 Hey guys, we'll be starting shortly. Bear with me for a couple of minutes. If you want to go check out something else, come back in about four minutes. If not, you can walk around with me for a minute. It's not all that bad, I guess. This stuff's really good, by the way. If you guys haven't had it, just got some new shoes. I thought you guys would like them. Here are a couple you guys recognize that. I want to say hi to Yuki, Jared, Anna, Buenas dias, or Buenas noches. And there we go. While you guys tell me how your day is, I'm just going to go through a couple of interesting facts. 230, 230? What time is it here? Oh, sweet. I'm honored to be a part of your spring break start. Is this the first night, Jared? If it is, you slow down. You're going way too hard watching me. You guys see this? Feedback is intense. Kieran, hey, man. It's good to see you. Yeah, for all you guys watching, if you want to chat, we'll chat. But in the meantime, I'm going to read off some interesting facts. I was looking at a website that had a couple facts that scientists haven't been able to solve yet. First one is the improbable EM drive. And since first hearing rumors about NASA's physics-breaking propulsion system late last year, a paper describing their advice has passed. Pure review. China claims to be testing their own version of EM drive in space right now. Yet no one can explain how this fuelless drive is able to violate Newton's Third Law, which is that everything must have an equal and opposite reaction. So if we learn anything this year, let's hope we can get to the bottom. Damn, that was kind of short. I was hoping we would have a little more information. But I actually don't know anything about the EM drive, so maybe I'll go back to that one. This next one is about congregating humpback whales, which seems dull until you learn that whales generally don't hang out with each other in bigger groups than in larger groups than four or five at a time. Apparently humpback whales have been forming mysterious supergroups, and we still don't know why. So back in March, never before seen groups of up to 200 whales, 200 whales. That's just so many whales. They were appearing off the coast of South Africa, which is weird because seven is usually the upper limit. Yeah, I know, 200, right? And it had this cool picture button, you know, because I can't really show you guys the picture. That kind of sucks. It really adds to the effect. Okay, so the behavior could be due to changes in prey availability. But because the species has been making a surprising comeback in years, the last few years, the jury's still out on this one. So I think that's interesting. I wish they would have, again, given a little more information regarding why that's such a mystery. But I've been reading this book. Well, I forget who it was, but someone recommended reading the book Sapiens. And it has a lot to do with our, basically our evolutionary past, and how that actually, well, how it affects how we act, you know. We're instinct, we're animals like everybody, like every other living organism on this earth. And the things that have it, the instincts. Yeah, you've read it? Cool, cool. Yeah, so you would know more than I have. I haven't read it, but I heard that. To me, it's really fascinating. I'm trying to start reading this book, The Origins and History of Consciousness by Eric Noyman, one of Carl Jung's students. And to me, it's just fascinating how integral and unavoidable instincts and, you know, our nature really is, you know. I mean, when you're really angry or really sad, really emotional, you can't really rationalize yourself out of that. I think the more you know about evolution and your evolutionary biology, the more you're going to know about yourself. But that's all to say that I think there's a whole lot about our past, and not just the last thousand or even two million years, but hundreds of millions of years in the past that is just such a mystery, you know. And these whales congregating in us, 200 unit supergroup off the coast of South Africa is a huge mystery. But at the same time, you know, it could have been going on for the last 100, well, I was going to say 100 million years, but I don't know how long the whale's been around, I wonder. That's a question in itself. The next one is the ninth planet that we all hear about, you know, Planet X. We've found evidence that there's gravitational, the comments keep, they keep disappearing if I'm not actively touching the screen. So Wavelight said, in class, we talked about how to become a superhuman, you know, it was interesting to see us as an animal. What does that mean, superhuman? I wonder. But it definitely is, you know, interesting to see yourself as an animal. The ninth planet, they don't really say much about it, but I think it could definitely be a possibility that way out in the Kuiper Belt, there could be a massive solid planet, or maybe just a gas giant that became unstable through an interaction with one of the other gas giants and got flung out. And so it could be gravitationally perturbing some of the