The Timeline of the Universe | Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains...

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • How far back in time can the JWST see? On this explainer, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Chuck Nice, and Gary O’Reilly break down the timeline of the universe, looking at when the solar system started, when life began, and other highlights.
    We dive into the gridiron timeline of the universe. If the timeline of the universe we mapped out on a football field, where would human civilization be? We go through all the landmark points on the gridiron timeline: When our solar system was born, when life started on Earth, when humans arrived, and how far back the James Webb Space Telescope will let us see. Was the universe just right for life?
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    About StarTalk:
    Science meets pop culture on StarTalk! Astrophysicist & Hayden Planetarium director Neil deGrasse Tyson, his comic co-hosts, guest celebrities & scientists discuss astronomy, physics, and everything else about life in the universe. Keep Looking Up!
    #StarTalk #neildegrassetyson
    0:00 - Introduction
    1:06 - Age of the Universe
    2:01 - Timescales
    5:04 - Age of the Universe in Yards
    6:07 - Solar System
    7:05 - What JWST Is Observing
    7:58 - Life
    8:49 - Cave Dwellers
    9:32 - Development of Agriculture
    9:50 - Religious Figures
    10:32 - Advancement of Civilization
    12:25 - Cosmic Perspectives
    13:06 - Cosmos
    14:21 - How JWST Will Change Our Notion Of Time
    16:00 - Predicting the Future
    17:40 - Closing Notes
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 962

  • @StarTalk
    @StarTalk  Před rokem +72

    Would you rather look into the past or the future?

    • @pranavnath8732
      @pranavnath8732 Před rokem +8

      Only by looking into the past can we understand the present. I'd appreciate the present in its entirety before trying to look or extrapolate the future

    • @errolwilcox747
      @errolwilcox747 Před rokem +11

      I'd rather know how we got here, than where we're going.

    • @TheDunlopdude
      @TheDunlopdude Před rokem +4

      If we look into the future, we can understand what the past caused, and make the present our future.

    • @Boballoo
      @Boballoo Před rokem +8

      @@pranavnath8732 "the present in its entirety" Cool, but I think the present is gone already. Ooops! There it goes again.

    • @breezy8105
      @breezy8105 Před rokem +6

      Past FOR SURE. Who wouldn't want to see The Library of Alexandria? Or the Roman empire? DINOSAURS AND NEANDERTHALS?!

  • @studiocordesvocalles
    @studiocordesvocalles Před rokem +490

    Let's all take a moment to cherish the fact that Neil deGrasse Tyson popped into existance in our universe

    • @jezlawrence720
      @jezlawrence720 Před rokem +9

      That we live *right* at the point where the moon & sun are the same relative size in our skies, allowing us perfect lunar and solar eclipses, is not as miraculous as us all happening to cross world lines at the same time as N dG T. :D

    • @brianstrutter1501
      @brianstrutter1501 Před rokem +3

      @@jezlawrence720 - not perfect eclipses

    • @Belphegor-jq4uf
      @Belphegor-jq4uf Před rokem +1

      Nigel deCrass Byron isn’t anything that you need.

    • @leesadillman4443
      @leesadillman4443 Před rokem

      💥🌟✨🎉😘♥️💜♥️💙🧡💚♥️

    • @MarleneMeier
      @MarleneMeier Před rokem +1

      THINKING OF THIS EVERY TIME I WATCH THIS SHOW!!! ❤

  • @JasonTylerRicci
    @JasonTylerRicci Před rokem +18

    The football field/universe analogy is brilliant. I love when Neil breaks down the complexity of the universe into terms we layman can easily understand.

    • @amberlynn147
      @amberlynn147 Před 11 měsíci

      "Laymen" (or, preferably, "laypersons"). 🙂

  • @TheDunlopdude
    @TheDunlopdude Před rokem +163

    What a perfect time to have the best person to interpret the universe, at the same time as the James Webb Telescope giving us the data to interpret.

    • @StarTalk
      @StarTalk  Před rokem +18

      What a timeline to exist in!

    • @beermerican
      @beermerican Před rokem

      Yeah and the JWT proves he is wrong. ( and an idiot)

    • @jameslacy679
      @jameslacy679 Před rokem

      Disagree. Sounds like he’s talking to a bunch of kids

    • @Tech.Library
      @Tech.Library Před rokem

      On Religion, Neil twisted facts and was not fair to Islam when he talked about the 100 yard line... The Quran corroborate with the 100 yard analogy where it says;
      "Has there not been over man a period of time, when he was not a thing worth mentioning?”
      [al-Insaan 76:1].

    • @big0ben209
      @big0ben209 Před rokem +2

      @@Tech.Library how can man exist without a surface in which to roam? It took time for such a planet to come into existence and a framework of atmosphere, weather, vegetation and such before man can even take a breathe on the planet.

  • @fulstaak
    @fulstaak Před rokem +78

    Cosmos is an exceptional series. Just beautiful and fun to watch, and you learn quite a lot along the way. Loved it, each time I watched or rewatched it. I don't buy a lot of digital movies, I think I have less than 5, and these are one of them. The cosmic calendar was really well done. Thanks for this work Neil, hope there will be a 3rd season!

