What Planets' Insides Look Like

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  • čas přidán 16. 12. 2022
  • How much do you know about the planets of our solar system? By combining information about a planet's seismic activity, density, magnetic field and so on, we can make assumptions about a planet's interior. Let's find out, what's inside them.
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  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 644

  • @jennifersaar1611
    @jennifersaar1611 Před rokem +321

    Scientists recently found out that Mars is a lot more seismically active than previously thought.

    • @HASMETMEAP
      @HASMETMEAP Před rokem

      science scammers said
      do you really believe this?

    • @alessioatta762
      @alessioatta762 Před rokem +11

      Indeed i would like too know if the notions behind the video are contemplating even the latest updates from inSight probe

    • @distantthunder12ck55
      @distantthunder12ck55 Před rokem +2

      Yes, there's a huge bulge/upwelling of magma, a chamber under the Tharsis region to this day.

    • @melle1996meijer
      @melle1996meijer Před rokem +2

      Yet it doesn't have a molten core cause if it had it would have a magnetic field what it clearly doesn't have

    • @distantthunder12ck55
      @distantthunder12ck55 Před rokem +9

      @@melle1996meijer Again, you're wrong, the latest findings are that the core is indeed molten. Venus most definitely is volcanically active and has no magnetic field. This, should tell you how flawed your logic is.

  • @erikm8372
    @erikm8372 Před rokem +79

    I’m honestly confused about the non-inclusion / randomness of these celestial bodies:
    1. Venus?
    2. Uranus?
    3. Ee-oh is pronounced “eye-oh” I think…
    4. Titan? I mean, if you’re looking at Europa and Io…
    5. Enceladus?
    6. Pluto? Might as well. I meant as far as digging into the core…

    • @fb6039
      @fb6039 Před rokem +1

      The name Io comes from Latin and means "I".
      It's actually pronounced like that in modern Italian so I think "eh-oh" is also correct.

    • @bigbengamer
      @bigbengamer Před rokem +1

      Eye-oh is the american pronounciation. E-oh is the original form.

    • @sarahs472
      @sarahs472 Před rokem +6

      Exactly! I wondered if I had missed Venus, it makes no sense not to include it, we even have PICTURES of Venus' surface from landers! Also, Jupiter was revisited multiple times, which was weird and confusing.

    • @terryrussell8527
      @terryrussell8527 Před rokem

      Seriously the editing on this is spastic.

    • @reneewells2835
      @reneewells2835 Před rokem

      Fr like how did yall do two moons but no the other planets

  • @timothypage252
    @timothypage252 Před rokem +51

    The asymmetry of the lunar crust may indicate that the crust formed, still molten, while already tidally-locked to the Earth. It would act as a sort of centerfuge, pushing more mass toward the outer edge of the orbit. REALLY cool.

    • @equious8413
      @equious8413 Před rokem +3

      Hmm. The centrifuge answer is one I hadn't considered. I assumed that as the bodies became tidally locked the center of mass of the system, would be near the systems gravitational center. Is the orbit of the moon sufficient to generate this centrifugal force?

    • @scottjustscott3730
      @scottjustscott3730 Před rokem

      @@equious8413 I would tend to think there's not enough centrifugal force but much earlier in the history of the earth-moon system the moon's orbit was much closer and therefore much faster so I suppose it's possible.

  • @lotus7589
    @lotus7589 Před rokem +77

    Mars is not geologically inactive. InSight (Who recently shut down forever) has shown us a lot of Mars and how it's still very much active in some capacity. The largest marsquake recorded by InSight clocked in at a 4.2. It's also much more porous than previously assumed, which might mean there's more radioactive elements present there than here on earth.

    • @kateofone
      @kateofone Před rokem +1

      Also the reason it doesn’t have a magnetic field is because there was as much liquid separation between denser and lighter materials. They sort of just mixed together without much difference in the mantle or so I read.

    • @hotfightinghistory9224
      @hotfightinghistory9224 Před rokem +1

      Also, there have been some VERY tantalizing discoveries made at Gale Crater in the recent years. We wont be absolutely sure until a sample return mission in 2030, but some of the photos being sent back from Gale go WAY beyond fossilized microbes on a rock. I urge anyone reading this to do some googling :)

    • @riproar11
      @riproar11 Před rokem

      @lotus *there are more radioactive elements there is? C'mon man!

