The Sun is NOT the Center of the Solar System

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 2,3K

  • @DineshKumar-uv3xb
    @DineshKumar-uv3xb Před 27 dny +1380

    Gravitational centre of solar system being outside the sun until 2027 is crazy. It will definitely be a lot of fun to explain this to future school children.

    • @matgonzalez6272
      @matgonzalez6272 Před 27 dny +54

      The specifics being “the sun is ALMOST the center of the universe”

    • @TheDoomWizard
      @TheDoomWizard Před 27 dny +1

      Future school children who are living in an uninhabitable world? Clearly you're disconnected from reality. We're in a global environmental crisis.

    • @nebulan
      @nebulan Před 27 dny +65

      When i was in elementary school, i thought it was fun to learn that Pluto was actually closer to the sun than Neptune (due to its elliptical orbit). It went back to last place in 1999.

    • @hamidrana085
      @hamidrana085 Před 27 dny +17

      "that one time, the gravitational center went outside the sun. we lived under a rock for that period"

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 Před 27 dny +17

      My first takeaway of this scientific news: The flat-Earthers will try and use this, clumsily and without understanding, to scream more about how NASA is making scientists lie and flat-Earth was right all along.

  • @stonedmountainunicorn9532
    @stonedmountainunicorn9532 Před 27 dny +1411

    "Our ancestors weren't stupid, ofcourse"
    True, we have more flat Earthers then ever in history

    • @cooltubes547
      @cooltubes547 Před 26 dny +93

      So sad considering the wealth of knowledge we have available to us compared to our ancestors.

    • @Matok1
      @Matok1 Před 26 dny +156

      @@cooltubes547 The advent of the internet has enabled both knowledge and ignorance to spread like wildfire.

    • @klazienanalenveehouderkweker
      @klazienanalenveehouderkweker Před 26 dny +25

      Than

    • @cooltubes547
      @cooltubes547 Před 26 dny +35

      @@Matok1Ignorance because most people can’t be bothered to fact check any information they receive.

    • @norrecvizharan1177
      @norrecvizharan1177 Před 26 dny +31

      @@cooltubes547 And also because some people's egos are so big that they refuse to share the same opinions as the majority, instead basically going out of their way to have contradictory views, but yea.

  • @Talon19
    @Talon19 Před 27 dny +497

    A key distinction of science is its ability to both explain AND predict.
    This separates it from pseudoscience and conspiracies like flat earth myths.

    • @CalaTec
      @CalaTec Před 26 dny +24

      Except when we find out that our models that seemed to work and predict were wrong. The problem is when people assume we understand perfectly something that we still don't because of unknown factors that come to light.

    • @OverlordZephyros
      @OverlordZephyros Před 26 dny +27

      ​@@CalaTec not about flat earth... that is a totally wrong idea and everyone should make fun of them

    • @CalaTec
      @CalaTec Před 26 dny +5

      @@OverlordZephyros 😅 give them a break, I'm sure people already do that

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Před 26 dny +16

      @@CalaTec scientific models are almost always adjusted these days and not turned on their head anymore.

    • @lunatickoala
      @lunatickoala Před 26 dny +24

      @@CalaTec All models are wrong, but some are useful. Gravity is often still thought of and treated as a force even though General Relativity tells us otherwise. The Apollo moon landings were done with 1-body Newtonian models because of the very limited computing power available in the 1960s.
      The original comment uis right in that what gives a model scientific value is that it can make useful predictions. You can get to the moon with Newtonian mechanics even if they're not 100% accurate. You can't do anything useful with a flat earth model. Also, if there's ever a model that's a 100% fit for the data, the model has been overfitted and won't make useful predictions.

  • @ciscoserrano
    @ciscoserrano Před 25 dny +214

    Something my mentor once told me is “all models are wrong but some are useful” and I found that to be extremely profound. No matter how much we know the best we can do is build models to understand reality. And they will always inch closer to Truth but never reach it. Despite that, our current models let us predict everything from how electrons will behave to the motion of planets.

    • @alsydar
      @alsydar Před 23 dny +15

      Occasionally, a new Copernicus emerges to challenge or reshape existing models. The issue lies in people overly relying on these models, assuming them to be absolute truth. True wisdom, as Socrates once stated, involves recognizing our own ignorance.

    • @PromptCriticalJello
      @PromptCriticalJello Před 23 dny +15

      Something i read once said "Don't eat the menu."
      The model isn't reality, it is a useful description of it. The word 'hamburger' on the menu is not the food.
      Don't eat the menu.

    • @rongarza9488
      @rongarza9488 Před 23 dny +2

      @@PromptCriticalJello Thank you, I'm going to use that when explaining metadata.

    • @DavidsonTroy
      @DavidsonTroy Před 23 dny +11

      Please let's not call less accurate or simpler models "wrong." If they give answers that are/were sufficient for the purpose it's day, then there was something good about them. The wrungs on the bottom of a ladder aren't wrong just because they won't take you to the top. But they might have been very useful to get to the top.

    • @thesilktariq
      @thesilktariq Před 22 dny +2

      The map is not the terrain, very true indeed

  • @TheOtherSteel
    @TheOtherSteel Před 25 dny +83

    The loops the Sun moves in, caused by the planets and the gravity between them, is one characteristic astronomers look for to detect planets around other stars.

    • @tealkerberus748
      @tealkerberus748 Před 23 dny +2

      gotta love a wobbly star!

    • @splinewalker214
      @splinewalker214 Před 21 dnem

      Lies

    • @2dogsmowing
      @2dogsmowing Před 21 dnem

      It's the dimming of the star when a planet move across the star is how planets are found.
      Wobbling of the star is a part. So you're not totally wrong. The wobble is if it's a binary system or not.
      Because planets could be further away to not effect the gravity pull to make a star wobble.

    • @tomsmith2013
      @tomsmith2013 Před 17 dny +2

      Well actually, it's the doppler shift and a slight dimming of light caused by the shadow of a passing body between light source and observer.

    • @bjornfeuerbacher5514
      @bjornfeuerbacher5514 Před 14 dny +1

      @@splinewalker214 Hint: simply claiming that something is a lie won't convince anyone. Try providing some arguments and evidence. Or do you prefer that people think you are a total fool?

  • @SaiceShoop
    @SaiceShoop Před 27 dny +359

    I clicked on the video knowing the twist about the gravitational center. Happy to see people talking about this kind of thing

    • @MegaLokopo
      @MegaLokopo Před 26 dny +1

      Why? everyone knows this. The center of the solar system is whatever we define it as. So what.

    • @nonagone9570
      @nonagone9570 Před 26 dny +13

      @@MegaLokopo Ah youre right. The video should never have been made and so what, science sucks and is totally all subjective anyway. 🙄

    • @MegaLokopo
      @MegaLokopo Před 26 dny +1

      @@nonagone9570 Well, what is the point of this information/video, it isn't new.

