Added: 8 months ago
From: SpaceRip
Views: 29,418
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  • @tylersurcess im sure your a leading physicist too, i just have to laugh whenever a joke like you thinks they know ANYTHING.

  • Maybeeeeeeeeeeee she is both English and American, life happens :)

  • interesting video and very informative

  • love the video really good

  • you have some great stuff here

  • i enjoyed this vid

  • WHERE IS THIS UNHOLY ACCENT FROM?

  • like i give a fuck

  • @skolopija You just "gave a fuck" by commenting.

  • Sounds more like a large collection of Lagrange points to me rather than DARK matter.

  • Astronomy is so beautiful. And trust me I never use that word. Also it's super Psychedelic.

  • I prefer "Mat-ter" than American "Madder"

    Can't Americans say "T's"?

  • Is dark matter like anti matter? :O serious question

  • @EkoFurreh Dark matter is an elusive type of matter that was used to explain how galaxies stay together when precise calculations are done on galaxies that suggest they would spin out of control and become less dense. Anti matter is just matter with subatomic particles(protons, neutrons electrons) that have opposite charges as normal matter. They cancelled each other out at the beginning of the universe and anti matter has taken a subtle form that cannot be perceived like normal matter, imo

  • @muchufoo Thanks

    

  • Sounds like a British woman doing a bad American accent :)

  • @MDkid1 no this is interesting, go play with your legos if you cant watch a simple but educational and informative documentary.

  • Yea she sounds cute!

  • I like the way this lady says "mat-ter" =D

  • @gettavid Is it you?

  • I hate the way this lady says "mat-ter"

  • this is kinda boring as shit. 

  • @MDkid1 you need MTV production values to keep your attention? maybe they can perform a rap version for the Simpletons

  • 7 people missed the thrill and wonder that is true science by the length of a button.

  • trippy

  • Daaamn SPACE you scary!

  • 1.load this video and set volume to zero

    2.search Mt eden dubstep - still alive

    3.play at the same time

    4.i like turtles

  • @BMXchris100 How many times have you hit your head BMXing? :P

  • Do galaxies move fast enough for us to observe a collision within a few years (im assuming it took a few years to collect this information). If so, that's mind boggling.

  • @quantium40 nope, takes for ever for something to happen but there is a couple of them out there that already collided, or at least we think they have, we think they have cause of the weird shape / pattern the spiral takes

  • @Rel7eGaDe

    Yep, it's like watching flowers at different stages and taking an instant picture of the whole process

  • seeing this interstellar gas as fuel for solar activity; gets me to the question in regard to our solar inactivity... ARE we missing fuel or something?

  • I hate the way she says "matter" and "cluster"

  • 7 entities are from Abell 2744.

  • The 'ESA Hubble' lol. Reminds me of the security arrangments that Europe so conveniently uses the US for.

  • Why are the galaxies beginning to look more and more like bacteria in a liquid filled petri dish? Wait till I find a vaccine, the universe will be destroyed... hahahahha!!

  • Thats alot of Nibblonian poop.

    seriously though this is fasinating. I hope we discover what darkmatter is in my lifetime.

  • Great Job!! In order to see further into space or understand it, you must understand what you don't see about Dark Matter as all Energy MUST have seen and unseen characteristic. For an Example: It's much like standing on a penny and you are looking for it but you have no idea where it is.. You must change you understanding of viewing energy in order to see the unseen information. You will not see the penny until you remove your foot and step away and look in ALL directions. - Everett

  • I found Dark Matter....between the ears of my ex girlfriend

  • Auto like videos. Always.

  • She has laptop in the kitchen? nice...

  • chuck norris doesn't interact with existence, chuck norris IS existence

  • dark matat0r? lol

  • How did HST become the NASA/ESA HST? Wasn't the HST designed, built and paid for by the US? How does the ESA now get ownership?

  • @StereoSpace: According to wiki, "ESA agreed to provide [some of the] funding and supply one of the first generation instruments for the telescope, as well as the solar cells that would power it, and staff to work on the telescope in the United States, in return for European astronomers being guaranteed at least 15% of the observing time on the telescope." They own a stake in it, but they do make the video, and they can hype as they please there.

