James Webb Space Telescope: Comets, Planets, and the Origin of Life

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  • Опубліковано 23 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 182

  • @sachiperez
    @sachiperez Рік тому +14

    ...when the interviewer does their homework. This is great stuff!

  • @akpanekpo6025
    @akpanekpo6025 Рік тому +92

    Brian Greene is one of my favourite physicists, not just for his obvious brilliance, but also because of his entire approach to the subject. You'll never hear him disparage others, and he has a healthy amount of respect even for non-scientists. Consider the way he engages with this other brilliant physicist: Stefanie Milam. Unlike, say, Lawrence Kraus or Neil DeGrasse Tyson, he actually allows the guest to speak. All of which leaves you thinking you've learned something, even if you haven't:)

    • @rogerman65
      @rogerman65 Рік тому +5

      He probably isn't among the very top thinkers in his choice of science, but he is a great communicator and intermediator/moderator and thus he has found his role in science - to communicate scientific progress in an up to date fashion to laymen and academics alike. He is so darned amicable and he can keep focus even after careful listening to what the other persons have to say. He doesn't interrupt and he most often follows up on what the other persons are saying instead of statingly going back to his script. Or maybe he does, but it doesn't show. I want to listen to him. He is the right person at the right place.

    • @akpanekpo6025
      @akpanekpo6025 Рік тому +3

      @@rogerman65 Alas, I'm not qualified to assess his choice of science, for I managed to leave school without ever being able to solve a single equation. So to me, anyone who can is a genius by definition. Besides, I don't think you can have his kind of biography by being second-rate, quite aside from regularly engaging with the likes of Penrose on equal terms.

    • @oaksnice
      @oaksnice Рік тому +3

      @@rogerman65 What do you mean? Physicists are unlikely to be top thinkers?

    • @rogerman65
      @rogerman65 Рік тому +1

      @@akpanekpo6025 You are right, he is not second rate. He is just not among the absolute top scientists. He is however among the absolute top of thinking people altogether. But who am I to tell. Except, this isn't a thesis, it's my sqribble on a UA-cam-channel's comment section. I am not that great at math either, but neither am I a top scientist.

    • @knowledgetracker
      @knowledgetracker Рік тому +4

      I've discovered Neil DeGrasse Tyson is not the sharpest tack in the box after watching for years. I have to turn away if I even hear him. Brian Greene is awesome because he evokes child-like wonder in the rest of us.

  • @hosehuang8565
    @hosehuang8565 Рік тому +7

    This is why I love scence, let's us know our place - since we are sharing this little planet, it's in our best interest to at least get along 🤗

  • @ивангареев-и5ю
    @ивангареев-и5ю Рік тому +13

    I've just spent 51 minutes of my life with great pleasure. Thanks!
    Hello from Russia!✋😃

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Рік тому +2

      Hi there, leave Ukraine.

    • @rahrah8962
      @rahrah8962 7 місяців тому

      Who's got the vodka 😂

  • @stellarwind1946
    @stellarwind1946 Рік тому +3

    I see a Brian Greene science video and I click

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 Рік тому +4

    How appropriate in a talk about water and life to see each speaker with a glass of water.

  • @hifibrony
    @hifibrony Рік тому +6

    Greene is such a marvelous and gifted teacher.

  • @RockEdison
    @RockEdison Рік тому +9

    She was absolutely amazing and what a marvelous human mind. Thanks for all of your insight Stefanie Milam! Well done.

    • @wagfinpis
      @wagfinpis Рік тому

      I was worried this Vogon was going to recite a poem, but she didn't; phew!

  • @nathc5479
    @nathc5479 Рік тому +12

    When Brian can sit back and listen like the rest of us you know this woman knows her stuff. Really enjoyed this 😎

  • @Paul_Ch52
    @Paul_Ch52 Рік тому +4

    Thank you, Dr. G. You attract the most interesting guests for the most interesting subjects. This has been one of the best. Dr. Milam is an excellent communicator with a deep knowledge of her subject. Thank you both.

  • @Ava31415
    @Ava31415 Рік тому +19

    Ah, the wonder of knowing something no one else in the world knows, and the thrill of spreading that knowledge: you lucky people! Keep the thrills going with our thanks.

    • @vvanderer
      @vvanderer Рік тому

      That CAN be as mundane as doing a rich liquid fart. You get a warm feeling and a strange expression on your face, but no one knows why.

