NASA Find Ancient Star That Was Previously Thought Impossible To Exist

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  • čas přidán 16. 02. 2024
  • NASA Find Ancient Star That Was Previously Thought Impossible To Exist
    ► Subscribe: goo.gl/r5jd1F
    We've all seen the solar system pictures in textbooks - the Sun, slightly larger than Jupiter. But that isn't the right depiction of the scales: the Sun is so massive that you could fit about 1,000 Jupiters inside! Impressive as it is, our Sun isn't the biggest star in the universe or even our galaxy. That title goes to UY Scuti, and compared to it, our star is like a tiny pebble. But there's more.
    Scientists have stumbled upon something even more mind-boggling - an enigmatic ancient star with a black hole inside. It's an astronomical mystery that both puzzles scientists, and can potentially explain how the universe came to be what it is today.
    But how is it possible for a black hole to exist inside a star? Why were these stars so gigantic? And what would happen if a black hole star wandered into the solar system?
    We are on social media:
    / destinymediaa
    The Destiny voice:
    www.TomsVoiceovers.co.uk
    Sources:
    pastebin.com/raw/8Yn0sjM0

Komentáře • 401

  • @VahnBlack
    @VahnBlack Před 3 měsíci +234

    So you're telling me its a... Black Hole Sun?

    • @oldtimer2192
      @oldtimer2192 Před 3 měsíci +11

      Good song!

    • @darianleyer5777
      @darianleyer5777 Před 3 měsíci

      XD
      Only if it has planet(oid)s

    • @ernestmac13
      @ernestmac13 Před 3 měsíci +6

      I watched Sound Garden Live at the concert arena near UC Berkeley during their Spoon Man and Black Hole Sun days.

    • @JeersNX
      @JeersNX Před 2 měsíci

      @@ernestmac13 cool

    • @JeersNX
      @JeersNX Před 2 měsíci +2

      DONT YOU COME???

  • @nicklandeck9034
    @nicklandeck9034 Před 3 měsíci +285

    Wow. Chris Cornell was right

  • @Choc-Ice
    @Choc-Ice Před 3 měsíci +72

    Black hole sun, won’t you come, wash away the raaaaiiinn. Black hole sun, won’t you come, won’t you come? 😊

  • @erika_fuzzbottom
    @erika_fuzzbottom Před 2 měsíci +112

    Was waiting for the part about how NASA found an ancient star that was previously thought impossible to exist.

    • @Ghuirm
      @Ghuirm Před 2 měsíci +22

      spoiler alert, its the star with a black hole core, theoretically thought to exist at near the beginning of the universe and are the reason supermassive black holes exist

    • @erika_fuzzbottom
      @erika_fuzzbottom Před 2 měsíci +10

      Right, but did NASA find one?

    • @KaneLivesInDeath
      @KaneLivesInDeath Před 2 měsíci +11

      Theirs a good chance that they existed in the Universe far in its infancy, and were very common...
      Some speculate that their deaths is how galaxies form, as every galactic center contains a black hole that was also once thought impossible to exist.

    • @VergilArcanis
      @VergilArcanis Před 2 měsíci +6

      Speculation here: the galaxy center is the remnants of a second-generation hypermassive star that had a black hole core
      I say second-generation because while they were the first semi-stable ones, they were not the first ones.

    • @stephenkolostyak4087
      @stephenkolostyak4087 Před měsícem +2

      this is a shitpost channel, which every "destiny" channel I've seen ends up being. Hell, even Stargate Destiny was just a big shitpost.

  • @d3fct
    @d3fct Před 3 měsíci +33

    SoundGarden approved!
    RIP Chris.

  • @edazar961
    @edazar961 Před 2 měsíci +25

    Black hole stars don't necessarily have to collapse or go supernova, cuz if they can form, then they can obviously maintain some kind of balance, at least temporarily

    • @thatsfsguy3609
      @thatsfsguy3609 Před měsícem +3

      "temporary" what happens when that balance faults? smh

  • @LordNaruto_
    @LordNaruto_ Před měsícem +12

    Before I looked at the title i thought that it was a donut 😂😂

  • @IPSHardcore
    @IPSHardcore Před 3 měsíci +13

    I would like to know how they saw a black hole inside that sun, but they can't see in our sun?

