Watching the Sun - Deep Sky Videos

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • Astronomer Pete Lawrence has a passion for the sun and solar astronomy. Part 2 at • Local Star - Deep Sky ...
    Featuring "astro cat". Follow Pete on Twitter at / avertedvision and his website at www.digitalsky....
    Deep Sky Videos website: www.deepskyvide...
    Twitter: #!...
    Facebook: / deepskyvideos
    Flickr: www.flickr.com/...
    Videos by Brady Haran

Komentáře • 188

  • @amisfitpuivk
    @amisfitpuivk Před 9 lety +3

    One thing I've learned from drawing plans in architecture is to always include a little sillhouette of a human (to scale) so I get an idea of the size of the spaces I'm making. If I were observing the sun, I would put a little paper circle on the screen somewhere representing the Earth to get an idea of how big these events are. It helps a lot

  • @Philc854
    @Philc854 Před 11 lety +1

    I really like the way you show, not just the actual astronomy, but also the kit and the physical process, and also the making of the programme. It's kinda inclusive and fun. And horray for Pebbles, The Astro Cat! (more cats in your videos please) :)))

  • @Tatterdemalion-77
    @Tatterdemalion-77 Před rokem

    These old videos, from well before I was aware of the channel or Brady’s work, are just amazing!

  • @youtubuzr
    @youtubuzr Před 11 lety +2

    Hooray for Pebbles! Also, cool to see how you can observe the sun w/a telescope!

  • @TheRostbart
    @TheRostbart Před 10 lety +6

    wow... this is cool. I love sun-astronomy. And the pics of it amaze me every time.
    Galaxys and supernovas may be pretty nice... But this little yellow star is my favorite.

  • @DarkMoonDroid
    @DarkMoonDroid Před 11 lety +2

    Thank you for the introduction.
    Hi, Pebbles!
    3:07
    COOL!
    It peeves me that we never get to see these things in real time. This is a treat!
    6:48
    Yes! This is called "Feedback". watching a picture can turn something into an abstraction very easily. But when we connect the picture with real time sensation perceived thru the other senses of our body, we learn in a different way than with an abstraction alone. This is very important and also difficult with astronomy.

  • @pdxbound81
    @pdxbound81 Před 11 lety +1

    Please do more sun videos with Astronomer Pete :)

  • @blakedurrant9399
    @blakedurrant9399 Před 11 lety +6

    So good. Between sixty symbols, deep sky videos, numberphile and periodic videos who needs cable? Thanks for all the great videos, keep up the fantastic work!

  • @stefanschneider3681
    @stefanschneider3681 Před 2 lety

    So much fun to watch this, because it‘s so direct and honest, not smoothed to perfection! Thanks 🤩!

  • @jaimitoelpoderoso
    @jaimitoelpoderoso Před 9 lety +14

    this was pretty awesome. the 11 people that "thumbs down" this video must not like cats.

  • @slapastronomy8646
    @slapastronomy8646 Před 7 lety +1

    Solar is my favorite type of observing. Great video! Scott

  • @DeepSkyVideos
    @DeepSkyVideos  Před 11 lety +1

    hey glad to have you! you've got some catching up to do!

  • @insu_na
    @insu_na Před 12 lety

    There are loads and loads and loads of interesting objects in the universe, but for me, our very own sun is the most interesting. Thank you for doing this video, I really hope you do more videos about our sun, not only about watching it, but about facts regarding our sun too!

  • @DeepSkyVideos
    @DeepSkyVideos  Před 12 lety

    happy to oblige

  • @adamzindani2019
    @adamzindani2019 Před 11 lety +1

    thanx for sharing

  • @E30_Eric
    @E30_Eric Před 11 lety

    it's been a month. please post another awesome video

  • @funsizeclarkbar
    @funsizeclarkbar Před 12 lety

    one of my favorite deep sky videos yet. Thanks Brady and Pete!

  • @testercles
    @testercles Před 11 lety

    That was fantastic. What a great set-up.
    For some reason I thought that Refractors had gone out of fashion.

