Plot Twist! Even James Webb Has Confirmed Our Physics is Broken

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024
  • The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has calculated the expansion rate of the universe. The results have confirmed the biggest crisis in cosmology, the Hubble Tension. This means that the universe is expanding at a rate faster than what our best cosmological models predict, and no one knows why. The resolution of the Hubble Tension is important as it highlights a significant flaw in our understanding of the cosmos.
    RESOURCES and REFERENCES:
    📄 RESEARCH PAPERS:
    1. Crowded No More: The Accuracy of the Hubble Constant Tested with High-resolution Observations of Cepheids by JWST, Riess et al. (The Astrophysical Journal Letters) - bit.ly/3W08Mle
    2. JWST Observations Reject Unrecognized Crowding of Cepheid Photometry as an Explanation for the Hubble Tension at 8σ Confidence, Riess et al. (The Astrophysical Journal) - bit.ly/444SY2P
    REFERENCES:
    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 The Great Debate: bit.ly/3UjvHH4
    ✨ Cepheid Variables: bit.ly/4aYINPn
    🚀 NASA Press Release: bit.ly/43BR7Cj
    🎼 Music: CZcams Audio Library, Envato Elements and MotionElements
    🎥 Footage: Envato Elements, StoryBlocks, NASA, ESA, and Pond5
    💻 Created and Produced by: Rishabh Nakra
    🔍 Researched by: Shreejaya Karantha
    ✍🏻 Written by: Shreejaya Karantha and Rishabh Nakra
    🎙️ Narrated by: Jeffrey Smith
    🌌 Animated by: Sankalp Dash
    🌐 3D Models of Big Bang: Orkun Zengin

Komentáře • 760

  • @mileslong9675
    @mileslong9675 Před 4 měsíci +453

    On behalf of Earth, I have to ask all those galaxies moving away from us: “Is it something we said?”

    • @iodtiger2
      @iodtiger2 Před 4 měsíci +34

      It's because we stink😮

    • @jolo3118
      @jolo3118 Před 4 měsíci

      I think it's because we are a carbon based being that destroys everything we touch. I don't want to have anything to do with the human race half the time.

    • @Crocotcrocfr
      @Crocotcrocfr Před 4 měsíci +22

      Bleep vlorp, poopoo stik, dsa n Utica. Fchff. Gucci to tu if👽

    • @jimcoppa6946
      @jimcoppa6946 Před 4 měsíci +16

      Absolutely hilarious

    • @alexandrebaelyrion9621
      @alexandrebaelyrion9621 Před 4 měsíci +12

      🤣🤣🤣

  • @Elaphe472
    @Elaphe472 Před 4 měsíci +102

    Improving knowledge is getting better, not "worse". It is not a "big problem". In the future things that are taken for granted today might be proven to be mistakes tomorrow; that is science.

    • @rikulappi9664
      @rikulappi9664 Před 4 měsíci +10

      "Crisis"? WtF! How about a facinating mystery or energizing contradiction? Or just science at it's best?

    • @wadeodonoghue1887
      @wadeodonoghue1887 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Most people's biggest problem: " How will I pay Rent"
      Scientist biggest problem: "How fast is everything moving away from us, Exactly"
      Such wildly different lives we live.

    • @ESL-O.G.
      @ESL-O.G. Před 4 měsíci

      It's just an expression😂

    • @gregoryleonwatson8631
      @gregoryleonwatson8631 Před 4 měsíci

      Science clearly has a good definition of itself 🤗
      Pseudo Science defines everything ✨Not Understood Yet ✨
      🤯

    • @Elaphe472
      @Elaphe472 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@ESL-O.G. "It's just an expression" is also just an expression.

  • @simoncoweII
    @simoncoweII Před 4 měsíci +49

    Moments like these are the most exciting moments in science.

    • @NOT_NativeEN_Speaker
      @NOT_NativeEN_Speaker Před 4 měsíci

      Hi there Simon, seems to me JWST GOT TALENT ;)

    • @RekySai
      @RekySai Před 4 měsíci

      I didn't bother watching this video because it's already general knowledge that the expansion of the universe is under one. It's around .86 which means the universe will slow down at some point. But I bet this video is saying otherwise

    • @simoncoweII
      @simoncoweII Před 4 měsíci

      @@RekySai Say no more! Rest assured, it is immediately obvious to anyone who meets you-online or offline-that you have not reached such a caliber of intelligence by partaking in the hobby of watching educational videos. Don’t you worry about that. Thank you for enlightening my humble comment thread with this breakthrough in astrophysics.

  • @TheEducat0r
    @TheEducat0r Před 4 měsíci +16

    Mind officially blown! Webb's findings on the universe's expansion are mind-boggling.

    • @MegaBob222222
      @MegaBob222222 Před 4 měsíci

      All based pm Theory and it is in reality "so called science"

  • @karelvandervelden8819
    @karelvandervelden8819 Před 4 měsíci +17

    There is no crisis in cosmology. We are advancing our insight. Its progress.
    The laws we handle in science are the best we have.......untill we learn otherwise.
    That is why agnosticism is the best attitude. (also socially)

    • @PeterKoperdan
      @PeterKoperdan Před 4 měsíci

      *For the people not understanding the problem/crisis framing of the new cosmological evidence that's coming up:* Cosmology is like a "house" of complex interconnected theories that not only explain observation, but also predict phenomena. This prediction aspect is an essential element of science. Theories must predict phenomena accurately if they are to be valid. When actual observations conflict with theoretical prediction (the prediction is wrong), then the theory has a problem. If significant observational challenges to theories keep accumulating, the problem keeps growing and can eventually be labeled "crisis". A crisis would mean that essential foundational theories are challenged to the extent that their validity would be suspect. Once the foundations of your house are shaky, the whole house could come tumbling down. This is basically called a "paradigm shift" (Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions).
      From the perspective of a lay person interested in science as a hobby or even a scientist that is not in physics or astronomy, this is not a crisis. It's just inevitable evolution of scientific understanding. It's actually exciting. However, for the people from the scientific fields whose careers are built around science which becomes obsolete, this is indeed a potential crisis. Shaking up the foundations of cosmology and related science could turn into a period of chaos for the people involved. For some scientists a paradigm shift would be a blessing, but for many it would be a curse for a number of reasons.
      A paradigm shift in science can negatively impact scientists by rendering their expertise obsolete, diminishing the relevance of their research, and complicating efforts to secure funding if their work aligns with now-questioned theories. Additionally, their professional reputation can suffer if they are closely associated with discredited theories, potentially stalling their career advancement. The psychological toll is also significant, as adapting to new paradigms can be challenging for those who have invested heavily in the old ways of thinking, causing emotional and psychological distress.
      These factors contribute to the entrenchment of existing scientific paradigms because they create a significant inertia against change. Scientists, whose careers, reputations, and emotional investments are tied to established theories, may resist new ideas that threaten their professional standing and the validity of their past work. This resistance is compounded by institutional mechanisms, such as funding priorities and publication biases, which favor established paradigms. Consequently, the scientific community can be slow to accept paradigm shifts, despite the foundational principle of science to continually test and revise its theories based on new evidence. This entrenchment is a natural human response to the risks associated with fundamental changes, reflecting a tension between the ideal of objective scientific inquiry and the practical realities of career-driven scientific research.

