For the Last 33 Years, Hubble Has Been Seeing Something It Wasn't Designed For | Hubble Supercut
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- čas přidán 18. 10. 2023
- Supercut of all the Hubble episodes on our solar system. A journey through the solar system.
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We definitely should have a telescope dedicated to taking super detailed high res images of our own solar system.
I think we have more pressing matters to attend to, but I'm actually down with that
the u.s. government has several hubble type telescopes but they are not pointed out into space they have them pointed at the earth so they can watch you.
It’s possible that the outer planets could be viewed using the Extremely Large Telescope when it’s completed, I’m not entirely sure if it’s possible or not depending on the ability of the ELT to actually point towards them. The ELT will rather unbelievably be able to gather about 250x more light than Hubble, it’s very hard to overstate how incredible this observatory will be. I highly recommend the Tom Scott video about it. To put a dedicated telescope in space for the outer planets… it’d be quite costly and eat into budgets for other projects that are probably more important right now.
Already exists just not to you
And
Nothing is more pressing than our own solar system and right here on this planet
"nah" - the money men
Hubble is what got my love of space and science. Massive respect for the engineers and crews that have kept it going all these years
And it’s been in use past its estimated lifetime too, right?
i have always enjoyed docus about space but with hubble its even more interesting . i only saw this channel in my feed now and its brill and in simple language explained and i subbed for sure . just a few years ago a telescope was programmed to come back and i thought they said it was hubble . when i checked around it says hubble will stay up there till 2030 so which 1 was made to come down i cant find any info .
Those images are old. Hubble is shut down till SpaceX can get a repair mission on the schedule and thw parts are made to replace the broken gyros and whatever else needs to be repaired. I don't think they can replace the mirror. I'm not sure if they can do a major overhaul and upgrade any computers and communications gear it has.
Wow what got me into it was the mars rovers!
Hubble took the Deep Field Image.
Which is for me the most amazing picture we've ever taken.
It still (will always) leaves me in awe and lost in the musings that come with knowing this Universe that we're made out of, is indeed a great mystery, and we are it looking back at itself, it's everything.
Hubble changed the world in a massive way.
It's a very important and amazing sensory tool that we, humanity, have created.
I'll always feel very grateful to Hubble and it's engineers. ❤
That it's found new life and a new usefulness is if no surprise, it will serve us for many year to come, I'm sure.
My friend, if you have not seen it, make sure to check out some of the JWST deep field images. You can also compare Hubble deep field to the exact same jwst deep field image.
I know that anyone with as much stoke for the Hubble deep field image as you have, almost certainly has seen the jwst deep field images as well. However, I could not pass up the chance to guarantee you another perspective altering experience, even if it doesn’t have the same novel emotional context as when you first saw Hubble deep field.
In the unlikely case that you haven’t come across the jwst images before, please be sure to report back here with your thoughts after you check them out
Yah… and now we have another revolutionary telescope, webb took a better deep field in hours compared to hubbles weeks
Webb smoked that image
Well said 👏
and somehow the jwst deep field image is even more beautiful
I had some beautiful books on our solar system when I was a teenager, right after Voyager 2 saw Neptune. They were... formative. :) This video feels like catching up after all these years. Thank you Alex, from my heart.
I was in the 4th grade when I learned there was a "dark side" of the moon, 4th grade library was a trip
@@Channeldyhb I can imagine! :) I had a poster of the far side of the moon, but it still took me time to get used to the thought that there was so much of the moon we couldn't see directly.
Yes beautiful. Those books were designed to push young children to have the same yearning scientists have. In fact I bet most scientists were just like you.
Thank you so much for highlighting the lack of "competition" between the Hubble, the Webb, and other space telescopes like the soon to be launched Grace. They aren't just different versions of the same thing, they're each invaluable because they do vastly different work.
Listen, a mission on Europa may sound cool, but there's an entire game dedicated to exactly why we shouldn't ever go down there on a submarine mission.
Barotrauma is literal nightmare fuel
Real
yeah but you wanna know another otherplanetary submarine horror game?
that's why we can't do the bean soup
Why we should*
Thought you ment destiny 2 until I read submarine
Good to see Hubble still getting some love !
But Pluto forgotten 😢
@@shurpie8232He made a video about Pluto too
Hubble is the daddy of telescopes!