  • Dear "SpaceRip" can you please make a detailed video on what would if Anteres (star) was to blow up, its effect on the galaxies and systems around it and subsequently earth.

    Would be fun to watch, thanks

  • @clovelywindheaven: Antares is a class M supergiant with 15-18 solar masses, with slow variability. While it will likely go nova some day, it is nowhere as near to it as Betelgeuse or a list of other stars. It is about 500 lyrs away. It's demise will be spectacular from Earth, but not problematic. It is not a Wolfe-Rayet star, so a gamma burst is not a possibility. Besides being visible, it will have no effect on other galaxies.

  • narrator please can you decide if your English or american.

  • @dvarblo doesn't matter she still sounds sexy

  • @dvarblo OMG thank you so much, i thought the same thing about this wierd woman, but the guy that sometimes narrates has one wierd fucking voice and accent! i think hubblecast should fire these two wierdo's and get some normal sounding people in to narrate!

  • @dvarblo She sounds Australian, or if not, she probably has a mixed accent probably due to residing in American accented areas.

  • @dvarblo european probably not from an english speaking country - i often hear swedish or german people having a mix of two accents

  • So Dark Matter main purpose is to bend light waves? lolwut?

  • @Riotboy1 Dark matter has mass; mass implies gravity; gravity alters the underlying geometry of the Universe, and that bends light.

    You know, you gave me a bit of a scare there; whenever I see ppl talking about "purpose" for something in nature, I get Intelligent Design flashbacks and start feeling weird.

  • @StrikaAmaru

    Thanks, I see the light now. It was only a matter of time.

  • @Riotboy1 i see what you did there.

  • @Riotboy1 this comment made me lol

  • TOTALLY AWESOME!!!

  • Amazing!!

  • not trying 2 be sexist but space vids are always more epic with a guys voice

  • hubble ultra deep field

  • @kmica2008 no look space is cool didnt you watch the video

    

  • @kmica2008 troll alert......

  • @kmica2008

    Space is cool........why boring? Don't criticize other accents of people. Go to England or Australia, and you will see their accent is different. What accent you are, they can still talk to you. Your comment is dumb as a non-moving shell.

  • There one thing she didn't tell you though. That cluster is some 1 billion light years away, so what we're seeing is actually how it was a billion years ago. Things have most likely changed a lot since then.

  • @itsMinuteMaid: Sure, but we won't find out about them for a billion years. So they might as well be that far in the future.

  • How wonderful that we haven't had such things happening to the Milkway for the past 350 million years, but our nice Sun and solar system have been out here away from everyone and able to develop on our own. Yes, that asteroid 65 million yrs ago was a "pill" but it turned out good for mammals.

  • @DreadRaptor85 lol if you were to write out a 5 minute argument for a debate it would have far more words than this, unless you talk slow.

  • Comment removed

  • The lensing effect from the cluster's gravitational bubble, reveals a smeared like galaxy around the edges as well as duplicate galaxies of only one, and it is really a distortion at different points in time. Its fascinating.

  • The second I got a video update on my phone from spacerip I was counting down till I could get home and watch this. So many mysteries in space, never ending source of knowledge and complex ideas.

  • SpaceRip for President

  • @crts69 Nah, Ron Paul.

  • If we can end wars now and focus our money into space science... man we should be type 1 civilization within the next 10 years!

  • IMO Dark matter/energy will be an embarrassing black eye worn for decades by generations of 'experts' who insisted its supposed existence. All it demonstrates is an incomplete understanding of the universe and its laws. Surprize, we dont know everything - not even close to everything.. cheers

  • Comment removed

  • Isn't dark matter just gravity unaccounted for? Can't remember that well.

  • What inbred ignoramous could dislike a video on gravitational lensing due to dark matter?

    Probably the same ones who have trouble reading my insults.

