SCP-2460 │ Dark Satellite │ S̶a̶f̶e̶ Keter │ K Class Scenario SCP

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  • čas přidán 26. 06. 2024
  • My Patreon -► / thevolgun
    Source -► scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-2460
    Author -► "WrongJohnSilver" - scp-wiki.wikidot.com/wrongjoh...
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    All of my links! -► beacons.ai/thevolgun
    ╾╾╾ ►! Video Info !◄
    SCP-2460 │ Dark Satellite │ S̶a̶f̶e̶ Keter │ K Class Scenario SCP
    Item #: SCP-2460
    Object Class: Safe Keter (See Addendum 2460-B)
    Special Containment Procedures: Due to its position and properties, SCP-2460 is not contained at this time. Space agencies are to be informed of SCP-2460's trajectory so that satellites and launches do not collide with SCP-2460. When doing so, SCP-2460 is to be listed as a large piece of space debris. No object is allowed within 50 km of SCP-2460.
    00:00 Title screen
    00:12 Introduction
    00:29 Special Containment Procedures
    01:18 Description
    02:07 + appearance
    02:36 + quantum behavior
    03:11 + colocation
    04:00 + attractor objects
    05:36 Addendum 2460-A [observed collision]
    06:19 + quantum spin annihilation
    06:53 Addendum 2460-B [close range testing]
    07:46 + remaining data
    08:31 Addendum 2460-C: Transcript of lecture regarding SCP-2460 on 4/3/2015
    09:01 + Begin Log
    09:36 + walking through walls
    10:12 + lack of EM interaction
    10:59 + Why do we see anything?
    11:56 + What's the risk from this?
    13:13 + as far away from us as possible
    13:52 + What is this, and why did it end up here?
    14:42 Outro
    14:54 Credits & Patrons
    16:22 End screen
    ╾╾╾ ►♪ Music ♪◄
    Corvus B. Used with permission & composed by him especially for this channel, many thanks!
    Artist ♪ - / corvus-b-composer
    CZcams Channel ♪ - / mrrct4
    ╾╾╾►Graphic design◄
    The graphics that make up Dr. Millars office were created by me .
    All vocal performances are performed by me unless stated otherwise.
    "TheVolgun" logo was created and designed by me (Aaron McKee) to represent my CZcams channel and brand. Said logo is owned by me and is not covered by the creative commons license, therefore copying or reproducing the logo without my consent is not allowed.
    ╾╾╾►! Important !◄
    The subject matter on which this video is based on originate from the SCP wiki. My adaptations are created with permission and with the purpose of adding value to the source content via voice acting, graphic design, animation and illustration ... none are present within the source material.
    ╾╾╾╾╾╾╾╾╾╾╾╾ ✔
    (creativecommons.org/licenses/b...)
    #scp #scpfoundation #thevolgun
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 908

  • @jamesnorman9160
    @jamesnorman9160 Před 2 lety +2400

    It's always a fun time when something is reclassified from Safe to Keter.

    • @nibblrrr7124
      @nibblrrr7124 Před 2 lety +125

      also known as a _OK-Class Whew Lad Scenario_

    • @the_honkler778
      @the_honkler778 Před 2 lety +171

      scp foundation: it looks safe
      scp: _does something fucky_
      scp foundation: *eyes widen*

    • @camerondiflo3828
      @camerondiflo3828 Před 2 lety +33

      @@the_honkler778 scp be like ima pull a wacky move

    • @joshc6295
      @joshc6295 Před 2 lety +49

      That thing? Yeah dont worry about that thing.
      *Something happens*
      Oh that's what it does

    • @coloradohikertrash9958
      @coloradohikertrash9958 Před 2 lety +36

      @@the_honkler778Foundation: lets launch a few D-class into it... Yeah? turned into spaghetti you say? hmmmmmm...

  • @yaldabaoth2
    @yaldabaoth2 Před 2 lety +2348

    I usually listen while doing something else but I had to double-check I didn't accidentally tuned into a nuclear physics lesson.

