The Vertical Plane - From Out of This World (1996)

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Komentáře • 212

  • @natesuth7742
    @natesuth7742 Před 2 lety +162

    I HIGHLY HIGHLY recommend a video from "the why files" regarding this subject. It is one of the most interesting videos I have watched on CZcams

  • @VeeFatal
    @VeeFatal Před 4 měsíci +9

    The why files brought me here. Awesome and intriguing story!❤

  • @Sjrick
    @Sjrick Před 4 lety +21

    Came here because of Mysterious Universe Podcast.

  • @foxglovethealchemist4350
    @foxglovethealchemist4350 Před 2 lety +11

    I believe it. They say the verbiage was incorrect but, no one really knows what we said 400 years ago. Not everything.

    • @mcfcguvnors
      @mcfcguvnors Před 3 měsíci

      Very true indeed ,written word is different to language , no one EVER spoke as the bible narrates

  • @loribach534
    @loribach534 Před 2 lety +20

    Time to contact a psychic investigator in England to locate Tomas's book!

  • @susiedyer3260
    @susiedyer3260 Před rokem +12

    I just watched the why files and it turned me on 2 this

  • @jennytaylor3324
    @jennytaylor3324 Před 2 lety +22

    As this progressed I remembered watching it at the time. It was the bit about the ghost fancying the woman where the penny dropped! Didn't imagine I'd be sitting here in 2021 re-watching it on a computer screen some 25 years on. Old Thomas must have been blown away by 20th century life.

  • @sandrafaith
    @sandrafaith Před 2 lety +25

    ~27:00 - Mmm, gonna have to disagree with this one. "We don't make up our verbs.... it wasn't possible to say 'I doth'..." _Wasn't possible?_ Everyone speaking early modern English used the correctly conjugated form of the verb all of the time? C'mon. Moderately educated people today screw up verb tenses all the time, so why not an uneducated person from this time period?

    • @Nyctophora
      @Nyctophora Před rokem +5

      I was just thinking this myself today. Perfect language is not reasonable to expect, and there are always local words and variations.

    • @Moonlight-96
      @Moonlight-96 Před rokem +3

      Exactly 👉 @sandrafaith and @NYCtophora. I agree with u both.

    • @ChristopherCox978
      @ChristopherCox978 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I completely agree. I had the same thought, her skepticism leaves a really bad taste in my mouth. She said it so definitively, almost with arrogance.. regardless, she absolutely could be wrong.. and hopefully so.

    • @zappababe8577
      @zappababe8577 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I agree with you. For example, in my Black Country dialect, we say "You am" instead of "You are" - we're so well-known for it that we're known as "Yam-yams". A prescriptivist grammarian would just say that a native English speaker would never make such a "mistake" - never allowing for regional dialects or individual idiosyncracies. Who knows what little nuances of language and dialect were spoken and written in the scattered regions of Tudor England?

  • @summerlaverdure
    @summerlaverdure Před 2 lety +50

    thumbs up if nostalgia nerd sent you

  • @jonntischnabel
    @jonntischnabel Před rokem +5

    English is by no means standard now, even with the internet, people in rural Scotland talk nothing like academics from London (for example) so in the 16th century, the language would be even more varied throughout the land, and a modern academic could NOT say for certain how someone would speak.

  • @Dirty2Clean1980
    @Dirty2Clean1980 Před rokem +4

    The why Giles brought me here thanks guys, what's up heckle fish....

  • @paulmadigan5603
    @paulmadigan5603 Před 5 lety +4

    Thank you so much iv been after this episode a long time spooky time travel really rare cheers

  • @grooperalta8926
    @grooperalta8926 Před 2 lety +7

    Nostalgia Nerd brought me here.

    • @gchecosse
      @gchecosse Před rokem

      Me too, but I now remember it from the time.

  • @hanniffydinn6019
    @hanniffydinn6019 Před 6 lety +26

    Great stuff, I wonder why this isn't discussed more. It's more mind blowing than John Titor story.

    • @R.E.Z.
      @R.E.Z. Před 5 lety +2

      Hanniffy Dinn I do know of a book on this. I believe it is the vertical plain but I am not sure. It's a long read

    • @hanniffydinn6019
      @hanniffydinn6019 Před 5 lety +1

      LittleKat Productions i just picked up the vertical plane book, after listening to the mysterious universe podcast about it! Amazing stuff !

