How Far Are The Nearest Stars?

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • I make a 200 billionth scale model to demonstrate.
    365 Days Astronomy Video: • Geo,Video FAR
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Komentáře • 13K

  • @AlessandroGenTLe
    @AlessandroGenTLe Před 5 lety +1701

    What's about that "High Valley chemical and laboratory supply" flashing in at 4.33?

    • @theCodyReeder
      @theCodyReeder  Před 5 lety +541

      Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy reference.

    • @MrCrilliver
      @MrCrilliver Před 5 lety +182

      The answer you are looking for is 42

    • @questioneverything8301
      @questioneverything8301 Před 5 lety +20

      under 1000 miles. they are lights of some kind in the sky. star in a petri jar. not planets.

    • @Crusader1815
      @Crusader1815 Před 5 lety +25

      Masterful advertising... We are all curious cats...

    • @sunriseshell
      @sunriseshell Před 5 lety +15

      Subliminal

  • @tuffyb8375
    @tuffyb8375 Před 5 lety +5250

    This guy drove 200 km to put a bean on the ground
    GO SCIENCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @YD-uq5fi
      @YD-uq5fi Před 4 lety +66

      He could have used a tiny little Cream of Wheat granule (0.5 mm) and instead drove just 8 miles.

    • @kiiistreak8748
      @kiiistreak8748 Před 4 lety +48

      Just imagine if they forgot to record it 😂

    • @shingamba
      @shingamba Před 4 lety +92

      In a similar video a man drove from england to spain as he took a golf ball as the size of the sun.

    • @karigreyd2808
      @karigreyd2808 Před 4 lety +8

      Pure respect!

    • @Pantibiblon
      @Pantibiblon Před 4 lety +22

      An English guy crossed the British Channel and ended up in Pamplona to show the same...amazing in both cases.

  • @Andrew-hp1yj
    @Andrew-hp1yj Před 4 lety +2563

    Good thing he used a pea. Just imagine if he used an apple. He'd have to drive to Alaska.

  • @joealex89
    @joealex89 Před 7 měsíci +70

    Additonal facts: if the distance between Proxima Centauri and the Sun on on this scale was 202 km, and in reality it's 4,2 ly away, it means that 1ly =42 km on the scale.
    This means that Andromeda galaxy, which our Milky Way is about to merge with in 5 Billion years forming Milkdromeda, on this scale is 120 Million kilometers from the pea Sun (roughly 80% of the distance to the real Sun).
    Our galaxy cluster (Local Group) is about the size of a solar system in this scale.
    And the diamater of the observable universe (92 Billion ly) is 4,5 Trillion kilometers in this scale which is 0,5 ly.

    • @coach4546
      @coach4546 Před měsícem +2

      Wow

    • @lethalwolf7455
      @lethalwolf7455 Před měsícem +2

      This was amazing information

    • @pflaffik
      @pflaffik Před 19 dny

      Just to clarify, some may think youre saying Andromeda is 5 billion lightyears away. You should have added the approximated distance in lightyears, in your case just below 2.9 million lightyears i believe.

    • @howardsternssmicrophone9332
      @howardsternssmicrophone9332 Před 15 dny

      I'd also like to add, if I may, that the nearest star is so far away that we can't even get there by traditional means. That, I can tell you!

  • @DarkForcesStudio
    @DarkForcesStudio Před rokem +194

    I've been passively into astronomy for at least 40 years and the scales and distances of the universe never cease to amaze me. The human brain is simply not built deal with this stuff. Love it! Great video.

    • @darrinsiberia
      @darrinsiberia Před 8 měsíci +4

      But we should be shooting off probes like Voyager all the time. We could be learning so much more. There should be 1,000 Voyager like probes in every direction from the Earth collecting data. We're like blind people using one finger to read braille when we have ten.

    • @talalmalki
      @talalmalki Před 8 měsíci +4

      This really is amazing, how far planets and stars are. Makes me think again, where did this whole universe come from ? ... Where did we humans come from? ... the distances are shocking ...

    • @darrinsiberia
      @darrinsiberia Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@talalmalki but maybe the distanced aren't so big. we just lack the understanding to bend space and time. the answer is right under our noses.

    • @darrinsiberia
      @darrinsiberia Před 8 měsíci

      @@talalmalki *s

    • @domxem5551
      @domxem5551 Před 7 měsíci

      Who said that?

  • @Fiddlemaster56
    @Fiddlemaster56 Před 7 lety +2600

    "we're gonna have to leave town." That's where the realization of cosmic spectrum of distance really hit.

    • @KingOftTheArsenal
      @KingOftTheArsenal Před 7 lety +306

      John Pettit it probably hit even harder when he said he left the state

    • @Borednesss
      @Borednesss Před 7 lety +63

      If you want to watch a cool series on how large the universe actually is, there's a man on CZcams named David Butler with a video series called How Far Away Is It. It is extremely well done. He has a lot of other content too that is definitely worth watching.

    • @oldben444
      @oldben444 Před 7 lety +42

      This is my favorite thing about space. How it isn't comprehendible how large it is. No mind on this Earth can begin to imagine its vast size.
      Great video Cody. One of my favorite subjects to be talked about :)

    • @-danR
      @-danR Před 7 lety +49

      Fermi's paradox resolved.
      We don't see aliens here because the distances in space are simply mind-bogglingly too great.
      Some engineering feats just ain't gonna happen. No-how, No way, Never.

    • @rihardsrozans6920
      @rihardsrozans6920 Před 7 lety +15

      Yeah, that should manage to put pretty much anyone back in place.

  • @ico9005
    @ico9005 Před 4 lety +2094

    *No matter how big you imagine the scale of the universe, it's bigger!*

    • @nativeam25
      @nativeam25 Před 4 lety +30

      That's deep

    • @David-gb1qn
      @David-gb1qn Před 4 lety +122

      Nope it’s even bigger than that

    • @ico9005
      @ico9005 Před 4 lety +85

      @@David-gb1qn *Nope. It's still bigger than bigger than that.*

    • @David-gb1qn
      @David-gb1qn Před 4 lety +31

      ico Nope bigger

    • @hansroberts2574
      @hansroberts2574 Před 4 lety +38

      @@David-gb1qn pretty sure it's EVEN BIGGER

  • @richvail7551
    @richvail7551 Před rokem +136

    Even with your downsized scale my mind still couldn’t accept what I was seeing.
    I’m glad you made this video, my mind needed this challenge. Thank you

    • @project-326
      @project-326 Před rokem +5

      The human brain is not able to comprehend 1 millions points and still see scale (just 1mm dots over 1 meter squared, [ seems that our eyes are the limitation] ), we seem to be able to understated with our minds as much as 1m^2 data points, yet this massive scale does only allow us to imagine to the nearest star. We are are so far away from being able to imagine our galaxy that it is as in-obtainable to our conscious minds as the technology required to make cell phones are to primates...
      Scale is everything

    • @jhardcore77
      @jhardcore77 Před rokem

      this guy has no clue how far stars are total bs! Astrology is not science it’s pseudoscience

    • @ChadPrestonOfficialThree
      @ChadPrestonOfficialThree Před 9 měsíci

      It's all unprovable nonsense. Research flat earth and the Firmament. All those lights in the sky are CLOSE and TINY, not "light years" away. Look into the Inverse Square Law of Light to understand that the term "light years" is a physical IMPOSSIBILITY.

  • @TNitroH
    @TNitroH Před 2 měsíci +7

    It has taken 46 years for the voyager 1 to get to the end of the football field

    • @pflaffik
      @pflaffik Před 19 dny

      I never been to the end of a football field. And never will, even if i live to be 100

  • @isramations7565
    @isramations7565 Před 7 lety +701

    I love the determination Cody has. Most other Science channels would say, "So, the nearest star is so far we'd have to leave the state, but that's too far away so here's some numbers: *puts numbers up on screen*" But, no. Cody up and drives outside of the state and puts the tiny peice of paper on the gravel road, like, 125mi away.

