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“There’s nobody in space” - You have just adopted a burden of proof. Go!! Yes, I agree there’s no evidence of anyone in space, but analogously, I don’t claim there is no god, even though there is no evidence for any, and I therefore don’t believe in them.
@@YoungGandalf2325 - Yes, I _do_ believe there are aliens out there (despite a lack of concrete evidence)! Let’s hope a few of them have light switches that could outshine their stars; it provides hope we can overcome our tribal and warlike nature and work together well enough to achieve that, even if it is _exceedingly_ unlikely in my lifetime.
During the last full solar eclipse in USA, August 21, 2017, it was so weird to see bright stars and several planets during the day while the sun was obscured. Meanwhile out on the horizon it was full light. I only wished it lasted longer to observe in awe and wonder.
I think i remember that. I was trucking through Wyoming and the electronic signs were telling people to keep there lights on when driving. That could have been a different year but it was definetly in the last 5-6
We'll not know unless we have a Contact-type meeting and learn the secrets of the universe in billions of years "when we're ready". The whole consciousness thing is so mind-blowing to me. Almost everything is susceptible to our brains twisting it to fit in the simulation mould.
Please could you talk more on the idea of an "Infinite Universe"? It has to be the most frustrating question, making the existence of gravity no big deal by comparison
Olbers didn’t realize that the universe isn’t infinitely old and light photons from stars have to follow the inverse square law (the farther you move away from a light source the less photons there are to fill the space) then navigate gases, dust and larger objects. It’s going to look pretty dark unless you’re close enough to a star to collect a massive number of photons. Think how bright our rocky neighbors the Moon, Venus and Mars are, and Jupiter and Saturn because of their size and gas composition reflectivity. Then Uranus, Neptune and Pluto had to be discovered by telescope because there’s not enough light reaching and reflecting to be seen by the naked eye back on Earth.
Light means energy (photons) reflecting from matter (atmosphere, plants, flowers, clouds, ocean, soil). As space is sparse on matter and energy....it's dark.
Every time I hear 'Dark Matter that we know exists' I tune out. We do not know if Dark Matter exists, it's still a hypothetical matter just like Aether. If you're going to use Dark Matter as an education explanation of how something works, you have the responsibility to make it clear that it's theory, not fact.
So visible and invisible are subjective... "Why sky is blue" is not a dumb question then, and most of us didn't know the answer. Also many sounds are "invisible" to us but may be well perceived by some (other) animals. It's all a matter of frequencies after all. I'd like to see a video about dark matter. And "why humans see in this light' spectrum (and no other)" is a interesting topic for a video. One of your most informative videos, really.
I feel like the simple answer to this question is “because the universe is massive. It’s like asking why is my house dark but the neighbor has his lights on.
What BS it should be totally forever light. We are in no way as clever as we think. No big bang. Why can't someone say we don't know, it is all guess work
The premise that there are infinite stars is wrong. The universe may be infinite (or at least continually expanding) but matter is finite. If matter was infinite that would mean more matter was constantly being created. And we all know matter cannot be created or destroyed, only change form.
I have a question, when we light up a room and switch of the source of energy for the light the light dissapers and the room will be dark. Where does these photons go ? Is darkness formed from particles ? Is there a place in nature where space is White? Does darkness expand? What is space by it self?
A lunar day takes roughly an earth month to complete. The phases that we see on the moon, also happen on earth, we just call it daytime and night time.
Finally some progress...finite means enclosed...gasses need a container.That containers medium is the ether in which pressure by the matter inside the container manifests as magnetism and dielectric...time to restore the first chemical table that included the ether
It’s darker on earth in the middle of nowhere. You see more stars in space than on earth in the most remote areas since light still scatters in our atmosphere areas but you’ll be blacker than black in space regardless unless sunlight hits you because they’re too far to emit any visible light on you.
Conrad Ranzan explains that photons stretch due to the presence of mass in space, ie due to gravity, & they stretch out of existence, the energy going back into the aether from whence it came.
