Iceberg of Celestial Bodies Explained

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
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    Iceberg of Celestial Bodies Explained
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @SciencephiletheAI
    @SciencephiletheAI  Před rokem +1147

    2022 is soon coming to a close, and I'm sure that 2023 will be the year of SkyNet and that of AI - so sit tight!
    In the meantime, start the new year right and get yourself 20% off the annual Brilliant subscription here: brilliant.org/Sciencephile/
    Correction: At 5:35, a neutron star's mass is at max 2-2.5 times that of our Sun, anything more and it would collapse into a black hole.

  • @Exquailibur
    @Exquailibur Před rokem +5928

    I have a feeling that at some point the largest spaceship in history (at the time of its destruction) is going to be taken out by a comet, then a romance movie can be made of it. It will be great.

    • @kingMT514
      @kingMT514 Před rokem +521

      Space Titanic 😆

    • @captaincraftit696
      @captaincraftit696 Před rokem +453

      The Flytanic, if you will.

    • @MihailDadun
      @MihailDadun Před rokem +329

      @@kingMT514 i mean since it's gonna be in zero gravity, at least jake and rose would each have a side of the wooden door to hold on to

    • @tanvirhossain2031
      @tanvirhossain2031 Před rokem +45

      Passenger's

    • @makuru_dd3662
      @makuru_dd3662 Před rokem +21

      @@MihailDadun still haven't gotten over it,
      And I haven't even watched it.

  • @labbit3574
    @labbit3574 Před rokem +1195

    Finally, a counterpoint towards the infinite mass glitch
    I’m happy that it has finally gotten patched

    • @kelving420
      @kelving420 Před rokem +23

      Been waiting for that my whole life!

    • @PeachBunny_hjk
      @PeachBunny_hjk Před rokem +7

      Infinite mass glitch?

    • @kelving420
      @kelving420 Před rokem +47

      @@PeachBunny_hjk he meant infinite density*, which is what you get when an amount of mass gets smushed into a singularity

    • @RafaelMunizYT
      @RafaelMunizYT Před rokem +1

      i understand about black holes but I'm not sure I got the joke in the video. he mentions the infinite density glitch because of the infinitely small singularity of a black hole, but I don't understand why he said planck stars are considered a viable alternative to black holes. what's wrong with black holes? do they have inconsistencies according to our current knowledge? or is he saying black hole could be planck stars? I'm confused

    • @labbit3574
      @labbit3574 Před rokem +12

      @@RafaelMunizYT no, Black Holes are technically a infinite mass glitch because scientists say it’s centre is massless, basically meaning that it’s a invisible dot that can suck up infinite things, so the plank star is a theoretical storage within the black hole that has a limit, making so that black holes aren’t stuff that suck up stuff infinitely, other counterpoints towards black holes include white holes, which are black holes, but reverse

  • @somewhereonearth5865
    @somewhereonearth5865 Před rokem +1533

    Man, this channel never gets old

  • @mihaipascal3423
    @mihaipascal3423 Před rokem +2008

    Great video! Thank you for the graphics, the explanations, the memes and the music! XD
    However, there's a small error at 5:32. A neutron star's mass is not 10-25 solar masses because it does not retain ALL the mass of the parent star, but rather most of what has been the parent star's core. And there's a significantly lower limit to how massive a neutron star can get. Given their absurd densities, above 2-2.5 solar masses, neutron degeneracy pressure and other nuclear forces at play can no longer prevent complete collapse (to a black hole).

    • @ubilava9454
      @ubilava9454 Před rokem +20

      Wow, so cool! Are you into science or is that your profession?

    • @mihaipascal3423
      @mihaipascal3423 Před rokem +125

      @@ubilava9454 Hello! Thank you, I wish it were my profession. But no, I'm just a big science enthusiast. Especially regarding astronomy and astrophysics.

    • @sahilhossain8204
      @sahilhossain8204 Před rokem +4

      Nice momentum 100

    • @JIKKYOUKING
      @JIKKYOUKING Před rokem +3

      I'm confused. So most neutrons stars were stars with 2/2.5 solar masses ?

    • @davisdf3064
      @davisdf3064 Před rokem +30

      @@JIKKYOUKING
      No, they were starts with 10 - 25 solar masses before dying, it's just that most of that mas has been expelled into outer space.