  • @SCAREDBANANA
    @SCAREDBANANA Před 12 lety

    Your videos are exactly what I want to see in my subscription after long day at school.

  • @lesconrads
    @lesconrads Před 12 lety

    :D That looks really cool. Nice thing about the sun is that it is so close - in astronomical dimensions, that is... Very impressive.
    Also - very cute cat ^^

  • @Bercik87
    @Bercik87 Před 12 lety

    A MA ZING
    Even though I've seen hundreds of pictures like this - being able to see it "live" is crazy fun.

  • @SW-zx3op
    @SW-zx3op Před 2 lety

    Fascinating, thanks for sharing your knowledge and your passion.

  • @JordanGough97
    @JordanGough97 Před 12 lety

    I learn more from your channels than I do in Science at school! Thanks Brady!

  • @katymaloney
    @katymaloney Před 12 lety

    That's a good one!!! I had the luck to observe the sun through a telescope like that (not through a computer, but directly into it) during the Venus transit event, it was really cool! We saw Venus of course, but also sun spots, the faint blue color around the corona, and I DID feel the connection you're talking about Brady! After all, we're all stardust, and the sun formed out of the same cloud of cold gas that ultimately collapsed and formed the solar system, and eventually "us"!

  • @DeepSkyVideos
    @DeepSkyVideos  Před 11 lety

    very glad to hear it!

  • @RMoribayashi
    @RMoribayashi Před 11 lety

    Years ago I used to take a pair of binoculars, cover one lens and duct tape them loosely to a windowsill, focusing the image on a white card to watch the sunspots. The loose duct tape allowed me to move the binoculars just enough to keep the sun in the center of the card.

  • @confuseatronica
    @confuseatronica Před 11 lety

    As far as connecting the telescope iamges with the real sun goes- There was a big complex of sunspots, 7 or 8 years ago, and I noticed you could catch glimpses of something out of the corner of your eye- as if a bird or a plane had just passed in front of the sun, but it would happen all day. It really gave me a sense that the pictures from SOHO and Mt Wilson were from -that- sun up there.

  • @GaryMcKinnonUFO
    @GaryMcKinnonUFO Před 7 lety +1

    Great videos, thanks for sharing.

  • @ericX97
    @ericX97 Před 11 lety

    Pebbles the Astro cat!
    That so needs to be a Saturday morning cartoon!

  • @bjelisha
    @bjelisha Před 11 lety

    i feel like a noob, i just found out about all these awsome channels from the nubmerphille's last video
    go brady :) awsome stuff on your channels
    i love watching your videos and learning stuff ;)
    thank you

  • @Olhado256
    @Olhado256 Před 11 lety

    Cats are so great. They like to be with you but most of the time they don't bother you at all. They're like "Hey pal! Pointing that weird thing at the sun again? Cool. I'll just chill with you for a while."

  • @maybe_monad
    @maybe_monad Před 12 lety

    it's amazing to get a hands-on view like this. magnificent work, as always)

  • @Noughtilus
    @Noughtilus Před 10 lety +21

    The cat was my favourite part.

  • @Mastertim2006
    @Mastertim2006 Před 12 lety

    Man this is awesome. I got quite recently into the science of the sun. And i have to say its amazing. Though i dont understand most of it yet :D But our star is damn beautiful.
    Im waiting for the next video Brady :)

  • @jusiw12
    @jusiw12 Před 12 lety

    When I saw isle of man on the Hydrogen alpha filter I was very confused because I live on the island and I was even aware that we had a technical optics centre here.
    Thanks Brady for this :D

  • @yo_fighter9750
    @yo_fighter9750 Před 9 lety +4

    Wow!!!!!......... this was something interesting ......... i also want to have that telescope ........

  • @Surfurplex
    @Surfurplex Před 12 lety

    Yes, of course :) what I meant was whether or not you could see anything actually moving on the surface of the sun, or if you'd have to speed up a video of it in order to see anything move..?

  • @chucktaylor1908
    @chucktaylor1908 Před 5 lety

    When you observe the sun, it is not 'immediate', there is a delay of 8 minutes, or 7 and some change. So if you see the "spike" start to take place then you have time, somewhat to everything ready.