Our eyes have evolved to see only a very small part of the very wide electro magnetic spectrum ( for one example, Ham radio frequencies occupy another part of the spectrum. We certainly can't see that!). Our brains interpret what little part of the spectrum that we 'see' and separate the minute differences in each wavelength into what we now call colors of which white for example is just one color or wavelength. We in all our conceit have expanded our definition of 'light' to now include all the various wavelengths of the EMS even though our eyes and brains cant 'see' them. For example when we see pictures from the various space telescopes, what we often are looking at are computer created versions of what is actually there that have been visible color enhanced to differentiate the various wavelengths being received. Those telescopes are seeing wavelengths that we cant visibly see which are then converted to colors we can see so we can get an idea of what some distant entity (star, alien planet, clouds of gas) might look like ...if we had the ability to see at those wavelengths ...which we dont.
No shit sherlock. Let me expand that revelation with the fact the the blue color is due to the scattering of blue light in the upper atmosphere. Red light is much less impeded by the atmosphere and the dust in it and is not scattered (as much)
It’s because it has cooled sufficiently to allow it (slight tongue in cheek). This happened a _long_ time ago, after the end of cosmic inflation, and the cosmic microwave background radiation is the evidence of that very important event. Before that, the universe was opaque.
The absence of matter allows photons to travel in a straight line. Space ( vacuum) just means absent of most or all regular matter. Nothingness cannot influence anything so light travels unimpeded through it.
@@altosack That event was due to the universe cooling down so much (~3000 K) that neutral atoms could form, 380 000 years after the big bang. The plasma that existed before blocked all photons from travelling more than a couple of planck lengths as the electrons and protons bouncing around could interact with all frequencies of light. This event also spawned the CMB background. The burst of photons immediately permeated all of space in the universe, and were in the visible(few percent) to mostly infrared range (970 nanometers plus or minus a few hundred nanometers) but due to the expansion of the universe the wavelength has been stretched into the microwave region (1 millimeter to 1 meter) of the EM spectrum and is currently brightest at 2mm.
If you were in space you wouldn't notice a Z axis. It'd be hidden from your vision. It'd seem 2 dimensional to you. You also wouldn't have any sense of up or down, It'd all feel pretty much the same in every direction.
@@xiloveyuuhx3 good questions. The blackhole that we are in formed like any ordinary blackhole. So you see we are inside a blackhole that is inside another universe. And "aliens" have figured out how to enter and exit blackholes to be able to see beings inside this blackhole such as us. And then they can enter our blackholes and enter into thoughs blackhole universes and so on and so forth. When a blackhole is formed it creates a universe inside of it. It takes the guts of a star and magnifies it into unbelievable sizes. Because everything in that universe is shrunk down so only one stars matter can fill an intire universe full of stuff. And the stars that fall into a blackhole only make the blackhole bigger which accounts for why our universe is constantly expanding.
It's puzzling how the James Webb Telescope can detect a planet 300 million light-years away when there's no ambient light in space, and infrared light only travels a certain distance. How can this telescope view that planet as clearly as if it were observing Earth from space? There are many aspects that seem inconsistent. For instance, observing a planet in the Kuiper Belt beyond Pluto with such clarity as if it were Pluto itself is perplexing. Infrared light requires a target to illuminate for visibility. By this logic, the telescope should be capable of seeing something as minute as the hairs on an ant's butt in the dead of night in the Mojave Desert.
There are plenty of nobel prizes waiting for the geniuses who discover what dark matter and energy are! I wish I was smart or driven enough to do it so i’m leaving it in the hands of more intelligent people.
There is no dark matter, it can be explained by electro magnetism and dark energy is still a thing but not in the mainstream way, speed of light and gravitational effect varies and changes.
