Everything about Miller's Planet! | Interstellar world analysis

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 584

  • @soonsims
    @soonsims Před rokem +181

    I always thought the water was shallow b/s the rest was pulled by the gravity and forming a huge wave somewhere. So if there were no waves it would actually be deep.

    • @michellesheaff3779
      @michellesheaff3779 Před rokem +21

      Yeah the tsunami effect, the tidal waves sucked up all the water.

    • @spitfire1815
      @spitfire1815 Před 11 měsíci +6

      That is smart thinking too wow

    • @bartycrouchjr.8831
      @bartycrouchjr.8831 Před 11 měsíci +8

      That mountain sized waves could only rise water a few more meters not more.

    • @bigcat47
      @bigcat47 Před 11 měsíci

      Have you played EXO ONE on gamepass?

    • @hello-ox5rf
      @hello-ox5rf Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@bartycrouchjr.8831why do you think there was 1 wave total, planetwide???

  • @mark110384
    @mark110384 Před rokem +43

    From what I understand the waves aren't actually moving, the planet is rotating into a large water mass that is locked by the extreme gravitational force exerted by gargantua

    • @BloodHoundPL
      @BloodHoundPL Před 8 měsíci +6

      This is really cool concept.
      I wonder if with the ocean so shallow the opposite side of the planet would be completely dry, because all the water "slipping off" the planet's spherical suface towards the black-hole's center?

  • @DarkWater4Eva
    @DarkWater4Eva Před rokem +314

    I would love sequels to this movie and other thought provoking movies like Inception. Unfortunately we only get one movie of each. Meanwhile, there are approximately 10 million mindless Fast and Furious movies.

    • @Bapuji42
      @Bapuji42 Před rokem +7

      Inception would be terrible too after ten sequels. Probably before that.

    • @erichayes2890
      @erichayes2890 Před rokem +3

      Yeah...What sense does that make!! Zero!

    • @Bapuji42
      @Bapuji42 Před rokem +4

      @@erichayes2890 It's because a real original idea, with characters that have definite arcs, doesn't necessarily lend itself to having lots of sequels. Where would you go with Inception without wearing the whole premise pretty thin?

    • @LucyFerr000
      @LucyFerr000 Před rokem

      ​@@Bapuji42 I thought inception was inspired by an anime not exactly an original-original.

    • @Bapuji42
      @Bapuji42 Před rokem +2

      @@LucyFerr000 You know what I mean, I'm not going to split hairs.

  • @jhtrq1465
    @jhtrq1465 Před rokem +103

    2:56 If you are close enough to a neutron star for it to give earth like daylight, it make you very dead in the same time. Those things emits a lot of ionizing radiations, and if it is a pulsar the planet atmosphere would be blasted away by the jets.

    • @majormarketing6552
      @majormarketing6552 Před rokem

      That phony science knowledge isnt fooling anyone. Black holes arent proven yet and you claim to know its exact abilities and range

    • @Mandrak789
      @Mandrak789 Před rokem +10

      Right. In reality, this close to the black hole's powerful accretion disk, Miller's planet would be barren, airless, molten hell of a world.

    • @BradiKal61
      @BradiKal61 Před rokem +1

      Gargantua is a black hole with an accretion disk, but yes- that disk creates MASSIVE amounts or radiation.

    • @BradiKal61
      @BradiKal61 Před rokem +2

      ​@@majormarketing6552 Your statement displays the familiarity with science that one would expect from a half-orc / halfling neutral evil cleric

    • @AwakenedAvocado
      @AwakenedAvocado Před rokem +6

      As somebody who was blasted away into molecular matter by ionizing radiation, i understand this

  • @LevCallahan
    @LevCallahan Před rokem +44

    I'll point out an additional anomaly that makes the ocean tides so huge. As you've mentioned, the tides are ultimately caused by gravitational forces that most likely come from Gargantua, but the swells of the wave sizes are caused by a lack of any landmass. Water waves generally cannot reach past a certain size on their own due to continental shelves and landmasses that the waves ultimately meet.
    This means: because there are presumably are no shelves or landmasses, the waves have nothing to stop their consistency, thus making the gravitational forces of Gargantua causing uncollapsable waves of fantastically mammoth size. On a relatively smooth-faced planet with nothing but water, there's nothing to stop the waves, so they just increase and increase and increase as far as they can based on how much gravity is caused by Gargantua, of which it's noted is 130% earth's (which, for lack of a better word, is... bananas).

    • @hoominbeeing
      @hoominbeeing Před rokem +2

      The thing is, the level of gravity that would cause that to be possible would also tidally lock the planet very quickly
      Once it's tidally locked, no more tides ironically enough

    • @hubbsllc
      @hubbsllc Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@hoominbeeing Two things: 1) Miller's may be tidally locked with Gargantua but that wouldn't keep it from rotating on an axis that points at Gargantua (remember that Miller's is ovoid so that would be its long axis) - if that's the case then the planet might be turning underneath waves that are more or less sitting in place 2) Even if the planet isn't spinning on that axis, it might have a wobble that could set up motion in the water.

    • @hoominbeeing
      @hoominbeeing Před 9 měsíci

      @@hubbsllc 1. Planets do not spin underneath their waves. Even atmosphere, which is much less dense than water, spins with the earth. Water is denser and would do the same on Miller's planet
      2. With how the wave is depicted and explained, we already know this is false. It circles the entire planet. No form of wobble can cause that.

  • @mnaglich
    @mnaglich Před rokem +286

    The hardest part for me to believe is that they didnt orbit the planet first, did some basic observations, and notice that this planet was insanely dangerous to land on. Well for reasons outside the time dialation.