    • @nonagone9570
      @nonagone9570 Před 26 dny +18

      @@MegaLokopo A lot of people dont know this discrepency and so its pretty interesting stuff if youve never heard or thought about it before. Plus its still quite an interesting video even if you are as educated as yourself! Some history in there too which is always nice. Not every video has to be super new information as it would only be accessible to those who are informed and up to date on scientific advancements, which isnt the point of educational entertainment

    • @MegaLokopo
      @MegaLokopo Před 26 dny +1

      @@nonagone9570 I guess, but if people wanted to know about it, they could find the information out pretty easily on the internet.
      I see what you mean, but you could also argue, that just because this one channel hasn't done a video on a specific topic yet, doesn't mean they should. In ten years from now are all of the science channels going to have exactly the same content, but simply posted in a different order?

  • @d-i-ry
    @d-i-ry Před 27 dny +176

    "You are technically correct. The best kind of correct." 😹😹😹

    • @Tensquaremetreworkshop
      @Tensquaremetreworkshop Před 25 dny +2

      My son's favorite saying since age 10.

    • @wefinishthisnow3883
      @wefinishthisnow3883 Před 24 dny +2

      Actually, the technically correct answer depends on the definition of 'center'. He's only using the definition of gravitational center, not the definition of planetary center.

    • @Tensquaremetreworkshop
      @Tensquaremetreworkshop Před 24 dny +1

      @@wefinishthisnow3883 From context, he was referring to the rotational centre. So correct.

    • @wefinishthisnow3883
      @wefinishthisnow3883 Před 24 dny

      @@Tensquaremetreworkshop correct in that context. But the headline is not correct because it is context dependant. It's like saying Mt. Everest is the tallest mountain on earth. When actually, it 'could be', but it depends on the context.
      For the headline to be technically correct, he'd need to have said something like 'gravitational center'.

  • @Kailokel
    @Kailokel Před 27 dny +427

    "We haven't had our last scientific revolution. We've continued gazing deeper into the heavens with greater and greater precision."
    This should be on a t-shirt or something. So good.

    • @degariuslozak2169
      @degariuslozak2169 Před 27 dny +27

      Or a tattoo on someone's chest

    • @besmart
      @besmart  Před 27 dny +71

      Thanks! If you get that chest tattoo let me know

    • @matthewboire6843
      @matthewboire6843 Před 27 dny +1

      It’s accurate

    • @ambarcraft4476
      @ambarcraft4476 Před 27 dny +5

      It's rather long for a shirt though

    • @FLPhotoCatcher
      @FLPhotoCatcher Před 26 dny

      @@besmart I have to say that there is an inconsistency in what you said in the video. You strongly implied that people in the late middle ages didn't question the church. But then you show that Copernicus did just that. And quoting those Bible verses is also off. You imply that the verses are wrong, not that the interpretation of them was wrong. The Biblical writers knew that the Earth moved, because it was often shaken in an earthquake. So, you have to realize that a very valid interpretation of the verses is that the earth does not move out of its orbit around the sun.

  • @Ponderosa518
    @Ponderosa518 Před 25 dny +53

    0:25 *gets up and moves*

  • @3rdicam724
    @3rdicam724 Před 19 dny +9

    I already figured out. The Sun is within the earths atmosphere, right behind the moon, and the sun moves across the earth. It is a local sun

  • @waleedabdullahkhan5706
    @waleedabdullahkhan5706 Před 27 dny +448

    More than 2000 years ago Aristotle said earth is sphere today SOME people say its flat. Aristotle would be sooo disappointed
    Edit: ok guys my bad I should have used sphere instead of round

    • @thehellyousay
      @thehellyousay Před 27 dny +37

      aristotle was hardly the first person to say the world was round.

    • @DFloyd84
      @DFloyd84 Před 26 dny +36

      The guy was wrong about a lot of things, but he got that part right.

    • @AlbertaMartian
      @AlbertaMartian Před 26 dny +9

      spherical

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Před 26 dny +24

      @@AlbertaMartian oblate spheroid

    • @waleedabdullahkhan5706
      @waleedabdullahkhan5706 Před 26 dny +1

      ​@@DFloyd84yup at least he got something right and with ancient tools

  • @pwolkowicki
    @pwolkowicki Před 27 dny +124

    I didn't expect that 1% of mass can influence the other 99%(Sun) do much. I thought that the center of Solar System is always somewhere inside the Sun.

    • @GhostGlitch.
      @GhostGlitch. Před 26 dny +31

      It still isn't effecting the position of the point much compared to the size of the solar system. The distances are just large enough that a small percentage change to where a point is can still be a significant distance.

    • @GhostGlitch.
      @GhostGlitch. Před 26 dny +42

      To put it into perspective, after a bit of quick research it would seem that the furthest the center of gravity gets from the sun's center in simulations is definitely under 3 solar radii, and seemingly right around 2 solar radii. and while yes, 1.4 million km is a very big distance to a human, it isnt that significant on these scales. The heaviest planet in the solar system orbits at an average distance over 1,000 solar radii from the sun. So the center of mass moves less than .2% the distance to the second heaviest body at the absolute maximum distance. That's relatively tiny, as would be expected.
      Edit: wanted to add that according to the math another comment did the contribution of Jupiter itself is just over 1 solar radius. So it is moved percentage wise around .1% of the total distance towards Jupiter. That is practically a rounding error.

    • @kidmohair8151
      @kidmohair8151 Před 26 dny +10

      for what it's worth. it's that way depending on where the rest of the planets etc,
      are in their orbits.
      if all the planets are on one side of the sun, then the center is farther outside,
      than when they are scattered around the sun.

    • @GhostGlitch.
      @GhostGlitch. Před 26 dny +6

      @@kidmohair8151 right. The number I used for the distance from sun's center to solar system center was based on a graph I found of simulation someone ran for the years 1700-2200. The highest distance on the graph is just over 1,400,000 km so thats what i used. And for the distance to Jupiter I used the average.
      It was just some quick back of the napkin math. The actual specific numbers aren't all that important. My point was that on the scale of the solar system the distance that point moves is still relatively quite small. It is orders of magnitude smaller than the distances between most objects.

    • @VEE727
      @VEE727 Před 26 dny +2

      ​@@GhostGlitch.Just goes to show that a lot of mass is packed into a very small orb

  • @shimittyshim
    @shimittyshim Před 26 dny +93

    *Spends 10 minutes talking about the entire history of cosmology.
    *Spends only a minute talking about the subject in the title of the video.
    *Doesn't actually go into detail of what a barycenter is or explain it.
    This is the CZcams equivalent of a high school essay where the student didn't understand the subject so they waffled for a page and a half about an unimportant tangent.

    • @liam78587
      @liam78587 Před 26 dny +7

      becoming an adult means realizing school never ended it just changed a bit

    • @mattrempel4850
      @mattrempel4850 Před 25 dny +5

      Exactly, the video title gave me more questions than there are answere in the video.

    • @olli1886
      @olli1886 Před 25 dny +9

      Also wrongly implies that the lunar cycle is earth's shadow, that "planets" are called that because they "wander" relative to the earth (it's because they wandered relative to the stars) and that the elliptic orbits of the planets caused their going back and forth relative to earth (it's earth's orbit that's causing that)

    • @mirrorblue100
      @mirrorblue100 Před 25 dny +3

      Written for sixth graders.

