How Saturn Got Its Rings | The Planets | Earth Science

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2024
  • There's evidence to suggest Saturn didn't have its rings when the dinosaurs inhabited Earth, so how did they form?
    Best of Earth Science: bit.ly/EarthLabOriginals
    Best of BBC Earth: bit.ly/TheBestOfBBCEarthVideos
    The Planets (2019)
    This stunningly ambitious series brings to life the most memorable events in the history of the solar system, by using ground-breaking visual effects to tell the thrilling story of all eight planets. Transporting you to the surface of these dynamic worlds to witness the moments of high drama that shaped each one, The Planets reveals how the latest science allows us to unlock their past lives. It pieces together clues of magnificent lost waterfalls on Mars, the mass planetary migrations as they jostled for position early in their history, and even the distant fate of Saturn as one of its moons awakens to form a beautiful water world.
    This is a channel from BBC Studios who help fund new BBC programmes. Service information and feedback: bbcworldwide.com/vod-feedback-...
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Komentáře • 4,9K

  • @SamuelEMPowell131
    @SamuelEMPowell131 Před 2 lety +7978

    Just want to take a moment to thank the BBC camera man who got these shots of Saturn's old moon. He must of woken up really early to get there 100 million years ago.

    • @Straight90s
      @Straight90s Před 2 lety +487

      You can tell him yourself! He’s still alive (because the camera man never dies)

    • @Phagnabotwashere
      @Phagnabotwashere Před 2 lety +255

      All hail the cameraman

    • @8-gamingnight288
      @8-gamingnight288 Před 2 lety +182

      The cameraman sees all, he is everywhere

    • @johnkane3240
      @johnkane3240 Před 2 lety +107

      He's union. Wait till he cashes the overtime check.

    • @mrartdeco
      @mrartdeco Před 2 lety +37

      @@johnkane3240 they did.. they’re the British Royalty now

  • @l0nele_
    @l0nele_ Před 2 lety +2058

    I love hearing someone passionate about a subject speak on it. “I mean is that cool or what!” I smiled right along with her ☺️ Saturn has always been my favorite planet. Space is so terrifyingly fascinating

  • @gamingmoth4542
    @gamingmoth4542 Před rokem +1435

    It’s interesting to know that while dinosaurs were here on earth, Saturn was still ringless.

    • @tylerhartley5031
      @tylerhartley5031 Před rokem +84

      Yeah kinda like how Uranus was formed

    • @EnshourT_
      @EnshourT_ Před rokem +81

      You somehow blew my mind with this information...

    • @Dan2yefa
      @Dan2yefa Před rokem +34

      @@tylerhartley5031 hehehehegehehehe uranus

    • @-108-
      @-108- Před rokem +17

      Don't be so pompous as to presume you KNOW that which is merely theoretical. I don't believe Carolyn treats the idea as anything more than theory, either.

    • @seccosec
      @seccosec Před rokem +3

      Maybe ringless...

  • @CalderaXII
    @CalderaXII Před 8 měsíci +164

    Man, can you imagine how cool the sky must look from one of those mini moons inside the rings?

    • @kenzo_1172
      @kenzo_1172 Před 2 měsíci +9

      it would be just a tiny line, as they orbit in the dame plane as the ring and the ring has a small thickness, it would be a line on the sky

    • @abxyabxy281
      @abxyabxy281 Před měsícem +9

      Half of the whole f467ing sky would be S A T U R N

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 13 dny +1

      @@kenzo_1172 Only if you were at the equator of said moon, in which case you likely wouldn't even see the rings (them being just meters deep), but anywhere else on the surface of the moon you would be looking at a shimmering wall.

    • @kenzo_1172
      @kenzo_1172 Před 13 dny +2

      @@krashd my brother in earth, the rings are 1-4 km wide, you would only see a tiny part of them

  • @dannyarcher6370
    @dannyarcher6370 Před 2 lety +1964

    100 million years ago is really not that long. That surprised me. I always assumed that Saturn's rings had been there since its formation and consisted of material that simply failed to accrete into, like a planetary asteroid belt. I learnt something today.

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 Před 2 lety +169

      @@sandhyarani3576 The Sun is 46 times older than the maximum estimated age of those rings. The Milky Way is 135 times older.
      So, yeah. Yesterday.

    • @skateboardingjesus4006
      @skateboardingjesus4006 Před 2 lety +149

      @@sandhyarani3576 We're talking about astronomical time scales here. 100 million years is brief. Planetary rings are transitional and many of our Planets may have had stunning rings at one stage. If the "Thea hypothesis" is correct, our own Planet Earth had spectacular rings at one time.

    • @rickymiller8539
      @rickymiller8539 Před 2 lety +72

      Also the rings are vanishing at a fast rate too by being pulled into Saturn from Saturn’s gravity so won’t be there for a very long time either.

    • @bingbong9844
      @bingbong9844 Před 2 lety +27

      @@skateboardingjesus4006 and one hypothesis is those rings turned into our current moon.

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 Před 2 lety +11

      @@bingbong9844 Well, that's part of the Theia hypothesis.

  • @anttam117
    @anttam117 Před 2 lety +2509

    Those mountains by the edge of the ring are incredible. I know it’s a rendered image, but just the idea of it. What a sight those things may do!

    • @LucasGomes-vh9ei
      @LucasGomes-vh9ei Před 2 lety +55

      those arent renderings, those are actual images!

    • @bipinrana7116
      @bipinrana7116 Před 2 lety +22

      Dear friends . Cassini is moving, orbiting Seturn with high speed.
      And on thair camara images those Image are elaborated.
      All are real

    • @theamorphousflatsch2699
      @theamorphousflatsch2699 Před 2 lety +168

      @@LucasGomes-vh9ei he meant the cgi close ups, those aren't real.