planets. This next one is about the Great Pyramid of Giza and how there's a void that was recently found in the top of it. Archaeologists made a stunning discovery inside of Egypt's Great Pyramid. It's a strange void behind the pyramid's north face, so an unknown cavity high up in its northeastern edge. It's suspected that these could represent secret chambers that have eluded researchers and looters alike for thousands of years. So archaeologists are now hoping to non-invasively scan the insides of the Great Tune to figure it out. For any of you out there who know who John Anthony West is, I only know about him through Joe Rogan's podcast, but I immediately became enamored with this series that this guy put out, and he just, like, three weeks ago, unfortunately died. But he was pretty old. He was in his 80s, I think. But he was looking into a particular but also other places. My connections get interrupted. Molly just called me. If you're watching, sorry babe. I gotta turn you down. I got some stuff, some serious stuff I have to talk about for the next five minutes. I'll talk to you after this. Anyways, I got an episode about the possible much more ancient, much more in-depth history of the Great Pyramids of Egypt that generally isn't widely known and really thought about. Is that the pyramid might actually be a lot older than we think? And if not the Pyramids, at least the Sphinx, because of the water erosion, the geological signs of water erosion from rain, actual rain. I don't know. I thought that was really fascinating that... Oh, there's a whole lot about it, but this guy, John Anthony West, I'd like to do an episode about him, his work with Robert Bavall and Graham Hancock. There's the other guy. Randall Carlson. Yeah, that's who it is. Anyways, Egypt just fascinates the shit out of me. I love it. Because it's just so massive and it would have taken some serious engineering without power tools back then. So there she is. I see a bee. I'll call you in like five minutes. Wavelet says, what I mean by superhuman is to live without any emotions and to lay down our feelings for others. Lay down your feelings for others. Well, do you mean willfully? You know, if you can will yourself out of emotions, I'm not so sure that... I don't know. I feel like that would take away from what it is to be human. So, I don't know if that would be superhuman or just something else, you know? I mean, it depends on what you define human as, I guess. It's really fascinating, yeah. I think that goes back, you know, to the evolutionary aspect is one of the things about us that absolutely, you know, we can't dispense with. Feeling emotions, I feel like, is such an integral part of being a human, but having the discipline not to let them override your rational decision making or at least knowing when to allow them to take over is probably more superhuman than completely suppressing them. I don't know, but I'm sure you have more subtle and complex understanding of it than there, but I'm just going off of the little bit you commented there. So, his next one is talking about the 300 million year old creature called the Tully Monster. Tully Monster. And this is a artist's rendition of it. Basically, it's something that looks like a squid, cuttlefish, and it had just a really weird, what do you call it, super weird looking, but you know what's even weirder is a change of colors. It's actually really cool. That feedback loop right there. Anyways, this thing is, it's kind of like the platypus. Apparently it doesn't really fit into any categories that biologists have discovered. So, it just froze? Did it unfreeze? No? Okay. So, yeah, all right, just to finish the Tully Monster. I've never even heard of it before, but apparently the Tully Monster is a 300 million year old creature that had fins like cuttlefish, eye stalks like a crab, and rather intimidating a jaw on a stick. This jumble of body parts has seen it compared to everything from mollusks, anthropods, worms to more complex vertebrates like lampreys. You still don't know what's causing intimate flow. You're from New Zealand, if I remember right. So, I don't know what time that's probably like some mid-morning over there or something like that. It's good to see you nonetheless. I remembered. Good to see you. Thanks for stopping by. Yeah, and everybody just, you know, chime in anytime. 