    • @lucianz7636
      @lucianz7636 Před měsícem

      As an official religion hater, I think they make a bunch of shit up to justify the huge money that get invested into NASA. We don't know anything outside of our solar system, besides a bunch of speculation. IMO, i'm no expert in science.

    • @robertb1792
      @robertb1792 Před 13 dny +1

      Gravitational lensing. There's probably a math equation that says x amount of lensing means y amount of mass equals abra cadbra.

    • @Vxrtu
      @Vxrtu Před 7 dny +1

      There isn't a black hole within our star, this video revolves around the hypothetical celestial body "Quasi Star" or better known as a black hole star.

  • @AKidNamedLucas
    @AKidNamedLucas Před měsícem +2

    Finally!! New space update. Ive been waiting for so long!

  • @spacemushh2771
    @spacemushh2771 Před 2 měsíci +5

    And after all of that caseOh is still bigger

  • @pac-manandtheorangeghost717
    @pac-manandtheorangeghost717 Před 2 měsíci +4

    5:46 this means that the compressed space inside a black hole, minus the gravitational warp of space time curvature, would be far bigger than the universe

  • @williambest933
    @williambest933 Před 3 měsíci +7

    Wow black holes in the middle of stars
    . .very interesting 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾💯💯💯

    • @victorforzani3433
      @victorforzani3433 Před 3 měsíci

      for starter he have not seen such a thing he just make it up for attention and a new BS paper..

