Destin, I don't know who won the Johnson Space Center lottery. You found one of NASA's National Treasures as your host, but Brian (Brady's Host) looks like he could be Brady's uncle. Soooo.... You both win?
@@christianchannel8755 Well at least it's true that Phil Collins exists (unfortunately!). That is more than can be said about the nonsense in Genesis and the rest of the appalling and immoral Bible. If any book should be banned, it's the Bible! Best wishes.
Dude, you have to catch the podcasts between Brady and CGP Grey. Also, he has a series of videos with University of Nottingham on Physics, Math (Fine... Maths), and Chemistry with none other than Dr. Sir Martyn Poliakoff PHD.
This was a wonderful trilogy of videos! I love how you coordinated your content to minimize redundancy, while giving each video a really important part. It can't have been easy, so good on you three for a job well done!
Thanks for everything you do to feed our curious nature everytime, on each channel you manage or help. I always dig your childish curiosity and communicative enjoyment ! Thank you for everything mister Brady Haran!
Brady, your body of work over the years had been a near constant source of learning, wonder, and world enlarging/ consciousness awakening! Thank you for all you have done and will continue to do!
An excellently timed video. I still recall the excitement I felt as a kid watching the rockets launch and seeing the Apollo program progress. I even recall my father's disappointment; he had purchased an expensive new color TV so that we could watch the landing in color, and it turned out that the signal sent from the moon was in black & white.
It was over a decade after the Apollo program ended before we got a color television, and my dad made a huge deal about it - I can't begin to imagine the expense and trouble your dad went through, but I can absolutely empathize with the disappointment that he must have experienced when all the moon landing video was in B&W!
and that they where guided by a voice and that the stone just sat there on a slab like it was presented on a plate was even more stunning after all the time even before life was created
Thank you Brady and Dustin for your wonderful videos, what a special treat. I have always what to see the stones that came back from the moon missions, and how they were studied. It appears we will have some more rocks to study soon,
Watching these videos has made me excited for the prospect of getting more rocks back from the moon some day in the not too distant future. That will be a tremendous day for the scientists at Johnson Space Center.
Ryan is really good at explaining and presenting all these lovely objects (I'd imagine he's just as good at his *actual* job). Would love to see more about this facility and their research. Also, shout out to Andrea from Destin's video for being equally awesome and enthusiastic. These are my kind of people.
I got to see a display sample in a Museum in Berlin once and it was quite special. Knowing that we might bright back more samples within the next few years is really exciting.
I thought I would see Destin since he said it was a collab. I really liked the the film clips you put in there. They brought me back to when I watched them as a kid, although it was a bit of a kick in the ass because I do not realize how old I am :-( I'm glad I grew up when I did.
This channel is always amazing but this *really* beats them all. Thanks for sharing this! I had no idea how they secure them and keep them safe. Awesome science!
Wow, what a great video! Thank you for sharing your experience with us all, it is truly something special. I just watched the other two videos that you link to and wanted to thank you for those links because any one of these videos are awesome and full of interesting facts but watching them one after another really conveys the importance and significances of why we went to the moon and why we are studying the moon rocks. Anyways, THANKS once again for taking the time to create the wonderful content you have made for us all to enjoy. Take Care and keep on with the awesomeness that you keep awesomeing out for us. And yes I know it’s not a word. However, I felt it fit what I was trying to convey.
Gday Brodes..... fellow oz-stanaut from tassie here. Im a numberphile, periodic table follower.... watched Destin from smarter everyday, another Brody channel. Cool
Being someone who's adored astronomy my whole life, I felt like I was there with you almost, Brady, with your overwhelming enthusiasm. It really brought the video to life. It made me happy to sse someone who clearly loves astronomy as you do a chance to see something so special in the field. It was insping, really. I hope you read this someday, and I hope you get more chances to do more fun things with astronomy on objectivity :)
About 30 years ago, at the Space Museum in Hutchinson Kansas, I had a chance to look through about three inches of bulletproof glass at one of those rocks - a one-inch or so chunk on a pedestal, in a compartment about six inches wide (a foot wide counting the glass). The pedestal itself apparently sank into a steel recess in the floor whenever it wasn't on display. It's really quite a humbling, awe-inspiring experience to see it and think about its history.
Coming from It's Okay to be Smart (but I was subscribed to you 3 [with Smarter Every Day] anyway!). This is so so cool! It must be so exciting to be there!
@@samuelponce1 WTF are you smoking. I'm pointing out the engineers during that time did not have computers for calculations. They used slide rules. Do you even know WTF we are talking about? ;D
Came over from Smarter Every Day to watch this four year old video about moon rocks because science, got an email at work today about old rocks and new science, read article that name drops Robert Ziegler and talks about how as a new grad student in '98 he was surprised scientists still studying rocks from the Apollo missions, circle back to discover he was that guy at Johnson Space Center and still pumped about science but now with a majestic beard.