    • @CosmosGatito
      @CosmosGatito Před 2 lety +18

      you have no power over me, demiurge

    • @PowerCrafter123
      @PowerCrafter123 Před 2 lety +83

      "Quantum physics" would be more approriate compared to "nuclear physics" here :D

    • @jwalster9412
      @jwalster9412 Před 2 lety +21

      I had to check google three times to see if some of these words existed 😬

    • @chrstfer2452
      @chrstfer2452 Před 2 lety +11

      You should check out some nuclear physics lessons tho, theres some good ones by MIT and Stanford profs on youtube here

    • @yaldabaoth2
      @yaldabaoth2 Před 2 lety +9

      @@chrstfer2452 I've had enough of it in my own university to understand what was being said, thanks anyway.

  • @yourfaceishumerus
    @yourfaceishumerus Před 2 lety +169

    I can't help but feel like this one was a budding undergrad astrophysicist nerding out about how absurdly weird our own universe is, and it's awesome for it

    • @DrDingsGaster
      @DrDingsGaster Před rokem +6

      Right?! I don't mind that one bit honestly. I'm all for the weird hyper-specific science things getting used for an article.

    • @TemptationsEnd
      @TemptationsEnd Před 2 měsíci +2

      I absolutely agree, as someone who is a bit of a self taught astrophysicist due to watching many videos from genuinely intelligent people who talk about the subject in great depth.
      A lot of this video sounds like whoever wrote this. DEFINITELY did their fair share of research like almost even better than interstellar. Though something that absolutely ripped me out of it being better than interstellar was the comment:
      “Being 100,000 times more dense than our sun!” When a cursory google search shows that if our sun was only 10 - 25 more dense than it was at its current size. It would collapse into a black hole.
      So while yes an anomaly can be whatever the writer creates. 5$/5 can violate the laws of physics. Though if you’re trying to make a halfway believable “non fiction” or based mostly on “non fiction” story to give your story credit or narrative hook supremely effective. You make it believable, not absolutely immersion breaking quantities
      Or you could take the wildcard route of just throwing an absolutely ridiculously number out there to pad the stats like saitama but if you’re going to do that. You have to full send it to have a good narrative hook.
      Source: a self taught astrophysicists who sucks at math lol and an English major with a+ in most of my English schooling career lol

    • @sentinelav
      @sentinelav Před 17 dny

      This is something I love most about SCP. The entry format gives room for people who would otherwise be non-writers to express their deep understanding of various niches, ideas and concepts, without being restricted to a traditional narrative structure.

  • @darron13
    @darron13 Před 2 lety +949

    The final lines are what really made this one terrifying

    • @burnin8able
      @burnin8able Před 2 lety +103

      it really is just the perfect sucker punch to turn this article from a bunch of techno-babble into existential dread

    • @holdenbell1630
      @holdenbell1630 Před 2 lety +51

      It is a creepy answer to the Fermi Paradox

    • @jwalster9412
      @jwalster9412 Před 2 lety +78

      "And when you consider that fully 85% of the mass in the universe is dark matter, we should not ask why we are so unlucky to have a chunk of it orbiting around earth, we should ask why we are so lucky that we haven't hit any of this stuff yet."
      I see what you mean

    • @nicholasleclerc1583
      @nicholasleclerc1583 Před 2 lety +4

      I fucking know, right ?

    • @LoFi_Sinner95
      @LoFi_Sinner95 Před 2 lety +1

      Indeed

  • @exile1412
    @exile1412 Před 2 lety +1404

    This SCP is way more scientific than usual SCPs. Very interesting. That conclusion is terrifying

    • @iCore7Gaming
      @iCore7Gaming Před 2 lety +49

      Yeah it's more Sci-fi than actual sci-fi fantasy.

    • @rockspoon6528
      @rockspoon6528 Před 2 lety +6

      "More scientific"
      What do you think science is? A substance that can be bought and sold, parceled and measured?
      There's nothing more or less scientific about this SCP than any other SCP because they're all fantasy- there have been no actual experiments performed on them. Call it "realistic" or "feasible," but don't call it "scientific."

    • @Lunar994
      @Lunar994 Před 2 lety +50

      @@rockspoon6528 Does it matter? His point still came across.

    • @brandonvelde5774
      @brandonvelde5774 Před 2 lety +17

      Well the theme for the 2000 contest was sci-fi, so it only makes sense most SCP's from Series III would be science focused.

