NASA Telescope Discovered Planets Even Better for Life Than Earth

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  • Опубліковано 28 кві 2024
  • NASA Telescope Discovered Planets Even Better for Life Than Earth
    ► Subscribe: goo.gl/r5jd1F
    Humanity has been wondering for a long time: "Are we alone in the Universe"? Is there a mind in its vast expanses, born under a different sun and looking at completely different stars in the night sky? On April 18, 2018, the TESS space telescope was launched on a Falcon 9 launch vehicle to search for exoplanets, that is, planets outside the solar system. Almost four years have passed since then. What was discovered during this time? Are we any closer to answering one of humanity's most burning, intriguing questions - is there extraterrestrial life? Are we alone in the universe?
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 999

  • @kf9346
    @kf9346 Рік тому +76

    Wait a minute... I recognise that soothing, friendly voice! That's the narrator form Kurzgesagt!

  • @notapplicable761
    @notapplicable761 Рік тому +146

    FACE it friends… we are stuck with the beautiful earth we have, let’s all just try to take care of it!

    • @johnklausi
      @johnklausi Рік тому +7

      I just hope that we're able to preserve that beauty, while it's still here to preserve.
      ...or maybe we'll get lucky with a break through on the Alcubierre FLT Drive. lol

    • @ndld4955
      @ndld4955 Рік тому +11

      Ya .. but i kinda want a backup..
      Just incase..
      😬👍

    • @garyanthony3627
      @garyanthony3627 Рік тому +6

      It’s to late we completely shit on the gift of life the ipcc has stated that it will be within the 3 degrees temperature rise within the next 30 years

    • @cryptonomous888
      @cryptonomous888 Рік тому

      Governments are destroying the world, freedom is being demolished. Need a fresh start.

    • @PrOtaku123
      @PrOtaku123 Рік тому +6

      Facts, it’s really pointless still searching for life outside of earth because everything near we can’t reach and secondly like how does it affect us if there is life just for more knowlede

  • @chungusmaximus526
    @chungusmaximus526 Рік тому +348

    Shout-out to the cameraman for showing us the planets.

  • @TheJohnberger
    @TheJohnberger Рік тому +52

    I can only watch about 15 minutes of these videos before I realize my mind is literally in space.

    • @ndld4955
      @ndld4955 Рік тому +11

      I like to watch videos like this when i want to sleep..
      Kinda like informational asmr ..
      I have tiniest so it helps ...
      👍😬

    • @nancyharper1360
      @nancyharper1360 2 місяці тому

      ​@@ndld4955 *Tinnitus - you're welcome. 😊 (Me too.... 🫤)

  • @bandini22221
    @bandini22221 Рік тому +16

    I doubt that any alien world could be "better" for human life than the world we grew up on. The earth is fined tuned to us ...and us to it...through billions of years of evolution right down to the very microbes in the air and water.

  • @r7rahuls
    @r7rahuls Рік тому +8

    What makes me sad is that I won't be alive to see these places.

    • @Radrook353
      @Radrook353 Рік тому +1

      Most of past humanity was never alive to see the marvels we are seeing right now.

    • @SKYSKY-vn9zb
      @SKYSKY-vn9zb Місяць тому

      Very sad reality 😞 😢

  • @martymcpeak4748
    @martymcpeak4748 11 місяців тому +2

    I am so gladvyour channel came up in my feed, What a great documentary, liked and subscribed and looking forward to the next installment. Cheers and Thank You for making these.

  • @mariaansari248
    @mariaansari248 11 місяців тому +67

    I love watching anything that has to do with finding different planets and possibly harboring life. Those ideas are absolutely awesome. Could you imagine to be able to live one day on a different planet? I would love to be a part of that. But I also think that we are going to be stuck here for long while.

    • @girlbossfromscratch
      @girlbossfromscratch 10 місяців тому +3

      It's not easy to live on another planet. It would take you 100 years to reach them. It's only good in the movies. Dream on.

    • @IB4UUB4ME
      @IB4UUB4ME 10 місяців тому +1

      @@girlbossfromscratchwhile it’s moving further away from you, it would be like chasing the horizon!

    • @nyoungjunior
      @nyoungjunior 9 місяців тому +6

      Take care of the planet you currently live on. There is no need to go and destroy another planet.

    • @PeterJanssens-he5ns
      @PeterJanssens-he5ns 7 місяців тому +1

      this planet will be here a long time after you are gone@@nyoungjunior

    • @apexxxdarkenergy203
      @apexxxdarkenergy203 4 місяці тому

      We were meant for other planet , our body belongs here , and your idea is colonialism of another planet forcefully, and look what Europeans have done to many cultures and the cause and effects, would you want other far advance aliens to invade planet earth? Good thing the don't go against the universe and creation like human creatures, not human beings wich we all need to start being

  • @ericb2017
    @ericb2017 Рік тому +33

    is this new material or retreads? I can never tell anymore

    • @nomadbynature8811
      @nomadbynature8811 Рік тому +11

      Thank you for saying this. I'm leaving a comment on your comment so I will know that I've been here before.

