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From: SpaceRip
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  • my space ship is finally ready, all I need is 72 virgins and im ready to go,

  • I hate it when they refer to planetary systems with their HD name(ex:HD#####, HD########). They put HD in front of everything and put a long number in front. I like it when planetary systems are reffered to by their name from a better naming system. Ex: The 55Cancri System Ex: The 47UrsaeMajoris System Ex: The 51Pegasie System. The numbers only have two digits and the word tells you what constelation is in the same general area of the night sky as the planetary system itself.

  • @Alex808thegreat I mean "and put a long number behind it."

  • @Alex808thegreat Those types of names usually have to be decided upon by a majority or something. I'm pretty sure anyway. There are a lot of stars and planets out there. More than we could possibly name.

  • @pogpog28

    Nibiru doesn't exist!

    It was made for some thingy to get money!

    The people from NASA said they would already see it coming.

    It's in one of the YouTube videos...

  • Amazing. 

  • belnomer.ru/

  • you stop it NIBURU YOU ILL

  • This is NIBIRU.

  • Great clip thanks for posting !

  • Why should we bother that much about life on other planets?

    - If they are smarter than us, they wil find us.

    - If they are are more stupid than us, I don't want anything to do with them.

  • @krankenstyn If they more stupid than us then it will be much easier to steal oil and other natural resources on their planets. Long live human hunger!

  • It's not on the news because the elites, shadow goverment's and religion dont want the people on mass to be educated, it would create questions that they dont want to answer. This is why we need to keep asking more from what education our governments are putting in place in schools and or demanding what we want to be taught, what a wonderful world we could have with no religion and power crazy fucktards.

  • @Thumper396396 Your right on the button there

  • @Thumper396396 Completely Agree With You, Fine Friend Of Mine

  • @Thumper396396 I'd say it's probably more because news media nowadays is more interested in three things:

    1) Selling ad space between segments.

    2) Reporting on the latest follies and scandals of politicians and celebrities.

    3) Talking about the latest war or high-profile murder.

    You want this kind of stuff, watch 'Daily Planet.'

  • @Thumper396396 Um wrong.

    People aren't educated because people don't want to be educated.

    Even if you took away the big boogey man you consider the government, people would still be dumb as rocks.

    Most people are just naturally stupid.

  • @AgrivatedKillah Exactly. Try to have a conversation with them about anything like this, and see their eyes glaze over. They're too busy filling their brains with meaningless bullshit about some new pop craze or another. It's been beat into their minds that learning anything that MIGHT take thought is a waste of time. Oh, and they are reminded how stupid they really are every time they hear anything to do with science. Thats why most people hate learning.

  • @DaBamBamMan Exactly tbh.

  • @Thumper396396 the masses would rather watch the Kardashians,people in general are pretty dim

  • @jugulator0 true that.

    /watch?v=DJ3RrqBqk14

  • Imagine having a birthday every eight days..

  • Hmmmmm?

  • so what?? what am i missing here?

  • @shanecox704

    Laaame.

  • @shanecox704 Uh.... YOUR BRAIN!

  • This is all bs . They use words such as":likely, should, could " and so on . This is bs propaganda - they have no idea what out there. lmao

  • @kc8nqa That is because they use primitive instruments to measure something light years away. We can not be certain of much. However, using the data provided we can make good assumptions. Propaganda would be the Catholic Church blaming Hitler on atheism. Claiming he was atheist and so on. While in fact he was Catholic. That is propaganda. This is science. It appears as if your little brain can't handle what science is or (for some reason) you dislike science. However, u could be being sarcastic.

  • Seven people got so high they disliked this...

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  • @MrButtbanger we don't have that limitation!

  • @MrButtbanger wormholes could one day be the key :)

  • i like it becuase i like planets

  • Why is NASA research and still fucking with Mars shouldnt they like be more concered about this new found Solar System lol

  • @fuxwrongwitu Well this system is extremely far away too travel to. By going to mars, it will be the first ever man has stepped on another planet.