    • @anchofucc7400
      @anchofucc7400 Před 2 lety +16

      @@rockspoon6528 well aren't you a gramatically pedantic delight

  • @NicholasLaRosa0496
    @NicholasLaRosa0496 Před 2 lety +429

    Knowing the effects Dark Matter and how the Earth somehow survived this long reminds me of a Lovecraft quote:
    "We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far."

    • @randybaumery5090
      @randybaumery5090 Před 2 lety +14

      The universe is so hostile to human life, its incredible that we even exist to this day.

    • @ozzymand1as
      @ozzymand1as Před 2 lety +5

      I'm probably reading to much into what you said but dark matter doesn't work like this in reality, or if it did everything is already phase shifted

    • @DonkeyWork420
      @DonkeyWork420 Před 2 lety +8

      @@randybaumery5090 maybe life on earth is itself an anomaly and we truly are alone in this terrifying universe

    • @zen_of_chloe
      @zen_of_chloe Před rokem

      We live in the narrow interface between radioactive molten rock and hard vacuum. Safety is not in the cards.

    • @keanenfulton4696
      @keanenfulton4696 Před rokem

      @@DonkeyWork420 or we aren't, either or its pretty damn terrifying.

  • @Maskof7eyes2
    @Maskof7eyes2 Před 2 lety +82

    The fact that it's just a chunk of dark matter is the most horrific thing I've heard in anything in a long while.

  • @tangrunhua
    @tangrunhua Před 2 lety +1239

    "QK-CLASS QUANTUM DEGENERACY END-OF-THE-WORLD SCENERIO"
    The fact that this term even exist in the SCP universe really says a lot.

    • @nibblrrr7124
      @nibblrrr7124 Před 2 lety +76

      I mean TBF, many scenarios are mentioned in only one article, and we don't know if they apply elsewhere. I bet Foundation theoretical eschatologists (?) have even thought of possible scenarios that no concrete SCP is threatening as of now.
      P.S.: Don't look up "false vacuum decay." Sweet dreams! :^)

    • @lenschwedt9646
      @lenschwedt9646 Před 2 lety +17

      @@nibblrrr7124
      No reason to worry about Something that you have no Chance of actually witnessing.
      In comparison to at least a Third of all scps false vacuum decay May even be preferable

    • @jwalster9412
      @jwalster9412 Před 2 lety +12

      I'm beginning to think that the people who write articles just pick terms that sound about right for the scp universe and what even is good enough gets added as official content.

    • @siduxjxhdgzhdjxhxuuxxyhgg1079
      @siduxjxhdgzhdjxhxuuxxyhgg1079 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nibblrrr7124 whats so bad about vacoom decay?

    • @DanYami
      @DanYami Před 2 lety

      @@siduxjxhdgzhdjxhxuuxxyhgg1079 watch Kurzgesagt's video on that

  • @RotcodFox
    @RotcodFox Před 2 lety +457

    I love Keter SCPs that were previously safe, and vice versa, meaning that something had drastically changed in a substantial manner

    • @Laezar1
      @Laezar1 Před 2 lety +25

      Yeah it's either something has drastically changed, or the perception of the anomaly has drastically changed. Which is when SCP's are at their best, not just as a scary story but as things beyond our understanding that we are attempting to understand nonetheless.

    • @SaddestTV
      @SaddestTV Před 2 lety +1

      or it was more understood and it has proven far more dangerous and far more difficult to contain than when it was thought when first discovered

    • @lucy_Bad_Bunny
      @lucy_Bad_Bunny Před 2 lety

      Me to, it always make them even more scary that the foundation was wrong about a scp and it turns out to be more dangerous than previously theorized

  • @insanemang9983
    @insanemang9983 Před 2 lety +497

    What's crazy is how this SCP has the ability to rip apart the earth if it's range of influence increased to what is normal for a density like this.

    • @christopheraaron1255
      @christopheraaron1255 Před 2 lety +9

      What?

    • @plzifan3773
      @plzifan3773 Před 2 lety +49

      @@christopheraaron1255 if an object that heavy had a regular gravitationap field, itd already have eaten earth

    • @vlfpl
      @vlfpl Před 2 lety +45

      ​@@christopheraaron1255 It has a mass comparable to that of a white dwarf, which is usually close to mass of our Sun. So it's range of influence should be around the same as the Sun. Considering the orbit distance of ~400km, Earth would be ground to atoms by the gravitational forces involved at this range.
      edit: that's what I get for watching it in the background, durr

    • @Denamic
      @Denamic Před 2 lety +27

      I understood it as it having the *density* of a star, not total mass of one. As in, all that matter in one place being equivalent to the same area of the inside of said star, not all of the star.