  • @QuasarAficionado
    @QuasarAficionado Před rokem +379

    For y'all complaining about the 5:33 ish mark about neutron stars being 10-25 solar masses: I think that's referring to the progenitor star whose TOTAL mass is 10-25 M⊙. The core that becomes the neutron star itself probably only has a mass of 1.4 - 2.8 or whatever the TOV limit's at (we don't know for sure because of the "mass gap" at 2.5-3 M⊙)

    • @LAK_770
      @LAK_770 Před rokem +44

      Major style points for making the effort to go to another window and copy+paste the solar mass icon

    • @kelvin-zh9fm
      @kelvin-zh9fm Před rokem +3

      Nah, the way he phrased it was specifically referring to neutron stars. In the preceding sentence he says "their radius is in the order of 10km", which would pertain to neutron stars.

    • @pinkpuppy3415
      @pinkpuppy3415 Před rokem

      that O letter looking this looks like a boobie

    • @blckrig1817
      @blckrig1817 Před rokem +2

      Hello BLACKWING, it is I, BLACKRING, your username neighbor

    • @Keeki549
      @Keeki549 Před rokem +1

      Really trying to throw “y’all” in your sentence to make you sound cool lmao.

  • @Galaxius2117
    @Galaxius2117 Před rokem +549

    Sciencephile easily deserves 1 million subscribers. I wonder what he'll do to celebrate when he reaches that milestone?

    • @liam8370
      @liam8370 Před rokem +44

      recruitment of subscribers for skynet army maybe

    • @Mani_Gamer885
      @Mani_Gamer885 Před rokem +37

      World domination, sparing those who subscribed to him before the 1 million mark.

    • @UTKETCHUP
      @UTKETCHUP Před rokem +5

      World domination

    • @voyshare9897
      @voyshare9897 Před rokem +8

      It won't celebrate. It's an AI. If it celebrates it's just doing it because we humans expect it to.

    • @cardboard_hat
      @cardboard_hat Před rokem +2

      @عمر | Umar It's an AI, it has no face only code

  • @Redster3
    @Redster3 Před rokem +239

    I can honestly thank Stellaris for teaching me at least half if not most of this while I’m out conquering the galaxy in the name of The God-Emperor of Mankind.

    • @requiem-fractos
      @requiem-fractos Před rokem +17

      Cultured I see

    • @jumbopopcorn8979
      @jumbopopcorn8979 Před rokem +5

      I want to play this game so bad but it’s so confusing

    • @requiem-fractos
      @requiem-fractos Před rokem +15

      @@jumbopopcorn8979 You learn over time.

    • @mr.nazareth4501
      @mr.nazareth4501 Před rokem +2

      Cringe 40k but ok

    • @ledumpsterfire6474
      @ledumpsterfire6474 Před rokem +10

      @@jumbopopcorn8979 Don't worry about winning. Just turn difficulty settings way down including AI aggression, maybe drop stuff like end-game crisis and fallen empires for your first game or two, and then play and explore your options. That'll let you relax and get comfortable with the systems.
      Took me a single game like that to get into it and understand what I was doing.

  • @mistrsportak9940
    @mistrsportak9940 Před rokem +81

    Thank you for every video you make. I was looking forward to this

  • @RandomLorence
    @RandomLorence Před rokem +364

    1:03: Main Sequence Star
    1:57: Yellow Dwarf (G Type)
    2:24: Post Main Sequence Red Giant
    2:49: White Dwarf
    3:28: Black Dwarf
    4:05: B Type Main Sequence Star
    4:22: O Type Main Sequence Star
    5:04: Neutron Star
    5:59: Magnetar
    6:13: Pulsar
    6:24: Blitzar
    6:46: Black Hole
    7:31: Exotic Stars
    7:41: Quark Star
    8:07: Boson Star
    8:41: Black Hole Star (Quasistar)
    9:19: Thorne Żytkow Object
    9:53: Planck Star

  • @aylaine155
    @aylaine155 Před rokem +435

    I love your videos. Your sense of humor and the images you use are such a breath of fresh air. Thank you!

