I get goosebumps when I think about the planets and their moons spinning for billions of years, I imagine what it would feel like to visit them and see them first hand.
I feel you mate, it gives such pleasure even just thinking about such marvelous creation. I can watch & listen to such videos for hours & hours and still crave for more ❤️. We are such tiny creatures in comparison to this universe ❤️
I like to think of it this way. The universe is so huge that if the earth itself was the whole universe we would be like 1 single grain of sand on earth
I love how this guys tells the story of Cassini as if it was a living being. It felt like watching a whole character growing up and meeting people during its journey. It even ended in a sad note 😭
When Cassini was failing. It alerted the humans. But Cassini never knew it was being sent to Saturn to die. It was an honor, I salute Cassini for its work. I got emotional 😢
Like, maybe Cassini felt homesick seeing its home from such a distance. Smiling tearfully as the journey it made flash before its mind and falls in the dense storm, fulfilling its last mission 😭
Can you imagine living in a colony one one of Saturn’s moons in the distant future and being able to look out your bedroom window and see Saturn in the sky? Simply breathtaking!
It might be, but you wouldn’t see Saturns rings. Most orbits along the equator so you will never actually see the rings, and Titan has such a thick atmosphere that you wouldn’t even see Saturn itself.
@@homiej8163 The bigger moons Tethys and Mimas have orbits inclined by over a degree, as compared with Saturn's rings and equator. They both orbit _through_ the rings, which means that you should obtain grandiose, changing views of the rings, from them. Certainly, when these moons _cross_ the rings, you'll see nothing, the rings being too thin for that.
@@homiej8163 No, I have told you something wrong or at least rash. You _could_ see something of the rings from a moon in an orbit around Saturn between the heights of the lowest and of the highest rings, even when such a moon crosses the rings. I'm imagining that you'll recognize how Saturn dims (from one side) and after this again gets as bright as before. In the sky _around_ Saturn and on the opposite side, you'll probably -either- perceive a corresponding brightening and subsequent return of an earlier, darker hue, perhaps coming and going like a (more or less transparent) curtain and in this resembling what you see when you look to the planet. Perhaps you'll even see something reminiscent of a contrail straightly stretching through the sky. NASA says that Saturn's rings were but thirty to three hundred feet thick. Nevertheless, differences of their inclinations will probably have to be made responsible for the situation that you still can see the rings well, in photographs of the planet in which you look through their disk from the side. If such a dispersion is massive enough, around yourself, you could indeed be unable to see anything of the rings on crossing them. Of course, the visibility of the rings from a moon also depends on the distances and thicknesses of the passages around you. Generally, the rings are well visible because the pieces making them up (which have diameters of up to tens of meters) largely consist of water ice. This should ensure that you'll always have a well-perceptible, straight line looking like a contrail in your sky, at least when you are on such a moon during periods in which you can look at some of the rings from a stronger angle. The imagery does, meanwhile, suggest such a strong overall thickness of the complex of rings that you'll probably see this entire complex from inside about all the time - which suggests that you'll always have, at most, a wildly striped sky and in the end really won't ever feel that you can catch a noteworthy view of the complex. An aspect one should mention is that at Saturn's distance from our star, there already arrives only a dim sunlight. Visibility of things in the sky of a Saturnian moon should not be obstructed by this very much, as long as you have no light pollution around yourself; a human being can also see the stars even through the thick atmosphere of Earth!
The scale of the objects in these images is unfathomable. Imagine being able to be inside these supermassive storms and being able to observe them closely first-hand.
Back when I was little I thought sending a probe to distant planets is nothing but a easy task. As I grew older and learned more of physics, I realized it’s actually an incredible feat of humankind to figure out all the numbers regarding different orbits and gravity. Its just incredible. Hats off to the scientists and engineers.
When I grow up I quickly realized that ALL video from space is CGI. When you apply common sense to any of this it quickly falls apart. Asking questions will label you a flatearther. Hope one day you will wake up
@@gamingbigfats3934 CGI didn’t exist when the first pictures of the earth were photographed by the v2 ballistic missile. And how was the feet accomplished by America? Well Warner Van Buren German scientist was captured and offered to help the US military in a space race and they set up a V2 missile to take photos of the earth during the 30s and 40s EnV2 was the first intercontinental ballistic missile that could reach the Karman line when space starts and you exit the atmosphere. computers were literally code breakers Running on binary genius.
This is such a beautiful story it’s almost moving. Like HUMAN BEINGS made this thing that flew all over the fricken MASSIVE solar system for decades. It’s honestly like something from a movie. And then the fact that they chose to end the mission by letting Cassini disintegrate into Saturn to avoid polluting the moons was so beautiful.
Interesting to see how scientists take care of a barren world in comparison to how governments & people take care of the only life supporting planet known in the entire universe
This is so interesting. I don't know why we don't hear about space expeditions more often. Thanks for this information. So much going on in space exploration than I could have ever imagined.