A Saturn V launch costed $375 million so you actually can put a price on each rock. $25.4 billion (total Saturn program cost) for 382 kg of rocks (total weight of rocks collected) comes at $66 million per kg. In 2019's money that is $460 million per kg. And that doesn't even make them the most costly substances in existence but it certainly puts them among the top along endofullerenes, californium and antimatter.
I've worked on anorthosite from the Bushveld Igneous Complex (worlds largest layered mafic intrusion) and impact breccias from the Vredefort Impact Crater (one of the largest terrestrial impact craters) and seeing these rocks is really quite eery and interesting because they look so familiar and close to home, yet they come from the moon!
I enjoyed all three videos about this facility. But I would ask different questions. Eg., "When you send a rock to a university for study, do they generally, always or never send the rock back here?" And, "What form of transportation do you use to carry the rocks to the universities? Do they ever travel by air? Or by any commercial means like FedEx?" And similar questions that pertain to their safety and safe keeping. But nobody asked these questions. Sure, one of the videos mentioned the two-person combination lock on the vault door, and one video mentioned the two-key locks on the samples, but generally I was sad that these issues weren't covered.
I came here from Smarter Every Day.. I'm obsessed with earth and extraterrestrial geology, and if I could do life again, I'd become a geologist. I'm grateful for UA-cam, so that I can live vicariously through my geologist heroes!
About time buddy! What took you so long? 😉
In all seriousness thanks for being patient with me.
Even the Genesis Rock was beginning to lose patience - four years ago we filmed this!
@@ObjectivityVideos worth the wait... Winking at Destin !
Duuuuuuude!!!!! wtf
Destin, I don't know who won the Johnson Space Center lottery. You found one of NASA's National Treasures as your host, but Brian (Brady's Host) looks like he could be Brady's uncle. Soooo.... You both win?
1. This was worth every damned second it took you guys.
2. I think you guys got the two best hosts at NASA.
coming from smarter every day!
Cheers
Same!
Me three
Same here. Loved this vid!
DITTO!!
Same here
Thanks to you, people will now hear "Genesis Rock" and not immediately think of Phil Collins and Peter Gabriel
Now you've done it - I feel a Phil Collins binge coming on!
Joe, Let's not bicker, because that'll end up with you guys throwing it all away. You're in too deep to start up these misunderstandings.
Well, I hadn't thought of them but now I can't get them out of my mind and I absolutely hate Genesis! Thanks for that, Joe! :(
I thought of Genesis in the Bible
@@christianchannel8755 Well at least it's true that Phil Collins exists (unfortunately!). That is more than can be said about the nonsense in Genesis and the rest of the appalling and immoral Bible. If any book should be banned, it's the Bible!
Best wishes.
Smarter Every Day sent me. Awesome videos. I really like how you added in the original footage from NASA.
Dude, you have to catch the podcasts between Brady and CGP Grey. Also, he has a series of videos with University of Nottingham on Physics, Math (Fine... Maths), and Chemistry with none other than Dr. Sir Martyn Poliakoff PHD.
Same!
Respect 🙌
I just stumbled across your channel. Phenomenal video! Easiest subscription ever.
Thanks for tuning in!
The ultimate “White gloves of destiny” door pull.
This was a wonderful trilogy of videos! I love how you coordinated your content to minimize redundancy, while giving each video a really important part. It can't have been easy, so good on you three for a job well done!
Brady has this lovely look of awe whenever he looks around the vault :D
As an older bearded gentleman with red hair Im glad to finally see some representation.
My stepson also. Paul Bunyan!
@@fuffoon
And my youngest son. Sequoia!
That's one of the most American-looking people I've ever seen.
Worth the wait my friend... Destin told me to say that. I actually didn’t know I was waiting. But I’m sure glad you made the video. I love this stuff.
Three of my favorite UA-camrs, working together - WOOT!
Thanks for everything you do to feed our curious nature everytime, on each channel you manage or help. I always dig your childish curiosity and communicative enjoyment ! Thank you for everything mister Brady Haran!
The most exclusive collection of any kind on this planet!
Brady, your body of work over the years had been a near constant source of learning, wonder, and world enlarging/ consciousness awakening!
Thank you for all you have done and will continue to do!
came from Smarter Every Day! Dang, Destin took his time on this... It was awesome to watch! Thank you both for sharing!
An excellently timed video. I still recall the excitement I felt as a kid watching the rockets launch and seeing the Apollo program progress. I even recall my father's disappointment; he had purchased an expensive new color TV so that we could watch the landing in color, and it turned out that the signal sent from the moon was in black & white.
It was over a decade after the Apollo program ended before we got a color television, and my dad made a huge deal about it - I can't begin to imagine the expense and trouble your dad went through, but I can absolutely empathize with the disappointment that he must have experienced when all the moon landing video was in B&W!