    • @ddd1hhh
      @ddd1hhh Před 6 lety +9

      Cody rules!!

    • @brandonfreeman1823
      @brandonfreeman1823 Před 6 lety +1

      he subbed to the work harder, not smarter... I'm the opposite.

    • @CarpetHater
      @CarpetHater Před 6 lety +4

      and luckily gasoline is cheap in the US

    • @Eric-lx8hp
      @Eric-lx8hp Před 6 lety

      So how far is andromeda?

    • @adolfodef
      @adolfodef Před 6 lety +5

      @ Eric:
      It is so far out that in this scale nothing on the Solar System would sufice [but stil not SO FAR that Proxima Centauri could be usefull]

  • @drusha
    @drusha Před 7 lety +790

    In your scaled system a snail would move at the speed of light :D

    • @drusha
      @drusha Před 6 lety +142

      8 minutes takes light to travel from Sun to Earth. Between Sun and Pluto it takes more than 5 light-hours.

    • @borginator1493
      @borginator1493 Před 6 lety +13

      You are right Andrew, that's so mind boggling considering light travels 670.6ish million mph and takes that long just to go through our solar system.

    • @borginator1493
      @borginator1493 Před 6 lety +28

      Well I'd have to say that's a super fast space snail! =)

    • @jessikapiche6097
      @jessikapiche6097 Před 6 lety +4

      give that snail some redbull hey?, good advertisement though!

    • @kruleworld
      @kruleworld Před 6 lety +19

      I was thinking humans wanting to travel to the stars is like an ant wanting to travel around the world. kinda hard when you're dwarfed by a Pea.

  • @ExtraChrisP08
    @ExtraChrisP08 Před rokem +19

    Really good video. Puts the scale into understandable perspective. Honestly, seeing our sun is a pea and Betelgeuse is a car is an insane representation.

    • @petertrznadel8107
      @petertrznadel8107 Před 7 měsíci +4

      What really puts it to scale is that car Betegeuse is way over on the East coast, BUT the distance is measured going WEST out across the pacific, across asia/europe then landing on the East Coast from over the Atlantic.

  • @Abdulrahman99699
    @Abdulrahman99699 Před 6 měsíci +13

    The amount of effort this man did to show us something!!
    Hats off to you man. Respect.

  • @jso19801980
    @jso19801980 Před 4 lety +2413

    so the furthest weve gone is 1.3cm, and we want to go 202km

    • @m0rtez713
      @m0rtez713 Před 4 lety +189

      Let's start by going those 1.3cm again and then go the extra meter.

    • @aeroscience9834
      @aeroscience9834 Před 4 lety +102

      jso the furthest we've sent humans is 1.3 cm. He showed the voyager probe which is well past pluto

    • @undistinguishedlyricist3324
      @undistinguishedlyricist3324 Před 4 lety +12

      HILARIOUS

    • @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts
      @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts Před 4 lety +192

      If Voyager was headed to Proxima Centauri it'd be 0.04 percent of the way there by now. I don't think man is leaving the solar system lol

    • @jean-baptistemoquelin6006
      @jean-baptistemoquelin6006 Před 4 lety +44

      it's worse than that. The furthest we've gone (the moon) is 2 mm - though what's a little factor of 6 at that point...

  • @PlayTheMind
    @PlayTheMind Před 7 lety +3201

    The nearest star is...
    *you, Cody*.
    _(sentimental piano music)_

    • @Lizard-813
      @Lizard-813 Před 7 lety +15

      PlayTheMind YES

    • @MrN1c3Guy100
      @MrN1c3Guy100 Před 7 lety +41

      Wrong! The nearest star is the Sun.

    • @ebadsheikh792
      @ebadsheikh792 Před 7 lety +27

      _(*flowers blooming in the background*)_

    • @Archiekunst
      @Archiekunst Před 7 lety +78

      No Cody is a mineral ore of Cobalt and Dysprosium. Cody was mined in Cody's mine. I bought him for a dime and now Cody's mine.

    • @bernardo00124719
      @bernardo00124719 Před 7 lety +6

      hahahaaha that was dope

  • @8bert9
    @8bert9 Před rokem +10

    Those distances are mind blowing and that was just to our nearest star. Great presentation!

  • @Peekul1
    @Peekul1 Před 11 měsíci +19

    Nice job. Wow. I knew it was a large distance, but this really puts it in perspective. We are definitely on our own. Hopefully we can keep the earth running for a while longer.

  • @OurFantasyLife
    @OurFantasyLife Před 4 lety +630

    Until he said “that’s the furthest any human has ever been”, it never struck me...I literally never thought about it that way. We have explored approximately none of our universe.

    • @Chuked
      @Chuked Před 4 lety +23

      Our Fantasy Life absolutely nothing

    • @doiron12
      @doiron12 Před 4 lety +20

      Relative to the center of the Milky Way the earth is hurtling through the galaxy at 500,000 mph. Voyager spacecraft is only traveling at 50,000 mph relative to earth. "We are exploring the Cosmos at breakneck speeds!"

    • @mrkiky
      @mrkiky Před 4 lety +26

      @@doiron12 Except everything is moving along with us so we're not really exploring anything. At least Voyager is actually moving away from Earth and closer to other stuff, but then again it has been doing so for decades and only has a few years of battery left, even with most of its sensors shut off. Its considered to be in interstellar space now, but it's so much closer to the Sun than any other star.

    • @losgryfog
      @losgryfog Před 4 lety

      ...it never struck you that people are on earth?
      what the fuck are you talking about?

    • @Mqxwell
      @Mqxwell Před 4 lety +7

      @@losgryfog He is talking about how far we've explored, how'd you miss that?

  • @Twisted426
    @Twisted426 Před 5 lety +246

    Definitely the best demonstration I've ever seen to truly understand the distances. Thanks for sharing your work.

    • @panner11
      @panner11 Před 4 lety +5

      Coming back to this, I really appreciate how he recorded the entire drive.

    • @3cs3hs
      @3cs3hs Před 4 lety

      too bad this is all just theory and not proven. NASA lies about everything!!

    • @eugenef0zzy
      @eugenef0zzy Před 4 lety +1

      3cs3hs hahah....is this true

    • @3cs3hs
      @3cs3hs Před 4 lety

      @@eugenef0zzy yes that is true, go watch a time lapse video of the stars at night. They all move around the north star, in perfect circles but after a long period of time goes by you'll see that the stars all move the exact same distance relative to there appeared 2D distance away from the north star. How is it possible, from our perspective, that this occurs, if all stars are at different distances from earth (some thousands of time farther away from each other) and yet they all appear to move from our perspective at the exact same speed, all in THE EXACT SAME DIRECTION?? Stars should be moving all over the place from our perspective, not all in perfect circles.

    • @eugenef0zzy
      @eugenef0zzy Před 4 lety +1

      3cs3hs couldn’t that just be rotation of our planet on its axis from our point of view? I’m not saying I trust nasa, or any government organization...

  • @arbjful
    @arbjful Před rokem +17

    Truly amazing demonstration, gives us a glimpse of how grand the universe is. I thought for a moment Proxima centauri would be at the edge of the field, didn't know it would be 125 miles away even on such a small scale..

    • @michaelweston409
      @michaelweston409 Před 8 měsíci +1

      It’s kind boggling

    • @Earth1218
      @Earth1218 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I thought maybe a couple of blocks away, but 125 miles… wow. At that scale, it’s hard to wrap your head around just how massive the universe is.