@@philwiens4554 lol CGI is the only word you know of. Without those animations, your smooth brain wouldn't be able to visualize and comprehend any of this. The whole video isn't gonna be composed of real images and footages. It never claimed it is. It's your job to find that out yourself.
When you look through a telescope and are able to see Saturn for the first time, it's a crazy "holy crap!" moment, because it looks so much like a diagram in a book. No sarcasm... It's really spooky to see this massive thing in the sky with rings around it as a big flat disc perfectly on angle. Surreal. I'll never forget that feeling.
Yeah.. Gives some perspective! At my friend's cabin, he had strong binoculars on a stand to check the pretty babes in the skislopes, and I asked him if he had ever seen Saturn. I showed him where it was, (just another 'star' for him) and he was awestruck for the reminder of the weekend.. :D
@beernutsonline you could saw the rings through binoculars? How big is the magnification? On mine it says "10x26", I'm not sure what that means, but I can't see rings. But I saw saturn (as a dot) with 4 or 5 moons around him
@@alessandro9509 It was a Bresser spotting scope of some kind, (I think it was a 10x type) but you could definitely see the plante and the slanted rings as an American football-like object and as you say, some of the moons. I have a small 70mm refractor at home, and with a 10mm eyepice I can absolutely see the rings.
I've looked at Saturn through my telescope well over 100 times and still have that "holy crap!" moment every time. Never gets old. Space is so amazing.
I teared up at the end ..... I remember, I've been reading about Cassini space mission since childhood , I barely knew anything else except that it's sent to explore Saturn and it's natural satellite......... When I slowly grew up, I read many stuffs about it over the internet......... In 2017 when they finally decided to crash Cassini in Saturn's atmosphere, I teared up because I feel like a part of me growing up is gone........ After watching this video, I'm tearing up once again....... Truly nostalgic, inspiring, innovative and mesmerizing ❤️
Me too bruh, I first read about Cassini when I was 9 years old in the library and was so fascinated until I keep going back to the library to borrow space books. Fast forward 2021 and I'm still so glad to be able to view this video about Cassini. Been more than 20 years since I read that book!
One of the most successful and amazing missions in all the astronautic's history. Great accomplishment for all mankind, Cassini-Huygens will be remarkable forever.
Your Space-Mission Series is so good. I really found it interesting and hope you explain more of this sort. Saturn's moons have a huge possibility of hosting life.
The amount of calculations for this satellite to move is insane. But what's even more insane is the cameraman. Huge respect to that guy. Sacrifice his past life in earth for sake of photography and video.
One thing id like to see improvement to this type of documentaries is that the creator needs to caption the parts where it is a raw/real footage or an artist reimagine artwork..
@@dreddjudge8969 We don't. Go outside at 1:00 AM on June 30 and look at the night sky; then look at the night sky at 1:00 AM on Sept. 30; and 1:00 AM Dec. 30; and then look at the night sky at 1:00 AM on March 30. The night sky changes over the year--because we orbit the Sun. Before you reply, go try it.
@UniworldCityGGaon Space is a vacuum. There's nothing to blow parts away. How can 1970s era humans who call themselves names like 'Flea' not understand the world they live in? Is it the booze and drugs they consume?
This was very interesting, what a journey. The mission accomplished so much, they really made the most of it. Saturn is beautiful and intriguing, and so are the moons.
@@paul9120 cgi wouldve costed more than making the rocket and probe because we dont know how to cgi a rocket taking off in from of thousands of people in real life
I can't help but look at all of these remarkable pieces of human engineering, providing invaluable data about us and our solar system, and think of them as if they're war heroes. I wish we could bring all of these home, to exhibit and cherish forever. It'll be a truly depressing day when Hubble succumbs to the same fate. I believe I will genuinely cry.
Thanks to the engineer's and scientists who worked to make this project a success, sometimes it's hard to comprehend how much we humans have achieved. Hopefully 40-50 years later when I come back to this comment we would have had first humans on mars too.
@@chrissede2270 Getting there will be really tough and we should not put human lives at risk, Let's hope for the best, maybe in the next 20-30 years 😂!!
Coming from the future, while I am struggling to write in the old english I just want to tell you that it's not an uncommon thing traveling to Mars. *14 apr 2069*
@@lirycline6646 He did say people will die in the process of going to mars. Since the 1970's Nasa always thought of sending people and sending rovers itself is a great achievement. But a journey to mars looks like a 1 way trip for now which includes 7 month of travel to mars and the window to return to earth opening only every 18 months. Let's see how far we can reach by the end of the decade, I think it will be difficult for humans to reach there by 2030 but I would love to be proven wrong
I know the video is primarily about Saturn, but those shots of Jupiter with a moon in the foreground really does a good job of showing scale. Everyone knows juptier is big, but that shot puts it into perspective (even if that's a perspective known for making the foreground object appear bigger than it is compared to the background).
@@philwiens4554the video is cgi the creator never said it was real. it was to make you visualise how it travelled the real photos are in between this video
Dude, It's just a satellite. Chill. You're acting like it's a living being. It's nothing more than a computer. They've lost lots of them before over the years and boo hooed over them.
