'
Thanks Joe and team for another fab video. For those into the Remembrance of Earth's Past series, the first book has been turned into a Chinese TV series, called Three Body. It's very good, and available here on You Tube. Longevity is interesting, and hope the therapy is available to everyone, and not just the privileged. Hopefully, if we live longer, we'll be a more responsible species, as well still be around to see the consequences of our actions
Considering what we know, that so many Rogue Planets exist, how unique our solar system is for not being a binary star ... some people might think some kind of higher entity fudged probabilities for us. It is like we won the lottery... 100 000+ times in a row. We got a solitary sun, we had our home planet in the Goldilocks zone, something crashed into our planet and then became our moon, ... I could keep going, but if all these events hadn't happened in this exact causality chain we would not be here. Just one Rogue Planet casually coming by and crashing into the Earth and we would be over, yet it never happened... and they are an incalculable number!
I love my Henson razor. I bought it with some skepticism but I’ve been totally won over and tossed out all my old stuff. It takes a couple of weeks to get the angle right since the head doesn’t self-angle on a spring, but once you have the knack of it, you’re good to go, permanently. Now I love the thing.
So you're growing into the Joe Scott Corporation and you are scared of missing out on the hands on experience. That reminds me so much of Hayao Miyazaki who used to draw the cells himself for his movies and finally employed dozens of cooperators while still staying close to every aspect of production.
I mentioned Yamanaka factor research in your last video on aging a year ago. I don't know if you read the comment or not but thanks! Also if you're interested in cancer therapies Lift Biosciences is one to watch. Cool story too. Starts off with a mouse that wouldn't die, then they discover neutrophils (which usually target bacteria) do the killing, moves into the discovery that 15% of the human population are innately immune to cancer (explains those smoker Guinness record holders) and ends with the discovery that the immunity is transplantable.
Hey Joe, when you said it's all dark on rogue planets... you know our night sky is relatively bright even when there's no moon or anything right? You can spot the milky way lights with your naked eye on earth... when there's no light pollution. Then there's volcanic activity, bioluminescence, various forms of lightning, triboluminescence, all sorts of stuff to see in the 'dark' ...
(On top of the always great video content) Kudos for the most entertaining intro to a sponsor plug of all time 😂🙌🏼 the only UA-camr I’ve come across who puts the effort into making even the sponsor ads hilarious to watch. I always love debates and conversations between Joe Scott and Scoe Jott
would be interesting to find a jupiter sized rogue planet with a few large moons. conditions arround a moon with the right ammount of tidal heating could be stable enough to host life for as long as a planet like earth. without a sun for light it would need to be something that gets energy from chemosynthesis using something like earths deep sea vents rather than photosynthesis
Your vision, voice, (like a writer's voice), passion, humor, intelligence, likeability and your ability to explain complicated concepts in a way that so many of us can understand - these are your gifts to us. If AI can help you do this even better, great. FTR, I am fine with AWJ 1.0. Thank you
This just makes me realise how damn *lucky* we are to have been brought about on this planet, in this star system, in this part of the galaxy and point in time
19:50 if you're a creator, please, for the love of all that is holy... read your transcript after it auto-renders. You can edit it to fix mistaken words, and it doesn't affect the algorithm, but it helps those of us with audio processing issues or those hard of hearing to be able to just back up 10 seconds and grab it easily from the subtitles.
Come on Joe come back to the tube we love you 💕 I'm a full time parent and work and I'm to poor to subscribe to stuff. Please keep the mystery and intrigue coming ❤️
Love you Joe! I've been following you since either just before or just after COVID struck, but it was definitely on a big space kick with Everyday Astronaut and Scott Manley et al, that lead me to your "how effing insane is it to try and terraform Mars" that turned me on to you and gave me the inkling that maybe Elon isn't so all-knowing, after all! What a lot has changed since then, but I feel so happy to be able to enjoy your content and your curiousity every single week. That's all I got, peace!
For some reason I get an eerie feeling knowing that entire potential life hosting masses with insanely unique geology. Entire weather systems, crazy landscapes, all completely dark, vapid, and almost certainly never to be explored til heat death. Eerie
One cool thing I learned about rogue planets is that their cores can stay warm for millions of years after leaving the gravity of their host star. That means technically it’s possible for life to exist below their surface.
I imagine most life is swimming around in sub-glacial oceans on frozen worlds. Must be interesting living under a big shell of ice.