    • @davidsheckler8417
      @davidsheckler8417 Před rokem

      You're not learning anything 😅🤣😂 you're continuing your indoctrination 🤤🤪🤡

    • @AttilaDuka
      @AttilaDuka Před rokem +1

      Same opinion here.

    • @davidsheckler8417
      @davidsheckler8417 Před rokem

      @@AttilaDuka So you're also indoctrinated 🤦‍♂️

    • @michaelbariso3192
      @michaelbariso3192 Před rokem

      Time, space and distance are independent of each other, space-time is a fabricated construct humans invented. If the universe were expanding at 186,000 mi./s from a Big Bang the unimaginable centrifugal forces of gravity would bend, crush or flatten stars, planets and galaxies into infinite density, expanding and imploding before time existed and the earth would be flat as a pancake. If space was curved gravitational waves would throw planets out of orbit, altering time as galaxies and planets ascend and descend gravity waves, cause gravitational lensing in the Hubble and James Webb telescopes. Gravity expanding at the speed of light would make gravitational waves scientifically impossible! Einstein was either an imbecile or a fraud. Big Bang theorists bring new meaning to the term Flat Earthers :-). A Big Bang singularity would expand, implode in all directions before time existed so obviously measuring time would be scientifically impossible as time would run forwards, backwards in all directions and would have no beginning and no end. Without a universal time, past and future events would be relative to distance, so time would be relative-imaginary depending on the observers vantage point. Einstein was either an imbecile or a fraud. It is scientifically impossible for a universe to create itself from nothing, reside in nothing or expand into nothing since nothing has no properties. Out of nothing nothing comes.
      Explain how you can see and feel the infrared warmth of the Sun coming up on Earths horizon when light-speed (Einstein's space-time) tells us the Sun is supposedly 8 minutes and 20 seconds in a past dimension of space-time. The speed of light and gravity are both 186,000 miles per second, if the speed of light slows with the stretching of space-time, gravity must also slow as well. Explain how the planets in our solar system can maintain orbits if the gravity from the Sun slows down. If the Suns light, gravity and images are in a past dimension of space-time using the same frame of reference, all the stars, planets and galaxies in the universe would have different coordinates than Earth and would thereby violate the law of conservation of energy also making celestial mechanics of solar systems impossible. The communications delay between Earth and Mars is approximately 20 minutes. We're either viewing the light from Mars in the future, Einstein's past dimensions of space-time or in real time, which do you think is more logical? Einstein's relativity is wrong light has no limitation of speed; it cannot be slowed down because it isn't moving. From every vantage point in the universe light is omnidirectional-instantaneously traveling in both directions. Light and electromagnetic waves are independent of each other. If the speed of light is constant then past and future dimensions of space-time and an expanding universe would not be possible.
      From every vantage point in the universe light is omnidirectional-instantaneously traveling in all directions (forwards and backwards through Einstein's space-time) while violating the law of conservation of energy. Explain how Einstein's projectile light particle proton can travel in all directions having a (constant speed) of 186,000 miles per second. The speed of light according to Einstein's relativity is 186,000 miles per second, but according to physics if two mechanical watches were synchronized on earth and one traveled across the universe and back, there would be no difference in time between the mechanical watches proving the speed of light is instantaneous as the only way a mechanical watch will run slow is if you tighten the main spring :-).
      Time, space and distance are independent of each other, space-time is a fabricated construct humans invented. If the universe were expanding at 186,000 mi./s from a Big Bang the unimaginable centrifugal forces of gravity would bend, crush or flatten stars, planets and galaxies into infinite density, expanding and imploding before time existed and the earth would be flat as a pancake. If space was curved gravitational waves would throw planets out of orbit, altering time as galaxies and planets ascend and descend gravity waves, cause gravitational lensing in the Hubble and James Webb telescopes. Gravity expanding at the speed of light would make gravitational waves scientifically impossible! Einstein was either an imbecile or a fraud. Big Bang theorists bring new meaning to the term Flat Earthers :-). A Big Bang singularity would expand, implode in all directions before time existed so obviously measuring time would be scientifically impossible as time would run forwards, backwards in all directions and would have no beginning and no end. Without a universal time, past and future events would be relative to distance, so time would be relative-imaginary depending on the observers vantage point. Einstein was either an imbecile or a fraud. It is scientifically impossible for a universe to create itself from nothing, reside in nothing or expand into nothing since nothing has no properties. Out of nothing nothing comes. Magnetron
      Time is an abstract thought process of a conscious mind, where physical and nonphysical realities exist in a physical and nonphysical system called the universe. Is God Electromagnetic? sciforums.com/threads/is-god-electromagnetic.76891/?msclkid=536745d7b1bf11ec9e6fbe125fbe9860.
      Geniuses notice patterns or discrepancies that are not obvious to average minded people, they do not accept or take for granted things that other people do, they question why things are the way they are instead of following like sheep. "Intelligence sees the reality of what ignorance cannot, knowledge can be both painful and hilarious. While a fool follows others in the path of stupidity, a genius walks alone and laughs.
      Einstein Relativity 1=2 Fantasy Physics, Wave-Particle Duality, Photon, ... czcams.com/video/0cjBdTwF6v8/video.html via @CZcams
      (Part 2) Einstein Relativity 1=2 Fantasy Physics of Relative Simultaneit... czcams.com/video/RVyjCQVvBRs/video.html via @CZcams
      Special Relativity is Einstein's Biggest Blunder! czcams.com/video/CcnyiLFqL-Q/video.html+via+%40CZcams&feature=youtu.be
      The Scientific Evidence Against the Big Bang lppfusion.com/science/cosmic-connection/plasma-cosmology/the-growing-case-against-the-big-bang/
      The Theory Of Everything According To Humans That Believe Their Intellect Evolved From A Monkey Brain www.academia.edu/79900784/The_Theory_Of_Everything_According_To_Humans_That_Believe_Their_Intellect_Evolved_From_A_Monkey_Brain?source=swp_share
      The first cells were simple so the nonintelligent process of evolution evolved life by adding millions more nonintelligent cells :-) This is like thinkin a TV will evolve if you bury a bunch of electronic parts in your backyard adding water, topsoil and Stardust. Explain how a nonintelligent unguided process with no eyes to see can evolve eyes without first having the concept of sight. Can you guess the reason why there are no blind brain surgeons :-) Once people been conditioned to believe an ideology all evidence to the contrary is rejected. Scientific evidence against evolution - the clash between theory and reality
      www.newgeology.us/presentation32.html
      B