    • @michaelweston409
      @michaelweston409 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@Earth1218 it’s to impossibly big for puny humans to explore in our short time existence

  • @skeepee
    @skeepee Před rokem +15

    I love a good "scale of the universe" video and this is among the best! It's hard to grasp how far away objects in the universe really are, but most of us know what a long drive in a car feels like.
    Speaking of which, it would be worth noting how the speed of light scales to this model. I think it would be about the speed of a banana slug if it wasn't in a particular hurry!

  • @swfbutler
    @swfbutler Před 3 lety +365

    Crazy to think that a "pea" is exerting gravitational pull on an object 97 feet away....

    • @AInfrEEzebr
      @AInfrEEzebr Před 3 lety +58

      In fact way, waaaay further if you consider the Oort cloud

    • @owenkeller2748
      @owenkeller2748 Před 3 lety +4

      AInfrEEzebr,
      The Oort cloud has never been observed.

    • @justinbrah627
      @justinbrah627 Před 3 lety +4

      @@owenkeller2748 how do we know such a place exists?

    • @owenkeller2748
      @owenkeller2748 Před 3 lety +10

      justin brah,
      We don’t. The Oort Cloud has never been observed. Therefore, we don’t know if it exists at all.
      There was a guy, named oort, who made it up in hopes that it would explain comets. But new observations show that comets look a lot like asteroids.

    • @nickleo7586
      @nickleo7586 Před 3 lety +2

      @@owenkeller2748 pretty sure Voyager observed it when it went through and also discovered the heliosphere

  • @jenniferjimenez677
    @jenniferjimenez677 Před 4 lety +107

    6:35 Giant space ant!

  • @AmonAmarthFan609
    @AmonAmarthFan609 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Two analogies that might be easier to visualize:
    -at the scale where Neptune’s orbit is 1 millimetre in diameter, Proxima is about 4.5 metres away
    -at the scale where the distance from the Earth to the Sun is 1 mm, the distance to Proxima is about 270 m (roughly the length of a suburban residential street)

  • @tim7402
    @tim7402 Před rokem +15

    I can't believe you did the drive BUT it does explain perfectly how far that closest star is.
    We appreciate your efforts !!!! Even here in Thailand.

    • @dibassarkar2898
      @dibassarkar2898 Před 7 měsíci

      He probably needed to meet his grandmother or something who lives outside of the town lol. So he was like why not just shoot a video while on the way there.

  • @5Andysalive
    @5Andysalive Před 3 lety +214

    these scale visulaistions never get old. And never stop to impress.

  • @davidhenderson3400
    @davidhenderson3400 Před 5 lety +319

    Now lets see you put Andromeda on this scale. I think you may have to leave the planet for that one.

    • @sphericalchess
      @sphericalchess Před 5 lety +5

      David Henderson Yes! ... and then the Universe?

    • @boonslang6689
      @boonslang6689 Před 4 lety +55

      If we put a star at a distance of a single human Step and star twalking, we would have to cross Uranus orbit to get outta Milky Way. Tough shit when you look at how far the next Star is. It will take our current fastest Jet Plane that flies at 1220 km/hr around 2.2 millions years to reach the Next Human Step, Proxima Century. There are 25000 million such stars in our galaxy only. And there are trillions and trillions such galaxies in observable universe alone which itself is estimated as only 0.2% of the total universe lmao.

    • @mark2073
      @mark2073 Před 4 lety +5

      @@boonslang6689 wow. lotsa zeros bro

    • @milolee4746
      @milolee4746 Před 4 lety +1

      Ha Haha
      David, you is sarcastically savage!👍

    • @kranmaster
      @kranmaster Před 4 lety +20

      @@boonslang6689 Nice analogy, but some of these numbers are a little off. The Columbia reached 28000 km/h in 1981. As far as spacecraft, Voyager 1 reached 60 000 km/h. With current existing technology, a manned flight could be made in roughly 13000 years. A nuclear drive could do it in a single millennia. When you start considering that in just 117 years, we've gone from a wooden & canvas plane that flew at 56 km/h, to space probes reaching speeds of hundreds of thousands of km/h with the aid of gravity, we're a whole lot closer to interstellar travel than people think. Many of us today will be alive to see telemetry from the first probe to reach another star system. With the pace of current technological development, it is not inconceivable that we may even live to see the first humans reach another star system.

  • @itsjustnopinionok
    @itsjustnopinionok Před 7 měsíci +5

    It's really amazing that stars have the gravity power they have on planets and other stars when you see their size compared to distance from each other.

  • @destructivecriticism5842

    I love videos like this where the distances are, more or less put into relatable metrics

  • @RonaldEddyJr
    @RonaldEddyJr Před 7 lety +386

    "So, at this scale, to place the nearest star we are going to have to leave town...did I say town....I meant state!" :) awesome demonstration of the amazing distances in space.

    • @elias_xp95
      @elias_xp95 Před 6 lety +7

      That blew my mind. I love these kinds of visualisations. It really puts things into perspective.

    • @davidb6927
      @davidb6927 Před 5 lety

      Subtle, really subtle

    • @DexterHaven
      @DexterHaven Před 5 lety +2

      "We're gonna need a bigger boat," moment.

    • @Draliseth
      @Draliseth Před 5 lety

      Aaaaand that's why I'm dubious of claims made that we've had E.T. visitors.

    • @papadopp3870
      @papadopp3870 Před 5 lety

      Ronald Eddy Jr I walked into the ‘puter room during the video trip to Alpha Centauri. Recognized 80 into SlC, then north on 15 to Downey cutoff and on up to Downey. Thought my kid shot a dash vid coming in from Tooele! Instead, a vid made by a scientific Utahn with only a hint of accent! 'Morble' gives it away. Very cool vid on our need to create warp space without scrunching everything between points A and B.

  • @Alpharius93
    @Alpharius93 Před 5 lety +396

    "Betelgeuse, a red supergiant, which would be about the size of a car" while the Sun at this scale is about a pea. Mah brain. I love space

    • @Ed-iz4wm
      @Ed-iz4wm Před 4 lety +11

      beatlejuice.....lol

    • @satan1189
      @satan1189 Před 4 lety +6

      Ed i hope you do know betelgeuse is correcr

    • @ValleyoftheKings64
      @ValleyoftheKings64 Před 4 lety +13

      So would that mean VY Scuti would ve the size of a Catapillar dump truck?

    • @mysticnomad3577
      @mysticnomad3577 Před 4 lety

      Pseudo science hurts your brain eh?

    • @gottagofastest
      @gottagofastest Před 4 lety +5

      @@mysticnomad3577 ???

  • @51hankyspanky7
    @51hankyspanky7 Před rokem

    I have watched this a dozen times because of the amazing and well done prospective it provides. Thanks Cody.

  • @mootzeroni
    @mootzeroni Před rokem +19

    This is a truly "brilliant" demonstration. "Stellar" explanation, Cody.

  • @lewismassie
    @lewismassie Před 7 lety +293

    I know all of this already, but it fucks me up every time I see it again

    • @fugithegreat
      @fugithegreat Před 7 lety +25

      Same. How many times can one's mind be blown over and over again?

    • @hellelujahh
      @hellelujahh Před 7 lety +6

      fugithegreat Minds weren't made to withstand that! Such cruelty...

    • @garethhanby
      @garethhanby Před 6 lety +6

      Same. Nothing new here to me, but it is still incredible when presented like this.

    • @beyondbackwater4933
      @beyondbackwater4933 Před 6 lety

      hellelujahh That's true people haven't evolved to process such huge numbers and distances. Good though because it's fun being spun out by things like this.