    • @brosplit
      @brosplit Před rokem +54

      1, suspense of disbelief; this is science fiction. 2, The plot stated that they were time-constrained. How long would you think it'd take to orbit whole planet? + that the planet is orbitting the gargantua! + Cooper wanted to save fuel + they thought the water was a good indicator of livable planet.

    • @mnaglich
      @mnaglich Před rokem +21

      @brosplit that's my problem with this movie. If it's just sci fi I'd be fine but every person and scientist sold this as some scientist miracle. And yeah, that tiny shuttle has the delta v to direct lift off and break away from a planets gravity well. The 25 min for a orbit before you land on a dangerous planet is just common sense. Or send a probe ahead of time??

    • @brosplit
      @brosplit Před rokem +15

      @@mnaglich your expectations are the things that lets you down. This movie was never promising something bombastic as you claimed but as it is : a sci-fi made by nolan. It is on you, and you seem to miss many plot points too.

    • @brosplit
      @brosplit Před rokem +8

      @@mnaglich send a probe ahead of time? 😂 Did you even digest the whole plot?

    • @mnaglich
      @mnaglich Před rokem +4

      @@brosplit not a probe from earth, from their mothership

  • @cesarjom
    @cesarjom Před rokem +73

    The extreme proximity of Miller's planet to the massive black hole (BH) would have one more significant consequence. You mention the BH accretion disk emitting light but also note that EM radiation in the full range of beyond visible spectrum would be emitted. This EM emission would consist of high energy radiation most likely due to the extreme gravitational field acting on the accretion disk to emit high energy particles and radiation. This would most definitely bombard Miller's planet and unless the planet possessed a strong magnetic field, it would not have sufficient protection from the harmful high energy radiation doing damage to planet and any occupants.

    • @bodypilot2006
      @bodypilot2006 Před rokem +4

      That was one of the first thoughts that I had about the planet. But it was fiction, getting all of the physics correct wouldn't necessarily make for a good story.

    • @Apotheosis1113
      @Apotheosis1113 Před rokem +3

      Yeah the movie wasn't scientifically accurate at all. They magic space dust time things

    • @averyb.476
      @averyb.476 Před 3 měsíci

      The EM radiation could also be blocked by the atmosphere/clouds. Similar to how earth's ozone layer and atomosphere. protects us from the full EM spectrum that our sun emits

    • @jmc.spectre
      @jmc.spectre Před 3 měsíci

      While earth has some protection from our suns radiation, the sun also plays an important role in protecting our planets from our galaxy's radiation.

  • @zeligchernia6186
    @zeligchernia6186 Před rokem +417

    I'm a physicist and I liked this sci-fi movie very much, however..with a huge time dilation depicted, where 1 hour equal several years in a target reference system, escaping speed for returning to the original one would mean achieving 99.99% of a light speed. NO WAY!!

    • @zeligchernia6186
      @zeligchernia6186 Před rokem +37

      @Diomedes I'm not an expert in the physics of the relativity, but I can relate to some of the questions raised by you. In respect to the issue of the proximity of Miller's planet to the black hole, it is not a issue: all matter that spins the black hole is essentially in a free fall and as long as the gravitational pool is not manifested on a local scale of several meters, no one would be hurt. In fact, one of the most interesting theories regarding the existence of our universe, assume that the entire 3-d universe that we are experiencing, exist on 2-d plane of an event horizon of a huge black hole... The only effect of the black hole in that scenario would be the impossibility of the return flight from Miller's planet.

    • @gregft1979
      @gregft1979 Před rokem +5

      ​@Diomedes I haven't watched the movie recently but the apparent size of the black hole doesn't mean the planet is that close. The picture depicts clearly the accretion disk where matter flies by and heats up insanely, and it's clearly not in the vicinity of the planet.

    • @bling815
      @bling815 Před rokem +4

      He says anything trapped in the black holes gravity is effected by time dilation. My question is let’s say there are 4 planted trapped by the black holes gravitational pull would the time dilation be different on the planet closest to the hole vs the planet furthest away?

    • @sachadossantos7972
      @sachadossantos7972 Před rokem +6

      @@bling815 yes the closer you're from the black hole the stronger the time dilatation is

    • @anger57289
      @anger57289 Před rokem +1

      Explained around 2 mins in with Kip Thorne's input

  • @BradiKal61
    @BradiKal61 Před rokem +62

    I feel like the water planet was inspired by a Larry Niven (AMAZING sci fi author) story "There Is A Tide". The story appears in a collection published in 1974 , called "A Hole In Space".
    If you haven't read any Larry Niven, you are missing out. He came to prominence in the 1960s and he always was a leader in mixing hard science with extrapolated technology. He's up there with Heinlein and other SF greats .

    • @Sarom335
      @Sarom335  Před rokem +1

      I've only read his probably most famous book Ringworld.

    • @BradiKal61
      @BradiKal61 Před rokem +2

      @@Sarom335 He really is one of the pioneers of sci fi. Even though some of his ideas feel a bit dated, most of them have timeless concepts in them, and his characters are really interesting.
      He wrote some books with Jerry Pournelle that are pretty famous, like Lucifer's Hammer (comet hits the earth), The Mote In God's Eye (distant future where we meet aliens) , Footfall (An alien race shows up and drops rocks on Earth)

    • @Sarom335
      @Sarom335  Před rokem

      @@BradiKal61 I wanna read another story by him. Out of the ones you mentioned which one should I read next?

    • @timambridge2545
      @timambridge2545 Před rokem +1

      The Mote in God's eye.