    • @SolarChip
      @SolarChip Před 2 lety +51

      5:09 is a real image, you can see the shadows cast by the mountain like structures on the rings. I've never seen anything quite like it until just now, it's amazing

    • @asyaryraihan
      @asyaryraihan Před 2 lety +16

      The images are actually real! The video part however is rendered.

  • @deomni6578
    @deomni6578 Před rokem +371

    God I love those incredibly realistic renders of space and some processes that are going on, it’s just incredible to see it like that

    • @-108-
      @-108- Před rokem +10

      Yeah; It's too bad the artist doing the "representation" is usually someone with little understanding of physics and the laws of motion. This one looked really cool, but it made little sense from a physics standpoint.

    • @deomni6578
      @deomni6578 Před rokem +1

      @@-108- yeh, that is also true.

    • @nuru666
      @nuru666 Před rokem +1

      @@-108- Yea but what's more important? That it's insanely accurate for us adult nerds to gawk over, or that it's REALLY cool looking to whip up our kids imaginations and get them into these fields? I'm a backyard Astronomer because of seeing shit like this as a kid.

    • @-108-
      @-108- Před rokem

      @@nuru666 i was a backyard astronomer as a kid - subscribed to Astronomy Magazine when I was in 3rd grade - and I always hated "artist representations" of anything. They did nothing to inspire me, and everything to annoy me. To each their own, I guess.

    • @nuru666
      @nuru666 Před rokem +1

      @@-108- More than fair enough, I found it inspiring that there were incredible wonders beyond my imagination and I wanted to see them for real, and now I have!

  • @voidvalkyrie
    @voidvalkyrie Před rokem +70

    I stood on the edge of it’s broken frozen shores. In the face of such a majesty I wept. There was no such a sight I have witness with my own eyes as beautiful as the stardust rings of Saturn.

    • @Lornoor
      @Lornoor Před 3 měsíci +5

      Please pursue a career in writing! 😀

  • @110452ND
    @110452ND Před 2 lety +325

    Seeing scientists geek out and be super passionate about their findings always warms my heart.

  • @EraldBuneci
    @EraldBuneci Před 2 lety +765

    No matter what wonders we know about nature, it manages to impress us even more, always.

    • @markhollander1201
      @markhollander1201 Před 2 lety +4

      Do you mean that better computer software programs are giving you more clarity on the imagination of fake space by these 33rd freemason liars ???

    • @EraldBuneci
      @EraldBuneci Před 2 lety +38

      ​@@markhollander1201 Always when we learn something new about nature, we are more surprised than last time. In this case, we learned about the even more complex behavior of rings with Saturn moons. You can see the real photo of the spaceship.

    • @Getman0001
      @Getman0001 Před 2 lety +20

      @@markhollander1201 Go touch grass.

    • @astroevada
      @astroevada Před 2 lety +23

      @@markhollander1201 "BUT DA FWEEMASUNS AND CEEGEEEYE"
      Bitch go outside and stop repeating what papa dubay tells you, flattard.

    • @skateboardingjesus4006
      @skateboardingjesus4006 Před 2 lety +18

      @@markhollander1201 You poor thing, still blaming the world for your failed education and abysmally poor grasp of science I see? Run along child, you're way out of your depth here. Perhaps sit in the corner and keep being a non-contributor.

  • @imajulianuel
    @imajulianuel Před 2 lety +28

    The oldest creatures in universe is the cameraman.

  • @dannyraiden9722
    @dannyraiden9722 Před rokem +30

    The fact that we had a better understanding of the rings is amazing. Knowing it’s vertical makes them even more impressive.

  • @javiertorres9114
    @javiertorres9114 Před 2 lety +531

    I feel envy for the next generations to come when traveling the stars becomes viable.

    • @alexma1
      @alexma1 Před 2 lety +154

      Assuming our greed won't doom ourselves, of course.

    • @javiertorres9114
      @javiertorres9114 Před 2 lety +30

      @@alexma1 no argument here.

    • @boom-d8034
      @boom-d8034 Před 2 lety +1

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @hirokokueh3541
      @hirokokueh3541 Před 2 lety +47

      imagine 100 years later, the offspring of our generation are doing nightmarishly dangerous slavery-like job on space bases serving the rich space tourists.

    • @LetsPlayGamesRandom
      @LetsPlayGamesRandom Před 2 lety +16

      Yeah dude you should look up the distance from earth to saturn. Its not going to be viable for a very long time.

  • @rumel02
    @rumel02 Před 2 lety +381

    When I was a kid I wondered how those rings looked up close. I would've never guessed they were just 10 meters high. We are lucky to live in a time of exploring and discovery of the solar system!! Can't wait for the next few decades (if we're still around 😅).

    • @GotoHere
      @GotoHere Před 2 lety +7

      According to the dumb democrats in USA, you only have 8 years left to live because of the made up disaster called climate change.

    • @Chuked
      @Chuked Před 2 lety +20

      @@GotoHere climate change is real

    • @mr.smellgood2794
      @mr.smellgood2794 Před 2 lety +13

      @@GotoHere 8yrs left isn't true. But climate change is real. You can see it happening with you're own eye's. Look what's going on around us.

    • @legendaryzodiac574
      @legendaryzodiac574 Před 2 lety +7

      @@GotoHere there's lots of research supporting that it exists

    • @nrw64
      @nrw64 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Chuked he never said climate change is not real

  • @TJSaw
    @TJSaw Před rokem +23

    The animation is just spell binding. Hypnotic.

  • @beastsurfer616
    @beastsurfer616 Před rokem +12

    6:15 , this scene really gets me . It makes me realise that how infinite is our universe....