Gases in Earth's atmosphere wasn't necessary. Other planets also may or may not have gases. Objects absorb the light and reflect the color that they don't, making it visible for an observer. This, the massive space has less objects to absorb and reflect light that's why it's mostly dark. As simple as that
Either its a black hole or boundary made of black hole causing all the strange phenomenon we dont understand. Could be rainbow or multicoloured in nature in the exterior.
if the entire space is 13.5 billion yrs old then what was around 14 billion yrs ago? what caused a big bang if there was nothing here to cause an explosion?
light on earth began slowly, as lightbulbs began to be manufactured. This is why it's so bright in the current year. 150 years ago, the earth was a black ball, rolling around the billiard table that is space.
Does the radiant emission work the same way? I mean it's gotta be something hot 🔥 up there but it gets colder the closer we get....obviously to a point....but why is space itself cold? If it's not the heat from the sun causing us harm then theoretically it would be from the absorption/reflection of light itself.
It’s not the heat causing harm, it’s the radiation caused by the fusion. And space isn’t absolute cold, once all the stars die out, it will eventually become absolute cold though
@@bobbyt223 So t's like being microwaved....🤔.... That's why things are dehydrating at such an alarming rate. I'm completely uneducated and eccentric but if the human body is made up of mostly water than we would too become part of the process.
how would the discovery of the james webb space telescope give the wide indication that the big bang theory is malsch based on dark matter calculations. If no theory is wrong about the discovery, it would not mean that the universe has much less dark matter than thought
Wrong. The very first interview of Apollo 11 crew said they didnt remember ever seeing any stars from the Moon. So that suggests we can't see them without passing through the Magnetic field.
@@andrejones2147 Question. So why do mars Rovers never shoot up at stars? With no life or lights or atmosphere, you’d think you’d get some amazing shots of all the stars in obscured right? Yet none. Space yo date has always been gov controlled of what you see. Wait until more nations and private space companies get to show what you can see.
You can’t see them on the day side. Your pupils shrink and only let in the brightest light omitting stars. If you’re on the night side of the moon without the Earth in its view, your pupils will dilate let in star light. Why do most people not realize this?
Tell me if this makes sense. I turn on a flashlight. I point at my hand; my hand is the only object illuminated, not the surrounding space as well? If so, that would mean space is empty, voided of any substance.
I never thought there would be people that ask this question. I'm not a scientist but obviously it's reflexion from the Sun and also the moon, and man made lights. And also the distance between stars and other star and us. We wouldn't be able to see Earth's light if we were in a different part of the MilyWay, but we would be able to see the Sun.
I mean, you're wrong so.... That is why people ask the question, because they obviously don't understand science. It is from Scattering and this video LITERALLY just told you that but you were too busy typing instead of listening. The light scatters off of air molecules and since shorter blue waves scatter the most it is why we see the sky as blue, and water appears blue. Neither is actually blue it is just blue light is scattered more. It is called Rayleigh scattering and is why we see sunsets the colors we do. BTW, We would be able to see the Earths light if we were in a Different part of the Milkyway as well as the suns light so that is also incorrect.
@@seditt5146 I swear at the beginning, the word " reflection" was use. Maybe it's what I wanted to hear. And to see Earth's light from a different galaxy, why do scientist use transmitting technique to find a planets that orbit a star?. The only reason why Voyagers and New Horizon can see the Pale Blue Dots is because, it's still in the Solar system, where the lights from the sun can still be reflected. From what you're saying is you can see a bulb from New York city, contrast to the whole city lights.
"Why Is There Light On Earth But Space Is Dark?" Because we have a star just a few million miles away that gives us light. If it wasn't there, it would be dark, like space. Hope that answers the question in less than 10 minutes.
Light is the fastest measurable unit. We don’t really know if anything is faster so we just say speed of light is the fastest known thing. If something is found to be faster than we will find it hopefully
Light only follows the traffic rules of the universe (nothing can travel faster THROUGH SPACE than (speed of light)). There is no (speed) rules governing the expansion of the universe itself. Locally it's miniscule, but little+little+little+little etc.. adds up to tremendous speeds over VAST distances.