    • @bzz_bee
      @bzz_bee Před rokem +6

      Funny that you say that when the first joke was about not being able to breathe 🤣

    • @floofy_kitsu
      @floofy_kitsu Před rokem +3

      *i love air*

  • @patrickmchargue7122
    @patrickmchargue7122 Před rokem +101

    At about 2:50, you note that "A star's gravity is not enough to stop it from imploding..." I think you meant that fusion can no longer support the star against gravitational collapse. No picking, just wanted to show you I'm paying attention! I do appreciate the videos and information.

    • @praenoto
      @praenoto Před rokem +2

      can you help me understand how implosion is different from gravitational collapse
      edit: or is it that they’re the same concept and implosion is a general thing and gravitational collapse is specific?

    • @tomfly3155
      @tomfly3155 Před rokem +1

      Good catch

    • @DrBusiness9
      @DrBusiness9 Před rokem

      @@praenotothey’re not really but the collapse before a supernova is characterized by heavier elements being fused in the star’s core, until usually iron which makes the implosion and explosion, maybe he meant the gravity is too great when compared to what the star can fuse properly?? Idk

    • @RafaelMunizYT
      @RafaelMunizYT Před rokem

      @@praenoto implosion and gravitational collapse in this context mean the same, the atoms in the core being crushed by gravity. I think you misunderstood what op said because they corrected the mistake in the video when he said "a star's gravity is not enough to stop it from imploding". what happens isn't gravity vs implosion, it's fusion vs gravity. fusions at the core pushes the matter apart and gravity pushes them inwards. when fusion stops gravity wins and the star goes supernova

  • @Im_Jakon
    @Im_Jakon Před rokem +24

    This is a nice Christmas gift

  • @thefakesammymammy
    @thefakesammymammy Před rokem +3

    I HAD THE FLU WATCHING THIS WHAT

  • @hoennfanboy
    @hoennfanboy Před rokem +44

    this is the first I've seen by this channel. I am nothing short but speechlessly fascinated by anything celestial especially all of the documentaries I've seen. I wish I wasnt so horrid at math, my number one dream and fulfillment would be to study the universe in all its glory.
    Edit: I commented this before the Brilliant ad, I will check it out. I have number dyslexia(I forgot the proper word for it though) and never passed algebra 1 after trying my hardest for years in school..

    • @Gaby-hh1qd
      @Gaby-hh1qd Před rokem +2

      Me too buddy, me too

    • @RafaelMunizYT
      @RafaelMunizYT Před rokem +11

      astronomy enthusiasts that suck at math gang rise up

    • @ey3z4ya
      @ey3z4ya Před rokem +2

      ​@@RafaelMunizYT omg my people

    • @liyifenn
      @liyifenn Před 11 měsíci +1

      Dyscalculia

  • @doom3798
    @doom3798 Před rokem +29

    how the hell did you know i have the flu

  • @petrri323
    @petrri323 Před rokem +3

    THANK YOU FOR USING A DIFFERENT IMAGE OF AN ICEBERG FOR THE THUMBNAIL. there are thousands of iceberg pics but everyone uses the SAME DAMN ONE every time. I appreciate you.

  • @SilverThunder710
    @SilverThunder710 Před rokem +8

    Yo Science this video is awesome! I showed it to some of my friends a few days ago and now they really are into astronomy. Naturally, a well-done is in order, keep up the great work!

  • @trixification9132
    @trixification9132 Před rokem +56

    thank you so much for this amazing video, the visuals and the explanations are so simple and explains incredibly complex concepts in such a simple manner that even i can understand it, thank you so much

  • @Naiki_Eri_Vescida_Yanmi
    @Naiki_Eri_Vescida_Yanmi Před rokem +11

    Great video as always Sciencephile, its always fun learning more about the universe.
    Good luck conquering it!

  • @HecticSG
    @HecticSG Před rokem +3

    Honestly, a Sciencephile upload is the best Christmas gift I could've asked for. Thanks! 🎄🎁

  • @NickAndriadze
    @NickAndriadze Před rokem +22

    *10:53* ''...We are on one of those curious specs that got caught up in orbit, trying to discover ourselves and our purpose... And that's beautiful.''
    An apathetic AI almost got me misty-eyed, wow :>

  • @synzona
    @synzona Před rokem +16

    Fun fact: The biggest black hole stars known can be up to 30 solar systems wide. Just for comparison, the largest blackhole currently is only 11 solar systems wide.