How about 2 rogue planets. 1 giant, 1 smaller. stay warm longer.
@hongo3870 no, that would suck. The pressure and lack of photons would be a real drag
@@justsam7919Typical Earthling view. You get used to extreme low atmospheric pressure and a flood of photons and you think everyone else in the universe must want that. 😛
Some of the leading origin of life theories don't require light from a star, such as those relating to hydrothermal vents (white smokers and black smokers). One theory even involves a Hydrothermal Sedimentary setting. If there two rogue planets orbiting each other in such a way that tidal forces cause their mantels or cores to move, create heat, and to be liquid, then the interaction between volcanoes, an icy surface, and a liquid water sub-surface could create hydrothermal vent-like conditions. Maybe that life would evolve to have bioluminescence and when Joe approaches in his spaceship, there might be more than just a black void.
So most planets are orphans. We should feel lucky to have a parent who didn't throw us out!
I miss chocolate rain
Wonder what planet has chocolate rain...?
“Most” no…… no….. not “most”…. For every 1 rogue planet there are hundreds, maybe thousands orbiting a “parent star”…..
Thank Saturn , from simulations I've seen, Saturn apparently prevented Jupiter from creeping closer to the sun an kicking out the inner planets like an abusive psychotic big brother.
@@petevenuti7355 So Saturn is our big sister? Able to intimidate Chad Jupiter from hurting the little siblings?
Don't think of them as rogue planets, think of them as single and ready to mingle planets.
Living their best life out and about with nothing holding them back :)
Bro timed traveled to comment in the future
Ikr lol
They’re just free agents
Win hahahahah
Out of all the youtubers I love and addicted to this is the one I just cant wait every Monday to watch.
Same. But I feel like the content has changed for the worse.i don't really understand what the problem was before he changed everything. It was fine.
@@jordanliszewski6549 I'm curious, what changed?
@@jordanliszewski6549What are you talking about? I think he's always been awesome.
But are there mage planets? Or warrior planets? Where's the class diversity
😂😂😂
Enceladus is a mage moon. It's casting frostbite at Saturn at the moment
We will always have Druidia thanks to Spaceballs.
Oooh, I want to respawn on barbarian planet
What a nerd comment!!!!!! Love it.
Can I just say how refreshing and calming it is to watch a Joe Scott video. There is just so much anxiety inducing, rage baiting, and polarizing content out there. Joe please keep it going.
I agree but I HATE the woo-woo alarm. I would be embarrassed to have colleagues know that I watch videos with a woo-woo alarm in them. But Joe himself is good. He does not need a gimmick.
Some of the best of non-political UA-cam
@theophany150
Ass woo-woo grifters skyrocketed and deceive uneducated internet users in masse lately, such an alarm is fully justified. It's a justified label for simple-minded folks, even if the deceived ones will refuse to change their minds.
@@theophany150 what’s a woo-woo alarm?
@@Periwinkleaccount an alarm that goes ”woo woo”
"There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened." - Douglas Adams
42!
I want an improbability drive for my Honda.
So long and thanks for all the fish!
What is 6 times 9?
the universe as 1 big wave function.....hmmmm...
I wouldn't dismiss rogue planets off so easily. They could harbour life on sub-surface oceans. They are fascinating objects wandering in the dark void.
I think the lowest things can get is about -240 so I could see something similar to the tartagrade kicking about.
We have recently re-evaluated our galaxy and found out that it has less mass than we thought, so our galaxy has a lower density than a galaxy our size should have. So we live in a quiet place just right for life. Anton Petrov covered this lower than expected mass on one of his recent videos.
Reminds me; when are two of our favorite geeks going to do a crossover? I want Joe to interview wonderful Anton about living in the alternate cyberpunk capital of the world
Feels like this just leading to a redefining of what "should" be there. Like the measurements that tell us that 98% of the universe is invisible matter and energy, says to me the models are wrong is all, and we need to keep working on them.
@@vincentcleaver1925Let us not forget John Michael Godier and his second channel Event Horizon.
@@SFELNMOD entirely possible. But then again we're all individually and collectively incredibly stupid, so discovering these while still being alive in the next 50 to 100 years will be difficult. The consequences of the Exxon deal are just starting to roll into town like a merry band of outlaws that learnt there's no sheriff, but plenty of booze and women.