@@MrYoumitubetrue
The most soothing narrator on the internet. Deserves every bit of success. Thanks Alex
Hubble. the telescope that had a difficult beginning.
has grown into a most useful tool.
Alex you didn't disappoint..... well done
I think a study on the plumes of europa to see if any organisms get caught in the plumes and ejected, would be cool but probably really hard to detect something
I think that'd be a perfect place to start. Any point that ejects water to the surface might be over a black or white smoker, so they might be "hotspots" for lifeforms to congregate. So, may well get ejected from the geyser. It might not be many, as the pressures would likely filter out most organisms from the plume, but you might get some smaller lifeforms like Europan equivalents to bacteria.
Shoemaker-Levy was my introduction to astrophysics, thanks to my condensed matter physics grandfather. I got so many newspaper clips and discussions about how this adjusted Luis Alvarez's theories on dinosaur extinction due to the Yucatan impact (in not gonna try to spell the proper name!)
Sadly, he passed this year, but seeing SL9 as a highlight of Hubble reminded me of going over the images frame by frame with him as we got then through dial up!
To me, HUBBLE will always be the "Father" of modern telescopes. Its images are unprecedented when you consider the images of what came before it. I understand JWST is used for different wavelengths but in comparison images, I'm honestly unimpressed with the difference to Hubble. Yes, there is more detail, but if I were to give a percentage of the images by telescopes before Hubble... I would say about a 95% definition and quality increase in Hubble images, for JWST I would say maybe a 10% increase at best....I think Hubble has spoilt us with its beautiful images through the years. Thank you Hubble!
Your visual biased.EHT is the most amazing image from a technical pov.
Right on 🖤
delusional bias
I don't think you get the point of JWST. It was designed to capture images literally impossible for the Hubble to even see...
Hoping once Hubble wraps up we have something that can retrieve it and bring it back down to Earth so we can put it in a museum
Unlikely, unfortunately...
@@pfunk_1535 I don't think so neither, but the way Elon just creates stuff to create stuff, I wouldn't put it past him that he'll have a Starship freighter variant
Eventually
If only we still has the Shuttle, it put it up there I'm sure it could bring it home!
Impossible when its done it will burn up during reentry no heat shields.
I've stumbled across this channel by chance and I'm quite happy I did. Thank you, Alex, for your great narration and vast passing on of knowledge. I've been watching the supercut playlist for about..... 7 hours now.
Damn you man you got me with the dwarf planet we love Pluto. 🎉 Always a Planet til I die 😂
I used to be a "Pluto is a planet" kind of guy. Then, I realized just how many objects in the solar system would also be considered planets if pluto was one. There'd be over EIGHTY planets in our solar system. I'm sorry, but no.
Now this is a video i am waiting for, it's gonna be one beautiful evening relaxing, viewing the video.
Thank you so much for giving us a Premiere notification, Astrum, because your content is worth it for anybody, and i believe you are not even close to getting enough recognition for the work you do.
You are very sadly, only one, of ONLY a handful of Channels who makes incredibly watch- or even listen-worthy videos, informative, based on evidence and facts, no clickbait, no misleading titles, straight to the point, all beautifully put together Professionally, just for us. So, or everything you do, please keep doing what you do, wether you are alone or a team... a massive thank you!
For the people!
@@bojohannesen4352 I don't relax 5 and a half hours, buddy. I watch it before sleeping, hun.
I have only known Gonggong for two minutes, but I love it already. There's something about little planetoids and their moons.
This channel inspires me more and more to pursue a career in astronomy with every video I watch. Really incredible stuff
I could listen to you talk about space for hours….!
Hubble is the badass older brother to Webb. 😙
When i first saw the deep field picture it took me a second to realize what i was looking at and i sat there staring at it in awe
What a great tour, Alex. Thank you and thank you to Hubble.
Imagine the oceans of Mars with so many moons passing by so fast. It had to be crazy!
bah probably not. cancelling out most of the time. also only our moon is a big ass one compared to its planet
How?, they're tiny relative to Mars.