  • @HaggardPillockHD
    @HaggardPillockHD Před 2 lety +490

    Wow wait, I never realised the rings had vertical structures. I always assumed it was just a sea of small ice/dust particles

    • @TactileCoder
      @TactileCoder Před 2 lety +65

      It's caused by gravitational perturbations by one of the shepherd moons as it orbits by.

    • @daniboiyy
      @daniboiyy Před 2 lety +7

      @@TactileCoder is the moon on the same plane as the ring? Or does it perpendicularly cross the rings at a certain angle?

    • @chrisrobinson803
      @chrisrobinson803 Před 2 lety +3

      Wait what you still believe in space you believe that that's CGI no such thing as space 😭😭😂🤣🤣😂

    • @graydonsharp5165
      @graydonsharp5165 Před 2 lety +1

      @@chrisrobinson803 you believe in CGI? No such thing, its the atomized LSD they pump into the air.

    • @Paula_Mancilla
      @Paula_Mancilla Před 2 lety

      ☝📷🗽🌹⏰🙏🐎🌉♎♎♎⚡💥🔥👓🎺🌔🌠🌈👷🐉🌄Amén Amén y Amén.

  • @Tilnaor
    @Tilnaor Před 2 lety +204

    Never thought formation of the rings was that fast. Days... I thought it needed way more much time to differentiate from the original positions. And the mountains on the rim just incredible. The universe is amazing

    • @akshaydalvi1534
      @akshaydalvi1534 Před 2 lety +2

      Is it earth days or Saturn Days though???

    • @JohnnyT0pside
      @JohnnyT0pside Před 2 lety +13

      @@akshaydalvi1534 Probably Earth days. One day on Saturn is less than half a day on Earth hehe

    • @ryanbrink2755
      @ryanbrink2755 Před 2 lety +8

      I mean it’s all just theories, and it’s highly favored so you can’t challenge it

    • @knightmarefuel4499
      @knightmarefuel4499 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ryanbrink2755 The fact people hear this stuff and actually believe it JUST because some people with "college degrees" said it lol and those same people will try to discredit the bible by saying it was written by man.... Well EVERYTHING YOU READ was written by man and they believe it like evolution... sheep will be sheep brother

    • @AlehGea
      @AlehGea Před 2 lety +16

      @@knightmarefuel4499 You sound like a earthplanner who don't understand science. The only one believing in any bullshit on internet is you.

  • @studioambience8340
    @studioambience8340 Před rokem +11

    One day space tourists will see the ring with their naked eye from a tour operator's space vehicle.

  • @chasehicks7465
    @chasehicks7465 Před 2 lety +17

    Mind-boggling the scale of the universe

  • @AmanRaiAgrawal
    @AmanRaiAgrawal Před 2 lety +161

    What has surprised me is the thickness of the ring.... It's just 10 meters, I always thought it to be a cople of hundred or a thousand km thick.

    • @leomartin1603
      @leomartin1603 Před 2 lety +13

      Aman. I thought the same thing years ago, and I thought they were more ASTEROIDIAL. Not water ice and I thought it was thicker.

    • @kevstaa7121
      @kevstaa7121 Před 2 lety

      Lo l

    • @leomartin1603
      @leomartin1603 Před 2 lety +3

      The idea of the SIGHT of travelling across the rings in some space craft then......BOOM! A mountain of Saturn's ringlets shooting up and forming mountains miles high has to be just as intense as seeing those MASSIVE geysers shooting out from ENCELADUS.

    • @chillyhead611
      @chillyhead611 Před 2 lety

      Hahahahh. I have some swamp land for sale. Lol.

    • @devonex
      @devonex Před 2 lety

      Idk man, is it even possible for humans to travel that far. Even with whatever futuristic technology invented in the future, are humans really capable of travelling at such speed or such long time. Humans do not live that long.

  • @Bootrosgali
    @Bootrosgali Před 2 lety +278

    I love how she thinks of the movie scene potential for it. A nice window into how she thinks about it. Also promising that they think that way because its what we all want to see, ues of course she is just human too but how many of us are in that position so it is good to know. Good to know because besides the scientific finds, the public have above all else a hunger for the spectacle of what it out there.

    • @AmidaNyorai48
      @AmidaNyorai48 Před 2 lety +1

      😯😯

    • @fatitankeris6327
      @fatitankeris6327 Před 2 lety +8

      I'd say that movie producers often think the viewers would be bored by reality and such phenomenon, but many things in reality are much more phenomenal than a lot of science-fiction.

    • @anzaca1
      @anzaca1 Před 2 lety +2

      CoD Infinite Warfare kinda did that with its first level, where you're on one of Jupiter's moons.

    • @humanbrainphyscholgyeffect3706
      @humanbrainphyscholgyeffect3706 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/7NFX2OCGDOI/video.html

  • @nathancommissariat3518
    @nathancommissariat3518 Před rokem +83

    Would love to see it in person one day. Saturn is incredible.

    • @ala0284
      @ala0284 Před rokem +3

      Well you can tbh. Just get a telescope

    • @nathancommissariat3518
      @nathancommissariat3518 Před rokem +4

      @@ala0284 I have a telescope. I meant up close.

    • @nick_0
      @nick_0 Před rokem

      @@nathancommissariat3518 With Starship we have the potential to travel to the moons of saturn, which mean doing a flyby of the rings of Saturn. Can't wait for that day.

    • @hazardeur
      @hazardeur Před rokem

      @@nick_0 yeah sure, 3.5years in a tiny spacecraft and then again 3.5years to go back. sounds like a good deal.