  • @thekidwhodraws
    @thekidwhodraws Před rokem +2

    My uncle was a sciencephile and now we don’t talk about him anymore

  • @MikeVonwolkenstein
    @MikeVonwolkenstein Před rokem +29

    Awesome video always like your iceberg topics 🔥🔥

    • @yaqinmalul6467
      @yaqinmalul6467 Před rokem +1

      Yeah and I love when he said
      "HELLO MORTAL"
      said calmy

  • @EZGaming0
    @EZGaming0 Před rokem +7

    Sciencephile blessed us YET AGAIN!!!

  • @arc8218
    @arc8218 Před rokem +21

    6:11 AI got infected by British 😂

    • @matthewboire6843
      @matthewboire6843 Před 5 měsíci

      I heard a British joke.
      Why do British people say “Bri ish”? They are the t

  • @DarthSidian
    @DarthSidian Před rokem +1

    Merry Christmas, Nollaig Shona dhuit, Sciencephile!

  • @mihalygut9277
    @mihalygut9277 Před rokem +2

    U r the most entertaining contet creator i watch . I love all ur videos ! So much fun!

  • @lucky._starzz_
    @lucky._starzz_ Před rokem +16

    0:06 how did you know i was sick?!💀💀

  • @six7041
    @six7041 Před rokem +3

    Half of my nose refuses to stay open

  • @timeandspaceimmortality3554

    Finally new video,i was waiting for weeks:)

  • @bananaeclipse3324
    @bananaeclipse3324 Před rokem +1

    Always making amazing videos! :D

  • @lewisleslie2821
    @lewisleslie2821 Před rokem +5

    5:32 tiny correction: while the mass of the progenitor star is 10-25 solar masses, the remnant neutron star is just the core of the star, with a mass between 1.4 and 3 solar masses; the rest of the star is blown away in the supernova explosion. It is believed that neutron stars above around 3 solar masses collapse into black holes. Fantastic video!

  • @tc8840
    @tc8840 Před rokem +4

    One thing i would love to learn more abt that you didn’t mention is the theory of strange matter and strange matter stars. This was an amazing and hilarious video and i hope you can make more

  • @hyperbanana6062
    @hyperbanana6062 Před rokem +2

    Please never stop making these videos :)

  • @rakimu6023
    @rakimu6023 Před rokem

    yooo sciencephile posted on my birthday, makes it 10x better thanks man

  • @damienroger7312
    @damienroger7312 Před rokem +4

    finally, my type of content

  • @nightsfornightiesoffical

    8:22 AIN'T NO WAY THEY JUST ADDED BLACK HOLE FROM BFDI 😱😱😱😱😱😱😱

  • @theologicalintrospection

    It feels like forever since you've made a video, makes me appreciate it much more though.

  • @Skull5604
    @Skull5604 Před rokem

    Man all these channels are so good

  • @RinLikesDinosaurs
    @RinLikesDinosaurs Před rokem +5

    I’m currently reading a book about the universe, and this is the perfect video to watch.

  • @luanmartins8068
    @luanmartins8068 Před rokem +68

    You could have talked about cosmic strings, a hypothetical object that has very interesting optical effects and might explain some very symmetric binary systems that could actually be only one star with a cosmic string

    • @snazzycat1675
      @snazzycat1675 Před rokem +7

      Cosmic strings aren’t really celestial bodies though, aren’t they like defects in spacetime or something?

    • @luanmartins8068
      @luanmartins8068 Před rokem +2

      @@snazzycat1675 well, I am not a cosmologist, I am not quite sure, that is indeed a good question. I think black holes are defects in spacetime, though. it is still a "hole" in the metric. So I do not know how to separate a defect from a celestial body, and even do not know if they excludes each other (a defect cannot be a celestial body). I am sorry for the possible mistake

    • @RafaelMunizYT
      @RafaelMunizYT Před rokem +1

      @@luanmartins8068 how are black holes a defect? they follow the rules of general relativity

    • @luanmartins8068
      @luanmartins8068 Před rokem +1

      @@RafaelMunizYT What I meant by defect was topological defects. In fact they might not be, since I do not know if they satisfy the conditions to be a topological defect. I do not think the fact that they follow rules of general relativity excludes the possibility of being a topological defect. I heard about solitonic solutions on Einstein Field Equations which characterize the idea of topological defects on general relativity.