Forget the moon rock, I want me one of them "ropes of specialness"!
Dr. Haran, you are quickly approaching the peak of awesome places. If you keep going like this, you'll just have to go to the moon some day.
Brady is in heaven. I was mainly listening to the video and Brady's excitement comes through in a way I cannot describe.
This is such a good video. It's hard to believe that humanity achieved this over 50 years ago. Truly mindboggling.
To say a rock has been sat in the same place, even before life was created on earth is mind blowing.
and that they where guided by a voice and that the stone just sat there on a slab like it was presented on a plate was even more stunning after all the time even before life was created
Life created ?
And how could itbe still there when constantly bomnarded by micro meteors?
joshua caro That is why it is mind blowing
@@safetybeach there iis.more to this mind b story , but again .. it can not be sharef on this forum or topuc above.
Thank you Brady and Dustin for your wonderful videos, what a special treat. I have always what to see the stones that came back from the moon missions, and how they were studied. It appears we will have some more rocks to study soon,
What a special video this is. Thank you for making it for us!
I was sent here from Smarter Every Day, Great video Objectivity!
Great how you guys worked together to get three videos about this amazing collection
Thank you for sharing this!! I love achondrites, and it’s wonderful to be able to see them in their prime!!! How beautiful!!!
Watching these videos has made me excited for the prospect of getting more rocks back from the moon some day in the not too distant future. That will be a tremendous day for the scientists at Johnson Space Center.
5:00 His voice even sounded a little like those old transmissions recordings for a second there. So amazing.
Hope this shoutout helps the channel. This is one of my favourites of Brady's channels
Watched the three videos, thanks for your work guys!
Destin sent me over here, what a wonderful and informative video!!! Thanks to you guys for all that you do! Subscribed too!
Ryan is really good at explaining and presenting all these lovely objects (I'd imagine he's just as good at his *actual* job). Would love to see more about this facility and their research. Also, shout out to Andrea from Destin's video for being equally awesome and enthusiastic. These are my kind of people.
Smarter everyday sent me here. I'm glad he finally released the video
THIS is BY FAR one of the most INSANELY AWESOME youtube videos I've ever seen! I didn't want it to end! Omg that blew my mind! So awesome!!!!
I got to see a display sample in a Museum in Berlin once and it was quite special.
Knowing that we might bright back more samples within the next few years is really exciting.
I thought I would see Destin since he said it was a collab. I really liked the the film clips you put in there. They brought me back to when I watched them as a kid, although it was a bit of a kick in the ass because I do not realize how old I am :-( I'm glad I grew up when I did.
the smart video was ABSOLTELY worth the wait,
luv yall
OMG! WOW! I don't even have words! Reminds me of the first time I saw gold littering a river. Speechless!
Came here from Smarter Everyday. Awesome videos very informative
Thank you, Brady. I am so glad you made this (even if it took 4 years to get out) and it was fascinating.
As an American, I'm deeply proud of my country for obtaining these samples for all of humanity to study.
I'm so happy for Brady :)
I'm kind of surprised you don't wear beard nets. :) very cool. Smarter everyday sent me here.
Welcome - and thanks Destin
They were wearing neck beards.
That jigsaw puzzle is out of this world!
This channel is always amazing but this *really* beats them all. Thanks for sharing this! I had no idea how they secure them and keep them safe. Awesome science!
Wow, what a great video! Thank you for sharing your experience with us all, it is truly something special. I just watched the other two videos that you link to and wanted to thank you for those links because any one of these videos are awesome and full of interesting facts but watching them one after another really conveys the importance and significances of why we went to the moon and why we are studying the moon rocks.
Anyways, THANKS once again for taking the time to create the wonderful content you have made for us all to enjoy.
Take Care and keep on with the awesomeness that you keep awesomeing out for us.
And yes I know it’s not a word. However, I felt it fit what I was trying to convey.
Came from Destin's channel, his was great, yours is even better. Brian's material (though obviously well rehearsed) was wonderfully informative.
This absoluitely blew my mind, watching this at night, I could look out of the window and see where these came from
Gday Brodes..... fellow oz-stanaut from tassie here. Im a numberphile, periodic table follower.... watched Destin from smarter everyday, another Brody channel. Cool
Being someone who's adored astronomy my whole life, I felt like I was there with you almost, Brady, with your overwhelming enthusiasm. It really brought the video to life. It made me happy to sse someone who clearly loves astronomy as you do a chance to see something so special in the field. It was insping, really. I hope you read this someday, and I hope you get more chances to do more fun things with astronomy on objectivity :)
Fantastic video, Brady! Really fascinating.