    • @maflones
      @maflones Před rokem

      This video is full of amateurish errors.

  • @frantisekvrana3902
    @frantisekvrana3902 Před rokem +108

    The thickness of Luna's crust does not depend on whether the Sun shines upon it. It depends on location.
    Specifically, the crust on the side near Earth appears to be thinner than the crust far from Earth.

    • @equious8413
      @equious8413 Před rokem +2

      This is surprising to me. Any theories as to why? You'd think gravity on the side facing may cause some kind of.. bulge. You'd think the centers of mass would be nearest the systems gravitational center 🤔

    • @rustypliers74
      @rustypliers74 Před rokem +2

      @@equious8413 there is a theory that we had two moons, and when they collided the near side is what remains of it

    • @DavidStruveDesigns
      @DavidStruveDesigns Před rokem +15

      I think you're a little confused. It's called the "dark side" not because the Sun never shines on it, but because it always faces away from us on Earth. Hence humans on Earth have never seen it, hence "dark side". Also when rockets or satellites orbit over that side, they can't communicate via radio with Earth, hence their radio "goes dark". Still, it _is_ rather confusingly labelled.

    • @frantisekvrana3902
      @frantisekvrana3902 Před rokem +9

      @@DavidStruveDesigns While calling the far side dark is still inaccurate, it is not what I am complaining about this time.
      What I am complaining about is that he called the near side sunny.

    • @DavidStruveDesigns
      @DavidStruveDesigns Před rokem +2

      @@frantisekvrana3902 Yeah I re-watched it cos I didn't quite catch it the first time, and you're correct - he did. And yeah, that's incorrect as you pointed out. So my bad, I misheard him not you. Apologies :)

  • @hazelmarieb9934
    @hazelmarieb9934 Před rokem +38

    So much for the "We're now going to drill Uranus" jokes.

  • @Tigtone_85
    @Tigtone_85 Před rokem +71

    The reason Mercury has such a large core might be because it once was a much larger planet according to some theories. Things were chaotic early on especially with Jupiter and with Mercurys funky orbit it seems likely something major happened to it after formation. Might have been a Earth like planet or even a super Earth at one point which we are finding to be pretty common out there. Maybe in the future we will have some super algorithm that can perfectly rewind the solar systems history and tell us what happened.

    • @WikiNieWiki
      @WikiNieWiki Před rokem +4

      Isn't Sun burning Merkury's surface?

    • @Kidgermodsout
      @Kidgermodsout Před rokem +6

      @@WikiNieWikiYes but if I remember correctly, while the sun liquidities some of the surface of Mercury, the side facing away is cold enough to consolidate the rock back on the surface, meaning no mass is ever loss.

    • @Tigtone_85
      @Tigtone_85 Před rokem

      @@Kidgermodsout Yeah I do remember hearing something to that effect. I don't think Mercury is being burned off into space if that's what Wiki is saying never heard anyone make that claim.

    • @Anti-Italian19138
      @Anti-Italian19138 Před rokem

      ​@@WikiNieWiki u spelled mercury incorrectly

  • @erikkorhonen
    @erikkorhonen Před rokem +10

    Funny part is No one knows what they look like inside, people can't even agree what the moon looks like inside and it's the closest body we have to he earth

  • @Nitix18
    @Nitix18 Před rokem +9

    Why did you skip drilling into Uranus? 👀

  • @Ikkas_stuff
    @Ikkas_stuff Před rokem +36

    This change subjects real quickly XD
    First we're talking about insides of a planet, the next thing you know that he's explaining what would happen if earth is the same size a Jupiter XD
    Cool vid tho! It's interesting :)

  • @christopheraaron8299
    @christopheraaron8299 Před rokem +1

    There is no "dark side" of the moon. Every side of the moon gets sunlight. It's tidally locked to Earth, the same side always faces Earth, so there's a near side and a far side, but no dark side.

  • @pepperVenge
    @pepperVenge Před rokem +34

    I'd be very interested to know how we learned all this.