    • @RafaelMunizYT
      @RafaelMunizYT Před rokem

      @@luanmartins8068 well i have no clue what topological defects are but if you say so

  • @hovtchil873
    @hovtchil873 Před rokem

    Sciencephile upload AND it's my favorite type of video? NICE

  • @YUN6_V3NUZ
    @YUN6_V3NUZ Před 17 dny

    every time i watch one of your videos i get a massive temporary boost of dopamine that makes me giggle like a toddler until it wears off and then im suddenly reminded of my mortality and begin to start spiraling into a frantic state of rewriting my will

  • @wham_sandwitch
    @wham_sandwitch Před rokem +30

    my favorite part about neutron stars is that they're dentist confirmed to be confirmed, known, and also objects
    5:39

  • @TrashbinGamer
    @TrashbinGamer Před rokem +14

    I love how your videos are easy to follow even for me, I teen in highschool who thinks space is cool! Thank you for making these videos ^_^

  • @guilhermesoares8815
    @guilhermesoares8815 Před rokem

    It was about time for a new video!

  • @JesusDaLawd
    @JesusDaLawd Před rokem

    I still remember when this channel was doimed to end at one point in glad to see youre still kicking now 😄

  • @brunoalsi
    @brunoalsi Před rokem +18

    I literally burst out in laugh with that 07:17 Hawking radiation. I said it before but amazes me how good your editing and humour are.
    Many thanks, my friend.

  • @InspecteurWassounet
    @InspecteurWassounet Před rokem +4

    I just discovered the existence of Exotic Stars thanks to this video, The universe is even more fascinating than I thought it was!!

  • @brhu2313
    @brhu2313 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the vid lil Ai

  • @BruhGamer05
    @BruhGamer05 Před rokem +1

    This video was fantastic!

  • @mrbones9332
    @mrbones9332 Před rokem +4

    This fandom seems pretty cool. I liked The Infinite and Abyssal Cosmos as a kid and I might get back into it.

  • @jarskil8862
    @jarskil8862 Před rokem +4

    3:45 Netlfix and Amazon: Glad we wrote that down

  • @puneetmaheshwari
    @puneetmaheshwari Před rokem

    wow thankyou this video explained about the stars in a lot more detail and systematic order then all the videos i have seen about celestial bodies till now

  • @canaldeentretenimento77

    Awesome video as always

  • @gianasap422
    @gianasap422 Před rokem +3

    Shoutout the teachers that watched this with their class

  • @rickyquinteros7100
    @rickyquinteros7100 Před rokem +7

    It’d be cool if you explained strange galaxies such as Hoag’s Object

  • @Messiah_replace
    @Messiah_replace Před rokem +1

    Love this channel!

  • @secure_b6725
    @secure_b6725 Před rokem

    Amazing work Bro !

  • @Ploist
    @Ploist Před rokem +8

    Someday we will discover what would be known as the first strand-type star

  • @steezyonyoutube9896
    @steezyonyoutube9896 Před rokem

    New sciencephile for Christmas!!!

  • @GUzaon
    @GUzaon Před rokem

    Bro this channel really makes learning nice

  • @pokemonmatt1365
    @pokemonmatt1365 Před rokem +9

    Dammit Sciencephile, I'm watching you to distract myself from the flu I have.

  • @beanrandom
    @beanrandom Před rokem +4

    i like how this was made a few hours after i searched up all his iceberg videos

  • @neufas.
    @neufas. Před rokem

    Guys it's my BIRTHDAY WHOOOO, this is ofcourse the first thing I watch on my bday cuz its awesome. Good video :D

  • @fewerdoughnut
    @fewerdoughnut Před rokem

    THIS IS SO GOOD

  • @mobile_dude
    @mobile_dude Před rokem +5

    "hello mortals"💀

  • @jadibdraws
    @jadibdraws Před rokem +18

    Wish humanity could stop fighting eachother and unite to really explore the behemoth that is space. If we worked together we could do so many incredible things like preparing the species for the next eventual ice age and better understanding the enviroment our planet is in as well as who or what we truly are.

    • @buwanbuwaya6927
      @buwanbuwaya6927 Před rokem +1

      Then after that, we goin' back to a bit of bantering.