    • @mrmachine5632
      @mrmachine5632 Před 3 lety +2

      because its a poor hoax by the two bored twats

    • @cardcounter21
      @cardcounter21 Před 2 lety +3

      @@mrmachine5632 Amazing anyone even remotely took this seriously!!!

    • @LAkadian
      @LAkadian Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​It's "The Vertical PLANE", and it's in this video's title. Lmfao

  • @Ravensonng
    @Ravensonng Před 2 lety +17

    Fascinating story. I saw it featured on the Why Files and came here to watch this one. However, back in the 1980s there were no plastic bags at the supermarket. They used to give you paper. Just a little incongruous item on the dramatization. :)

    • @No-lc1hn
      @No-lc1hn Před rokem +11

      No this is wrong. I’m from England and we definitely had carrier bags in plastic! So much so my mum had one big one full of other ones.

    • @t-man2612
      @t-man2612 Před rokem +8

      We has plastic bags at the supermarket in the 80"s. I use to cut a hole in the bottom and wear it like Hulk Hogan and rip it off.

    • @chris7921
      @chris7921 Před rokem +8

      We had plastic carrier bags in the 80’s

    • @johnscanlon2598
      @johnscanlon2598 Před rokem +4

      We had plastic grocery bags in the 80s and I lived in Alaska

    • @hannahbaxter8825
      @hannahbaxter8825 Před rokem +3

      We did have plastic bags

  • @jcpadmore
    @jcpadmore Před 6 lety +26

    Fascinating case. Vorderman was wrong (well, the script writers were wrong) - you COULD network BBC Microcomputers via the "Econet" system which utilised the RS232 interface cable. However, that would have been very obviously a hoax if there was a network cable hanging around and not enough time to link to another machine. I find inter-temporal commuication to be utterly compelling - even the Society for Psychical Research (SPR) couldn't explain it.

    • @aperinich
      @aperinich Před 2 lety +1

      @@roberttodd2414 one of my favourite movies ~!

    • @masscomnet
      @masscomnet Před 2 lety

      The Vulcan Science Directorate has determined that time travel is impossible.

    • @joeharley1423
      @joeharley1423 Před 2 lety +2

      @James Raven You’re right on the Econet networking - although RS-422, much like AppleTalk, was used, not RS-232 initially.

    • @jcpadmore
      @jcpadmore Před rokem +1

      @Leo Polled Connecting them up was a Dodleston 🤣😂

  • @reptilian_overlord
    @reptilian_overlord Před 6 lety +23

    What a captivating mystery. Some say the only thing left to prove this to be fact is the book Thomas wrote in the 1600s. It hasn't been found yet

    • @kellyshaw7271
      @kellyshaw7271 Před 3 lety +4

      Still not been found either. I wonder if the contactees are even alive now themselves.

    • @lildarkd
      @lildarkd Před 2 lety +7

      Can it be even found? For all we know he exists on alternate timeline.

    • @daddystabz
      @daddystabz Před 2 lety +2

      @@kellyshaw7271 They are.

    • @kellyshaw7271
      @kellyshaw7271 Před 2 lety +2

      @@daddystabz Brilliant😁

    • @stephenlangsl67
      @stephenlangsl67 Před 2 lety +5

      There is one more thing involved here. It's called the Mandela Effect.

  • @mortalclown3812
    @mortalclown3812 Před 2 lety +8

    I think it's wonderful that the UK, generally speaking, doesn't rule out anomalous events simply because there is no immediate explanation. Folks seem to respect that other dimensions exist and that, from time to time, breakthroughs occur. (I'm uncertain about this particular one - just mean overall impression.)

    • @redwoods7370
      @redwoods7370 Před 2 lety

      Great Britain and Ireland are very haunted. They have no choice but to treat hauntings and supernatural occurrences as important to investigate. Even the royal family pays attention to their ghosts at Sandringham.

    • @annikaerf
      @annikaerf Před rokem +1

      That's my impression too, and I'm from Sweden (been to UK and Scotland several times).

  • @PugFaceMedia
    @PugFaceMedia Před 2 lety +16

    Ken is the first troll that ever existed.