@@ashleyr6809 no one is actually that sad about it. It’s more like a kind of mood dampening effect not really being sad just dampening your mood while also inspiring you I guess. Cant explain it very well right now because it’s like 3 am and my brain is shut off
To the narrator: - 2:31: Sun's gravity didn't pull Cassini BACK to the Inner Solar System! 1st - it was still there, 2nd - Sun's gravity was pulling on it according to the same law in each point of its orbit, and actually weakest at the aphelion - 3:16: after Earth gravity boost Cassini DID NOT escape Sun's gravitational pull! It would mean it achieved the 3rd cosmic velocity and was on escape route from the Solar System, like New Horizons.
@@Max20FA Well, that's something I shouldn't even try to correct, as English isn't my mother's tongue :) Personally, I'd prefer Greek-originating names pronounced in Greek, like Enkélados. I'd be even more awesome if Greek was used generally for Space, like Latin is still in medicine.
@@koczisek I agree on this final point, and this is why I believe it is disgraceful to refer to Aeolus Mons [on mars] as "Mount Sharp." [99% of all people don't even realize how apropos the Greek name is here.]
@@David-gh6vp It's Aeolis Mons - I'm not sure if it refers to Aeolia (Thessalia), Aeolians, to a windy environment, or to the changing nature of things. I bet for the windy conditions.
I grew up with missions such as Cassini and must admit that I find it sad that it ran out of fuel. Good bye Cassini, you have done a good job, and achieved much more as some humans do in their lifetime
Love it when youtube algorithm hits me with an amazing piece like this. Really well done, thanks so much, this definitely filled in a lot of gaps of my knowledge of this mission and there's so much more to explore. Easy sub, your other vids look super interesting as well.
I looked at Saturn; "my favorite planet besides Earth" through an Observatory telescope in 1985 somewhere in Arizona when I was 13. I was so excited to see it, but was sooo disappointed that it looked like a projector slide had been put in the telescope. It was the only time I looked through the telescope while I was there too. I believed it would look much bigger than it did, but looking back on it, that was a cool thing to experience. Thank you GOD for it.
the first planet i ever saw through a telescope was saturn. been my favorite since! i would love to live on one of her moons to see her up close and personal. every. day.
Somehow i feel sad After Hearing Cassini's Final Orbiting...Thanks to this spacecraft and the engineers that create this awesome guy...You will be always remembered....
I wasn't surprised by the amount of CGI. We're not allowed to see photographic images from the probe. just that one bland Grey shot at 10:58. Lots of artwork. Thanks for sharing what NASA thinks we should be "imagining".
"Making Titan a deserving candidate to be on the list of potentially-habitable worlds" ah yes, I can't wait to live on Titan and enjoy a hot methane bath every morning
It's always sad when such important spacecrafts and missions come to an end. But, it really isn't possible right now to have a spacecraft continually sending data and just doing stuff forever...
This is one of those situations where you would never expect 1 thing to touch another. Id never think something from a tiny planet millions of miles away would touch the atmosphere of Saturn.
411 years since Galileo first set eyes on Saturn with his telescope. Hard to believe we can see Saturn's rings from 963 million miles away. Even more impressive when you realize Saturn's rings are only about 30 feet thick.
With all of this amazing technology allowing us to see distant planets and their moons as the probe slingshots around our solar system, you have to wonder, how in the world do we still have active flat earth societies?
He killed the names of the satellites (except Titan)...if what should sound as Enkela-thoos came out like Enchilladas one dreads to think how this guy will narrate the mission to Uranus!
My question: how come Cassini never bumps into other objects such as rocks? How did it remain safe? Another: how did it manage to defy the gravitational forces across/between these planets or moons, maintaining its objective to reach the moon 🎑? Funally: was Cassini being controlled from earth or was moving freely on its own?
I dont think the narrator is a real person. The cadence, rhythm and emphases are all in the wrong places. shame that such a beautiful story didn’t justify using an actual person to narrate it.
Watching Cassini plunging and breaking apart in the Saturn atmosphere is like watching someone die in your hands. That's what I felt when watching this. Cassini and his buddy Huygens will be remembered for all information that they were able to provide to us.
I remembered Cassini because of its final descent, but I forgot about the fantastic pictures of the moon, earth, and Jupiter / various moons it also took. Many of those photos are THE images seen in textbooks around the world.
it kinda freaks me out knowing we're floating and how we're so small. like- what's beyond space?? is it infinite? how did it even become a thing, y'know? So many galaxies, not knowing what's in those galaxies. It freaks me out in a good way.
It's so amazing what humans can actually do, can't go to look for ourselves? We build a probe and attach a camera to it. Simply put by me, but truly genius. I now wonder if they ever sent a probe to the earth like planets which are closed to us, say a couple of lightyears. Probably would take decades to reach, but you know for future generations.