    • @davidsheckler8417
      @davidsheckler8417 Před rokem

      @@michaelbariso3192 Lovely regurgitation of NASA

  • @owensingh
    @owensingh Před rokem +21

    The best group of people ❤️, Its a great time to be alive.
    Remember, The cosmos is within us. We are made of star-stuff. We are a way for the universe to know itself - Carl Sagan.

  • @quintenkortekaas2018
    @quintenkortekaas2018 Před rokem +22

    This one of my favorite shows the explainers and the cosmic quaries are so damn good

  • @michaelnelson7240
    @michaelnelson7240 Před rokem +2

    That calendar explainer video was my first time watching Neil very cool I can’t get enough

  • @johnb2706
    @johnb2706 Před rokem +6

    Neil Degrasse Tyson is amazing at explaining space and time so well we can almost literally see it.

  • @andagain21
    @andagain21 Před rokem +12

    I remember that cosmic calendar on Cosmos. It was really helpful and provided a lot of perspective

  • @The_SCPFoundation
    @The_SCPFoundation Před rokem +3

    My dog, (my 3 year old daughter's best friend), is turning 15 this February. I don't envy the equivalent human age of 105. And I now have major respect for his energy and health to keep up with my daughter. I can't see him passing within the next 2-3 years but with this perspective, it's unbelievable how old he actually is. 2 years would make him 135 😳😳 sonny Bono is getting major belly rubs and some baked chicken and rice today after work

  • @mattevans-koch9353
    @mattevans-koch9353 Před rokem +29

    Thank you for another eye opening explainer. I recall a similar discussion of just human history when I was in high school history class. It was based on the length of a mile in yards and it was astonishing how short the present was. Have a great weekend all.

  • @ejmtv3
    @ejmtv3 Před rokem +3

    That's why every time I hear a friend talk about Mercury Retrograde affecting their life, I slowly fade out of their lives.

    • @Freelancer.Warzone
      @Freelancer.Warzone Před 4 měsíci

      So essentially, mercury being in retrograde did actually affect their lives lmao

  • @billross9744
    @billross9744 Před rokem +4

    What an amazing explanation of how far back in time the James Webb telescope can go by using a football field analogy! Knowing that it can look back from the 7 yard line to present is now understood mind-boggling impressive!!!!! Thanks so much, Neil!!

  • @mickeybrumfield764
    @mickeybrumfield764 Před rokem +46

    We here the numbers thousand, million, and billion all the time without really grasping how large they are, especially when put in the context of time in years. Thank you Dr. Tyson for giving us some perspective.

  • @debbiehoagland548
    @debbiehoagland548 Před rokem +2

    I need me some cosmic queries with just NDT and Chuck Nice! Those videos are so enjoyable!

    • @ericparrish1515
      @ericparrish1515 Před rokem

      How to approach a question. I don't know how to say it like he does.

  • @mikekerezsi9672
    @mikekerezsi9672 Před rokem +1

    I love hearing Tyson speak on the universe, life, time! Thanks

  • @joseimpact
    @joseimpact Před rokem +10

    this is the most American this ever "tell me how old the universe is in football field yards" 😂😂😂

  • @andrewm000
    @andrewm000 Před rokem +4

    Neil D!!! What a thinker & communicator!

  • @THall-vi8cp
    @THall-vi8cp Před rokem +2

    It's refreshing to see someone frame looking into the universe as looking into the past. So often, we look at some part of the universe as be X distance away, never really giving any thought that, due to extreme distances, by the time the light reaches us that part of the universe has changed.

  • @perloscippy
    @perloscippy Před rokem +1

    You are my favorite to watch.. its my birthday today and im feeling kind of sad.. thank you for posting today and giving me a reason to smile

  • @IceMontgomery
    @IceMontgomery Před rokem +13

    I appreciate the light hearted comedic turn this channel has becuz if they were serious 24/7 it wouldn't be as interesting! Human nature is funny sometime. Love the show!