3 p.m., okay. Nice. It's kind of weird. You're like five hours behind us, but you're in, but it's tomorrow. So, you're like 19 hours ahead of us, me, I guess. That's, you do. Could have used your helvel. Me and Molly were buying lottery numbers on Saturday night, which we wasted $20 on by the way. Dang, it's so exotic. It's only 11 here in Bermuda. Yeah, okay. This next one here. 10 p.m., okay. Is it already 10? Just, there's two more things I'm going to get to, and I'm going to have to end this just because I'm doing it just on my downtime right now. 14 of you watching, and three more that are going to watch afterwards. I haven't posted in a while, in like a week or so, because I'm working on a collab with Flyby, Tingles with Flyby, Gaslamp, ASMR, and ASMRptica. And it's actually a really extensive collaboration. So, it's taken a lot of my time, and I've just been trying to do other stuff. And also, I'm working on a topic. It's our Atlas. It's like an Atlas collab. Basically, it's just going to be us challenging the other people to find random places in the Atlas and see, kind of, compare our Atlases and just have fun and create really good days and marbines while we're slowly sifting through our Atlases and the maps and traveling the world, trying to figure out really, really obscure, random locations. So, cool. All right. Nice. Glad you guys are up for it. So, look forward to that. That should be coming out in the next couple weeks, because it's going to take a while for just the logistics of it to get worked out. But we're doing it, and it's going to be fun. So, okay, this next morning. Oh, I appreciate that wave light. That means a lot. Thanks. You have a great day, too. So, I really appreciate you chiming in and chatting for a minute. So, take care. Yeah, it'll be fun. It'll be kind of cool if you want to actively do it with us. It helped me kind of just figure out the lay of the land. I think I went to Africa. I went to some really obscure place in Northern England. I don't know, just a bunch of places. So, I'd be curious if any of you guys have heard of this next phenomenon, which is that three separate experiments have found signs of a phenomenon that goes beyond the standard model of physics. And together they've hit certainly a certain level of four standard deviations, which indicated 99.99, 1.29 is there, and 99.95% chance that this isn't a mistake. This result can be supported by further experiments. It'll have profound implications for our understanding of particle physics. The force scientists to draw a whole new branch of physics to explain it. And that was a really big tease because I got that mixed up with the other one. I'm about to read you, and they don't have anything further than that. So, I haven't heard anything about that. This next one about fast radio bursts. I actually printed out another article. Ever Raptor? Watch the channel because I love your voice, but my favorite thing about you is your enthusiasm. That's really cool of you to say. Awesome. I'm glad to hear the standard model will be updated. Yeah, who knows? I think it's pretty fascinating that it's like the dictum, the more you learn, the more you realize you don't know. I feel like that applies to everything, including in-depth, super eccentric, and esoteric particle physics. It's like the more they learn, the more they realize they don't know. I know a lot of what they do is explained by their mathematics and theories, but it's like when you... I think the theory, the apparent reality of everything, that everything is ultimately energy at the most fundamental levels. Sleepy games, what's up? We touch things, we feel that we can't run our head through our hands as much as we like to sometimes, but really that's just our electrons repelling each other. We have hands that are made up, anything material, anything really that we consider matter is made up of electrons. An electron probability sphere, just like when Bors explained quantum physics and the classical physicists had to completely change their models. Yeah, yeah, exactly. I don't know, I think it's super interesting that, you know, the best we can do with our scientific instruments is approximate. We'll never like a perfect circle. Here's an idea for you guys to chew on. If you haven't already, when I first heard it, it seemed super simple, but Dylan says, screen to see the comment. I don't know why he doesn't just leave the comments up on my screen here. It's kind of annoying. It's also a miracle that I'm able to even do this, so what am I complaining about? Dylan says, I feel the purpose of most science is nothing more than to find new questions to ask. By the way, I love your work, man. Thank you. And completely agree with you too. So the little thought experiment I was just going to say is this magnet right here inside. I won't bother tapping because this isn't really a sounds video, but it looks like a perfect circle, but it's not, you know, it's an approximation of a perfect circle. If we were able to zoom in on a microscopic level and measure the diameter on the micrometer level, we'd realize that it's actually really, really bumpy and not perfect, very far from perfect. The point is that there's no such thing in nature as a perfect circle or sphere, for that matter. All spheres, all planets, all droplets of water in space. There always are some imperfections, I think, that just made me realize that gravity may in some way, if there would be a perfect sphere in nature, it would be a drop of water in space. So I might be wrong about that, but the point is that science can only approximate. We can never perfectly explain everything, even with our elegant equations. And I don't know, all that shit just is what interests me about science and what we know. Yet the core of it, everything's energy. All matter is