    • @o0oAeyao0o
      @o0oAeyao0o Před rokem +2

      Was about to comment the same

    • @aarongregory4980
      @aarongregory4980 Před rokem

      There’s plenty of scientific papers published on the topics out there to read.

    • @grimreefer213
      @grimreefer213 Před rokem +11

      A lot of it is still theoretical, we don’t actually know exactly what Jupiter’s core is made of. But there’s some theories that it is made of metallic hydrogen. I’m wondering how they’re so confident that half of these objects have iron cores. I would’ve liked for the people making this video to specify how we know these things and talk more about this topic generally before confidently describing the contents of each object

    • @thearianmandalorian
      @thearianmandalorian Před rokem +2

      @@grimreefer213 ahaha all of it still theories, they havent even got to our own core yet

    • @abhijithajay1998
      @abhijithajay1998 Před rokem +1

      @@thearianmandalorian 💯

  • @ThanawatSuekeaw
    @ThanawatSuekeaw Před rokem +12

    Venus and Uranus: 🧍🧍

  • @wxb200
    @wxb200 Před rokem +9

    What happened to Venus & Uranus?

    • @erikm8372
      @erikm8372 Před rokem +2

      I know I was like…?

    • @wxb200
      @wxb200 Před rokem +1

      @@erikm8372 the video was long & fairly inaccurate. I never finished watching it.

  • @linrayzou5952
    @linrayzou5952 Před rokem +2

    Bright side: I think I forgot about something
    person: If you forgot about it then it wasn't important.
    Bright side: your right
    Venus:

  • @wolf_9626
    @wolf_9626 Před rokem +6

    How do they even know all these? It's not like they can see through planets all have drilled through any of them. That's what fascinates me.

    • @aqqaluolsvig1564
      @aqqaluolsvig1564 Před rokem +3

      I drilled them myself with my handy drill from the garage.

    • @REFORGER_2023
      @REFORGER_2023 Před rokem

      Just have a look at Juno probe's instruments (wikipedia).

  • @bathin813
    @bathin813 Před rokem +19

    Can someone explain how people can know this.

    • @veyrenwolf6530
      @veyrenwolf6530 Před rokem +5

      these infographic channels tend to gloss over a lot of the details, I won't try to explain it myself coz I'm no scientist but channels like PBS Spacetime, Astrum, and Anton Petrov have a few videos that go into more detail about atomic emmission spectra and mathmatical simulations of these planets that predict what these planets are really like (along with data from probes that we've sent to these planets to study them).

    • @darassylmoniakam
      @darassylmoniakam Před rokem +6

      they speculate

    • @Tuttomenui
      @Tuttomenui Před rokem +2

      They pull it out of Uranus. This video is rediculous.

    • @changsangma1915
      @changsangma1915 Před rokem

      An actual scientists would give you all the real information there is but would you still agree to an information you have no grasp about?!

    • @bathin813
      @bathin813 Před rokem +1

      @@changsangma1915 if they are going there and measuring it with machines and stuff. Yeah very believable.

  • @Electroblade360
    @Electroblade360 Před rokem +8

    Fun fact: Mars is a lot more seismically active than previously thought

  • @john_doe_not_found
    @john_doe_not_found Před rokem +2

    Europa has an icy crust and likely a volcanic sea floor somewhat similar to the surface of Io. Europa and other moons of Jupiter that orbit close enough will likely never cool down. They are stirred by the gravity of Jupiter and that keeps their mantle molten.

  • @AproposDare
    @AproposDare Před rokem +10

    I learned what the inside of Jupiter looked like from the One Punch Man manga.

  • @TheRetroReboot
    @TheRetroReboot Před rokem +9

    I love how he goes into the wall thingy on earth and he turns into a full spaceship

  • @stankfaust814
    @stankfaust814 Před rokem +6

    Always interesting to see Jupiter's composition get discussed. I wonder when we'll advance beyond the notion that the planet is 90% hydrogen (the lightest element in the universe) and 10% helium (the next lightest) and yet it self accreted these elements into a planet that is 2.5 times the mass of all the other planets combined. It's a lazy answer.
    In a gravity well, matter is stratified by its density which is why you have light atmospheric gasses on top (radially speaking) and dense metals at the bottom (core.)
    On earth, hydrogen readily escapes off into outer space. In fact all the 4 inner 'terrestrial' planets have weak atmospheres, slow rotations and low mass compared to the outer 4 'gas giants'
    They're gas giants because they have a very large core that is able to grab and hang onto and even compress gasses. Hydrogen does not escape from jupiter. Its well is very deep.

