Added: 3 months ago
From: tdarnell
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  • scre it im subing this shit is crazy

  • i will say this again, STARS ARE PURELY AN ELECTRICAL PHENOMENA. i'm sure you all think the earth has a solid Fe and Ni core. ha. If the Sun was nuclear, wouldn't we all die instantly? The stream of ions that lands on plants and our skin gives rise to photosynthae and Vitamin D just under our skin. educate yourselves before dismissing what may seem to be a totally wrong and misleading troll comment.

  • @aaronCapricorn why do you think that if the sun's energy is being fed by nuclear reactions that we would all die instantly?

  • @aaronCapricorn Stop trying to sound smart.

  • @aaronCapricorn

    I've spent a goodly number of years educating myself, and I can tell you that *everything* you state as fact in this comment is incorrect.

  • Awesome!

  • Great video. Who would thumbs downed this?

  • @Zehrful Jesus Lovers did that.

  • @luzerith Great video anyway. knowledge can sometimes be treating to peoples beliefs.

  • It's in the blood ,it's in the blood that Jesus Christ lives in each and everyone of us, It is a cool video though

  • @TheRemedy2012 Get the fuck off.

  • @TheRemedy2012 JESUS? LOOOOL Stop reading fantasy books.

  • @luzerith Jesus Christ lives in your blood brother, that is what your life is about ,your flesh will die and you will be judged

  • Nice music choice.

  • Cuts space taxis?

  • I read exactly that in the bible, lol

  • Imagine if you had the time to bless us/YouTube with more in depth, 20 minute versions of the subjects chosen - what a legend you would become! *hint*hint*

  • FUCK!!!! What a video...

    You resumed what a crap we are in 2 minutes.

    I love it

  • anyone good with telescopes?, i have a 10" reflector, and I was wondering if you can really see the gas cloud and stuff... When I try to look for galaxies and nebula I cant find them but I can see thousands of stars.. I use a program called Stellarium and i have a planisphere but I dont really know how to use it that well.

  • @BrAdEnSB666

    You're not going to see these colors visually. The best you can hope for is to spot faint gray patches at the correct locations. Look up a technique called "star hopping".

  • @pseudorandomly I could see the colours on Orion

  • so cool

  • Good to see you making other uploads than SFN, don't get me wrong, they're great, but personally i would want more videos that focuses on one subject

    Thanks for your work Tony!

  • Cool photos.

  • can 2 or 3 nebula's be intertwined or colide

  • Is it possible to take pictures of nebulae in other galaxies that are as detailed as the ones in our own? I sometimes setup my telescope for imaging, and sometimes when i image galaxies i see the red star forming areas. Are some of the bigger telescopes able to capture those in detail?

    Very nice video, thanks for sharing :)

  • great vid, but !!

    you should keep music volume at mid level most of the time,

    you have great voice, but just a tad annoying when sound level

    go up and down 50 times in 5 minuttes.

  • i wanna go there when i die, never mind that how about now , what beautiful pics

  • If any of our neighboring stars were to go supernova and explode, would we be in any danger? The plume of Stardust given off by such explosions just seems so vast and scary.

  • This IMO is the best space channel on youtube. I'm so glad I found it.

  • ted, you said it Mr. I will name my future kid ted,,, but first, I need to find the other half...

  • Wow amazing, but you have to admit it looks like fart gas bubble in the bath.

  • wow that's loud thanks

    keep making them

  • beautifully done. you synced the music with your narration perfectly.

  • My screen does not do this justice

  • Hey Tony, You sound so much different on narrative videos as compared to the "space-fan show" videos. Both are excellent, but these narrative videos sound so "divine" like someone else commented, if god existed he would have your voice. Thanks and keep posting up :-)

  • Wow... Gives me shivers.

  • At first, I thought I was watching SpaceRip.

  • Yay! You made another short film in documentary format. I always enjoy those the most!

  • Sagan would be very proud of your work, tdarnell. Thanks.

  • The Universe is so complex it's scary. 

  • Tony - Another excellent video. Your words brought to mind those of Carl Sagan from Cosmos - "we're made of star stuff."

  • Thank you Tony. Lovely imagines...

  • i have a question that might be a little dumb:

    is time faster/slower outside the galaxy? 

  • @alixinthemiddle This is actually a very good question. You see, time can pass at different subjective speeds. The faster you go the slower time for you passes. Also when you are near a object of great mass like a neutron star or a black hole the gravity causes your time to pass more slowly. So to answer your question, in intergalactic space (Outside our galaxy) due to the decreased influence of gravity, i would say time would pass ever so slightly faster.