    • @ericb2017
      @ericb2017 Рік тому +10

      @@nomadbynature8811 I’m just a glorified bookmark?

    • @diogenesstudent5585
      @diogenesstudent5585 Рік тому +1

      Yep

    • @toddlerj102
      @toddlerj102 Рік тому +2

      I was listening to it until "jwst will be launched in Oct 2021" lol, I'm out ->

    • @ericb2017
      @ericb2017 Рік тому

      What the hell are we talking about here boys? Sounds like just a bunch of random shit.

  • @nicbaeten
    @nicbaeten Рік тому +25

    Strange that they always talk about a planet in the goldy lock zone and never talk about a big moon that circle arround it what is also very nessesary for life to have like on earth.

    • @literallyjustabean8635
      @literallyjustabean8635 Рік тому

      Hold up is the moon like actually critical for life on Earth? I knew tides would get crazy and stuff but like that doesn't necessarily mean life would end

    • @nkadimashiane
      @nkadimashiane Рік тому +6

      The moon is critical for life. It helps the earth's axis to become stable, thus helping maintain good temperatures on earth. The earth would rotate2 to 4 times faster making a day 6 to 12 hours long nights would be pitch black. The moon has saved the earth from a lot of astriod and meteorite impacts. Tides also are important for evolution and weather control around the earth.

    • @Radrook353
      @Radrook353 Рік тому +4

      Noticing too many requirements for life might force them to struggle against a conclusion they wish to desperately evade.

    • @hideoron
      @hideoron Рік тому

      Well our Moon just not got normal name as other planets moons. Let's call our moon Luna. Titan of Saturn is closest to Earth as i know from all info i get till now. Titan is second world in Solar system who have hard body, liquid lakes and seas (even its not of water but of liquid methane and ethane and maybe other liquid kind of gas), second world where raining (not diamonds or other more strange things, but a liquid gas drops falling down in Titan), when heard there landscape are familiar to our Earth. One minus there probably too cold for us and still too far and not safe to travel in Titan. But i believe Titan sky would look awesome, and could see Saturn rings from much closer😅

    • @parallelparkdaudette2863
      @parallelparkdaudette2863 8 місяців тому

      ​@@literallyjustabean8635the moon causes women to menstruate. Without the moon, we couldn't reproduce.

  • @Nicole-kt5qf
    @Nicole-kt5qf 7 місяців тому

    Man, I'm really grateful this is on UA-cam

  • @majorkramer
    @majorkramer Рік тому +110

    I'm thinking the only way to colonize space is not to find a planet first but to be able to survive on a massive space ship that can sustain it's on ecosystem, factories, science lab ect. If & when you do find a suitable planet we are going to need to be able to provide our explorers with a huge supplies of raw materials & machines to process it.

    • @frankszander2761
      @frankszander2761 Рік тому +8

      Not necessarily. There are also ideas around, manipulating human genes to survive statis as well as space radiation.

    • @realname2490
      @realname2490 Рік тому +15

      Nah you would need that for the trip alone unless we figure out faster travel we will simply not be able to leave this solar system in any realistic time frame.

    • @coralmonty5280
      @coralmonty5280 Рік тому

      Sustained radiation is also a problem. All studies have shown that it causes problems for pregnant women and babies, who's to say that humanity will reach a planet that is several hundred light years away if that population cannot survive several generations in space.

    • @majorkramer
      @majorkramer Рік тому +8

      Just think of the odds against survival. Imagine finding a habitable planet only to be shot down or kidnapped by the species that inherited the planet discovered. Lol

    • @rockyjohnson9243
      @rockyjohnson9243 Рік тому +4

      Not only do we need to go faster in space we need to develop shields to deflect micro asteroids at least. I would imagine the habitat / spaceship would be massive in order to provide a decent jump start on the new planet. Hibernation pod's that keep you from aging should be something to also look forward to. Along with complex 3d printing tech. that can use many different materials to create what is needed.

  • @bartekw2344
    @bartekw2344 Рік тому +27

    Great video, although it would be nice to see something newer, which would include some information that we already gathered with JWST. The narrator in this video mentions that JWST "is set to be launched in 2021", which means that the video was made probably early 2021 so almost 2 years ago.

  • @Stormyweather751
    @Stormyweather751 Рік тому +14

    It is wonderful that this video is here. And that there are signs of hope. However, the only discouraging factor is these planets are so far away and will never be able to go there in our lifetime.

    • @itspurple9824
      @itspurple9824 Рік тому +4

      shshshhhhh dont say that its not true we will gooo
      shhjhhhhnhhhhhhhhhhh not true
      please dont say that shshshhhhhhhh

    • @IB4UUB4ME
      @IB4UUB4ME 10 місяців тому +1

      They are also moving away from us at breakneck speeds, one thing that people tend to forget !