Mars only has 2 tiny moons
An interesting thought, but Mars's moons are teeny tiny little potato-shaped things, not even having the gravity to pull themselves into spheres. They're basically asteroids, and quite small ones at that. They could still be useful to future Mars colonists. I once read how to navigate on Mars's surface with a suitable calendar, an analog watch and the two moons. ;) I can't remember any of the details, but I think it may have been in one of Robert Zubrin's books; possibly either _The Case For Mars_ or _Mars Direct,_ but it could be another. I haven't read it since the 90s.
I've been binge watching Alex's videos, they're superbly made. Thanks Alex.
Hope that in my lifetime, the standard model is updated and inconsistent theories are trashed and we can finally integrate electricity and plasma dynamics into what we are clearly now seeing as major players in the universe. Great video, that was fun.
Thank you for your excellent video of Hubble’s images of Solar System bodies. You packed in so much information and the images were incredibly beautiful. It also reminded me of how long I have been an amateur astronomer, I can’t believe that Shoemaker-Levy 9 was in 1994. I’m particularly interested in Europa, it would be fascinating to ‘taste’ the subsurface ocean for organic compounds like Cassini did with Enceladus, also to discover hydrothermal vents and even life beneath the ice. Hubble has given us unparalleled views of the cosmos, thanks for sharing them with us.
I hope you know how much these videos mean to people around the world. Not only the content but your sympathetic way of presenting is heartwarming and exciting!
Thank you so much for these kinds of videos! ❤
Awesome video. Look forward to more space telescopes being launched at some point!!
I don’t know why but Europa gives me the chills. Probably because it looks like a giant living/sentient object rather than a moon or a planet. I feel like it would have sensor arrays like the tendrils of the Egregore in stranger things
Even after 20 years of watching pictures taken with hubble and other telescopes, I'm still amazed of how beautiful and high quality they are. Thank you hubble...thank you.
As always, superb work Alex
I think Dr Carl Sagan would be proud of your informative storytelling well done Alex
I appreciate the labelling of the pics 👍
I really like this video, makes me feel so tiny and meaningless compared to the vastness of the space. Damn, I want to be a space explorer. If I could trate the rest of my life for a year of space exploration, I wouldn't hesitate at all
Beautiful perspective!
You know you are not meaningless, your life has meaning as does all life. But you're different than all life on Earth. Koko the signing gorilla was merely miming what she was taught, but she did not understand what "Once upon a time" meant, but your typical 4 year old does and so do you. You understand abstract concepts. You are not a meat computer, there is too much evidence that shows your mind is immortal, what is the Solar System compared to that?
You like being belittled also?
Blah, blah, blah. Absolute horseshit.@@MountainFisher
@@MountainFisherif that universe can create us then we r tiny infront of universe and it's consious
That was brilliant, thanks mate ❤
WOW! Ive never heard of Gonggong before! thank you for your amazing videos as always!
Love you and the channel 😍 well done on 10yrs 🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤
One of the seminal astronomical pieces of equipment of my lifetime. And like many great inventions it can be used for many more things than was ever envisaged originally, and find things we could never have imagined.
Thanks for the lessons. I enjoy your work.
Amazing images and information presented with great skill and knowledge.
What a great video. Thank you for this.
The gravitational pull of another starsystem. After working hard to escape the gravity well of one star you creep up to the well's rim and find nothing but gravitywells stretching all the way to infinity.
I read somewhere that, if you could get to the deepest reaches of the Hubble deep field, which would be at the "edges" of the universe, the vastness of the actual distances between the stars and galaxies, you wouldn't see anything. That totally blew my mind!
Love your voice. Your content and narration are wonderful!
you and kosmos are very good
Yay for odd Dwarf Planets getting some love. Don't forget about Cedna, Far Out and Far Far Out. The last two are pretty recent.
I love this kind of information ❤ thank you for sharing this ❤
Hubble needs another service call. Repairs, upgrades. Hubble and Webb could synergize so well together with another maintenance visit to the elder 'scope it isn't even funny. So let's send a crew up there to overhaul Hubble and see what it can do with a little TLC!