    • @casbot71
      @casbot71 Před rokem +2

      ​@Sarom while The Mote in Gods Eye (and its sequel) is good, it's set in a different Universe than RingWorld.
      I recommend exploring the RingWorld series further first - I think it's called the Tales of Known Space series (other authors have also written books for it).
      There's a sequel to RingWorld, but first, there are a few books that give some _very important_ background information.
      The book you must read next is *Protector*
      It's a short read but the "revelations" about humanity and other stuff tie into RingWorld.
      And it's just got a mind blowing concept. [Spoilers].
      *World of Ptavvs* should be next after that, it also includes important background information about the setting (that many characters wouldn't know) but will be easter eggs in other books and is set in a similar time period to Protector - Earth in a roughly the Expanse level of tech and not yet having alien contact.
      Larry Niven has two main settings, Humanity at that level with ramscoop STL travel, and then much later with a FTL multi species civilisations, which is when the RingWorld series is set.
      Then the next important read is *The RingWorld Engineers.*
      From there there's further RingWorld books, more books set in the early periods of the Solar system and STL travel, and another series about the Man/Kitzen Wars.
      Enjoy.

  • @hmaiusculooinimitavel3705

    The only thing nobody explained is why that same flying pod had to leave Earth in a "normal" rocket, with stages and whatnot. Than, after acoplate on the space station they use to travel, only the pod have strenght to descend and to escape that planet with a 30% INCREASE on the gravity.

    • @arablues4142
      @arablues4142 Před rokem +4

      Fuel

    • @pseudonym8082
      @pseudonym8082 Před rokem +9

      True, went from earth technology to star wars technology without explaination

    • @chrism3784
      @chrism3784 Před rokem +2

      yep, they were not leaving that planet in the little space ship, no way no how

  • @trequor
    @trequor Před rokem +18

    I will never get over how silly this is. Not the planet or physics, that stuff is super cool, but the fact that they landedon this planet at all is bonkers

  • @ryandowning2750
    @ryandowning2750 Před rokem +19

    Amazing that their ship was able to jettison off the water surface of the Miller’s planet just in time before the wave hit them when you consider the ship itself weighed 30% more as well.

    • @arghentrock
      @arghentrock Před rokem +11

      You are absolutely right and they did it with that small shuttle ship and to think that they initially left earth on top of a huge booster rocket just to escape earth's gravity into orbit.

    • @chrism3784
      @chrism3784 Před rokem +7

      @@arghentrock yep, that ship was not leaving that planet, ever, would need an even bigger huge booster rocket to overcome it's gravity

    • @seffard
      @seffard Před rokem +1

      Why is it amazing? It's a movie and the events follow a script. It's fun to watch, but that's it.

    • @ryandowning2750
      @ryandowning2750 Před rokem

      I was amazed they escaped. They could’ve been stranded on that water world! Story ends there 😞

    • @Klevzz
      @Klevzz Před rokem +2

      @@arghentrock Might have been a long time ago you watched the movie, but the reason they used rocket boosters was to save fuel in the rangers. They talked about saving fuel the whole time. They also brought a lot of supplies with them to the endurance.

  • @Icehax1
    @Icehax1 Před rokem +30

    The saddest part of this firm is they didn’t show what happened to to the original scientist that went to this world. After the scene where he isn’t able to get into the ship it shows him floating in the water, since it had only been a few years on earth that the OG scientist was on the planet because of the time dialation she was only there for about 15 minutes and the OG astronaut was left behind and it sparked debate if that floating body was the scientist we saw or the other scientist that was on the planet before them that wasn’t able to make it.

    • @luis_villagomez
      @luis_villagomez Před 2 měsíci

      The body we saw wasn’t the original scientist, when the team saw the giant waves there were two people (the dead body guy and the one girl I forgot her name) and when they ran towards thier ship the girl made it but the other scientist didn’t make it so we see his body in the water, I wrote another comment about the actual original scientist under this

    • @luis_villagomez
      @luis_villagomez Před 2 měsíci

      The body we saw in the water was not Miller because of the other comment I wrote, but some more reasoning I have is that we see Millers ship ripped apart and this proves that even though she only died a few minutes before the team arrived, she was still hit by a wave causing her to most likely be sent miles off in the distance or just ripped apart by the force of the waves

  • @Lutrian
    @Lutrian Před rokem +21

    My own suspicion, is that Miller's planet is probably also in the early stages of breaking apart, due to the tides. Time dilation might be the only thing keeping the planet together. The planet might normally take months to years to be destroyed, which would translate into tens of thousands of years.

  • @karlostj4683
    @karlostj4683 Před rokem +11

    So, the effect of time dilation due to the black hole's gravity is the same for everyone/everything at the same distance (R) from the black hole's center of mass. A difference in the passage of time only occurs if two objects are at two different R's. But if the distance is the same, there's no time dilation. Since Miller's Planet would be tidally-locked to the black hole, this means that if the ship from Earth were in a polar orbit around Miller's planet AND the people who landed on the planet were standing on the line marked by the ship's polar orbit through the surface of Miller's Planet, there would be nearly zero time dilation. Because everyone would be approximately the same distance from the black hole's center of gravity.

    • @BradiKal61
      @BradiKal61 Před rokem +1

      I agree. The black hole has to be REALLY massive in order to generate a gravitational effect far enough away from the hole to be unaffected to the accretion disk radiation , and at that extreme distance the gradient is going to be imperceptible between the orbit of Millers planet and the surface of the planet

    • @Mike__B
      @Mike__B Před rokem +3

      And if the planet was tidally locked, meaning the same face always was pointing towards the black hole why would there be huge tidal wave that moved along the surface? The reason why tides move on Earth is because Earth is spinning faster than the Moon is rotating around so it's less the tides moving around the Earth and more Earth moving towards the tides. If the planet is tidally locked it would rotate at the same rate as the tidal bulging meaning no tidal wave moving around the planet.