    • @jonny555ive
      @jonny555ive 9 місяців тому

      Elon has joined the chat........

  • @MosesOpoke-rl3dl
    @MosesOpoke-rl3dl 9 місяців тому

    Thanks for your efforts, we appreciate you,

  • @chefdicko
    @chefdicko Рік тому +1

    Brilliant documentary thankyou.

  • @hyphyhijabi
    @hyphyhijabi Рік тому +11

    there’s a lot of negative comments but this content is incredible. humans advance through dreaming, learning, and being innovative. we must always push the boundaries of impossible

  • @OlatundeAdegbola
    @OlatundeAdegbola Рік тому +11

    Every time I watch a space video, I'm always blown away! 👌🔥

  • @Space_Library
    @Space_Library 10 днів тому +1

    Bravo! This video not only celebrates the achievements of NASA's Kepler mission but also sparks our curiosity about the vast possibilities of the cosmos. The narration skillfully guides us through the complexities of exoplanet discoveries, leaving us in awe of the universe's diversity. It's a reminder of the importance of scientific exploration and the boundless potential for discovery.

  • @skywolf2012
    @skywolf2012 Рік тому +11

    My brain just got smarter ,thanks for making such fascinating video.

  • @17DeMerion
    @17DeMerion Рік тому +13

    I would love to hear what everyone else is doing in terms of space exploration.

    • @jayeshnathani6929
      @jayeshnathani6929 Рік тому +3

      Well I am currently gazing into space with my very own eyes for no reason other than what u wanted to hear about exploring space

    • @sameshitdifferentsmell1305
      @sameshitdifferentsmell1305 Рік тому

      @@jayeshnathani6929good job buddy, glad someone was listening 👂🏼 💀

    • @jayeshnathani6929
      @jayeshnathani6929 Рік тому +1

      @@sameshitdifferentsmell1305 😂👍

    • @sameshitdifferentsmell1305
      @sameshitdifferentsmell1305 Рік тому

      @@jayeshnathani6929 👍🏼😂

    • @philmorris8862
      @philmorris8862 Рік тому +1

      I looked around in my attic this morning. Does that count?

  • @vaelinlaornas
    @vaelinlaornas Рік тому +2

    Everytime a excellent video

  • @user-fy6ck9di1f
    @user-fy6ck9di1f 7 місяців тому

    Thanks for sharing this massage association with deep science discovery.

  • @codyschuler8471
    @codyschuler8471 Рік тому +7

    It's only time before we find Them 👽

  • @Kakashi-Hatake-1Eye
    @Kakashi-Hatake-1Eye Рік тому +13

    Destiny has a very good and dedicated cameraman

    • @arminskols1998
      @arminskols1998 Рік тому +2

      Enough with the cameraman jokes. It was kinda funny at first but now it's overused

    • @HectorNykterstein
      @HectorNykterstein Рік тому

      U copy my kakashi rokodaime

  • @sullystpatrick
    @sullystpatrick Рік тому +6

    * *aliens in the ocean observing us prioritize planets millions of light years away* *
    “These humans stupid af”

  • @darrellschulte3868
    @darrellschulte3868 Рік тому +26

    I'm not very optimistic that humans will ever have the technology to travel to other star systems. Future generations of people need to make some serious changes as to how everyone can coexist with each other, and the planet

    • @sancte3982
      @sancte3982 10 місяців тому +4

      Considering all the discoveries and inventions done by mankind the last 500 years alone, i wouldnt rush it, we will get there.
      Unless we choose to end ourselves that is.

    • @xynonners
      @xynonners 10 місяців тому +2

      ​@@sancte3982 the real question is if earth has enough resources to sustain us (and R&D) that long

    • @BonnieBlindBox
      @BonnieBlindBox 10 місяців тому

      We definitely don’t have enough resources here. The main question is if we can evolve, physically and mentally to put all our efforts into saving ourselves. If resources are so short for us to continue making breakthroughs, peace for humanity will cease to exist, as the more people, the more space and resources are stretched. People need to become as useful as possible or just cease to exist at all. If we can work together and be smart enough to use resources we have and from other planets, I have no doubt we can manipulate them to escape to other planets when earth is beginning to die. We could definitely sustain small populations of people and life off food we grow in a spaceship, but we definitely couldn’t protect populations of which we have right now, so I’m really concerned with what’s going to happen to people in general. It’s estimated by some scientists that humans will split into sub species, one super smart and another completely opposite, wealth will definitely be a factor for more poverty and stop certain people from becoming educated. Hence creating two divisions of the human race. We should have a lot of time before our star dies, but right now, may actually be the most peaceful period of humanity EVER.

    • @Norseman2
      @Norseman2 10 місяців тому

      I think AI will figure it out for us.