    • @bestaround3323
      @bestaround3323 Před 2 lety +15

      @@vlfpl The mass is comparable to a asteroid 22 miles across.

  • @LukeFancher
    @LukeFancher Před 2 lety +393

    This stuff is the best. Some of the best articles are about anomalies in space.

  • @14possumsinatrenchcoat
    @14possumsinatrenchcoat Před 2 lety +597

    Me listening to this and not understanding a word: I like your funny words magic man!!

    • @taxidriverxdscp4242
      @taxidriverxdscp4242 Před 2 lety +42

      I take physics and I still don't understand half of what he says

    • @Fanny-Fanny
      @Fanny-Fanny Před 2 lety +18

      Your comment makes my clode happy and fills my appolity certificate to the point that it is 100% glarded. Mr Rev. Dr. Barosa / Warosa, esq. confirms it.

    • @Jesus_Offical
      @Jesus_Offical Před 2 lety +12

      @@taxidriverxdscp4242 Thats the nature of Qunatum Pyshics

    • @styrax7280
      @styrax7280 Před 2 lety +18

      Feels to me like the author went overboard with the jargon.

    • @itsderek298
      @itsderek298 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Fanny-Fanny um...is he okay?

  • @Slikwashere456
    @Slikwashere456 Před 2 lety +273

    So nice that Dr. Millar moved his lectures to a virtual format since the pandemic began. I do have some questions though...

  • @SomaticApparition
    @SomaticApparition Před 2 lety +479

    Absolutely killing it with these lately, dude. Fantastic narration, perfect atmosphere and great graphics!

    • @Newt2799
      @Newt2799 Před 2 lety +4

      He’s on a freaking roll

    • @ChaosMaker6
      @ChaosMaker6 Před 2 lety

      Agreed! Looking forward to

    • @camojoe83
      @camojoe83 Před 2 lety

      ... on a roll doing what? Reading other people's work and getting paid for it?
      Unimpressive. Just like that loser that reads people's bigfoot emails and gets like 10k a month for it. Failed hunting guide turned bullshit profiteer in the most lazy way possible.

  • @86_percent28
    @86_percent28 Před 2 lety +39

    I like how whoever wrote this article actually had knowledge about physics and chemistry.

    • @AntonLennikov
      @AntonLennikov Před 2 lety +5

      The author have certainly read a bit of physics books and articles. However, there are number of inconsistencies in the narrative that specialist would not make. The whole Schwarzschild radius only apply to the black holes and SCP-2460 is not a black hole as it have high but finite density so it’s can’t have singularity and thus Schwarzschild radius. Another oddity is placing such mass so close to earth, it would destroy the earth by its gravitational effects and tidal heating without any need to actual collision. Placing the object into solar orbit would make more sense. Few other minor things such as visible light spectroscopy would only suggest that the comet is similar in spectrum to Oort Cloud objects but can’t make it a certainty. It is also unclear how the quantum effects of the matter in SCP-2460 were studied. The only reasonable way would be to shoot small test payloads through SCP-2460 at different velocities and study the changes that occurred in the objects. By the way If the matter trapped in the SCP-2460 can reflect and absorb light beaming high powered laser would allow adding acceleration to objects to push them out of the earth orbit, this approach at least shuld have been considered, maybe not used in concerns of anomalous hydrogen and helium expansion within SCP but discussed never the less. Outside of this quirks it’s a certainty great SCP and even implied solution to Fermi paradox of universe being slowly consumed by dark matter.

    • @86_percent28
      @86_percent28 Před 2 lety +2

      @@AntonLennikov yeah, you’re right, but I think those discrepancies were probably necessary to make an interesting SCP

    • @AntonLennikov
      @AntonLennikov Před 2 lety +3

      @@86_percent28 Nah, they actually show that whoever wrote this has an incomplete understanding of physics gravity, and orbital mechanics. The author just blends several theoretical concepts together and a few speculations on the dark matter without fully understanding the totality of the effects and consequences. But it is a good concept never the less. I enjoyed it a lot.