About 30 years ago, at the Space Museum in Hutchinson Kansas, I had a chance to look through about three inches of bulletproof glass at one of those rocks - a one-inch or so chunk on a pedestal, in a compartment about six inches wide (a foot wide counting the glass). The pedestal itself apparently sank into a steel recess in the floor whenever it wasn't on display.
It's really quite a humbling, awe-inspiring experience to see it and think about its history.
This is such a great video. I honestly had no idea how secure they keep these samples. Thanks a lot!
@Dreamstate what a waste of money fake space is usless no help to humans
Definitely worth the wait for this video. Super special. All the words that mean awesome, dude.
I subscribed to your channel because Destin told me to and it seems like it's worth it.
Coming from It's Okay to be Smart (but I was subscribed to you 3 [with Smarter Every Day] anyway!). This is so so cool! It must be so exciting to be there!
I watched all 3 of you guys, great job
There's nothing objective about your love for these rocks! And that rocks man loved the video!!
When you think about what they did at that time, it is incredible. Slide rules and archaic processors. Amazing efforts by ingenious people.
Not really when you realize they are 50-100 years ahead of people that think like you .
@@samuelponce1
WTF are you smoking. I'm pointing out the engineers during that time did not have computers for calculations. They used slide rules. Do you even know WTF we are talking about? ;D
It was worth the wait!
You guys have the most awesome job on Earth!
OMG! Did youtube recommend something I actually care about?? The legends are true!
Absolutely amazing episode. Thanks!
I got all three moon rock videos in my feed today. But I made sure to watch Objectivity first.
Watched smarter every days video and yours. Just subscribed to your channel. Keep up the great content!
Came from smarter every day, great video here too!
These are the crossovers we live for
I'm here from smarter every day, you got yourself a new subscriber!
Check out Brady's other great channels, as well.
Oh man, dude, yes worth it! Thank you for keeping on Destin for it! Haha! Amazing man, awesome work everyone! Thank you for sharing the experience!
from smarter everyday. great work guys.
This place is popular this week.
Good video. Keep it up. Came from smarter everyday.
Came over from Smarter Every Day to watch this four year old video about moon rocks because science, got an email at work today about old rocks and new science, read article that name drops Robert Ziegler and talks about how as a new grad student in '98 he was surprised scientists still studying rocks from the Apollo missions, circle back to discover he was that guy at Johnson Space Center and still pumped about science but now with a majestic beard.
This was a fantastic video Brady!
awesome, thank you for another cool vid!
This was 100% worth the wait.
Awesome video. Superb! Love it! Thank you for making it! Kudos
Totally loved this video.
Man you guys are awesome! Thank you for the great video!
I just stumbled across this channel,awesome. thanks
The vault of the holy grails of science.
Sent by Destin! Fantastic video, my friend!
A Saturn V launch costed $375 million so you actually can put a price on each rock.
$25.4 billion (total Saturn program cost) for 382 kg of rocks (total weight of rocks collected) comes at $66 million per kg. In 2019's money that is $460 million per kg.
And that doesn't even make them the most costly substances in existence but it certainly puts them among the top along endofullerenes, californium and antimatter.
Awesome to see how valued and well looked after these rocks are.
BTW I used to use the 50% rule with wine. That way, you always have some left. :-)
So neat! Especially with the 50 year anniversary coming up. Thanks for sharing your experience. SMarterEveryDay sent me over.
I've worked on anorthosite from the Bushveld Igneous Complex (worlds largest layered mafic intrusion) and impact breccias from the Vredefort Impact Crater (one of the largest terrestrial impact craters) and seeing these rocks is really quite eery and interesting because they look so familiar and close to home, yet they come from the moon!
Dustin said to come here! I think your videos compliment each other extremely well.
Wonderful! Thank you!
SmarterEveryDay! Great video!
Thanks for pressuring Destin :)
Brilliant video, Brady.
This was worth the wait!! 👊👊
My subscription to Objectivity brought me here.
Bash that 🔔
I enjoyed all three videos about this facility. But I would ask different questions. Eg., "When you send a rock to a university for study, do they generally, always or never send the rock back here?" And, "What form of transportation do you use to carry the rocks to the universities? Do they ever travel by air? Or by any commercial means like FedEx?" And similar questions that pertain to their safety and safe keeping. But nobody asked these questions. Sure, one of the videos mentioned the two-person combination lock on the vault door, and one video mentioned the two-key locks on the samples, but generally I was sad that these issues weren't covered.
PHENOMENAL....Thank you...
I came here from Smarter Every Day..
I'm obsessed with earth and extraterrestrial geology, and if I could do life again, I'd become a geologist. I'm grateful for UA-cam, so that I can live vicariously through my geologist heroes!
Smarter every Day sent me here
Great vid. Definite sub
Thank you!
So we HAVE been to the moon Several Times!! This video should go viral and end the controversy
Worth the wait.
This was so cool! 💜