  • @Brit_in_Mindanao
    @Brit_in_Mindanao Před rokem +84

    There is a problem with the waves though. The water depth is insufficient to support a non breaking wave. The wave should be continually breaking as the drag at the leading edge caused by the sea floor would cause it to slow, allowing the following body of water to overtake and break over.

    • @ms0824
      @ms0824 Před rokem +3

      Even if the entire planet is covered in water?

    • @Brit_in_Mindanao
      @Brit_in_Mindanao Před rokem +37

      @Marquise Strong yes, a non breaking wave needs one and a half times its height in water depth to support it. Shallower than that, the drag from the sea floor causes the leading edge to slow. I don't see that would change even under different gravitational conditions.

    • @razorbackroar
      @razorbackroar Před rokem +2

      @@Brit_in_Mindanao nice

    • @Isibor
      @Isibor Před rokem +2

      😮

    • @Brit_in_Mindanao
      @Brit_in_Mindanao Před rokem +10

      @RazorBackRoar I guess the movie's advisors were experts in the mechanics of space flight, time dilation and gravity. But maybe no geographers on board...

  • @BradiKal61
    @BradiKal61 Před rokem +26

    When you have a movie like this dealing with some of the most extreme concepts in real and theoretical physics we have to cut the filmmakers some slack in bending the known laws of physics . Some important concepts that are dealt with in Interstellar is that space travel takes a LONG time, that time dilation, black holes, and dimensions exist beyond the three spatial dimensions plus time that we are familiar with.
    Interstellar didnt cheap out and provide its characters a handy warp engine but instead made their journey possible by understanding and using these new concepts.
    2001A Space Odyssey remains for me the gold standard in near future space exploration movies, but Interstellar did try to stay grounded while bending the rules to make its story happen

    • @ddespair
      @ddespair Před rokem +1

      Interstellar was fairly plausible for me until the end when the black hole conveniently spits out copper close to civilization and he is somehow found within the infinite vastness of space and brought home.

  • @costasspartan1894
    @costasspartan1894 Před rokem +4

    First and foremost the 1st question i would ask is why the hell would you think that a planet so close to a black hole would be safe for colonisation.

  • @firthm2
    @firthm2 Před rokem +7

    I think the highly ionizing EM radiation from the black hole accretion disk would evaporate the oceans, break apart water molecules, and strip them off into space.

    • @BloodHoundPL
      @BloodHoundPL Před 8 měsíci

      Could a magnetosphere from potential iron core stop this process?
      Or maybe Miller's Planet used to be much further away from Gargantua, but is on a decaying orbit and the process already started but it lasts very long due to the time dilation?

  • @diechecker2016
    @diechecker2016 Před rokem +2

    The ocean is probably the same depth everywhere because the wave has tumbled all available debris along with it and ground off, or filled in all the high/low spots.

  • @Draycoe
    @Draycoe Před rokem +15

    There is no way you would think to colonise such a planet, it's ridiculous.

    • @dominiicp
      @dominiicp Před rokem +4

      Yes but we all claim this is such a great movie and it seems so realistic

    • @Blue-vn4dl
      @Blue-vn4dl Před rokem +5

      Just move the planet , or colonize the black hole , Type 3 civilization style.

    • @Draycoe
      @Draycoe Před rokem +4

      @@dominiicp Oh I really enjoyed this movie, the visuals alone are amazing.
      But yes, there are some especially daft descions made in the film, this being one of them.

    • @wtfpantera
      @wtfpantera Před rokem

      Which is why they didn't.

    • @dominiicp
      @dominiicp Před rokem

      @@wtfpantera but they went to the planet to investigate knowing the time variation.

  • @qraal
    @qraal Před rokem +4

    Most of the questions people have about this scenario are answered in Kip Thorne's "The Physics of Interstellar". Sadly the one thing he didn't analyse was the effect of extreme time-dilation on the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). The CMB would be hotter than the Sun seen from Earth and Miller's Planet would be hot enough to melt aluminium.

    • @ddespair
      @ddespair Před rokem

      If your movie needs a separate paper to explain things so they make sense you did a bad job making the movie.

    • @user-kt4vn8le5p
      @user-kt4vn8le5p Před rokem

      What are you even talking about
      The CMBR was produced long before the black hole was created and the time dilation started to happen

  • @Mic_Glow
    @Mic_Glow Před rokem +1

    Light from the accretion disc.... yes, but from up this close it would bake the surface, bombard it with neutrons and so on. Thin disc with stuff moving close to the speed of light surely also fuses stuff.
    Unless the time dilation effects on the planet also "stretch" the radiation and spread incoming high energy particles over longer time period.

  • @RE-jm9un
    @RE-jm9un Před rokem +1

    I get the feeling that a planet in that close proximity to what looks like an SMBH's accredtion disk and a neutron star wouldn't have any atmosphere or water left on it.

  • @thecorrupted3217
    @thecorrupted3217 Před rokem +1

    Dude jesus your highly underated, i truely enjoy learning about planets. I hope you do nake more on various more.

  • @ThanosKratos
    @ThanosKratos Před rokem +1

    What I fail to comprehend is as human species we are looking for life everywhere and destroying it on our own planet.

  • @rong1924
    @rong1924 Před rokem +1

    A planet evenly with 16” of water except for enormous waves.
    Only makes sense to a movie producer who wants a cool shot in the movie.

  • @jonathanleslie9100
    @jonathanleslie9100 Před rokem +3

    shouldn't those tidal forces also be effecting the land under the ocean causing a nearly constant cracking of the planets crust so that the planet would be covered with erupting magma?