  • I hope we can live in one of those planets

  • Comment removed

  • the narrator sounds like the Dyson guy

  • "BULLSHIT"!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • This low of formation is most likely to be PHI. We can take as a good example our own solar system. The average of the mean orbital distances of each successive planet in relation to the one before it approximates PHI. We must take into consideration Ceres asteroid, which comprises over one-third the total mass of the asteroid belt. My guess is if we could take the other two-thirds of this mass into the equation, we'd get this result much more close to PHI.

  • So when are we going to create a "starfleet federation" or a "galactic republic" and find and claim a second earth?

  • Just because we humans are all war mongers ,selfish, self absorbed,small minded and believers in fantasies like the bible, doesn't mean aliens would be as corrupt, vulgar and shallow! Point is if anyone claims to think they know how extra terrestrial life forms would behave and what their beliefs are they should check into a psych ward today!

  • @GodlessPeaceTM No, we're not all war mongers. In fact, we're all mostly just people who want to earn a living, raise a family, save for a comfortable retirement and get good heath advice and care so that we don't suffer.

    There are millions of functioning psychopaths of the billions of people in the world. Some are the leaders that take nations into wars. Hitler, Napoleon, Bush one and two. Not since Kennedy did we have a US president that was opposed to war. And they killed him for that.

  • @beneehall you dont know history very good do you

  • @derrick713 Wow, a comment from an inarticulate paintballer. I feel privileged.

  • @beneehall you still don't know history dumb ass. kennedy put us in vietnam after the french left

  • @derrick713 Look up,

    The Five Dancing Israelis

    The USS Liberty

    Jonothan Pollard

    WTC7

    whatreallyhappened(*)com

    And WAKE UP, before it's too late.

  • @derrick713 Right, Kennedy came back from the grave to respond to the Gulf of Tonkin Incident,,, right. Kennedy was going to do several things, pull back from Southeast Asia, actually TALK to the Soviets, ABOLISH the Fed and restore the issuance of the currency of the country to the government, by way of Executive Order 11110. This didn't suit the Generals and the arms industry so hey had him murdered. He also opposed the acquisition of nuclear weapons by Israel.

  • @beneehall you are clueless aren't you everybody knows that kennedy put military advisors in vietnam. and i suppose you didn't here about the bay of pigs but i guess you wouldn't have since your tin foil hat sprung a leak

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  • Imagine another solar system where they are two or more planets with life, and they come into contact with eachother. I bet that is super frightening to them. Do you think they would work together or start wars?

  • @nickmooreimages

    If they are both like humans, the only way that they might not end up at war with one another is if they are very closely technologically matched, in which case a Cold War like what happened between the US & USSR would result. More than likely one would be more advanced than the other and make use of that fact to defeat the other, along the lines of Europeans coming to America - this analogy is actually pretty good, for to Europe, America was indeed a "New World" to exploit.

  • @nickmooreimages If there was two planets side by side, both containing life.. There is a good chance that one of the planets inhabitants will be more advanced than the other, due to climate changes or disasters rendering life almost wiped out completely at some point. Much like if we found life on Mars, which is still possible, it might be microbial life.... The chances of life being side by side advanced enough to tavel planet to planet and fight is just about impossible I'd say.

  • maybe we cant fly to these places yet, because earthlings watch justin bieber 600 million times, and this only 27k times... Seriously, why dont we just nuke all the retards and us intelligent people can live on a beautiful island together and have intellectual conversations and devise our plans for our future.

  • @ttdantt10384 um dude u realize that the people who watch justen bieber would be retarded even if they didnt watch him

  • @t1oxETy Well yeah. Good point.

  • @ttdantt10384 we need retards believe it or not. we need people to argure with so that we can grow. think of it as using the retards

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  • @XxKuyaaaJayyxX

    Hmm we found a earth like planet 20 light years away. So what if we can't get there just finding one is a technological achievement.

  • @XxKuyaaaJayyxX  ((SIGH)) small minded idiot.

  • Why isn't this stuff on the news

  • @hkpopfan4lif3 why don't they teach this in sunday school?

  • @hkpopfan4lif3 most people can't understand it. Its sad but most people are pretty damn dumb.

  • @hkpopfan4lif3 because its still a guessing game.....they still dont know for sure yet, plus lady gaga just put up a new song

  • @hkpopfan4lif3 because this video is educational and does not contain dick pics or snooki.