Mr Petrov has become one of my favorite asmrs...I feel real relief from anxiety and ptsd
Thank you Joe!❤
In January this year, I got promoted to senior physician in our department and soon after my boss had to leave for an extended time due to an injury.
Your words on how you had to structure your "department " is reminiscent of what I'm going through now. You may have not noticed it, but your answers helped me for I dee what you mean, when suddenly in leadership position. Especially the bottle neck-ing and learning to delegate... not dump work on others, but delegate.
There are unfortunately no rogue planets in No Man's Sky, they are all bound to one star system or another. In the homebrew planetarium simulator known as Space Engine, however, there are rogue planets. From my experience, there is enough starlight to make out basic shapes. It was one of my early amazing VR experiences to stand on a mountaintop on a rogue planet high above the galaxy disc and gaze out over the Milky Way.
This sounds like the coolest thing I’ve ever heard of???
I love SpaceEngine. Probably one of the most beautiful games I have ever played.
Checkmate Nathan Moore
@@lavasharkandboygirl9716 It's on Steam and (I think) some other platforms as well, works with VR and flatscreen and it's basically a simulation of the known universe with all of the current data on the universe plugged into it. Everything else that we don't know is procedurally generated based on our current understanding of physics and how the universe works so it can fill in the gaps and you can basically go wherever you want. Highly recommend checking it out if you can run it, it's an absolutely insane accomplishment.
@@SeanTR420the oceans actually still have a lot to explore
Hope you are well, Joe.
Missing your video this week. :)
Godspeed
Thanks Joe for all that you do. Some of your videos helped me get through some tough times. Helped me keep my mind occupied. I'll always be grateful for that. Thank you!
Ditto...Joe's helped me retain what sanity I have left after years of battling medical problems & the absolutely sucky American medical "care" system.
"I'm always overwhelmed but I can't step away from work"
Felt that more than anything. Didn't come for the therapy session but I am now here for it.
You’re the best Joe. Thanks for your videos. Always unique topics, you make it interesting. You’ve built one of my favorite channels. There’s a short list of UA-camrs I often send people, like, “you gotta watch this channel, this video, etc.,” you’re definitely on there.
Don’t burn yourself out mate, we love you and your content and totally understand if you need to take your time.
In fact there might be more chance of life in rogue planets than orbiting planets. The reason is simple; stability! Millions, if not billions of years without the risk of dangerous solar pulses nor planet killer asteroids, that are usually coming from the star system. A giant gas planet with large moons could perfectly host life in inner oceans, like Europa might be.
You know what else are stable? Asteroids flung out into the void of space, with no parts of their orbits close to stars or blackholes. Life however requires energy flow. Now if that is provided from an active core and released through plate techtonics or similar, sure, there is a possibilty.
@@dhayes5143 I read once that if earth suddenly became rogue planet, all life on land would die, as almost all ocean life, and oceans would be covered by kms of ice, but around hydrothermal wants (where we believe were the best conditions for abiogenesis), anaerobic life would continue for billions of years using energy of the sulphides to fix carbon, totally independent of solar energy, based on the energy of leftover heat and nuclear decay in earth interior.
Loving the content, Joe. I'm still very much enjoying your presentation style over the years. So glad to have found your channel. Keep up the great work with your team!
Can we petition the International Panel For Whatever to rename the 'rogue planet' as 'yeets'?
Yessssssss
@safoutop10104ok. I won’t.
Captain's log #245 year 3078 " we've finally set our feet on a yeet. Suitable yeet for planting beet. Perfect amount of heat. I've found a dirt seat. After all the work I'm beat. Skeet skeet. Captain Sidjeet out."
I say we arrest Trump and find out what he knows about these rogue planets!
🎯
Hope everything is ok Joe missing this weeks video 😢
Recently there was a paper on rogue planets detected by the JWST. They are Jupiter size and are thought to be sort of failed stars. One of the most intdresting highlights is some of them are binary systems - two planets orbiting around each other.
They might also have earth size moon orbiting possibly with some form of life under its global shell ice 🌒
That's a classic observation bias; JWST can "only" detect huge gas planets.... doesn't mean there are no smaller ones
@@thierrymad9743 He never said those were representative of all rogue planets, though. Just that those were the features of the specific ones detected, which are interesting in their own right.
I wonder if the missing mass of galaxies isn't dark matter it's just a bunch of debris like rogue planets and asteroids and black holes that just don't show up on telescopes. Especially a shit ton of stellar mass black holes, more than there are stars in a galaxy. Isn't that the simplest explaination?