  • @JesseSlaughter
    @JesseSlaughter Před 3 měsíci +8

    Great another impending doom syndrome fear trigger added to my list lol

  • @jeetsisodia8165
    @jeetsisodia8165 Před měsícem +5

    you forget about Stephenson 2-18 Hypergiant Star

  • @dennishagans6339
    @dennishagans6339 Před 2 měsíci +3

    13:37 gravity drew vast pockets of gas
    13:41 into dense centers
    13:45 they grew hotter and hotter igniting to
    13:48 become the first generation of stars
    Sounds so good doesn't it? The problem is that it does not work.
    The Big bang is said to have produced hydrogen, and helium along with trace amounts of lithium and beryllium.
    The gas is said to have collapsed under gravity to form the first stars, today there are three methods of star formation.
    1: compression, the shockwave of a supernova near a gas cloud compresses the gas enough for gravity to take over.
    2: cooling, grains of dust enter the cloud cooling it enough to compress and gravity to take over.
    3: collisions, such as two galaxies colliding and new stars forming along the collision front.
    Those are the three ways stars are formed today, the problem is that it takes stars to make new ones,
    1: a supernova is a star exploding rather violently, the crab nebula is the remnant of a supernova.
    2: cooling, the big bang did not make any grains of dust as those are made in stars.
    3: Galaxy collisions, galaxies are just huge collections of stars.
    For all three things needed to make new stars, you need stars to exist to make new ones. go back to the big bang and there was no first generation of stars to make the second generation.
    "We Know the cloud wants to Collapse under its own weight to make one or more stars. but rotation as well as turbulent motion within the cloud work against that fate, so too does the ordinary gas pressure you learned about in High-school chemistry class."
    "Galactic magnetic fields also fight collapse they penetrate the cloud and latch onto any free-roaming charged particles contained therein restricting the ways in which the cloud will respond to its self-gravity"
    Tyson. Neil DeGrasse. 2007.
    Death by black hole and other cosmic quandaries.
    New York: w.w. Norton and co., P. 107
    “The process by which an interstellar cloud is concentrated until it is held together gravitationally to become a protostar is not known.”
    Eva Novotny. Introduction to Stellar Atmospheres and Interiors, p. 279.
    “Literally hundreds of ideas on how stars are formed have been advanced in past decades. However, we are still far from any real solution.”
    Martin Harwit, Astronomical Concepts, Second Edition. p.405.
    “The origin of stars represents one of the most fundamental unsolved problems of contemporary astrophysics.”
    Charles J. Lada and Frank H. Shu. “The Formation of Sunllke Stars."
    Science, 4 May 1990, p. 564.
    “The formation of stars is one of the most fundamental problems in astrophysics... No current model can reproduce all of the observations.”
    Ward-Thompson, D.,
    Isolated Star Formation: From Cloud Formation to Core Collapse, Science 4 January 2002: " Vol. 295. no. 5552, pp. 76 - 81.
    “The formation of galaxies and large-scale structure remains TMIUPIMA. . . "the most important unsolved problem in modern astrophysics.”
    V. Trimble and M. Aschwanden, Astrophysics in 2000,
    Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 113:1025-1114,, 2001 September.
    They know self-gravity does not work to collapse a gas cloud into a star, but they do not have anything else so they just keep pushing the self-gravity model anyway.
    It is the same with our moon, 3 theories were advanced and Apollo was supposed to tell us which one was correct, but Apollo disproved all 3, so they needed a new theory.
    Enter the giant impactor theory where and object the size of mars came in at just the right angle and just the right speed hitting the earth where all the heavier stuff sunk down into the earth and the lighter stuff formed the moon, there is a hiccup with that as well.
    Moonwalker and geologist Harrison Schmitt discovered some of them back in 1972, during the Apollo 17 mission, when he looked down and was shocked to discover orange soil at his feet.
    A study about 10 years ago looked at the beads and saw hints of water. But the results also fell within the instrument's margin of error. So Hauri and his colleagues decided to look again using newer, more sensitive detection technology.
    Some moon experts were skeptical, saying there was no way the team would find any water molecules. "We got a lot of comments like, 'Oh, well, we already know that the moon is dry, we've known this for 20 years,'" Hauri says.
    But this time they did find water molecules, according to a report in the journal Nature.
    It wasn't a lot of water. The beads had only up to 46 parts per million. But from this, the researchers estimate that the interior of the moon once probably contained an amount of water equal to that of the Caribbean Sea.
    This is a problem for the giant impact theory, says Hauri. "It's hard to imagine a scenario in which a giant impact melts, completely, the moon, and at the same time allows it to hold onto its water," he says. "That's a really, really difficult knot to untie."
    The giant impact theory was all they had, and since finding that the moon once had a lot of water when it could not have had any after being completely molten disproves that theory, but guess what? they are still teaching this theory too, why? because they do not have another theory to replace it.
    That is modern science for you, they know things do not work but because they do not have anything else to replace them, they just keep teaching stuff they know does not work, is that true science or an agenda?

  • @AdultToons
    @AdultToons Před měsícem +5

    The univserve is such a mystery that it honestly angers me that we don't know anything besides the basics. Dont get me wrong we came a long way but even I feel like even if we were the most advanced type of civilization we still wouldn't know shit about the universe.

  • @LeetengjingYT
    @LeetengjingYT Před měsícem +3

    Black hole stars originally formed in the early universe, but it has been extinct for billions of years, so I’m gonna report for misleading title

  • @spacedude_0
    @spacedude_0 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Nice vid, very interesting
    (I like space vids a lot, my response is boring bc I'm half asleep)

  • @mellovbeatz8062
    @mellovbeatz8062 Před 3 měsíci +2

    The music in the 1st 50secs❤

  • @__Kurobei___
    @__Kurobei___ Před 19 hodinami

    my guess before watching is that it is a supermassive blackhole whose accretion disc built up so much material that its accretion disc began to undergo nuclear fusion and was both prevented from being blasted away from the black whole by its gravity while its only energy from the nuclear fusion prevents the disc from entering the black hole

  • @Cat-team-studio2345
    @Cat-team-studio2345 Před 23 dny +2

    UY Scuti is not the biggest star I thought Stephenson 2-18 was.