    • @justynpryce
      @justynpryce Před rokem

      Lazy?

    • @stankfaust814
      @stankfaust814 Před rokem

      @@justynpryce Yes lazy
      it's an antiquated thought being regurgitated without giving the information being swallowed any rigorous contemplation.

  • @InuranusBrokoff
    @InuranusBrokoff Před rokem +1

    Mars: Geologically active
    Jupiter: liquid metallic hydrogen core
    Io: eye oh
    Uranus: yes?

  • @taraponce1709
    @taraponce1709 Před rokem +2

    Mars has confirmed seismic activity from data sent back from InSight.

  • @alexandthesquad7227
    @alexandthesquad7227 Před 8 měsíci

    I like learning about these types of stuff its kinda cool ngl.

  • @bmaybatrisyha12
    @bmaybatrisyha12 Před rokem +4

    Nobody:
    The teacher: *Talks about stuff only some scientists know*

  • @mpc1mil
    @mpc1mil Před rokem +4

    Just because we never see the dark side of the Moon doesn't mean it's always dark. Why is the crust so much thicker? Edit: I think I get it now. It's the gravity of Earth pulling the dense center of the Moon with more force then the lighter outer crust. May have settled this way while the moon was still molten

    • @lancerevell5979
      @lancerevell5979 Před rokem +1

      There is no "dark side" of the Moon. The far side gets as much sunlight as the near side.

    • @priatalat
      @priatalat Před rokem

      It's the dark side meaning dark to us since we can never see it from the Earth.

  • @lukeclark4102
    @lukeclark4102 Před rokem +9

    Drilling video he says Jupiter’s core reaches 50,000c in temp but second video with the Great Red Spot says the core is upto 28,000c? I like these type of videos and the animations really make things look great but fact checking and consistency is very important.

    • @lesstevens2370
      @lesstevens2370 Před rokem +1

      Yes and also Europa in order for there to be life there the core should be hot from the gravitational effects of Jupiter

    • @TwistedFire85
      @TwistedFire85 Před rokem +3

      This is what confused me. Said 90,000 F, 4:41, then said 43,000 F, 9:28. How's there so much deviation in the same video?

    • @storyteller5931
      @storyteller5931 Před rokem +1

      And later on said we could fall from side to side due to how low dense it was.

  • @robertbonneau6680
    @robertbonneau6680 Před rokem +5

    Okay they did all the planets a couple moons of Jupiter but what happened to Venus why didn't they do this for Venus

    • @ki5aok
      @ki5aok Před rokem

      Venus gets no love.

    • @Killervision.
      @Killervision. Před rokem

      @@ki5aok Neither does mercury, It's the smallest planet and it has NO moons.

  • @Rbskater12000
    @Rbskater12000 Před rokem

    Towards the end speaking about if we were the size of Jupiter, you forgot to add how time would essentially be slower, based on Einsteins Theory of Relativity

    • @nonsuspiciouscolour
      @nonsuspiciouscolour Před rokem

      Actually, the difference would be very very tiny. A few seconds at most.

  • @pride2184
    @pride2184 Před rokem +3

    About mars they do think mars recently they think its still has a living core of molten metal like our own as mars has earth quakes or just quakes they think are lava plumes under the surface scishow did a episode on it.

  • @TNight00
    @TNight00 Před rokem

    Amazing

  • @FirstnameLastname-bz8wg
    @FirstnameLastname-bz8wg Před rokem +1

    You dropped a lightsaber perfectly verticle on EVERY planet?

  • @seanmurphy1411
    @seanmurphy1411 Před rokem +1

    Wow, great intelligent 🧠🤓✊ cool vid

  • @tommyhartman
    @tommyhartman Před rokem

    Alarms during the voice over, that's special.