    • @trevorperry8470
      @trevorperry8470 Před měsícem

      Agnosticism debunked in one sentence:
      If theists are wrong they lose nothing, if atheists/agnostics are wrong they lose everything.
      If by default you lean intelligent design based on the evidence, then there must be a designer and there’s no reason to believe that the designer hasn’t made Himself known to His creation.

  • @MitchRuth
    @MitchRuth Před 4 měsíci +109

    You know what is interesting? All the debates and competing views were completed without anyone being burned at the stake or condemned as a heretic.

    • @lanceknowlton1871
      @lanceknowlton1871 Před 4 měsíci +7

      It was more civil than today's debates.

    • @wadeodonoghue1887
      @wadeodonoghue1887 Před 4 měsíci +11

      From what I hear it isn't the easiest to convey new ideas in the upper echelons of your scientific discipline, Evolution has had some big holes that have not been commonly recognized until recently.
      Money is also a factor, so fewer people are interested in the expansion of the Universe than the expansion of their bank account, so when news about the expansion happens fewer people have an interest in Reality Objectively as apposed to Reality Subjectively. So we have less comprehension as a sum of all the comprehension of the minds on our planet.
      I agree we are more civil today, although we still have skins to shed it seems.

    • @axeman2638
      @axeman2638 Před 4 měsíci +10

      want to bet?
      anyone that dares questions the false unproven assumptions of cosmology gets excommunicated.

    • @jimshepherd3841
      @jimshepherd3841 Před 4 měsíci

      I Don’t Think it’s off the Table 😂

    • @Mrch33ky
      @Mrch33ky Před 4 měsíci +2

      You obviously haven't been keeping up with the literature.

  • @jerrypolverino6025
    @jerrypolverino6025 Před 4 měsíci +32

    Except for our current assumptions this is hardly a “crisis” or a “problem”. It’s science and it’s a wonderful and exciting question. This is how science works, by following the facts wherever they may lead.

    • @Lethgar_Smith
      @Lethgar_Smith Před 4 měsíci +3

      Yes but, despite the rigors of the scientific method that scientist prescribe to, they are highly defensive and reluctant to face any question of the established accepted theory. Whenever new evidence emerges that upsets the established cosmological view, there is always naysayers and those that will refute the new thinking to the end of their days. Which is a very unscientific.

    • @jerrypolverino6025
      @jerrypolverino6025 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@Lethgar_Smith No. That’s not at all how science works. I don’t know where you got such a crazy idea.

    • @thomas-gw3xf
      @thomas-gw3xf Před 4 měsíci +1

      universe approaching a division ie akin to a cell division thus another "cell" formation in the body containing the process we are a universe in a pimple on a gigantic Giant's ass !!!!

    • @5337kb
      @5337kb Před 4 měsíci

      Yes, but it it changes the narrative of what we have claimed to know for centuries, it means we literally have to.l audit the info we have taught for years. Science is no longer about "discovery" or a search for knowledge, it's now about finding ways to do more with less money, for example, "high powered new telescope" stares at stars, not looking at the stuff closest to us (Trappist system) Andromeda, zooming in on Mars, Jupiter, Uranus or Pluto, instead it's focusing more on 14 billion years ago instead of our own/closest neighbors, things we could ACTUALLY reach in the near future and the funniest thing is, jwst is actually TOO sensitive to actually look at out neighbors the light reflecting off them would literally burn a hole/cauterize the lenses and equipment, don't get me wrong jwst is awesome but shouldn't we get to know our neighbors first before looking at a nother country? (Metaphorically speaking)

    • @CaptainBlaine
      @CaptainBlaine Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@jerrypolverino6025don’t bury your head in the sand. Just look at the medical research community as a clear example. This idea of science as defined by popularizers, ignores the politics and confirmation bias inherent to any human endeavor.

  • @0331machinegunman
    @0331machinegunman Před 3 měsíci +3

    The one thing I've always really admired about the entire field of astronomy is that they're not afraid of new discoveries and are more then willing to acknowledge that changes are needed; unlike archeologists and historians who are willing to go as far as to hide or destroy new discoveries that might affect the status quo.

  • @1Kent
    @1Kent Před 4 měsíci +73

    I'm expanding way faster than the universe!

  • @rufusmcgee4383
    @rufusmcgee4383 Před 4 měsíci +19

    Seems like the more we learn, the less we know.

    • @gjpyoung
      @gjpyoung Před 4 měsíci +2

      Exactly!

    • @thomaswayneward
      @thomaswayneward Před 4 měsíci +4

      It will always be that way.

    • @BobbyJardine-vs8yc
      @BobbyJardine-vs8yc Před 3 měsíci +5

      Also,the more we know,the more we know we don't know

    • @walterbushell6624
      @walterbushell6624 Před 3 měsíci +1

      We used to know the Universe was small with the flat Earth at the center between the waters above and the waters below and less than 7000 years old. That was a view tidy and jejune.

    • @thomaswayneward
      @thomaswayneward Před 3 měsíci

      @@walterbushell6624 The flat earth myth is just a myth. From the very earliest times mariners knew the earth was round; they could't see very far and thus knew the earth had a curvature.
      I used to wonder why people like you, resort to attacking Christianity. Eventually I learned the answer by reading the Christian Bible. It tells us that God draws us to him, and we can't actually know God unless he draws us to him, we can't find him. So when people like you go out of their way to poke fun at God, I now know that God is drawing them and working on them, and people don't like that, they get mad and rebel.

  • @irene_renaissance
    @irene_renaissance Před 4 měsíci +9

    Thought provoking!! If there's a missing link( which seems plausible after the discrepancies found between two measurements) I hope it will lead the field of Physics and Astronomy to a greater understanding of this existence. A well analysed episode it is!! 💯🙏🌌

    • @marko-1987
      @marko-1987 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Bang on.

    • @mikehannan8206
      @mikehannan8206 Před 4 měsíci

      Irene, alas, that is highly unlikely. Cosmology is well and truly stuck in a rut, and all tenured professors steadfastly refuse to re-examine the foundational assumptions.😢

    • @mikehannan8206
      @mikehannan8206 Před 4 měsíci

      Irene, alas, that is highly unlikely. Cosmology is well and truly stuck in a rut, and all tenured professors steadfastly refuse to re-examine the foundational assumptions.😢

    • @irene_renaissance
      @irene_renaissance Před 4 měsíci

      @mikehannan8206 maybe not in our lifetime but can't eliminate the possibility entirely. We must not be ignorant of the fact, that time plays a pivotal role in shaping up such unlikely thoughts into reality.