  • @hkpopfan4lif3 because they find new exoplanets every day

  • @hkpopfan4lif3

    Because the mass of zombies do not care.

  • @hkpopfan4lif3 probably because all of the mooks who believe in gods, unicorns, the Easter bunny, Santa Claus and all the other bullshit mythical nonsense are worried that if it gets out theres life elsewhere a lot of people will stop believing in their lies and start thinking for themselves and stop giving up their hard earned cash and then they`ll have to actually get a job and pay for their opulent lifestyles out of their own pockets. criminal lawyers are costly in child rape trials

  • @hkpopfan4lif3 haha you struck a cord there

  • @hkpopfan4lif3

    Because nobody died

  • @hkpopfan4lif3 This stuff is in the news, just not the headlines. There have been over 2000 candidates for extra-solar planets, of which 600 have been confirmed.

  • Mind blowing!

  • Happy Birthday HD 10180b!

  • This is cool

  • Very cool but also frustrating. We can now detect exoplanets but do not yet have technology to detect Earth-like planets. Argh. 

  • @MazeleyFanClub do a search on earth like exoplanets and you will find info like

    watch?v=5w7NUsBcgyw

  • lovely research. i am so appreciated.

  • Six years of research summed up in less than four minutes.

  • @cesarisawesome the research is not as intensive as you think its quite flexible most of the work is done by computers

  • @cesarisawesome CERN over 60 years research, the result will be :  "YES" or "NO"

  • *smashes a glass* WERE IS PANDORA?! >:O

  • Great video! We talked about this on our show. Hope you accept our video response...

  • 127 light years away. How was this observed over 6 years? it may not even exist anymore...

  • @manaseater We will be looking at what was happening 127 years ago. I don't think a whole solar system could disappear that soon unless there was a catastrophic event which is highly unlikely.

  • the 4 people pressed thumbs down because they are am your mother

  • 4 people think that there is just one sun in universe

  • @brahim121985, But there is just one sun in the universe. There are a lot of starts, but only one of them is the sun. The word is defined to mean "the star about which earth orbits."

  • @ananiasacts lol want to go deep ? there's 2 suns ,sun and his anti mater sun ;)

  • like the music

  • 0:40 he started ...yawning?

  • Hurray ! :-) This is great news. I hope we manage to prove planetary systems like ours are far more plentiful than they currently seem.

  • I think we should launch a UFO toward that group and scare the hell out of them! But, maybe we already have....and maybe THEY already have!

  • @Pkr, Maybe they'll fill it with candy and send it right back.

  • Interstellar travel may not be possible but I still think finding exoplanets is exciting. If we find signs of life on one of them, it may not make headline news but I would throw a huge party when I found out my jaw would drop. It's a big deal to me, personally. Saying life is out there is very different to me than proving it is with sceince that I can understand and verify myself.. yeah I'm weird like that.

  • @Gr3mpy123 How are you weird? Oh and it would definitely make headline news are you kidding me?

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  • I bet if human interests focused on interstellar travel, we could make huge technological leaps in the next 50 years. But instead we worry about market shares and forest fires.

  • @SMMsideproject I imagine if all the money and resources used for military purposes since 1950 were instead dedicated to interstellar travel, astronomical research, and human accommodation in space, we'd be sending manned flights to Alpha Centauri by next Tuesday. And we'd still have some cash left over to be able to worry about market shares and forest fires. :P

  • @Csp499 Yep, it's sad how that's so true

  • Damn, I thought that the Earth-like planet was within the "life-zone" or "habitable-zone"...

    Nevertheless, It`s incredibly exciting!

  • 1 year = 1.18 Earth days

    Birthday presents every day!!

    Very cool video. :)

  • @oneeyedgeek

    LOL! true mate :D in 50 years on that planet will take about 46 earth days, so humanity would have to find some other way of identifying age :D "yeah i'm 70,000 years old."

    Na mateeeeee you've been on that planet for 70,000 days :D

  • @oneeyedgeek

    No because they would have there own time warp speed meaning that there one of our years would be about 350 years for them

  • @bigjordan3692 Time warp speed has nothing to do with the calendar, only travel, so I don't know what you are talking about. (and your grammar sucks) As for the last part, yes, if they measure time the same way we do (1 trip around the sun is 1 year) you are right, and it is what I already said.