    • @MrT------5743
      @MrT------5743 Před 25 dny +11

      ​@olli1886 he never said the phases of the moon were the earth's shadow. He did say they saw Earth's shadow on the moon, and it was always round. Anyone who is anyone knows when we see.earths shadow on the moon it is during a lunar eclipse.

  • @DaveHardy-n1q
    @DaveHardy-n1q Před 21 dnem +5

    Blessed is the person who is too busy to worry in the daytime, and too sleepy to worry at night.

  • @jersey714
    @jersey714 Před 24 dny +6

    Minor but happy note: I love how you had the timer visual onscreen for the 15 seconds you said your thank yous! Clearly your message got out, but reassured folks you wouldn't be long. Wish that was the standard!

  • @sports5760
    @sports5760 Před 27 dny +144

    Man, i love these infotainment science-based videos and CZcams channels. I fell blessed to get this content and knowledge, that too for FREE. Love from India.

    • @Neotenyx
      @Neotenyx Před 27 dny +2

      What other channels can you recommend?

    • @tomasfisher
      @tomasfisher Před 27 dny +1

      yes ​please@@Neotenyx

    • @Splarkszter
      @Splarkszter Před 27 dny +9

      Never forget to Donate.
      Nothing is free.
      Always give back when you take something :)

    • @Petch85
      @Petch85 Před 27 dny

      @@Neotenyx May I recommend Welch Labs. I guess you should start with "How Kepler Actually Discovered his Laws" I highly recommend it. It has very nice illustrations and many need detiles.

    • @LightBlueVans
      @LightBlueVans Před 27 dny +2

      everyone drop suggestions for similar channels! i’m always looking for more

  • @josephhargrove4319
    @josephhargrove4319 Před 27 dny +124

    Nice video. What amazes me is not the amount of refined scientific knowledge we have amassed in human history but how much of it was not known 100 years ago. When I was taking high school chemistry and physics in the 1960's, it wasn't impressed on me how much of what I was being exposed to had only been known since the 1910's, 20's and 30's. And the accumulation of scientific knowledge has only accelerated since then. Stay curious and try to drink from the fire hose.
    richard
    --
    Said of the Ephebian philosophers, but just as valid for modern scientists:
    "These are men who are trying to work out how the world fits together, not by magic, not by religion, but just by inserting their brains in whatever crack they can find and trying to lever it apart."
    - Terry Pratchett. Pyramids

    • @stewiesaidthat
      @stewiesaidthat Před 26 dny

      Doing a little research, it's been known since Galileo in the late 1500s early 1600s that the earth is in motion around the parent star. So why is Newton and Einstein and Hawkings still treating the earth as a stationary frame with the universe revolving around it?
      Take gravity for instance. Prior to Galileo, gravitational attraction was the reason heavy objects fall to tge ground on a stationary frame instead of floating off into space. Galileo showed the scientific community that it's the Earth's MOTION in space that causes objects to fall, is the reason there are rides. Kepler's laws of motion added to tools to explain the annual high tide. So why does the scientific community still preach gravitational attraction? There has not been a single experiment conducted that validates it. That goes for Einstein’s relativity nonsense. Nicholas Tesla pointed out that it was pure mathematical nonsense. And like gravity, no experiment to date has validated it. There are however plenty of experiments that disprove gravity and relativity.
      Why is the scientific community so blind to reality. By using mass as the actionable force, they created a mirror image of the real universe.
      What was it that Ronald Reagan said. Its not that Relativists don't know anything, what they do know, just ain't so.
      Gravity is like the hammer and nail. When all you have is a hammer (gravity) everything is treated as a nail. Galileo created the screw and Newton supplied the screwdriver (laws of Motion), and yet flat earthers like Einstein and Hawkings are still treating the screw as a nail. Why?
      Just trying to understand why Relativists are so ignorant and refuse to accept reality. The hammer&feather drop test proving mass does not attract mass? The equivalence principle. The Hafele-Keating synchronized clocks showing space and time are separate frames of reference, that there is a preferred frame of reference as motion is absolute. Why are Relativists still preaching time-dilation? Light travels in its own frame of reference. The observer is not in the clock's frame of reference. How is that so-called physicists don't understand that.
      You may have more information but you are still stuck on stupid when it comes to critical thinking.
      NDT doesn't even understand basic physics. F=ma. When you add mass (salt) to water, you get less acceleration (temperature).
      You have all this information but you don't understand how to put 2 and 2 together. I think its on account of the fact that you still have monkey brains being wired chimpanzees.
      You were taught gravity/gravitational/mass attraction in school and now you are wired to observe the universe from those lenses.
      You have no critical thinking skills otherwise you would understand why gravity is not a fundamental force of nature. You have all the information. You are just lacking the ability to reason. The brainwashing runs deep which is why Relativists don't understand that they are the real flat earthers/science deniers.

    • @dravmtp385
      @dravmtp385 Před 26 dny +3

      @@stewiesaidthat i hope you copypasta'd that nonsense and didn't waste your time writing it

    • @theeyeofomnipotent
      @theeyeofomnipotent Před 26 dny +1

      Well... we have more people alive working together simultaneously than any other time in human history and even prehistory

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Před 26 dny

      Nice to meet a person of culture in the comments.

    • @steveaustin2686
      @steveaustin2686 Před 24 dny

      @@stewiesaidthat Look up the Cavendish Experiment, which is over 200 years old and calculates the gravitational constant.
      There have been many experiments proving relativity, including Mercury's orbit around the Sun, which Newtonian laws don't quite explain.
      Einstein and Hawking are flat earthers? Really?
      Then you devolve a lot of projection. Good luck with that.

  • @Rainho1991
    @Rainho1991 Před 26 dny +26

    The way the "Our ancestors weren't stupid" is said and all the emphasis! Cold and calculated!

  • @DanielKellyFolkMusic
    @DanielKellyFolkMusic Před 25 dny +10

    “The ancients weren’t dumb”, yet here we are, flat earthers and ‘do not drink’ labels on bleach.

    • @maxdanielj
      @maxdanielj Před 24 dny +3

      Flat earth quacks are the reason those labels exist 😂

    • @kathleenmccrory9883
      @kathleenmccrory9883 Před 11 dny +2

      Stupid isn't a new phenomenon. It's just that stupid now has social media.

  • @books4739
    @books4739 Před 22 dny +20

    As an atheist, thank you for using BC and for not pretending that the Church had nothing to do with the development of civilisation whilst still using their calendar. 🙏😉

    • @mr.ch4rli3_
      @mr.ch4rli3_ Před 20 dny +1

      It can be both, one being archaic and outdated the other being common day and more universal

    • @crabby7668
      @crabby7668 Před 17 dny +3

      No it is a modern deceit. The scale of time is exactly the same, the new names are the result of the modern habit of renaming everything for political reasons.

  • @AlgaeEater09
    @AlgaeEater09 Před 27 dny +29

    Is it weird that my favorite part of these videos is the INTRO MUSIC? 0:55
    It just always sounds so whimsical. A tad creepy, but in a 'lets go exploring through an old dusty house' way.

  • @tgjaedan
    @tgjaedan Před 27 dny +22

    So, in the end Ptolemy still got part of his spirograph solar system dream to come true!