Haley's Comet in '86 & Shoemaker-Levy's spectacular crash into Jupiter were my first major "wow" moments in anything space-related... that & the passing of Challenger. I wept like a baby for those 7 astronauts, & years later for Columbia. My hope for humanity's exploration of space flagged for many years until the talk of missions like DART, the many others that went to sample other comets, the amazing Cassini, Europe's & India's & Japan's space-races & then the jewel in the crown, JWST. I got up in the wee hours of Christmas morning--an aging, arthritic guy in his 50's, yet--to watch the launch like a little kid. It was _glorious._ One of the best Christmas gifts ever. Then the images started rolling in. Images to make one's jaw drop. It was hard to scrape that jaw off the floor. It makes me wanna put on a spacesuit, get into a spacecraft & get _out_ there! Humanity isn't gonna be stuck on its little nest-ball for much longer, I think. We'll go to the stars, one day. One day... Ad Astra.
Hubble is obviously old, but has proven to be serviceable over the decades. Obviously the mirror size is fixed, but how much better could the sensors get before we hit a practical limit to its clarity and sensitivity?
i somewhere heard they really mostly corrected the lens to the intended standard. Not much more possible due to constructional limits. Its optical, after all.
@@kawafahra They fixed the lens back in the 90s, but I was thinking more about the digital camera sensors. I guess the mission is ending in 10 years, so they don't feel like upgrading it again.
Without the shuttle, they currently don’t have any way of getting to Hubble.
The practical limit is set by the diameter of the mirror. This is called the diffraction limit, and there's a formula that calculates the best possible resolution based on mirror size and wavelength. If I remember correctly, Hubble's current cameras are already pretty close to that limit. Adding more pixels won't improve the image.
The limit is 1.22 lambda divided by D where the is the lens diameter and lambda is the wavelength of the electromagnetic radiation Cj Besos function J1
JWST may hv gotten all the hype...but the images from Hubble Telescope will be for posterity !!!!
Hubble will always have a special place in my heart, just because it went up on the same date as my birthday hehe
The way you've presented in this video and your clear and genuine enthusiastic delivery has just reinvigorated my childhood love of space and our solar system. ☺ I also have a tendency to anthropomorphise everything and your script now has me cheering for these heroes! I'm rooting for JWST to live far beyond its expected lifetime, much like old mate Hubble! ☺🛰🛰
Probably the greatest scientific instrument of all time.
Is there an adult human on earth today who hasn't seen multiple Hubble images?
Is there anyone who hasn't felt a sense of awe when viewing them?
1 in 7 people don't get a meal every day. Millions of people draw dirty water from wells to drink. And you can't imagine anyone who hasn't seen multiple Hubble images? 🤨
@@nagualdesign😭
Fascinating doc as always ! Space is a wonder!
I am so glad to see someone still showing respect for Hubble. Ever since JWT was launched it seems like everyone goes out of their way to compare the two like a Porche compared to a Model T. Let's see if JWT lasts as long. Sadly, even you coo over JWT a bit. But you do explain that they are two entirely different instruments.
Hubble is a Milestone, first of its kind. It made generations longing for more to know, it is a gift that keeps on giving. JWST continues that mission, it lives up to its very high expectations, which is as beautiful. Many men and women put a good part of their lifes into making both possible. You better be happy !
I wholeheartedly agree, but its Porsche ;) Sry couldnt resist...
Webb will absolutely not last anywhere near as long as Hubble. The only reason Hubble has lasted as long as it has is because of multiple servicing and upgrade missions to it by the shuttle. The shuttle no longer operates, so servicing is all over, sadly. But Webb will never see a servicing mission of any kind. It's just too far away.
Right? Geez jwt need attention much? Haha. It’s nice to see tho yer right. Bubbles in its twilight now…
They were designed for different reasons I still respect Hubble, without it, my childhood experiences of great outer space pictures would never be.
My body is ready. My brain isn't so sure lol
Thank you, loved it.
I’m surprised you didn’t mention jupiters lagrange points. It’s like the bodyguard for the whole solar system.
Incredible stuff. Terrific video!
Great video. Did the test using the moon as a mirror show success? You kind of left us hanging on that point.
Very good walk-through! Waiting on mine to come in. I greatly appreciate you saying the center distance for the bunks. Is that 8” all the way down the yak? I couldn’t get a direct answer from Native on that. Granted, they tried to help but never replied to any of my follow-up questions. Thanks for the video! 👍
When I was in 3rd grade there was a 1/6 scale replica model of the Hubble Telescope in the art room on display shortly before they launched the real one in space. I have friends whose parents worked on the project
Nice job. Learned a lot.😎
Amazing! I wonder how many little or giant creatures could possibly be flourishing in any of these planets and or moons..