Hey Insane Curiosity Squad! If you liked the video, we would love for you to share it with your friends or on other social networks like Facebook, Reddit, Instagram, TikTok and Twitter, etc... (Since the algorithm is not cooperating in showing us to the public 😅). In just 30 seconds, you will greatly help our Channel to grow and improve future contents. A big thank you from all of us.
There's nobody in space, so it would be a waste of electricity to leave the lights on all the time.
“There’s nobody in space” - You have just adopted a burden of proof. Go!!
Yes, I agree there’s no evidence of anyone in space, but analogously, I don’t claim there is no god, even though there is no evidence for any, and I therefore don’t believe in them.
Ok, there are probably aliens out there. Let's start sending out messages asking them to flip the light switch on.
@@YoungGandalf2325 - Yes, I _do_ believe there are aliens out there (despite a lack of concrete evidence)!
Let’s hope a few of them have light switches that could outshine their stars; it provides hope we can overcome our tribal and warlike nature and work together well enough to achieve that, even if it is _exceedingly_ unlikely in my lifetime.
Smart man
Space is Santa Claus for adults. Reserve that padded cell now
During the last full solar eclipse in USA, August 21, 2017, it was so weird to see bright stars and several planets during the day while the sun was obscured. Meanwhile out on the horizon it was full light. I only wished it lasted longer to observe in awe and wonder.
Darn! Just to think I missed that spectacle!
I'm in the path of a full solar eclipse next April. Can't wait.
I think i remember that. I was trucking through Wyoming and the electronic signs were telling people to keep there lights on when driving. That could have been a different year but it was definetly in the last 5-6
Lol I watched that same eclipse and it didn't get dark enough to see anything in the sky.
Even have pictures of it during total coverage. So you're exaggerating a lot.
The more we learn about Space and the Universe... It seems like the whole Simulation theory just gets stronger....
For sure, we are in a simulation. A video game.
@@rebeltvr6046 absolutely young double slit exp also proves it
I do not understand. Could you elaborate.
@@jewulo thus far, there is no evidence to confirm that we live in a simulation. Nor any evidence that denies it either.
We'll not know unless we have a Contact-type meeting and learn the secrets of the universe in billions of years "when we're ready". The whole consciousness thing is so mind-blowing to me. Almost everything is susceptible to our brains twisting it to fit in the simulation mould.
Seeing the sky at high altitude on a daytime flight never fails to amaze me - look down and it's regular blue sky, look up and it's black as night.
@@judgedread-q4t what do u mean?
Please could you talk more on the idea of an "Infinite Universe"? It has to be the most frustrating question, making the existence of gravity no big deal by comparison
Olbers didn’t realize that the universe isn’t infinitely old and light photons from stars have to follow the inverse square law (the farther you move away from a light source the less photons there are to fill the space) then navigate gases, dust and larger objects. It’s going to look pretty dark unless you’re close enough to a star to collect a massive number of photons. Think how bright our rocky neighbors the Moon, Venus and Mars are, and Jupiter and Saturn because of their size and gas composition reflectivity. Then Uranus, Neptune and Pluto had to be discovered by telescope because there’s not enough light reaching and reflecting to be seen by the naked eye back on Earth.
Here’s the actual answer.
Light means energy (photons) reflecting from matter (atmosphere, plants, flowers, clouds, ocean, soil). As space is sparse on matter and energy....it's dark.
A metre from a boiling kettle is cool...
@@robertallan4916 Elvis was cooler
Elvis Wesly?
Nothing is faster than the speed of light. Three sentences later the Universe is moving faster than the speed of light.
Answer: because thats how the developers who made our simulation we live in wanted it.
😄
Super interesting video! Space is full of never-ending questions and opportunities to learn- thanks for sharing this knowledge!