  • @lenren2004
    @lenren2004 Před 4 měsíci +77

    We don't know didly!

    • @absurd..
      @absurd.. Před 4 měsíci +4

      We know more than yesterday

    • @craig7350
      @craig7350 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Bo?

    • @maccloud8526
      @maccloud8526 Před 4 měsíci +4

      And didly is expanding at a faster rate than expected.

    • @JoeDeglman
      @JoeDeglman Před 4 měsíci +5

      The main problem is that redshift is mostly an intrinsic function based on atomic density or magnetic flux density, not doppler.
      The expanding model is based on the sci-fi model of Einstein.

    • @mikehannan8206
      @mikehannan8206 Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@JoeDeglman Yes Joe is correct! For those looking to advance their knowledge beyond the standard (blinkered) view of cosmology, the best sources are Ray Fleming, Eric Learner, and Pierre-Marrie Robitaille. Good luck truth seakers!

  • @johng4093
    @johng4093 Před 4 měsíci +6

    I know I'll be laying awake all night worrying about this crisis!!

  • @vrjb100
    @vrjb100 Před 4 měsíci +7

    What if physical constants are not constant over long time?

  • @AnAstroSelenoPhile
    @AnAstroSelenoPhile Před 4 měsíci +5

    The thing I really like about SOU is that their contentjust keeps getting better and better. I have been watching your videos for the past three years now, and this was the best one so far. The animations, script, narration by Jeffrey, and presentation was top notch! Please keep it up. Looking forward to more :)

    • @AndreaCrisp
      @AndreaCrisp Před 2 měsíci

      I agree! And the research, all of ir, so good!! 👏 👏 👏

  • @amazoniaquedavignon8180
    @amazoniaquedavignon8180 Před 4 měsíci +45

    There is no crisis. And it's not a problem. It's impossible to measure the size of the universe because it keeps expanding everytime human consciousness focus on it!! This is just the way it is!!

    • @a.f.stevens
      @a.f.stevens Před 4 měsíci +5

      I'd like to clarify, are you under the impression that the universe is only expanding when we observe it? If so, what do you mean by "observe"?

    • @summerhypersniper
      @summerhypersniper Před 4 měsíci +1

      I believe they're referring to when we observe atoms via our eyes on a microscope they are more likelier act out of the ordinary. Same goes with telescopes with this theory.

    • @14489
      @14489 Před 4 měsíci +1

      yes and before humans it was expanding because dinosaurs used to observe it.... and before that... alien dinosaurs used to observed it, till we get as far back to the big bang.

    • @rkadowns
      @rkadowns Před 4 měsíci +5

      Write your paper. Let the world know you figured it out!

    • @michaelbokrosh7374
      @michaelbokrosh7374 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Yes, an expanded form of the heisenberg principal!

  • @totalannihilationtheory1187
    @totalannihilationtheory1187 Před 3 měsíci +1

    According to The Urantia Book, space respiration is the pulsating nature of the universe, which takes place in billion-year cycles. Each phase of space respiration lasts a little over one billion earth years, with one phase being a billion years of expansion and the other a billion years of contraction. The book says that we are currently halfway through a phase of expansion. So no big problem

  • @ashleyobrien4937
    @ashleyobrien4937 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I was about on my sixth beer, and when I briefly looked at that thumbnail image of JWST I thought it was Bart Simpson riding on a surfboard lol !

    • @raphmaster23
      @raphmaster23 Před 4 měsíci

      I'm not drunk but now I can't unsee it lol

    • @bpie8390
      @bpie8390 Před měsícem +1

      You mean 6 joints

  • @waalwink
    @waalwink Před 4 měsíci +8

    Since we now know that the speed of light is not a constant, maybe someone should consider the impact of that.

    • @karamba1920
      @karamba1920 Před 4 měsíci +3

      you mean not a limit

    • @sbcap3809
      @sbcap3809 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I think that what was said, is what was meant to be said.

    • @SCM0NDT
      @SCM0NDT Před 4 měsíci +1

      Speed of light is the same (in a vacuum)....but time depends of density/gravity...
      What is speed if time is changing?

  • @clarkthomas354
    @clarkthomas354 Před 4 měsíci +9

    We are looking back in time. So it seems if things are moving much faster long ago would that mean that much closer objects would be a better indication of expansion? Gaging the expansion further back in time seems counter intuitive. ❓❓🤔

    • @summerbrooks9922
      @summerbrooks9922 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Absolutely you got a very basic fact in the logic line, there. If you look back in the past where the universe was in a tumble, is it worth measuring for now? Congratulations for being reasonable. I appreciate you very much.

    • @evaryLloydJasonMcCuistionaliov
      @evaryLloydJasonMcCuistionaliov Před 4 měsíci +2

      Ding ding! Logic champ! Gratitude. Reward insight: looking outside the being is always a measure of the past, the future can only be seen within

    • @Cowface
      @Cowface Před 4 měsíci

      Looking at close objects will only give you the current expansion rate, but looking at both near and far will help you see the change over time.

    • @jasonfusaro2170DragonFly
      @jasonfusaro2170DragonFly Před 4 měsíci +2

      Perhaps the assumption is incorrect. Light speed is affected by the medium through which it travels.
      Perhaps the medium of space varies with distance?
      Remember the images we're shown are not actual but created by software which interprets electromagnetic waves or frequency and converted to visual representations.
      And electromagnetic waves do interact, canceling and enhancing and radiate spherically in all directions.
      Viewing the universe as spherical it's impossible to find it center from where we currently reside.
      We can only be on the outer edge of the supposed bang, the center or somewhere in between.
      We can rule out the outer edge. If we were the center then there would be no way to determine which direction of the outer sphere was the exact center in the past.
      Lastly if we're in between there is no way to determine where the center of the sphere originated.
      That diagram of the expansion is a nonsensical representation of an explosion, it would be spherical not funnel shaped.
      Then it's closed, open, positively curved or negatively curved.
      It might even be static.

    • @MrMwirth47
      @MrMwirth47 Před 4 měsíci

      How does something appear in and move through nothing?

  • @Shivaho
    @Shivaho Před 4 měsíci +14

    Maybe their reliance on using Human Time Scales is the Big Flaw in Their Theories...
    The Rest of the Universe doesn't abide by 24 hours in a Day & 365 days in a Year.

    • @7-i22daksheshrao8
      @7-i22daksheshrao8 Před 4 měsíci

      This guy's illiterate in the beet possible way. Go learn from godly scriptures, 😂😂

    • @itsrobby3487
      @itsrobby3487 Před 4 měsíci

      Are you implying that time isn't constant and can speed up or slow down due to many variables?