    • @blazunlimited
      @blazunlimited Před 13 dny

      I liked your comment because I am old enough that I once had a spirograph.

  • @Wolfiyeethegranddukecerberus17

    There needs to be a game where you wake up on some random world and have to discern the rules of the universe around you through context clues, like what it seems like the Greeks did.

    • @somedude4832
      @somedude4832 Před 26 dny +6

      You should check out Outer Wilds, it’s exactly what you’re describing

    • @briebel2684
      @briebel2684 Před 26 dny +7

      The ancient Greeks weren't the only ones working on these problems. There were smart people in other civilizations as well. They just didn't have an efficient way to communicate ideas with each other, like we have today.

    • @Ninjatek16
      @Ninjatek16 Před 24 dny +1

      Like the AR helmet in Netflix’s 3 Body problem

    • @Scripture-Man
      @Scripture-Man Před 24 dny

      Star Trek is good for these kind of scientific mysteries. There's a fun episode titled "Remember Me" (Star Trek: The Next Generation) where the whole of reality is in a state of decay, with Doctor Crusher using the computer to ascertain the nature of the universe. Some good Star Trek: Voyager episodes like this, too. If you're young and scientifically-minded, I highly recommend these shows.

    • @rebbrown7140
      @rebbrown7140 Před 23 dny

      Someone wrote a book just like that about 900 years ago. The plot is that a young person grows up with nobody else around, and they gradually figure out theological and scientific truths purely through observation. It's called Philosophus Autodidactus (the self taught philosopher). You can download it for free online. Here's more info on it: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayy_ibn_Yaqdhan

  • @Carmoflage
    @Carmoflage Před 25 dny +3

    Great video.
    Kinda reminds me of the "Model of the Atom" by Bohr. It´s good enough for elementary and highschool, but if you go to college you´ll learn that it´s just that: "good enough for basic education". There´s so much more beyond but pupil always get taught on their "level" in elementary, highschool, and other schools with a sentient of "THIS IS IT! - you´ve to learn it this way by heart!".
    I´ve rearly encountert a teacher who was openly about it like: This is only the basics and not all correct, but you need to understand it to build up upon for higher education.
    The Problem comes when people think they know it all, based on the "flawed" basic models they learned in school. Maybe this could be countered by teaching the "Dunning Krueger Effect" as soon as pupils/students are old enough to unerstand it.

  • @uzetaab
    @uzetaab Před 22 dny +3

    the Ptolemy Model at 4:28 would make a great t-shirt. Those spirals are really nice

  • @RoguishlyHandsome
    @RoguishlyHandsome Před 26 dny +10

    I mean. I always understood that the sun being the center meant that the planets orbited around it, not that it was THE ABSOLUTE center. Always seemed like the center being the center of mass was a given, implied.

    • @robspiess
      @robspiess Před 26 dny

      The center of mass is what the video is about. Google: barycenter

    • @MrT------5743
      @MrT------5743 Před 25 dny +1

      Technically, the planets don't just orbit the sun. They all orbit the barycenter of the solar system. Most of the time, the barycenter of the solar system is within the sun.
      That is the just of this video.

  • @drnut-22
    @drnut-22 Před 27 dny +70

    You're right, Joe. I'm the center of the solar system 😎😎

    • @JonaS-vy1il
      @JonaS-vy1il Před 27 dny +19

      Because of your enormous mass? 😂

    • @ivarbrouwer197
      @ivarbrouwer197 Před 27 dny +10

      Your life still revolves around the all consuming centre of our galaxy, my mother, so don’t think to highly of yourself…

    •  Před 27 dny +2

      ​@ivarbrouwer197 yeah but my mum is the great attractor so you all can just move at bonkers speeds towards her

    • @cheeeeezewizzz
      @cheeeeezewizzz Před 27 dny +2

      ​@@ivarbrouwer197Your mothers mass is nothing before the mass of my ego, gravitational center of the universe.

    • @CarFreeSegnitz
      @CarFreeSegnitz Před 27 dny +8

      Acktually… you are the centre of your observable universe. Everything you see is back in time. Your reflection in the mirror is a nanosecond old. The light from the Moon is roughly 1.5 seconds old. The light from Alpha Centauri is roughly 4.26 years old. Your cosmic horizon is ever-so-slightly different from everyone else’s.

  • @filipinosonicfan
    @filipinosonicfan Před 27 dny +18

    I learned this in social studies / Araling Panlipunan / History, economics, and stuff. Seeing this makes ne happy since when i was younger I'd watch this channel and always expect to learn in school what I'd watch on CZcams

  • @Bilfford
    @Bilfford Před 24 dny +8

    The following is what chat gpt 4o has to say about those verses that you used to support your claim that the Bible claims that the earth doesn't move. (And before anyone says it, yes I understand that he probably meant it to be taken as not his own claim but the claim of the church at the time).
    These verses are best understood in their context and genre. They are part of the poetic and metaphorical language commonly found in the Psalms and other parts of the Bible. When interpreting these verses, several points should be considered:
    1. **Poetic Language**: The Psalms, in particular, are filled with poetic expressions that communicate truths about God and His creation in a way that speaks to the heart and mind. The descriptions of the Earth being "fixed" and "immovable" can be understood as poetic ways of expressing the stability and order that God has established in the world. These verses emphasize God's sovereignty and the reliability of His creation, rather than making scientific statements about the Earth's physical properties.
    2. **Theological Emphasis**: The main focus of these passages is theological, not scientific. The intention is to affirm God's control over the cosmos and the unshakeable nature of His creation. For example, when the Psalmist says, "He has fixed the earth firm, immovable," it is to convey that God’s creation is stable and trustworthy because it is under His control.
    3. **Cultural Context**: In the ancient Near Eastern context, stability and order were highly valued, and the Earth being "fixed" would have been understood as a symbol of God's order and rule. It wasn't necessarily a literal statement about geophysics but rather a cultural way to communicate the unchanging nature of God’s sovereignty.
    4. **Metaphorical Understanding**: The Bible often uses metaphors to describe spiritual truths. The Earth being "fixed" and "immovable" could be seen metaphorically, representing the enduring nature of God’s creation and promises rather than a literal description of physical motion.
    In summary, these verses are meant to convey theological truths about God’s sovereignty and the stability of His creation, using poetic and metaphorical language. They are not intended to be taken as literal, scientific descriptions of the Earth's physical properties. When interpreted in their proper context, they do not contradict the scientific understanding that the Earth moves.

  • @leightonholley4342
    @leightonholley4342 Před 24 dny +19

    6:46 For anyone who cares.
    In Chronicles 16:30, Psalm 93:1, and Psalm 96:10,
    The word translated as immovable is "môṭ," which means to totter, shake, slip. The word translated as fixed is "kûn" which means to be firm, be stable, be established.
    In Psalm 104:5,
    The word translated as foundation is "māḵôn." This translation is pretty close, but it lacks the connotation of dwelling place or abode that the original word has. The word translated as fix is "yāsaḏ." This translation is also pretty close, but lacks the ideas of being set or laid that the original has.
    In Isaiah 45:18,
    The word translated as "fixed it fast" is "kûn."
    Sanuel 2:8,
    This translation is pretty good, and the poetry is left intact. The section shown here is the second half of vs. 8, and is given as the reason why God can lift people out of poverty and give them authority. Setting a literal planet on literal pillars doesn't make a strong argument for why people can be lifted out of poverty. It sounds more like the pillars are figurative, maybe rules or laws.
    Psalm 119:90,
    The word for established is "kûn." The word for stands firm is "ʿāmaḏ," which contains the ideas of to stand, remain, endure, or take one's stand.
    If you look at the original language and the context, there is no need to interpret the Bible as saying the earth doesn't move. Despite this an authoritarian religious organization happened to insist that they were infallible, and told everyone that they needed to believe only what their interpretations. He who has eye's let him see, and he who has ears let him hear, don't just believe what people say, but test things for yourself.