  • @hellzs
    @hellzs Před rokem

    you dropped it PERFECTLY VERTICAL

  • @unisophia
    @unisophia Před rokem

    higher gravity won’t fundamentally impede flying, as athmosphere will indeed become denser, which in some sense will make it even easier to fly. we’ll just have to evolve not just physically, but also technologically and develop different sorts of planes that will rely on these changed conditions.
    also, birds will much more rely on floating and will have to grow much bigger and stronger, with huge wide wings which will allow them to float on in the air, like huge living kites, using ascending and descending currents.

  • @brick4643
    @brick4643 Před rokem

    Anybody else notice that some of the sound effects are from a game. The ones I recognize came from Mindustry, unless they are free to use sound effects.

  • @alexanderzarzycki8405
    @alexanderzarzycki8405 Před 6 měsíci +2

    outer planets has a core called dense solid rock

  • @brianwyatt9972
    @brianwyatt9972 Před rokem +2

    Actually Mars is currently being seismicly active

  • @ecswipeher6394
    @ecswipeher6394 Před rokem +3

    I just want to know how do you know this stuff without ever being there to even sample the land or anything else on the planet

  • @LeifurHakonarson
    @LeifurHakonarson Před rokem

    The Moon doesn't HAVE a dark side - it just a long day (28 Earth days). When we have no moonlight ("a new Moon") it's because the Sun is shining on its far side. If you got this basic fact wrong, what else did you get wrong? The Moon DOES have a "near side" and a "far side" - which is a totally different thing.

  • @wewillworld522
    @wewillworld522 Před rokem +2

    When u are in the middle of an object, mass is outside = No gravity only pressure.
    Super Atom ?

  • @stevegovea1
    @stevegovea1 Před rokem

    Loving the Rick portals and light saber reference. ..

  • @talbaskin1081
    @talbaskin1081 Před rokem

    Scientists theorize that the core of gas giants is made out of Metallic Hydrogen, aka. Hydrogen that is compressed so much that the space between atoms is nil and it starts having a pattern of a metallic substance in structure.
    We still don't know if it would be liquid or solid, but most say it'll be solid metallic hydrogen.

  • @marktwain2053
    @marktwain2053 Před rokem

    The thickness of the moons crust is because of the way it formed, and there's no way of knowing how thick it is on either side, it's all just conjecture.
    The moons molten core would be very small, if it exists at all.
    A large meteor strike will cause the moon to ring like a bell, giving the impression that it is either a solid ball of iron ( actually an alloy), or that it is hollow (there's the belief by some that it's not even a natural object, but a very large ship...maybe like the Deathstar?).
    I guess anything is possible, no matter how unlikely!

  • @NoobNoobNews
    @NoobNoobNews Před rokem +3

    You know, I think Martian tunnels will be very deep... Like, deeper than anything we know or understand. We are talking ultra deep. Imagine 100 mile deep shafts with a hive of people. humans living literally like ants.

  • @WakenerOne
    @WakenerOne Před rokem +1

    "Sunny side" and "dark side" of the moon? And that affects the thickness of the crust? You aren't aware that both the nearside and the farside get pretty much the same amount of sunlight over the course of an orbit? We're done here.

  • @itsamemario444
    @itsamemario444 Před rokem +1

    If jupiters core is completely molten due to the intense gravimetric pressures then why would earths molten core solidify when it's the size of jupiter.... makes no sense to me.

  • @shanethecolloidalsilverman718

    Oh so that’s what the cores look like right we’ll take me because no one has ever been there to tell or take pictures of the cores 😅

  • @JuliusCaminus
    @JuliusCaminus Před rokem +1

    You built this drill out of Delroy Lindo's unobtainium, huh?

  • @EvaOwnsAll
    @EvaOwnsAll Před rokem

    I'd love to see "What if, when the sun is nearing the end of its life, we were to dump Jupiter into it? How long would it extend the Sun's life or would it have more negative effects upon it?"

  • @gustavosantos106
    @gustavosantos106 Před rokem +1

    How do they know what is like under 250 miles of the surface of Mercury?