Imagine there was a way to survive a lifetime while traveling through space and people decided to just live there lives in space travel? Wow just amazing
HATS OFF to the orbital technicians who calculate & execute such complex trajectories so precisely!
bulyea!
Its all scam
@@kevinglennfangonon2698 Why do you say that?
Uhm🥺
@@robinlarge1630 bigger lol
I get goosebumps when I think about the planets and their moons spinning for billions of years, I imagine what it would feel like to visit them and see them first hand.
I feel you mate, it gives such pleasure even just thinking about such marvelous creation. I can watch & listen to such videos for hours & hours and still crave for more ❤️. We are such tiny creatures in comparison to this universe ❤️
@@josephnayak3165 this, absolutely true! We're just nothing
You will be wondering forever because it's all a lie
I like to think of it this way. The universe is so huge that if the earth itself was the whole universe we would be like 1 single grain of sand on earth
@@antarcticwallscam2507 do we have dark ager here, A flat earther ?
I love how this guys tells the story of Cassini as if it was a living being. It felt like watching a whole character growing up and meeting people during its journey. It even ended in a sad note 😭
at least it got to plunge through saturns atmosphere as its last ever daring assignment 😢
when it was in the news that cassini got destructed a lot of people got sad like it was a living beeing
Same :'(
We all love cassini ❤️
Humans really will pack bond with just about anything
When Cassini was failing. It alerted the humans. But Cassini never knew it was being sent to Saturn to die. It was an honor,
I salute Cassini for its work. I got emotional 😢
Like, maybe Cassini felt homesick seeing its home from such a distance. Smiling tearfully as the journey it made flash before its mind and falls in the dense storm, fulfilling its last mission 😭
Fr I get too emotional over objects :(
@@wickedwitch7456 Cassini felt nothing because cassini was an object.
@@painted.pink1 bro shut up ur ruining the moment
Kind of like you I guess :).
Can you imagine living in a colony one one of Saturn’s moons in the distant future and being able to look out your bedroom window and see Saturn in the sky? Simply breathtaking!
I've never thought about such a possibility - but it's a realistic scenario!
It might be, but you wouldn’t see Saturns rings. Most orbits along the equator so you will never actually see the rings, and Titan has such a thick atmosphere that you wouldn’t even see Saturn itself.
@@homiej8163 The bigger moons Tethys and Mimas have orbits inclined by over a degree, as compared with Saturn's rings and equator. They both orbit _through_ the rings, which means that you should obtain grandiose, changing views of the rings, from them. Certainly, when these moons _cross_ the rings, you'll see nothing, the rings being too thin for that.
@@homiej8163 No, I have told you something wrong or at least rash. You _could_ see something of the rings from a moon in an orbit around Saturn between the heights of the lowest and of the highest rings, even when such a moon crosses the rings. I'm imagining that you'll recognize how Saturn dims (from one side) and after this again gets as bright as before. In the sky _around_ Saturn and on the opposite side, you'll probably -either- perceive a corresponding brightening and subsequent return of an earlier, darker hue, perhaps coming and going like a (more or less transparent) curtain and in this resembling what you see when you look to the planet. Perhaps you'll even see something reminiscent of a contrail straightly stretching through the sky.
NASA says that Saturn's rings were but thirty to three hundred feet thick. Nevertheless, differences of their inclinations will probably have to be made responsible for the situation that you still can see the rings well, in photographs of the planet in which you look through their disk from the side. If such a dispersion is massive enough, around yourself, you could indeed be unable to see anything of the rings on crossing them. Of course, the visibility of the rings from a moon also depends on the distances and thicknesses of the passages around you.
Generally, the rings are well visible because the pieces making them up (which have diameters of up to tens of meters) largely consist of water ice. This should ensure that you'll always have a well-perceptible, straight line looking like a contrail in your sky, at least when you are on such a moon during periods in which you can look at some of the rings from a stronger angle. The imagery does, meanwhile, suggest such a strong overall thickness of the complex of rings that you'll probably see this entire complex from inside about all the time - which suggests that you'll always have, at most, a wildly striped sky and in the end really won't ever feel that you can catch a noteworthy view of the complex.
An aspect one should mention is that at Saturn's distance from our star, there already arrives only a dim sunlight. Visibility of things in the sky of a Saturnian moon should not be obstructed by this very much, as long as you have no light pollution around yourself; a human being can also see the stars even through the thick atmosphere of Earth!
@@HansDunkelberg1 Grandiose collisions with the ring's matter as well... Doesn't sound like a "peaceful" human existence.
The scale of the objects in these images is unfathomable. Imagine being able to be inside these supermassive storms and being able to observe them closely first-hand.
🤔🤔
such an act is too great for us mortals
@@dirtybanana3 we’d simply die in an instant :-/
Come to my house during the holidays... it's pretty much the same thing
If the scale of the objects is unfathomable then how can you fathom that they’re unfathomable, or objects?