    • @la-gl4uh
      @la-gl4uh Před rokem +1

      I disagree. I love NDT, but there's too much inter- joking which wastes time. signed, Fido.

    • @IceMontgomery
      @IceMontgomery Před rokem +1

      @@la-gl4uh i feel ya. With respect to your opinion, may i ask who you would rather tune in to for this type of info? 👀

    • @chrisgorgol9442
      @chrisgorgol9442 Před rokem +1

      @@IceMontgomery just watch them all like me! Joe Scott + PBS space time + Isaac Arthur

    • @IceMontgomery
      @IceMontgomery Před rokem +1

      @@chrisgorgol9442 thanks Chris! Will do 😎

  • @angebr4321
    @angebr4321 Před rokem

    Your Cosmos series was so good to ilustrate this

  • @StrawberryEyes0
    @StrawberryEyes0 Před rokem +1

    My dog was killed 1 month ago and everything in my life, every thought, every video has to remind me of her. Spend your time with them. They love you more than you love yourself. You never know if one day they will be gone.

    • @StrawberryEyes0
      @StrawberryEyes0 Před rokem +1

      And you want to tell them you love them one last time, but you can't.

  • @KOKOLOYO
    @KOKOLOYO Před rokem +3

    Been waiting for this one 😮😮

  • @Sammasambuddha
    @Sammasambuddha Před rokem +4

    It's ridiculous that Joe Rogan (love you joe!) has more subscribers.
    ! HIT THAT 👍 BUTTON !
    Make the algorithm work for Startalk!

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 Před 24 dny

      Rogan is polarizing and appeals more to the less educated. I’m just calling it like it is…

    • @Sammasambuddha
      @Sammasambuddha Před 24 dny +1

      @@mattorr2256
      Huh. I thought I did that. Thanks?
      👍

  • @RAYON10
    @RAYON10 Před rokem +1

    Everything that gets out of Neil's mouth is amazing

  • @chrisostling805
    @chrisostling805 Před 5 měsíci

    I enjoy these videos so much, thank you.

  • @e818bboy
    @e818bboy Před rokem +13

    Great video. So we been seconds in the time of the universe and we already destroying those chances. Wow!!!

  • @Docta50
    @Docta50 Před rokem +7

    There are a lot of blades of grass in between the 7 yard line and the end zone that need to be discovered.... I really hope that we as a species never stop pushing our limits and continue to have the hunger for discovery.

  • @robinghosh8891
    @robinghosh8891 Před rokem

    We really get a deep insight into the Cosmos which is fantastically explained by Mr Tyson..Great Discourse

  • @ginnyjollykidd
    @ginnyjollykidd Před rokem +1

    I'm so glad I got to see you in my hometown, Neil! Louisville, KY. Hope to see you again!

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Před rokem +3

    I'd like to point out how refreshing it is, and how reassuring it is, to see in the background of Neil's office not only one but two American flags displayed.
    That's not something that I see much of, any of it, really, in the world of academia.

  • @jimiverson3085
    @jimiverson3085 Před rokem +3

    That's the interesting paradox of better and better telescopes. We can see what other parts of the universe were like billions of years ago. But we have no idea what they are like now.

  • @blindsight3690
    @blindsight3690 Před rokem

    Currently binge watching cosmos dude makes it all interesting

  • @BlackDevilSmoking
    @BlackDevilSmoking Před rokem

    Greetings from Greece! Amazing episode 👏

  • @georgebartholemew8444
    @georgebartholemew8444 Před rokem +3

    You did a video on Earth's rotation. I would like to see one on our speed through space based not only on rotation but also on revolution around the sun. We would speed up and slow down wouldn't we?

    • @Chris-hx3om
      @Chris-hx3om Před rokem

      From an external viewer's perspective, yes. From our own, no we are just 'stationary'... But them you have to add our solar system's motion through the galaxy, and our galaxy's motion through the universe. I did see all that done recently. Damned if I can remember where! Maybe Veritasium?
      EDIT: It's Vsauce, here's the link. czcams.com/video/IJhgZBn-LHg/video.html

  • @lesleyjane7785
    @lesleyjane7785 Před rokem +2

    "Let's all take a moment to cherish the fact that Neil deGrasse Tyson popped into existance in our universe" ---this is true. And the word is existence. You are a Knight of Nobility, Champion of Science, and Studious Curiosity. Seemingly in possession of Great Imagination. Which, as Einstein pointed out, is more important than intelligence or education. But you have them too. Glad you're here. We need all the help we can get, man.

  • @_NCB_
    @_NCB_ Před rokem +1

    Incredible well explained.

  • @MarSkai
    @MarSkai Před rokem +8

    It’s just so simple for Neil to have that much more joy about it than Gary and share it all with us😂

    • @MarSkai
      @MarSkai Před rokem +1

      When the teacher’s seriously into it and you get the giggles during class…

  • @carnitagroves7758
    @carnitagroves7758 Před rokem +4

    There was waaay more synergy when it was Neil and Chuck only with the occasional guest. The two men vibe off each other well.

    • @AnantMall
      @AnantMall Před rokem +1

      @@HopDavid ahan, got a example to quote?