  • @MohammedHussain-fb6ms
    @MohammedHussain-fb6ms Před 2 měsíci +1

    WOW! That was an amazing theory!👏 There are some other ancient stars that are way larger than the largest black hole in the universe.✨️

    • @creatsotom6312
      @creatsotom6312 Před 2 měsíci

      Your wrong no star can be bigger than a light year

    • @warakpawairakpam270
      @warakpawairakpam270 Před měsícem

      ​@@creatsotom6312He is not saying light year he is saying the largest black hole

    • @TokyoDownFall
      @TokyoDownFall Před 13 dny

      ​@@warakpawairakpam270uhm...what

  • @joeycad
    @joeycad Před 3 měsíci +3

    If a black hole star gets within detection of heading into our solar system, I think we're all running.

  • @ijustquitmyjob
    @ijustquitmyjob Před 3 měsíci +4

    i googled (x^3)=1000. cos if 1000 jupiters fits in a sun, and they're both roughly spherical, then jupiters height compared to the sun should = 1/X . X is 10, so jupiter should be roughly 1/10th the height of the sun, if 1000 jupiters fit in it.

    • @NickAtkins
      @NickAtkins Před 3 měsíci +4

      you should probably google the formula for the volume of a shpere

    • @matthewross5388
      @matthewross5388 Před 3 měsíci

      Bro this is all psudo science you should really apply yourself to something real that actually matters

    • @stevemchadd
      @stevemchadd Před 2 měsíci

      Smart arse 😎

    • @Hikei100
      @Hikei100 Před 9 dny

      Smart 😳

  • @waldemarskibinski-cn5ft
    @waldemarskibinski-cn5ft Před měsícem

    they came up with a new story to match their history of the universe - big bang

  • @seanwilson531
    @seanwilson531 Před měsícem

    0:48 now i see where Soundgarden got their song from. 🤣

  • @n3vvToo
    @n3vvToo Před 3 měsíci

    Great song 👍

  • @TedToal_TedToal
    @TedToal_TedToal Před 3 měsíci +3

    I think it would be a good idea, when comparing sizes of planets and stars, to remind watchers that the VOLUME is compared, not the diameter, so a 10x diameter equals a 1000x volume.
    Also, when comparing star sizes, I think it would be good to compare not only size but also density. A red giant might be a million times the volume of the sun but also a MILLION TIMES MORE TENUOUS, so the masses might be the same.
    And that said, I'm wondering about the volume ratios and mass ratios of black hole stars vs red giant stars.

  • @michaelpeer1753
    @michaelpeer1753 Před měsícem

    I'm not an astrophysicist, nor was my 8th grade physical science teacher, but I think he was right about star formation. Gravity is too weak to do it. Electromagnetism HAS to play a key part in the earliest stages.

  • @Indygo9
    @Indygo9 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Black hole engines? If you keep light in a constant orbit without falling in. Black hole powered energy source. ?

  • @Anvarynn
    @Anvarynn Před 2 měsíci +1

    So... soundgarden was onto something

  • @88Padilla
    @88Padilla Před 15 dny +1

    All hail the giant purple donut

  • @woman.of.wessex
    @woman.of.wessex Před 3 měsíci +2

    Perhaps uy scuti is inside the black hole . Perhaps the whole universe is inside that black hole and we are all inside looking out 🙂

  • @piotrmontgomerytv7786
    @piotrmontgomerytv7786 Před 3 měsíci +1

    ST-218 Is the largest star.

  • @user-jm3sd6ke9t
    @user-jm3sd6ke9t Před měsícem

    I hear all the time that stars become black holes, that black holes are in the middle of every universe, and that black holes only feed and get bigger. Is it possible that a black hole has another stage of metamorphosis that we have yet to see? It just seems like we everything would have , or is destined to be, drawn into a giant singularity at some point if everything is about gravity.

  • @jucardi1
    @jucardi1 Před 2 měsíci +51

    interesting video, but I'm voting thumbs down because of the misleading title, since these stars haven't been found yet and are just theoretical

    • @silaskuira9124
      @silaskuira9124 Před měsícem +5

      The video actually names the discovered quasi star and gives us it's size

    • @Omacron2104
      @Omacron2104 Před měsícem +2

      Just watched the full video and it never said a name, mass, or size

    • @jucardi1
      @jucardi1 Před měsícem +3

      @@silaskuira9124 it does not, doesn't reference any discovery

    • @silaskuira9124
      @silaskuira9124 Před měsícem +5

      @@jucardi1 Oh you're right, I just realized we were catfished.