    • @shanemather4602
      @shanemather4602 Před 6 lety +1

      So cody i quess u believe in the iss, please explain the speeds of the ball in comparison to the iss is out there to say the least, how can the earth be spinning at 1025 mph and the iss supposed orbit of 17,500mph, let alone the earth hurtling around the sun at 66,000mph and traveling thru the galaxy at 500,000mph and the can take steady videos and clear pics and vids how is this even possiball, it would look like the fastest long exposure ever being as blurry as can be, but yet we see sometimes on iss it spins and moves oh so slowly or is that because im a stupid flat earther some might say, let alone see no satilites ever not in one vid or pic provided from the iss, so explain the crazy fuckin theory boys n girls, correct me if im wrong, and u think we came from monkeys come give everyone a break, with ur scientism bs.

  • @klmrk9961
    @klmrk9961 Před 7 lety +214

    Cody you should do a similar video, but with distances and sizes of atoms in molecules and electrons, neutrons in atoms etc.

    • @daemonhat
      @daemonhat Před 7 lety +4

      would still need a football field just for the atom. plus we don't know exactly how big, or in this case, small, an electron is.

    • @Toemelii
      @Toemelii Před 7 lety +8

      Not only what daemonhat said but electrons aren't actual objects, but electromagnetic waves with a probability of being close to the proton (but they could be anywhere really). I mad this gfycat.com/HorribleAllGermanshepherd little anymation recently were I pretended that electrons are spheres (which they aren't) to compare its weight to that of a proton and I also made this imgur.com/a/0TFn0 periodic table, where each element sticks out proportionally to its calculated radius. It might give you at least some idea.

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 Před 7 lety

      We could use its minimum possible size as determined by experiment. He could do a helium atom and explain the nuclear shell model.

    • @MrSN99
      @MrSN99 Před 7 lety +4

      Toemelii electrons are particles, and like any other particles they have wave properties... Also don't know why you said electromagnetic waves that's completely different thing.

    • @jimsmind3894
      @jimsmind3894 Před 7 lety +5

      Gareth Dean The trouble is at school you learn the solar system type model of atoms which is easy to visualise but wrong.
      Once you get into quantum physics the picture becomes a lot more complex with the particles behaving like waves and visualising it gets harder.
      Then you go even deeper and realise protons and neutrons behave the same but are made up of quarks and the picture gets harder and harder to imagine!

  • @wootle
    @wootle Před rokem

    Fantastic video. Just discovered your channel and subbed. The scale of it all is so hard to comprehend but your video really helps the human mind grasp it better! Well done. 🙂

  • @7775Kevin
    @7775Kevin Před 7 měsíci +1

    Great work. Thanks for doing this. Incredible distances.

  • @itskarl79
    @itskarl79 Před 4 lety +290

    This is a profoundly educational video, you have expanded so many people's imaginable reference of distance. You did so, very simply and effectively as well. Today I comprehend why you have amassed such a following considering what a superficial glance doesn't demonstrate about your depth. Well done, you have exceptional humility too. Great content Cody, keep up the good work. People like you bring so much and so many people the scientific community, which serves mankind indefinitely.

    • @terrylandess6072
      @terrylandess6072 Před 3 lety +5

      While the focus is on size and distance - watching this again years later I'm struck by the power of gravity, and it's reach.

    • @Swizzenator
      @Swizzenator Před 3 lety

      @@terrylandess6072 Yea. . . my nuts have dropped 2 centimeters in the last year.

    • @ramonsanabria1472
      @ramonsanabria1472 Před 2 lety +3

      Amen on that !

    •  Před rokem

      Fuck with the scientific community. This should be knowledge of the common people. Agree with the rest.

  • @smitty7692
    @smitty7692 Před 7 lety +534

    Hey Cody. I've got a challenge for you. Try to figure out the COLDEST temperature of a flame. Maybe try different fuels or different environments. Would be a great learning experience for a lot of viewers and myself. Hope to see if this gets accepted.

    • @cuckedresponsetoeuropeante4427
      @cuckedresponsetoeuropeante4427 Před 7 lety +30

      Make the coldest flame possible?

    • @smitty7692
      @smitty7692 Před 7 lety +7

      Yep. I know there are different ignition points for fuels but don't know which are "Colder" than others. Like I said, would be could if he could distinguish which are "colder" and "hotter".

    • @domv9225
      @domv9225 Před 7 lety +1

      Bisceps Gaming great idea!

    • @Avaruusrangeri
      @Avaruusrangeri Před 7 lety +7

      +Cody'sLab please Cody! This would be fascinating.
      (Ignore my profile picture's hand gesture. I'm huge fan of science and you. This is not sarcasm. [Shit, I'm losing my credibility fast. Better stop here.])

    • @logan831
      @logan831 Před 7 lety +1

      Please :)

  • @zingerxxxx
    @zingerxxxx Před 6 měsíci

    I see your content mentioned so much on other platforms and I find it so entertaining every time! Even like today I am seeing your video mentioned in the comments on reddit 6 years later!

  • @jasonrodgers9063
    @jasonrodgers9063 Před rokem +4

    You made a "pea-clipse"!

  • @Raren789
    @Raren789 Před 7 lety +240

    Woa, that car drive was unexpected. I had no idea stars are THAT far away ._. Good job visualizing that Cody!

    • @johnfrancisdoe1563
      @johnfrancisdoe1563 Před 6 lety +2

      Raren I was surprised he didn't hop on a plane until going to Betelguese.

    • @dougodud
      @dougodud Před 6 lety

      I feel like comments using the creators name are so superior and get likes XD

    • @Soothing432
      @Soothing432 Před 6 lety +2

      It's all bullshit, there is nu endless vacuum. The stars you see in the night sky are attached to the firmament, and are no more than frequencies of light. The other stars of the "solar system" are only wandering stars on the firmament. That has been known for thousands of years until the heliocentric bullshit unrealistic model took over.

    • @darrelc5411
      @darrelc5411 Před 6 lety

      Stars have to be that far away from each other, if they get too close bad things happen. Scales in space are on another level from what you are use to here on Earth. Cody is only talking about the nearest star, which is 4.3 LY from Earth, our nearest galaxy, Andromeda, is 2 million LY away from the Milky Way. There are billions and billions of galaxies spread across a universe on a scale that we can't really grasp the size of.

    • @Soothing432
      @Soothing432 Před 6 lety

      I'm none of the above, although in your little mind you would wish I was just trolling
      take a month to watch the stars every night
      and I dont mean in a smartphone app
      they haven't changed in thousands of years
      how is it possible if we're tossing through space with the solar system and the galaxy?
      these are some serious questions about the heliocentric model people are starting to ask

  • @nicholasfoss1853
    @nicholasfoss1853 Před 7 lety +121

    Normal people: let's go to the football field to play football
    Cody: Let's go build a scale model on the football field

    • @PromptedHawk
      @PromptedHawk Před 7 lety +27

      And the neighbour state.

    • @colinsfasah
      @colinsfasah Před 7 lety +4

      love the amount of work Cody does for these...!

  • @luxsaban4012
    @luxsaban4012 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Great video man, i really appreciate your effort u made for this video.

  • @LG-qz8om
    @LG-qz8om Před rokem

    Thank You.
    Very well done demonstration.

  • @pizzafrenzyman
    @pizzafrenzyman Před 6 lety +352

    Did anyone else see the space monster ant almost destroy Alpha Centauri?

  • @palfers1
    @palfers1 Před rokem +467

    One of the unforgettable moments that lead to me getting a physics degree was when an older boy ( I was around 7, he around 15), while walking me home at night, asked me if I knew how far were the stars? This was the 50s and so space travel had hardly begun, let alone general awareness of matters astronomical. I told him I did not know, and, although I forget his exact words, he was able to convey to me the staggering truth of it all. We walked the rest of the way home in silence because I was literally shocked and lost for words.