  • @bradbird100
    @bradbird100 Рік тому +9

    Brian Greene, thank you for what you do 🙏

  • @tobycortes
    @tobycortes Рік тому +8

    videography in this one is SICK !!!!! Great job!!!

  • @SailingEast
    @SailingEast Рік тому +8

    Outstanding interview by Brian, allowing Stephanie’s scientific discussion to blossom for the layman. Nice to see Brian bringing Stephanie back to the layman’s arena when she would get on a PhD discussion tangent role … fine for PhDs, not so much this audience. Thanks to both, best.

    • @patrickcarney5811
      @patrickcarney5811 Рік тому

      Neil. Take note. Let your guests finish sentences. Even multiple ones.

  • @ThatBoyTweek
    @ThatBoyTweek Рік тому +8

    very excited for what the future discoveries will hold for us.

  • @jinstinky501
    @jinstinky501 Рік тому +2

    Water is vital... but so are you. Thanks for the video.

  • @balaji-kartha
    @balaji-kartha Рік тому +8

    Great to see Greene (a theoretical physicist) get amazed by observational astronomers ❤

  • @IselaAvila
    @IselaAvila Рік тому +1

    She exuded all the excitement! Loved this conversation!

  • @рейкарина
    @рейкарина Рік тому +3

    Brian Greene❤ amazing as always. Thank you so much

  • @M0U53B41T
    @M0U53B41T Рік тому +6

    Thanks for this! it was amazing

  • @balaji-kartha
    @balaji-kartha Рік тому +6

    The amazing evidence of it just being by chance that our solar system was born and birth of Earth and evolution of life and birth of humans and for us to be here to discuss all this is just mind blowing!!

  • @jbrownjetmech-4783
    @jbrownjetmech-4783 Рік тому

    Always like a good episode of The World Science Festival.

  • @ludgang5
    @ludgang5 Рік тому +7

    Great discussion

  • @b-retrogamer2324
    @b-retrogamer2324 Рік тому +21

    BG going with the mad scientist look these days. I approve of this.

    • @Ava31415
      @Ava31415 Рік тому

      Well he's not JC, he's just a very naughty boy, and knows I had no choice but to add this comment...

    • @nulfire
      @nulfire Рік тому +1

      And a faux dog collar to boot

  • @frankbarnwell____
    @frankbarnwell____ Рік тому +4

    Best news since the galaxy conceived Earth.

  • @YersiniaPestisNPO
    @YersiniaPestisNPO Рік тому +1

    Dr Greene is such a great host and presenter. I think his most admirable quality, besides his intellect, is his low ego. He doesn't have to act like the smartest person in the room (cough cough Neil deGrasse Tyson) and let's others teach him (and us) in a very comfortable and non combative way.

    • @gps9715
      @gps9715 7 місяців тому

      Generally speaking the smartest people in the room usually don't mind not being thought of as the smartest person in the room. Only those who have egos with something to prove are the ones who need to be known as the smartest person in the room.

  • @meetghelani5222
    @meetghelani5222 Рік тому

    This was a great interview, thanks WSF, hoping to watch more of these talks this year!

  • @paxdriver
    @paxdriver Рік тому +1

    The intro piano is soooo nice, great choice in production

  • @larrycarino4903
    @larrycarino4903 Рік тому +4

    This is amazing!!! Thank you so much!

  • @Whippets
    @Whippets Рік тому

    I very much enjoyed the more "practical" aspects of this discussion.

  • @johnpavon799
    @johnpavon799 Рік тому +3

    Great Video thanks for sharing!

  • @cosmoslogic9088
    @cosmoslogic9088 Рік тому +2

    We learn at a fast pace today one answer in Physics leads to more than a hundred questions and yes we are leap-frogging our knowledge of the Cosmos the major factor is that we have JWST to quantify what we think we are really looking at what it means to us for our future, The Cosmos is like a super colossal pinball machine things come in and things disappear in microseconds I hope what we find out is accurate enuff to help us make the major changes to our knowledge that we need to survive and maybe keep our planet Earth in the condition that helps us. I truly love the interest and comments said here.

  • @HGALAXIES
    @HGALAXIES Рік тому

    Eye opening, as always! 🎉🌐🌟💫

  • @infuriatedgerm
    @infuriatedgerm Рік тому +1

    Brian is a Gangsta!

  • @bereel5621
    @bereel5621 Рік тому

    WOW!!! TY Dr. Green a MILLION TIMES!!!!!! ^.^

  • @BrianFedirko
    @BrianFedirko Рік тому +4

    A tattoo for teaching! Wow, I've never seen anybody with a useful tat before. What a great educational tool and reason.