This could have been a 3 minute video. I heard the same information probably 5 times 😆 really stretched those 3 minutes past 10 hahaha
Monetization is why..lol
@@P71ScrewHead duh
@@D-Rock420 8===D
Repeating the info is good for us stoners. They know their audience 🤣
I literally posted a comment answering the title question that would take about 30 seconds to read lol.
Every time I hear 'Dark Matter that we know exists' I tune out.
We do not know if Dark Matter exists, it's still a hypothetical matter just like Aether.
If you're going to use Dark Matter as an education explanation of how something works, you have the responsibility to make it clear that it's theory, not fact.
I always thought that space was black because of how far and deep it really is
So visible and invisible are subjective...
"Why sky is blue" is not a dumb question then, and most of us didn't know the answer.
Also many sounds are "invisible" to us but may be well perceived by some (other) animals. It's all a matter of frequencies after all.
I'd like to see a video about dark matter.
And "why humans see in this light' spectrum (and no other)" is a interesting topic for a video.
One of your most informative videos, really.
I feel like the simple answer to this question is “because the universe is massive. It’s like asking why is my house dark but the neighbor has his lights on.
I love black space. It’s like deep water. Very calming. As above so below
☝️🎯
I took Astronomy 101 way back when thinking it’d be an easy A. Boy was I wrong.
People still believe we landed on the moon
@@glorygloryhallelujah
Because we did
We wouldn’t fit
What BS it should be totally forever light. We are in no way as clever as we think. No big bang. Why can't someone say we don't know, it is all guess work
The premise that there are infinite stars is wrong. The universe may be infinite (or at least continually expanding) but matter is finite. If matter was infinite that would mean more matter was constantly being created. And we all know matter cannot be created or destroyed, only change form.
It's the "scattering" of light by atmospheric gases and not "reflection" that's responsible for the brightness during "day"!
Great video !
Thanks !
If you need to watch this video to find out the answer, how the hell are you able to use a smart phone? Drive a car? Get dressed by yourself?
I have a question, when we light up a room and switch of the source of energy for the light the light dissapers and the room will be dark. Where does these photons go ? Is darkness formed from particles ? Is there a place in nature where space is White? Does darkness expand? What is space by it self?
A lunar day takes roughly an earth month to complete. The phases that we see on the moon, also happen on earth, we just call it daytime and night time.
Finally some progress...finite means enclosed...gasses need a container.That containers medium is the ether in which pressure by the matter inside the container manifests as magnetism and dielectric...time to restore the first chemical table that included the ether
Yes, please do the next video that talks about dark matter in the universe.
And why is it all black when I close my eyes when I have so many bright ideas?
😄
It’s darker on earth in the middle of nowhere. You see more stars in space than on earth in the most remote areas since light still scatters in our atmosphere areas but you’ll be blacker than black in space regardless unless sunlight hits you because they’re too far to emit any visible light on you.
Conrad Ranzan explains that photons stretch due to the presence of mass in space, ie due to gravity, & they stretch out of existence, the energy going back into the aether from whence it came.
Our eyes have evolved to see only a very small part of the very wide electro magnetic spectrum ( for one example, Ham radio frequencies occupy another part of the spectrum. We certainly can't see that!). Our brains interpret what little part of the spectrum that we 'see' and separate the minute differences in each wavelength into what we now call colors of which white for example is just one color or wavelength. We in all our conceit have expanded our definition of 'light' to now include all the various wavelengths of the EMS even though our eyes and brains cant 'see' them. For example when we see pictures from the various space telescopes, what we often are looking at are computer created versions of what is actually there that have been visible color enhanced to differentiate the various wavelengths being received. Those telescopes are seeing wavelengths that we cant visibly see which are then converted to colors we can see so we can get an idea of what some distant entity (star, alien planet, clouds of gas) might look like ...if we had the ability to see at those wavelengths ...which we dont.
7:33 how can we say that anymore. Do we really know?
Agree. But it looks like new findings in physics will eventually give way to another theory.