  • @oneeyedgeek Don't forget they would disintegrate due the star's heat if you were ever in a 1 day-like orbit. Must be the saddest days of your life. :D

  • @Kaylanthedj Yeah, a 1.8 day orbit would mean it would orbit really close to the star, but I imagine if there was actually life forms on it, they would have evolved to live in those conditions. We'd be toast though :)

  • @oneeyedgeek More like disintegrated toast lol.

  • we've been clonedd.....

  • Keep at it.

  • easy the warp drive it wil be made very soon

  • Pfft travel to other planets, I don't see it happening. Unless we find some means to artificially produce gravity and shielding to deflect radiation. And then there's the problem of covering the distance between stars.

    The reality, sadly, is very unlike Star Trek.

  • @Kareldekorte wormhole or black hole and don't forget there are different dimensions of reality,that we have yet as a science point of view understand anything like new born babies.

  • @Kareldekorte we can already produce artificial gravity (AG) by means of centrifugal force. Also, the reality is very much like star trek. Warp drives are given serious thought today (Alcubierre Drive) and they are allowed to exist in classical physics. A warp drive works by contracting the space-time in front of an object of very high energy, and expanding the space-time in back of the object, while the object itself is encased in a "warp bubble" that protects it from time-dilation, etc.

  • @Kareldekorte I'm sure many people living about a century and a half ago would've laughed at the idea of getting into space; we can only estimate where we'll end up technologically later on. We've still a lot to learn and a long way to go, so who knows?

  • Why does this remind me of Mass Effect? This is odd.

  • more exco planets mean more life in the late 1000 years which means spcae battles like star trek and star wars then i'll be like W00000tt and we'll all be like watching from the under world and the heavens with the gods and demons 

  • How many new planets were discovered?

  • Wait!

    Where is the guy with the caramel voice!!??!?!?!

    PLEASE BRING BACK THAT DUDE!

  • Viva Chile =)

  • where is the " love " button ?

  • @DASJOTUNHEIM666 Ask your wife/girlfriend...

  • @ripplesinthefield

    No, the user is talking about how to favorite the video. The "love" button the user is saying is the favorite the video button.

  • SpaceRip you need to upload more 20 minute videos...hurry! before its TOO LATE!!

  • I have a question...

    what if we will find that one of those planets has climate similar to our planet. it is still 127 light years from here.

    now let's assume we will be able to be as fast as the speed of light (a very extreme assumpsion) can someone survive 127 years in a spaceship and still be able to populate the planet.

    is somthing wrong with my way of thinking? or those news are really exceptional?

    thanks.

  • @shlomishoham try and read about anti matter

  • @shlomishoham - Well firstly at the speed of light time stops pretty much, so the astronauts would not age like you or me. However we don't have anything at all that can travel at those speeds. Even if we did, we don't have anything to allow us to stop. One day i can see some sort of voyage where the people who arrive are the sons and daughters of the original mission.

  • @TheSpankymonkey More like the great-grandchildren, I'd assume...

  • @Csp499 - Noo0o0o0o0o, we will eat them along the way :-)

  • i hate his voice, it makes me want to rip is vocal cords out

  • @thesecretmaker92 lol yeah sounds like he's trying to burp and speak loud at the same time

  • So, if we can live on another planet, we will survive the end of the world?

  • @GiromCalica In 4.5 billion years, I'll get right on it...

  • By the way, as of right now, there are 365 likes and 1 dislike. I don't know why that person's finger slipped when he/she was trying to hit the like button, but there are 365 days and 6 hours to a year and I'll excuse that persons finger slipping and i'll count it as half a like. Works out perfectly. This video is a definition of a likeyear. 365.5 likes. Get it? lightyear--> likeyear

    never mind... :/

  • OMGOMGOMG!!!!!!

    Imagine, as we are looking out for life/intelligent signs in that solar system (and there is a good chance that there will be,) we are like nosy aliens to them lol

    But the most fascinating thing, i think, is that they might be aware of our solar system as well and they might be looking out for life in here just the same!!