    • @lifeoflennie2443
      @lifeoflennie2443 Před rokem +38

      Indeed. And we have avoided this fact (ridiculously insurmountable distances) ever since. Pretending just a little more, each decade, that we're right on the cusp of actually travelling anywhere in space, other than maybe the moon once again if we're lucky.
      We've convinced ourselves our reach as a human race goes beyond the paper - thin wrap around our own planet. 😉

    • @DrDeepstack
      @DrDeepstack Před rokem +18

      That's poetry man.

    • @richardlawson6787
      @richardlawson6787 Před rokem +20

      Nothing is more fascinating nor mind blowing as space facts...kind of sobering though...we live in an ocean of exotic planets that we can never know ..they exist just like our earth..

    • @TheVanillatech
      @TheVanillatech Před rokem +6

      Cool memory.

    • @danevertt3210
      @danevertt3210 Před rokem +20

      …..and that’s the story of how Andrew lost his virginity

  • @loki76
    @loki76 Před rokem +7

    This really helps putting it into perspective and these are just our nearest stars. It's mind warping to even think about it.
    It's also sad because even though there is likely life out there in the galaxy and the universe we're never going to see it. Not unless we can find some wormhole way of travel to any point at an instant.

    • @michaelweston409
      @michaelweston409 Před 8 měsíci +3

      & the wormhole way would be the equivalent of humanity finding a cheat code to be able to travel those vast distances. Possible but very unlikely

  • @ronchappel4812
    @ronchappel4812 Před rokem

    I especially liked that little drawing at the end - showing how much we can see with the naked eye.
    I've never seen it put so simply before

  • @CesarCordova
    @CesarCordova Před 5 lety +959

    Thanks for using the metric system!

    • @kingslayer8121
      @kingslayer8121 Před 5 lety +13

      César Córdova boooooooooo

    • @Cyber_Kriss
      @Cyber_Kriss Před 5 lety +32

      Metric system is used in science, too...

    • @zedzedski7382
      @zedzedski7382 Před 5 lety +80

      more like thanks for using normal system

    • @baximax
      @baximax Před 5 lety +5

      si, aguanten los metros centimetros segundos, que me vienen con onzas, patas, dedos, ojos jajaja

    • @dannyh8288
      @dannyh8288 Před 5 lety +13

      yeah thanks loads (sarcasm) I stopped watching the video. We went to the moon using imperial units to build the space craft. Where did YOUR metric country go?

  • @jamie91995
    @jamie91995 Před 7 lety +441

    Damn driving 125 miles for a videos, that's commitment

    • @bensmith4563
      @bensmith4563 Před 7 lety +14

      The Chemistry Nerd the other night I drove from 30 miles north of Milwaukee to Chicago just to listen to the song lake shore drive while driving down lake shore drive

    • @Vacated204
      @Vacated204 Před 7 lety +6

      the aesthetic commitment

    • @ficolas2
      @ficolas2 Před 7 lety +5

      The Chemistry Nerd he drove that to get lab supplies from a shop

    • @muttlyone2964
      @muttlyone2964 Před 7 lety +1

      He went there to buy lotto tickets.

    • @ffggddss
      @ffggddss Před 7 lety

      + The Chemistry Nerd
      Yeah, he shoulda gone for a scale of a nice, even, one-to-a-trillion. Then he'd only have had to drive a mere 25 miles.
      Of course, he'd also have to use that magnifier a lot more to show us the scaled-down stars and planets.

  • @doksooli
    @doksooli Před rokem +2

    Thanks for the conversion into the metric system. Helps a lot...

  • @onair141
    @onair141 Před rokem

    I really enjoyed the details. Thank you!

  • @kentinspacetime5378
    @kentinspacetime5378 Před rokem +316

    Great video. I’m 76 but it was just a few years ago that I realized how incredibly alone we are. I’m sure there is intelligent life out there but we are never going to contact it. Let’s all try to not screw up this human life thing.

    • @christerstabis3187
      @christerstabis3187 Před rokem +18

      Oh, prepare for a surprise... 😊

    • @Snailmailtrucker
      @Snailmailtrucker Před rokem +14

      I'm 76 also and pretty much a Recluse/Hermit.
      (which I wouldn't change for anything!) I learned decades ago to be my own Best Friend and I am never lonely at all.... Plus, Christ is my other Best Friend... so what more could I ask for !

    • @jeromebullard6123
      @jeromebullard6123 Před rokem +7

      I’ve got some news for you. They’re already here. We cannot comprehend their technology.

    • @christerstabis3187
      @christerstabis3187 Před rokem +3

      @@jeromebullard6123 Spot on ! Exciting times are waiting for us and that is soon. 😊

    • @distilledfreedom1840
      @distilledfreedom1840 Před rokem +4

      We don't know if there is life elsewhere. Chances are not. The media and egotistical cosmologist claim it's a given, yet without the knowledge of how common abiogenesis is, it's a black box.

  • @Za7a7aZ
    @Za7a7aZ Před 5 lety +370

    It is hard to believe that such little objects at these immense distances are influencing eachother by gravity.

    • @moonrazorking2366
      @moonrazorking2366 Před 5 lety +26

      If its hard to believe, than it is most probably not true.

    • @dekippiesip
      @dekippiesip Před 5 lety +38

      Stars barely affect one another. It's the big bad black hole in the center of the milky way that makes them all stay nice and organized in the galaxy.

    • @sanezio9756
      @sanezio9756 Před 5 lety +2

      The distances are small tho

    • @steviefordranger198
      @steviefordranger198 Před 5 lety +73

      Moonrazor King A stupid comment . The flat earthers find it hard to believe that the Earth is a sphere but they’re wrong. Galileo fought against the “hard to believe” theory that the Earth is the centre of the universe let alone the solar system and he was found to be right. Evolution as a theory was hard to believe but rigorous scientific method proved it right... Gravity is a theory, lets see you jump out of an aeroplane and prove gravity wrong.

    • @PaldBenis
      @PaldBenis Před 5 lety +75

      @@moonrazorking2366 what horrible reasoning

  • @mattbeale9668
    @mattbeale9668 Před 9 měsíci

    What a great video, amazing to see the scale - thanks for making it!

  • @hiramlewis3873
    @hiramlewis3873 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for doing this experiment. Much appreciated. You are dedicated to Science and we need more people like you

  • @Blaze22F
    @Blaze22F Před 7 lety +2247

    *here comes my existential crisis kicking in*

    • @Sir_Ninonino
      @Sir_Ninonino Před 7 lety +102

      I nearly unconciously cried when he was travelling to place the star. I was like
      ENOUGH, YOU'VE TRAVELED ENOUGH, STOP IT, I DON'T WANT TO KNOW. HOW F@#&-*G FAR IS IT??!!
      HOW SMALL WE ARE?????!!!!!!

    • @MrTeaboar
      @MrTeaboar Před 7 lety +57

      Frank22 I felt worthless before, and knew that things are far. But this pea stuf made the whole thing worse.

    • @SpicyMeatAhBall
      @SpicyMeatAhBall Před 7 lety +5

      oh shit waddup

    • @HelpFromAbove1
      @HelpFromAbove1 Před 7 lety +40

      The volume of the observable universe is ~3.6x10^80 Cubic Meters. A human takes up ~0.1 m^3. Or rather, you take up 1/3600000000000000307409205720723958754374371817423089397567280740026905028139679744th, or 0.00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000028% of the universe, at least for the moment. The volume of the observable universe is expanding at the speed of light, so that number is shrinking at a cubic rate.

    • @mandernachluca3774
      @mandernachluca3774 Před 7 lety +13

      Frank22 Frank22 Frank22 Well, in order to give you a better feel: In my opinion the dream of being part of a race that could have the capability to handle such a huge task is overwighting the fact that we are so "small ".