And that's the answer to the fermi paradox, too many black holes to hit for interstellar travel. Like if we made the background of space white instead of black a whole shit ton of black holes would just show up in between the stars.
I thought this too, but apparently our non light emitting matter in our solar system is only a fraction of the mass compared to the sun, like 1% So even if all the solar systems lost their planets, thats still only a tiny fraction, which is not the huge fraction they're saying is missing. I think the math is just wrong but thats easy for me to say i dont have any better maths to help them with. But I dont think there is a fermi paradox, you cant say "we dont see aliens" when you dont even have eyes, as JWST is finding biosignature even next door (proxima b) i think its stafe to say we finaly have some eyes and we are seeing the possibiliy of life everywhere. Still just a possibliity and you can argue the JWST really isnt eyes, yet, but its better then being blind and making these assumption of the universe. @@GodofWhoopass
Thanks for being transparent & sharing so openly.
I remember watching an early SciFi movie when I was a kid called "When Worlds Collide"....this means that this is a possibility, hopefully a remote possibility. It was actually a pretty decent movie, where they are building a spaceship to land on the new planet as it forces the Earth out of its current orbit (or something to that effect). They do a lottery to select folks to be on the new spaceship, mostly younger couples.
When I was a teenager I read a good book, which may be the one that inspired the movie. A pair of rogue planets were detected, one would collide with Earth and the other would pass nearby and be the only hope of escape. It was written before space travel, so the problems were not well understood. They lined the hull with books, to preserve Earth's knowledge and to insulate against the cold of space. They were most concerned about finding a metal to withstand the heat of the rocket's exhaust. But an entertaining story. Have to look up the movie.
@@EinsteinsHair It used to show on a station out of Chicago - called Family Classics. It actually won an Oscar (according to IMDB). A decent movie for its time.
I remember a sci fi story in which we needed to flee the system before Sol went red giant. Their solution was to turn Luna into a sort of gravity tug. The engines would face towards Earth so that it’s light (and radiation) would shine on Earth giving us a false sun and keep a 24 hour (ish) day, while our gravitic attraction would let the “tug” pull our “spaceship” out of the system, or at least to a safer orbit.
That was a Star and planet. A much newer film about a rogue planet is Melancholia.
When World's Collide is available on UA-cam.
I actually had one of those days where I couldn't concentrate because I read an article suggesting that the best way to find aliens is to observe systems where planets may be been moved. It would be much more efficient to capture a rogue planet and use it for resources or another home than say, building a Dyson sphere.
Not sure if anyone else has mentioned it, but Eris is the Greek goddess of strife and discord. She was the sister of Ares (in some tales) and known for causing problems and stirring up trouble (as she does with the Apple of Discord, that leads to the fall of Troy).
Humble newbie photoshop user here (tend to stick more to lightroom as I bulk shoot) and honestly, after not using it since about 2009, it's insane, the new fill things just blow my mind. It's actually scary how good it is/will become.
Coupled for me personally with another prog that filters out blurry pictures/closed eyes and can import straight into Adobe and oh my gosh, my life compared to 10 years ago is so much easier. I'm really excited to see where they take the technology forward in 10 years time.
no video this week?
And anyone who is a fan of the Stargate series will know the story about the rogue scientist who sought to treat aging and succeeded but it affected an entire population and everyone lost their memory.
Like average people will ever see that medical "technology" anyway........
Oh, but Joe - Neil deGrasse Tyson says that there are probably rogue planets that are large enough to have their own heat, and among those, there are probably rogue planets that have life on them.
These planets have no regular day/night, no year, no seasons. The stars in the sky would be constantly changing, and have no repeating cycles/patterns.
Tyson also says there`s no evidence whatsoever of Bigfoot, UFOs, telepathy, or anything paranormal. He`s a complete kook.
I'd imagine most of those would be the heavier ones. Like 7 to 12 Jupiter mass planets
@@Flesh_Wizard I think you're correct.
@mikeoxmall69420 lol earth produces its own heat
Imagine taking Neil deGrasse Tyson seriously.
"I have two editors working on it now..." obvious cut is editors saying, "I'm here!" Love it. Love the channel!
It's now Tuesday and no new video. What's going on joe?