    • @petermarshall7352
      @petermarshall7352 Před 19 dny +2

      Holy hell, you need help.

    • @kingboagart899
      @kingboagart899 Před 11 dny

      As one of those who cares, it is plain to see that you have a very analytical mind, yet your obvious genius is spent analyzing a storybook modified to suit the powerbrokers of the times in their own pursuit of wealth and population control. I can only hope that this pursuit is something that you do in your spare time after you have achieved amazing and life changing tasks, physically bettering the lives of humanity, in your day job. The unfortunate reality is that most individuals of your caliber become enmeshed in trying to make sense out of gobbledegook, wasting enormous talent on irrelevant knowledge.

    • @leightonholley4342
      @leightonholley4342 Před 10 dny +1

      @@kingboagart899 I appreciate you caring. I'm definitely not a genius, I know less than 99% of the knowledge in the universe and can make sense of even less of it.
      If it was modified by power brokers then they did an awful job. The Bible does a terrible job at controlling people, when I look around no one actually practices what it teaches. Every organization I've studied that tries to control the conscience, tries to take away the Bible one way or another.
      Trying to understand reality and words is what I do constantly in order communicate with people.
      I design custom hooks for a living. In my free time I try to share the only hope I have with others.
      What you call gobbledegook seems to describe the reality I have personally experienced, so I don't think I could believe the knowledge is irrelevant anymore than I could believe grass is never green.

  • @NRNF1776
    @NRNF1776 Před 26 dny +36

    The Old Testament translation is SO BAD.
    I can't stress this enough.
    For example - we have 3 or different words that we use to say 'see', yet the translation of the bible always translates this to 'see'.
    In your example, chronicles 16:30, DOES NOT SAY 'immovable'.
    It literally says the word 'תִּמֹּֽוט' - 'TIMOT' -> crumble down, fall down, shatter down, fall apart.
    That is miles away from the word 'Move'.
    I haven't checked the other examples, but I'm sure they follow the same path of wrong translation...

    • @gy2gy246
      @gy2gy246 Před 26 dny +4

      There are 16 versions of the Bible in English. Depends on which monk copied them and whether he was biased, which translation they used, etc.

    • @NRNF1776
      @NRNF1776 Před 26 dny

      @@gy2gy246 Yet all translations are wrong...

    • @gy2gy246
      @gy2gy246 Před 25 dny +5

      @@NRNF1776 I consider them all fictional, so I don't have a problem with "right" and "wrong." I'll let the religious folks argue it out.

    • @justinessah215
      @justinessah215 Před 25 dny +9

      Regardless of the translation, that is NOT even what those passages say. Has the author of this video noticed, for example, that the Earth has NEVER wandered away from where it is supposed to be? It has been in orbit for as long as people can remember! The Earth is "immovable," as the passage says! I wonder if the author has never used the expression "I am not going anywhere" in his life to mean "I am not giving up." The clergy's interpretation is their opinion, NOT that of the Bible. People "mock" things they don't understand. They always try to "force" their worldview on others and call it science!

    • @skwills1629
      @skwills1629 Před 25 dny +8

      @@gy2gy246 - There are More than 16 Translations of The Bible in English, and They were Not All Copied by Monks, n or are Translations always Translations of a Previpous Translation. Most of the Translation Issues have to do with Either Linguists Disagreeing on what a Term means or simply facing a Problem in No Exact Match in Language can be Founbd for a Certain Phrase.,

  • @DragonXero
    @DragonXero Před 26 dny +12

    I'll be honest: I already knew the answer but it was still a good watch. The visualization was absolutely worth the watch.

  • @ATADSP
    @ATADSP Před 27 dny +6

    Someone from two, three, or even ten thousand years ago would have had the same capacity for intelligence as you or me, but they lacked the accumulation of knowledge that we had. The ancients were smart, they just weren't knowledgable, it took those thousands of years of passing down our findings to get to today.
    I also think that the patterns traced by Ptolemy's epicycles are beautiful, even if they are wrong.

    • @5353Jumper
      @5353Jumper Před 27 dny +3

      Most of us would fail miserably in the society of 5000 years ago. Heck even 200 years ago. We are just as dumb as they were, just in different ways.

    • @robspiess
      @robspiess Před 26 dny +2

      "If I have seen further than others, it is only by standing on the shoulders of giants before me." -Isaac Newton

  • @elmartillo7931
    @elmartillo7931 Před 25 dny +3

    When my daughters were young in the early 2000s they used to watch blue's clues a lot, and your mannerisms and the way you look at the camera and the way you talk reminds me of Steve hahaha

  • @logtothebase2
    @logtothebase2 Před 22 dny +6

    Skip to 9:42 to avoid the lengthy historical preamble.

    • @johndoiron9615
      @johndoiron9615 Před 5 dny

      Not all heroes wear capes. Do you wear capes?

    • @Wildman-zh8lg
      @Wildman-zh8lg Před 5 dny

      No

    • @MariaMartinez-researcher
      @MariaMartinez-researcher Před 2 dny

      The historic preamble is extremely important. There are people out there who believe NASA imposed the belief of spherical Earth in the 60s - that right before people "knew" the Earth is flat. In most schools, science is taught as a set of axioms, devoid of development or context. Another reason why flatearthers can be successful telling people they have been "indoctrinated" at school.

  • @henrywyckoff4301
    @henrywyckoff4301 Před 26 dny +11

    In old Greek, the "p" wasn't silent. And didn't Copernicus insist his book was only published after his death? It's the only way to Inquisition-proof yourself back in those days.

    • @johns2226
      @johns2226 Před 25 dny +2

      The 'P' is still not silent in current Greek ... used in mathematics these days as Π π (pi) correctly pronounced as pee and not pie.. 🙂

    •  Před 24 dny +1

      About Copernicus is false and true. I mean, he was very careful about this, which could be very polemic, so it was published very close to his death. But, as it was in the past, it is now. On the couch, as in politics, there were many factions, and some of them received very welcome news ideas (in the end, they were from the material world, not the spiritual). But others were very against those ideas. In the beginning, it was the Protestants that were against them; later, Galileo, there was a flip in the side.

  • @Noogleminus
    @Noogleminus Před 27 dny +10

    How would this effect solar activity? Has anyone attempted to gather and analyze data to see if there is a link between the sun, the gravitational center, and solar activity?

    • @Splarkszter
      @Splarkszter Před 27 dny +2

      It's just a calculated point.
      It's the sum of all gravitational forces.
      Everything spins around it but doesn't mean is attracted to it.
      The sun is still the sun.