    • @MsPabloRms
      @MsPabloRms Před 4 měsíci

      These are just reference numbers it doesn't matter what value you use as long as you apply it to everything

    • @russellalesi5715
      @russellalesi5715 Před 4 měsíci

      No...he just had a thought that popped into his head...thought it was clever and posted it...he's not thinking past that first thought...​@itsrobby3487

  • @edwardenglishonline
    @edwardenglishonline Před 4 měsíci +3

    So clearly explained it is almost comprehensible for laymen like me. Thank you so much!!

  • @billburgess9100
    @billburgess9100 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Our moon is the same distance from us as always. So is our sister planets. So local expansion, if any, is all that concerns me.

    • @800katie4U
      @800katie4U Před 4 měsíci

      I agree. Unless there is something headed towards us this kind of exploration likens itself to shooting at a moving humvee to see what happens 😂. 🤔 uh oh running will not help 😊

  • @busterrooster1391
    @busterrooster1391 Před 4 měsíci +112

    It’s almost like we don’t know everything and act like we do.

    • @MsPabloRms
      @MsPabloRms Před 4 měsíci +10

      I think you have mistaken this by some religious video. This is a science page, scimce is a tool we use to learn our reality. We'll never know everything, and the video itself mentions many disputing theories which is literally saying "we dont know that yet"

    • @johnmichalski5981
      @johnmichalski5981 Před 4 měsíci +9

      ​@MsPabloRms Science can only scratch the surface of reality, which is beyond our comprehension. We need to accept our limitations, and the limitations of our tools.

    • @MrGrumpyGills
      @MrGrumpyGills Před 4 měsíci +7

      @@johnmichalski5981 Sure, no problem. Science doesn't claim to explain everything in the first place. That doesn't mean that religion is an answer - for anything, really.

    • @MrGrumpyGills
      @MrGrumpyGills Před 4 měsíci +7

      Who's we? I certainly don't act like I know everything, nor do I know anyone who does.

    • @anthonycarbone3826
      @anthonycarbone3826 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@MsPabloRms I have heard very few scientists say WE DON'T KNOW IN ANY FIELD. You are so naive to believe that SCIENCE TODAY is not one of the biggest scams in the Universe. Not that real science is not being done but it is so hidden in the pure crap it is hard to find.

  • @MauricioA666
    @MauricioA666 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I learned a lot with this video. Thanks a lot. Greetings from Colombia.

  • @sammavitae114
    @sammavitae114 Před 4 měsíci +9

    My waist keeps expanding.

  • @dominicchong7338
    @dominicchong7338 Před 4 měsíci +18

    It feels like Schrodinger's cat...
    Like the observer plays a role in what is being seen.

    • @Lethgar_Smith
      @Lethgar_Smith Před 4 měsíci +1

      There is a new theory that the universe is a holographic projection, the source of which is our conscious awareness.

  • @BradyHansen81
    @BradyHansen81 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Exciting time for astronomers 🙏

  • @jp27whodey31
    @jp27whodey31 Před 2 měsíci

    The reason it SEEMS to be expanding faster and faster is in fact because the light itself slows down. Our measurement of lights speed is constant but the actual speed is absolutely not constant. In fact it's not possible to be infinitely constant. I would like to study this theory further but i lack the resources.

  • @Lukeos
    @Lukeos Před měsícem

    I have this idea, and I’m sure many others have it also. It’s seems that the more knowledge we gain, collective knowledge of all things conscious, is expanding our universe. The more we learn about the universe seems to correlate with our understanding of how large the universe is. Can the universe be an expanding collective consciousness? 🤔 I remember reading something long ago, though I forgot who wrote it, “The universe is a thought.”

  • @peterclarke3020
    @peterclarke3020 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Somewhat weird to call this discrepancy ‘tension’, since as far as I am aware that’s not a term used in other fields.
    One solution, is that BOTH answers are correct, in which case some kind of phase-change would have occurred between the time of the Cosmic Background Radiation was produced, and later galactic measurements.

  • @SHADOW.GGG-
    @SHADOW.GGG- Před 4 měsíci +2

    its not just the universe its everything

  • @shaddouida3447
    @shaddouida3447 Před 3 měsíci +1

    James Webb has the ability to look very far into space, and therefore, very far into the past. Indeed, although light travels at the dizzying speed of 300,000 kilometers per second, the Universe is so vast that some images that reach us today are billions of years old!

  • @edufau815
    @edufau815 Před 4 měsíci

    As always, a lesson in how to make it easy to understand concepts that are not so easy... 👏👏👏

  • @soneraydn2925
    @soneraydn2925 Před 4 měsíci +7

    What if I told you... that the Doppler effect is not the only mechanism that causes the cosmological redshift?

    • @summerbrooks9922
      @summerbrooks9922 Před 4 měsíci +4

      You would be correct in stating that. Alton Arp, astrophysicist, stated in his study on red shift that the spectrographic evidence revealed an intrinsic variation.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 Před 4 měsíci

      @@summerbrooks9922 It's Halton Arp and his theories have been discarded with the advent of better and more precise observation instruments. If his theory was right the observations from modern instruments would have produced results consistent with his theory. On recent study with find inconsistences with quasar redshifts - but nothing to the point that supported his theory.

  • @agerven
    @agerven Před 4 měsíci

    The Hubble constant clearly can be interpreted as a measure for the acceleration of galaxies relative to each other. And yes, that can be interpreted as the expansion rate of the universe if you like. In the Acceleration view it should be possible, by reverse calculation, to obtain either the Force associated with the big bang or the mass of the initial universe.
    Even at a large scale, Newtonian mechanics often apply.

  • @izkh4lif4
    @izkh4lif4 Před 4 měsíci +1

    If you analyze the CMB you can see a great void which would infer the central point of the expansion, the location of the origin, now why would we assume that the expansion is uniform? Maybe pockets of matter based on their cluster density would not have the same rate of expansion so the expansion itself is not collective, but is relative to the matter density of the galactictic clusters.

  • @RatCarnage
    @RatCarnage Před 4 měsíci +2

    Great and cool video! I would really like to know in which directions these measurements against supernovae and galaxies are made? Even if the coordinate system in the universe is surely defined in some way, so if the measurements are made in roughly the same direction, will the values ​​be correct? Think of the center of the Milky Way as 0 reference (take into account the movement of our solar system in relation to the galaxy) Then from 0 measure in X, Y and Z.
    180 degrees X,Y and Z will thus be the opposite direction. So what are the results in different measurements? According to the Big Bang theory, the space between galaxies expands. Like multi-layered balloons, the outermost layers even faster than the ones inside. Thus everything moves apart, even galaxies moving in the same direction as us thus appear to move away from us regardless of whether their positions are inside or outside us. Even greater differences if we study galaxies on the other side(?!). I know this is considered paradoxically contradictory because it would imply that the universe (big bang) had a center. Scientists return several times to say that the universe does not have a center, a starting point does not exist - but that hypothesis still feels wrong to me because they are still allegedly able to "reverse the expansion" and calculate when the Big Bang occurred. Does anyone know of these measurement points that have been made and can give me sources?