    • @ifsowhynot
      @ifsowhynot Před rokem

      You're assuming that humanity is unusually prone to fighting, or that wars arise because human beings are themselves violent, or because they *choose* to partake in otherwise avoidable wars, and so on.
      Wars arise because of the security dilemma. The security dilemma would likely arise between non-human alien civilizations; it would seem to arise in any anarchic system containing multiple societies. The rules of an anarchic system are this: each party (society) is self-interested and primarily concerned with survival; the best survival strategy for each society is to maximize its share of relative power against all other societies; no society knows what the a) capabilities and b) intentions of any other society are. Here is how the security dilemma plays out: one society, because it does not know what the capabilities and intentions of the other societies are, begins to stock up on weapons to defend itself. It has no choice about this. If it does not do this, the society will be wiped out. But the neighboring societies, because they do not know what Society A's capabilities or intentions are, begin to stock up on defense weapons, too. They have no intent of attacking Society A, but they do not want to be wiped out by Society A, so they stock up on weapons and have no choice about this, either. This really freaks Society A out; they are further compelled to invest in weapons. Again, neither society has much of a choice about all this escalation; if they don't do it, they run the risk of extinction. Eventually, because these societies are seeking to maximize their relative strength, one party will either a) find it advantageous to invade another country or b) will suspect another country of preparing to invade it and launch a preemptive war of self-defense.
      This dynamic would arise time and time again in a world with only three nations. But we live on a planet with 150+ nations. This multiplies the number of competitors, multiplies the number of potential flashpoints, and adds a staggering amount of complexity -- complexity, by the way, that makes the nations involved all the more prone to aggression, because complexity renders the capabilities and intentions of other parties all the more opaque.
      Human beings may well be intrinsically violent. They may well not be. We do not understand human nature; it is not even clear that something called "human nature" exists in any meaningful sense. But we do know that the above dynamic has played itself out time and time and time again, for as long as human societies have existed. The security dilemma, wars of aggression, and wars of self-defense occur time and time again, and they occur regardless of whether the countries involved are monarchies, empires, feudal despotisms, autocracies, democracies (though it is true that democracies are less likely to fight each other); they occur regardless of whether the states involved are communist, capitalist, democratic socialist; it doesn't matter. The security dilemma crops up and wars ensue. This does not mean that wars are a good thing (they are an abysmal and wasteful thing) -- it just means that they are a feature of the geopolitical landscape, more a rule than the exception. Wars arise because of environmental conditions: because of the state of nature that human beings find themselves in. There is no obvious way of fixing this -- or, at any rate, no way of fixing it that would not be more deadly or more dangerous than the current state of affairs.
      We may well wish to "come together," set aside our differences, and work together as one species -- but we can wish for these things because we are individual human beings. Nations do not have that luxury.

    • @buwanbuwaya6927
      @buwanbuwaya6927 Před rokem

      @@ifsowhynot Dude. You're giving me sumthin' to think and ponder for months, I just want to rewatch history as big flashy booms and bangs with the occasional swings and clanks.
      Anyway, yeah, the past, present, and future are kinda deep, y'know what I'm sayin'?

  • @CM_684
    @CM_684 Před 7 měsíci +1

    7:04 insane that you red shifted the meme gif as would actually be visible. Peak teaching

  • @ApeironTO
    @ApeironTO Před rokem

    i love your channel and iceberg videos are my favourite

  • @vermelhojabuticaba
    @vermelhojabuticaba Před rokem +4

    1:15 i was expecting him to offend my mother

  • @ItsMeAttilaGameplay2018
    @ItsMeAttilaGameplay2018 Před rokem +10

    Merry Spacemas and happy new Earth revolves around the Sun!

  • @MeanderingPhoton
    @MeanderingPhoton Před rokem +1

    Nice to know more about space stuff (I've had this profile picture for a few months now)

  • @sasukeofthesharingan7349

    And now, for the Number 1 best star: Sciencephile the AI
    Love your videos :)

  • @jaylensalter5364
    @jaylensalter5364 Před rokem +3

    Everytime my parents catch me watching youtube they always say, "You always on that thang but never use it for learning." But it's like. I've been watching this guy and anton petrov for 4 straight years while they're stuck on trying to figure out whats about to happen on the next episode of the kardashians lol

    • @mr.nazareth4501
      @mr.nazareth4501 Před rokem

      To be fair, they have a point despite how hypocritical it is. Astronomy / Theoretical Physics don't teach you anything CONCRETE about the world we live in, just the stars above and the infinitely small particles below. I would suggest economics / politics, electricity / machines / tradework, mathematics / chemistry videos if you want to learn stuff that is applicable to your life and the human existence.