  • @ramakantmali9626
    @ramakantmali9626 Před 2 lety +3

    The lady played Debbie, hmmm eye catching...I felt like Lucas might have been...😍😊

  • @alexs1540
    @alexs1540 Před 2 lety +1

    I believe it because I've never seen this and yet it's nostalgic

  • @redroostermcmlxxl
    @redroostermcmlxxl Před rokem +5

    I'd like to know where he got the electricity from in 1546

    • @the_anomaly_channel
      @the_anomaly_channel Před 7 měsíci +1

      radionics

    • @jemshadow123
      @jemshadow123 Před 6 měsíci

      Apparently he was writing on a quill and parchment at the same place the computer was...and the writing was digitised...

  • @martinvegas1327
    @martinvegas1327 Před 2 měsíci

    Love this type of stuff👍

  • @nichhodge8503
    @nichhodge8503 Před 2 lety +13

    Ken: “Ask him how he writes to us”
    Tomas: “I use my iPhone 13 pro what about you?”

  • @chloedamone3014
    @chloedamone3014 Před 2 lety +6

    Couldn’t be more desperate to read this book

    • @PhotographerVA
      @PhotographerVA Před 2 lety +3

      its available on line as a pdf

    • @Slopmaster
      @Slopmaster Před 2 lety +2

      @@PhotographerVA and an epub.

    • @hannahbaxter8825
      @hannahbaxter8825 Před rokem

      I think they wanted to forge this book and get lots of money from it.

  • @stephenlangsl67
    @stephenlangsl67 Před 2 lety +7

    Those paranormal events must be the result of the timeline changing.

    • @brown3394
      @brown3394 Před 2 lety +1

      You couldn't have a timeline that changes, with them still existing on that time line... as soon as you change anything in the past like that, you're going to have an entirely different population of people by the time you get to the 1900s, really within a few generations you're going to have every single person in history end up being somebody else. The butterfly effect isn't at all an exaggeration, actually it doesn't even begin to describe how radically different everything will be.
      Imagine it like this. Let's just say everything on Thomas's timeline remains identical to our own history, until one day in his time, the smallest change occurs. Let's say the change is this: in this new timeline, the only thing affected is a single atom. An oxygen atom, is suddenly replaced by a nitrogen atom. It might take some time with a change that small, but this oxygen atom - let's just call it an O2 molecule - would have bounced around and around and have extremely tiny but very real effects on everything it interacts with, most notably living things breathing and exchanging energy, whereas nitrogen is mostly unreactive.
      Ok so let's imagine after enough time and energy exchange, we get to a point where there is a tree in the fall, that would have taken in an extra molecule of CO2 on our original timeline as a result of that single Oxygen atom existing. So to set the stage--a newly wed man is walking home from work. In this new time line, a single, crunchy fall leaf begins it's decent to the ground a fraction of a second earlier then it did in our timeline, directly because of the lack of that one tiny molecule, the tree let it drop just an instant sooner--that instant was just enough that the new timeline, our man has stepped on the crunchy leaf--subconsciously, a memory very quickly runs through his head that otherwise wouldn't have. It sound practically meaningless, but now, ever so tiny changes begin in his thought patterns, all stemming back from that subconscious memory the crunchy leaf invoked, just barely enough to have effect.
      Here's where you can easily start to imagine the big changes--in this new timeline our newly wed man gets home, he makes love to his wife and they conceive their first child--this time though, the sex finishes about .3 seconds later then our original reality, and he is in the ever so slightest different position. This is way more than enough of a change, we now have a completely different human being conceived, and another one completely erased--with there being 100 million sperm all competing, and only one that can become a person, in one healthy mans ejaculation--this split second difference and altered body position at the time of ejaculation, is a guarantee that he is now going to have a different child. That is a huge change.
      Ok so now we have Eliza on the new timeline, instead of the Henry we had in our timeline. From here it gets a lot easier to understand what I'm trying to explain. If you can grasp how easy it was for that gigantic change to occur, you can now easily imagine how Eliza, her parents, etc. will now go on to have the exact same effect on just about every single person they ever interact with in their lives, including any of those interactions with people that will go on to have children. That's how this concept of the different child will begin having a gigantic, cascade effect--at which point won't take long to reach every person on earth--and within few generations, every single person we had in common with this timeline will have died, every single new person born from that point on will 100% all be different people, and practically everything in history - from that point on - that we know, will be completely different in just about any and every way you could imagine--The Butterfly Effect.
      lol that's my take on why the idea of timeline "changes" that take place at any point before your own conception is likely to result in you not existing, like the grandfather paradox but realizing you don't need to do anything even remotely as severe as that, you just have to snap a finger or take a breath, if you are far enough back in time, that's when you have the need for branching timelines or other concepts about time travel that might solve this paradox.
      I didn't realize it would take so much to write out though lol, so if you get through good job.