Back when I was little I thought sending a probe to distant planets is nothing but a easy task. As I grew older and learned more of physics, I realized it’s actually an incredible feat of humankind to figure out all the numbers regarding different orbits and gravity. Its just incredible. Hats off to the scientists and engineers.
When I grow up I quickly realized that ALL video from space is CGI. When you apply common sense to any of this it quickly falls apart. Asking questions will label you a flatearther. Hope one day you will wake up
ok cutie
@@gamingbigfats3934 prove it
@@gamingbigfats3934 proof?
@@gamingbigfats3934 CGI didn’t exist when the first pictures of the earth were photographed by the v2 ballistic missile. And how was the feet accomplished by America? Well Warner Van Buren German scientist was captured and offered to help the US military in a space race and they set up a V2 missile to take photos of the earth during the 30s and 40s EnV2 was the first intercontinental ballistic missile that could reach the Karman line when space starts and you exit the atmosphere. computers were literally code breakers Running on binary genius.
This is such a beautiful story it’s almost moving. Like HUMAN BEINGS made this thing that flew all over the fricken MASSIVE solar system for decades. It’s honestly like something from a movie. And then the fact that they chose to end the mission by letting Cassini disintegrate into Saturn to avoid polluting the moons was so beautiful.
Interesting to see how scientists take care of a barren world in comparison to how governments & people take care of the only life supporting planet known in the entire universe
@@HC-nj3bs Our priorities as a sentient race can be pictured as a college student's home after having a college party.
@@HC-nj3bs science has made pollution worse
@@NB-yu4lj how?
Who cares about the moon getting polluted?
Massive respect to the camera man who recorded the Cassini's exploration
What second rate CGI - come on NASA looks so fake it must be fake. 💩
@FAKos-np7rhyou're a hero
This is so interesting. I don't know why we don't hear about space expeditions more often. Thanks for this information. So much going on in space exploration than I could have ever imagined.
Because people would rather watch idiots dance on tiktok.
Lol you can see the cgi in this video
@@philwiens4554 lol CGI is the only word you know of. Without those animations, your smooth brain wouldn't be able to visualize and comprehend any of this. The whole video isn't gonna be composed of real images and footages. It never claimed it is. It's your job to find that out yourself.
money is the problem...
@@philwiens4554the purpose of cgi here is to visualize you what it looks like in outer space🤡
When you look through a telescope and are able to see Saturn for the first time, it's a crazy "holy crap!" moment, because it looks so much like a diagram in a book. No sarcasm... It's really spooky to see this massive thing in the sky with rings around it as a big flat disc perfectly on angle. Surreal. I'll never forget that feeling.
Yeah.. Gives some perspective! At my friend's cabin, he had strong binoculars on a stand to check the pretty babes in the skislopes, and I asked him if he had ever seen Saturn. I showed him where it was, (just another 'star' for him) and he was awestruck for the reminder of the weekend.. :D
It almost looks as if it's completely fabricated. Great job. Everything all neat and tidy not a meteor in sight
@beernutsonline you could saw the rings through binoculars? How big is the magnification? On mine it says "10x26", I'm not sure what that means, but I can't see rings. But I saw saturn (as a dot) with 4 or 5 moons around him
@@alessandro9509 It was a Bresser spotting scope of some kind, (I think it was a 10x type) but you could definitely see the plante and the slanted rings as an American football-like object and as you say, some of the moons. I have a small 70mm refractor at home, and with a 10mm eyepice I can absolutely see the rings.
I've looked at Saturn through my telescope well over 100 times and still have that "holy crap!" moment every time. Never gets old. Space is so amazing.
I teared up at the end ..... I remember, I've been reading about Cassini space mission since childhood , I barely knew anything else except that it's sent to explore Saturn and it's natural satellite......... When I slowly grew up, I read many stuffs about it over the internet......... In 2017 when they finally decided to crash Cassini in Saturn's atmosphere, I teared up because I feel like a part of me growing up is gone........ After watching this video, I'm tearing up once again....... Truly nostalgic, inspiring, innovative and mesmerizing ❤️
Though being an object/machine they taught us so much ❤️
@Kaian凯安 everyone has emotions you know
@Kaian凯安 To say 'I teared up' is expressing the emotion felt, crying is something different and no one mentioned that.
Sama 😭
Me too bruh, I first read about Cassini when I was 9 years old in the library and was so fascinated until I keep going back to the library to borrow space books. Fast forward 2021 and I'm still so glad to be able to view this video about Cassini. Been more than 20 years since I read that book!
Cassini was a brave and loyal probe to the end. RIP little soldier of our curiousity.
Vulcan looks so surreal here, I've always been fascinated by its rings. Great photos.
One of the most successful and amazing missions in all the astronautic's history. Great accomplishment for all mankind, Cassini-Huygens will be remarkable forever.
This is more about Cassini than it is about Saturn. Halfway in and we are finally at Saturn.
thanks for saving 5 minutes of my life..! :)
@@alxgiann watch it anyway it is really interesting
@@-sela I know the story already hence why I didn't need to watch it..again ;)
Without Cassini it wouldn't be possible
It’s like watching how I met your mother.