    Imagine, one day we receive signals from them????

    It's SO cool it hurts!!!!

  • amazing

    Fire Tornado in Brazil

    watch?v=7Sau-lu8Jl8

  • The more solar systems we discover with exo-planets - the more excited i become. Once we have a definative way of finding exo-planets within the 'goldie locks' zone we can then set about contacting these planets.

  • @roguemale57, It seems unlikely to me. The closest place is likely to be hundreds of light years away. It looks like having a moon large enough to stabilize a planet's orbit is also likely to be very rare, as is an extraordinarily large iron core (which we may have for the same reason we have such an oddball moon.) Given how long life existed on earth before people, it seems very unlikely that there are many places suited for life and stable enough to remain so for long enough to evolve smarts.

  • @ananiasacts Myself, Stephen Hawking and many other prominent scientists disagree with your assertion. There is the 1961 Drake Equation-mathematics cannot be discounted by the reasonable person.Indeed, on the 26th April 2010- the Mail Online reported; Stephen Hawking the renowned astrophysicist argued that it is 'perfectly rational' to assume intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe.Please, not speculation rather, empirical gathering is the key to forming a rational opinion.

  • @roguemale57, That's a very different idea. I'd agree that even highly intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe. But that's not saying much. I'm only claiming that it's extremely optimistic to assume we could every become aware of other life--even in our own galaxy. The distances involved are simply ludicrous. And I don't buy into stuff like "warp" drives, wormholes, and time travel. Contacting other life is fantastically unlikely.

  • @ananiasacts never say never.Yes, the distances (measured in light years) are uncomprehensible but,that doesn't mean we will not ever have the technology. Indeed, time travel (forward never back) has already been proved- after cosmonaut Sergei Avdeyev who, by virtue of being on space flights for 748 days, is one-fiftieth of a second younger than if he had stayed home. So that man has traveled one-fiftieth of a second into the future.

  • @roguemale57, Well, let's hope he can adjust. But seriously, time dilation isn't likely to ever mean much to anyone not studying physics or engineering something that actually depends on the phenomenon, like cosmology, etc. Traveling at anything near a speed where time dilation is even trivial is unlikely because the interstellar dust and gas would become too erosive. I suspect we'll go to mars when the robots that we send to make it life sustaining build a ship to come and get us.

  • @ananiasacts I have to agree with on the vast logistics between interplanetary and interstellar travel while the former is possible the later will need something miraculous. But, again i must point out that you are not entirely correct on your assertions about time travle and wormholes.I've already showed time travel is possible and it seems wormholes do exist but at the molecular level.That crazy world of quantum mechanics shows everything is not as it seems and has flaws in its structure.

  • @roguemale57, I hope I'm dead wrong more than you do. But I think a realistic assessment of our situation is that space travel is going to come long after immortality has been achieved. The later is fantastically more likely to be doable, and changes the space travel issue completely. We really are a sort of machine made out of ludicrous numbers of molecular robots. Going anywhere else seems to depend most on being able to modify ourselves--not the universe we are imbedded in.

  • @ananiasacts I agree with that. I would add advances in computer Ai as well as that medicine (its the same thing.) People assumed we would be racing around in flying cars by now but what they didn't realize is that you need greater than human Ai to make a flying car feasable. The same goes for interstellar space travel, you need sophisticated Ai and robotics to be the passengers. Computers and a better understanding of genetics to hybrid the biological and artificial comes first.

  • ananiasacts- Immortality?gee, that's a long time! Given science is a series of incremental advances,each building on what went before it would be difficult to see us travelling to the stars (or modifying ourselves to assist in such a task!) in this lifetime or even the next. Unless, there was some massive intervention... A last word on quantum wormhole theory.these would be;too small for us to use,exist for only a nano-second and because of Heisenberg's uncertianity principle-we'll never see.

  • @roguemale57, Things can change fast. How long did it take the web to revolutionize the entire world? Less than a single generation. Given that we are already mostly defined by what we've learned, rather than by our genes, it doesn't seem that far fetched to assume they'll be left behind completely--that we'll engineer completely different, perhaps even distributed, containers for ourselves. Maybe bodies are just a mind's way of bootstrapping itself into a position suited to find a better host.