    • @sancte3982
      @sancte3982 10 місяців тому

      You basically explained how the world already works and has done for the last 500 years

  • @ranonampangom2185
    @ranonampangom2185 9 місяців тому +14

    It's nice to imagine that plant and animal life thrives on another planet, given what we've done to this one. I hope that planet, if it exists, remains human-free for eternity.

  • @bullsheets6151
    @bullsheets6151 Рік тому +13

    Still really cool videos, but the thumbnail and title always make the videos seem way cooler. Not a bad thing at all tho

  • @nicholascosentino8492
    @nicholascosentino8492 Рік тому +2

    Thats great news. All we have to do is hitchhic onto the mothership for a lift.
    Hahaha

  • @VintageGangstaK
    @VintageGangstaK 7 місяців тому

    Truly Awesome Video 📹 👏 🙌 👌

  • @schoolclass1010
    @schoolclass1010 Рік тому +5

    Amazing content 😊

  • @jkim5746
    @jkim5746 Рік тому +5

    Time to blast out colony ships to the best candidates

  • @GamerDave1974
    @GamerDave1974 Рік тому +12

    As for the Kepler Planets, how far Back are we looking? What we're seeing could be millions of years in Their past.

    • @bangrojai4868
      @bangrojai4868 Рік тому +1

      Millions years, there maybe only a little change of the planet. In a billion years, it could be already gone.

    • @martindesjardin4774
      @martindesjardin4774 Рік тому +1

      Not millions, what we see when looking is 1 light year = 1 year so 100 light years we see 100 years ago. Travel to these planets is where we see significantly higher times due to the current speed we can achieve. It could be sooner than we think before these distances can be traveled, especially when considering a generational ship with colonists who will not see the destination but make the trip so the children born on the vessel will actually colonize the destination planet. The biggest hurdle humans have to overcome is making space profitable, companies like SpaceX are just the beginning of this process.

    • @bangrojai4868
      @bangrojai4868 Рік тому +2

      @@martindesjardin4774 that is the point. 100 like years is 100 years ago. 1 million light year is 1 million ago. All planet in million years range of telescope observation are worth to observer since imo, million year willnot make too much different in the planet unless there is sudden change in that planet.

    • @IB4UUB4ME
      @IB4UUB4ME 10 місяців тому

      @@bangrojai4868uhh, everything is moving away from us at breakneck speeds, one thing that people tend to forget!

    • @ingermany-eq1mw
      @ingermany-eq1mw 9 місяців тому

      In a way it is similar to how two people in two oposite sides of the earth are experiencing time.
      if you were to teleport there it would be the present.
      travel there would be impossible because you need to be the next adam and take an eve with you so your offspring could somehow land there in your place after N generations.
      if you were to teleport, you would realise that time is the same everywhere and that your life span will be the next clock.
      you might live on another planet that rotates fatser than earth but with similar life conditions and you would still die after an equivalent of approximately 70 years there.

  • @mejust8392
    @mejust8392 Рік тому +2

    u guys are most welcome to leave earth in search of a better world for yourselves out there....

  • @sheromanysooklal775
    @sheromanysooklal775 Рік тому

    Awesome Amazing and very incredible Stories.

  • @maheshbharti1
    @maheshbharti1 Рік тому +14

    If the planet is 500 LY far then there is a possibility we are just watching the shadows not actual planets.

    • @philmorris8862
      @philmorris8862 Рік тому +1

      Given the life span of most planets, it is a very, very slim possibility that we are seeing something that is no longer there. Certainly that is the least of the problems in colonizing another planet.

    • @realname2490
      @realname2490 Рік тому +4

      I mean that's always a possibility 🤷 with anything you look at in space 😂 but not very likely

    • @brigitteking969
      @brigitteking969 9 місяців тому +3

      @maheshbharti1 Somebody please correct me if I am wrong. But I think if we are viewing an object 500 LY away, we are seeing the light it sent out 500 years ago.

  • @IDamian1
    @IDamian1 Рік тому +4

    "Atmospheric pressures reaching 200* C" @53:51 Pressures normally quantified by their temperature?

    • @rogerbussiii
      @rogerbussiii Рік тому

      Atmospheric pressure increases the temperature also increases.. Atmospheric pressure isn't measured In Celsius or Fahrenheit, but psi. They were simply saying that the atmospheric pressure is so great that the temperature is that high..

  • @AnthonyBenson-dm3ir
    @AnthonyBenson-dm3ir Місяць тому

    I really need More

  • @kayskreed
    @kayskreed Рік тому +5

    Maybe the moral of the story is that the grass isn't greener on the other side, that the earth is best that humans will perhaps ever have. I do find space discoveries fascinating though, but I view them as that: curiosities.

  • @darkmatter6714
    @darkmatter6714 Рік тому +5

    3:56 it’s so rare to see a correct scale animation. Yes, the diameter of the earth is 109 times smaller than the Sun’s, but in this depiction it’s only about 9 times smaller. That’s about the difference in size between the earth and Jupiter, not the earth and the sun.
    The actual size of the earth next to the sun in this depiction would be more like one of those faintest dots in the background.