  • @umami0247
    @umami0247 Před 4 měsíci +5

    It’s obvious we don’t have a clue what is actually happening in space. Theories run rampant in physics and most are not provable or even understood by other physicists and that’s a serious issue. To say that the universe is expanding at a rate faster than the speed of light then say that isn’t what is happening is confusing period. Just saying.

  • @sahebplays3589
    @sahebplays3589 Před 4 měsíci +5

    the potential lack of homogeneity in the universe could demonstrate why the hubble constant is not constant: the dark matter between us and the observed point is the interference of something yet not understood, or the dark energy is fluctuating (or the way we understand that quantum fluctuations occur spontaneously and mass is transformed to energy to create large sudden particles but imagined on a larger scale); I am interested and slightly more assured with the way the CMBR has been used to understand the difference between 74 and 67 kms^-1mpc^1 , I hope james webb demonstrates it in a new picture of cosmology and astrophysics! @TheSecretsoftheUniverse

    • @Apollo1011
      @Apollo1011 Před 4 měsíci +3

      I agree, dark energy works at different rates at different times and places. They should study the rate of expansion in a place such as Bootes Void and compare it to the expansion in a super cluster.

  • @GEOFERET
    @GEOFERET Před 4 měsíci +1

    Excellent presentation. Am I right to understand that the rate of expansion, though obviously very important, is really quite slow compared to cosmic distances and velocities? Or am I missing something?

  • @jdeang3531
    @jdeang3531 Před 4 měsíci +6

    Wait wait wait….I thought the science was settled?

    • @porkeywings
      @porkeywings Před 4 měsíci +3

      Man we dont know shit

    • @blehbleh5095
      @blehbleh5095 Před 2 měsíci +1

      For any discipline in science to be considered settled it must be exact.

  • @TheCatzilla1
    @TheCatzilla1 Před 4 měsíci

    I am happy to see you start to make videos again SOU

  • @robsan52
    @robsan52 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Science moves forward one funeral at a time.

  • @Buy_YouTube_Views_a091
    @Buy_YouTube_Views_a091 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Your channel has become a trusted source for me. I appreciate the integrity and credibility you bring to your content.

  • @clarencegreen3071
    @clarencegreen3071 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Read Mark Twain's comments on scientific extrapolation. I think it has some applicability to the question at hand.

  • @ciarandevine8490
    @ciarandevine8490 Před 4 měsíci +2

    No big bang, that's a theory that seems to be taken as fact but they left out two important factors in their calculations, quantum physics and consciousness.
    Universes are constantly passing through one another and occasionally create another universe.
    Yet everything we observe is an illusion, distance and space is a single point/location, HERE.
    Time is another illusion as there is a single moment, NOW. .
    In each second of earth's time, there are measurements we refer to as Planck TIME, the length of time it takes light to travel the diameter of an atom.
    In each moment of Planck Time, a parallel and completely new universe is created.
    And there are 14billion X 10Million Planck Times per second.
    This creates the illusion of linear time.
    And the really good news is, we are the creators of all this.
    We are HERE NOW always.
    💥

  • @phillipellison4758
    @phillipellison4758 Před 4 měsíci +3

    From the perspective of the other galaxies moving away from ours faster. Would not those "expanding away" galaxies not have the same perspective as we?

    • @birrextio6544
      @birrextio6544 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Those far away galaxies would have the same problem and one of those problems is that our solar system didn't exist yet and what we see far away maybe don't exist anymore. All we can say is that the expansion is faster the longer time we look back, in other words, it may slow down.

    • @phillipellison4758
      @phillipellison4758 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@birrextio6544 Hmmm , you have me thinking. Thank you for the reply

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 Před 4 měsíci +1

      From their perspective everything in the universe is moving away from them. Think of a balloon. You put a bunch of dots on it and the slowly inflate it. From the perspective of every single dot - they are standing still, and all the other dots are moving away from them.

    • @birrextio6544
      @birrextio6544 Před 4 měsíci

      @@colincampbell767 All of us here know this, the question is, do they move away faster or slower.
      It depend on if you think of distance to them or how long back in time we see them.
      The answer is probably some complex math that include both way of thinking but nobody explain that for us, we just get a simple answer based on distance.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 Před 4 měsíci

      @@birrextio6544 From the perspective of each dot - the further away another dot is - the faster it is moving away from it.

  • @jimhughes1070
    @jimhughes1070 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I didn't even know Lowe's sold a tape that long😂

  • @jumpingman8160
    @jumpingman8160 Před 4 měsíci +1

    "There will always be something else" - The Universe thinking to itself

  • @justdoingitjim7095
    @justdoingitjim7095 Před 4 měsíci +2

    How do we know that our known universe isn't just some cosmic drop of condensate that formed on the glass of cold liquid some alien being is drinking and his gravity is causing it to spread out? What happens when he finishes his drink?

  • @corley-ai
    @corley-ai Před 4 měsíci +4

    Variable speed of light

    • @johnbjorkman4144
      @johnbjorkman4144 Před 4 měsíci

      Or, light speed is constant, but it shifts toward the red as it ages.

  • @Andy-df5fj
    @Andy-df5fj Před 4 měsíci +2

    What law dicates that a star pulsates at a rate proportional to its brightness?

    • @rb368370
      @rb368370 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Good question. Money would be better spent improving agriculture in poor countries.

    • @clarencegreen3071
      @clarencegreen3071 Před 4 měsíci

      @@rb368370 I'm still looking for a university that offers a program in the applications of cosmology. Put differently, what is the practical benefit of all this cosmology stuff? --Old physicist

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 Před 4 měsíci

      @@rb368370 Research into 'pure science' is actually an investment in the future. All of our advanced technology is based on research conducted decades to centuries ago.

  • @blueberry-ri7eb
    @blueberry-ri7eb Před 4 měsíci

    The fact we know the expansion is accelerating is amazing.

  • @gpetrowitsch
    @gpetrowitsch Před 4 měsíci

    There's a mistake in the diagram shown at 8:50. On the upper right the absolute magnitude is mentioned, which should be m = -4.85, not m = 24. At the same time, at the lower left the apparent magnitude shouldn't be m = -4.85 but m = 24.

  • @homoblogicus7899
    @homoblogicus7899 Před 4 měsíci

    The galaxies on the universal edge are obviously less bound by descreasing density / gravity so an acceleration would be naturally occurring. In our understanding we could safely make that hypothesis.

  • @guytech7310
    @guytech7310 Před 4 měsíci +1

    No crisis: Light looses momentum (red shift) over long distances.
    "The "tired-light" hypothesis, claimed that galaxies' light reddens because it loses energy as it passes through space. In this scenario, distant galaxies are red not because they are moving, but because their light has traveled farther and gotten pooped along the way."
    Presume the universe expansion isn't accelerating & calculate the lost of momentum over distance.