    • @scraggybear
      @scraggybear Před 2 lety +1

      @@brown3394 Another view piont is there is no change or butterfly effect
      because everything happens in the current time before the future
      (like it was predestined) Meaning the future already predetermined the past.

    • @brown3394
      @brown3394 Před 2 lety

      ​@@scraggybear yeah, that kind of time travel makes for some good time travel stories.

    • @brown3394
      @brown3394 Před 2 lety

      @@scraggybear have you seen Timecrimes? It's this low budget Spanish film that turns out to be one of the best time travel movies ever that follows the single timeline time travel premise. You might be temped to not stick with in the first 10 minutes because of the kind of old low budget look it has, and some people don't like subtitles, but once you commit, after like 10 mins you'll be so into it-if you enjoy time travel movies.

    • @scraggybear
      @scraggybear Před 2 lety

      @@brown3394 No. I will definitely watch it though and let you know what I think. Been looking for a good sci-fi film for a while now. Cheers

  • @suzetteanne
    @suzetteanne Před 3 lety +1

    I came here from the Howdie Mickoski CZcams channel.

  • @mubtasimfuad1899
    @mubtasimfuad1899 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Who is here after watching the why files?

  • @willmfrank
    @willmfrank Před 3 měsíci

    Okay...
    Who else remembers Carol Vorderman as the narrator of Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious Universe?

  • @journeygraham4957
    @journeygraham4957 Před 4 měsíci

    The why files brought me here ❤️

  • @phillawrence5148
    @phillawrence5148 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Vorders looking 🔥

  • @consciousexplorer8118
    @consciousexplorer8118 Před 4 lety +9

    For a parapsychological explanation of the phenomena see the book "The Entity Letters" by James McClennon. It is about the psi phenomena experienced by a modern seance group SORRAT who amongst other phenomena would receive letters from entities / spirits. This group was investigated by American parapsychologists. He draws similarities with this and other cases in the final chapters. Highly recommended. He has a youtube channel and interviews too.

  • @czrbumm.5290
    @czrbumm.5290 Před rokem +3

    How did the past have a computer or power to use a computer, I don't comput.

    • @Murch2013
      @Murch2013 Před rokem +1

      I was wondering the same.

  • @No-lc1hn
    @No-lc1hn Před rokem +4

    I think the linguist is wrong. That’s my take away.

  • @derelictmanchester8745

    This case is mentioned in a book, titled Threads of Time...which includes similar timeslip cases...

  • @TeatroGrotesco
    @TeatroGrotesco Před 20 dny

    Our sound is shite....let's have a scene where important information is whispered between two people.

  • @mcfcguvnors
    @mcfcguvnors Před 3 měsíci

    here to read the " I came here cos of the why files" comments

  • @digit861
    @digit861 Před měsícem

    I thought 'people don't make up verbs' was odd. We do that shit all the time. Jokingly or serious. The way the expert says it's impossible was odd to me. Considering that 'Lukas' says he's not terribly educated and lives in a farm area, he prolly wouldn't be up to the main city type language. A small village would prolly use different phrasing from a huge city where the king is. I'm in KS used to live in PA, the phrasing the slang and terms are completely different, for her to say 'no one would use older language back then' how sure she seems is odd to me because we do that now. We even talk in old English. How often does someone talk cheeky 'bring thyself to bed' being cute and shit? Story is fascinating and the Why Files not having a 100% conclusion is chilling.

  • @leadengineer4105
    @leadengineer4105 Před 2 lety +1

    90s England was a wild place/time...
    Was that Bill Nighy?

  • @thamirivonjaahri6378
    @thamirivonjaahri6378 Před 2 lety +7

    Many say it was very elaborate "geeky" hoax. I preffer to remain neutral as among inconsistencies there is one for me personally quite baffling question: Whoever wrote the historical part...why is it he/she/they got the hard part more or less right (places, people) and easy part wrong (spelling)?