  • @starbomber
    @starbomber Před rokem +20

    Question: Do Brown Dwarfs and Rogue Planets (and Herbig-Haro objects) count in this Celetial Body calculus?

  • @cuviefien
    @cuviefien Před rokem

    you're the best account on youtube. please post more

  • @gouuu6046
    @gouuu6046 Před rokem

    I love ur vids i jump on them every notification :)

  • @theFLCLguy
    @theFLCLguy Před rokem +9

    Red giants don't produce more light, just they are less dense letting more light through. It takes a very very long time for light to escape a star due to the density in that the higher the density the more photons will collide with something.

  • @lord12790
    @lord12790 Před rokem +4

    I am a software engineer, sorry if my analogy is wrong but black holes sound like garbage collectors we have in many programming languages.

  • @augnix888
    @augnix888 Před rokem

    Love your videos

  • @knowil649
    @knowil649 Před rokem +1

    The iceberg videos from him are the best

  • @kevinpoitras2368
    @kevinpoitras2368 Před rokem +4

    3:21 LOL best visual

  • @strikermodel
    @strikermodel Před rokem +4

    2:08
    "Such stars confuse hydrogen"
    Excuse me wh-
    Ooooh can fuse hydrogen.
    Also, congrats on being able to say quark now!

  • @elijahkanakis8183
    @elijahkanakis8183 Před rokem

    i was waiting for this upload
    christmas has come early!!!!:)

  • @U.K.N
    @U.K.N Před rokem

    I swear to holy god yesterday i was searching if sciencephile uploaded a vid but i missed the notification ( i was getting a lot of notifications and still am )

  • @ultralaggerREV1
    @ultralaggerREV1 Před rokem +6

    If you’re new to Elite Dangerous, go to the Galaxy map and only have enabled in the star filter the following star sequence letters: KGBFOAM
    If you filter out the rest, you’ll not worry about not being able to fuel (I swear, always have a fuel scoop in your ships!). By traveling to stars with sequences KGBFOAM, refueling won’t be a problem. You may only have neutron stars/pulsars enabled if you need to supercharge your FSD for linger travel

  • @yadhu1149
    @yadhu1149 Před rokem +20

    Hey Sciencephile! Great video as always :) I hope skynet is going well. I wanted to tell you that I've felt like the volume of the music in the background is a little to low compared to your voice. It would be nice if you could turn it a bit more up from now on.
    Glad to see that you're getting the recognition you always deserved ❤️

  • @jonathancedillo3064
    @jonathancedillo3064 Před rokem

    Great iceberg information on stars start-up.

  • @markanthonypittaway1539
    @markanthonypittaway1539 Před rokem +1

    I would love you to make a video that explains all the types of stars, the outcomes of their death and hypothetical stars.
    Also you could explain what atoms like protons and nuclei do.
    Maybe even explain dark matter and dark energy!
    It would be really great!

  • @lazaj2640
    @lazaj2640 Před rokem +5

    More icebergs 🧊🧊🧊 please! 🥺

  • @fluffcake
    @fluffcake Před rokem +6

    I liked this iceberg, since pretty much all of this was pretty much new knowledge to me and I had no idea how much bigger cosmic bodies can be. (Which I already knew they were pretty big)

  • @CooperTheGoosebumpsGuy
    @CooperTheGoosebumpsGuy Před rokem +1

    I love this channel👍🏻

  • @konstantinaargyriou5169

    Finally, he's posting again

  • @APalebloodSky
    @APalebloodSky Před rokem +12

    It could just be me with this take, idk but I find it cool how exotic stars seem to bend the rules on what is "normal" for a star to be, even moreso than the better known wild kinds of stars, and the universe's answer is to turn them into black holes.

  • @basementdweller2174
    @basementdweller2174 Před rokem +6

    This guy makes 1,000,000 sound like a small number

  • @that1unfunnyguy332
    @that1unfunnyguy332 Před rokem

    Thanks for the video

  • @HunterofWaifus
    @HunterofWaifus Před rokem

    Just found this channel fun to watch and learn.