    • @ashton6039
      @ashton6039 Рік тому

      While thus is true, these space videos are made with 98% fabricated animations cgi etc almost no real footage on these videos which I imagine is very hard not to mention getting the scale accurate

  • @chrisswan907
    @chrisswan907 Рік тому +2

    19:01 that is incorrect. -40 C and -40 F are actually the same.

    • @Phdintheory
      @Phdintheory Рік тому

      Nice catch!

    • @hossainfarnoush
      @hossainfarnoush Рік тому

      if you use c/100=f-32/180 formula, then -30c =-22 f but -40c=-40f. !!

  • @JAMAICADOCK
    @JAMAICADOCK Рік тому +1

    If looking back in time, maybe Kepler is showing us the Earth at an earlier stage?

  • @bullsheets6151
    @bullsheets6151 Рік тому +14

    I can’t imagine all of those planets w/ oceans not harnessing some sort of life underneath. Just a matter of getting to them.

    • @jasonroberts6080
      @jasonroberts6080 Рік тому

      ​@j** tee right, there could be predators on the planets that would welcome us as a new food source. The grass isn't always greener.

    • @horenzodipartendo8225
      @horenzodipartendo8225 11 місяців тому

      Well that has to do with atmospheric composition as well. Most important for intelligence is brain size relativity

  • @unityispower1545
    @unityispower1545 Рік тому +7

    I am eager to see any kind of life as we know, in any body of the solar system, in my life time.

  • @raerambaran
    @raerambaran Рік тому +1

    Help me out exo planet means outside our solar system right? So these plants are in our milky way, which is our galaxy and our galaxy is part of our universe right?

  • @jeffconge155
    @jeffconge155 Рік тому

    My mind blew up 🤯🤯🤯

  • @teibokpyngrope8661
    @teibokpyngrope8661 10 місяців тому +2

    Signs of hope for the next generation.

  • @Rojaun
    @Rojaun Рік тому +2

    Best videos to end a night off watching before sleep

  • @ScorpionX669
    @ScorpionX669 8 місяців тому

    Can we take a moment to thank the camera crew in space for filming this video 😂

  • @navnitgaglani5655
    @navnitgaglani5655 Рік тому +1

    yes I would like to learn more about space thank you

  • @Healitnow
    @Healitnow Рік тому +30

    Although it is good to find planets why do we concentrate on ones larger than earth. Once there is too much mass we can not land on the surface because we would be trapped there with rockets too small to break the more massive gravity. Should we not concentrate on looking at equal or smaller mass planets where we could land and safely take off again?

    • @jacquesmjulie
      @jacquesmjulie Рік тому +3

      Great point. Never thought of this

    • @trapslickk4836
      @trapslickk4836 Рік тому +1

      Nice theory i think we can still pierce the ozone layer of these planets

    • @CvGirth32
      @CvGirth32 Рік тому +9

      We're focusing on the ones we find

    • @shaunosmorrison8385
      @shaunosmorrison8385 Рік тому +7

      it's worth even checking gas giants, Neptune-like worlds in habitable zones as they could have moons the size of Earth

    • @adriaanbrand4939
      @adriaanbrand4939 Рік тому +1

      @@shaunosmorrison8385 dayumm. Badaboom badabeem. Me off a planet or a moon slongs it’s same or smaller. I know, timing is everything and sometimes skews our perceptions of excellence, but I am now officially your fan.

  • @staceygruver1969
    @staceygruver1969 Рік тому +30

    The planet may be more suitable for life in general, but it the planet is larger than Earth this will cause gravitationally issues with our bodies, either increases our apparent weight or if smaller less gravity and decreases what we would weigh and feel.

    • @ShilohLux.13
      @ShilohLux.13 Рік тому +5

      They would need the same size moon as well to keep the water moving.

    • @rimc4378
      @rimc4378 Рік тому +6

      @@ShilohLux.13 Not really two or three smaller moon could do the same to sea.

    • @onashir
      @onashir Рік тому +1

      yes besidfe the obvious facts what are your trying tosay ?

    • @vuurdraak-
      @vuurdraak- Рік тому

      All planets that resembling Earth size rocky watery planets, due to telescope time restrictions etc, have been mainly found around red-dwarfs, where the planet is very close to it's host star, and most likely it's atmosphere has been stripped, for the foreseeable future no real Earth like planet orbiting a G class star like our Sun will be found any time soon, as it's discovery would take/eat up years of precious telescope time, at the moment there is no serious search for Earth like planets orbiting at the same distance from their star like we do.

    • @HfknK
      @HfknK Рік тому +5

      First , we must overcome 0 gravity in space. Living in 0 gravity reduces bone density. It would also take many dozens, perhaps hundreds of years for us to travel to the distant stars and to start a new life on a distant planet with gravity, the transformation to living in Earth like gravity would kill many trying to re-adapt to it or, adapt to it at all. Generations of people would pass and those who started out on the expedition would die and their children & grandchildren would grow accustom to 0 gravity because they've never lived with gravity as we know it.