There's an old science fiction story called A Pale of Air about a family struggling to survive after the Earth is pulled from orbit around the Sun. Not only are they in perpetual moonless night but the atmosphere itself has frozen solid. They exist with warmth from a small nuclear reactor, the father was a scientist and saw the disaster coming and took steps to survive. They replenish their oxygen by carving out a solid block and bringing it inside while wearing environmental suits.
It was a radio play on X Minus One back in the 50s. It's available here on UA-cam. A very unique story.
Seeing Joe gaming was a very surreal experience 😂
In my physics and astronomy classes I don't recall the technical term of a planet being " yeeted"
I think you’re doing great joe and I think your channel is great too. I used to watch a ton of science content but now I only watch you and Isaac Arthur. You just have a great variety and it’s always wonderful content. You make it fun as well as interesting and I’m a lifer because of it!
I'm so glad you a breaking your comfort zone my friend. Good job on you! It's always hard going to a different chapter but it is worth it. Keep up the great work!
Where are you, Joe? I need my new and interesting sciencey content; help me Joe-bi wan kenobi, you’re my only hope!
Going from a sole proprietorship to a multi-personnel company is difficult. Especially if it's your baby and you think you need to be hands when you don't. The hardest part is to let it go but you have to make it grow. You don't want to be hands-on in 20 years and you don't want your channel to stop if you get sick for any reason so you have to manage.
Not mentioned in the headlines, but besides Trillions of Rogue Planets, there's also billions of Scofflaw Planets, Zillions of Ne'er Do Well Planets, but only dozens of Jackanapes Planets.
There's like three and a half goofball planets
Riff raff planets too
Congratulations, Joe, you're the first person that I've actually paid for what they're sponsoring (and one of the first things I've bought online, period). I used to have a cartridge razor, but lost it a long time ago and have been using the cheap-o disposables ever since, but I've been getting progressively more frustrated with them since these days I can only get a couple of good shaves out of them before I have to spend nearly ten minutes going over the same spot to cut everything that needs cut. Gotta admit it's a hefty down payment for the handle, but with the price of the 100 pack, well worth it to go with them instead of these stupid disposables that clog up so damn quick.
Anyhow, thanks for being a reliable source for quality content, and someone who I feel I can trust with their sponsors!
Similar to the Photoshop thing, in the audio production sphere using AI to separate audio sources (stem separation) and even to aid in mixing is making huge strides. I really blew me away on how well it did with certain audio.
I'm very interested in this. Are there any apps you've used that are worth mentioning?
Always good to see a Joe Scott video drop
you should definitely check out the "Helliconia" series by Brian Aldiss. It's about a planet orbiting a star that orbits a star. Amazing. I simply cannot understand why it hasn't been made into a series or movies.
I can explain that.
I first encountered the heliconia series about 30 years ago. And its super attractive. Until you try to read it. I have not yeat finished the first book but i am almost done and it seems like its gonna get more exciting and i like dull things. Primer. The man from earth. Atlas shrugged. Watership down. (That took 20 years to finish and im an avid reader and i watched the animated feature.
Im listening to the audble verison of the Heliconia series and am hoping the next 2 books are better. Thats why its not been adapted. Its dreadfully dull and amazingly attractive. 😜
@@metamorphicorder20 years to read Watership Down!? Thats not avid, it’s glacial lol. The Helliconia series was brilliant featuring an entire planetary ecology and also a society built around a thousand year long cycle of seasons. (Probably why it’s not a series tbh) anyway if you want to read some novels by Brian Aldiss that are less “dull” and considerably shorter I’d recommend both “Hothouse” and
“Nonstop” … absolute masterpieces and real page-turners. You should be able to complete at least one of them by the end of the decade! 👍🤪😜
I'm seriously vibing with the background music and the lighting/filter. Very nice.
I got covid for a second time a couple of months ago and it was 100 times worse than the first, I actually thought I was going to die and wondered why I never sorted a will lol. Long healed from covid but I'm still suffering from Parosmia, Tinnitus and Labyrinthitis. Sucks balls I tells ya.
I enjoy your channel. Almost every episode brings new ideas for me to contemplate. But the commercial this episode - pure genius. So well scripted, so well produced. I really enjoyed watching your skill doing this commercial.
I wonder if there's any chance that one or more of the planets/dwarf planets in our solar system was once a rogue planet before being captured by the sun's gravity.
Venus and Uranus have mysterious rotation characteristics. And our moon and others are certainly candidates. Pluto is highly inclined to the plane of most planets. There's a lot of chaos right here in the solar system. I wonder how a captured rogue planet could be conclusively determined?