    • @kamion53
      @kamion53 Před rokem +1

      I think those tidal forces should bring the planet in a tidal lock: .... one rotation on it axis in one rotation around the black hole. Jupiter's moon Io is tidal locked and always faces Jupiter with the same side. However it's orbit is not circullar but eccentric, this changes in forces during it's orbit causes the vulcanism. Should the otbit of Miller's planet be excentric, it would be very vulcanic, but when is is circular there is not much change in forces to crack the crust.

  • @cathleenwilliamson6668
    @cathleenwilliamson6668 Před rokem +3

    Love the movie Interstellar!
    I wish the narrator explained time dilation. Unless I missed it, the narrator explained the effects of time dilation not what it is.

  • @coolbreeze5683
    @coolbreeze5683 Před měsícem

    Before they went to Miller's planet, you could tell that Doyle knew that Plan B was the main goal. He probably would have eventually told all of them but it was his fate to drown on Miller's planet in order to allow the others to continue on their journey. If Coop would have know Plan B was the only planned option, he would have thought it was all a sham and would have steered the ship back to Earth immediately to spend his remaining time with his family. It's amazing how we watch fate unfold in this movie since it seems chaotic but then you realize how everything was predestined to happen.

  • @MessianicJewJitsu
    @MessianicJewJitsu Před rokem +3

    I never understood why living next to a blackhole is a wise move if anything but temporary.

    • @wheresmtnzx1115
      @wheresmtnzx1115 Před rokem

      But they couldn’t live in that planet since the air composition is toxic to humans

  • @ddespair
    @ddespair Před rokem +1

    So the scientist who stayed on board put himself to sleep for 23 years? Did he time it perfectly so he would be awake already when they returned?

  • @lordkayx
    @lordkayx Před rokem +1

    That's neat that the advisor Got to have one of the robots named after him I find the robots in interstellar extremely fascinating for their design but also their Mobility I think it was a interesting and refreshing to take on an Android companion

  • @davidolsen9425
    @davidolsen9425 Před rokem +4

    How did they escape the planet’s gravity in just the lander, when they needed a full traditional rocket to launch from Earth?

    • @richard_d_bird
      @richard_d_bird Před rokem

      exactly. that little oversight jumped out of the screen and beat me senseless first time i saw this movie. this planet was supposed to have 1.3g too. if you could make a tiny little shuttle get into anything like leo from the surface of a planet like that, all by itself, well shucks, who needs antigravity eh

    • @Kai...999
      @Kai...999 Před rokem

      ​@Dick Bird You just need to reach escape velocity. Considering the time period the fuel source probably has enough energy to accelerate them to escape velocity

    • @chrism3784
      @chrism3784 Před rokem

      @@Kai...999 they wouldn't have needed it to leave earth then

  • @gigachad2632
    @gigachad2632 Před 10 měsíci +1

    1 hour on Miller’s planet is actually
    6 years 11 months and 23 days

  • @Fiish243
    @Fiish243 Před rokem +1

    3:11 Waves are not caused by the gravitational pull of the moon but by the wind on earth So on Miller's planet there would be very large tidal change where all the water would collect on the side closest to the black hole and this bulge of water would rotate around the planet as the planet rotates however there would not be thin tall massive waves like there was in the movie.

    • @minimac721
      @minimac721 Před rokem +1

      Exactly,
      Also this should only be one wave I believe right??

    • @Fiish243
      @Fiish243 Před rokem

      Yes that is correct!

    • @NuclearBomb-ow4zf
      @NuclearBomb-ow4zf Před 5 měsíci

      No because the planet is constantly rotating at an incredibly high speed so when the first wave passes the gravity from the black hole pulls another bulging wave and repeats that process ​@@minimac721

  • @akamered4483
    @akamered4483 Před rokem +2

    I am super confused because I read online that the waves on the planet occur every hour. I wanna ask a question because of that:
    They land shortly before a wave and lift off shortly before the next wave, so I understood it as one hour has passed which would result in 7 years. Yet, when they get back to the main ship, apperantly 23 years have passed instead of 7.
    How exactly does this work?
    Also, in the movie after the first wave hits them, its said that the engine needs around an hour to get the water out, yet the next wave already hits after they talk for only a few minutes (without a noticable time skip). That also confused me, can someone explain??? Or was this just a bad choice when it came to the cinematography?

  • @BloodHoundPL
    @BloodHoundPL Před 8 měsíci

    I also think the shallow ocean might come from extreme erosion. The tidal forces after millions of years caused all land to be leveled by relentless waves and the water was eventually just spread thin across the entire planets' surface. It is possible that water was much more scarce resource on Miller's Planet than it is on Earth, so it became globe-wide puddle.

  • @victors.1848
    @victors.1848 Před rokem

    Your voice is amazing for doing this kind of videos! Keep it up!!

    • @Sarom335
      @Sarom335  Před rokem

      Really? You're the first to say that. That just boosted my confidence lol people have been saying that I need to enunciate better which I kind of agree with. what do you think?

  • @jrkorman
    @jrkorman Před rokem +8

    I want to know how the radiation emitted by the accretion disk of a rapidly rotating black hole would not have fried the surface of Miller's Planet to slag!

  • @FirstNameLastName-okayyoutube

    For the water planet, the biochemistry works differently at your head then it does your feet. Additionally the time distortion would be along a vector to that of the blackhole, which means it wont allow for your orbit or the cohesion of the planet with that amount of time dialation. Remember, as best we understand today, gravity is the result of a time dialation. A sort of space time anti buoyancy. So if Earth has such a minor effect, then landing on the surface of something versus orbit... well... they would have to had set foot on a star. Not something that a blackhole being merely nearby could cause.