  • @cliffrayner3013
    @cliffrayner3013 Před 4 lety +433

    2019: travelling between star is possible in near future
    8019: still stuck on earth

    • @spiritualopportunism4585
      @spiritualopportunism4585 Před 4 lety +4

      Must've been the space litter.

    • @yungpo9853
      @yungpo9853 Před 4 lety +31

      If at the year 8019 we are still stuck on Earth then we have a species have failed.

    • @spiritualopportunism4585
      @spiritualopportunism4585 Před 4 lety +22

      @@yungpo9853 We're the apex predator, can traverse the entire planet, can heal ourselves remarkably...we are absolutely a successful species what we want now is to expand beyond that success. However, taking in mind that rat race with ourselves never ends. :)

    • @spiritualopportunism4585
      @spiritualopportunism4585 Před 4 lety +2

      @@yungpo9853 ALSO SPACE LITTER, AHHHHHHHH :)

    • @yungpo9853
      @yungpo9853 Před 4 lety +10

      @@spiritualopportunism4585 Didn't say we were a failure currently. But if by 8019 we haven't traveled the stars we've failed. Our spieces will have to travel to different places in the universe to ensure our survival.

  • @Mrwittycraftyguy
    @Mrwittycraftyguy Před 6 měsíci

    Amazing and wonderful video. Thank you for doing it.

  • @AbandonRule
    @AbandonRule Před rokem

    I just watched this again and it aged very well. I really enjoyed it. Thank you, Cody

  • @maxlashley5672
    @maxlashley5672 Před rokem +217

    This was actually a really good scale to try to get across the concept of the kinds of distances the universe operates on

    • @lxathu
      @lxathu Před rokem +9

      There's only one more thing to emphasize: gravity is FAR the weakest of the basic forces of nature. Yet that is what binds together that little material compared to that huge distance that can be passed by at a very-very-very limited speed by that force.

    • @diogeneslantern18
      @diogeneslantern18 Před rokem +9

      Our time as homo sapiens on earth is half the size of a pea if the age of earth was as long as a football field (100m)

    • @SnapCracklePapa
      @SnapCracklePapa Před rokem +3

      Why actually?

    • @someotherdude
      @someotherdude Před rokem

      Hey, that would make a good video.

    • @FleshWizard69420
      @FleshWizard69420 Před rokem

      Space Engine gets the sheer distance across the best. 4LY is a long way bro. First time I played, I located Proxima Centauri and went towards it. After about a minute of going about 12c I was thinking "damn how far is this thing?" I cranked up to 1LY/s and I shot past it lmao

  • @manetarofl
    @manetarofl Před 5 lety +464

    So in this scale he was moving faster than the speed of light.

    • @brewplanes7021
      @brewplanes7021 Před 5 lety +30

      pedro beato Which by the law of bs he is youger than his twin because he is moving faster.

    • @aluisious
      @aluisious Před 5 lety +73

      Duh, he didn't spend 4 years driving.

    • @Kokurorokuko
      @Kokurorokuko Před 5 lety +7

      @@aluisious did you read that write?

    • @fmills1583
      @fmills1583 Před 5 lety +2

      @@Kokurorokuko lol

    • @sisuentrenadoh4589
      @sisuentrenadoh4589 Před 5 lety +9

      the speed of light is just insignificant compared to this big and expanding universe, so insignificant that in some point in the future It will not be enough fast to reach us because the universe is expanding faster than the speed of light basically, there are faster galaxies than the speed of light

  • @DougVandegrift
    @DougVandegrift Před rokem +7

    if two galaxies collided head on, it's likely not a single planet or star would collide due to the sheer open space between them.

  • @hazy-
    @hazy- Před 6 měsíci

    Great video!
    For whatever reason, the image at 10:06 really struck me as significant. To think about the tremendous number of stars we can see all being in such a minuscule part of the galaxy is mind-boggling. Thanks for this content. I quite enjoyed this.

  • @wreagfe
    @wreagfe Před 4 lety +81

    6:34 I'm actually from the Alpha Centauri system, and I remember like it was yesterday when that giant space ant roamed around 🐜🐜🐜😔😔😔

  • @Ethan7s
    @Ethan7s Před 6 lety +416

    Cody, you are getting a speeding ticket, for exceeding the speed of light.

    • @seancarroll9849
      @seancarroll9849 Před 6 lety +37

      Cody: "I'm sorry, Officer Einstein; I didn't know how fast I was going."
      Einstein: "Shameful. I'll write you a warning this time, but the next time you might not be so lucky. A hyperlight speed collision is hazardous to your health. Don't do it again."

    • @Ethan7s
      @Ethan7s Před 6 lety +1

      Buds420King random stoner is stoned, surprise surprise.

    • @Ethan7s
      @Ethan7s Před 6 lety +1

      Buds420King
      you wish

    • @forsakenagony6784
      @forsakenagony6784 Před 6 lety +1

      Ethan Shen I get what you're going for, but, he is no where near the speed of light. (:

    • @timoshki8528
      @timoshki8528 Před 6 lety +1

      it was time warp and if he was going faster than the speed of light he would go around the earth 6.7 times in 1 second

  • @bogdanolariu5535
    @bogdanolariu5535 Před rokem

    I like it, great descriptions and very well explained , cool stuff

  • @wfly81
    @wfly81 Před rokem +3

    Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.

  • @markog1999
    @markog1999 Před 7 lety +294

    And for the million subscriber special, cody will travel to proxima B

    • @JediNg135
      @JediNg135 Před 7 lety +12

      I can't wait for the cobbled together commander keen style spacecraft he'll use!

    • @SpacefarerIndustries
      @SpacefarerIndustries Před 7 lety +1

      you're going to have to wait for nasa to finish the IXS enterprise first

    • @welp...
      @welp... Před 7 lety +1

      Thank you for the Commander Keen reference :) The favorite game of my childhood. Hey, actually, it is my favorite game overall.

    • @lexluthermiester
      @lexluthermiester Před 6 lety

      I think markog1999 meant that Cody should travel further on to show how far, in scale, Proxima B would end up being. My guess is northern Montana or southern Canada.

    • @markog1999
      @markog1999 Před 6 lety +1

      lexluthermiester nope, i meant actually go to proxima B

  • @lucishrimp
    @lucishrimp Před 7 lety +104

    Honestly I find you dedication amazing. You drove that far just for the sake of demonstration. Have my like!

  • @gee6607
    @gee6607 Před 2 měsíci

    you went thru a lot to make this video and for that we say THANK YOU!!

  • @masteraefcpro
    @masteraefcpro Před 7 měsíci

    Such a good visualisation. Thank you

  • @Locut0s
    @Locut0s Před 6 lety +187

    The thing that has long amazed me about the size scale of the universe is just how astoundingly slow the speed of light is compared to the size scale of the universe. We tend to think of the speed of light as fast. That’s only by human standards. On the scale of the universe it’s insanely slow imho.

    • @kenlogsdon7095
      @kenlogsdon7095 Před 6 lety +3

      Yup!

    • @Mernom
      @Mernom Před 6 lety +1

      About two years to Proxima, I think...

    • @evilsmurf2k8
      @evilsmurf2k8 Před 6 lety +12

      More like 4 years

    • @Flyfeuhhh
      @Flyfeuhhh Před 6 lety +30

      It feels insanely slow to you because we have an peculiar relationship with time. For us, 100 years is enormous, it is our entire existence. But really 100 years is nothing for the universe. It wouldn't matter much if the speed of light would be a billion times faster or slower, sure it would take a billions times more or less time for light to travel distances, but in the end it would still be nothing compared to infinity.