  • @Bobajobimus

    What kind of smug jackass misspells the word 'ignoramus' while attempting to label others as ignorant?

  • @frazzzer8888 Me! Typing quickly and not checking myself. Happy now?

  • we are soooo tiny it's scary

  • I know, some bright minds already gave this some though, but can someone explain to me why a large mass, that cannot be seen could not be explained with dark holes and why we had to invent dark matter instead?

  • @teasesTheBear: do you mean black holes? The dispersion of the effect is too fine for the numerous black holes that would be required to supply 2-3x more gravity than all visible matter.

  • @puncheex

    Ah, of course black holes :)

    Yes, it came to my mind, that black holes might be too coarse to fit as an explanation. But the on the other side, I thought, on such big scales black holes could be just fine grained enough sources of gravity to explain the observed effect. Seems they are not :)

  • you know, i was kinda expecting to see blue people in the video... xD

  • 1080p <3

  • 4 people prefer to watch a lady gaga video.

  • hmmmm..... really not sure about dark matter.... will it turn out to be testable?

  • awesome stuff

    

  • @SpaceRip I'm god-damned dying to watch the full Episode !! Can't wait....can't control any more :)

  • Is Dark Matter just a methodological placeholder for something that we don't fully understand ie to account for the apparent lack of mass of galaxies?

  • @doe791 from my basic understanding, it started off as a place holder because the simulation without it dident make galaxys. but i think they have mapped where the darkmatter is in the universe. not a whole lot is known about it at the moment though. i find it very hard to get my head around and i find it hard to incorporate in the model of the universe i have built in my head.

  • Great. Thanks for vid.

  • dark mat0ter

  • dark matter - hide and seek champion since 13.73billion Bc

  • @szasz85b Dark matter used to be second, and then osama got caught.

  • shouldn't we be making space crafts by now?

  • @garuga0777 too busy making war

  • On behalf of all your subscribers, and the vast majority of your viewers, I would like to thank those involved in the making of the videos on this channel.

    These are always excellent, and challenge those that watch them to expand their understanding of the universe we all live in.

    In addition, they're free to view whenever I want to see them, and are of a very high production quality.

    Thank you, SpaceRip!

  • and now let me bring you back to earth and real people.

    Miss Ignorance USA 2011 discusses science

    watch?v=Ay7srP7lOlE

  • Cool :)

  • well narrated

    ...how can anyone on this planet 'know' these things ...things that suposedly happened millions of years ago

  • @gaiagale There are billions of examples in the heavens for us to look at. They are all at varied stages of growth and decay, many of which are in mid-collision with other celestial bodies. That combined with our understanding of physics (as we now know it, Lord knows our definition of it is always changing) and some amazing computers, we're able to reproduce what most likely happened to create what we can now see with our telescopes.

  • @souprcheff thank-you for seeing my comment and for replying so intelligently ...your reply does make sense in fact I'm certain that you have stated in easily understood terms the basic methodology ...still how does one know that the computers are reproducing what did happen ...I do appreciate that "our understanding of physics" is constantly changing more over I'm inclined to think "our understanding of physics" is growing ...growing by leaps and bounds but often theories are touted as fact 

  • @gaiagale Science, that's how we know and can study thses events that have happend million to billions of years ago!

  • @Krissypoo508 thanks for seeing my comment and for replying ...I know it is "Science" ...yet it is a well known fact that great men of "Science" at one time said the world was flat ...moreover many brilliant scientists have put forth as scientic fact all sorts of theories and later proven false

    understand me well ...I'm fascinated by these stories about the 'stars' ...still questions do come up for me and "Science" is a noun totally outside of an explanation

    thanks again though ;-])

  • @gaiagale Welcome and all. Actually you may have heard that people thought the world was flat when Columbus sailed. Actually that is an urban legend, in literature it influnced common people that common people back then though the world was flat, which the people back then in Columbus times already knew it was not flat. And of course maybe even further back they thought that, because Science is all about Paradigm shifts! And Science is a better explination than anything else!