    • @nick_0
      @nick_0 Před rokem +1

      @@hazardeur it’s an adventure 🤷‍♂️

  • @TheYimeFlakes
    @TheYimeFlakes Před 4 měsíci +7

    I love when I wake up in the middle of the night to watch a video of Saturn getting engaged

  • @jasonmcconnell3503
    @jasonmcconnell3503 Před 2 lety +274

    when she's talking about the vertical structures on the rings honestly i teared up

    • @Baulder13
      @Baulder13 Před 2 lety +15

      Carolyn Porco is awesome. I got to hear her speak at an astronomy festival just before Cassini concluded and she was so proud of what Cassini accomplished. It was really moving to hear her speak about it.

    • @dreeemer
      @dreeemer Před 2 lety +8

      If you teared up at just that, you may want to prepare a box of tissues if you haven't already seen Cassini's Grand Finale documentary. I was crying buckets just from the preview alone!

    • @mantesh1379
      @mantesh1379 Před 2 lety

      @@dreeemer bro can u share me the link. I would love to see it. 🙏

    • @faizansaleem9905
      @faizansaleem9905 Před 2 lety +3

      @@mantesh1379 czcams.com/video/xrGAQCq9BMU/video.html

    • @dreeemer
      @dreeemer Před 2 lety +2

      @@mantesh1379 @faizi99 shared the emotional preview and this is the documentary: czcams.com/video/V5Ho30EMRm4/video.html

  • @arshpreetkaur9
    @arshpreetkaur9 Před 2 lety +104

    I love the excitement and happiness in the lady on finding out and explaining the vertical structures in the rings. 😍

  • @SomeGuy-mt4hq
    @SomeGuy-mt4hq Před rokem +27

    Big props to the drone operator getting those sick shots on the ice moon mid explosion. We really don't hear enough about these legends

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Shout out to the mic operator. That sound of that moon getting ripped apart by tidal forces couldn't have been easy to record, and with such crystal clarity.

  • @jakerose1362
    @jakerose1362 Před 2 lety +6

    Rip 🪦 to the cameraman. His work won’t be forgotten.

  • @melissapyle7879
    @melissapyle7879 Před 2 lety +46

    Wow!! The animation of the moon breaking apart.. i could watch that all day.. its fascinating and terrifying at the same time..

    • @kysike666
      @kysike666 Před 2 lety

      Ur pretty

    • @jumalajivee653
      @jumalajivee653 Před rokem

      @@kysike666 but u are not...😅
      Joking don't take it seriously

  • @Sve3t
    @Sve3t Před rokem +28

    They say that the moon entered Saturn's Roche limit, but based on the footage of the moon exploding I am gonna say that clearly Saitama did it. Saturn is just lucky he didn't sneeze.

  • @Gr84you
    @Gr84you Před 2 měsíci +7

    This is very fitting, because Saturn (in Mythology) actually ate his own son.

  • @dragoonsunite
    @dragoonsunite Před 2 lety +62

    The image of the moon coming apart from the surface is the sort of stuff I LOVE to see from CGI of these phenomena. Straight out of some of my "dream/nightmares" (Weird because I never wake up during these nightmares, always so awe inspiring, I think if I die, I might rather like to have it be while on the surface of a world torn to shreds XD).

    • @_egghead
      @_egghead Před 2 lety

      You just need to film it to not die. Cameraman invincibility.

    • @israelgomez6988
      @israelgomez6988 Před 2 lety

      Marvels did it

  • @CloudsGirl7
    @CloudsGirl7 Před 2 lety +84

    I absolutely love this series - I never watch broadcast TV anymore, but I kept going back to watch the premiere of each new episode. The scene of the destruction of Saturn's ancient moon is one that will remain with me for a long time. The CGI and cinematography are *amazing* ... And the music! I'm dying to get my hands on a soundtrack...

    • @legitpancake4276
      @legitpancake4276 Před 2 lety +2

      I watched it on TV as it came out. Only complaint I have is that the original BBC UK broadcast was narrated by an actual scientist, but for the US broadcast (the one we hear in this video), they re-recorded basically everything with a celebrity Zachary Quinto (Spock in the new Star Trek movies). I really wish we could have gotten the unedited version.

    • @legitpancake4276
      @legitpancake4276 Před 2 lety +3

      @@chairmanofthebored8684 I don’t really care who they got to record for it. I’m just annoyed they felt the need to change it at all for the American release.

    • @CloudsGirl7
      @CloudsGirl7 Před 2 lety +2

      @@legitpancake4276
      Huh, I did not know that. Zachary seemed to have done a decent job, at the very least - I had no complaints - but as a scientifically-inclined American, I resent the thought that I would prefer some celebrity over a scientist.

  • @in_the_building1
    @in_the_building1 Před rokem +11

    I would love to see that in a movie! So magnificent! I had no idea the rings were anything like this! Tremendous

  • @Bakedcakeyyy
    @Bakedcakeyyy Před rokem +10

    I just LOVE how enthusiastic she is while talking about the rings. It’s contagious!

  • @DeathJustice
    @DeathJustice Před 2 lety +52

    Are we simply going to ignore the fact that *young Commander Spock himself* is explaining us stuff happening in space?

    • @edwardclancey8260
      @edwardclancey8260 Před 2 lety +1

      I thought that was Zachary’s voice.

    • @HC-cb4yp
      @HC-cb4yp Před 2 lety

      I thought it was Kier Dullea from 2001...

    • @agquad
      @agquad Před 3 měsíci +1

      Spock got a little dramatic for his planetary history report at Starfleet Academy.

    • @uxjared
      @uxjared Před měsícem

      I had to scroll too far for this…

  • @RektemRectums
    @RektemRectums Před 2 lety +222

    Mad respekt to the cameraman who filmed Cassini as it filmed Saturn.