    • @JohnyG29
      @JohnyG29 Před rokem +3

      @@HopDavid That's a tad harsh. Its usually topics outside astrophysics when, sometimes understandably, he typically displays his ignorance.

    • @dtsai
      @dtsai Před rokem +2

      It’s more important for him to be entertaining and 80-90% correct than to be 100% correct. He’s not the guy building this stuff but he has to motivate someone to get into the field. I left the engineering field because it was too boring. Why not become an actor? But if someone had made it more exciting and fun for me, perhaps I would have stayed. That was the mistake for movies to give kids the impression that school is not fun, because then it becomes a self fulfilling prophecy where the kids don’t like school and the country declines like we have now. We could be a lot further ahead.

    • @dtsai
      @dtsai Před rokem

      @@HopDavid have you not worked on a technical project? They get it wrong all the time which is why they test and redo. The whole scientific process is about constant failure to success. Yes , I’m glad you pointing it out that he is human and makes mistakes. And I’m just point that he is human and will make mistakes. So we are saying the same thing in a way. Just remember, don’t build your billion dollar company entirely based upon free CZcams videos. Trust but verify.

    • @ambeshpratik8032
      @ambeshpratik8032 Před rokem +1

      @@HopDavid What do you have personally against him? You are everywhere obsessively badmouthing him. Your criticism doesn't even have anything to do with science either. I have read his paper as well as his books and they are exceptional to say the least. He worked with Brian Schmidt (noble prize winner). I have also attended seminar of people who work with him in Hayden planetarium. I'm a PhD student of spectroscopy and astronomy myself. I haven't seen a single evidence of him knowing any less than an average astrophysicist. Actually, the reverse is true. You don't go to Princeton and Harvard to do science simply by being an entertainer. There are plenty of those in all forms. Please resolve your issues for your own sake. You have an obsession.

  • @andrewferrauiolo4618
    @andrewferrauiolo4618 Před rokem +1

    It makes you appreciate every day that we have because we are so small and not important in the grand scheme of the universe. We are a momentary speck in reality. So we have to appreciate each hour that we have and make the most of it.

  • @bd4_l
    @bd4_l Před rokem

    Lol ty for explaining this in gridiron! Legitimately helped me! 🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯

  • @AJD...
    @AJD... Před rokem +6

    I can tell Niel has burning, passionate disdain for astrology and I can't blame him whatsoever 😂

    • @wlockuz4467
      @wlockuz4467 Před rokem +2

      I agree lol
      Humans will blame anything but themselves when it comes to their mistakes or bad luck.

  • @michaelflores451
    @michaelflores451 Před rokem +10

    Keep in mind... He said the thickness of a blade of grass not the width! That's just amazing how little time we have taken to damage our atmosphere!

  • @dmaximojellypedispamiddmax2664

    i love your show, we adore to listen you before sleep every night,

  • @w00dyalien
    @w00dyalien Před rokem

    Great analogies to give idea to its magnitude...

  • @DavidAllen_0
    @DavidAllen_0 Před rokem +12

    The universe began with a "big bang" no doubt about that. But before that, what is the possibility that it sparked because of a change in physics such as a quantum fluctuation (i.e. a false vacuum) which caused the emergence of the current physics we know and love today?
    I'm probably wrong but I do find it amazing how we're alive and consciously. It'd just be a little bit cooler to know the reason as to "why" and "how" we are here and able to observe our surroundings. I think this really digs deep into philosophy though

    • @angryatheist
      @angryatheist Před rokem +2

      Alternatively, instead a false vacuum a perfect vacuum could have existed pre bang and always had , which might be an explanation for the acceleration of the expansion we now see as the vacuum tries to reach perfection again

    • @AbbyTheAbinator
      @AbbyTheAbinator Před rokem +3

      True. I think consciousness spawned from generations of communications and our social ties to one and other, plus family ties really make a huge difference in our lifes. So i think after it became the norm for us to be around eachother. We begin to understand that we need parents to nurture us until we can do it on our own. We understand that we're connected once you notice someone needs help or you helped another. Just as chaos is the underlining fact of the universe, all it took was time and countless other variables for something to eventually happen. So i believe just as must time passed and generations of minds coming and going, where one mind began to think that its alive and began to share this probably very enthusiasticly to its other fellow humans. It couldnt of been an homogeneous experience, it had to be shared, explained, experienced, throughout humanity from 1 mind. Just as it probably took 1 spark to start the on-going chain reaction of our universe.

    • @gutamawado6904
      @gutamawado6904 Před rokem

      Try looking into metaphysics, you might find answers if you looked genuinely

    • @Faisal.h7
      @Faisal.h7 Před rokem

      Maybe by experiencing a non-physical dimension only then we can know

  • @furrybear9416
    @furrybear9416 Před rokem +3

    My best guess thus far is microbial life is extremely common, intelligent life fairly rare and the reason we havent found microbial life yet it's hard to find, and intelligent life is far to far away, assuming it hasnt destroyed itself and most critically existed now while we exist. Talk about a long shot to find something that is almost definitely out there!🚀

    • @dtsai
      @dtsai Před rokem

      Sunlight is 7 mins old. You probably can’t get current events using a telescope. Probably need quantum speed. For example, what you see on the computer screen is already behind what the CPU had already calculated and going to change it to in the next second. There could be advance SciFi aliens flying right in front of us but the light reflected back to won’t get to us for 100s of years.