When the sun is up, the sky is blue and light on earth. When there's no sun, space is dark. KISS.
Lol.
No shit sherlock. Let me expand that revelation with the fact the the blue color is due to the scattering of blue light in the upper atmosphere. Red light is much less impeded by the atmosphere and the dust in it and is not scattered (as much)
One of Star Trek Animated series show had the Enterprise go to a Parrella Universe where space was white and the stars was black
An equally interesting question; Why is space transparent?
It’s because it has cooled sufficiently to allow it (slight tongue in cheek). This happened a _long_ time ago, after the end of cosmic inflation, and the cosmic microwave background radiation is the evidence of that very important event. Before that, the universe was opaque.
The absence of matter allows photons to travel in a straight line. Space ( vacuum) just means absent of most or all regular matter. Nothingness cannot influence anything so light travels unimpeded through it.
@@altosack That event was due to the universe cooling down so much (~3000 K) that neutral atoms could form, 380 000 years after the big bang. The plasma that existed before blocked all photons from travelling more than a couple of planck lengths as the electrons and protons bouncing around could interact with all frequencies of light. This event also spawned the CMB background. The burst of photons immediately permeated all of space in the universe, and were in the visible(few percent) to mostly infrared range (970 nanometers plus or minus a few hundred nanometers) but due to the expansion of the universe the wavelength has been stretched into the microwave region (1 millimeter to 1 meter) of the EM spectrum and is currently brightest at 2mm.
No
If you were in space you wouldn't notice a Z axis. It'd be hidden from your vision. It'd seem 2 dimensional to you. You also wouldn't have any sense of up or down, It'd all feel pretty much the same in every direction.
Well if there's nothing for the light hit and reflect off, it will not show any light. Not that hard of a question to answer.
So why is space pitch black...did I miss something.
Light can only emit from a source, or reflect when it hits matter. Space is nothing..
Please do a video about dark matter and energy
4:28 ..... The face does anyone else see it ?
I call it young Spock 🖖
Lol
The real reason that space is black is because we are inside a blackhole. 😅
How long have we been in a black hole? And why haven’t we been stretched out yet?🤔
@@xiloveyuuhx3 good questions. The blackhole that we are in formed like any ordinary blackhole. So you see we are inside a blackhole that is inside another universe. And "aliens" have figured out how to enter and exit blackholes to be able to see beings inside this blackhole such as us. And then they can enter our blackholes and enter into thoughs blackhole universes and so on and so forth. When a blackhole is formed it creates a universe inside of it. It takes the guts of a star and magnifies it into unbelievable sizes. Because everything in that universe is shrunk down so only one stars matter can fill an intire universe full of stuff. And the stars that fall into a blackhole only make the blackhole bigger which accounts for why our universe is constantly expanding.
Well i prefer dark mode.
Simple explanation. Even with so many cars with the headlights on in the countryside, why doesn't the the whole countryside light up?
It's puzzling how the James Webb Telescope can detect a planet 300 million light-years away when there's no ambient light in space, and infrared light only travels a certain distance. How can this telescope view that planet as clearly as if it were observing Earth from space? There are many aspects that seem inconsistent. For instance, observing a planet in the Kuiper Belt beyond Pluto with such clarity as if it were Pluto itself is perplexing. Infrared light requires a target to illuminate for visibility. By this logic, the telescope should be capable of seeing something as minute as the hairs on an ant's butt in the dead of night in the Mojave Desert.
Space... Wow .. space.... It's soooo big. Wow.
There are plenty of nobel prizes waiting for the geniuses who discover what dark matter and energy are! I wish I was smart or driven enough to do it so i’m leaving it in the hands of more intelligent people.
😄
There is no dark matter, it can be explained by electro magnetism and dark energy is still a thing but not in the mainstream way, speed of light and gravitational effect varies and changes.
The Universe is not finite.
Yes...it is!
@@stuartrichardson5232 What makes you think so?