I love this type of videos. It made me interested in astronomy and astrophysics
Good for you!!
Sm here!
And I bet you play Fortnite in your parents basement and work at a Walmart
@@Michael_Beanflip at least he has a job nerd.
@@mcraider3933 and I bet you're a trump supporter
probably the most collected new data by a spacecraft, the physics and engineering behind this are astonishing
I feel like I just watched a documentary of someone's life. I even felt touched when Cassini fell into the heavens of Saturn.
I think it's cool how it ended, it got to become part of the thing it had been studying for so many years.
Your Space-Mission Series is so good.
I really found it interesting and hope you explain more of this sort.
Saturn's moons have a huge possibility of hosting life.
Glad you like them!
You wanna reach Saturn's moon. There must be something that we haven't started living on our moon as of yet.
🥺
Dekh la y mai v ponch gya tere comment kol 😁😁
@UniworldCityGGaon well , the man on the moon has a lot to explain about that cube.
The amount of calculations for this satellite to move is insane.
But what's even more insane is the cameraman.
Huge respect to that guy. Sacrifice his past life in earth for sake of photography and video.
Nah, he got out of the clouds as soon as he got the photographs
The cameraman is omnipresent. We must thank him for sharing his experiences with us
One thing id like to see improvement to this type of documentaries is that the creator needs to caption the parts where it is a raw/real footage or an artist reimagine artwork..
@UniworldCityGGaon or questions like how do we see the same constellation yet earth travels over a billion miles per year..biggest lie ever told.
Absolutely! I agree with you. Very annoying.
@@dreddjudge8969 We don't. Go outside at 1:00 AM on June 30 and look at the night sky; then look at the night sky at 1:00 AM on Sept. 30; and 1:00 AM Dec. 30; and then look at the night sky at 1:00 AM on March 30. The night sky changes over the year--because we orbit the Sun. Before you reply, go try it.
@UniworldCityGGaon Space is a vacuum. There's nothing to blow parts away. How can 1970s era humans who call themselves names like 'Flea' not understand the world they live in? Is it the booze and drugs they consume?
@@RideAcrossTheRiver yup just look at the stars they never change its the same ones over and over if you go outside you will see the same stars
That hexagon is fascinating indeed! Even Jupiter have one at the south pole.
This was very interesting, what a journey. The mission accomplished so much, they really made the most of it. Saturn is beautiful and intriguing, and so are the moons.
It's so sad to know that the spacecraft ended its life on Saturn😢RIP. We will miss you. Thanks for all the beautiful images.
You can thank NASA’s CGI specialists for that!
@@paul9120 ya because that’s clearly fake
its not life its just some steel atoms with a camera
@@riftplut0474 your mom's fake
@@paul9120 cgi wouldve costed more than making the rocket and probe because we dont know how to cgi a rocket taking off in from of thousands of people in real life
I can't help but look at all of these remarkable pieces of human engineering, providing invaluable data about us and our solar system, and think of them as if they're war heroes. I wish we could bring all of these home, to exhibit and cherish forever. It'll be a truly depressing day when Hubble succumbs to the same fate. I believe I will genuinely cry.
Thanks to the engineer's and scientists who worked to make this project a success, sometimes it's hard to comprehend how much we humans have achieved.
Hopefully 40-50 years later when I come back to this comment we would have had first humans on mars too.
Well it’s been 3 days and still no humans on Mars. I doubt I have 40-50 years left. While not impossible it’s improbable. Let’s shoot for 20-30 years.
@@chrissede2270 Getting there will be really tough and we should not put human lives at risk, Let's hope for the best, maybe in the next 20-30 years 😂!!
Coming from the future, while I am struggling to write in the old english I just want to tell you that it's not an uncommon thing traveling to Mars. *14 apr 2069*
@@jehanbhathena6270 Elon said that he would put humans in mars before 2030 so there’s that
@@lirycline6646 He did say people will die in the process of going to mars. Since the 1970's Nasa always thought of sending people and sending rovers itself is a great achievement. But a journey to mars looks like a 1 way trip for now which includes 7 month of travel to mars and the window to return to earth opening only every 18 months. Let's see how far we can reach by the end of the decade, I think it will be difficult for humans to reach there by 2030 but I would love to be proven wrong
I know the video is primarily about Saturn, but those shots of Jupiter with a moon in the foreground really does a good job of showing scale. Everyone knows juptier is big, but that shot puts it into perspective (even if that's a perspective known for making the foreground object appear bigger than it is compared to the background).
Unbelievable job, what an amazing team who were able to accomplish such an amazing mission
Fantastic images from Cassini, I understand why it was sent into Saturn, but I was upset it could not have been brought back to Earth.
Fake images
Photoshop
@@waterproof4403 ok........
@@waterproof4403 it's actually real believe it or not. Not everything is Photoshop, this is what it actually looks like
It didn't want to come back to Earth. Too many stupid humans.