  • @frissonsteemit2318
    @frissonsteemit2318 Рік тому +1

    AWESOME !!!!!! 👾

  • @mikeclarke952
    @mikeclarke952 Рік тому +1

    I don't understand, so the Brownian motion velocity of the original water molecules was greater than 7 miles/sec? That's how hot the Earth was? Can someone do a calculation for that?

  • @rhoddryice5412
    @rhoddryice5412 Рік тому +1

    36:22 Formalhaut is at 25 light years. Not 10000. Almost three orders of magnitude wrong!

  • @falvegas511
    @falvegas511 10 місяців тому +1

    JWT IS SO IMPRESSIVE. What many may not realize is that IF EXOPLANETS are found Say - 1/3 of way across the Galaxy (Milky Way) - That Planet's Light has been traveling to Earth for 30,000 to 50,000 Years. A lot could have happened since then. For Galaxies Millions of Light Years away, that could be a lot of change...or evolution.

  • @petersheppard1979
    @petersheppard1979 Рік тому +2

    Top marks 🙂

  • @JASONQUANTUM1
    @JASONQUANTUM1 Рік тому +2

    This is my hypothesis. The enigmatic nature of black holes and solving the information paradox. In this theoretical framework, the photon sphere of the black hole acts as a "white hole" emitting information in the form of Hawking radiation. This emitted radiation, being a quantum state vector, imprints onto the holographic screen surrounding the black hole as a lattice of qubits or "Plixels."
    The lattice of qubits represents the encoded quantum information about the properties and characteristics of objects that have fallen into the black hole. The mathematical information contained in this quantum state vector describes various attributes, including velocity, acceleration, and the probability of spin states.
    This novel approach hints at a new type of physics that explores the relationship between black holes, quantum mechanics, and information theory. The idea of a holographic universe, programmed with bits of light in the form of Hawking radiation and encoded onto the lattice of qubits, holds the potential to unveil profound insights into the fundamental workings of our universe.

    • @MacNif
      @MacNif Рік тому +1

      You should publish your idea

  • @josee4283
    @josee4283 Рік тому +1

    she is awesome

  • @MuhyadinMohamedAbdulahi
    @MuhyadinMohamedAbdulahi Рік тому

    Copied from my last night comments and happy to watch this tonight. I went to school without laboratory
    I don't consider myself a science because I am not. And I don't want even to make efforts to acquire titles attached with my name because that is gonna create personal actualization which is a big cause of many human faults as it creates higher expectations from other people and that person who holds those titles tries to defend them by all costs whether in political or in business instead of acting and interacting with people as a normal human being who makes mistakes, who learns new things, who doesn't know many of the things who accepts and admits faults honestly, who asks forgiveness when they hurt others and compensate others if they did anything bad to countable (physical) by actions and regrets and apologizes when they hurt others in words and make much effort in self discipline of never hurting any one intentionally but that is not passive quality and weakness. Who doesn't regret and doesn't hesitate to denounce horrible acts including theirs first and then other people's
    This topic of food security was well addressed which when lacked creates "food insecurity"
    But quite different topic, I often hear climate change and climate justice and that countries most affected by climate crisis are the poorest.
    I also hear carbon dioxide (CO2) discussed which is the gasses animal breath out (exhalation process) and plants take. Ok.
    We also know that carbon monoxide is (meaning carbon with single oxygen at molecule level) reaction of two elements at gas state (substance state .... solid .... liquid and gas). Ok. This state is always due to the level of temperature (0 degree is the center) above 0 degree is hot or + and below is cold at substance level not human level because water is the center or queen measurement used at classification with the temperature so 0 deg is the freezing (ice point of water) which is two elements of hydrogen and one element of oxygen at molecule level or you can forgive me and say two atoms and one atom at this level because element is made up of atoms. Ok.
    Carbon monoxide needs more chemical reactions and that is why it takes one more oxygen to become stable at the electrons +- (loosing and gaining between the elements in reaction) gases which are usually in the category of the periodic table in chemistry depending on the electrons cycle in outer layer with the atoms to create elements and between the chemicals (with other elements to create molecules).
    First, carbon is eating the oxygen usually present in the lower atmosphere as gas. I said as a gas because with water it needs process to purity from it. Ok.
    When temperature of the earth goes up, snows will heat up and make rivers to follow to the seas because sea level is the lowest of the earth and that why altitude is measured from the sea level.
    Can we imagine the level of effects of such water follow not only in erosion but also every thing else. We can even bear in rain floods. But I hope, I am wrong and the solid snow oceans, seas and on lands are already in the sea level and will not make any water follow.