  • @petterlarsson7257
    @petterlarsson7257 Před rokem +8

    anyone gonna talk about the fact that they used the mercury texture for the moon at 0:16

    • @bnd7911
      @bnd7911 Před rokem +1

      Saturn's roche limit gonna kill Mercury bro💀

  • @paulgibbon5991
    @paulgibbon5991 Před 2 lety +1

    The funny thing is, 10-100 million years ago is....not RECENT as such, but within a time when the Earth was life-bearing and a time from which we have archaeological relics. It's easy to assume the shape of the Solar System and the nature of each planet was basically set in stone way before any life emerged on Earth, but this goes to show how it's an ongoing and evolving place.

  • @astop94
    @astop94 Před 2 lety +145

    I love watching these vids and seeing just how excited scientists still get with new discovered material.
    It is amazing looking up at the night sky and seeing these objects through a telescope. It never ceases to amaze me.

    • @edwardanimsyujinamuka6203
      @edwardanimsyujinamuka6203 Před 2 lety +2

      In a metaphoric way it's like a kid sees a treassure in front of him waiting to be opened

    • @vanessajazp6341
      @vanessajazp6341 Před 2 lety +7

      To be a scientist is to be forever a child. The mud we play in just gets a little more complex as we learn more.

    • @JessicaGarcia-xf9wr
      @JessicaGarcia-xf9wr Před 2 lety +2

      Yes it’s amazing seeing the planets 🪐 just being there while also having a historic history behind is amazing!

    • @humanbrainphyscholgyeffect3706
      @humanbrainphyscholgyeffect3706 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/7NFX2OCGDOI/video.html

  • @ben1449
    @ben1449 Před 2 lety +14

    My favorite part is the accuracy of the time frame 10-100 million years ago.
    Goes to show as far as we have come we are so far from knowing so many things

  • @jamestl9301
    @jamestl9301 Před 2 lety +4

    The camera man did an awesome job capturing the destruction.

  • @condor5912
    @condor5912 Před rokem +18

    Respect to the cameraman who went back in time to film that

  • @shayanchamas60
    @shayanchamas60 Před 2 lety +86

    Dr. Carolyn Porco is an amazing woman! Love her enthusiasm. I've often imagined the same. Thanks for all your hard work in bringing us the crown jewel of our Solar System up close and personal.

    • @bono9814
      @bono9814 Před rokem

      You only like her because she is a female

  • @tellydianadayondon6534
    @tellydianadayondon6534 Před 2 lety +65

    There are only 2 things I wish in my life..
    1st. To have a ultimate healing ability
    2nd. To be a celestial ghost to travel the
    universe forever eternity.

    • @jonathan-zo9nh
      @jonathan-zo9nh Před 2 lety +5

      My wish is to know All the secrets of the universe. Im always curious about the big bang and how something came from nothingness, or probably this universe came from a big crunch from the past universe before this universe existed, but where did the past universe come from? Another big crunch maybe but where did the first universe come from too. Also curious about the edge of the universe and whats beyond it. Like what happens if you get past it?

    • @sheldonginsberg5382
      @sheldonginsberg5382 Před 2 lety +1

      Wow! I thought I was the only one that wished for this!

    • @maanmallak8953
      @maanmallak8953 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/SdZIiBLtWf4/video.html

    • @mskimyu
      @mskimyu Před 2 lety

      It's nice to know that somewhere in this planet we have soulmates! I'm also wishing for the second one!

    • @nobodyishere
      @nobodyishere Před 2 lety

      @@sheldonginsberg5382 damn me too

  • @DustinPlatt
    @DustinPlatt Před 5 měsíci +4

    Us boomers remember Saturn without its rings. Those were the days when we had to walk 953 million miles in 5 feet of vaccum to Saturn.

  • @lf3322
    @lf3322 Před rokem +9

    A warm congrats to the researchers and scientist who do this work. Also, this music put me in a trance. If at all possible, please link

  • @GComas-jn2yc
    @GComas-jn2yc Před 2 lety +19

    The views shown at 5:46 is something I’ve never seen before. Pretty stunning if there’re ice mountains on it’s ring.

    • @mindrover777
      @mindrover777 Před 2 lety +1

      That's not a real pic. Simulated.

    • @brucea3103
      @brucea3103 Před 2 lety +5

      From the graphics, it looks like they are not solid 'mountains', but a jumbled-up pieces of ice. Think of a rug when it wrinkles on the edge when you push against it.

    • @GComas-jn2yc
      @GComas-jn2yc Před 2 lety +1

      @@mindrover777
      Lol 😆 I know that but if it’s true, I’ve never seen it before.

    • @GComas-jn2yc
      @GComas-jn2yc Před 2 lety

      @@brucea3103
      Hmmm 🤔 Could be.

    • @Hackanhacker
      @Hackanhacker Před 2 lety

      gravity waves effects on matter orbiting a planet caused by one of its moon that find itself in that ring of matter
      ... basicly xD

  • @litfill54
    @litfill54 Před 2 lety +6

    2:06 imagine you were living there, amazing

  • @richcast66
    @richcast66 Před rokem +75

    I'm so jealous of aliens advanced enough to fly around in space to see everything like this first hand. But then again, would they have the capability of things like appreciation? Are they capable of being moved by such spectacles?

    • @jxg1652
      @jxg1652 Před rokem +8

      Heres a thought I found interesting:
      Due to light moving so slowly, Aliens could watch earth forming through a telescope.
      And we could watch their planet forming.
      And both of our species could exist at the same time, go extinct and we'd never know of each other.
      Or, for a more happy ending - at least one of either species could develop FTL/Instant travel technology and we could visit to each others homeworld and watch our own homeworld take shape.
      Kind of a intergalactic cinema.

    • @nelsonwelser116
      @nelsonwelser116 Před rokem

      @richcast66, if they do exist, I believe what stops them from creating chaos and from trying to change the planets or rule other species is their fascination withwith the universe. @richcast66, You must be admiring an art piece so much to preserve it in its natural state, to not try and change its colors.