really just electrons, protons and neutrons. If you try to go any further than that, then it really becomes just energy. So I think it's hard to pretend that you have a grasp on the fundamental reality of things. And so that's why we should always try to be open-minded. A two-dimensional circle could ever be perfect, because the degree of error, I might be wrong, I appreciate that and I completely agree. Thanks for spotting that. Because, yeah, I've been wrong so many times that I feel stupid by ever claiming to know any truth, other than my own experience. That's the only thing I'll ever be 100% certain about. But yeah, a two-dimensional circle, because when you think about it, the best example you could ever see in nature of a two-dimensional circle, I think of maybe like an oil spill on a water, in water or a bacteria, expanding outwards in a Petri dish, if it's really flat, or, yeah, approximations are at the heart of science. I think that's, in what else did you say? If we can't be perfect, our equations can't either. It's just fascinating. We can do so much with it, though. That's the crazy part, is that we can build shit like this, this phone and the network that you guys are watching this on, and I'm broadcasting this across. Yet, our equations are on a very small scale, very imperfect, imperfect, full of imperfections. But yeah, I don't know, with a two-dimensional circle, if you had the most accurate printer in the world try to print a circle, the imperfection of it would be on... I mean, you could reach a resolution at which the ink would be no longer smooth. So, you know, we can never produce a perfect circle on two dimensions, I don't think. I didn't mean to criticize it all. I didn't take you... No, man, don't feel like you're criticizing. I didn't even take that. I'm about to criticize this inability to keep all the comments visible on my screen, but... All right, Dylan, I appreciate you dropping by. Take care, man, and good luck on your AP cam test. It doesn't sound too fun, but hopefully you put it in a broader context and don't have to just rote-memorize it, because that sucks. I mean, criticize it. All right, man, no worries, dude. I appreciate you dropping by, and thanks for commenting. It's been fun chatting with you, so take care. All right, I'm just gonna do this one more, and then we'll call it quits. Fast radio bursts. Fast... We still don't know what's causing fast radio bursts. Arguably the weirdest phenomenon in the known universe. There's some of the most explosive signals ever detected in space, but they're so confounding. So there's... The title of this article is that scientists read a lot to explain the mysterious cosmic radio signal. It's so brand new and unknown. There's 22 of them. So there's 22 of them, and we have a hard American eagle. Definitely. Well, we'll do it again soon. Enjoy it, and it seems like some of you guys do too, so... Cool. EverRaptor says, I feel like you and this other A is the smartest name. E-R-R. Pretty... Oh, E-R. Oh, ephemeral rift. Pretty similar perspective that you both are very smart. Love to talk and learn about stuff. I love it. As much as humans know, we only have scratch... We only scratched the surface. Yeah, I appreciate it, and I'm glad you share my enthusiasm for it. We just don't know shit, but it's... Somehow, we're still light years ahead of where we used to be. You know, 20,000 years ago. Or at least 50,000 years ago, for sure. It's just super cool. You know, we keep pushing on, and overall, there's a lot of bad shit that happens in the world, but overall, it's an upward-positive, productive, and inspiring trend, you know? No, I'm not overtly religious, but... I'm not... I'm not atheistic at all. I just don't readily accept religion as preached to the masses. You know, the Billy Graham style, absolutely not. Even my local church. I grew up religious in a religious Christian family, but not overly religious or anything, so we went to church most Sundays, and connecting to the first part of what I was talking about earlier. I think the more I learn about psychology and philosophy and science, science too, the more I realize we just... we just don't know, you know, the fundamental nature of the universe, and who's to say that there's not one big connection across all our conscious... all our minds, and all our consciousnesses. No, Julius Evolos? No, I haven't... I haven't even heard of him. I'll have to look him up if I get time. Thanks for the suggestion. So anyways, yeah, I'm open-minded, I guess you'd say, as I am with this article. There's 22 cosmic radio signals, and this is what the graph looks like. Yeah, I have a raptor, I agree. Thanks. I appreciate you being as open-minded, you know. I got no... you know, I... the older I get, the more I realize you can't judge people. I don't know what you've been through, and you don't know what I've been through, although you might know more about me than I know about you, because I put my ear, my garbage, sometimes out on this channel, but why be pretentious, and why act like you know people, and you know the