    • @ImminghamIronhead
      @ImminghamIronhead Před 2 lety +5

      Nobody cared about spelling back then, even Shakespeare got his own name wrong at least twice :-) I like it, and I want to believe.

    • @DiodeMom
      @DiodeMom Před rokem +2

      They didn’t spell the same as modern English spelling.

    • @peterleschinski9758
      @peterleschinski9758 Před rokem +2

      Maybe thomas was dyslexic?

  • @Fatherjohn76
    @Fatherjohn76 Před rokem +1

    “He was testing us!”
    Using knowledge he could not have had access to on his own timeline? Some big old logic holes there.
    Unrelated, I love how bad acting always manifests as the characters only emotional response being sounding a bit annoyed about everything

    • @sunraider0_0
      @sunraider0_0 Před měsícem

      I'd suggest watching Louis Sinclair Investigates here on YT. Puts an entirely different spin on this that makes a lot more sense.

  • @CaliMayh3m
    @CaliMayh3m Před 5 lety

    Is part 2 of this video uploaded as well? I can’t seem to find it.

    • @striebgriebling1415
      @striebgriebling1415  Před 5 lety +10

      This is parts 1 & 2 edited together into one video. The join is at 12:54. You can see the full episodes the first part was taken from here czcams.com/video/Ipz43IHiK-0/video.html

    • @striebgriebling1415
      @striebgriebling1415  Před 5 lety +7

      And the second part is from this episode here czcams.com/video/1WXSjRvOYr4/video.html

  • @UndergroundRaver85
    @UndergroundRaver85 Před 3 lety +2

    Good old dodleston

  • @smellypee8761
    @smellypee8761 Před 2 lety +3

    The why files

  • @mr.dales3rd-4thmath61
    @mr.dales3rd-4thmath61 Před 10 měsíci +1

    The likes at this moment is 666 😂😂

  • @lauriedooker1031
    @lauriedooker1031 Před 2 lety +3

    So how did the person from the pass ,400 years previous write on a computer that didn’t exist for 400 years?

    • @LastCall534
      @LastCall534 Před 2 lety +7

      At 12:07 the man from the past states that he received "the box of lights from 2109". Referencing a computer I suppose. He was accused of witchcraft for having the box of lights.

    • @ralphylad
      @ralphylad Před rokem +2

      Thy leems boyste

    • @hannahbaxter8825
      @hannahbaxter8825 Před rokem +1

      He was given a box of lights that he speaks to and it writes for him but what does he plug it into I wonder? The people of the time would have smashed it to bits

    • @sparkesman1980
      @sparkesman1980 Před rokem

      @@hannahbaxter8825 if someone from 2109 was capable of delivering a ,"Light box" to a person in the 1500s, I would of thought that they would of also provided a way of working it. For instance, computers in 2109 will no doubt need electricity to operate. Even today there are devices such as wind up radios, wind up torches etc that need no electricity to work.

  • @arnolddalby5552
    @arnolddalby5552 Před 2 lety +7

    The Vertical plane is a good description of Earth's Time Field and the book is interesting because they were contacted by folk from 2109 which cannot be as the human race are extinct in 2109. The book says the 2109 where etheric entities not human which would be correct as there is no one alive in 2109. The last Americans sent a message back in time saying that everyone dies from an airborne prion disease between 2071 and 2078. And it's funny, but the Hindu time travel temple shows the human race extinct and replaced by the winged creatures called Alpha Draconians. Hahaha.

  • @zappababe8577
    @zappababe8577 Před 4 měsíci

    19:59 I wouldn't want to snog anyone from Tudor England - toothpaste and mouthwash hadn't been invented yet! The best thing they had were "kissing comfits" - sweets like "Devon Violets" which were supposed to sweeten the breath, but being as they contained sugar, they would have made dental hygiene worse!

  • @ZalexMusic
    @ZalexMusic Před 2 lety +5

    It would take a lot to convince me this is not real.

    • @teodelfuego
      @teodelfuego Před 2 lety +1

      Thank goodness you weren’t alive during the original broadcast of Orson Welles’s War of the Worlds radio drama

  • @sharonmontoliu6573
    @sharonmontoliu6573 Před 6 měsíci

    and how is lucas and thomas communicating they do not have computers

  • @nichhodge8503
    @nichhodge8503 Před 2 lety

    Why does the voice of Tomas sound like he’s from Gloucester

  • @mtjoy747
    @mtjoy747 Před rokem +1

    What better way to "sell" the BBC Micro, eh LOL and make it sound like an episode from Sapphire and Steel or the Tomorrow People

  • @keenbaker-dias1137
    @keenbaker-dias1137 Před rokem

    I have one of those computers a model b

  • @skstills4621
    @skstills4621 Před rokem

    Hopefully taking with the past and future didn’t mess up our flow of time or had us Jumped to another time line. Flamingo’s are green right?