I've long suspected Uranus. Never quite trusted that guy. With his sideways rotation and silly name; I know that 𝐼 didn't invite him to the party.
@@StevenLMaldonado What about the other candidate like Venus? If I'm not mistaken, Venus is the only planet that orbits the sun in clockwise. While others move counter clockwise (or maybe it's the other way around. Have to check that later).
Edit: I was wrong about the Venus' orbit. It's actually Venus rotation that is retrograde. While Venus orbit the sun in counter clockwise, its rotation is clockwise. But still.
@@harbingerofabsolutemadness6968 The sunsets on Venus are stunning , well, for the first few months, then it starts getting a bit tedious. I once met a Plutonian, he left Pluto because on Pluto you can live your whole life without getting a single birthday present, which is very rude.
Sick and tired of 'uranus' jokes, the International Asstronomical Union has voted to rename 'Uranus'. In future, the planet will be known as "Urectum".@@StevenLMaldonado
The WISE spacecraft ruled out Jupiter sized planets out to a little less than 1 light year from us and Saturn sized planets out to about 1/3 of a light year. So, there is no one really close to us, at least no big one.
If I remember the coverage from the time correctly Joe got the covid variant severity wrong. Delta was more deadly and virulent than Alpha or Beta, but Delta was out-competed by Omicron which was even more virulent but far more mild.
He also got the epidemiology wrong. Omicron isn't related to any other variant other than Wuhan strain.
Hi Scott, coincidentially I was planning on commenting here to let you know my fiancé and I just got a henson shaver, came in the mail yesterday and we already used it. We are THRILLED with the results. And I don't say that lightly. lol
I'm practically immune to advertising, I don't buy stuff simply cuz somebody on the internet or TV is recommending it, I'm one of those commercial hating people, but I've been SO curious about Henson Shaving for a while now and you're actually one of the few UA-camrs I trust to be honest about these things. All your sponsors have been useful and effective from what I can tell, so just a big thanks to you, and letting you know you're the very first person that got me to buy something simply cuz I had seen it in an advertisement, thought that was kinda funny XD
Good point about the darkness and cold of interstellar space. It's weird how people think you can use solar power while traveling between stars or to rogue planets. Even at 1/1000th the way to the nearest star it is too dark to use solar cells for power even if they are 100% efficient and as big as a house.
Already on our backyard on Mars solar efficiency drops significantly. Going beyond the asteroid belt solar power is becomes too weak yet we're only about half way within our star system...
You should bring the chair spin back full-time! Love you as always Joe!
Interesting 4.4 percent on life expectancy for my age takes me from 83 to 86.5. that's good if that's an extra 3.5 years of being healthy not in a room dribbling and unable to think or control my bladder.
Top 10 ad gag, right there. It got across everything the rest of the ad read did quick and funny. (And since I'm commenting, I'll add "Hey Joe, thanks for all the infotainment!")
Joe: "[...]if you know anything about mole rats"
My brain: *CALL ME BEEP ME IF YOU WANT TO REACH ME*
Joe did you see the recent "nod" to you from "The Why Files" where he made a little joke that in an alternate universe he may be you... he didn't specifically say you, but it's your music and he does the chair spin LOL
At my work, the company paid for us all (on a vlonutary basis) to get a Flu shot, a new Covid shot and a Pnuemonia shot (again, if we want it)
I got all three because science.
In regards to AI, I highly recommend developing the habit of being polite to your AI nased vocal interface devices.
I have no doubt that they will remember everything.
Open the Pod bay door please HAL.
I'm sorry Dave, I can't dp that.
Damn it Joe, your imaginative theatrics hooked me into watching your Henson Shaving commercial (and I have no need for that product at all). I was entertained there for a bit.
Don't get a big head or anything, but that displayed talent on your part in my opinion.
Yeah good luck with that.
I would want to search the rogue planets/ well skim them with technology to search for past signs of intelligent life before they were yeeted out.
I love your take on AI-creep and I'm definitely with you. No reason to be afraid of it, but to use AI in general, one has to make sure it's reliable to the point that double-checking isn't necessary anymore. And where you draw the line is obviously based on how important your project is. Anyways... long-time fan, as I bet most of your subscribers are. This time I thought I'd mention I'm on my 4th blade since Christmas. So in my case that's 20 years of shaving.