  • @Krissypoo508 thanks for clearing up the "urban legend" I stand corrected ;-])

    I agree ...that "Science is all about Paradigm shifts!" hence my original and on going question ;-]

  • @gaiagale Mhmm! My pleasure :) And yes it is, just like the Geocentric to the Heliocentric views of the Universe!

  • why does some white girl singing about friday get more views than this kind of awesome shit!!!!

    space exploration is our future people! (and saving the planet first)

    BTW ITS WEDNESDAY

  • @JaZuN94 i wish everyone thought that way

  • @SuperCoraxo there are theories about that. Some say we can harness the energy from dark matter to achieve interstellar travel. There's also a radical theory that we may be able to travel through these clouds, but that may just be science fiction. I personally feel upon running into dark matter clouds we'll finally figure out Chuck Norris' source of power

  • Nothing happens fast in space does it. million years here a million years there, in all it takes a shit long time for things to happen. And it seems we only see the after fact never the begins, we are really late to the parties aren't we.

  • @MindEmail Millions of years is nothing for the Universe. We just live for very short periods of time, that's all.

  • @BlackThoven That's why i hope transhumanism develops into a advanced stage before i die.

  • @TheOnlyBananaKing :P, I hope you're rich. But even if I can't afford to convert myself to a conscious cyborg I think it would still be awesome to see everyone else become androids and fly away from Earth while the rest of us get raped by a supernova, or blackhole... whatever it may be.

  • maybe i'm a noob, but I wonder what would happen if a spaceship or if our solar system encounter a "dark mater cloud" (cluster or whatever)? Dark matter seems to be so weird, + no body know of what it's made of.... :S

  • Hahaha. Why are ukchill1's comments so funny? They shouldn't be, but they are.

  • @genobahamut1337 Mr.Chill's Got some humor there. Its actually a compliment ^_^ cause he took his time to watch it.

  • Pandora is awesome.

    All those flying islands and weird creatures. Those blue Na'vi people.

    Sucks that they almost blew up HomeTree.

  • Stuff like this blows my mind. It intrigues me like nothing else I've experienced.

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n the world is waking up indeed. Let's see if we can gain keep gaining momentum.

  • like...best subscription channel ever dudes

  • brilliant! every thing gets disrupted but the dark matter :D someone had on their thinking cap.

  • the narrator sounds a bit Irish

  • As usual, very interesting SpaceRip video with very annoying choice of wording...

  • damn spaceripteam I love y'all

  • it looks so complicated but I love watching this :)

  • i can never remember information and facts of videos like i do in books

  • @tini1298 then take notes

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n

    "Any plans for your channel? I'm sure you'd like to spread this message further" let me modify my comment by replacing the word "message" with revolution :)

  • @racerxsfx i think the enough seeds have already been planted, i dont think theres any turning back now, just look how things have transpired in a matter of months... once people know truth, theres no going back to their old ways, the world is waking up :)

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n hit the nail on the head you have... I like where you're going with this. Any plans for your channel? I'm sure you'd like to spread this message further.

  • @nickharvey7 I saw your channel and find it quite interesting. I like your videos on space-time vortex & the frequency of our visual senses. Keep it up please its a noble effort. Moreover I believe artists = scientists = artists.. If you can get my meaning :)

  • im hungry

  • Interesting video! I am an artist on YouTube trying to promote my theory on the dynamics of light and time

    This theory is based on just two simple postulates

    1. The first is that the quantum wave particle function explained by Schrödinger’s wave equation represents the forward passage of time itself

    2. The second is that Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle that is formed by the wave function is the same uncertainty we have with any future event

  • @nickharvey7

    I'm not sure that your postulates make any sense...

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n agreed! The Big Bang is just that a perception, but we have to start somewhere. Our science is still quite primitive but every assumption or discovery is a step forward. Its all trial & error. God willing someday soon we'll have the answers.

  • Awesome! Imagine there might be sentient life just like us somewhere in those clusters waiting and watching? I sure hope interstellar travel can be achieved sooner than soonest... Great video once again SR

  • galaxies are sofa king cool just to think of what they are.