  • @scottjustscott3730
    @scottjustscott3730 Před rokem

    I feel like I need to clarify something. The moon does not have a "sunny side" and "dark side" but instead has a near and far side both of which are subject to lunar day and night.

  • @jeffrisager2367
    @jeffrisager2367 Před rokem

    Awsome

  • @thepersonwhoasked10
    @thepersonwhoasked10 Před rokem

    i like how the video is replaced around 10 minutes in

  • @ramonsanchez6903
    @ramonsanchez6903 Před rokem

    We need a Shuttle fleet like this one

  • @giovannisolano5433
    @giovannisolano5433 Před rokem

    I hope you do Uranus

  • @Matthew.Sirrom
    @Matthew.Sirrom Před rokem

    in order for us to survive 5x gravity we would have to gradually be exposed to higher and higher pressure from what we are now so our bodies could slowly adopt to the changes over time but if you just jump from 1G to 5G environment.

  • @iammyself337
    @iammyself337 Před rokem

    NASA released evidence of vast stores of water under the crust. And when a used craft was sent crashing into the surface, the moon rang for hours.

  • @palomarivera7433
    @palomarivera7433 Před rokem

    5:35 “challenger deep”
    The Mariana Trench: am I a JOKE to you?

  • @Sofav0963
    @Sofav0963 Před rokem

    This guy is the reason why people is living happily

  • @EnterNameHere_
    @EnterNameHere_ Před rokem +1

    the drill looks like a lightsaber💀

  • @ndaasimandikudza970
    @ndaasimandikudza970 Před rokem

    Nice 😊😊

  • @axelwulf6220
    @axelwulf6220 Před rokem

    The bit with Earth suddenly becoming a Jupiter size might be a problem, but what if it always was like that?

  • @ncjsgrki
    @ncjsgrki Před rokem

    There was two NASA missions that crash probes in to the moon, making it ring like a bell for hours. Proving that the moon is hollow.

  • @lawofliberty3517
    @lawofliberty3517 Před rokem

    Definitely glad I came to comments first🖐. Thanks.

  • @thomasp506
    @thomasp506 Před rokem

    Jupiter's slower orbital period is due to its distance from the sun, not its mass. An object's mass has no effect on its orbital period. Earth would only orbit the sun slower if you also moved it to the same distance from the sun as Jupiter.

  • @Dustin-wc1cq
    @Dustin-wc1cq Před rokem

    Why does landing on Europa sound so satisfying lol

  • @jaydenskylersworld
    @jaydenskylersworld Před rokem +1

    Wow!

  • @farmlyf
    @farmlyf Před rokem

    There is no "dark side" of the moon - while the Moon is tidally locked to Earth, both hemispheres receive the same amount of sunlight over time.

  • @luxbreakable1669
    @luxbreakable1669 Před rokem

    Yes bright side is right if you drill the core of a planet then it would be unnecessary as a planet would pretty much explode.

  • @willyreeves319
    @willyreeves319 Před rokem

    there is not a dark and sunny side of the Moon. there is a side that faces the Earth and a side that faces away, but both sides get roughly 14 days of sun light and 14 days of darkness. the crust of the Moon is thinner on the Earth facing side

  • @lousongsbytraffic2852

    Scientists have discovered that core of mars started to cool down and it caused it to lose it’s magnetic field and that’s what wiped out life on mars

  • @jabezperez4369
    @jabezperez4369 Před rokem

    They is mindustry sound when you research some thing

  • @vorrdegard2176
    @vorrdegard2176 Před rokem

    All these solid metal cores could be harvested in the future

  • @DoNotEatPoo
    @DoNotEatPoo Před rokem

    Material of drill pls? thks!

  • @PlicPlicc
    @PlicPlicc Před rokem +2

    Where do you get the information to give this type of data?

    • @RSCB
      @RSCB Před rokem

      Wikipedia

    • @riomj4220
      @riomj4220 Před rokem

      Wiki, where anyone can edit the information.

  • @kentuckybeardsman
    @kentuckybeardsman Před rokem

    So how do we know what's inside the moon if we've never drilled that deep?