  • I vote for Tony to be the successor to Carl Sagan on a show called "Cosmos and Beyond." Or some better title I can't think of.

  • We are all made of stars.

  • Man I don't know what I would do without this channel you fill my brain with awesome knowledge. I hope you continue to make videos I've been a fan since your The Most Important Image Ever Taken video. Anyway what I wanted to say was thank you for taking the time out of your day to make these videos.

  • go ahead.. click dislike!! I will hunt you down and decapitate you using an old teaspoon.. why a teaspoon you may ask? coz it will take weeks and hurt more

  • look no dislikes on the video yet :D

  • Happy birthday Carl Sagan!

  • what are your views on the Fermi paradox and the Drake equation ? do you believe ?

  • inspirational!

  • Epic as always.

  • Thank you Tony!

  • OMG YOU'RE SOOOOOOOOOOOOOO BEAUTIFUL.

  • Best Infinite minute yet Tony!!!

  • Hey tony, I have question for you.

    Have you done any voice-acting or voice-over for NASA videos and/or movies or something? I swear I have heard your voice somewhere else, and if so, that'd be so cool. I love hearing your narrations like this, thanks for doing these sort of videos (along with SFN videos) for us.

  • @MsWhitekanna No, this is all I've done. Thanks for the kind words though!

  • @MsWhitekanna

    he just needs a better soundengineer :D

  • so we get beautiful pictures of space,(sorry for the stupid question) but what colour would they be if we saw them with our own eyes? invisible?, black?.

  • @beastiedesigns Since our eyes are sensitive to 'white light', it would appear mostly white with some green thrown in there from the ionized oxygen. Some red too from hydrogen alpha light.

    If you've ever looked at the orion nebula through a telescope, it would be like that.

  • @beastiedesigns I know! I know! Pretty much what you see when you look up at the night sky. These images are made by by combining and compressing wavelengths that are outside the visual range of our eyes plus they accumulate photons over longer periods of time than our retinas can do. We can't see into the ultraviolet and these images show X-rays. Any object gives off infrared but we can't see those unless it is red-hot or hotter. These images combine light from those ranges, too.

  • @beastiedesigns The reason why the images compared to what our see are in color, are because cameras are EXTREMELY sensitive, therefore the Cameras can take INCREDIBLE images of the Universe. Therefore like tdarnell said they appear white, grayish and with some green and red. I know many people say that it may be boring seeing it in just black and white. But the truth is if you come to think of it. These celestial objects left there light 1,000 plus years ago. And your eyes are just barely,

  • @beastiedesigns Receiving it. So that to me is quite incredible! With a small amateur telescope ranging in the 5 inch to 12 inch range. YOU CAN SEE MANY INCREDIBLE objects in the Universe. My goal one day is to get everyone involved in Astronomy because if they learn about it well, it is AMAZING. And I know everyone would have a great time, because these are things that are happening, or happened. And we are observing the universe. It is quiet incredible if you ask me.

  • @beastiedesigns Think of it as an Old BLACK AND WHITE TV lol. If our eyes were supreme sensitive it would be like a COLOR TV. I think maybe in the future if our human race evolves and the humans eyes become more sensitive WE MIGHT see color now. instead of black and white. But at the moment only grayish white. But on some of the closer nebula's appear with some hint of color. Like the Orion nebula.

  • If God existed, he'd have your voice. Yup.

  • Very poetic interpretation of our scientific knowledge.

  • Great video Tony. A combination of the vastness of astronomy and the cosmological origin of us all. Love it, good music too.

  • Based on the general shape of the phenomenon, is this a gas cloud that is recycling itelf, so to speak? This is a very beautiful image and thank you for speaking about it.

  • @bigscarytigermonster I'm not completely sure, but based on other star forming regions, I think this is a giant coalescing dust and gas cloud forming new stars.

  • @tdarnell Ah. I wasn't sure either. It looks so much like many novae seen in the past with the dual-lobed formations and the linear structures along the outer edges within said lobes. If you hear more of this astounding natural creation/event, it'd be great if you'd pass it along.

  • @bigscarytigermonster Yeah I know what you mean, Eta Carinae came to mind when I saw this image.

  • @tdarnell Quite. I had to look up the name of the one I was thinking of, No nomeclature at the immediate, but it's known as the "ant Nebula." That's what came to mind for me. Not necessarily a supernova, but very similar in structure.

  • @tdarnell: Technically, all of these clouds are supernovae remnants. The stars that are forming have other elements in their spectra, so the cloud is not pure Hydrogen/Helium. The cloud could, however, be the result of many coalescing remnant supernovae and not just one.

  • There can be many reasons for feeling humble.

    This is one of them:

    Thanks

  • how cold is space

  • @49hamburger its very cold... and apparently no one can hear you scream also.