  • @nickdavis6676
    @nickdavis6676 Před rokem +1

    The planet has to be lit by the blackhole. Otherwise it should be dark from gravitational redshifting so the neutron star isn't even worth considering

  • @mapsgoonthewall5396
    @mapsgoonthewall5396 Před rokem

    Great video. I loved this movie so much that I had to grab "the science of interstellar" soon afterwards.

  • @tardiscommand1812
    @tardiscommand1812 Před rokem +2

    Brand new to the channel and loving it. Time to catch up on videos!

    • @Sarom335
      @Sarom335  Před rokem +2

      haha thanks for the love and feedback

  • @siddharthkumar593
    @siddharthkumar593 Před rokem +22

    Fun fact: To cause such a huge tume dilation on Miller's planet, Gargantua has to weigh 900 Million solar masses. And we've already found black holes like ton-18 and Phoenix A, which weigh 66 Billion solar masses!! Also, the gravity on Miller's planet should be muchhhh more than just 130% of earth's gravity, to cause such a huge time dilation

    • @BradiKal61
      @BradiKal61 Před rokem +6

      Actually I believe that because the planet and the astronauts are all within Gargantuas gravity well together they would feel only the gravity on the surface that is due to its mass. the bigger question is Would Miller's planet even exist that close to a black hole due to the accretion disk radiation, and also because of the tidal squeezing that should have turned the planet into a ball of molten rock

    • @siddharthkumar593
      @siddharthkumar593 Před rokem +1

      @@BradiKal61 This black hole is a fast spinning black hole and not a stagnant one. I don't know the science, but somehow this is the reason why Miller's planet still exists so near

    • @najeebshah.
      @najeebshah. Před rokem

      its just a concept, time isnt a force that can move separately in separate parts, its a constant. no matter where you are time is the same everywhere

    • @siddharthkumar593
      @siddharthkumar593 Před rokem +1

      @@najeebshah. I don't quite understand you. Time does change at different places in the universe. Its been proven already as the astronauts in the ISS are a few milliseconds behind from us

    • @najeebshah.
      @najeebshah. Před rokem

      ​@@siddharthkumar593 its never been proven.on the station, its still a theory

  • @BloodHoundPL
    @BloodHoundPL Před 8 měsíci

    I think there is a moon orbiting around either Jupiter or Saturn, that is subject to tidal forces that induce volcanism.
    The shifting rocks heat up and burst out.
    Imagine what would happen around the massive black hole if a planet can do this to its moon.

  • @user-kd3zd2nd9p
    @user-kd3zd2nd9p Před 5 měsíci

    The wave is supposed to break at shallow water. It is like 65degree breakpoint in earth, with 1.3x gravity it should be even less. Shallow water means 1/20L (L is here wavelenght and the distance between 2 waves). The water depth looks 0.7 meter (even less). So 20L means 14 meter. If the next wave is further than 14 meters, it means that water is shallow water. So, any wave will break. I must say that it is not possible to have such a big wave on that shallow water

  • @lambielikesit
    @lambielikesit Před rokem

    a great visual reference for the water planet from Children of Ruin

  • @jsbrads1
    @jsbrads1 Před rokem

    The extra weight would play hell on the joints. My father, at an advanced age, was carrying a few extra pounds and his hip started acting up.

  • @shujah9746
    @shujah9746 Před rokem +1

    50th subscriber. Nicely done.

    • @Sarom335
      @Sarom335  Před rokem +2

      Thank you so much! Appreciate it.

  • @robertnewman4105
    @robertnewman4105 Před rokem

    I felt 7 years older after watching that scene

  • @OOTurok
    @OOTurok Před rokem +22

    A water planet so close to a blackhole, who's gravitational pull is so great, trillions of tons of water is lifted miles into the sky... but somehow, tiny little humans stay grounded. 🤔
    And lets also forget that this super tide can move around a tidally locked planet, the planet still has an atmosphere, & it's not a molten rock puddle from Gargantua's tidal forces.

    • @dakmycat3688
      @dakmycat3688 Před rokem

      I thought he explained the reason. Now I’ll need to watch it again😙

    • @OOTurok
      @OOTurok Před rokem

      @@dakmycat3688
      He explained why the planet doesn't fall into the blackhole.

    • @subsume7904
      @subsume7904 Před rokem +4

      The mass of the waves is significantly higher than that of the humans. Same thing happens for us here on Earth, small insects are actually so small that they slightly escape our own planets gravitational pull, but humans do not because we are bigger.

    • @OOTurok
      @OOTurok Před rokem +1

      @@subsume7904
      Yes, but on Earth tides are not pulled 20,000 feet into the sky, by the moon. The tallest tides on Earth are generally only around 30 feet.
      Interstellar is pulling an Independence Day 2 on us, where the giant space ship's gravity is pulling skyscrapers off their foundations, into the sky, but somehow the tiny humans running around are still grounded.

    • @splatbubble
      @splatbubble Před rokem

      @@subsume7904 I don't think insects are excused from gravity.

  • @fastmclaren71
    @fastmclaren71 Před rokem

    Big Goldilocks zone too. Given how far apart, and how far from the black hole the planets are.

  • @rigormortis3219
    @rigormortis3219 Před rokem

    a crazy thought is the dude that died basically drowned and his body his just flailing around the planet in huge waves for hundreds of years our time.....

  • @josholin31
    @josholin31 Před rokem

    Being on a planet heavily influenced by time dialation. I wonder if the night skies would look like they were going in fast motion. - seeing the stars move.
    Light might be affected in the same way though. So I don't know if you'd actually get to see it. - I wonder how affected we are by the milky way's super black hole, and how that distorts our view of the universe.