    • @CommanderZavala
      @CommanderZavala Před rokem

      Yes, Aliens are just humans from the future.

    • @jancarlosanluis8279
      @jancarlosanluis8279 Před rokem +1

      @@nelsonwelser116 or a scenario wherein an alien species loved the beauty and uniqueness of the earth so much, they eradicated humanity which they percieve to be destructive viral organisms in order to preserve it.

    • @frankarce-gw2hr
      @frankarce-gw2hr Před rokem +1

      Beings of Planet earth:::*--•%%[*=,/We Are Watching You 👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽👽

  • @phsal5182
    @phsal5182 Před rokem +12

    Great visuals in this very informative video. Thank you!

  • @hamzamahmood9565
    @hamzamahmood9565 Před 2 lety +56

    Imagine you're an astronaut standing on one of the mountain peaks of Saturn's ring. For a brief moment, Earth's existence may not seem to matter much.

    • @Rendydany
      @Rendydany Před 2 lety +12

      Damn bro. I don't remember ordering another existential crisis

    • @abdulaleem9207
      @abdulaleem9207 Před 2 lety +1

      true.

    • @hamzamahmood9565
      @hamzamahmood9565 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Rendydany It's free shipping

    • @MarsFKA
      @MarsFKA Před rokem +2

      Um...you wouldn't be "standing", but floating.
      The view, though, would be monumental.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@MarsFKAI'm not sure if "floating" is the correct word. There is no buoyancy, technically you would be falling alongside the ice.
      But yes, not enough gravity to stand, and the view must be breathtaking.

  • @MadScientyst
    @MadScientyst Před 2 lety +10

    Anybody else detect Zachary Quinto's voice over?...Homage to the late, great narrator Leonard Nimoy (Spock) no doubt...truly EPIC!...LOL

    • @rens1074
      @rens1074 Před 2 lety

      Yepp, I heard it too 🙂

    • @ogpimpin5059
      @ogpimpin5059 Před 2 lety +1

      I just think of Robot from Invincible when i hear his voice lol

  • @AsadKhan-lm6yr
    @AsadKhan-lm6yr Před rokem +4

    The narration of Brian Cox is really good with this

  • @shahad_alsayed
    @shahad_alsayed Před 2 lety

    Thank you BBC Earth Lab for wonderful & precious exploration.

  • @pratikkatkar7885
    @pratikkatkar7885 Před 2 lety +31

    Jewel of solar system
    Most charmasic character of entire universe
    Thanks Cassini for this remarkable search

    • @markhollander1201
      @markhollander1201 Před 2 lety

      And you think this is real ??? lmao

    • @geckoo7770
      @geckoo7770 Před 2 lety +3

      @@markhollander1201 Ok then show us your proof of why Saturn is actually just a big holographic water bug slipping on the firmament's surface then. Should be easier than looking into a telescope since you know about everything and are waaay smarter than every scientist who has worked in the entire History.

  • @HiiImChris
    @HiiImChris Před 2 lety +34

    wow the animation team did an amazing job on this one. it's certainly nice to watch space content on newer videos xD

  • @immortanjoe9362
    @immortanjoe9362 Před 7 měsíci +8

    These videos always fascinate me. They really put our lives into perspective. We're literally a blip in time compared to the life of the universe. I find that comforting. My life will come and go, and no matter what my decisions are or the impact I make, it will make little difference in the grand scheme.

  • @chrisblum2153
    @chrisblum2153 Před rokem +5

    Wow!! Amazing video and superb commentary!! Thank you

  • @kevinslater4126
    @kevinslater4126 Před 2 lety +65

    The fact that this happened is nothing special. Moons get within the Roche Limit of their parent planets all the time in the universe. The fact that this happened during a time we're alive to witness it, now that's something spectacular.

    • @robertkoen5506
      @robertkoen5506 Před 2 lety +15

      @TheRealLoganYT His point is that we're alive in the time the rings exist. On a cosmological scale, rings are short-lived and Saturn's rings will disappear. To see then really is amazing

    • @judah-benmorales9759
      @judah-benmorales9759 Před 2 lety +3

      EVERYTHING about it is special. You've just lost the ability to be amazed. 😪

    • @daddyrammus
      @daddyrammus Před 2 lety +2

      but, on the other hand, makes you think about all the stuff that we have missed or will miss in the future

  • @solojammer9500
    @solojammer9500 Před 2 lety +26

    Can we all take a moment and appreciate the brave camera man? Without him, we won't be able to see this. 😌😌

    • @geckoo7770
      @geckoo7770 Před 2 lety +3

      He even succeeded to reach and hold on Cassini!

    • @bod910
      @bod910 Před 2 lety

      The unmanned spacecraft sent the pictures back lol, nobody was trying to get you to think people actually went there and took pictures dummy 😂😂

    • @geckoo7770
      @geckoo7770 Před 2 lety

      @@bod910 Then how come the guy filmed Cassini from outside huh?

  • @pigpig252
    @pigpig252 Před rokem +1

    Adore how enthusiastic the woman at the end is. You can tell she gets emotional thinking about the wonders of space. Must love her job!

  • @Pers0n97
    @Pers0n97 Před rokem +1

    Today I learned that moons make thunder noise when breaking.
    Thank you BBC.

  • @aerostake
    @aerostake Před 2 lety +7

    4:24 moment gives out Homeworld vibes so strong it’s sending chills down my spine

    • @weirdface3838
      @weirdface3838 Před 2 lety

      steven universe?

    • @Spudtron98
      @Spudtron98 Před 2 lety

      @@weirdface3838 Nah, a space strategy game known for its monochrome cutscenes that are super atmospheric in their rendering of the various environs of space.