The universe isn’t real
Gases in Earth's atmosphere wasn't necessary. Other planets also may or may not have gases. Objects absorb the light and reflect the color that they don't, making it visible for an observer. This, the massive space has less objects to absorb and reflect light that's why it's mostly dark. As simple as that
Either its a black hole or boundary made of black hole causing all the strange phenomenon we dont understand. Could be rainbow or multicoloured in nature in the exterior.
Did we get the dark matter video or the dark energy video? Or both? ... Can we get both?
But nebulas and space dust should reflect enough light to brighten a tiny portion of space no?
yes, but the distance between that Nebula to another Galaxy is vast, just to prove how big the universe really is.
Nobody there to pay the bills for light bill.
😄
Good question
Thanks
I think there is a massively bigger picture and a ton we do not know and will never know
Ooooohhhhh!! I was wondering why it wasn’t a bunch of stars in the Moon landing footage…talk me Down Man!! TALK ME DOWN!!!
Whole universe is floating on some dark particles
if the entire space is 13.5 billion yrs old then what was around 14 billion yrs ago? what caused a big bang if there was nothing here to cause an explosion?
Why couldn’t a simple explanation be, “only humans/life on earth,” interpret “light” as a visual spectrum? #LightisSimplyNothinginOutterSpace
Or how about THERE ARE ONLY HUMANS AND LIFE ON EARTH
Or how about THERE ARE ONLY HUMANS AND LIFE ON EARTH
If we can see it, then it is reflecting light.
We dont truly know the speed of light because the speed of light remains the same for every observer.
7:37 We don’t really know though. It’s not a fact, just a theory still
How come we could see when they landed on the moon?
light on earth began slowly, as lightbulbs began to be manufactured. This is why it's so bright in the current year. 150 years ago, the earth was a black ball, rolling around the billiard table that is space.
it is still dark
@@OtterPup_ You need to turn your lights on.
Now this is something l'd really like to hear more about. So go Team "lnsane Curiously!" 🤩
Does the radiant emission work the same way? I mean it's gotta be something hot 🔥 up there but it gets colder the closer we get....obviously to a point....but why is space itself cold? If it's not the heat from the sun causing us harm then theoretically it would be from the absorption/reflection of light itself.
It’s not the heat causing harm, it’s the radiation caused by the fusion. And space isn’t absolute cold, once all the stars die out, it will eventually become absolute cold though
@@bobbyt223 So t's like being microwaved....🤔.... That's why things are dehydrating at such an alarming rate. I'm completely uneducated and eccentric but if the human body is made up of mostly water than we would too become part of the process.
@@fatbuddycat we are already a part of it.
Space is black because we are actually staring at a gigantic black hole in the background.
if we turn off the light and your room turn dark is that counted as a dark matter in theory?
Dark matter dark energy- yes, please.
Also stars may be infinite but only comprises 4.6% of visible/atomic based master
guys just turn up your render distance
@2:04 no atmosphere yet the US flag was filmed flapping in the wind on the moon
Reflectivity
The next video explains what shit is and where it goes when it seems to disappear magically after flushing the toilet.
Theory. The black ness is a wall around the universe that we can see but neva touch.
Is it the reverse polar bear effect?
Before I even open this video, the Sun. The end.
I find mectric units VERY OFFENSIVE and offensive content notice at 5:34
‘Cause Space be gangsta’.
I believe Ronnie James Dio put it best when said you are just a rainbow in the dark.
Spacetime, it's one thing.
how would the discovery of the james webb space telescope give the wide indication that the big bang theory is malsch based on dark matter calculations.
If no theory is wrong about the discovery, it would not mean that the universe has much less dark matter than thought
space is a vacuum and there is nothing to reflect the photons
The World 🌎 Yes Needs Light and Energy To Grow Plant 🪴 Life And To Sustain All Life In The Ocean and on Land Yes Ma'am ✨
Space lacks light. There I saved you having to watch the video
Because the vast distance between light sources like stars.