Thank you for saying "Where we are," instead of "Where we're at," which always grates on my ears.
Where is todays video?
This last Friday he tweeted "Monday’s video is going to be something special."
Hope he's okay.
Don't talk yourself down mate. It looks like you are doing everything right. Thanks for your content.
Rogue planets do have a remote possibility of life as we imagine, if they have liquid water under shell of ice, and some sort of internal heating (e.g., via nuclear decay) inside the core keeps it that way.
There should also be a possibility of life on a fairly large moon orbiting the rogue planet due to internal heat obtained from gravitational stresses.
Most of the time i watch videos while eating, nothing good to find, then i find you. Always saving the day.
As often as the AI model used for language in a video misreads "happiness", and as often as the content-aware AI misflags a video, we're definitely a long way off from being able to just trust AI to make decisions or write things for us. But companies like UA-cam are doing it anyway and I really, really hope it causes a massive financial loss to one of them before them getting away with it results in a massive loss of life from other industries following their lead.
Like most new things, AI is a powerful tool when used for what it's good at and monitored to make sure it's doing it. Old technology, like factory stamping machines that repeat the same task over and over endlessly have active and passive quality monitoring because factories learned the hard way that things can get out of whack without anyone noticing until it's too late. We have started doing that for software. And we're going to have to do that with AI as the disasters start to show up from over-eager people trusting them blindly. Your skeptical acceptance of AI into your process is the right reaction. We do have to move forward but we also have to keep our foot near the brakes just in case.
The problem I see occuring is in 20 or 30 years time.
We see the schmozzle of knowledge that is occuring now thanks to less ethical bloggers, cheap "citizen" journalists, and corporate infiltration of media and its biases. This jumbling of truth and opinion is already happening with Al generated articles and videos.
Over time, commonly accessible knowledge could become so muddied that no one can verify any truth. Coupled with the declining trust, amd division, with the institutions who are supposed to be trusted for knowledge, we have a recipe for disaster for common people and a recipe for success for control over the population by institutions who can claim to have hardcopy of knowledge from preAl.
Knowledge is power. Those who have the knowledge will have power over all. ❤
I’ve always said there’s a huge difference between being exhausted for yourself and exhausted for someone else!
Where is this weeks video did I miss something ?
Same here
Hey joe! Love your content! Im a earbud user and i got you turned up to max. Still kinda quiet. Turn up the gain a couple notches! Keep the content flowing! Love you thanks!
I wonder if rogue planets could be captured in the gravity well of another star... can stars adopt rogue planets?
YES they absolutely can.
@@obi-wankenobi1750based on what?
It's theoretically possible, but I guess the rogue planet would have to pass relatively close to the star without having escape velocity from that system. And as it's been flung out of its parent system (reaching escape velocity) in the first place then what are the chances it'll pass close enough to a star massive enough to be captured. Most probably it'll use the star's gravity to speed up even more and just shoot off - what's it called, gravitational acceleration or slingshot?
Yes it can.
But it will either fling something else out OR change orbits of planet(s) considerably.
Reason being: it needs to shed momentum to stay in the system. It can do it by gravity "assist" by tugging on something or by crashing into something.
All other actualities will leave the planet be an (un)welcome temporary visitor
ayyy Joe is a gamer now. hell yeah. what matters is you have fun
The sewage tracking in covid is no joke.
I listened about it on the Tiny Matters podcast and it is super detailed
Oh lots of things are being tracked.
according to countless surveys over decades, delegation is said to be THE hardest part of transforming from a one man band into a SME .
'trusting someone else with my baby'
Prompting is my new hobby. #chatgpt
21:08, the brown case on the bottom shelf with the fold over buckle. Is that an old camera? I swear it looks identical to the one my mother had.
Thanks Joe and team for another fab video.
For those into the Remembrance of Earth's Past series, the first book has been turned into a Chinese TV series, called Three Body. It's very good, and available here on You Tube.
Longevity is interesting, and hope the therapy is available to everyone, and not just the privileged.
Hopefully, if we live longer, we'll be a more responsible species, as well still be around to see the consequences of our actions
Having trouble hearing you in your recent videos. Love the space stuff. Great channel
>guys that politicized c19 complain about how politicized it is
Great episode. And the sarscov2 update is appreciated and necessary.