    • @Locut0s
      @Locut0s Před 6 lety +6

      That is a good point you make Flyfeuhhh. Velocity after all is simply defined as change in distance / change in time. So two way to express what I said above about how slow the speed of light is, is to simply recast that as the speed of light is fast but the universe is so INSANELY large (obviously). Or it's only slow for beings like us that have such insanely short life spans.

  • @carlreys180
    @carlreys180 Před 4 lety +39

    When they tell you distances, your mind doesn’t really grasp how mind blowing the distance is. Great job man you just blown my mind!!!

    • @ZEROmg13
      @ZEROmg13 Před rokem +2

      try this on for size. to count to 1,000,000 it would take about 11 and a half days BUT to count to 1,000,000,000 would take about 31 and a half YEARS!!!

  • @jbaccanalia
    @jbaccanalia Před rokem

    Simply amazing. Well done.

  • @MrAdryan1603
    @MrAdryan1603 Před 8 měsíci

    Your videos are really awesome. Subscribed

  • @SammyJ_Studios
    @SammyJ_Studios Před 3 lety +248

    Seeing it at this scale, it's mind boggling to see how the gravity from that little pea can affect the gravity of things so far away

  • @bblazeff1
    @bblazeff1 Před 3 lety +273

    I bet theres a guy or being, in another galaxy doing the same thing.

    • @shoriya1000
      @shoriya1000 Před 3 lety +4

      Are we in diffrent galaxy go sattelite helping us talk to each other

    • @OD_30
      @OD_30 Před 3 lety +3

      Haha talking about our solar system 😂

    • @charliedallachie3539
      @charliedallachie3539 Před 3 lety +1

      Maybe they’re already or have explored us. Those pentagon ufo videos seem like alien probes.

    • @FATillery
      @FATillery Před 3 lety +2

      No doubt my friend. Life begets life. We are made from the atoms in our universe, the chemical changes those atoms go through and the biological reactions that make up life. If Earth can do it...

    • @NSilver832
      @NSilver832 Před 3 lety +2

      Well, just think about this, if the universe is infinite the possibilities are endless so, there might be millions of guys like him trying to show people like us how fucking big the universe is.

  • @dyates6380
    @dyates6380 Před 2 měsíci

    This is awesome. Thank you for this!

  • @j3rocketeer
    @j3rocketeer Před rokem

    Amazing!! Thank you for your hard work sir.

  • @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts
    @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts Před 4 lety +329

    This kind of crushed my hope humanity will ever make it to another star

    • @patrickfitzgerald2861
      @patrickfitzgerald2861 Před 4 lety +73

      Not unless we turn ourselves into machines. Also a damn good reason to take better care of our home world.

    • @SaithMasu12
      @SaithMasu12 Před 4 lety +44

      We will be forever stuck here on this earth. Thats okay though. Humans are born here, they belong here and the universe made damn sure that there wont be any exceptions to this rule. Voyager 1 needs aprox. 70000 years to alpha centauri with the speed of 21km per second.

    • @supersoviettaco
      @supersoviettaco Před 4 lety +27

      @@SaithMasu12 To be fair, on the grand scale of things 70000 years isn't quite a long time. Voyager 1 was launched 43 years ago, and without a doubt there will be much faster space probes launched within the near future (assuming NASA doesn't keep getting bombarded with budget cuts).

    • @Omar-em7rl
      @Omar-em7rl Před 4 lety +34

      @@supersoviettaco no need to worry completely on NASA, the ball has started rolling recently, meaning private companies are jumping onboard, it's like the automotive industry compared to space, the year is around 1901 right now, give it some time, they said before the wright brothers flew that it just wasn't possible for man to take flight EVER. it's only been 120 years since, i think that's pretty good progress considering we did nothing but kill each other for the last few thousand years.

    • @Goosnav
      @Goosnav Před 4 lety +10

      Pulse propulsion could get us there in as little as 8 decades. Besides, there’s no real reason to go to another start system now; our main goal should be to build an O’Neil Cylinder.

  • @wildanS
    @wildanS Před 4 lety +315

    And this is why stars never, EVER collide when galaxies merge.

    • @konsultarvode6527
      @konsultarvode6527 Před 3 lety +78

      They probably could but it is very unlikely. Probably happened aswell. We have actally registered neutron stars colliding.

    • @Exponentveil
      @Exponentveil Před 3 lety +32

      when the galaxy merges and you see a star coming very close: current objective survive

    • @jabloko992
      @jabloko992 Před 3 lety +48

      I mean, with the sheer number of stars in both galaxies A FEW are bound to collide just because of the immense numbers involved (we're talking a handful out of a billion here), not counting the cores or very-near-cores of both galaxies because there will be some terrifying cataclysmic clusterfuck there and anything could happen in that area afaik.

    • @kaustuvrijal6426
      @kaustuvrijal6426 Před 3 lety +4

      That is correct. At most they might start revolving each other forming a system

    • @joannot6706
      @joannot6706 Před 3 lety +28

      @@jabloko992 I like the word "clusterfuck" it's the perfect balance between vulgarity scientific wording.

  • @larrygraham3377
    @larrygraham3377 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you so much for this fantastic video. This video really does give you a very clear vision on how far stars are from us. Again, Thanks 🤔🤔🤔

  • @sherlok561
    @sherlok561 Před rokem +1

    Thanks man.
    Appreciate your effort.

  • @danthemansmail
    @danthemansmail Před 5 lety +47

    I love simple but mind blowing stuff like this. I already knew it, but every time I see someone try to explain the vastness of the universe I always am awed by the immensity.

    • @jamesobrian1643
      @jamesobrian1643 Před 5 lety +1

      When put to that scale, yeah. Certainly makes you feel small. And thats just the nearest star. Imagine the scales for galaxy, and the galaxys' beyond. Wish I was born 200 years from now :/

    • @danthemansmail
      @danthemansmail Před 5 lety +1

      @@jamesobrian1643 Be glad you weren't, we will be reaching peak die-off just about then I figure.

    • @jamesobrian1643
      @jamesobrian1643 Před 5 lety

      @@danthemansmail Knowing mankind, you may be right. I like to think we will have put aside our differences by then. reached a balance with the planet in terms of resources. I suppose it's the rules of progression that excite me the most . 500 years ago, we were crossing the Atlantic in 2 months. 100 years ago, it was a week. 20 years ago, you could in 2 hours (via the Concorde) . Now there's someone in the International Space Station whipping around the planet every hour. While I'm certain we won't be reaching another star system, but travelling to Mars and back in a few days seems plausible.

    • @pedrovaldez8503
      @pedrovaldez8503 Před 4 lety

      Are you also laughing at how silly it is that he thinks he knows all of these measurements and distances of made up constructs in our sky=“universe”

  • @skeeter197140
    @skeeter197140 Před rokem +43

    This is by far the greatest video to show the scale of space. The thought of radish seeds and peas 125 miles from each other and all that nothing when blown up to scale is kind of frightening, really. I'm a little late saying it, but thanks, Cody.

    • @JesusIsaFlatEarther
      @JesusIsaFlatEarther Před rokem +1

      I love the CGI universe, just wish it was real.

    • @skeeter197140
      @skeeter197140 Před rokem +1

      @@JesusIsaFlatEarther Ok. I'll bite. Why is it not real? And I think I know what you are going to say already.

    • @JesusIsaFlatEarther
      @JesusIsaFlatEarther Před rokem

      @@skeeter197140 why is CGI not real? Ok, I'll bite, what was I going to say? But I'm thinking I'd say space travel by T-NASA is by the same people who produce SATAN Claus, just with a bigger budget.

    • @skeeter197140
      @skeeter197140 Před rokem +3

      @@JesusIsaFlatEarther I just don't see what CGI has to do with Cody's video, or my comment. But you seem slightly unhinged, and it's making me a tad uncomfortable, so I'm going to just politely excuse myself.