  • @princeindrajitlawlaha7027
    @princeindrajitlawlaha7027 Рік тому +1

    Happy FRIDAY ~ 😇

  • @BryanWard0926
    @BryanWard0926 Рік тому

    Do we have rings around Earth such as this that are detectable with James Webb telescope ?

  • @saulsavelis575
    @saulsavelis575 Рік тому +3

    Earth's water came mostly from the Sun: protons reached Earth's oxygens and still reaching and producing water in Earth's atmosphere.

  • @barrypoontang
    @barrypoontang Рік тому

    Can water be generated from its constituents via the earth formation itself? If the earth was a super furnace and abundant with ingredients can it spew from volcanic suface interaction with its relativly cool crust? AKA can we fog the glass of our planet to bring enough mist?

  • @terrywbreedlove
    @terrywbreedlove 6 місяців тому

    Is that image of Uranus natural light as we would see it with the naked eye ?

  • @qa1e2r4
    @qa1e2r4 Рік тому

    Where did the water from mars+atmosphere go to?

  • @MrBitterman75
    @MrBitterman75 Рік тому

    That tatoo was hilarious😂 18:26

  • @gsilcoful
    @gsilcoful Рік тому +1

    Vrey cool stuff.

  • @ericmeade3757
    @ericmeade3757 Рік тому

    When do we get to see a James Webb of earth?

  • @nutz2991
    @nutz2991 Рік тому

    Nice

  • @danielpaskoful
    @danielpaskoful Рік тому

    Of course our solar system is unique Brian, it’s the only one we know of to have life.

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Рік тому

      That doesn't mean that it is unique at all. The thing that would make it unique, by definition, is if it were the only system where that is true, and we have no way to know, either way. I expect that solar systems with life are literally a dime a dozen, and unlike ours some probably include intelligent life.
      I propose that ours does not, since the only species claiming to demonstrate signs of intelligence is crapping in the only kitchen it has, and maybe to the point already where the end is nigh, not today or tomorrow, but not that many years away, either.

  • @mdtys
    @mdtys Рік тому

    4:53 would make a great album cover

  • @fredcrown-tamir698
    @fredcrown-tamir698 8 місяців тому

    For any late watchers of this program, you can be assured that all of the Cosmos is in perfect harmony with our Creators will! Find answers in the four gospels you can trust. :-)

  • @jackwt7340
    @jackwt7340 Рік тому +2

    Some planets may have evolved the ability to breed Centaurs, Dryads, gargoyles, penguins with two hands, flying chimpanzees...🦄
    The genes of these new species are preserved in the ice ball at the center of these planets. 🧊
    These planets periodically melt the central ice ball, releasing new species onto the surface.🦠🐋🦭🐖🎎

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Рік тому

      Good luck with that. Sounds fun though.

  • @mikelore9914
    @mikelore9914 Рік тому +5

    Dear NASA, your mom thought I was big enough -Pluto

  • @c130comm
    @c130comm Рік тому +1

    wow

  • @janklaas6885
    @janklaas6885 Рік тому

    📍38:27

  • @peterbroderson6080
    @peterbroderson6080 Рік тому

    The moment a particle is a wave; it has to be a conscious wave!
    Gravity is the conscious attraction among waves to create the illusion of particles,
    and our experience-able Universe.
    Max Planck states: "Consciousness is fundamental and matter is derived from Consciousness".
    Life is the Infinite Consciousness, experiencing the Infinite Possibilities, Infinitely.
    We are "It", experiencing our infinite possibilities in our finite moment.
    Our job is to make it interesting!

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Рік тому +1

      Max was on some very good drugs at the time, and in one hell of a 'we're everything' circle jerk. Masergy is an old concept. Gravity creating particles seems far fetched, and it being conscious is absurd. Mankind thinks it's the center of the universe, making goofy statement like 'we are the universe trying to understand itself, when in reality we are, in total, probably completely inconsequential.