    • @maedux
      @maedux Před rokem

      You're the only one who thinks we haven't found microbial life yet

  • @morisn
    @morisn Před rokem

    Always amazingly entertaining

  • @nimrodlevy
    @nimrodlevy Před rokem

    Loved it!

  • @PinkHatred
    @PinkHatred Před rokem +3

    Something I’ve been thinking a lot about and need some minds to help me out. We know that gravity can bend light, not change the speed. So suppose that we send 2 telescopes or any type of observation tool into space. 1 in a pathway full of large masses giving us a gravitational lens and the other in the let’s call it path of least resistance; however, spots that are an equal distance from earth. So we aren’t changing the speed of light but the distance the light travels before reaching said observation tool. In theory and of the knowledge I have it makes sense to me that we would be able to study an object at different points in time simultaneously. Like looking at a lamp from one point while also looking at it from the same point where it’s bouncing from mirror to mirror. If there’s a law or something preventing that I’d be intrigued to know more, but I’ve been losing sleep over it. Thank you beautiful minded people!

    • @jettmthebluedragon
      @jettmthebluedragon Před rokem +1

      Well not necessarily you experience gravity all the time and you don’t bend 😑it’s the strange Nature of black holes ware gravity is being bent 😑

    • @Idle_Cerberus
      @Idle_Cerberus Před rokem

      This needs to be pinned

    • @The_SCPFoundation
      @The_SCPFoundation Před rokem +3

      @@jettmthebluedragon it definitely bends with other gravitational forces than just a black hole. Einstein' theory was completely tested and confirmed by a solar eclipse which he predicted correctly that light behind a star would bend around it.

    • @jettmthebluedragon
      @jettmthebluedragon Před rokem +1

      @@The_SCPFoundation yea but did he say it was a shadow? 😐it’s not a soylar eclipse that’s not being bent that’s the thing he did not understand 😑their were no telescopes 😑but he did not realize everything we see looks 2d but in Reality it’s 3d 😑so NO it’s not gravity thats being bent from a soylar eclipse he did not Calculate the rotation of this planet he did not Calculate the moons orbit as well 😑 Solar eclipses happen when the moon is completely in line with the earth 😑also he did not understand how this planet can change its axis 😑and orbit witch is also factors 😑its like this you have this a sheet of papper make a circle in orange to say that’s the sun now in black draw the moon 😑that’s how Solar eclipses work it’s not gravity 😑it’s just shadows 😑

    • @The_SCPFoundation
      @The_SCPFoundation Před rokem +1

      @@jettmthebluedragon what are you talking about? The solar eclipse is not the point. Smh the observation was done during a solar eclipse to confirm that light of other stars behind the sun will bend around the sun because of the gravitational force. Are you not aware of this historical experiment that helped change the scientific community? And yes they DEFINITELY HAD TELESCOPES during the 20th century. Even Galileo had telescopes!? Are you just randomly talking or you have no astronomy schooling to base your thoughts on

  • @rjsmith6698
    @rjsmith6698 Před rokem +3

    So if JWT can see back to the 7 yard line, how much more of a telescope would it have taken to see back to the 1 yard line or even the other end zone?

    • @RottenMuLoT
      @RottenMuLoT Před rokem +1

      Just put another JWT in front of the current JWT and it will magnify just fine ;)
      I suppose this is not "how much more of" than how / what can we measure when light is so "low" in energy if almost absent.

    • @LaurentCassaro
      @LaurentCassaro Před rokem

      You can't see before the Dark Age, no matter the size of the telescope you're using. Because the Universe was so dense light couldn't go through.

    • @rjsmith6698
      @rjsmith6698 Před rokem +1

      @@RottenMuLoT that makes sense. I was thinking more of the cosmic microwave background, which I thought might also be visible in the infrared, but now that I think of it, I don’t even really understand what the CMB represents. I pictured it as something like a pressure wave from the big bang itself.

  • @abeautifuldayful
    @abeautifuldayful Před rokem

    Excellent episode. Of course, they all are.

  • @michaelrogus4485
    @michaelrogus4485 Před rokem

    Very nice!

  • @AbbyTheAbinator
    @AbbyTheAbinator Před rokem +6

    It is just as hard and as jaw dropping to wrap your head around 14 billion years compared to the amount of progress made in the last 100 years. Which is so small we probably don't have a unti of measurement or something to compare it too...

    • @bonibroco1076
      @bonibroco1076 Před rokem +1

      Right! A wink could be a million years when sentient beings are in the mix. Just have to stop thinking in linear time.

    • @AbbyTheAbinator
      @AbbyTheAbinator Před rokem +2

      @@bonibroco1076 linear thinking is yhe very bane of pur existence though... life is going.. so time follows. Though it is time thats the master. Lol

    • @redneckshaman3099
      @redneckshaman3099 Před rokem

      I'm addicted to pigger nussy 😻

  • @michaelccopelandsr7120
    @michaelccopelandsr7120 Před rokem +15

    Time is fascinating. I worked the subway stations for nearly 10 years. From one end of the city to the other. Every so often I would notice the city would be saying that, "Today just flew by" or "The day was just dragging along." How can an entire city complain about the same time paradox unless it was effected by it. Maybe a time distorted bubble the earth passes through in its revolution around the sun. Maybe random waves of time distortion hitting the earth? Maybe they're randomly given off by the sun. Maybe they're from outside our Terran system and reach us in intervals. ???? Ti-i-i-ime, is on my side. Yes, it is!