    • @silaskuira9124
      @silaskuira9124 Před měsícem +5

      @@Omacron2104 Oh you're right, I just realized we were catfished.

  • @Lidocain777
    @Lidocain777 Před měsícem

    3:49 --> Neutron (not "newtron") star and white dwarf animations are inversed.

  • @tysondennis1016
    @tysondennis1016 Před měsícem

    Look at the size of that thing!

  • @tvmanrealhehe
    @tvmanrealhehe Před dnem

    3:55 "newtron stars"

  • @greg61377
    @greg61377 Před 2 měsíci +1

    black hole in a star thats insane

  • @mawage666
    @mawage666 Před 2 měsíci

    Hey man. I really dig this video man!

  • @shaddouida3447
    @shaddouida3447 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Type 1
    Now we are talking. We can’t find out how long it would take us to reach that level because human development is kinda random. Maybe another cold war could make it a million times faster. Seriously. A scientist during the cold war, could go to the American government and say one word “Russia” and the government would reply with two words, “How much?” This was the era when we saw amazing development in an amazingly short period. The current American monopoly doesn’t make it seem important to the government to fund those scientists more.
    Ok, coming back to type one, when we become the planetary civilization. Now our main fuel source is NUCLEAR FUEL. But you would argue, isn’t that a thing today? Well, yes it is, but it is 1, dangerous to operate so not used in bulk, and 2, we use nuclear fission for our energy. The type one civilization will be based on nuclear fusion. Fusion releases a lot more energy and can be performed with simple elements like hydrogen, compared to fission, which needs rare metals like uranium or plutonium. We would have propulsor technology which would allow us to launch rockets into space without using that absurd amount of fuel, and make interplanetary travel easy.
    Type 2
    Now we are a stellar civilization. The main source of our energy is nearby stars. We are now so developed that energy from nuclear fusion is not enough to fulfill our development needs. So, we take the next leap, Energy From Nearby Stars. No, I don’t mean we would plant solar panels in the oceans, we would plant them on the star…yup. Freeman Dyson, a theoretical physicist originated the concept of a Dyson sphere. We would build a system of rings around a nearby star and obtain all its energy, for our use.
    A very interesting event happened with a star names Tabby’s Star. Its intensity suddenly dropped by 22 percent! Scientists suspect the only way this is possible, as far we know is if someone built a Dyson sphere around it, someone who is already a type two civilization. Here is the quote from the wiki,
    Type 3
    Introducing the Galactic Civilization, and the final level according to the original scale. Our energy source would still be Dyson’s sphere, however, this time we will build them all over the galaxy to fund our experiments. We would be able to access wormholes and zap through space. It is a theoretical object if you don’t know what that is. Imagine the universe as a piece of paper. You are on a point on a paper and want to go to some other point. Instead of traveling, you fold the paper in such a way that the point you are on and the point you want to go in touch with each other. Then you make a hole in your location and enter the place you want to go to. This is roughly how wormholes would function. A type 3 would not be able to build wormholes but can zap through preexisting ones.
    Type 4
    Now we are a universal civilization. Our main energy source is supernovas! That is when a star explodes, releasing an absurd amount of energy. We would be traveling through multiple galaxies and extracting energy from supernovas. At this stage, humans would become immortal, like seriously! We would be able to upload our consciousness, the feeling of existing, along with our memory and experiences into a computer, and live in the metaverse or download that consciousness to another body, like the body of Ultron, and switch avatars and stuff. Being free from our biological bodies would open up new horizons for this civilization. We would also be capable of creating type 0 civilizations. They are kinda god-like, but not quite there yet.
    Type 5
    Being a type 5, humans realize something amazing, they find that multiverses exist. This might sound like science fiction, but remember going to space was also fiction in the early 1900s, having self-driving cars was fiction in the late 1900s. So now we are MULTIVERAL CIVILIZATIONS. An unimaginable amount of energy would be required to go multiversal. A type 5 civilization will probably be looking for White Holes at a time. They are only theoretical but their existence can be proved using Einstein’s Field Equations. It has been estimated that a white hole can emit energy equivalent to 14 million times that of an average galaxy! Now humans might assume they are at the peak of civilization, but soon they will realize the greater truth.
    Type 6
    We have always lived in a 3D world. Our brains are not capable of imagining things in the 4th dimension. But a type 6 can make their brains for their conscious selves. Their bodies are nothing but pure consciousness, and even going up by one dimension we would become a hundred times more efficient.
    Type 7
    But now, humans think they have reached the peak of their civilization. There is no greater truth that they do not know. It is now time that Humans realize the existence of a type 7 civilization, the one we all worship, yes I am talking of the existence of Gods, the real type 7 beings…would be pretty cool right?
    Many scientists consider we would never really reach the status of a Type 7 civilization. A type7 can manipulate the laws of physics it can make matter from the vacuum, and generate a tremendous amount of energy with its Godly Power. That’s why type 7 has been rightfully called The Creator Civilization, which can build its universes, with any laws of physics, and play with the laws of physics and manipulate them the way it pleases. Millions of type 6 civilizations together cannot compare to the immense power of type 7. Feels sad no one will be able to develop to a type 7 or will we?