    • @DarkJediPrincess
      @DarkJediPrincess Před rokem +5

      @@AntonLennikov Actually, _all_ objects have a Schwarzschild radius. It’s the radius at which an object becomes dense enough to _form_ a singularity. (Mount Everest’s Schwarzschild radius is less than a nanometre, for example. Source: Wikipedia article about Schwarzschild radii.) What you’re thinking of is the _event horizon,_ which, yes, has the same radius as a black hole’s Schwarzschild radius. But it’s not the same concept _or_ property as the Schwarzschild radius of the black hole (or any object).
      Quoth Wikipedia: “Any object whose radius is smaller than its Schwarzschild radius is called a black hole.” Therefore, theoretically, _any_ object can become a black hole if you make it small enough, in terms of volume, whilst maintaining the same mass. Or, by making an object more massive whilst preserving its volume. The second situation is the one which is of primary concern to us in the context of this SCiP, and here’s why:
      If SCP-2460 keeps accumulating mass as it has been so far, but does not increase in volume at the same rate (and, uh… it _isn’t,_ because all of the mass it’s capturing is co-locating instead of piling up on itself), then there is every chance it could _turn into_ a black hole. _That’s_ why the Foundation is keeping track of 2460’s Schwarzschild radius, why the special containment procedures include an exclusion zone around 2460, why the procedures require the Foundation to notify all space agencies of 2460’s location ahead of any launches those space agencies plan to conduct, and why it _is_ a relevant property in this document. _They’re trying to keep 2460 from becoming a Dark Matter Black Hole._
      Enjoy that moment of Fridge Horror I only just had whilst I was typing this out. 😋

  • @dsagent
    @dsagent Před 2 lety +283

    Due to the weird stuff that goes on inside a neutron star the idea of a bunch of objects inhabiting the same place might not be far off.

    • @Quadrohedron
      @Quadrohedron Před 2 lety +27

      Well, neutron stars are still held up by Pauli exclusion, aren't they? It's just not "standard", *electron* exclusion. And even there it's not that the electrons stop obeying Pauli exclusion, they're just merged with protons, and then the resulting neutrons supply the degeneracy pressure that holds the star, right?

    • @cyansorcerer6491
      @cyansorcerer6491 Před 2 lety +2

      That's pretty interesting

    • @nibblrrr7124
      @nibblrrr7124 Před 2 lety +13

      ​@@Quadrohedron I'm not a physicist, but I think that's correct. Neutron stars are held up by neutron degeneracy pressure, which is just a consequence of Pauli exclusion (neutrons are fermions, like electrons). Black holes only emerge when the stellar corpse is so massive that general relativity comes in to mess up spacetime and form an event horizon - no violation of the Pauli exclusion principle needed. (That might happen inside, though we can't tell without a theory of quantum gravity, and it isn't necessary for the formation of the black hole.)
      IIRC the Science Asylum video on white dwarf stars, the heavier they are, the smaller they get because they collapse more and more under their own gravity. To avoid violating the Pauli exclusion principle by occupying the same quantum state, the electrons expand in energy/momentum space to compensate being pushed closer in location (i.e. normal) space. That works until they have enough kinetic energy to merge with the protons into neutrons through reverse beta decay - which happens for stellar corpses heavier than the Chandrasekhar limit.

    • @Thomas.Wright
      @Thomas.Wright Před 2 lety +7

      @@Quadrohedron I'm not an astrophysicist, but I do watch a lot of Antron Petrov and Dr. Matt O'Dowd. I'm pretty sure that's how they explain it.

    • @chrstfer2452
      @chrstfer2452 Před 2 lety +3

      @@nibblrrr7124 love seeing a science asylum reference here. Im not a physicist but i do have some physics training and from what i recall youre spot on.

  • @Laezar1
    @Laezar1 Před 2 lety +117

    Damn, that one was scary because it feel so grounded. It doesn't feel like an anomaly like we usually read about that are things that are entirely impossible and clearly don't exist. It feels like something that could be a legit non anomalous physical phenomenon, just how reality actually works, and that's pretty damn scary.
    Monsters aren't as scary as the infinite uncaring void that could anihilate you at a moment's notice, without intent, without even noticing your existence. And when you remember that the universe contains countless things that actually exist and are even more destructive than that, it makes you shudder for a moment.