Ah Cassini. I love the story of this mission.
Story it is
You can see the cgi in it lol but good try
@@philwiens4554the video is cgi
the creator never said it was real. it was to make you visualise how it travelled
the real photos are in between this video
Cassini you will be missed.😭
Dude, It's just a satellite. Chill. You're acting like it's a living being. It's nothing more than a computer. They've lost lots of them before over the years and boo hooed over them.
@@ashleyr6809 no one is actually that sad about it. It’s more like a kind of mood dampening effect not really being sad just dampening your mood while also inspiring you I guess. Cant explain it very well right now because it’s like 3 am and my brain is shut off
I think that the Cassini-huygens mission is one of the most successful orbiters/sattelites that we have sent to another planet.
Sometimes I wish I was born in the future when interstellar travel could be possible just to be able to experience seeing all the planets firsthand
To the narrator:
- 2:31: Sun's gravity didn't pull Cassini BACK to the Inner Solar System! 1st - it was still there, 2nd - Sun's gravity was pulling on it according to the same law in each point of its orbit, and actually weakest at the aphelion
- 3:16: after Earth gravity boost Cassini DID NOT escape Sun's gravitational pull! It would mean it achieved the 3rd cosmic velocity and was on escape route from the Solar System, like New Horizons.
Also how to pronounce Enceladus lol
@@Max20FA Well, that's something I shouldn't even try to correct, as English isn't my mother's tongue :)
Personally, I'd prefer Greek-originating names pronounced in Greek, like Enkélados. I'd be even more awesome if Greek was used generally for Space, like Latin is still in medicine.
@@koczisek I agree on this final point, and this is why I believe it is disgraceful to refer to Aeolus Mons [on mars] as "Mount Sharp." [99% of all people don't even realize how apropos the Greek name is here.]
@@David-gh6vp It's Aeolis Mons - I'm not sure if it refers to Aeolia (Thessalia), Aeolians, to a windy environment, or to the changing nature of things. I bet for the windy conditions.
I grew up with missions such as Cassini and must admit that I find it sad that it ran out of fuel.
Good bye Cassini, you have done a good job, and achieved much more as some humans do in their lifetime
Love it when youtube algorithm hits me with an amazing piece like this. Really well done, thanks so much, this definitely filled in a lot of gaps of my knowledge of this mission and there's so much more to explore. Easy sub, your other vids look super interesting as well.
id love to live on a moon of Saturn just to get up every morning and look up to see Saturn in the sky real big
Wowsers! That truly is amazing! 🎉
What about Huygens, isn't that capable of contaminating one of the moons where it landed?
It was sterilized before launch.
I appreciate the excellent graphics as well as the amazing photos from Cassini
7:20 my man pronounces Enceladus like "enchiladas"
I see a lot of flerfers saying these images are fake. What makes these images look “fake”?
Conflicts with their delusion so it has to be fake
Shoutout to the cameraman taking fotage from Cassini taking footage of Saturn
I looked at Saturn; "my favorite planet besides Earth" through an Observatory telescope in 1985 somewhere in Arizona when I was 13. I was so excited to see it, but was sooo disappointed that it looked like a projector slide had been put in the telescope. It was the only time I looked through the telescope while I was there too. I believed it would look much bigger than it did, but looking back on it, that was a cool thing to experience. Thank you GOD for it.
Thank you, scientists
@@sophiek3292 God created saturn so scientists can learn about it
the first planet i ever saw through a telescope was saturn. been my favorite since! i would love to live on one of her moons to see her up close and personal. every. day.
I remember when Cassini died, I was watching it and my mom started crying and I even got a little teary-eyed
Damn you remember when that guy died back in the day?
Yeah i almost cried too, cassini was like a father to me
How old are you?
It’s mind boggling how amazing this engineering accomplishment is.
Somehow i feel sad After Hearing Cassini's Final Orbiting...Thanks to this spacecraft and the engineers that create this awesome guy...You will be always remembered....
I wasn't surprised by the amount of CGI.
We're not allowed to see photographic images from the probe. just that one bland Grey shot at 10:58.
Lots of artwork. Thanks for sharing what NASA thinks we should be "imagining".
Thank you!
@@mohammedrahman1298 🙏🏻💕
I think alot of the images were real though
Oh cool, nice 3D model of Saturn
"Making Titan a deserving candidate to be on the list of potentially-habitable worlds" ah yes, I can't wait to live on Titan and enjoy a hot methane bath every morning
🤣🤣🤣
Can you guys tell me what’s the music in the video? It sounds beautiful!
It's always sad when such important spacecrafts and missions come to an end. But, it really isn't possible right now to have a spacecraft continually sending data and just doing stuff forever...
And to our left ladies and gentlemen, one of Saturns unknown moons, Enchilada.
Is so sad to see cassine falling into Saturn😢 and that's the day when cassine's memories will be known forever with others too.
It would be interesting to create a copy of Saturn's rings as a record and play it since the rings are like the grooves on a record.
brilliant video.