  • @mysticdragonwolf89
    @mysticdragonwolf89 Před 2 lety +8

    I may have missed this but - we are watching this many times faster
    This process took billions of years - it’s still going on
    Soon Saturn may have a moon reformed from the ice eventually - much like our moon

    • @haylicewatters41
      @haylicewatters41 Před 2 lety

      It already has some - the so called "shepherd moons". Those moons orbit inside of the rings, helping them staying in place. The most accepted theory of how they formed is exactly that, chunks and particles of ice and rock fusing into one another.

  • @DavidBrocekArt
    @DavidBrocekArt Před 8 měsíci +1

    I'm so glad that other planets in our solar system are not flat so we can watch this beauty.

  • @diontaedaughtry974
    @diontaedaughtry974 Před 2 lety

    Thank you this was very insightful and informative 👍👍

  • @pinochet3317
    @pinochet3317 Před 2 lety +52

    I have never seen images of the ring walls before - the things you learn! :)

  • @shiroyt4185
    @shiroyt4185 Před 2 lety +5

    Props to the camera man for the awesome footage

  • @lliamjurdom9505
    @lliamjurdom9505 Před rokem +1

    Zachary Quinto is the narrator .... perfect intonation ...

  • @justincredible.
    @justincredible. Před rokem +4

    Hey flat eathers, there's your icewall.

  • @Knappa22
    @Knappa22 Před 2 lety +6

    I love how thrilled the scientist is. She’s still enthralled about the ice mountains on the rings.

  • @trick-o-treat414
    @trick-o-treat414 Před 2 lety +15

    AMAZING!!! It's very fascinating and yet scary at the same time, to KNOW things existed, how it got created, or how it got destroyed overtime.

  • @Michigan1985
    @Michigan1985 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I'm surprised it was only 10-100 million years ago. I would have thought it happened closer to the solar systems birth.

  • @7249xxl
    @7249xxl Před rokem +1

    Been watching allot of this simulations and the thing that always stands out for me is how the whole event is so incomprehensibly short compared to everything else.
    Like with the Theia collision hypothesis. 13 hours in the billions of years and we have a moon.
    That's like running into your sibling absorbing it and gaining an extra limb in the less then the blink of your eye.

  • @KHN.RVA.28
    @KHN.RVA.28 Před 2 lety +7

    The cassini mission was so dope to follow. It was the first I had followed from the intro of it in 2006 to the launch to the final pass of it thru the rings and finally crashing on Saturn 🪐🪐🪐🪐🪐

  • @lewasil
    @lewasil Před 2 lety +6

    That picture of Saturn was so perfect and pristine, it looked fake! It's so difficult to wrap my head around the fact that these planets exist, and why cant we go walk around on them lol. It's amazing!

  • @space_audits
    @space_audits Před rokem

    Incredible story backed up fantastic imagery. That's all these people have, stories and imagery.

  • @Sbeve_One
    @Sbeve_One Před rokem

    Her enthusiasm is contagious

  • @Demons972
    @Demons972 Před 2 lety +5

    I was today years old when i found out Saturn rings have vertical mountain-like structures and i been fascinated with astronomy ever since i have memory, space would never cease to amaze us.

  • @Scottingham
    @Scottingham Před 2 lety +3

    RIP Cassini
    The amount of science that little craft did was beyond anybody's imagination. Carl Sagan wrote about Cassini as a hopeful dream of a mission back in 1994.

  • @Pauly421
    @Pauly421 Před 2 lety

    BBC Earth these are some of the most gorgeous and well made space videos in existence please please please keep making them! MORE SPACE! MORE SPACE! MORE SPACE! 😍😃

  • @PaulEli_YT
    @PaulEli_YT Před 7 měsíci +3

    Saturn on Solarballs:
    I ki i i illed my MOONS 😭

  • @sophiajas3643
    @sophiajas3643 Před 2 lety +21

    Saturn's ring is beautiful from afar and it's full of surprises up close. It's just the stuff you want in your CZcams suggestion everyday👌

  • @hanklestank
    @hanklestank Před 2 lety +6

    Well that's just about the coolest visualization I've ever seen!

  • @orangetopaz_
    @orangetopaz_ Před 19 dny

    I love how the channel called earth science is talking about Saturn’s rings. anyways, amazing video! great visuals and animations

  • @adnanbashir4304
    @adnanbashir4304 Před 2 lety

    Great video excellent explained

  • @myrandomlife8881
    @myrandomlife8881 Před 2 lety +4

    5:13 I'm surprised too

  • @eozoon
    @eozoon Před 2 lety +31

    "Cassini's mission is far from over?" It crashed into Saturn in 2017. It's over.

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 Před 2 lety +6

      Funnily enough, The Planets aired in 2019. Guess they've been sitting on that script a bit longer.

    • @legal040
      @legal040 Před 2 lety +1

      lmao nice catch

    • @Pandamasque
      @Pandamasque Před 2 lety +1

      It's but a flesh wound.

    • @nickbisson8243
      @nickbisson8243 Před 2 lety +6

      Takes a few years to go through all the data from Cassini

    • @Belov3ed_Angel
      @Belov3ed_Angel Před 2 lety

      Rip

  • @octaveachebelle795
    @octaveachebelle795 Před rokem

    Magnificent ! Thanks a lot.

  • @Neoentrophy
    @Neoentrophy Před rokem

    I just want to thank the BBC for providing this content for free, especially since I cancelled my license fee over a year ago

  • @TheColdestWater
    @TheColdestWater Před 2 lety +3

    It’s always so impressive and mind blowing watching videos about planets 🤯

  • @wholesomebaker5410
    @wholesomebaker5410 Před 2 lety +5

    0:01 When Saturn is sus
    I'm so sorry

    • @brightax7502
      @brightax7502 Před 2 lety

      How

    • @SirRayGz
      @SirRayGz Před rokem

      @@brightax7502 because of the music when the video starts making a reference to among us when the game gives you your role and your objective to do.