  • @adnandada7458
    @adnandada7458 Před 4 měsíci +1

    The issue is the Doppler effect used to calculate red shift. The electric universe makes more sense. Brush up on that theory

  • @C-man553
    @C-man553 Před 4 měsíci

    SOU is on of the best Astrophysics channels. Cool Worlds and SEA also good.

  • @pooritech
    @pooritech Před 4 měsíci

    Serious question guys : as the universe seems to behaves like a fluid where matter flows under gravity and magnetism and who knows what else, what does it mean to measure a distance away from us? Wouldn't it make sense to monitor distances to identify currents. And then update the monitored distance, since it's relative speed has an influence on what we measure.
    Maybe the CMB allows us to compute an extension rate that is due to an original event like a big bang, and maybe the computed value through method one just happens to sample objects in some current directed away from us, so that the extension rate computed this way would appear larger, because these sample points happen to be speeding away from us in an expending universe after some event.
    Does it make any sense that distances should be monitored and understood as ever-changing values as we're a particles (our sun) aggregated to a clot of matter (the milky way) and we're looking at other particles (supernovae and pulsating stars) attached to their clot of matter (other goalies), all pretty much flowing.
    Sorry for the poorly expressed ideas, it's probably cause I have no clear idea of what could be out there 😂 obviously! Thanks for the time if you read or respond.

    • @pooritech
      @pooritech Před 4 měsíci

      Maybe I am just asking if the Doppler effect is being accounted for which I would feel silly about! Thx again

  • @atiqrahman7289
    @atiqrahman7289 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Does not seem right that there is a rapid stretching of space ,in between galaxies , with such a high speed??? If expansion of space is occurring that fast----- how can we see any galaxies --- how it is possible to see/ observe these galaxies???? Something is not right here.????

  • @gilleslalancette7933
    @gilleslalancette7933 Před 4 měsíci +1

    excellent summary.

  • @thekingofmojacar5333
    @thekingofmojacar5333 Před 4 měsíci +2

    What we previously thought about the functioning of our universe does not seem to be confirmed in any way. Where we thought the Big Bang expansion (out of a singularity) began, we are now discovering a completely different pattern.
    It doesn't seem to be a case of a starting explosion but rather a cyclical self-renewal of our cosmos, so to speak from one generation of the universe to another, a kind of passing on of the physical laws under quantum mechanical processes.
    We cannot explore the universe with precise chronological information, since the real beginning probably dates back several (constantly self-renewing) universe cycles and cannot be grasped due to the enormous "time shifts".
    With our (limited) human consciousness we probably won't be able to really bring light into the great darkness, we'll simply be overwhelmed...
    In summary: Determining the age of the universe from the beginning seems impossible; in any case, it is much further back than around 13 billion years, probably a multiple of this estimate. There was no Big Bang during a transition from a previous universe to our current universe. We also don't know how often this process was repeated.
    The expansion and contraction of the cosmos remains a certain mystery; it´s probably a cyclical process that could be described as a primal cosmic force.
    So we have to be patient in order to correctly understand and interpret these extremely complicated and varied processes of the concept of our entire universe.
    At this moment we know perhaps 1 to 10% (?) of the whole...

  • @billyhomeyer7414
    @billyhomeyer7414 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Are we expanding too? Some are 😂 but maybe we have universal expansion down to the subatomic level? How would we know with everything being relative - relatively speaking.

  • @BorisNoiseChannel
    @BorisNoiseChannel Před 4 měsíci +1

    A ''crisis'', till you hear that it's been only a hundred years ago that they were debating if the Milky Way was all there was or just one of many galaxies.

  • @JJJ-zs5nw
    @JJJ-zs5nw Před 4 měsíci +1

    There is no crisis, it’s natural. So it’s doing what it’s supposed to do. We just get scared when we don’t know what’s going on.

  • @birrextio6544
    @birrextio6544 Před 4 měsíci +1

    "The farther they where the faster they seemed to be receding." Well, that is wrong way to see the problem, it should be:
    "The longer back in time they are, the faster they seems to receding"
    In other words, the expansion rate was at max during the big back and have since then slowed down due to gravity.
    If we see a galaxy 13 billion light years away, we actually see the speed it had 13 billion years ago.
    If I'm wrong, just explain for me how we know that the Hubble tension is right but without making it simple by mixing up time and distance.

    • @TheDemontr1
      @TheDemontr1 Před 4 měsíci

      was thinking on this recently, the whole premise of dark energy was an accelating expanding universe based on observations the further away the galaxy is the further it seem to be moving away. BUT like you said, the further away they are is also further back in time which would imply the expansion is slowing down because local galaxies are not moving away as fast. Ie universe is not expanding, its slowing down?

  • @user-dialectic-scietist1
    @user-dialectic-scietist1 Před 4 měsíci +1

    This is because red shifting do not mean space expansion. It means only depletion of the energy of the light produced from the very old images of the real galaxy sources, which are invisible. We see only images and because the real source travel on a trajectory, it isn't any more behind the image to suppl;y it with energy. From the law of Plank: λ= ch/E and if E tends to 0 then λ tends to infinity and that explains the red shifting of the light which becomes analogous to the distance from the observer, from blue to yellow, to green, to red, to infrared, to microwaves and then to darkness.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 Před 4 měsíci

      Please explain how a photon (which travels at the speed of light and does not experience time) can become 'depleted' over time. (Remember that the 'speed of light is not an accurate description - since photons do not have mass the amount of force necessary to accelerate light to infinite speed is zero. Light travels at 'light speed' because this is the ultimate 'speed limit.')