  • @kr-sd3ni
    @kr-sd3ni Před rokem

    interstellar; movie that biologist and chemist could have solved on earth but instead chose physicist to go into wormhole to look for another planet near a blackhole and solve unsolvable gravity equation to get everyone on earth to that new planet. not knowing if the plants would grow on that planet or not.

  • @ScottMartinD
    @ScottMartinD Před rokem

    A wave is like an iceberg. There is an equal amount of ice below the surface as there is above the surface. Waves are the same. A thousand foot wave can't travel across a barren ocean floor (which is why it looks so bizarre in this scene).

  • @ge2623
    @ge2623 Před rokem

    At 4:05 if you look closely in the background, you can see the lights of a Taco Bell. Further proof that the planet is uninhabitable.

  • @shartsgamehouse7425
    @shartsgamehouse7425 Před rokem

    If you were born when this movie started playing on this planet you’d be able to drink legally when it finished lol

  • @ym7899
    @ym7899 Před rokem +1

    Question : how could millers planet survive being so close to a SMBH. And is the sky bright there due to black hole? Looks like its revolving around some star like our sun

    • @kylegraham7363
      @kylegraham7363 Před rokem

      Did you not watch the video 😑

    • @ym7899
      @ym7899 Před rokem +1

      @@kylegraham7363 give timestamp of my answer

  • @physicsbystanprisajny6284

    Runs on a garmin watch equals geomitry of a battery in there

  • @HalfDayHero
    @HalfDayHero Před rokem

    Really enjoyed the video although wish you slowed your speech down a bit and gave us some time to process the information of one topic before you moved on to the next :)

  • @navilearn5300
    @navilearn5300 Před 9 měsíci

    If we assumed an average planet density equal to Earth's what would need to be the mass of this Miller planet, in order to retain its atmosphere, considering the strong pull from Gargantua?

  • @showcase0525
    @showcase0525 Před rokem

    1:32 - that visual... wow.

  • @Richard_deVries
    @Richard_deVries Před rokem

    Funny thing about the idea of time dilation is that we are all under time dilation relative to other stellar masses. Even our sun or earth itself, and for example our galactic core (the black hole(s) that reside there)
    Gravity however is a weak force, so the amount of it required to give a significant effect on our perceived universe is extreme (like black holes) but even a weak force is a force. So if you leave earth and spend time outside our solar system and outside the gravitational reach of stellar bodies you would "go faster" then folks on earth, not worth measuring from an experiential perspective.. but its there.
    So conceptually, Sol and by extension us, could be in a gravity well of something warping time for us, giving us "more time" relative to outside that sphere of influence. Fun concept for sci fi, but hard to present accurately witch is why this movie is so much fun to watch for me

    • @BradiKal61
      @BradiKal61 Před rokem

      Time dilation is only fun when you take it to extremes, which this movie does. For the sake of introducing the audience to the concept Interstellar takes liberties with other scientific concepts to let the conditions of the story exist, and also to let the audience make discoveries along with the characters.
      A LOT Of sci-fi has to dumb down its main characters for that reason, and its kind of a necessary evil to keep the entertainment factor high .

  • @joelelbert1185
    @joelelbert1185 Před rokem +1

    How did they know the water was so shallow allowing them to land where they did?

    • @sirius4k
      @sirius4k Před rokem +1

      We have technology today that can determine the depth of a body of water. And they have slightly more advanced tech than we do.

    • @joelelbert1185
      @joelelbert1185 Před rokem +1

      @@sirius4k one would think that same tech could have also noticed a 3 mile high wave, too.

    • @sirius4k
      @sirius4k Před rokem

      @@joelelbert1185 On the other side of the planet (probably)? Guess not, it sure was unexpected because at first they had no idea what it was. Also, they didn't orbit the planet, they went straight in, to the beacon.

  • @Chedbenno
    @Chedbenno Před 8 měsíci

    So wait if one day is 7 years.... wouldn't they have only recived one signal

  • @zephyrprime
    @zephyrprime Před rokem +2

    It is always a bad idea to get so close to a black hole. They should have known better than to ever land on that planet.

  • @brightshadow9480
    @brightshadow9480 Před rokem +1

    You highlighted a key concept left out of most musing about time dilation: you are only allotted the time of your normal lifespan. No matter how slow your time moves relative to another's time, the total local perceived time you have remains the same.

  • @dominiicp
    @dominiicp Před rokem +1

    I would say this is a flaw with the movie that people chose not to talk about because why would you even explore a planet where you know the time variation. Hey let's search for alternative world to live in where we would die before our current planet dies.

  • @PippeML
    @PippeML Před rokem

    I thought he was going to explain the frozen cloud they tag when they enter the planets atmosphere

  • @user-wh8ng8xi3e
    @user-wh8ng8xi3e Před 11 měsíci

    when the tides hit. Its cause 23 year with 7 year so its mean that 35 year pass. When 35 year passed. The year on earth was 3091. Then actually edmunds died because the endurance crew goes to millers planet. When the endurance crew landed on millers edmunds died before so actually ameila buried her love. Because edmund was ameila love. So that why ameila buried her love. And that to be continued.

  • @tigermafia6251
    @tigermafia6251 Před rokem

    Fun fact : the water planet scene is shoot on earth

  • @chickenassasintk
    @chickenassasintk Před rokem

    excellent video. Loved it

  • @deadboyspoem2
    @deadboyspoem2 Před rokem

    keep em coming

  • @johankumpula
    @johankumpula Před rokem

    With 30% more gravity, how did they get back into space?