  • @saulsavelis575
    @saulsavelis575 Рік тому +1

    LISTEN KIDS (in short, the real world has two fields who form one particle electron=photon: magnetic is perpendicular to the plane of whirpool which produces electric field falling into that whirpool and emerging as magnetic field), THIS KNOWLEDGE WAS REVEALED IN THE YEAR 2000 (I just needed to learn English to transfer it to you): electron is photon (electron is a real atom which is a manifestation of electric and magnetic perpendicular fields like whirpool or eddy or black hole), left and right electrons form neutrino, gravity is uncompensated (or relativistic) electric field of proton (smaller particles consist of bunch of electrons and gravity there is called strong and weak force/field), proton consist of approx 2000 electrons, neutron is electron plus proton, light has no colors since it is a bunch of photons at various distances between themselves traveling in the same direction like thrown sand particles in the air, the red shift is not only due to Doppler effect, but and due to spatial dispersion both due to angular divergence and due to absorption of some photons by matter particles on the path (overall effect is red shift, like averaged distances between photons=electrons falling on averaged areas gives a sensation of frequency and color), a single photon has got no frequency. Universe is INFINITE and ETERNAL, we just cannot see (and will never be able) very deep in space since the lack of PHOTONS reaching us.

  • @AurelienCarnoy
    @AurelienCarnoy Рік тому

    That lady looks so bright while green looks...
    Thank you for the video

  • @jamesorenthal-bm4sp
    @jamesorenthal-bm4sp Рік тому +1

    " we are stardust, we are golden..."

  • @bdr420i
    @bdr420i Рік тому

    Do earth has rings?

  • @AdilKhan-gd2sc
    @AdilKhan-gd2sc Рік тому +1

    Question 4: Where did the asteroids get their water from?

    • @TideOfStamps
      @TideOfStamps Рік тому +1

      I have read or seen video somewhere that explaned this.The water is created in formation of stars. All starts in particle level. The birth of star and its solar system is like machine that throws out elements and in right temperature, pressure, radiation and distance from the sun if there is right building elements and usually there is you get water. Actually if we look at all these recent findings water is not so rare in universe and how could it be.😂 It is just that usually it is not in right form if we look at it from life's perspective. In the early time of formation of the star there is a sphere/distance from star where this is possible and I suppose all these rocky objects just need to fly through or be formed in this area to get water with them.
      I heard that The Earth is loosing more water than getting it at the moment. Lucky us we still have relatively good amount it left.
      Just let me know if this theory sounds completely wrong.😊 Actually this made me thinking when this water formation ends, is it still going on? Obviously happens somewhere but still in our solar system? Maybe too old system allready.

    • @AdilKhan-gd2sc
      @AdilKhan-gd2sc Рік тому +1

      @@TideOfStamps sounds plausible. Thanks for taking the time to elaborate!

  • @russchadwell
    @russchadwell Рік тому

    For Earth, Theia.

  • @thelyrebird1310
    @thelyrebird1310 Рік тому +1

    Well my question is, does earth have rings?

  • @chadlummark2489
    @chadlummark2489 Рік тому

    This channel should have more subscribers and viewer than Mr beast

  • @nickinurse6433
    @nickinurse6433 Рік тому

    The question isn't where did the water come from....but where did the oxygen come from as it is the more complicated rarer atom. We need to back to epochs with fungus only for answer.

  • @McNastyxx95
    @McNastyxx95 Рік тому +1

    I feel like earth was just a ball of ice in the beginning, and once it got struck by a huge rock like asteroid it gave us the material needed .
    Because the amount of water here is just crazy to think it came like buckets of water filling a pool.
    I’d say the pool was already full, then it got floaties and other things added or thrown in.
    My opinion anyways.

  • @SusaninNewYork
    @SusaninNewYork Рік тому

    I missed the first 20 minutes. Weren’t you supposed to send a link before the program started? Never got one. I had to do an exploration to find this. I will never leave a donation again!

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 Рік тому +1

    Dr. Milam looks like she came out of a 17th century Flemish painting,

  • @rbucius5584
    @rbucius5584 Рік тому

    We got water from Mars, and Moon is water tanker.

  • @jynxkizs
    @jynxkizs Рік тому

    So maybe a lack of water is why life is so rare in the universe?

  • @agneevraha231
    @agneevraha231 Рік тому

    Just like the shaft is cooled to produce force in Nuclear Plants. The oort cloud is a possibility of having metals and water in asteroids revolving due to Sun's Gravity so create a spherical band of metal and water. The direction the asteroids in the OORT cloud move, the electromagnetic flux produced by the moving asteroids is stabilized to create a field, that shuns outside Solar System Radiation. That is why water is required.

  • @dusanvuckovic17
    @dusanvuckovic17 Рік тому

    are we atoms?

  • @janusatthegate6201
    @janusatthegate6201 Рік тому +1

    Uranus is the Greek god of the sky.