    • @user-dialectic-scietist1
      @user-dialectic-scietist1 Před 4 měsíci

      @@colincampbell767 So you believe that photon is a real particle and not a particle property of light. This is a big mistake, even for Einstein's views. What I mean. The light has two known material "properties" by its nature, the particle and the wave. This is because the light is not emitted in a constant energy nature but with energy quanta, with frequency, and these quanta of energy are what we call photons and carry the physical property of particle for the light. The photon is neither immortal nor can exist without light. If the photon was immortal as you say, and it was not in essence a coin of energy exchange, then we would not have the phenomenon of turning light into electricity and have been explained by Einstein and took the Nobel for it. The well -known photoelectric phenomenon. So, the photon it gives its energy and stop to exist and disappears or can be created and occurs again every time there is excess energy such as in a transaction in changing an electronic layer, or in nuclear reactions. This is the reality for light, and it is not the light, just particles like an electron beam in the Thompson tube. As you said it has no mass, it is only a property a function. From a galactic source, therefore, the light emitted, say, emitting 10^10 photons for a period of time and encounters a transparent material such as glass e.g. Polaride. In fact, if we take two polarizing glasses and put them perpendicular to each other, then, the light will disappear and this is the phenomenon of light polarization. Do you think I need to give you more explanations that light it is possible to looses energy and to reduce the number of photons in its travel as a beam and to be absorbed absolute from the materials even if it is only from photons? The photons do not lose energy in the way you think, the one moment is there the next moment if the energy drops to 0 they vanish, in the mend time they only change their wavelength as we can see in nuclear reactions, but this phenomenon it seems that is ignored by the astrophysicists. As for the limit of the speed of light for all possible or unlikely reference systems, this is simply a doctrine, a dogma of Einstein for purely philosophical reasons that if you look for it, you will find the reason, it has to do with what was the beliefs of his teacher Mach, if you don't find it tell me to explain it. This does not mean that this limit cannot be this a truth, but it is something we will never know, because if you know, the speed of light we only measure it unfortunately as Einstein wrote, in two directions, going and returning, it is the only way, and we are measuring as a speed of light the whole distance over time passed. So the light can go with faster speed and return with a smaller one and we to do the wrong to count the two periods like the same. Chances are 50/50%. I think that I have proved to you that I am right and the quantum law of Plank is working and that we have depletion in the energy of light when the temperature of the image of a galaxy is reduced, because the galaxy travels on a trajectory and isn't anymore behind its image at that spot to supply it continuously with energy. You see, everything around us in the Universe, are only images, and it is not the appearance of the galactic sources in real time. From this law of Plank and the law of Wien, the conclusion is that when the energy of the light production drops, then the wavelength will redshifted. I have to suggest you a simple physic's experiment of red shifting with the use of an ordinary flashlight if you let it deplete batteries. Then some time you will see its light to change colors and to change wavelength to redshifted, and your space, trust me, will stays the same. Do you know a such experiment done from the Astrophysics that proves the dilatation of space and not the depletion in energy? If so, please give me the knowledge. If not, then do my experiment and tell me if I am right, and give my the Nobel.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 Před 4 měsíci

      @@user-dialectic-scietist1 I used 'photon' as a convenient shorthand. Because I felt that for the purposes of this discussion - it's 'good enough.' You went and posted a complicated explanation that I'm certain that nobody read.
      Should I use General Relativity to calculate the acceleration due to gravity? It is more precise than Newtons' Laws.

    • @user-dialectic-scietist1
      @user-dialectic-scietist1 Před 4 měsíci

      @@colincampbell767Complicated or not complicated, it is facts and the truth. What can be simplest from the experiment with the flashlight which I have suggest and proves that there isn't any space dilatation, and it is only depletion of energy. But as I can realize you are preferring the fair tales of the B.B. guys and not the truth, which actually is more simple, but you are finding it complicated. About GR and Newton's law. Newton's law is incomplete but mainly correct. The GR on the other hand is only math with no physical meaning. Gravity is an interaction between bodies with mass, and the math expression of this interaction is a vector we invented and use, and we call force. That gravity is an interaction between bodies with mass is a fact proved by the Henry Cavendish's experiment. The incomplete in Newton's law is that the law is taking the mass to be as gathered only in a spot and forget the differences in the mass distribution in a body which could make the difference. For that reason the use of the law couldn't predict the trajectory of Mercury in Kepler's law because the surface of the planet Mercury is shrinking over time, us we know today. This fact is the reason that the spinning speed of the planet is changing over time and produces the paradox for the planet's trajectory. Take the man who spinning on ice, and he increases his spinning velocity, only with gathering his hands near his body and thus condensing its mass just by changing his shape. As we know, this works the same and in the space station. The same problem exist and for the other planets, and it isn't only the three bodies problem. Even with our Earth exist small error, because the planet shape isn't sphere, but it is like pear if you see it without the water. The water is changes shape over time because of the moon's gravity interaction every 6 hours and because this is shape is dynamically changes it changes and the trajectory of the planet. But this isn't a huge problem for predictions, of not long terms, like it is the problem with the planet Mercury, where the rhythm of changes in the planet's shape is obvious. Einstein's GR theory on the other hand is nonsense because cannot predict even the 5 points Lagrange that we are using for the cosmic probes spots and are spots of gravitation equilibrium. Einstein's theory which has no place in quantum mechanich theory but even in the huge shapes of galactic's clusters, where we see the Cosmic Voids and the theory can't explain, is talking about matter, as if the material, to be only mass. Matter is everything. It is energy, it is mass, it is forces it is field it is polarity it is charge, it is everything, because these are the properties of every material. Material motion is which creates space and time is only one periodically repeatable material motion and for that reason space and time couldn't exist without the present of matter. But see what the tensors in GR theory are saying that when matter (the mass) isn't present the space and time exist, but flat. Because emptiness for Einstein have the energy of his god. Ha ha ha. First there isn't emptiness and second there isn't place for god in physics and third the most significand, couldn't exist pure material property without one of the others. Light, has no mass but it is produced by mass objects and couldn't exist without them. And do not be afraid for me, I am posting for people with the ability to think and to reject today that what they were saying yesterday, as Galileo said.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 Před 4 měsíci

      @@user-dialectic-scietist1 I take it you've never had any college level physics classes.

  • @northernpolestar8645
    @northernpolestar8645 Před 3 měsíci

    The way JW is showing us into the past of the universe or multiverse, we should change the definitions and the text books about Astro physics

  • @Bad-Bru
    @Bad-Bru Před 3 měsíci

    HELLO FRIENDS
    I MAY NOT UNDERSTAND A LOT OF THIS,BUT IT SURE IS NICE TO BE ABLE TO SEE THIS AND FEEL AND SEE,THAT SCIENCE IS FAAARRRR FROM SIMPLE AND KNOWN, AND THATS KINDA OK TOO. YET IM TOTALLY DIGGIN IT.TY

  • @DADela-ht6ux
    @DADela-ht6ux Před 4 měsíci

    I've been saying since my youth that it's silly to imagine that the speed of light is constant.
    We already know that time as we experience it is relative depending on mass and acceleration. Everything we know is really just based on accurate measurements within our solar system and local bubble.
    I'm pretty sure that we exist in a multidimensional universe where, as 3D creatures, all we can see are spheroids everywhere.

  • @miguelibanez0
    @miguelibanez0 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Excellent video, thanks.

  • @kafalonitis
    @kafalonitis Před 4 měsíci

    New Physics is the best hope to overcome not only the Big Bang puzzle, but a lot more issues haunting our starting principles. A clean slate start can be made by the "Novel quantitative push gravity/field theory poised for verification" (see page 99+ of version 9)

  • @walterhelm8186
    @walterhelm8186 Před měsícem

    Although not yet confirmed, timescape cosmology resolves this crisis in cosmology.

  • @ConwayBob
    @ConwayBob Před 18 dny

    How does improved observational accuracy "break" physics? Won't it only IMPROVE physics?