    • @Alex_anders96
      @Alex_anders96 Před rokem

      Ooh dear.. whose gonna tell him that ours are yellow

  • @RahulVerma-mo1fw
    @RahulVerma-mo1fw Před 8 měsíci

    Chats kese dekh sakte hai

  • @gchecosse
    @gchecosse Před rokem +1

    Simultaneously both tantalisingly compelling and also obviously half assed bullshit.

  • @ralphylad
    @ralphylad Před rokem

    Imagine having a fling with a ghost from 1500s 😂 Peter seems suspicious to me in all this.

  • @keymeter1917
    @keymeter1917 Před 2 měsíci

    I brought me here.😛🤪🤣

  • @aronyak1
    @aronyak1 Před rokem +1

    They drive a Jaaaaaaag!

  • @walterszewczyk9024
    @walterszewczyk9024 Před 2 lety +2

    Is this based on that Dodleston messages mystery thing?

  • @rexhallinan1785
    @rexhallinan1785 Před měsícem

    The language expert is wrong they did say doth

  • @gchecosse
    @gchecosse Před rokem +3

    Ley lines connect points of equal gullibility.

  • @felcas
    @felcas Před 2 lety +4

    Perhaps it is a hoax from a real time traveler 😆

  • @minnaljd
    @minnaljd Před rokem

    Who after beypur sultan video😌

  • @kimturner2105
    @kimturner2105 Před rokem +2

    Dr Laura Wright, you don’t know what the common person, whom did not have high education would or would not have said…. You only have the dregs of high society in those times to study…. You were not there…. Just like an Australian speaking slang…. You won’t find the meaning in a standard English dictionary, yet we speak this informal way….

  • @garyjoseph6574
    @garyjoseph6574 Před 3 lety

    Esta poopy?

  • @Jasmin-ux5ho
    @Jasmin-ux5ho Před 2 lety +2

    This is the most annoying and frustrating vid. the sound is terrible as it is and as if that's not enough the 2109 voice is doubled and scratched making it impossible to understand what they're saying and don't look at the subtitles or transcript unless you want to have a hard belly laugh

  • @scottphillips7108
    @scottphillips7108 Před rokem +1

    Tachyon universe theory... The galactic center sun...

    • @scottphillips7108
      @scottphillips7108 Před rokem +1

      The Orion Arm is a minor spiral arm of the Milky Way Galaxy that is 3,500 light-years (1,100 parsecs) across and approximately 10,000 light-years (3,100 parsecs) in length,[2] containing the Solar System, including Earth. It is also referred to by its full name, the Orion-Cygnus Arm, as well as Local Arm, Orion Bridge, and formerly, the Local Spur and Orion Spur.
      The arm is named for the Orion Constellation, which is one of the most prominent constellations of Northern Hemisphere winter (Southern Hemisphere summer). Some of the brightest stars and most famous celestial objects of the constellation (e.g. Betelgeuse, Rigel, the three stars of Orion's Belt, the Orion Nebula) are within it as shown on the interactive map below.
      The arm is between the Carina-Sagittarius Arm (the local portions of which are toward the Galactic Center) and the Perseus Arm (the local portion of which is the main outer-most arm and one of two major arms of the galaxy).
      Long thought to be a minor structure, namely a "spur" between the two arms mentioned, evidence was presented in mid 2013 that the Orion Arm might be a branch of the Perseus Arm, or possibly an independent arm segment.[3]
      Within the arm, the Solar System is close to its inner rim, in a relative cavity in the arm's interstellar medium known as the Local Bubble, about halfway along the arm's length, approximately 8,000 parsecs (26,000 light-years) from the Galactic Center.

    • @scottphillips7108
      @scottphillips7108 Před rokem +1

      Distance & Speed Of Sun’s Orbit Around Galactic Centre Measured
      In short, our Sun moves around the center of the Milky Way at a speed of 240 km/s (149 mi/s), or 864,000 km/h (536,865 mph).