  • @Gamingnstuff15
    @Gamingnstuff15 Před měsícem

    Guys wake up, a new star just dropped

  • @kingcheeks8752
    @kingcheeks8752 Před měsícem +1

    We are going to eventually go to war with the void

  • @majinvegeta9280
    @majinvegeta9280 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I know you know, but they only grow if they eat. Otherwise, they constantly lose mass from hawking radiation

    • @KOZMOuvBORG
      @KOZMOuvBORG Před 2 měsíci

      they'll radiate inversely to their mass, one the mass of the Sun would take ~10^30 years to evaporate, the one amid our our galaxy would take ~10^60.

  • @chrislong3938
    @chrislong3938 Před 2 měsíci

    First, Steven Stills told us about Dark Stars.
    Then Soundgarden told us about these.
    I wonder what Taylor Swift or whoever will tell us about... ;-)

  • @MKratz
    @MKratz Před měsícem

    What a exceptionally gifted scientist ! He invented a new celestial object - "The Newtron - Star" ... may happen when you write as you speek !

  • @illuminatin9335
    @illuminatin9335 Před měsícem +1

    Space scares the shit out of me

  • @AynRKey
    @AynRKey Před měsícem

    There is another possibility if a quasistar comes close to our solar system, other than complete destruction. If it doesn't barrel straight in to the center, it could instead divert all the planets and the Sun to orbit it instead. If the Earth is at a proper distance it might even settle into a new habitable zone.

  • @samuelsantanajr.784
    @samuelsantanajr.784 Před 29 dny

    It's not a black hole. It's the front of Ascension as in the Solid Aspect of Space that's being Burrowed Through by the Suns Magnetic Radiance in that direction. This is the Formation of Livables Space as it Exists in This Galaxy. The Sun Melts it Into the Translucent Space that We live in that is water like at the furthest regions and more like air in the layers closer to the Sun. The Nexus Determines the behavior of the Particles as they Scatter from the Front towards the back of Our Galaxy from that point.
    -Stratimus
    Remis to Romulus

  • @alphaomega153
    @alphaomega153 Před 2 měsíci

    3:55 → Newtron Stars. Um...

  • @KanenBlack2412
    @KanenBlack2412 Před 16 dny

    This dude really said the sun is slightly bigger than Jupiter

  • @SpaceStallionX
    @SpaceStallionX Před 2 měsíci

    Unbelievable discovery, NASA! The cosmos never ceases to amaze. Imagine what else is out there waiting to be revealed! I am an explorer myself and I love such stuff

  • @michalkuban9888
    @michalkuban9888 Před měsícem

    3:47 "NEWTRON" Stars? Really?

  • @ClassicallyNamed
    @ClassicallyNamed Před 2 měsíci +2

    Wow, another popup AI narrated science channel. My wish came true!

  • @wardamo
    @wardamo Před měsícem

    I watched a video last night that said that UY-SCUTY is not as big as they thought.