  • @st.maryswestvilleil863
    @st.maryswestvilleil863 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I noticed that in 2018 the IAU voted to add Lemaitre’s name to the Hubble Law so that it should read Hubble-Lamaitre Law. Does that also apply to the Hubble Constant and the Hubble Tension?

    • @st.maryswestvilleil863
      @st.maryswestvilleil863 Před 4 měsíci +1

      In an email response from an Associate Professor of Astronomy, she said “Yes.” It should read Hubble-Lemâitre Law, Hubble-Lemâitre Constant, and Hubble-Lemâitre Tension.

  • @bhumidave1303
    @bhumidave1303 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Lots of love n Blessings ✨✨✨✨🙌🙌🙌🙌sou

  • @grabir01
    @grabir01 Před 4 měsíci +12

    The more you learn, the more you realize what you do not know. This does not make a crisis. Humble yourself before the lord.

  • @DrakeLarson-js9px
    @DrakeLarson-js9px Před 4 měsíci

    It's inversion physics chat that is needed in this video... (The video's 'conventional wisdom' premises are flawed, and Mary Fowler's GEOPHYSICS PREM chart offers insight about this paradox-problem)...

  • @martincunningham2562
    @martincunningham2562 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Have to say that the 'dominant' theory seems hopelessly naive.

  • @bsmith577
    @bsmith577 Před 3 měsíci

    Like the milky way circling and falling into our black hole, the matter within the universe is falling into a black hole as well, that includes all the observed galaxies.

  • @sonyapierce3804
    @sonyapierce3804 Před 3 měsíci

    Can you do a video explaining how the change with the Hubble Tension will affect the time line of collision of the Milky Way and Andromeda Galaxy..and if galaxies are moving away from each other, how and why they will collide?

    • @TheSecretsoftheUniverse
      @TheSecretsoftheUniverse  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Changes in the Hubble Constant won't affect the timeline for the collision between the Milky Way and Andromeda. Andromeda is too close for the expansion of the universe to have a significant impact. As a member of the Local Group, Andromeda is in a region where gravity dominates over cosmic expansion.
      It's important to note that not every galaxy is moving away from us. There are many blueshifted galaxies as well. Hubble's Law states that galaxies in deep space are moving away from us at speeds proportional to their distances. The term "deep space" refers to galaxies more than 10 Mpc away. Andromeda, however, is only 0.78 Mpc away, making it an exception to this rule.

  • @dera6347
    @dera6347 Před 4 měsíci +2

    If they are moving away faster the father out they are, does that mean we are in a black hole? A place where the passage of time changes the closer you get to one.

  • @Speedy_dew
    @Speedy_dew Před 2 měsíci

    Trying to figure out the Distance Modulus Equation myself hurts my smooth brain lol, I really wish I studied cosmology when I was a young lad

  • @sbcap3809
    @sbcap3809 Před 4 měsíci +1

    First, if one galaxy is twice as far as another, why do you think it is moving faster, second the pulsating star may be so far away that the luminosity may be far greater and go through less particles. The remarks and equations are just theory. How do you prove a star is x number of light years away? So, what if light travels at a different speed in different parts of the universe?

  • @dmsentra
    @dmsentra Před 4 měsíci +2

    I think that instead of the universe expanding at an increasing rate the method of measuring is failed, and is revealing a new aspect of physics we haven't gotten a grasp on.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 Před 4 měsíci

      So every method of measuring is wrong? And wrong in an oddly consistent manner?

  • @premnath5105
    @premnath5105 Před 4 měsíci +2

    ❤❤பிரபஞ்சம் எவ்வளவுதான் விரிவடைந்து கொண்டே போனாலும் மனித உயிர்கள் வாழும் பூமியில் மனிதநேயம் வளர்ந்து கொண்டேதான் இருக்கும் ❤❤.......🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
    இந்த இரண்டுக்கும் இடையே உள்ள சமநிலை தனை பிரபஞ்சம் மிக நன்றாகவே அறியும்

    • @edwardenglishonline
      @edwardenglishonline Před 4 měsíci

      மனிதரின் பார்வையில், மனிதர்கள் எங்கேயும் செல்வதில்லை. நல்ல முயற்சி!! 🙂

  • @TheKcrellin
    @TheKcrellin Před 4 měsíci +2

    The real problem is the naive assumption that all typev1 supernovae have the same brightness. There is really no good reason to assume this. There are examples of type 1 supernovae with no observed stellar remnant, showing that two white dwarves collided to generate it. So not all explosions are the same, and it makes them useless as a standard candle.

  • @kurtpiket6513
    @kurtpiket6513 Před 4 měsíci

    I Think that there is ONE endless infinite universe, in which all galaxies with a centred black hole are moving by the red and the blue. the red is c1 and the blue is c2 from E=MC2.
    There is a speed of light, which is limited and therefore prsent by two borders. (red and blue).
    The speed of light has a centre by a "horizontal" wave of e-volution
    Inisde this centre there is a vertical line by the amplitudes of in-volution.
    The in-volution comes back to the tinniest point of zero.
    Now there must be a relationships between the speed of light and the smallest black hole known.
    I think this idea can help to find the answers longing for.

  • @user-hn8lm8th8k
    @user-hn8lm8th8k Před 4 měsíci

    Another example of the saying, "Nothing changes more than the past!"

  • @aaronmurgatroyd5810
    @aaronmurgatroyd5810 Před 4 měsíci

    How do they know the apparent brightness of a star is not affected by occlusion from clouds or by lensing effects from strong gravitational bodies?

  • @harryberry474
    @harryberry474 Před 4 měsíci

    The great unsolved mysteries will continue throughout time but what if all questions about the universe were known how would that change our lives?

  • @IamPoob
    @IamPoob Před 4 měsíci +9

    They forgot to carry the 2

  • @wonkybee7612
    @wonkybee7612 Před 3 měsíci

    My theory is they actually aren’t moving away faster but it’s an time dilation optical illusion caused by spacial relativity.

  • @heathermichael3987
    @heathermichael3987 Před 4 měsíci +1

    And yet , I’m still on planet Earth .

  • @danahilp7981
    @danahilp7981 Před 3 měsíci

    It dawns on me that light carries time by transferring information. Each point of light show information of time it was generated from.

  • @michaeld5888
    @michaeld5888 Před 4 měsíci +1

    It seems that a crisis and problem could be we have a scientific community who regard new knowledge as a crisis and problem.

  • @jamesjoyce6633
    @jamesjoyce6633 Před 3 měsíci

    What if the new Tired Light theory is correct ? And light gets red shifted partially by how far it has to travel through space so the universe is smaller then we think and is also expanding slower

  • @garrettrussell7281
    @garrettrussell7281 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Would people in another galaxy in the red shift. see us in the red shift. ?

  • @LehtusBphree2flyFPV
    @LehtusBphree2flyFPV Před 4 měsíci +1

    This universe will come in contact with other expanding universes expanding as we live in a multiverse