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 Před 27 dny +5

      Good question. Does the sun experience tidal flexing from all the planets tugging on it?
      I imagine the effect would be really small, but on a system of fluid convection that is as big as the sun, that could add up to quite a lot.

    • @Rebius
      @Rebius Před 26 dny +2

      I'm not sure if they do, but the best chance of finding something would be the Parker solar probe. Everything has some amount of effect on anything else because almost anything in nature (universe) is a chaotic system and they are notoriously unstable, there is a pretty good chance it has an impact.

    • @haversineastronomi
      @haversineastronomi Před 25 dny

      İt does but the effect is negligably small​@@Yora21

    • @MrT------5743
      @MrT------5743 Před 25 dny

      ​@@Yora21the sun does obviously 'feel' the tidal effects because the whole thing is outside of the current barycenter of the solar system.

  • @charlottedean2205
    @charlottedean2205 Před 27 dny +5

    the thing about heliocenterism, is it can be a good introduction to movement in space, before we tell everyone we're barreling forward in space, like a spiraling missile in a cartoon.

    • @thomasdequincey5811
      @thomasdequincey5811 Před 25 dny +1

      Everything in the Milky Way orbits the Super Massive black Hole in the centre, but I wouldn't call that "forward".

    • @charlottedean2205
      @charlottedean2205 Před 25 dny +1

      lolol that black hole is also barreling forward. nothing is stationary. ur being pedantic

    • @blakehelgoth5247
      @blakehelgoth5247 Před 23 dny

      n​@@charlottedean2205OK, what's the point of reference the?

    • @stephenderry9488
      @stephenderry9488 Před 23 dny

      Since about 1920, the Earth has left a trail of radio waves expanding into space along its path. If the Earth was stationary in space they would expand out in a sphere, but the fact we are orbiting the sun and the sun itself is barrelling around the galactic centre means the actual shape of the radio wave trail is... some kind of conical curved spiral. Like a very weird tuba. I have yet to see a satisfactory illustration of this.

    • @charlottedean2205
      @charlottedean2205 Před 22 dny +1

      @@stephenderry9488 yall are all forgetting that our galaxy is not stationary

  • @NorthernChev
    @NorthernChev Před 25 dny +2

    I like how you just throw Aristarchus aside.
    “Nothing to see here”…

  • @Tubulous123
    @Tubulous123 Před 25 dny +1

    Yes!!! Thank you!!! "... you never fully understand an idea until you understand where it comes from." nice; )

  • @apparentlyretrograde
    @apparentlyretrograde Před 27 dny +4

    I love when videos involve the terminology that comprises my YT alias.

  • @user-if1ly5sn5f
    @user-if1ly5sn5f Před 27 dny +4

    11:45 bigger dimensions with relative differences. We predict by reflections and crossing dimensions.

  • @withamih
    @withamih Před 27 dny +13

    The sun is not the center of the solar system. Wait what?

    • @trevinbeattie4888
      @trevinbeattie4888 Před 26 dny +6

      More precisely, the sun is not the _barycenter_ of the solar system; and for the moment the barycenter lies just outside the sun.

    • @Ayeshteni
      @Ayeshteni Před 23 dny

      Watch and find out.

  • @xinfuxia3809
    @xinfuxia3809 Před 23 dny +1

    10:20 is an excellent illustration of 3+ body problem.

  • @clairpahlavi
    @clairpahlavi Před 22 dny +1

    Interesting that the Bible claims the Earth "rocked to and fro, like a drunkard" during Noah's flood.
    The earth may have flipped 90° also, during that magnetic reversal.

  • @josiahtaylor
    @josiahtaylor Před 26 dny +11

    Except you're also technically wrong: you didn't mention gravity in the title of the video. When you ask "what's the center of our solar system", an accurate answer *would* be the Sun. This is because, putting aside the gravitational center, a planetary system such as our solar system does revolve around a star as the primary gravitational object, and this is generally true for planetary systems.

    • @trevinbeattie4888
      @trevinbeattie4888 Před 26 dny +1

      If you discard gravity, which also discounts all mass, then you need to define some other property of the solar system that can have a center. Even the Oort cloud won’t suffice as a substitute because the limits of the Oort cloud are defined by gravitational boundaries.

    • @MrT------5743
      @MrT------5743 Před 25 dny +2

      Just because gravity wasn't mentioned in the title, doesn't make the title wrong. Everything doesn't technically orbit the sun either. Did you even watch this video? Everything orbits the barycenter of the solar system, which most of the time is within the sun. But the sun also orbits the barycenter.
      It is a misnomer (technically) to say earth orbits the sun. When if you really get down to the detail of orbits, the 2 things orbit the common center of gravity, the barycenter. Duh
      Now obviously for just a quick general statement that is not as detailed people do say earth orbits the sun. And generally that is enough detail to continue talking about whatever you were talking about.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron Před 21 dnem

      Barycenter.

  • @ttt5020
    @ttt5020 Před 26 dny +6

    Did the math, and Jupiter and the Sun alone have a point between them but outside the Sun! The Sun contains 99.85% of all the matter in the Solar System, and Jupiter has 0.1067%. It's 417 million miles away though, making the center of mass a point 500k miles from the Sun in the direction of Jupiter- but the Sun only has a radius of 400k miles! It's only when the remaining 0.0433% of the system's mass 'pulls' the center back into the Sun that the center of mass is within it.
    This is really a matter of people commonly underestimating the scale of space. Even a grain of sand orbitting the Sun can have a center of mass outside the Sun if its far enough away! 10 to the 30 or so lightyears to be just outside the sun, though, which is much further than the diameter of the Universe. But proves that no matter how much mass the Sun has, it's the Gas Giants being so so distant in comparison to its radius that 'pulls' our center of mass ouside of it!

    • @dojelnotmyrealname4018
      @dojelnotmyrealname4018 Před 26 dny +1

      Something in those percentages doesn't add up.

    • @ttt5020
      @ttt5020 Před 26 dny

      @@dojelnotmyrealname4018 my bad! forgot a zero when typing it out- jupiter is 0.1067% of the solar system mass, not 0.167%. I used the corrext value for the calculations though!

    • @duckpotat9818
      @duckpotat9818 Před 26 dny +2

      @@ttt5020 and to be pedantic since we’re here anyway.
      We don’t really know the mass of the Oort cloud.
      Could be anywhere between the Moon’s mass and a few times the Earth’s mass.
      That alone makes the % leftover after the gas giants a bit meaningless.
      Although the Oort cloud is often excluded from ‘the Solar system’.

    • @ttt5020
      @ttt5020 Před 26 dny

      @@duckpotat9818 right, that would recenter the systems center of mass since the cloud is evenly distriputed

    • @duckpotat9818
      @duckpotat9818 Před 26 dny

      @@ttt5020 we also don’t know the distribution within the cloud.
      If it’s anything like the asteroid or the kuiper belt the it wouldn’t.
      A significant chunk of both is in dwarf planets like Ceres, Pluto and Charon.
      The Oort cloud could definitely hide a few mercuries without us knowing.