  • @BrekkaJones24
    @BrekkaJones24 Před 5 lety

    I loved pointing my telescope at the sun with no filter and put a white sheet behind the scope and you can see the sunspots like a big hologram

  • @diatribe114
    @diatribe114 Před 11 lety

    Phil Plait and Bad Astronomy got me here, love the vids!

  • @RossCourtright
    @RossCourtright Před 11 lety +1

    Cute cat.

  • @aclearlight
    @aclearlight Před 4 lety

    Lovely work, thank you.

  • @FTLNewsFeed
    @FTLNewsFeed Před 11 lety

    Every Sunday, Universe Today hosts a virtual star party where a few amateur astronomers come together on a Google & CZcams Hangout and use their setups to take and show pictures of various astro-phenomena. There's usually an astronomer or two that'll also have live video of the moon or other planets going on during it and they'll often take requests. If you're interested in watching then hit them up on UniverseToday on Google+ or their CZcams channel of the same name.

  • @susanwaltho4151
    @susanwaltho4151 Před 3 lety

    Hi great vid Pete is a great astro photo

  • @xavierpaquin
    @xavierpaquin Před 4 lety

    Mind-blowing

  • @stratussol2475
    @stratussol2475 Před 7 lety +2

    I used my telescope and pointed it at the sun and let it project onto the white wall behind me and it was amazing. I actually saw a sunspot and went to NASA's live footage of the sun and I saw that it was a real sunspot.

    • @bazpearce9993
      @bazpearce9993 Před rokem

      Yes, it's true. Amatuers can show that NASA isn't lying with their SDO images. They always EXACTLY match the views i get when the Sun is out here.
      Still waiting for my cheque from the Illuminati though. LOL

  • @mor0th
    @mor0th Před 11 lety

    Hi Brady, I was wondering if you posted the Part 2 already ?
    I am currently trying to understand how to better observe the sun, with binoculars and I also joined a astronomy club where they have couple of scopes to look at the sun.
    Thanks for your videos, we love them all !!!

  • @piercekyle62
    @piercekyle62 Před 9 lety +6

    Can anyone tell me what camera and or program on the laptop he is using. i've been looking for a nice camera for beginner astrophotography and i really like the look of the software he's using as well as the camera.

    • @ItsOdder
      @ItsOdder Před 9 lety +1

      Not sure but it looks expensive :)

  • @DeepSkyVideos
    @DeepSkyVideos  Před 11 lety +1

    new vids on the way!

  • @Tossphate
    @Tossphate Před 12 lety

    Brady you missed a trick there- you very nearly made this video the exact same length of time as light travelling from the sun to the earth!!! I know you sometimes do that with the length of your videos :D

  • @intrepidxprodigy91
    @intrepidxprodigy91 Před 10 lety +4

    What you're looking at isn't "live" as he commented. When looking at the sun, you're seeing the sun as it was eight minutes ago.

    • @amisfitpuivk
      @amisfitpuivk Před 9 lety +3

      If you want to be like that, then nothing is "live". Anyway I believe it is still "live" though, because of how relativity works and 4D space-time. Spaces travel through time (usually forward), and time travels through space (all directions). We can't have one without the other, so we have to include all 4 dimensions. So it is live (the time) at our location (the space). But it is 8 minutes in the past (the time) @92 million miles away (the space). Both scenarios exist at once. It's hard to explain but I tried. It's live here, and 8 minutes in the past at the sun.

    • @FriedEgg101
      @FriedEgg101 Před 8 lety +5

      And the heat you feel on your head while looking at the sun is also 8 mins old, so it's live in that respect; what you see on the screen and feel on your face are synced. Any image of the sun is as live as a livestream with an 8 min delay to prevent stream sniping.

    • @roxydzey
      @roxydzey Před 7 lety +1

      its only about the angle how you view things, every person sees that (and everything else in life and universe) and understands that differently, but it doesnt mean that someone is not right here. you are both right. cheers.

  • @jimmyshrimbe9361
    @jimmyshrimbe9361 Před 5 lety

    Amazing!