    • @scottphillips7108
      @scottphillips7108 Před rokem +1

      Where is the Sun located in the Milky Way?
      The Sun is directly below the galactic center, near the Orion Spur.

    • @scottphillips7108
      @scottphillips7108 Před rokem

      Strange waves in the sun are travelling far faster than they should be
      An odd type of wave has been discovered that travels backwards through the plasma that makes up the sun. But of three possible mechanisms to explain these waves, none fits the data, so they remain a mystery.
      Chris Hanson at New York University Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates and his colleagues found the waves, called high-frequency retrograde vorticity waves, using decades of data from both ground and space-based telescopes. The HFR waves are formed of groups of small eddies, or vortices, travelling around the sun in the opposite direction to its rotation.
      However, the vortices move around the sun three times faster than other, similar waves - more rapidly than can be explained by any of our models of plasma motion within the sun.
      The researchers tested three possible explanations: that the waves were caused by magnetic fields within the sun; that they come from other ripples in the sun called gravity waves; or that they are due to compression of plasma. None of these ideas matches the data.
      “To find a set of waves that has no current explanation is… exciting and intriguing, because the challenge now remains to explain what they are,” says Hanson. “We are missing an ingredient in our understanding of the sun.”

    • @scottphillips7108
      @scottphillips7108 Před rokem

      NIKOLA TESLA'S RADIATIONS AND THE COSMIC RAYS
      03 March 1935: “There exists, however, an element of incertitude which in itself is sufficient to invalidate completely the results obtained and of which Dr. Kolhoerster* does not seem to have thought. Light is a wave motion of definite velocity, determined by the elastic force and density of the medium. Cosmic rays are particles of matter, the speed of which depends on the propelling force and mass and may be much smaller or greater than that of light. Consequently, there can be no concordance in the phases of the two disturbances at the place of observation. The cosmic rays, generated during the maximum brightness of the star, may reach the place many centuries sooner or later than the light, according to their speed.” [*Tesla is probably referring to Kolhörster W., Physikalische Zeitschrift 26 (1925) 654. and Bothe W. und Kolhörster W. “Das Wesen der Höhenstrahlung”, Zeitschrift für Physik 56 (1929) 751-777]

  • @watchfan6180
    @watchfan6180 Před 2 lety

    How does a teacher afford a Jaguar XJS?

    • @Ghostrabbit22
      @Ghostrabbit22 Před 2 lety

      Well they are crap for a start if you can afford the fuel you would buy a new one , the old ones then you could pick up for 1000£

  • @davidwhite4874
    @davidwhite4874 Před 3 lety +4

    Howdie Mickoski brought me thither..............

  • @johnkeane1419
    @johnkeane1419 Před 2 lety +5

    Carol was still pretty hot in those distant days.

    • @teodelfuego
      @teodelfuego Před 2 lety +3

      Yes, but the actress who plays Debbie-Claire Price-was even more attractive

    • @mr.aNd3rs0n
      @mr.aNd3rs0n Před 8 měsíci

      no matter how mentally stimulating the story, it always comes down to the bottom line...i'd do her🤣

  • @masscomnet
    @masscomnet Před 2 lety +8

    This story is almost as believable as an angel giving a con-artist some "gold plates".

  • @Solaar_Punk
    @Solaar_Punk Před 3 měsíci +1

    Aww back when short haired feminists were sweet and polite when talking to men.

  • @STUDIOTIGERS
    @STUDIOTIGERS Před 7 měsíci

    Mr x8

  • @essess733
    @essess733 Před rokem

    26:16 it was him 🤣🤥

  • @jeesonjames3298
    @jeesonjames3298 Před rokem

    Hy Iam from year3105

  • @travismyers1985
    @travismyers1985 Před 19 dny

    Lol me

  • @arnolddalby5552
    @arnolddalby5552 Před 2 lety +6

    Time doesn't move and is holographic which means everyone is still alive in their own time which is why in the Bible the Elohim said that Abraham was still living because the Elohim can time travel. Hahaha. Very interesting stuff time travel.

  • @JAMAICADOCK
    @JAMAICADOCK Před 2 lety +1

    Typical BBC, endless repeats

  • @aaronz7267
    @aaronz7267 Před 2 lety +1

    This could only be believable by someone who knows nothing about computers! 😅🤣😂