depths of their soul? Why? What good does that do? To me, all it does is prevent you from understanding what they might have to offer you. I think everybody has something to say, you know, and I hate to sound like I'm just part of the church of Jordan Peterson, but I genuinely try to question everything, especially the stuff that makes sense from him, because I'd hate to feel like I'm just blindly following anybody or anything, so I haven't been able to find anything blatantly wrong or idiotic or, you know, just foolish that he's said yet, so and that's where I got that was you know, I think that's one of his 12 rules is just initiate and engage in conversations with the assumption that the other person has something they can they can something they can share with you that you may not know and to me that seems like pretty much a truth based on my own experience so there's always no matter how much more you think you might know than someone else, you haven't lived their life and there's bound to be something that they know that they can teach you if you just listen, so it doesn't seem like a bad idea at least would you say? I appreciate it, yeah I think so too Ryan, I do anyways, I might not even get to this, because my phone's about to die actually real quick the radio burst that's been detected might be a really compounding gas lamp, hey I was just talking about our collab a couple minutes ago and I was saying how fun it is that we get to explore parts of the world anyways, I got a few people hyped about it, so I recorded actually some of the covers I haven't done yeah, sweet, so anyways I recorded my finding portion of your challenges today actually so I'm about to go edit them right after this so anyways, thanks for giving me some cool places to look at and yeah, I look forward to peace night together especially with AS Mark to this super cool intro that he did really professional looking that it was just really quality it's going to be cool, definitely so yeah, you just popped up my phone's probably about to die, so I'm going to sign off very very shortly but I was talking about this thing cosmologists and astronomers I guess have discovered this yeah, no worries yeah, kids I know that can be a struggle putting kids to bed, I don't personally know it but I'm sure it's not easy yeah, definitely, definitely this will be my first my second collab in general so hey Tyler how's it going man so yeah, I'm absolutely having a blast doing this, it's so fun and yeah, I had and AS Mark we have a nice little email thread going back and forth and it's fun, wake up to that and be able to exchange ideas so these things are called fast radio bursts FRBs and the thread it's getting out of control especially on my phone fast radio bursts I'm on the telescope to find anything associated with it find where it says what it actually is so there's 22 signals confirmed they're rare but scientists think that they're actually quite common in the universe so they last, they're called FRBs, fast radio bursts and they last only 5 milliseconds and then they're gone and it wasn't until earlier this year that scientists were able to confirm that they even came from space and not just interference from Earth the electrical engineer you and the electrician hear me glad you can make a change electrician hear me well, I'm definitely not an electrical engineer but I'm taking a couple classes so we're probably on the same page but anyways, I'm really good to see you man the new paper has just come out scrapping the fast radio bursts which were detected in real time and you can see a short graph actually, it's really dim in here so you probably can't see it at all just follow it up so they got 11 telescopes trained on it to search across the radio optical X-ray, gamma ray and neutrino emission spectrum so they're trying to look all across the electromagnetic spectrum to observe the bursts neither transient nor variable emission was found to be associated with the burst and no repeat pulses have been observed in 18 hours the crazy part about this is this is generating as much energy as 500 100 million suns and has no afterglow 500 million suns that's insane by the parks radio telescope in Australia in February 2015 here it is in all its glory you can see that that blip, that blip right there is where they see it and then it just disappears after 5 milliseconds alright guys I was going to talk about Tabi star which is a asymmetrically dimming asymmetrically, periodically dimming star it dims up to 22% relatively periodically which is like most stars based on planets, dimma maybe up to 5% but this is dimming 22% so they think it's I don't know, could be aliens who knows but my phone's at 1% so I'm going to sign off unless it does it for me and I really appreciate it all you guys dropping by and hey to everybody else watching this after the live feed ends Shane Gaslamp Yuki, all you guys Yuki, Garen Jared Wade Light Molly, if you're still watching I'll give you a shout in a little bit alright guys I hope you have a good night and sleep well and make the awkward sign off now