Considering what we know, that so many Rogue Planets exist, how unique our solar system is for not being a binary star ... some people might think some kind of higher entity fudged probabilities for us. It is like we won the lottery... 100 000+ times in a row. We got a solitary sun, we had our home planet in the Goldilocks zone, something crashed into our planet and then became our moon, ... I could keep going, but if all these events hadn't happened in this exact causality chain we would not be here. Just one Rogue Planet casually coming by and crashing into the Earth and we would be over, yet it never happened... and they are an incalculable number!
I love my Henson razor. I bought it with some skepticism but I’ve been totally won over and tossed out all my old stuff. It takes a couple of weeks to get the angle right since the head doesn’t self-angle on a spring, but once you have the knack of it, you’re good to go, permanently. Now I love the thing.
Props for answering the covid question mate, and answered well too👌🏻
So you're growing into the Joe Scott Corporation and you are scared of missing out on the hands on experience. That reminds me so much of Hayao Miyazaki who used to draw the cells himself for his movies and finally employed dozens of cooperators while still staying close to every aspect of production.
I mentioned Yamanaka factor research in your last video on aging a year ago. I don't know if you read the comment or not but thanks! Also if you're interested in cancer therapies Lift Biosciences is one to watch. Cool story too. Starts off with a mouse that wouldn't die, then they discover neutrophils (which usually target bacteria) do the killing, moves into the discovery that 15% of the human population are innately immune to cancer (explains those smoker Guinness record holders) and ends with the discovery that the immunity is transplantable.
I bought a Henson because of Joe and I absolutely love it. Thanks Joe.
Robbie "The robot" was my favorite, but I loved the sinister look of Max!
6:10 they named a COVID strain after a Toyota hatchback?
Hey Joe, when you said it's all dark on rogue planets... you know our night sky is relatively bright even when there's no moon or anything right? You can spot the milky way lights with your naked eye on earth... when there's no light pollution. Then there's volcanic activity, bioluminescence, various forms of lightning, triboluminescence, all sorts of stuff to see in the 'dark' ...
Really Love your Vids. Thanks Joe
Not sure what's up Joe, this episode made me feel good. Definitely a good dose of Joe Scott today.
It's the music. Subliminal almost ;)
(On top of the always great video content)
Kudos for the most entertaining intro to a sponsor plug of all time 😂🙌🏼 the only UA-camr I’ve come across who puts the effort into making even the sponsor ads hilarious to watch.
I always love debates and conversations between Joe Scott and Scoe Jott
I am from the TYC 7037-89-1 system and we love you Joe. Also, my sleep cycles are severely out of whack.
would be interesting to find a jupiter sized rogue planet with a few large moons.
conditions arround a moon with the right ammount of tidal heating could be stable enough to host life for as long as a planet like earth.
without a sun for light it would need to be something that gets energy from chemosynthesis using something like earths deep sea vents rather than photosynthesis
Your vision, voice, (like a writer's voice), passion, humor, intelligence, likeability and your ability to explain complicated concepts in a way that so many of us can understand - these are your gifts to us. If AI can help you do this even better, great. FTR, I am fine with AWJ 1.0. Thank you
Love all that you do, but seems the audio of your video is a little low. Thanks for all the great content!
This just makes me realise how damn *lucky* we are to have been brought about on this planet, in this star system, in this part of the galaxy and point in time
19:50 if you're a creator, please, for the love of all that is holy... read your transcript after it auto-renders. You can edit it to fix mistaken words, and it doesn't affect the algorithm, but it helps those of us with audio processing issues or those hard of hearing to be able to just back up 10 seconds and grab it easily from the subtitles.
I really enjoy your videos and I'm glad to see you're still making them.
Come on Joe come back to the tube we love you 💕 I'm a full time parent and work and I'm to poor to subscribe to stuff. Please keep the mystery and intrigue coming ❤️
Love you Joe! I've been following you since either just before or just after COVID struck, but it was definitely on a big space kick with Everyday Astronaut and Scott Manley et al, that lead me to your "how effing insane is it to try and terraform Mars" that turned me on to you and gave me the inkling that maybe Elon isn't so all-knowing, after all! What a lot has changed since then, but I feel so happy to be able to enjoy your content and your curiousity every single week. That's all I got, peace!
For some reason I get an eerie feeling knowing that entire potential life hosting masses with insanely unique geology. Entire weather systems, crazy landscapes, all completely dark, vapid, and almost certainly never to be explored til heat death. Eerie