  • @OpiatedBliss what if u travelled so far in space, and looked back in the direction u came from, and realised that all the galaxies we know about and can see, are actually within a large super galaxy? a galaxy of galaxies... and all around this "super" galaxy, there were many other super galaxies, that would effectively mean that there are more than one universe (or what we perceive as the universe)

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n

    what, like a bubble universe moddel? If you dont know what that is brian greene goes talks about it in his new book about universes

  • Dark mat0ter? lol leetspeak :O

  • i want the dude that commentates the long episodes not the lady that tought me how to drive in 20 year old tapes....

  • vlt, elt, and what was the other one? who names these anyways?

  • humans tryin to understand the universe is like an ant tryin to master rocket science,its hilarious when scientists and astonomists come up with really vague theories,then they state a fact,which is derived from something that they cooked up in the vague theory. and then from that "fact" they cook up even further vague theories based upon a fact that was cooked up from vague theories.im not saying theyr wrong,im just saying dont take everything they say as fact,the universe is still undiscovered

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n: Ah, I like your analogy a lot, but instead of making the cosmos out to be rocket science, I think the science is the rocket science and the ants are those without the training to begin understanding it. It sounds vague because the observations and theory behind it has to be watered down so that the untrained public doesn't just turn it off. The hypotheses aren't vague, when you get into them. Oh, yes, they to know, much better than you, that much work remains to be done.

  • @puncheex i know the analogy isnt the best,because we know the limits of rocket science,but obviously dont know the limits of the universe.so sayin that its like an ant trying to master rocket science could be infinitly understated lol. the big bang..they used to call it "the big bang THEORY" now they call it just "the big bang" and teach kids that at school,which is very wrong.13.7bln years beacuse light says so??lol,light turns to black after so long,therefore we dont have any kind of number..

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n: "they used to call it "the big bang THEORY" now they call it just "the big bang"". No, that's just your dispeptic viewpoint. It is a theory, it will remain a theory forever. But I see your point now. You're just simply anti-science. You don't like this theory, and therefore all science is suspect, and overly vague (since you don't understand it). "lol,light turns to black after so long,therefore we dont have any kind of number." Seriously? That's an interpretation?

  • @puncheex im not anti-science at all,all im saying is,they come up with numbers up based on things they theorise, but there may be so many hidden variables that we dont account for, maybe the background radiation is from something else. so the age of the universe that they suggest may be WAY off, or maybe there is no age at all. i do understand science actually, i like it very much

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n: Sure there may be hidden variables. So you run experiments (or in the case of astronomy, you make more observations) and you find them. This is how dark matter was found. Now they are in the process of characterizing it, as described in this video. It's a mistake to think they don't have numerical measurements to back it up; you just won't see them in this sort of video. Your description of light in the big bang universe was confused and misleading; how should I interpret that?

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n

    You're confusing what astronomers actually say with what how popular media explains it.

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n "astronomists"? that explains everything that you said.

  • @qweiopasdz what do u mean?

  • @1nf1n1tyW1th1n vague theories? not hardly, but everything else you just said (dont take everything they say as fact/the universe is still undiscovered) they would completely agree with NDT for one of those people... he pretty much says it all the time... it (theories) may 'seem' vague, but in order for the masses to even begin to understand it HAS to be dumbed down, me personally I think vague is kind of disrespectful when you have to do the math behind these theories.

  • lel

  • fuck, now its ended what do i do now

  • @ukchill1 Im heading to pandora to find my avatar.

  • @ukchill1 lmao... funny as shit

  • @ukchill1 Here is what:

    1. Get filthy rich.

    2. Fund deGrey's SNES.

    3. Archieve biological immortality.

    4. Wait about 960 years.

    5. Buy a spaceship on the Martian shipyards.

    6. Fly to these galaxies.

  • @frag971 not funny.

    

  • @ukchill1 I recommend @tdarnell, he is like spacerip with a lower budget xD

    But he is awesome like spacerip.

  • cut my dick off cause that's how i roll.