  • @codehard5824
    @codehard5824 Před rokem

    what would we observe if we were to send a unmanned robo to millers planet. How would we perceive time, shown through robo's camera

  • @taylorlatch2635
    @taylorlatch2635 Před rokem

    How did earth receive the beacon signal from Miller's planet so fast? Did Miller land on the planet, see that there was water, and immediately activate the beacon without second thought? Seems like the water waves come every hour or so. I guess that's kind of up to interpretation... Mainly curious how time dilation affects the signal when activated. Light/radio should take 7 earth years every hour to reach earth as well I would think, otherwise there would be some paradox or something. I know it's science fiction lol but I'm curious

  • @physicsbystanprisajny6284

    Has a perpetual motion machine toilet

  • @imedlechelah7480
    @imedlechelah7480 Před 10 měsíci

    There is no planet or spaceship can survive around the black holes, Radiation and the heat, gamma rays and more

  • @minimac721
    @minimac721 Před rokem

    One question,
    I think there should be only 1 "Wave" or tidal bulge.
    And the waves are not actually moving it's the planet rotating in the water sitting on top. Unless I am mistaken?
    I'm just a paramedic and have no idea what I'm talking about but based on my limited knowledge it seems like they should only be one wave.

  • @John_Zatanna
    @John_Zatanna Před 8 měsíci

    Can someone explain to me why is the guy who stayed on the main ship got older by 23 years if cooper and brand was down there less than an hour?

  • @SynthRockViking
    @SynthRockViking Před rokem

    Nice video 👍
    Black holes terrify me

  • @takpaanboskofsky
    @takpaanboskofsky Před rokem +1

    300th sub due to this video 😊

  • @Neithie
    @Neithie Před rokem

    Even if it did have breathable air they probably wouldn't have taken off their helments without finding out what's in the atmosphere

  • @kamion53
    @kamion53 Před rokem

    the enormous waves on this planet covered without landfeatures in a very shallow word wide sea is explaned as the result of the enormous tidal pull on the planet.
    however I don't think this does hold water as the gravital forces should also tidal lock the planet and the tidal bulge of water should stay at the same place.
    On earth the tides move because of the rotation of earth under the tidal bulge. This planet would nor rotate but face the black hole always with the same side, just like the moon always shows the same face to the earth.

  • @sansactionl5723
    @sansactionl5723 Před rokem

    Our tides are equally caused by the moon and the sun. Thats why when you have the moon and the sun lined up you get spring tides.

  • @gaylecheung3087
    @gaylecheung3087 Před 5 měsíci

    Oh, makes logical sense ❤ thanks

  • @oliverjabroni9912
    @oliverjabroni9912 Před rokem +1

    Okay so, I know very little about physics, and I was confused as to how the main character survives traveling into the black hole at the end, past the event horizon (didn’t he?). Even though it’s a rotating black hole, wouldn’t the gravitational pull be immensely destructive around the center?

    • @Mike__B
      @Mike__B Před rokem +4

      The destructive force with the event horizon of a black hole comes from the tidal forces gravity creates, that is to say a point closer to the black hole feels stronger gravity than a point farther away, for a stellar mass black hole (i.e. a black hole no more massive than a star) this tidal force would in fact be lethal, often (and nicely) referred to "spagettification" in documentaries (because the reality is not so nice). However as the black hole gets more massive in a strange twist these tidal forces get less intense and the reason for that is that the event horizon is farther away so while the overall strength in gravity is stronger due to it being more massive the difference in the strength of gravity between two points (aka the tidal forces) becomes smaller so surviving a journey into a super massive black hole like Gargantua would be possible... well up until the point where the tidal forces (and not the magical 4 dimensional bookshelf as depicted in the movie) do rip you apart.

    • @taylorlatch2635
      @taylorlatch2635 Před rokem +2

      That part was super fictional lol. I didn't mind it though, thought it was a good ending. Seeing Cooper explode into vegetable soup inside his spaceship woulda been cool too.

  • @user-wh8ng8xi3e
    @user-wh8ng8xi3e Před 11 měsíci

    Because millers was near gigantua. So that how the water form

  • @GinjaNinja77
    @GinjaNinja77 Před rokem

    Why do people debate the physics in this movie as if it’s a documentary and not a work of fiction?

  • @EB-im8fu
    @EB-im8fu Před rokem

    Wow this was interesting!

  • @redmed10
    @redmed10 Před 2 dny

    So how did miller just die minutes before they arrived?

  • @E85_STI
    @E85_STI Před rokem

    I guess there’s a much deeper part of the ocean otherwise where would all that water for the wave come from? Normally the water recedes then creates the tidal wave so it’s just different on that water planet.

  • @aygwm
    @aygwm Před rokem

    How do any of these planets have sunlight in the absence of a sun?

  • @ashansahabandu6279
    @ashansahabandu6279 Před rokem

    Great explanation. Thanx.

  • @texmex9721
    @texmex9721 Před rokem

    My thoughts:
    1. Going there was shear lunacy. It would not be possible for Miller to decide if the planet was fit in any useful amount of time.
    2. Going there to check on Miller was shear lunacy. Earth is dying and a solution needs to be found soon.
    3. Landing on the planet without noticing 2000 meter high waves would require an active effort to remain ignorant. Waves move at 5-30mph.
    4. Waves cannot be more than 1/2 as tall as the depth of water. So those are impossible.
    5. You said it was covered in water, but they believe the waves are mountains. (how?)
    6. The spacecraft goes from the bottom of the wave to the top by what? Magic?
    7. Surfing down the backside of the wave was silly.
    8. 1000 videos have been made about the ticking clock thing. I get it...

  • @stadiamak692
    @stadiamak692 Před rokem

    All the radiation from accretion disk would have blasted the atmosphere away and make the planet inhospitable

  • @cjr21
    @cjr21 Před rokem

    I choose to believe this movie as truth.

  • @OnyxLee
    @OnyxLee Před rokem

    Why is ocean bottom of the miller's planet have so smooth and flat?