    • @GamStr-xq3vc
      @GamStr-xq3vc Před 2 lety +15

      That's why its terrifying, it's cold unphasing neutrality. It's existence isn't inherently malicious, it's just that's it's existence happens to be in opposition to ours by sheer cruel coincidence. It didn't have to be this way but it is and no being had a choice in it.

  • @IceeMolotov
    @IceeMolotov Před 2 lety +76

    Fermionic, bosonic, colocate, non-euclidean, magnetic moment
    I like your funny words, magic man!

    • @maxwellorryn3380
      @maxwellorryn3380 Před 2 lety +11

      Fermionic = normal matter
      Bosonic = non-normal, energy enriched matter
      Colocating = sharing the exact physical spacial location as something else

    • @seantaggart7382
      @seantaggart7382 Před 2 lety +1

      Boson: aka the force carriers of the universe
      Bosonic: basically the description of that
      Bosons can occupy the same space of each other

    • @styrax7280
      @styrax7280 Před 2 lety +2

      non-euclidean = our (normal) rules of geometric do not apply. Strictly speaking, that's nothing supernatural. The surface of an orb is non-euclidean.

    • @maxwellorryn3380
      @maxwellorryn3380 Před 2 lety +4

      @@styrax7280 yeah, non-euclidean as a supernatural term stems from HP Lovecraft not having the constitution for math

    • @styrax7280
      @styrax7280 Před 2 lety +5

      @@maxwellorryn3380 I see someone watches OSP. It's a good joke, but is different from todays authors slapping quantum infron of everything?

  • @stewy497
    @stewy497 Před 2 lety +43

    Crazy how Doctor Millar can talk about this kind of Damoclean existential threat in such even tones. I guess one acquires a certain tolerance doing Foundation work.

  • @ceasarspartacus
    @ceasarspartacus Před 2 lety +198

    Can we take a moment to appreciate that Millar sounds American, volgun sounds...irish(?maybe?) And the doctors usually sound british?
    Stunning presentation, as always

    • @EvanMe
      @EvanMe Před 2 lety +5

      I believe Volgun is Scottish

    • @Phoenix8492
      @Phoenix8492 Před 2 lety +28

      @@EvanMe volgun is Irish

    • @han-d
      @han-d Před 2 lety +10

      average Americans lumping in scots with irish and larping as them

    • @ceasarspartacus
      @ceasarspartacus Před 2 lety +15

      @@han-d youre not wrong.. there's just not a lot of exposure over here. Hard enough trying to follow a conversation between a southerner, a new Yorker and a californian, and they all speak the (mostly) same flavor of english

    • @danieldoesdumbstuff
      @danieldoesdumbstuff Před 2 lety +6

      @@ceasarspartacus as a southerner, I can say this statement is very wrong.

  • @andoli1646
    @andoli1646 Před 2 lety +73

    this feels like a nice counter part to the satellite that they just parked at a lagrange point like a week or two ago where the gravity of the system interacts in such a way that its a stable point and they wont need to worry about adjustments much cause the gravity such as it is anchors it to the that spot in the middle of absolute nowhere orbiting nothing .

    • @iCore7Gaming
      @iCore7Gaming Před 2 lety +12

      The james webb telescope is orbiting the sun and earth technically speaking. That's how lagrange points work.
      But it does have to use fuel to keep in a stable orbit, has enough for 20+ years.

    • @andoli1646
      @andoli1646 Před 2 lety +3

      @@iCore7Gaming it's still neat that there is nothing at the point itself the only way to know that is the point is with equations I dont think I'd ever have a chance of actually understanding.

    • @MidoriNatsume
      @MidoriNatsume Před 2 lety +3

      @@andoli1646 Thank you for making know that Lagrange points are a thing in real life.
      To this day I only knew them as the place were the five Space Colonies were placed in UC Gundam.

    • @blackwoodsecurity531
      @blackwoodsecurity531 Před 2 lety +4

      @@andoli1646 Its the border between our Minecraft chunks.
      Lol but seriously, my physics teacher in HS was motivated by his religious upbringing to quantify god's creation or similar ideals. It was really fascinating watching him go on and on about how beautiful and strangely clock like the universe is, and having intermittent contact with him, he nearly drools over this stuff every now and then. Super great seeing him get excited over this, it's infectious lol.
      It's no surprise physicists and astrophysicists are so engaged in their fields. Absolute wonderment.