  • @colinklebonis1912
    @colinklebonis1912 Před měsícem

    This proves size matters

  • @waratwar
    @waratwar Před měsícem

    We are only looking back in time

  • @Reaktora
    @Reaktora Před 3 měsíci

    UY scuti was measured wrong, we have a new biggest star I even think we have 3 bigger ones that where measured more accurately and recently. its big nonetheless no way around that.

  • @PumpedSmartass
    @PumpedSmartass Před měsícem

    0:54 wrong question, the valid question is: How the star survive and sustain itself with a black hole inside it.

  • @Demonic_Kitsuwolfane
    @Demonic_Kitsuwolfane Před 16 dny

    Here’s an idea since a Blackholes gravity is so dense what if it’s
    “the Core” of a beginning planet… just a theory of mine.

  • @endlessknot6037
    @endlessknot6037 Před 2 měsíci

    What about Stephenson 2-18 ???

  • @MrEnjoivolcom1
    @MrEnjoivolcom1 Před 3 měsíci +1

    They’re referred to as Hawking stars and as of December 18, 2023 none have ever been found.

  • @valentinakerman4216
    @valentinakerman4216 Před měsícem

    Tell me you don't understand how stars work without telling me you don't understand how stars work.

    • @bell_rev2
      @bell_rev2 Před měsícem

      Tell me you've never heard of a Quasi Star without telling me you've never heard of a Quasi-star

  • @Niven42
    @Niven42 Před 2 měsíci

    The graphic at 3:50 is wrong. The neutron star is on the right; white dwarf on the left.

    • @crimsonredd2847
      @crimsonredd2847 Před 2 měsíci

      It got the largest star wrong too, so many wrong things with this video

  • @ashleighberryman9280
    @ashleighberryman9280 Před měsícem

    **insert sound garden pun here**

  • @NICKSONKHIWA-rm8tx
    @NICKSONKHIWA-rm8tx Před 2 měsíci

    This video was just proving my theory about the universe having started from a blackhole that had swallowed all matter exploding due to strong nuclear force overcoming the gravity from the black hole being the cycle of the universe or something like that 🤔🤷

  • @patriciarowan2024
    @patriciarowan2024 Před měsícem

    The largest star is Stephenson 2-18 slightly more massive than uy scuti

  • @LewpyDrewpy714
    @LewpyDrewpy714 Před 2 měsíci

    Super Novi??! WOW

  • @bullitmaget8193
    @bullitmaget8193 Před 22 dny

    3 years tops....somethin bigger gets invented

  • @user-sg1dp2xo7p
    @user-sg1dp2xo7p Před měsícem

    Black hole equals to suction

  • @RockonthegroundToo
    @RockonthegroundToo Před 2 měsíci

    Newtron star??? NEUTRON-

  • @Gregwjohnson1
    @Gregwjohnson1 Před 3 měsíci

    Oh WOW, interesting 😮😮😮

  • @larrywhittaker9901
    @larrywhittaker9901 Před 2 měsíci

    ITS CRAZY THAT we are ALL made of STARDUST 😳 EVERYONE AND EVERYTHING 🤯

  • @safetybuddy
    @safetybuddy Před 2 měsíci

    GRBs anybody
    Can’t hide a black hole feeding like that inside a 🌟
    🧲 field to strong

  • @bikeradam
    @bikeradam Před měsícem

    How does this wash away the rain?

  • @pererbottella5451
    @pererbottella5451 Před 2 měsíci

    If Nibiru exists and is a red Giant and not a brown warf then perhaps the destroyer of world's hypnosis, wormwood, complete with black center, complements Hawkins theory.

  • @DeKapitein
    @DeKapitein Před měsícem

    newtron stars or neutron star? 😂

  • @limsnoor_5412
    @limsnoor_5412 Před měsícem

    But how would they grow if they had a black hole in them? Shouldn't they have either collapsed on their selves or been swallowed by the black hole inside them?

  • @lolums1458
    @lolums1458 Před 2 měsíci

    Only 1000 Jupiter's?