  • @ananiasacts I readily agree with you on the increased technological take-up rate of today’s society. Indeed, the capacities of microprocessors today and the advent of virtual reality would seem like science fiction to those who have just exited a time capsule. In regards, to your evolutionary hypothesis of the human species, it seems reasonable to suggest we will adapt ourselves (both naturally and artificially) to whatever environment is throw up. The Galapagos turtle did it -why can’t we?

  • @roguemale57, I see it happening rather suddenly. At some point we'll understand exactly how our brains work and develop artificial means to process information in even more efficient and useful ways. I doubt that we'll bother with bodies for space travel because the sort of body one needs is a function of a place (gravity, chemistry, etc.) and has little to do with our minds. We'll engineer bodies when we know what capabilities they'll need--likely very different for each place we can inhabit.

  • @ananiasacts I agree with you at present our fragile bodies cannot hope to endure the harshness of interstellar -or interplanetary- travel eg. Cosmic rays would shred our DNA. However perfecting the task by; sacrificing our human antiqueness or use of hardware – I would support the later. Sure, enhancements eg. Artificial implants- life is not a dress rehearsal-will see the advance of medical science but, not to the extent where our ability to be human is obsolete.

  • @roguemale57, Assume we've got an understanding of every creature on earth--all the "tricks" of biochemistry in all the different environments of earth and the knowhow to combine them to make purely biological, or biomechanical organisms as we see fit. (the first artificial bacteria has already been created--a few months ago.) The point is that we'll need a body appropriate for the place we're trying to settle. And it may be nothing like the one we have now. We might need to be fish or birds.

  • @ananiasactsThe creation of synthetic DNA has opened another field of genetic research. But in regards to an interstellar travel tailored species, I think we are missing the bigger picture here. Once we overcome the physiological challenges, there are the social questions. Obviously, this new species would need some intelligence and with that comes social integration. Political, Religious, Cultural and Environmental impacts are just some of the plethora of issues we would have to address.

  • @roguemale57 The way I see our application of interstellar travel happening is not necessarily removing ourselves from the exploration aspect but more or less modifying ourselves to handle it better. Undoubtedly, society NOW would not be quick to accept gene therapies to make smarter, stronger, and more resilient human offshoots but it won't happen quite like that.

    Come time we develop interstellar travel like that, gene modification would have become as common as vaccinations.

  • Comment removed

  • @ananiasacts you and everyone one else have no idea whats possible ;)..........staying cautiously optimistic must be the way to go

  • @3tangle3, I find it hard to believe that aliens have visited earth, because, if they had, our government would owe them money by now.

  • @ananiasacts they are your ancestors,they are all the worlds gods they will be back.

  • @666Angelfuck, If more than one comes back at the same time, won't that be a problem?  Or are they all super best friends?

  • @ananiasacts i understand what your saying and i know of past encounters with primitive man as we call them ,and they said they fought in the skies but i do not know.what i know is this is the truth of out history.and no one will know till that day arrives,i think that day we will become a class one civilization.

  • @3tangle3, Whether to adopt a skeptical or hopeful stance on something is, for me, a test of criteria. Is it something I want to believe? Than be skeptical. Is it something someone else is telling me I should believe for my own good? Than be VERY skeptical. It it something simple and/or elegant and/or logical? Then be very hopeful. And just because no one can know "what's possible" doesn't mean we should abandon our criteria for screening what's "reasonable" to be optimistic about.

  • @ananiasacts I can;t disagree......I feel more optimistic if more people were actively interested and involved with science research...I see so many ppl who scorn it...I hope to help in some small way when I do postgrad studies......but we need all the help we can get :)

  • @Sardanapalus96 I think the videos are independent of NASA and ESA but I did notice that the narrative in this video was almost verbatim of that this article: eso.org/public/news/eso1035/

  • Very important find. Chances of life there are low, but it's an indication that solar systems similar to ours could be quite common, and given the sheer number or stars at least some should harbor life.

  • I am sure we are not on;y civilization in the Universe, also I can believe without hesitation that we are also known by other civilization (numerous UFO sitings) but we need to know about them. *dreams about inter solar systemic connection*