    • @JesusIsaFlatEarther
      @JesusIsaFlatEarther Před rokem +1

      @@skeeter197140 They use CGI because the vacuum of space is scientifically impossible. So everything they show about space is either CGI or from low Earth orbit.

  • @leoFrom407
    @leoFrom407 Před rokem +3

    Great video. And wow that's just insane!! The vastness of space is just unfathomable 🤯

  • @oov55
    @oov55 Před rokem

    nice work, thank you !

  • @PeregrineBF
    @PeregrineBF Před 7 lety +57

    “Space is big. Really big. You just won’t believe how vastly hugely mindbogglingly
    big it is. I mean, you may think it’s a long way down the road to the
    chemist, but that’s peanuts to space.” Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker’s Guide
    to the Galaxy.

    • @BobSmith-ru2pm
      @BobSmith-ru2pm Před 7 lety +1

      yeh and we think we understand it ALL ???

    • @lordchickenhawk
      @lordchickenhawk Před 7 lety +4

      + Bob Smith. Kinda silly bunch, us humans. We measure something like interstella distances, make a scale model, then feel satisfied that we actually have the concept licked... ...but it gets worse... ...we realise maths/numbers cannot ever come to an end, invent a mere name like "infinity" and imagine that we actually understand THAT???? WTF??!
      Finally, via said maths, we discover things like "Infinitly dense black holes", feel comfortable that none of that stuff really matters, and carry on killing each other over oil, money, power and other real important stuff.
      At least quantum mechanics has the decency to be utterly baffeling...

    • @mebezaccraft
      @mebezaccraft Před 7 lety

      waIT WAS THAT CHEMIST PART IN THE ACTUAL QUOTE BECAUSE CODY STOPPED AT A CHEMIST PLACE ON THE DRIVE THERE

    • @lordchickenhawk
      @lordchickenhawk Před 7 lety

      +Niko Yes, it is in the actual quote, well caught mate.

  • @MRayner59
    @MRayner59 Před 5 lety +299

    This mind-blowing demonstration should be required viewing in every elementary school.

    • @robmccarthy9420
      @robmccarthy9420 Před 5 lety +1

      Thank you Cody. yes Martin I agree . Just a thought? stand at Alpha Centuri 210.93 Km away from earth with 1, 10, 100 arc welders all striking
      arcs. Light a 50m roll of magnesium to boot. Go stand at the earth dot. Shrink yourself to be able the stand on the dot[ earth] we'd be pretty small silly fuckers. Presuming you have a line of sight. Could you honestly see the light? This guy unwittingly, has just proved the FIRMAMENT and ignoring the big thing perspective. By the way 100 arc welders and the man ribbon would be like a very lengthy supernova [ School Maths lesson could scale how long in earth time it would last ] Cody would need Hubble eye sight too see a PEA 20 meters away let alone 1 light year away . The expression on death 'go to the light' really, they're saying. ' What silly fuckers the sheeple are. No one can see that far. We're being f#$*ed with in Astronomy Class . Thanks Cody I see you from 1000 light years away

    • @Acein3055
      @Acein3055 Před 5 lety +5

      All those Sci-Fi shows make it seem closer for going to other star systems.

    • @sumguy835
      @sumguy835 Před 5 lety +3

      Martin Rayner
      In elementary school they’d just stick the peas up their nose...

    • @RobertSmith-sq1wg
      @RobertSmith-sq1wg Před 5 lety

      SO SHOULD LEARNING HOW TO EAT A MEAT PIE WITHOUT GETTING IT ON YOUR SHIRT

    • @dannygjk
      @dannygjk Před 5 lety

      Pointless if all the religious students think the Earth is flat and that humans never went to the Moon.

  • @odedka76
    @odedka76 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for this. Absolutely blows ones mind when understanding how big space is

  • @TheAuldphart
    @TheAuldphart Před 7 měsíci

    Phenomenal.. .a different perspective on the distances ofthe Cosmos.Thank you.

  • @baab4229
    @baab4229 Před 5 lety +312

    "We're on a football field"
    Me: hm so I'm assuming the next star is on the other side
    "For the next star we have to drive out of town"
    Me: uh

    • @anaykekre3343
      @anaykekre3343 Před 5 lety +17

      The Earth Is a Cylinder!! Did he say out of town, he meant out of state 😂😂

    • @breadcat6454
      @breadcat6454 Před 5 lety +4

      I thought he was only going to drive a few miles away, lmao!

    • @atobee2595
      @atobee2595 Před 5 lety +1

      Ya, was also shocked!

    • @glenturney4750
      @glenturney4750 Před 5 lety +2

      That's because he drove into space with his trusty tape measure and measured the distance from our sun to the next solar system. Too bad he didn't fly American Airlines, he could've racked up some serious air, er...SPACE miles on his VISA card? 😕

    • @glenturney4750
      @glenturney4750 Před 5 lety +5

      @spikedpsycho: Not for God though. He Can do anything and be everywhere at the same time. 😁
      "one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all."
      (Ephesians 4:6)
      😁

  • @easternyellowjacket276
    @easternyellowjacket276 Před rokem +291

    I always wondered how it was possible for two galaxies to pass through each other. Now I know: lots of space.

    • @bekanav
      @bekanav Před rokem +8

      In average there is only few atoms worth of matter in cubic meter of space. We can't make that good vacuum. And all the time everything gets further away from each other, density gets smaller

    • @SteveMHN
      @SteveMHN Před rokem +28

      That used to blow my mind to think that two galaxies could collide but none of the stars are likely to collide, just interact.

    • @michaelweston409
      @michaelweston409 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@SteveMHNgalaxies spheres of influence may collide with each other but the stars & planets within them are so tiny astronomically speaking that the chance of 2 stars colliding is said to be 1 in a trillion.

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Před 7 měsíci

      Always more space in space!

    • @michaelolin2219
      @michaelolin2219 Před 7 měsíci

      Maybe we’re doing it right now.

  • @keiross
    @keiross Před 7 měsíci

    Back again for my annual viewing. Such a great vid ❤

  • @nofurtherwest3474
    @nofurtherwest3474 Před rokem +1

    I like that this was a no frills production. But got the point across very well.

  • @ParanormalEncyclopedia
    @ParanormalEncyclopedia Před 6 lety +50

    Aside from illustrating the distance to that star, which is also cool, this illustrates how cool an accomplishment the voyager probe is. Science for the win.

    • @garethhanby
      @garethhanby Před 6 lety +1

      Paranormal Encyclopedia: The most amazing thing about voyager is the fact that we can still (a bit) communicate with it and all the information it has passed to us on its voyage. The fact that it will be the first human made object to reach interstellar space is no more of a nice curiosity. I'm sure we will create probes that will overtake it, in dreams perhaps even manned missions. But yes, it is cool, and I'm sure will always be remembered.

  • @alessandrobaca8124
    @alessandrobaca8124 Před 7 lety +187

    Far is now more meaningfull to me.

    • @loganrogers9157
      @loganrogers9157 Před 7 lety

      Infinite Plane Society The flat earth society has members all around the world

    • @theo1395
      @theo1395 Před 7 lety

      @Infinite Plane Society. Flat on a map plane.

    • @XZenon
      @XZenon Před 7 lety +2

      Spelling still isn't.

    • @b1aflatoxin
      @b1aflatoxin Před 7 lety +4

      @Fiery - Alessandro is most likely an ESL learner. Would we rather him type in "proper" Italian?
      Meanwhile, the Flattardian luddites are in here, spamming their flat antiscience.
      Peace!

  • @glenngangan5876
    @glenngangan5876 Před 8 měsíci

    Wow. I did enjoy. I wanted to listen more of this kind of stuff. Thank you.