  • @randylplampin1326
    @randylplampin1326 9 місяців тому

    The picture you showed at 4:39 was the campus of the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia, while the voiceover said the Georgia Tech University, located in Atlanta, Georgia.

  • @wilsonlemani5129
    @wilsonlemani5129 5 місяців тому +1

    Sometimes It feels scary to think that other beings out there may discover our earth as habitable

    • @tishonnapugh452
      @tishonnapugh452 5 місяців тому +1

      Or is it scarier to be the only intelligent life period

    • @wilsonlemani5129
      @wilsonlemani5129 5 місяців тому +1

      @@tishonnapugh452 more or less like that,, the more we explore the less knowledgeable we discover ourselves to be

  • @Muslimforver
    @Muslimforver 11 місяців тому +5

    We are not alone ,we may not prove it now but one day our future generations will find it out

  • @nawwk79
    @nawwk79 Рік тому +6

    There are thousands, maybe even millions of planets more suitable for life.
    The issue is getting there.

  • @bibhutisaha673
    @bibhutisaha673 5 місяців тому

    Oldest to our sun amazing sir❤

  • @expecto1982
    @expecto1982 10 місяців тому +1

    Neptune is quite full of life thank you very much. It’s got lovely greens and bears and rabbits and bubbling brooks.

  • @renesilva241
    @renesilva241 Рік тому +3

    Finding planets is worthless, at 500 ligth years away is impossible for us to go there.

  • @fidelisazogu1189
    @fidelisazogu1189 Рік тому +6

    NASA has silently enormous work for the future of humanity. Kudos to NASA.

  • @navnitgaglani5655
    @navnitgaglani5655 Рік тому

    yes I would like to learn more about exoplanetThank you

  • @skyleryugen305
    @skyleryugen305 Рік тому

    Where comedy has turned into podcasts. You’re the only person standing out who didn’t have a name pre pandemic. It’s been a long ten years I’m sure but in 10 more you’ll be solidified as one of the best that ever did it. The greats are all dead there’s empty seats at the table Matt. Don’t forget that while you are going through it. Great special :)

  • @mrinevitable2003
    @mrinevitable2003 Рік тому +10

    yes 47C is very hot its not hotter than the hottest deserts, American desserts have had a maximum temperature of 55C and places like the Sahara and the Australian outback can get up to 50+ degrees, so its very possible life is on planets that hot

    • @amanpreetgill7564
      @amanpreetgill7564 Рік тому

      The issue is what youre talking about is local climate, which is at best an outlier, the overal planet temperature they were referring to is global temperature, meaning its highly unlikely to sustain life in any area and it would causs planatary sterilisation.

    • @budirbudi8026
      @budirbudi8026 28 днів тому

      Mimpi.jatah manusia hidup cuma diplanet2 yg ada mengitari matahari kita ini

  • @kevinkirk-hailey8762
    @kevinkirk-hailey8762 Рік тому +2

    Much as though I enjoyed this video, I can't help thinking that all the money spent on this research to discover planets which we cannot visit would be better spent on fixing the planet we live on.

  • @oliviaodessa
    @oliviaodessa Рік тому +1

    re upload?

  • @lordpurchase9189
    @lordpurchase9189 6 місяців тому +2

    I'd be very interested in Kepler 186-F as that seems pretty much the only Earth like planet that could have life on it. All the others sound iffy. If a planet is in the habitable zone It doesn't mean that its like Earth or going support life because there are too many factors to play. I suspect that probably all of them are going to be hostile to life one way or another. Kepler 186-F sounds the most promising.

  • @valentine8585
    @valentine8585 Рік тому +4

    Ah, yes. Luke Skywalker's home planet of Tattoonee...

    • @Republican_Extremest
      @Republican_Extremest Рік тому

      Tatooine* it's located in the Degoba system

    • @valentine8585
      @valentine8585 Рік тому

      @@Republican_Extremest yes, I know. Listen to the Narrator. He pronounces it "Tattoonee". Heh.

    • @LTLT900
      @LTLT900 11 місяців тому

      ​@@Republican_Extremest I think that's where Kiff came from.

    • @sharonbraselton3135
      @sharonbraselton3135 4 місяці тому

      Go there

  • @cmanicgaterau3263
    @cmanicgaterau3263 Рік тому +2

    Planet discovery is amazing. The Moon is why our planet works. Excited, Future Technology will find a water planet with a Moon.