Many thanks!
This is one of those situations where you would never expect 1 thing to touch another. Id never think something from a tiny planet millions of miles away would touch the atmosphere of Saturn.
Props to the cameraman for recording all of this
411 years since Galileo first set eyes on Saturn with his telescope. Hard to believe we can see Saturn's rings from 963 million miles away. Even more impressive when you realize Saturn's rings are only about 30 feet thick.
Yea their width is 300,000km tho
Props to the camera man surviving without oxygen and not being crushed 👍
This my favourite watch of the universe. Brilliantly done.
have to donate more to NASA to see more of the graphic!
I love your videos and I do share them with my family and all my friends. Beautiful and informative. Thank you.
With all of this amazing technology allowing us to see distant planets and their moons as the probe slingshots around our solar system, you have to wonder, how in the world do we still have active flat earth societies?
It's amazing what people can convince themselves is true
At this point i believe that they are trolls
There is a certain level of stupid where someone is sorta smart but not smart enough, resulting in flat earth stupidity.
Edgy folks who have nothing better to do
The way he says Enceladus lol everyone I've ever known called it "in-sell-uh-dus"
SALAD.!!!
He killed the names of the satellites (except Titan)...if what should sound as Enkela-thoos came out like Enchilladas one dreads to think how this guy will narrate the mission to Uranus!
hats off to the cameraman who worked hard to capture cassini and saturn videos and photos hats off to that man
My question: how come Cassini never bumps into other objects such as rocks? How did it remain safe?
Another: how did it manage to defy the gravitational forces across/between these planets or moons, maintaining its objective to reach the moon 🎑?
Funally: was Cassini being controlled from earth or was moving freely on its own?
Most people seems like don't ask questions they just have faith and believe.
This narrator mangled just about every Saturnian moon's name.
I dont think the narrator is a real person. The cadence, rhythm and emphases are all in the wrong places. shame that such a beautiful story didn’t justify using an actual person to narrate it.
the moon, ANCHALADAS
He speaks of this creation like its living i love it and its so sad.
I wonder what it’s like to be a satellite discovering the unknown.
Watching Cassini plunging and breaking apart in the Saturn atmosphere is like watching someone die in your hands. That's what I felt when watching this.
Cassini and his buddy Huygens will be remembered for all information that they were able to provide to us.
The way he says Encelauds has me weak 💀
More filler images than actual images ruins this video. It appears more fake than fact visually.
Yeah no shit.
@@Rivenshield its all fake. No proper Citations for actual concrete evidence.
That's because the images were blurry.
10:04 - Smokes! That's on my 10th birthday. 😳
I remembered Cassini because of its final descent, but I forgot about the fantastic pictures of the moon, earth, and Jupiter / various moons it also took. Many of those photos are THE images seen in textbooks around the world.
it kinda freaks me out knowing we're floating and how we're so small. like- what's beyond space?? is it infinite? how did it even become a thing, y'know? So many galaxies, not knowing what's in those galaxies. It freaks me out in a good way.
You have my respect to the orbital technicians who really to calculate it accurately and execute such complex trajectories so precisely!
would like to see no cgi shots, just the real ones.
Thank you Cassini! It's been a incredible journey to explore our solar system! Thank you!
It's so amazing what humans can actually do, can't go to look for ourselves? We build a probe and attach a camera to it. Simply put by me, but truly genius. I now wonder if they ever sent a probe to the earth like planets which are closed to us, say a couple of lightyears. Probably would take decades to reach, but you know for future generations.
The sun really said you ain’t gonna take pictures of Saturn imma pull ya back 😂
the cameraman capturing casini is legend
7:06 soooo nobody saw that Glock, all this is CG
Thanks for your service ,Cassini!
Incredible. What an amazing accomplishment.
Not gonna lie. I got teary eyes as watching the vdo about the Cassini's demise. So long one of the most successful missions ever launched.
The sounds of Saturn is terrifying
Rest in fuel all spacecraft who went in deep space for humanity.
If these images came from the Cassini, who took the pictures of the Cassini ?
Lol, people are so smart until they're aren't
Cassini did.
You don't need to man a camera, it can be automated or remotely controlled just like the rest of the probe.
Thank You for your service Cassini 💙
NASA needs to make a space exploration game. I would absolutely love to visit new planets and moons, but from the safety of my own home 😂
There's Elite Dangerous, I heard that game is a good space exploring game.
Why do they always show computer generated photos with the shuttle in the video? Just show the real thing, or does it even exist?
They can't and won't answer your question.
It doesn't exist.
Respect for the photographer inside Cassini ❤️
Arreyyyy bhai tum galat samaj gye ho kuch
Mera naam ka galat use horaha hai 🤣
This satellite or probe has seen a lot during its expedition to its destination and what images. Spectacular. 😍😍😍
Really cool cgi eh
Imagine there was a way to survive a lifetime while traveling through space and people decided to just live there lives in space travel? Wow just amazing
Great video.
Thanks!
this is proof the camera man never dies