  • @diolievecbdproducts8378
    @diolievecbdproducts8378 Рік тому

    Not showing us the images you are talking about really sucks

  • @mariyammapapabathiniratnam7862

    Sorry to say that about the space water , when the creation of the earth God separate half of the water on Earth and the half to up side and the middle place is called space see Bible (Genesis 1: 1-8)
    this is made on second day here the earth is having water but the upper water , the earth is made by 24 hours 12 hours day and 12 hours night but to know sky water actually while creation God added.2 more means 3 planets or something like this that these are the numbers 10 and 12 for 10 is 25 or 55 and 12 is 26 as 66 each one is having the separate meaning and to tell about 10 and 12 called J and L means in Indian language water and normally where the water there must be fish so 25 is as 55 and 26 is called 12 here 5 5 12 called EEL the name of the fish the secret is after number 10 the next number is 11 and 12 is as in neumaralagi 1 is A so 10 11 12 as J AA L means in Indian language Hindi meaning net the fishing net so we must know that there is water and normally the place is called God place where God is sitting on the 11 the number is invisible the size is as each one is the length is 18 and the width 12 as each 29 and 26 as called 1290 and 1260 and 1290 1260 as 49 is 9999 =36 and 46 is 6666= 24 as the same earth measurements and each number that is 11 is having the name called Jehovah and Boez means Jesus Christ see Bible ( 1Kings 7::15) and right side J left side L the Jesus Christ and the Lucifer sitting so this is called the thrown of God and the Earth is God's threshold hold thanks

  • @Lostcause1974
    @Lostcause1974 Рік тому

    Best use of a tattoo? I think so.

  • @SS-of2gr
    @SS-of2gr Рік тому

    Very cool. Not sure it's $12B cool, but it's cool.

  • @soku608
    @soku608 Рік тому

    U know it real when she has the solar system tatted on

  • @justinwalker4475
    @justinwalker4475 Рік тому

    Why can't i have my own planet ?

  • @FlockOfHawks
    @FlockOfHawks Рік тому +2

    That voice is simply too much for my misophonia , sorry

  • @jeffmerklinger9067
    @jeffmerklinger9067 Рік тому

    If water is so important why are we allowing Fukushima Japan to dump nuclear waste into Ocean?

  • @NaRaj21
    @NaRaj21 Рік тому +1

    Brian is not looking well. Hope he is in good health.

  • @Vagolyk
    @Vagolyk Рік тому

    The notion of life needing water on planets where liquid diamond rains, in wildly different environments than Earth seems biased and unscientific.

  • @stoatystoat174
    @stoatystoat174 Рік тому

    :)

  • @_JustinCase_
    @_JustinCase_ Рік тому

    Doggonit. Missed the first 20 minutes.

  • @MS-od7je
    @MS-od7je Рік тому

    Do you people have any idea how list you sound?

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage Рік тому +1

    I hope he got some sleep.

  • @quenepas415
    @quenepas415 Рік тому

    She openly admits that they withhold data and pictures from the public. Pretty annoying.

  • @kwal559
    @kwal559 Рік тому +3

    hey - take it easy science.. i'm losing followers -(insert religion here)

    • @sharafhussain1987
      @sharafhussain1987 Рік тому

      shallow minded like you who never truly understand science for they talk like this

  • @civir1226
    @civir1226 Рік тому

    A few things. She keeps saying dust ice clouds? Those all are biological processes. Dust is organic, ice is frozen liquid water or transition metal, and clouds of particles? 4 seasons ? You only need four season if you have a plant cycle or something similar. Also she says they have to proint the telescope at a Star first to the capture an image of Neptune/Uranus.. lol. The truth is all between the lines and poor use of words as descriptions. In or outside the lexicon of Astrophysics and Asto-Bio-Chemistry.

  • @AliPo-ne3yf
    @AliPo-ne3yf Рік тому +1

    So mch $ And So Long To Create@JW🛰 and a half million km's away ONLY in a infinite universe..I Have More Faith in Voyager loll😭🙌🏼💫

  • @garysnewjob
    @garysnewjob Рік тому

    Origin of Life: no more answers than in the 80's. Still more questions than answers. I won't call the title Click BAIT, but just be clear. The theories and stories of the origin of life have not changed in 40 years.

  • @Ketofit62
    @Ketofit62 Рік тому

    What are you gonna do with advising and comment go to squeeze it out of the comment and drink it?

  • @tomsawyer4776
    @tomsawyer4776 Рік тому

    The Godless will always be clueless.