    • @randyarnett2494
      @randyarnett2494 Рік тому

      I am excited about the news SpaceX going to the moon and Nasa building a moon base recent news speculates from 2025-2030 (this i cant wait to see perhaps then a relaunching from moon base to mars more likely scenario)

  • @BenjaminJeffreys-qt1mx
    @BenjaminJeffreys-qt1mx 11 місяців тому

    Still makes me giggle hearing about Uranus 😂

  • @wizardoflawz
    @wizardoflawz Рік тому +1

    the equation for how much the sun would be dimmed seems to be missing the variable of the distance from the Sun. though that may be a small factor at a great distance.

  • @hiimkaz1653
    @hiimkaz1653 Рік тому +5

    Cameramans these days need dual degrees - one for sciene and the other for photography

  • @neddyladdy
    @neddyladdy Рік тому

    Which telescope was it ? Is that the planet in question on the horizon? The horizon of what ?
    Please, how do they know it is better for life than Earth? Do you have a reference for the paper ?

  • @philipmcdonagh1094
    @philipmcdonagh1094 Рік тому +1

    That's good to know we can now get on with fucking up this one.

  • @NurseAmamiya
    @NurseAmamiya Рік тому +9

    Honestly, I don't wanna contribute any further ruining another planet than I already am ruining this planet alone so I'm content being here on earth

    • @philmorris8862
      @philmorris8862 Рік тому +3

      All good things eventually end. We must as a human species, at least try to find a way to continue our species once this earth is no longer hospitable to our kind. Certainly in a hundred or a thousand or ten thousand years our technology will allow us to colonize other planets. To just throw up our hands and say no way is not an option IMHO.

  • @awildgengxr9021
    @awildgengxr9021 Рік тому +5

    in this age we are looking for a proper foundation. in the next, we will be creating it.

  • @user-me2xh8xx3t
    @user-me2xh8xx3t Місяць тому

    Yes ..I want to see everything..

  • @Peenutzz
    @Peenutzz Рік тому

    I love videos like this. And Luke Skywalker's home planet Tatooney (59:59) made me laugh.

  • @AngelCatBaby
    @AngelCatBaby Рік тому +2

    It doesn’t matter how many planets are out there, if we don’t take care of this one properly, there won’t be any need to visit any planets, because this one will become an uninhabitable zone for future generations to live in. ☹️😭😭😭😥😥😥

  • @TheHonesttruth123
    @TheHonesttruth123 Рік тому +3

    Now, can we get off this jail of a planet? I'm sick of living with deranged politicians! We are literally locked up with these people! 😢

    • @lauragavrilov8721
      @lauragavrilov8721 Рік тому

      Those people in the rich will be the first ones on a new planet so we're not really going to be able to get away from them

  • @dutch5599
    @dutch5599 11 місяців тому +1

    The day we find intelligent life is the day we make a new holiday that will be celebrated for eons

  • @rennnnnnnnnnnnn
    @rennnnnnnnnnnnn 9 місяців тому

    35:15 can anyone tell me what this clip is from?

  • @edimondmachoki2000
    @edimondmachoki2000 11 місяців тому

    What's the difference between gliese 667c and proxima b?

  • @apexxxdarkenergy203
    @apexxxdarkenergy203 Рік тому +5

    We just need to learn with interference with nature, and worlds, let the universe do its part without our ignorance in thinking we are creators when we don't even understand ourselves and still can't take care of home earth, instead of looking out for answers, look within

  • @basukisugito3275
    @basukisugito3275 Рік тому +3

    K2-18b, probably animals are 1/10 as big as on earth because of the stronger gravity.

  • @Ckillen2422
    @Ckillen2422 2 місяці тому

    Wow! I'm going there tomorrow in my dreams.

  • @ioanbota9397
    @ioanbota9397 Рік тому

    I like this video its so interestyng

  • @kenpeters39
    @kenpeters39 Рік тому +5

    Exo-planets are the most fasinating discoveries ever!!!

    • @ominae1
      @ominae1 Рік тому

      No. Black holes are!

    • @buffalobill9793
      @buffalobill9793 Рік тому

      ​@@ominae1really. There is nothing in space more boring than a black hole.

    • @jennifera3074
      @jennifera3074 Рік тому

      @@buffalobill9793 you are wrong! Watch the videos where the black holes spew out material vs ingest it

  • @petarnovakovich240
    @petarnovakovich240 Рік тому +3

    Some of these planets are reported to be much bigger than Earth - what's the surface gravity like?
    I certainly wouldn't want to live on a heavy G planet - I'm heavy enough under 1g, under 2g I'd be twice as heavy!😵‍💫

    • @Radrook353
      @Radrook353 Рік тому

      it seems as if most of humanity's direct exploration of other worlds will be limited to our solar system for a very long time.

  • @erichoutman8803
    @erichoutman8803 11 місяців тому +1

    Now this is all in just our galaxy. Think about the 200 billion galaxies with the chances of this.