  • @DemonEyes23
    @DemonEyes23 Před 27 dny +6

    Kudos for including the best line from Futurama

    • @RK-si4ln
      @RK-si4ln Před 26 dny

      Which is?

    • @Wendy_O._Koopa
      @Wendy_O._Koopa Před 25 dny +2

      @@RK-si4ln The line they are referring to is: "You are technically correct. The best kind of correct." which, is _good;_ but the _best_ line from Futurama still has to be "That just raises further questions!" although, it unfortunately makes no sense out of context.

  • @ALaModePi
    @ALaModePi Před 25 dny +1

    One minor correction, which might not matter in any case: Since Easter is figured on Passover (which is a Saturday), the actual placement of Easter is the Sunday after the first Saturday after the first Full Moon after the Spring Equinox. So, the only situation where it would make a difference is if the Saturday would fall before any of those conditions, placing Easter a week later.
    There's also a small bit about "the Liturgical Moon," a contrivance to make the calculations easier. That last bit is why the Protestants and Catholics sometimes celebrate Easter on a different Sunday than the Orthodox, who don't use the Liturgical Moon.
    Back to the title of the post: I was pretty sure where this was going, but I do enjoy seeing how you get there. And you're right that knowing the barycenter of the Solar System is important for such things as the recent probe that met up with a comet, took samples, returned the samples to Earth, and then proceeded to rendezvous with another comet. You really have to have a handle on where things and will be in order to do that.

  • @jonah8055
    @jonah8055 Před 24 dny +1

    Conflicting information presented here: 7:45 states the church was on board with Copernicus's theory yet on the 24 February 1616 (a bit let than 100 years after Copernicus published his findings), eleven theologians that were enrolled by the Holy Office decided that “the sun is the center of the world and completely devoid of local motion” to be “formally heretical since it explicitly contradicts in many places the sense of Holy Scripture, according to the literal meaning of the words and according to the common interpretation and understanding of the Holy Fathers and the doctors of theology.” (Heilbron (2010), p.217 [67])
    And also after Galileo presented his findings, he was warned and then put on house arrest. Further reading on p.218 states how he was warned. So @besmart, please clarify how this is "support from the Church".

  • @joebandura8822
    @joebandura8822 Před 27 dny +11

    I feel like this is going to be a barycenter video.

  • @Megadextrious
    @Megadextrious Před 23 dny +4

    “We don’t *feel* the Earth move…”
    Meanwhile, in California, Mexico and Japan: 🫨

    • @doomsdaySephiroth
      @doomsdaySephiroth Před 19 dny +1

      And sometimes Virginia

    • @RedScotland
      @RedScotland Před 19 dny

      We dont ever feel the earth move until there is an earthquake, and the reason is that it doesn't move.

  • @sagaramskp
    @sagaramskp Před 27 dny +10

    Ibn Al-Shatir inventor of the first astrolabic clock, predicted that the sun instead of the Earth is the center of the universe hundred of years before Copernicus, as they began a systemic critique of Classic cosmology as early as the 11th century.
    In some instance, as in case of the model for the motion of planet Mercury, it was found that Copernicus even made mistakes in his interpretation of the earlier mathematical model that he apparently inherited from the works of the Muslim astronomer Ibn al-Shatir. In other instances he remained faithful to the mathematical formulations that were developed by other astronomers of the Islamic world such as Mu'ayyad al-Din al-'Urdi and Nasir al-Din al-Tusi
    Copied and pasted

    • @sagaramskp
      @sagaramskp Před 27 dny +4

      It's high time to give proper credit to eastern scientists for their contribution to science and not just the euro centric narration of science.. and if even Be Smart miss these legendary names😢😢 who will acknowledge them

    • @riyaansheikh7470
      @riyaansheikh7470 Před 25 dny

      ​@@sagaramskpwho will give credit to them, the westerns who stole their ideas?

    • @imadmorsli2871
      @imadmorsli2871 Před 21 dnem

      Speaking of credit to the east, wasn't there a whole thing where the west said the Quran had a mistake when it said the sun has an orbit too until this was discovered

    • @riyaansheikh7470
      @riyaansheikh7470 Před 21 dnem

      @@imadmorsli2871 hmm can you give me a source where they said this?

  • @clairpahlavi
    @clairpahlavi Před 22 dny +1

    Newton never defined the causation of attraction among the heavenly bodies. He called it a force, "gravity".
    "What caused it? God knows."

  • @Zunnerchia
    @Zunnerchia Před 16 dny

    It's amazing how with many historical philosophers and scientists, they get so much right and so much wrong. Although we keep finding today we do the same thing. There's always more to learn and that's awesome. I love learning and hope to always have the same passion and love for learning.

  • @mutantryeff
    @mutantryeff Před 22 dny +3

    Your audio needs an s-filter

  • @illesizs
    @illesizs Před 27 dny +4

    "...and it won't be until 2027..."
    Love it!

  • @LaineyBug2020
    @LaineyBug2020 Před 25 dny +3

    Semantics...

  • @JustinSassoon
    @JustinSassoon Před 21 dnem

    I love my past. I love my present. I'm not ashamed of what Ive had, and I'm not sad because I have it no longer.

  • @SpaceEnigma79
    @SpaceEnigma79 Před 22 dny

    I clicked on the video knowing the twist about the gravitational center. Happy to see people talking about this kind of thing 🌍🌍🌍

  • @AiNaKa
    @AiNaKa Před 27 dny +10

    this video feels like it has a lot of padding just to explain barycenters.

    • @nebulan
      @nebulan Před 27 dny +1

      Fun padding tho

    • @k1ry4n
      @k1ry4n Před 27 dny +1

      What you called padding is actually a brief explanation of the history of the models humanity invented to explain and predict celestial body movements. If you want 30 seconds videos there are other platforms.

  • @Mefodon
    @Mefodon Před 27 dny +7

    "Most of the time not in the center" would be more accurate....

  • @morganoverbay8783
    @morganoverbay8783 Před 24 dny +3

    Our ancestors weren't stupid, but most people in 2024 ???

  • @dandaniii04
    @dandaniii04 Před 17 dny

    I started watching Joe when I was 9, I'm 18 now, this channel literally awaken my curiosity and interest in science, now I'm entering my dream college studying biology, it's a dream come true, continue making these videos Be Smart team, Thank you for always making us curious about our life on earth!
    PADAYON! (keep going in tagalog)

  • @juliegolick
    @juliegolick Před 23 dny

    The first ten minutes of this video were literally a summary of the first half of a 3rd-year university history of science course I took!

  • @seattlegrrlie
    @seattlegrrlie Před 26 dny +1

    My favorite video is how the solar system moves through space. The sun isn't the center of anything. It's also a mass cruising through the universe

  • @FredSlocombe
    @FredSlocombe Před 21 dnem +1

    Yeah, so multiple fields of gravity from heavy bodies around the sun make it wobble. I think this is how we discovered exoplanets.

  • @billyroye3987
    @billyroye3987 Před 20 dny

    12 minutes of my life that I'll never get back.