  • @adrianrobinson7953
    @adrianrobinson7953 Před 2 měsíci

    How is that possible?

  • @ygth2704
    @ygth2704 Před 2 měsíci

    3:50 - Something is seriously wrong here.
    2 is White Dwarf
    3 is Neutron Star
    And what is Newtron Star? I've never heard of such a thing.

    • @VEDELI_playsbloxfruits
      @VEDELI_playsbloxfruits Před měsícem

      Neutron star? you dont know?
      imma tell
      Stars way larger (about 30x larger) than the sun can form into a black hole or neutron star. If the gravity wins, it turns into a black hole. but if the mass wins, it turns into a neutron star. But stars that are not that big will turn into a red giant for some time, then after that they will turn into a white dwarf.

    • @pknoeller82
      @pknoeller82 Před měsícem

      Yea I don’t think they were asking what a neutron star was. They were asking what a “newtron star” was considering that’s how the video had it spelled out. They were just pointing out the obvious mistakes made in the video. Honestly I almost posted the same thing. When I noticed the errors I checked the comments to see if people were talking about the obvious mistakes but all I found was mostly comments about Sound Garden and their song “Black Hole Sun” until I finally found this comment!

  • @Jaythegoat_yt
    @Jaythegoat_yt Před 2 měsíci +1

    Not uy scuti, sephonson 218 is the biggest star ever discovered

  • @CreatureKal
    @CreatureKal Před 10 dny

    UY Scuti is not the largest star anymore. It was outsized by Stephenson 2-18. This was years ago I’m surprised this video is so out of date

  • @pac-manandtheorangeghost717
    @pac-manandtheorangeghost717 Před 2 měsíci

    This is possibly due to the abnormal hydrogen to other element atoms in the surrounding area near the star

  • @zodammit
    @zodammit Před měsícem

    'dense' is kind of judgemental, they're kind of focused, or concentrated

  • @iraklichareli7228
    @iraklichareli7228 Před 2 měsíci

    The the super hypergiant star is quasi star

  • @Fiilis1
    @Fiilis1 Před 3 měsíci +7

    Do not bother watching this to the end.

  • @thekingkevinvlogz6508
    @thekingkevinvlogz6508 Před měsícem

    I did not just read density💀

  • @hi-fy2wb
    @hi-fy2wb Před měsícem

    İ dont think so, not because for they be gone far away ,just because the current universe itself, they created by pure hydrogen and hellium , but current star werent, the universe is dirty.. ( edit: it possible to exist, but never can be able to existed with prime version of quasi star)

  • @lab1gp
    @lab1gp Před 2 měsíci

    Actually black hole suck mater and light through strongest magnatic property not by gravity. So black hole must spin an that's why we can detect jets in pole

    • @crimsonredd2847
      @crimsonredd2847 Před 2 měsíci

      It's essentially the same, because the magnetic fields strength translates to gravitation

  • @Neilharvi3
    @Neilharvi3 Před 2 měsíci

    The sizes are wrong 💀💀💀

  • @veryllfattrope16
    @veryllfattrope16 Před měsícem

    Smart,smarter,....,and:" what would happen if a Black Hole Star wandered into the solar system?"(!?!?) 🤦🏻‍♂️😂✌️❣️

  • @alexdavies2675
    @alexdavies2675 Před 3 měsíci

    Fascinating 02/19/24 12:14

  • @progresstothestars
    @progresstothestars Před 2 měsíci

    yeah, i bet its closer then they think.

  • @MeyerBen27
    @MeyerBen27 Před měsícem

    I call it a Hawking Hole

  • @Jenjialed
    @Jenjialed Před měsícem

    bro forgot about stephenson.

  • @mr.iforgot3062
    @mr.iforgot3062 Před 2 měsíci +1

    As a brain scientist, I'm intrigued.

  • @n0xxm3rcyxx
    @n0xxm3rcyxx Před měsícem

    Have we ever seen 2 planets collide yet?

  • @OmegaVideoGameGod
    @OmegaVideoGameGod Před 3 měsíci

    I knew it, all we have to look at are luminous galaxies there’s too many stars out there and bigger than anything we can comprehend in a size