  • @MMT9312
    @MMT9312 8 місяців тому

    Amazing

  • @nazaudy
    @nazaudy Рік тому +3

    We have to be cautious about all of these. Looking from the outside, alien Astronomers will deduce that Venus is a wonderful candidate to host Life, and that it must have liquid water on its surface, just like Earth. In fact, Venus is the closest we have ever found to be a Earth 2.0 habitable planet, and is a hell. Planets bigger than Earth won't work, their gravity will push mountains down making the planet very flat indeed, no valleys where live could develop, crashing their atmosphere too. Earth is just the right size for carbon molecules to interact. I'm the first one who would love a vacación in Trappist-d, but don't be deluded: there is only one place where we have found Life... and we are burning it

  • @Yahlah
    @Yahlah Рік тому +2

    When these people tell you about taking you to another planet, at the same time they tell you about the massive amount of radiation in space, at the same time you see them wearing massive suites of which they can barely walk on to enter their rockets 🚀 . What planet do you really think they want to take you to?

  • @tureytayno3154
    @tureytayno3154 10 місяців тому

    That is all well and good but...How do we get there?

  • @olahmarkjozsef2712
    @olahmarkjozsef2712 Місяць тому

    nice!!!!

  • @desperate4dopamine
    @desperate4dopamine Рік тому +2

    And no one alive today would be around long enough to see one in person

  • @TilahunHailu
    @TilahunHailu Рік тому +5

    Earth is the best because it is choosen by GOD

    • @dadof3239
      @dadof3239 12 днів тому +1

      Oh really

    • @Aprilbird1991
      @Aprilbird1991 2 дні тому +1

      God has no sides or favorites, God is the creator of all things in the universe and God is all-powerful and all-knowing. God has no ancestry, no offspring, no race, no gender, no body, and is totally unaffected by the characteristics of human life, God is the living force that moves through the universe making it alive.

  • @mumblesscott7851
    @mumblesscott7851 Рік тому +1

    What's all this about Uranus and Neptune and the new findings about them.
    You did say ask about them in the comments.

  • @maryokeyo3682
    @maryokeyo3682 7 місяців тому

    It's cool to see

  • @rmdlgarcia
    @rmdlgarcia Рік тому +17

    None of the discovered Exo-planets are part of a binary planetary system like, our earth and moon. The moon causes the tides and the earth's core to rotate at a different rate than the crust creating an electromagnetic field strong enough to protect life and not allow the solar wind to strip the atmosphere away. Not only have we never seen binary planetary systems around other stars, but there is also no explanation for how to form a binary planetary system. Is earth unique as the only planet created to hold life? So far, it appears that way.

    • @adriaanbrand4939
      @adriaanbrand4939 Рік тому +2

      Al of the above seems legit to me up to where we have “no explanation for how to form a binary planetary system” - last I saw we do: Theia was a smaller planet with an orbit that significantly overlapped earth’s, until they inevitably crashed into each other . They did so at a somewhat oblique angle, and thus created a directional maelstrom of lava that could settle into an unusuall system given the relatively large size of the moon orbiting its planet, hence the bunary thing. So, how to tie this back to likelihood of the existence of other similar systems? I’d welcome better informed ideas on this but it seems to me like the probability of an orbital path getting hoovered clear by two main satellites instead of just one, could be reasonably sizable. It’s in the obliqueness of the eventual “final” path clearing collision event that the probability of a resultant bunary is reduced. By how much though? Sticking with the base assumptions of probability theory strictly, we could hazard a statistically even spread across 180deg. However, here’s where I suspect an actual astro physicist could be more enlightening with regards to how two planets could come to not only clear orbits of a lot of debris, but also overlap enough (or would come close enough to attract each other even if they weren’t initially overlapping) to collide. The non overlapping attraction collisions could, in sum, maybe increase the proportion of oblique crash outcomes, and so too increase the likelihood of binaries, but I’m completely shooting in the dark. I’m not a subject specialist, just a passionate fixator who’s been crushing on Saturn since primary school… It’s also the first time I read that earth’s magnetic field is caused basically by the friction between crust and core. Most interesting,

    • @rmdlgarcia
      @rmdlgarcia Рік тому +1

      @@adriaanbrand4939 That was the theory until none of the computer models worked.

    • @ShelleyYbarra
      @ShelleyYbarra Рік тому +1

      Exactly. So far, it is. You took the thoughts right out of my head. Seems to me, our earth and our very existence is a special gift we should be cherishing... Sadly that oftentimes, that is exactly the thing humans do not do.

    • @desordenpublico
      @desordenpublico Рік тому +4

      @@ShelleyYbarra and for this reason alone we will perish as a species , if humans focus on one goal collectively , to advance as a species , we would’ve advanced by 50 fold, but we’re caught up in these semantics, such as: Religion, politics,Egocentrism,Avarice and cultural beliefs that we had set ourselves backwards instead of moving forward… we’re doomed

    • @rmdlgarcia
      @rmdlgarcia Рік тому

      @DOC You still have to follow the science. Genetics has proven there is no evolution and we were created. Just " we don't see it, doesn't mean it's not there."