  • @Icantfindanamewtf
    @Icantfindanamewtf Před 11 lety

    this is just awesume

  • @TealeBritstra
    @TealeBritstra Před 12 lety

    Wow, coincidence - you post a video about Solar telescopes on the day I organised a Solar telescope for the upcoming Solar eclipse. They are pretty awesome pieces of kit.

  • @mor0th
    @mor0th Před 12 lety

    Very nice video and interesting video, I am looking forward for the part 2.
    However, I wish it could be in HD format. Brady could you fix that ? :)
    Thanks!!!

  • @boboften9952
    @boboften9952 Před 4 lety

    Pete Lawrence .
    Needs A Dark Room Built .

  • @periurban
    @periurban Před 11 lety

    Brilliant!

  • @krumble104
    @krumble104 Před 12 lety

    Nice one chaps; I'll take all the 'practical astronomy' advice I can get hold of! ;)

  •  Před 12 lety

    End on a cheery note.

  • @bullamarta
    @bullamarta Před 11 lety

    That was awesome!!!thanks for the video

  • @Mathview
    @Mathview Před 12 lety

    Notice that H-alpha light comes from a hydrogen atom, not an ion. That means we have an image of an excited, but non-ionized population of hydrogen. The source of ionized hydrogen (protons) comes from hotter regions below, hence proton+electron recombination is occurring in the observed region. Local thermodynamic equilibrium arguments, I believe, show that H-alpha intensity is actually proportional to the recombination rate. Interesting stuff. Corrections? Experts? comment pls.

  • @Alex1611AD
    @Alex1611AD Před 11 lety

    So cool guys

  • @vkotis
    @vkotis Před 11 lety

    Cool stuff!

  • @bigglessy
    @bigglessy Před 12 lety

    You guys should come have a go with the Telescope we have at the University of Kent!

  • @bluewales73
    @bluewales73 Před 11 lety

    Not only does the sun rotate, but because it's make of gas, different parts of it rotate at different speeds. This action is indirectly responsible for sun spots. Some people think that sun spots have a small impact on the earth. That's the only way the rotation of the sun would affect us.

  • @Filos247
    @Filos247 Před 11 lety

    Awesome video, keep 'em coming, please! A criticism - filming a laptop monitor with a camera really doesn't work very well if the laptop screen contains complex or detailed visuals; also - glare. There are ways of capturing the video output of a laptop which could be edited into your video easily. Cheers!

  • @ichandre975
    @ichandre975 Před 12 lety

    amazing

  • @longcastle4863
    @longcastle4863 Před 2 lety

    Interesting that the poles of the sun and its equater rotate at different rates

  • @DidntKnowWhatToPut1
    @DidntKnowWhatToPut1 Před 12 lety

    I just use solar filter paper on the end of my reflector scope. I get a good look at sunspots, but without a H-Alpha filter I can't see much else.

  • @TheGaIaxy
    @TheGaIaxy Před 12 lety

    More i want more!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @Mongalz
    @Mongalz Před 12 lety

    I want all those filters and an astrocat! XD

  • @GetOutsideYourself
    @GetOutsideYourself Před 11 lety

    I enjoy looking at the sun with my 6" reflector and a basic filter, which gives only enough resolution to distinguish sunspots, and no prominences nor mottling. Your observations are fascinating. Two questions: do you lose much resolution with that smallish-looking sensor attached to the end of the scope? Can similar results be achieved using only a neutral density filter and computer software filtering?

  • @EntrE01
    @EntrE01 Před 11 lety

    pebbles is beautiful!

  • @boboften9952
    @boboften9952 Před 4 lety

    3:29 Excellent .

  • @Carl_Mansfield
    @Carl_Mansfield Před 12 lety

    You are watching it 8 minutes and 20 seconds behind "real-time" as that is how long it takes for the light from the Sun to reach Earth

  • @helloofthebeach
    @helloofthebeach Před 12 lety

    Looks like you have plenty of friends to let you use one when you're in the mood!