  • @hazardousroo
    @hazardousroo Před rokem

    There's a theory....or maybe it's just a wild guess....that any carbon in Jupiter has drifted down to the core and been crushed by the immense pressure into pure diamond. I think Arthur C. Clarke was the first person to write the idea into a story.

  • @TheWiseJames
    @TheWiseJames Před rokem +1

    This is all realistically theoretical until we actually see or drill into a planets core. Although our current technologies gives us a great idea of what everything looks like, is made of ect... But realistically we wont know until we get closer to a planets core, Doing it to our own planet would be highly dangerous. So this is at least a century away from being proven.

  • @Lovelywatermelontea
    @Lovelywatermelontea Před rokem +1

    How about uranus and venus?

  • @maxhunter3574
    @maxhunter3574 Před rokem +1

    What happened to Venus, and the rest of the planets and large moons?

  • @neilshirrell3838
    @neilshirrell3838 Před rokem

    What do they mean by the sunny side of the moon?

  • @Fido-vm9zi
    @Fido-vm9zi Před rokem

    Maybe we humans on surface Earth are the offspring of astronauts sent from inside to figure out how to free those inside. It seems living inside a planet would be much safer. And similar to us now trying to figure out how to branch out further into space.

  • @jerrylove865
    @jerrylove865 Před rokem

    I'm sorry... why does the moon's crust double in thickness after sunrise?
    Though then the video contrasts "the dark side" which refers to the side that focus' away from Earth. So did the video (which showed the sun in the graphic) actually intend to refer to the face of the moon that faces Earth?

  • @torimorisbrown1300
    @torimorisbrown1300 Před rokem

    YOUR THE BEST I LOVE SPACS
    ❤❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉😊😊

  • @Koyai_Zieam
    @Koyai_Zieam Před rokem

    I have a fear of being INSIDE OF OTHER PLANETS. It was because I played a recreation of the solar system in Minecraft and I went inside every planet

  • @p.h.bridegroom4142
    @p.h.bridegroom4142 Před rokem +1

    Hilarious to think that we can be so absolutely certain of things we've never actually discovered. 🤣

  • @chrisgreen3632
    @chrisgreen3632 Před rokem

    One of the Apollo missions dropped an object on to the lunar surface and it rang for hours. The moon is hollow and rings like a bell when struck. The moon doesn’t have a mantle… there is no tectonic activity like here on earth

  • @sinking_ships
    @sinking_ships Před rokem

    What about the hexagon at the top of saturan

  • @haroldkline4898
    @haroldkline4898 Před rokem

    Except the moon's average density indicates that it is mostly hollow.

  • @nikashaolu
    @nikashaolu Před rokem

    I love the way we are able to see what's inside the planet but even if scientist colonise mars with earth I am not living there 😸👌💖😆😆

  • @orsonzedd
    @orsonzedd Před rokem +1

    of course a perfectly vertical Lightsabre.

  • @eoachan9304
    @eoachan9304 Před rokem +1

    Valiant attempt, but for example your data on Mars is already out of date-the active rovers have detected earthquakes up to 5.4 on the Richter scale there :) Plus at least one mantle plume has been found, although it is not as hot as one on earth :)

  • @Sebilion12
    @Sebilion12 Před rokem

    Oh! How I wish I could see the drill on Titan!

  • @InspirationHouseNetwork

    "👏🏽 Fairly interesting!" (-James)

  • @kerbalspaceprogramfan

    Did you just show part of the cassini mission at 9:40 ?

  • @lolspolant5383
    @lolspolant5383 Před rokem

    3:20 i think venus is simillar for diameter and gravity. But Living there is impossible and Terraforming would be hard

    • @stankfaust814
      @stankfaust814 Před rokem

      It would have to be easier to terraform venus, which already has a thick atmosphere than it would be to try to create and hold an atmosphere on mars which lacks the gravity to hold onto a robust atmosphere.
      The difference would be that we would not go to venus first and THEN terraform it, we'd have to introduce elements to the system that would bring the atmosphere and conditions present to be more in line with that of the earth.
      Likely by introducing extremophiles who injest something on venus we dont need or want and excrete something we do need or want.
      It wont be a fast process

  • @normiedeathsquad40
    @normiedeathsquad40 Před rokem

    So what's Jupiter's core made of?