  • @thepurrfectcat
    @thepurrfectcat Před rokem +1

    Phenomenal, no words to describe.

  • @krebituru
    @krebituru Před rokem

    Thank you for this bbc

  • @therunningpiranha8763
    @therunningpiranha8763 Před 2 lety +181

    Really quite awesome and fascinating to realise that if most of the dinosaurs would have looked through a telescope, they could have seen Saturn without rings! 🦕🪐

    • @dr.cheeze5382
      @dr.cheeze5382 Před 2 lety +26

      They could have literaly seen the moon get torn appart!

    • @thatmikatho8136
      @thatmikatho8136 Před 2 lety +2

      @@dr.cheeze5382 How long does a process like this take? Years, months, days?

    • @fallenwolf3368
      @fallenwolf3368 Před 2 lety

      What's even more awesome alien's visited us a long time ago and the dinosaurs ate them the ones that escaped nuked our planet. That's why they only hover over us when they come to visit.

    • @fallenwolf3368
      @fallenwolf3368 Před 2 lety +2

      @@thatmikatho8136 Light-year is the distance light travels in one year. Light zips through interstellar space at 186,000 miles (300,000 kilometers) per second and 5.88 trillion miles (9.46 trillion kilometers) per year.
      Do the math on how many light years there are from us to Saturn and then divide the time of the Moon being destroyed

    • @lionking_7597
      @lionking_7597 Před 2 lety

      🤣

  • @musaritrashid7534
    @musaritrashid7534 Před 2 lety +60

    Now a day's the fiction has overwhelmed the reality.

    • @Anicius_
      @Anicius_ Před 2 lety +5

      Ever since religion not just nowadays

    • @kewlbeans9905
      @kewlbeans9905 Před 2 lety +3

      ​@@Anicius_ Science gave us ability to construct weapons that will destroy humanity. Carl Sagan and other scientists have mentioned that the reason we haven't seen advanced civilization is because they become so advance, they kill themselves. Russia, China and USA and others have doomed humanity. Who did it...I can assure you, it was not a Rabbi, an Imam, a Priest or a religious reading out of some holy books but educated and secularly inclined scientists who doomed us. As much as religion can easily be used as a scapegoat, it can also be argued religion kept humanity safe by keep us away from deadly scientific knowledge to kill ourselves.
      From biological warfare, to weapons of mass destruction, to planetary systems hijacking such as weather, no stone is unturned during scientific research to satisfy our hate for each other. Science is leading the way to humanity's destruction. I rather have science dead than humanity dead. It's harms out weigh the benefits it offers.

    • @neverwinta7702
      @neverwinta7702 Před 2 lety

      @@kewlbeans9905 cool 😎

    • @kewlbeans9905
      @kewlbeans9905 Před 2 lety

      @@zhg4485 Hello dood. I am an electrical engineer by education and software engineer by profession. In my faith, we are taught that science is twin sister of religion. I am not against scientific research and development. It is only in the West that we noticed, religion and science are opponents. It is an alien idea to us. Church hasn't helped the matters either.
      We are taught that creation has been made subservient to humanity. And that we should question, research, discover, and invent not to dismiss God but to understand how Powerful He is. In the West, it is the opposite. Somehow new discoveries disapprove God. That baffles our minds. Did some scientist create atom? Did some scientist create black hole? Did some scientist create human beings? Did some man create Mars or cosmos or ordered Big Bang? No, we only discover what is already is there.
      In our faith, science helps validate our religion and brings us closer to God. In our view, there is no irony as God is not bounded by what we know such as scientific and mathematical models of reality, physics, matter, gravity, time, etc. but it is us who are bounded and limited by all measures.
      We also have to realize the irony of you typing on a device, internet technology, etc. that was made possible by the intellect planted in us to begin with, so we may discover and invent. The first instruction or commandment in our faith is, "Read! Read in the name of thy Lord who created; He created the human being from blood clot. Read! in the name of thy Lord who taught by the pen and taught the human being what he knew not!"
      I am not forcing my religion on you but sharing how we perceive things.
      Kind regards

  • @christophergreening1075
    @christophergreening1075 Před 2 lety +61

    Great theory and brilliant animation but I have a question; just how big was the ice moon? Are the rings made up only from the body of that moon? I would imagine that it would have been quite a sizeable moon to be responsible for what we see today

    • @RoguePC4U
      @RoguePC4U Před 2 lety +19

      They do tell you its estimated size in the video, almost 400km across. They even mention how many metric tons of ice that would be. I assume this was just a backwards calculation.

    • @dryb3301
      @dryb3301 Před 2 lety +1

      17000 million tons of ice

    • @GhostRydr1172
      @GhostRydr1172 Před 2 lety +11

      Still how do you get a body just 400 km across into a fine ring wider than Jupiter? I'm still trying to wrap my head around that.

    • @tyler-qr5jn
      @tyler-qr5jn Před 2 lety +8

      @@GhostRydr1172 the collective mass of the rings compressed into an ice planet... it's not hard

    • @tyler-qr5jn
      @tyler-qr5jn Před 2 lety +7

      @@GhostRydr1172 it's not "just" 400K across, you're thinking 2 dimensionally. It's a sphere. So yes, horizontally and vertically, it would be.

  • @AYAHWYWBEJGS
    @AYAHWYWBEJGS Před rokem +1

    Props to the camera man for doing this and living

  • @MaanIsMe
    @MaanIsMe Před rokem +1

    The beauty science has shown us. I could never replay for the knowledge it has given to me.
    There is no beauty beyond science.