  • @RockDodger
    @RockDodger Před 11 lety

    great info..ty

  • @OysterBarron
    @OysterBarron Před 12 lety

    you would be correct due to the time it takes for the brain to process visual and sound stimuli.

  • @-yeme-
    @-yeme- Před 8 lety +4

    1:53 to see the cat

  • @Tjousk
    @Tjousk Před 11 lety

    Excellent video, thanks (:

  • @DeepSkyVideos
    @DeepSkyVideos  Před 12 lety

    you'll get more soon!

  • @NANAbingbangboom
    @NANAbingbangboom Před 7 lety +2

    great video! I need to get a new filter my self would you confirm for me that the sun never changes in relative size? really would appreciate your feed back!

    • @roxydzey
      @roxydzey Před 7 lety +1

      it would be interesting to know about size too, actually i never thought about that :O

    • @winterweib
      @winterweib Před 5 lety

      Maybe you ask on twitter or so? He did not upload this video, so maybe he never read your question?

    • @bazpearce9993
      @bazpearce9993 Před rokem

      Yes the Sun does change apparent size throughout the year. We are closest in January, and farthest away in July. I know that doesn't sound quite right, but it's true. I used to have a setup that could view the whole disk, but only during Summer. In Winter the poles were always chopped off.

  • @dzzle
    @dzzle Před 11 lety

    Brady more numberphiles too pls :)

  • @JoelHudson
    @JoelHudson Před 7 lety +1

    Hello pebbles 💚⭐️😸

  • @TheWildIron
    @TheWildIron Před 11 lety

    You've got some great videos here! Do you ever use a fig rig? I need help with a new product I have for filming. Take a look at it. Wondering if you can let me know if you like it and help spread the word.

  • @MrNation1234
    @MrNation1234 Před 11 lety

    I feel the same way!

  • @ldchappell1
    @ldchappell1 Před 5 lety +3

    Love your cat. Looks like he had about 9 fathers. lol

  • @soutarman
    @soutarman Před 11 lety

    alltime10s sent me here. Pete, I wish your site worked properly in Chrome :( Can't see half the galleries without switching to Aurora. Awesome pics tho!

  • @TheeFinalSolution
    @TheeFinalSolution Před 12 lety

    You know that filament that was on the bottom of the Sun they paid somewhat attention to? Can anyone answer this question: How long would it take for the Sun to shoot that out into its atmosphere?

  • @mariesoullier
    @mariesoullier Před 11 lety

    Kitty is the real "star" of this video. ;)

  • @vistigioful
    @vistigioful Před 11 lety

    Let the sun shine. Let the sun shine. The sun un shine ine.

  • @StoicMaverick
    @StoicMaverick Před 11 lety

    Saying 'Astro Cat' with an English accent is so much better lol.

  • @wdm2112
    @wdm2112 Před 11 lety

    Well, most live things on TV are tape delayed as well.

  • @DeepSkyVideos
    @DeepSkyVideos  Před 12 lety

    Pete images the moon regularly - follow him on Twitter for some real treats in that department!

  • @michieldrost9396
    @michieldrost9396 Před 12 lety

    Hey Brady, ever took a loot at the stars yourself? Do you own a telescope? Once again, good work. Cheers.

  • @flupoop
    @flupoop Před 12 lety

    I WANT THAT TELESCOPE!!! NOW!!!

  • @oldi184
    @oldi184 Před 11 lety

    I recently seen videos about electric sun model. How it explains for example presence of sun corona and why is it hotter than sun surface. Brady can you ask professors what they think about it and maybe made video? Thanks in advance.

  • @Surfurplex
    @Surfurplex Před 12 lety

    How quickly do the prominences move? For example, during a flare, could you actually watch the sun being "alive" in real-time through that telescope?

  • @kchabwa
    @kchabwa Před 11 lety

    Hmm I didnt realize the sun rotated. Does the rotation of the sun affect the temperature or climate on earth?

  • @user-yk7yv8rb5i
    @user-yk7yv8rb5i Před 9 měsíci

    hi if you want to see more detail on the sun you need a hydrogen alpha filter this allows you to see much more detail