  • @HokageSama13
    @HokageSama13 Před 25 dny +1

    9:24
    Oh yeah, I’ve heard of Newton. Didn’t he coined the term Mavity?
    Good ole Newton. Such a character

  • @LetsPlayCrazy
    @LetsPlayCrazy Před 24 dny +1

    Center huh...
    What center are we talking?
    Distance? Of what? Furthest thing orbiting? Furthest big thing? Furthest planet? Average distance?
    Center of mass?
    Should it be an object or a point?
    Is it fixed or can it move?
    I'll refrain from adding more...
    LEARN TO SPEAK CLEARLY.
    (Yes I am aware this was done to provoke and is a style... still... 95% could have been explained in one sentence)

  • @JacquelineBright-c3v
    @JacquelineBright-c3v Před 21 dnem

    Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change the world. Indeed. It is the only thing that ever has.

  • @philippebouchard9093
    @philippebouchard9093 Před 8 dny

    The Bible texts mentioned at 6:49 can be understood as the earth being stable, which means that it's a safe place to live, it won't collapse or suddenly disappear or vanish. It's firm and immovable, meaning nobody can move or destroy the earth.

  • @toastymansabe
    @toastymansabe Před 22 dny

    I had absolutely no idea the solar system's barycenter could get outside the Sun, that's crazy

  • @dach829
    @dach829 Před 22 dny

    Thankyou and i appreciate the lack of ads

  • @TabithaStephens-s8j
    @TabithaStephens-s8j Před 21 dnem

    She had convinced her kids that any mushroom found on the ground would kill them if they touched it.

  • @FistandFootMartialArts

    This is one of those "Duh" moments. As in "Duh, of course it works like that. What was I thinking? Silly me."
    BIG THX!!!

  • @myalterego2878
    @myalterego2878 Před 13 dny

    Well i kinda figured id go annoy a professor in a prove me wrong kinda way😂

  • @uzijn
    @uzijn Před 10 dny

    0:45 Couldn't be more apt after what we've seen over the past 4 years.

  • @MacCrunch
    @MacCrunch Před 26 dny

    Thanks for challenging commonly held assumptions to make me reframe my perception of the universe.

  • @Scripture-Man
    @Scripture-Man Před 24 dny

    Astronomy still has so many unknowns, especially regarding the history of the solar system. Ancient legends including the Bible suggest that Mars used to pass near the earth then finally broke free, changing the Earth's year length from its original 360 days (confirmed all around the world) to what it is now. These legends inspired Jonathan Swift's writings, which gave details of two of Mars' moons 150 years before telescopes allowed them to be discovered.

  • @The_Azure_
    @The_Azure_ Před 22 dny

    Well, if we want to get technically correct. The _Sol_-ar system is always centered on Sol. The wandering point on the model is actually the gravitational center and _not_ Sol.

  • @OOTurok
    @OOTurok Před 22 dny

    When I read the title... I just knew it was going to be some smartass answer about the gravitaional center.

  • @bitpancake
    @bitpancake Před 21 dnem

    recently heard about Simon Shack's updated Tycho Brahe model. Which at first glance seems completely ridiculous but it models the geometry of the solar system quite beautifully.

  • @chrism3784
    @chrism3784 Před 25 dny

    I heard a while ago the barycenter being outside the sun has something to do with it's activity. The further the barycenter is the more active the sun is with solar flares and CMEs. When the sun's center gets closer to barycenter it calms down. Hence it's 11 year cycle.

  • @dingoniner5528
    @dingoniner5528 Před 22 dny +1

    Hey I really enjoy watching your stuff. You have a very entertaining way of presenting things, and time flies when I'm watching. Thanks. :-)

  • @chrissaltmarsh6777
    @chrissaltmarsh6777 Před 24 dny

    A good puzzle is the question 'why are there two tides a day?' - which is mostly true, some local distortions. Just Newtonian mechanics and a bit of material science, but fun to work out.

  • @animaticToshiue
    @animaticToshiue Před 21 dnem

    I don't think those Scriptures meant that the Earth itself is not moving. It's just that the earth is established and not crumbling.

  • @-sly-Critique
    @-sly-Critique Před dnem

    Well here is a thought for anyone who reads my comment.
    That invisible center we rotate around has never been a fixed point in space. Our solar system and the Milky Way are in constant motion traveling through space.

  • @andrewbarney5503
    @andrewbarney5503 Před 20 dny

    I've totally been thinking this is how it has been working for a few years now! It's cool to know I was right!

  • @deborshikashyap6745
    @deborshikashyap6745 Před 18 dny

    I read in books when I was a kid it says that we have winter season because the earth goes away from the sun just a inch

  • @clemstevenson
    @clemstevenson Před 25 dny

    The same wibbly-wobbly factor can be used to find planets in other star systems. The moon's mass can be determined to be quite small, as the balance point is within the radius of the Earth itself.

  • @oldsandface
    @oldsandface Před 16 dny

    Knowledge being understood and promulgated does NOT change the universe! It simply changes our perceptions.

  • @alexcastillo-hk8cy
    @alexcastillo-hk8cy Před 23 dny +1

    5000 years ago, Sumerians already knew about all planets including Uranus and Neptune, and other planets beyond Pluto that has not been discovered yet. They also knew about constellations and zodiac

  • @fullerdb
    @fullerdb Před 25 dny +1

    2:49 I wouldn't have guessed that Aristotle's world included the Americas. 😜

  • @prschuster
    @prschuster Před 23 dny

    This is a very complete view of astronomy and views of the solar system. It's a fascinating history.

  • @tonyleukering8832
    @tonyleukering8832 Před 22 dny +1

    "We haven't had our last scientific revolution."
    That may be true only under one of the subsets of future possibilities that managed to turn away what looks to me like the coming of... Idiocracy. Anti-scientific belief is rising and, thanks to what's made possible by the Internet, it's available to all those easily swayed by bright, shiny objects. Unfortunately, great venues such as Be Smart are, for the most part, preaching to the choir. Science and critical thinking need to be a much larger part of early childhood education, but we're losing ground on that... rapidly as evidenced by the rise of Flat Earth. Their minds are closed, which brings to mind the Forbes quote, which should be the target of all education, particularly early education: "Education's purpose is to replace an empty mind with an open one."

  • @EamonnSeoigh
    @EamonnSeoigh Před 22 dny

    It explains something about our actual orbits and why our weather is cyclic.

  • @esotericsage6914
    @esotericsage6914 Před 20 dny +1

    I expected more from you Mr. Be Smart. At 2:47 you say Earth is round, not flat. The two are not mutually exclusive. Witness a Frisbee, it is simultaneously both round and flat.
    What you meant to assert was Earth is a sphere not a disc.

  • @wavion2
    @wavion2 Před 22 dny

    This first occurred to me when I was playing a space game (Elite: Dangerous), and I was in a binary system where the jump point was a point in space between the stars, as opposed to a star. At first I thought it was strange, since a point in space doesn't have mass, and then I started thinking how gravity actually works and it made sense. Then I thought, this is probably actually happening in our own system, to a much smaller extent. Anyway, it's kind of cool to see it confirmed.

  • @cyb3rkitsun3
    @cyb3rkitsun3 Před 20 dny

    Seems like a situation where the combination of gravity and the blast from the sun is creating potential energy. Half the spring is gravity and the other half is explosion.