Why is it that whenever I see these images of Earth, the sun and moon are never there? 🤔🧐🤨
Honestly, the only people who shouldn’t know this are those that never had a 5th grade education.
Wrong. The very first interview of Apollo 11 crew said they didnt remember ever seeing any stars from the Moon. So that suggests we can't see them without passing through the Magnetic field.
No it suggests someone is lying… simply accept it
@@andrejones2147 Question. So why do mars Rovers never shoot up at stars? With no life or lights or atmosphere, you’d think you’d get some amazing shots of all the stars in obscured right? Yet none.
Space yo date has always been gov controlled of what you see. Wait until more nations and private space companies get to show what you can see.
You can’t see them on the day side. Your pupils shrink and only let in the brightest light omitting stars. If you’re on the night side of the moon without the Earth in its view, your pupils will dilate let in star light. Why do most people not realize this?
The artist ran out of the colour he/she wanted (chartreuse) and painted it black instead.
Tell me if this makes sense. I turn on a flashlight. I point at my hand; my hand is the only object illuminated, not the surrounding space as well? If so, that would mean space is empty, voided of any substance.
I never thought there would be people that ask this question. I'm not a scientist but obviously it's reflexion from the Sun and also the moon, and man made lights. And also the distance between stars and other star and us. We wouldn't be able to see Earth's light if we were in a different part of the MilyWay, but we would be able to see the Sun.
I mean, you're wrong so.... That is why people ask the question, because they obviously don't understand science. It is from Scattering and this video LITERALLY just told you that but you were too busy typing instead of listening. The light scatters off of air molecules and since shorter blue waves scatter the most it is why we see the sky as blue, and water appears blue. Neither is actually blue it is just blue light is scattered more. It is called Rayleigh scattering and is why we see sunsets the colors we do.
BTW, We would be able to see the Earths light if we were in a Different part of the Milkyway as well as the suns light so that is also incorrect.
@@seditt5146 I swear at the beginning, the word " reflection" was use. Maybe it's what I wanted to hear. And to see Earth's light from a different galaxy, why do scientist use transmitting technique to find a planets that orbit a star?. The only reason why Voyagers and New Horizon can see the Pale Blue Dots is because, it's still in the Solar system, where the lights from the sun can still be reflected. From what you're saying is you can see a bulb from New York city, contrast to the whole city lights.
@@seditt5146 😂😂 you just got it wrong yourself but felt so good thinking you were right
@@rattanameas1181 even if the word reflection was used it would be done incorrectly as it is not reflection.
@@stuartrichardson5232 No... no i didn't. But I bet you felt good thinking you just barfed out a gotcha lmfao. Na dude, not wrong.
Why do we study the exact same American history over and over from the 1st grade all the way into college????🤣😅😂🤣😅😂
Because it is apart of the formula for programming… there is no other reason
Ahaaa..
I knew it
It's a flat earth and Lord Spaghetti Monsters holding up a light above us!!! 😁
"Why Is There Light On Earth But Space Is Dark?"
Because we have a star just a few million miles away that gives us light. If it wasn't there, it would be dark, like space. Hope that answers the question in less than 10 minutes.
It's dark in space because the is no reflection. Light keeps traveling away without returning
If the universe is faster than light then how is light the fastest thing in the universe if what we believe is dark matter that is expanding?
Light is the fastest measurable unit. We don’t really know if anything is faster so we just say speed of light is the fastest known thing. If something is found to be faster than we will find it hopefully
Light only follows the traffic rules of the universe (nothing can travel faster THROUGH SPACE than (speed of light)). There is no (speed) rules governing the expansion of the universe itself. Locally it's miniscule, but little+little+little+little etc.. adds up to tremendous speeds over VAST distances.
The atmosphere, duh......
Mars has also very thin atmosphere then why day is not dark on Mars like moon then??
Mars atmosphere is about 1 percent of the earths whereas the moon doesn't really have an atmosphere at all..
Yes