Gotta love how every time an ad plays it kills the subtitles for 5-10 seconds, causing you to rewind and then you get to enjoy even more ads.😢
Space is too hauntingly beautiful, I just wanna float through space until I die
It's hard to imagine the loneliness of an entire planet with not a single living organism.
God is everywhere !
Santa is everywhere.
More evidence for God Then evolution@@davidgalea6113
thank-you. the Hubble is truly amazing telescope. Hubble was only to have a short life, but somehow has gone far beyond its life expectancy, so maybe will be same for Webb telescope.
I love it Alex.
Stunning!
Earth is really unlucky to not have its own rings.
Imagine living on Saturn and looking up the sky to witness the rings stroke through the sky in a wonder that can't be described as anything but a cosmic masterpiece.
If we had rings, we wouldn't be able to have as many satellites since debris would be in the way. Debris may also prevent us from getting to the moon and beyond. Also, meteor showers that can cause mass extinctions can be semi common @_@.
The plus side? Beauty, the ancients assuming they weren't obliterated would be able to determine the world is round much sooner, and scientific advancements would happen faster most likely.
Thanks Alex!
Man, to think that Hubble is the same age as I am, that it has been around since I was a newborn. A strange feeling.
Also strange feeling can be if the Hubble is even older than you.
Kip Thorne is a year younger than I am. I went to a Carnegie talk he gave on how to detect gravity waves, decades ago. I few years ago, he and his fellow workers actually succeeded.
I was 19yrs old when launched and remember it well, believe me it's just as amazing that it was over 30 yrs ago if a little depressing that it's gone this quick🤣👍
I appreciate your videos dude
This is a very good video! It’s rare to find quality like this. And rare to find narration actually done by a human (it was, wasn’t it?)
Possibly your finest video to date.
Fascinating!
Amazing and so understandable. 👌👌
“ALL THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS, EXCEPT EUROPA.
ATTEMPT NO LANDING THERE.
USE THEM TOGETHER. USE THEM IN PEACE.”
Arthur C. Clarke
:)
Thanks Alex 😊
Thank you!!
Fantastic video thx
It's so cool that my stepdads father help design and engineer such a magnificent piece of technology and history, that not only has helped us understand the stars, but also the planets.
Bedankt
bro the title gives shivers down my spine
if i even have one
Haven't stopped by in over a year and your productions are still phenomenal
Your friend in florida
I was nine when they landed on the moon & I wanted to be an astronaut. I was everything one can be "but" an astronaut & retired @ 42 knowing I would never get the chance to work at any job. I look at the moon almost every night and am drawn back to when I was nine, with awe
Actually, the ability to track planets was in the HST software from the start. One only needed to upload the coefficients of that planet/comet/asteroid to the algorithm to make it so.
I’m curious if Astrum took the time to add all of the key concepts covered in this video, or if it was auto generated?
Either way, I’m glad that they’re available! For several videos, I’ve noticed the white dots along the timeline, I don’t have ads so I know it’s not ads, for a bit I couldn’t figure out what it was for! Now I know!
Edit: OK, I’m going to be the bigger person and admit this… Key concepts (i) only for it to tell me it was auto generated by CZcams!
The more you know I guess!
I love how Hubble looks like it's wrapped in aluminum foil.
Beautiful 👊
Mankind's greatest achievement will be when we FINALLY walk on the surface of the Moon.
I very often forget about the asteroid belt when thinking about the solar system. There must be immense amount of material between us rocky planets and the gas giants
i wonder how they were able to create a camera still working after all those years. When i buy a camera I am sure it ll breake 1 day after the warranty expired. Very impressing quality
God I wish I was as enthusiastic about anything in my life as you are in astronomy.
Stop the blasphemous, idolatrous comment
@@carlmorgan8452stop telling people how to speak
Really got me with Gonggong, I was sure it would be Haumea
The last I heard NASA was talking about de-orbiting Hubble. This video is excellent examples of why that idea is pretty darned close to heretical. There's no telling what they'll find out next with that marvelous scope.