    • @Cnupoc
      @Cnupoc Před rokem +4

      Time doesn't care about time.

    • @tuloko16
      @tuloko16 Před rokem +1

      Its the same with year 2020. A lot of people will tell you “it just flew by” or I don’t remember much...And the few things they remember is “foggy”. Something happened.

    • @malcolmpulliam2709
      @malcolmpulliam2709 Před rokem +1

      @@Cnupoc 😂

    • @josephriley4356
      @josephriley4356 Před rokem +1

      You know how they have an heat index, it's 80 degrees but it feels like 94 degrees. Maybe it's something like that but we haven't scienced it yet.

    • @Andrew-zq3ip
      @Andrew-zq3ip Před rokem +1

      Working at a Cafe, I noticed a similar phenomena. There would be days where almost everyone ordered the same thing, or everyone would be impatient, or everyone would be withdrawn. It made me think, not that we have secret psychic connections, but rather we're all an extension of one thing, and it's overall mood effects us in our illusion of individuality.
      What are we if not matter that is self aware? Was that matter not all together in a single form originally?

  • @thijsrooiakker8498
    @thijsrooiakker8498 Před rokem

    i like the explainers the most.

  • @eveadams7785
    @eveadams7785 Před rokem

    Thank you for helping us understand. Your brain is amazing!

  • @blastoff9518
    @blastoff9518 Před rokem +3

    Has the speed of light been “stable” the whole time of the universe?

    • @IMWeira
      @IMWeira Před rokem

      Excellent question, wish the answer was available.

    • @Supernov4
      @Supernov4 Před rokem

      I imagine that would break a lot of physics we have today. So yes?

  • @ebcsecurity9490
    @ebcsecurity9490 Před rokem +3

    You mean Timeline of the OBSERVABLE universe

    • @jettmthebluedragon
      @jettmthebluedragon Před rokem +2

      That’s what I mean 😑it’s only the (observable) universe NOT the whole universe 😑but I do know this for a fact space and time are infinite 😑and our dna is super determined so no matter how many times your atoms are created and destroyed what you are is who you will be forever 😑if the universe as a whole had a beginning it will end if the universe as a whole had no beginning it won’t ever end 😑 plain and simple

  • @yallmeetdenzel
    @yallmeetdenzel Před rokem +22

    *Investing in crypto now should be in every wise individuals list, in some months time you'll be ecstatic with the decision you made today..*

    • @parker2573
      @parker2573 Před rokem

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    • @suzettemills5822
      @suzettemills5822 Před rokem

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    • @juliettn8401
      @juliettn8401 Před rokem

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    • @juliettn8401
      @juliettn8401 Před rokem

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    • @juliettn8401
      @juliettn8401 Před rokem

      @Rickwayne0

  • @michaellardner3638
    @michaellardner3638 Před rokem

    "I'll have to do a quick calculation before that" is such an awesome flex of how smart you are

  • @therealscrappyog
    @therealscrappyog Před rokem

    Bless this chanal and this Nice informations 🙏⚡🤲🙏❣

  • @ShaderockLouis
    @ShaderockLouis Před rokem

    Love the camera work (0:04-0:06) lol "Gary/Chuck". Love you NDT #camerawork lol

  • @denniskiarie1984
    @denniskiarie1984 Před rokem +1

    I watch ,I like I subscribe

  • @nigelb7737
    @nigelb7737 Před rokem

    Thanks!

  • @paulgray2928
    @paulgray2928 Před rokem

    The coolest prof. in the universe, as far as we know.

  • @co-vids
    @co-vids Před rokem

    Interesting 👍

  • @thechosenone8523
    @thechosenone8523 Před rokem +1

    She: What's your pickup line.
    Us: Chuck, back on your face.

  • @salmanuel4053
    @salmanuel4053 Před rokem +1

    With James Webb findings, we now know some galaxies existed within 300 million years of the Big Bang. Maybe those developed life, just not human life. Such a finding could restore the "perfectly tuned for life" view of the cosmos.

    • @phill6815
      @phill6815 Před rokem

      The big bang didn't happen, it was proven recently.

  • @morgatron34
    @morgatron34 Před 3 měsíci

    Let me tell you that the episode of Cosmos where Neil explained the time line of the universe inside of a calendar month was amazing. One of my favorites!

  • @84Actionjack
    @84Actionjack Před rokem

    Would luv to see ... this sent me immediately to Saturday Night Live skits.

  • @831Billy
    @831Billy Před rokem

    Totally Awesome asper usual Neil

  • @electroix
    @electroix Před rokem

    Thanks for this blow mind explanation. Then it would be possible to see almost the whole life of the Universe! And if we assume that out there would be galaxies, starts and planets which have already passed through what us happening now on Earth and the Sun, then we can also see the future, right? If this is true, then, what is time if right now we are receiving “information” from past and future? Really amazing.