  • Comment removed

  • -273 C In the coldest parts, it can't go any lower.

  • @Apache3619 We have -57 in Finland, and it can go lower. F*** :D

  • @KimiScuderiaFerrari Of course it can, but the limit for cold is -273.15C cuz in that temperature, the mass become zero and you can't go any lower or the mass would be negative, and negative mass doesn't exist right?

  • @49hamburger

    Colder than a cold man's cold bits.

  • awsome ty.very interesting.much love:-)

  • Cool!!

  • If I had a ship with light speed, I'd plan this place for my destination.

  • @GoreTorn16

    That'd be a very long trip, you should wait for Faster-than-light Travel! ;)

  • @Reoh0z Great SCOTT! :O

  • that's only 2000 lighyears away.. i can be there in 2 minutes

    not..

  • Man I goose bumps for this...

  • Tony and sixty symbols have tought me more and given me better info on the sciences in the extremely small ranges to the extremely large ,than any source in my life. (well i think mabie carl sagan...)

  • This is were bad ass videos come from

  • Very low commentary in relation to the music, I had to keep turning the audio volume up and down, Please speak up or reduce the music volume. I enjoyed the video even though it just woke the house up...

  • @glenwoofit You know, people tell me that sometimes and I wonder what's going on. I normalize all the audio using iMovie, then I turn the music track down further still until it sounds right on my iMac, then I render the vid. I don't want the music to overpower the script, but I get frequent enough complaints about that it warrants a closer inspection.

    I wonder if what my mac is telling me is accurate? My apologies, it seems I'm a victim of inferior hardware, I should get a better computer.

  • @tdarnell Sounds good on my Mac maybe just a PC problem they have sound cards and some aren't up to the task. Just a thought. 

  • @tdarnell Sounds fine on my end on my old Dell laptop with little Vaio speakers.

  • @tdarnell hmm, nothing wrong with the audio @ my end...maybe it's just their speakers having difficulty producing lower tones? This usually happens with older/cheaper, less efficient computer speakers.

    Yet another excellent video, Tony.

  • @tdarnell I have no problem hearing you in relation to the music.

  • @tdarnell Please don't think it was a complaint and i'm being ungreatfull by commenting on the audio as I can live with the audio volume with respect to the great videos you make. Who knows what weird and wonderfull things our computers do when rendering video....

  • i wish i go there

  • Beautiful, thank you Tony!

  • is this in our galaxy? or is this how galaxies start?

  • @666alilthrowedoff666 its 2000 light years away, so its in our galaxy (and is pretty close to us in astronomical terms).

  • @greycloud24 o ok. so was it a star that exploded to make this? how did this appear?

  • @666alilthrowedoff666 when matter cooled from the big bang, it started to collect into large clouds. those clouds than collapse in on themselves from the force of gravity. that is how nebulae are formed, and in turn nebulae are nurseries for the birth of stars. they do this as the clouds of gas further collapse. the initial matter came when the big bang occurred creating atoms of hydrogen through oxygen on the periodic table.

  • @greycloud24 "those clouds than collapse in on themselves from the force of gravity." what do you mean they "collapsed" in on themselves? they made a black hole? /"the initial matter came when the big bang occurred creating atoms of hydrogen through oxygen on the periodic table." what about life forms? like a tree was once a seed, those atoms didn't exist before that tree grew... those have to be new atoms... i apreciate the answers

  • @666alilthrowedoff666 This is how galaxies start :)

  • @Losuol so your saying this didnt happen in our galaxy? how did it start?

  • So this is from a supernova?

  • @uhhhhme yes it is

  • Amazing... 1:12 is what every ancestor of mine has failed to understand up until now.

  • Amazing episode...Keep looking up dear friends...

  • EPIC :D

  • ~ Thank Y()U for this offering ~ L()VEly ~ Shared ~ Namaste' ~

  • @MsNamasteLight is there any particular reason as to why you have avoided using any of the following keys?: 0 , o, O. do you have a phobia of the these keys? so bad so that you couldn't type a zero, the letter o perhaps? nope?

  • Very nice video, thank you.

  • Great video, has always. *thumbs up* I love your presentation style.

  • @aaronCapricorn LOL, no.

  • @aaronCapricorn Epic Fail/Trolling Win

  • Ooh artsy, I liked it

  • beautiful

  • Awesome.

  • Sweet..

  • Great vid man, keep them comin'!

  • No!!!! >:O!

  • First comment and like! :DD - Am watching video now.

  • @ThriveOnKilling Just off by a few seconds, sorry son.

  • @ProtossGod100 I'll win next vid

  • First

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