  • @Nightcrawler333
    @Nightcrawler333 Před rokem +1

    16:45 Neil said "and there you have it" and I expected "homeboy" after that phrase..

  • @joshuahunter2825
    @joshuahunter2825 Před rokem

    When I hit the like button it went from 7.9K to 8K. Never have to roll over like

  • @michaelres5335
    @michaelres5335 Před rokem +2

    What an episode!!! Just neat 👍❤

  • @MikelNaUsaCom
    @MikelNaUsaCom Před rokem

    Slide rules are very good for examining ratios... =D

  • @VentusGamingX
    @VentusGamingX Před rokem

    I love this ❤️ People love you guys ❤️

  • @johnrivera922
    @johnrivera922 Před rokem +1

    Fun with calculations. My wife gets mad that when I drink, I turn everything into math. Everything is math lol

  • @francescos7361
    @francescos7361 Před rokem

    Thanks prof.De Grasse yoj are a Greta educatori.Thanks for sharing your observations and studies with us.

  • @joshdelgado2233
    @joshdelgado2233 Před rokem

    Ooooo that Dog life span analogy was deep. I like it.

  • @Darkmountaindweller
    @Darkmountaindweller Před rokem

    The dog analogy was mind blowing

  • @roobscoob47
    @roobscoob47 Před rokem

    NdGT, C-Nice and G-legz! Good episode!

  • @jnate5887
    @jnate5887 Před rokem

    Wonderful info! What is the earliest possible timeframe for a civilization to occur after the creation of the universe?

    • @philcoombes2538
      @philcoombes2538 Před rokem

      Based on the earliest organisms on Earth appearing ~3.7bn years ago, or ~2.3bn years after the formation of the Sun (a 2nd/3rd generation star ~6bn years old) & 800mn years after that of the Earth (~4.5bn years old), presumably the same could have happened after the first stars were formed ~100mn years after the BB...

  • @jamesbrooks4971
    @jamesbrooks4971 Před rokem

    Everyone in the world should watch this video

  • @Sonny2009
    @Sonny2009 Před rokem

    Dr. Neil if we can look back at earlier stage of Universe, doesn't it hypothesize that we should be able to see future state as well? Or are you assuming we are at the extreme end or most current state of Universe?

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 Před rokem

    Thanks.

  • @DiamondRidgeMusic
    @DiamondRidgeMusic Před rokem

    I was so pleased to hear Neil say “tummy rub”

  • @diegofernandez4789
    @diegofernandez4789 Před rokem

    Metric system, religion, and of course science. Who knew this explainer was going to be so epic.

  • @kariannecrysler640
    @kariannecrysler640 Před rokem +2

    Wonderful analogy using a blade of grass. Thanks for a great discussion. I must thank Pocketlocker86 channel for his recommendation 😊

  • @ecemilegonulbondaji3005

    Keep Neil safe no matter what. Bc he is one of his kind . Like the universe always on time 🤌🏽 we solve this now or never moments thanx

  • @harshavardhannaik2499
    @harshavardhannaik2499 Před rokem +2

    Hello Dr. Tyson, Hey hey hey Chuck Nice to see you Gary. This is Harshavardhan from India, i will make it easier for you Chuck you can call me Harsh. Dr. Tyson, I couldn't get an answer with my thinking hat on, please help me understand what is the minimum amount of gases that is required to become a stable sphere of gases in space like our gases giant. If we could measure the distance of that sphere from one end to the other end how much would it be?

  • @bestescapes
    @bestescapes Před rokem

    I love the dog analogy. That is something I deal with every day 🤣

    • @oof6520
      @oof6520 Před rokem +1

      @@HopDavid I think it's calculated using all dogs average age, like some humans can live 100 years or longer, but our average life expectancy is around 75-85 years old while dogs average around 7-12

  • @Atmanyatri
    @Atmanyatri Před rokem

    On an other episode in cosmic queries someone asked if light is determined or something like that and neil said i will get back to it later and I’m still waiting. I’m very curious to know the answer please

  • @waynetec13
    @waynetec13 Před rokem +2

    Neil, I'm a lawn care professional. What type of blade of grass? Are we discussing Centipede, or Zoysia? There's a huge difference, especially at this scale.
    Maybe it's pedantic, but if you can be a stickler about the stars visible (related to your profession) in movies, I can be a stickler about grass (related to my profession) in your analogy.
    So, which is it?

  • @dr.jekyll2017
    @dr.jekyll2017 Před rokem

    The same with temp as time measurement and everything in the universe. You can make it as complicated as it is or you dont have to take the temperature of everything to know the temperature. Science is so cool.

  • @Z06Wingnut
    @Z06Wingnut Před rokem

    Neil, we need a cosmic gridiron shirt. Also, you need a cosmic gridiron tie and/or vest.

  • @unknownel6174
    @unknownel6174 Před rokem +2

    Imagine being a crew member on the Enterprise or Discovery traveling to a star system only to realize it stopped existing thousands of years prior. That’s what interstellar travel is going to be like for us when we accomplish it.

    • @Chris-hx3om
      @Chris-hx3om Před rokem

      We won't know the sun has stopped producing light for about 8 minutes and 20 seconds after it actually does!