  • @AnimeShinigami13
    @AnimeShinigami13 Před 2 lety +10

    The instant he said Swartzchild radius I started laughing, because I knew there was trouble. XD

  • @diamondmetal3062
    @diamondmetal3062 Před 2 lety +8

    So to explain some of the science in this, dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter that should in theory exist, because without it, galaxies and other such astronomical phenomena wouldn’t form in the ways we observe them to.
    According to theory, two facts about dark matter would have to be true: first is that ALOT of it would have to exist in the universe, many, many thousands of times the amount of “normal” matter. Second is that since there is supposed to be so much of it, combined with the fact we can’t seem to detect any of it, it must be both invisible and phase through any form of matter, emitting only gravity.

  • @darkninjacorporation
    @darkninjacorporation Před 2 lety +55

    It’s been a long time since we’ve had a proper scientific anomaly. Something that can be described and partially understood with the scientific method, but not explained. These kinds of SCPs are my favorite because you can tell the author either works in this field or is just very knowledgeable about it. It’s their hobby and they use these SCPs to flex their knowledge of the area to create great fiction.

  • @nullnull7352
    @nullnull7352 Před 2 lety +8

    Dude I swear, this is one of (IF NOT THE BEST) my favorite SCP documentation narration channels! The way its formatted is extremely immersive. I love how it makes you feel like its an actual debrief, and it gives you the full coverage of the SCP topic. Very well done!

  • @lastofthe4horsemen279
    @lastofthe4horsemen279 Před 2 lety +20

    Safe to Keter? Can't wait to hear about this .Wow that was awesome. Wrong John Silver is a person who has studied some Quantum physics.The Volgun your voice acting and modeling is absolutely second to none.

  • @orgixvi3
    @orgixvi3 Před 2 lety +8

    It's always interesting when an SCP is almost fully explainable, yet still so dangerous and difficult to deal with.

  • @falapadieu
    @falapadieu Před 2 lety +5

    The way everything shifted into place when he revealed the nature of the satellite, it gave me chills. This is really cool

  • @datcat8458
    @datcat8458 Před rokem +4

    I like how the Scp itself isn't anomalous, but how it ended up like this is. Very cool spin on your classic Scp.

    • @gordier6787
      @gordier6787 Před měsícem

      it is anomalous
      the part about dark matter forming a large ball that phases though normal stuff is real,
      but the part about normal matter phasing though its self or the complete suppression of the electro magnetic force is anomalous

  • @ArchviumLiminalium
    @ArchviumLiminalium Před 2 lety +31

    I’m never late to Dr Millers lessons!
    Believe me, why would you WANT to miss them?

    • @fransuke12
      @fransuke12 Před 2 lety

      That desktop name said DR. J MILLAR

  • @treviken9416
    @treviken9416 Před 2 lety +2

    Aw man that last comment about how we should feel lucky have me chills. Nice job, as always

  • @sski
    @sski Před 2 lety +63

    This was amazing. Nothing like this physics lesson of an SCP to go with my coffee, light snow outside my window, and snoring doggo. Great job all around, TheVolgun and WrongJohnSilver!

    • @yshwgth
      @yshwgth Před 2 lety +2

      If only he pronounced Schwarzschild correctly.

  • @AphidKirby
    @AphidKirby Před rokem +3

    Actually got goosebumps with that conclusion, the realization that Dark Matter in real life COULD be explained with something like this... matter that doesn't interact with light but generates gravitational pull, that's what it is and this interpretation of how that happens is absolutely terrifying!! As someone with an interest in theoretical physics this is easily one of my fave SCPs!

  • @TheJuicyGameCorner
    @TheJuicyGameCorner Před 2 lety +84

    Awesome job as always Dr. Miller. Maybe the new true SCP lord

  • @nicholasleclerc1583
    @nicholasleclerc1583 Před 2 lety +151

    Holy fucking shit, the reveal at the end of this being a valid candidate for what makes up SPOILER ALERT
    *dark matter* , and it being so intricately concordant with our current understanding of quantum physics, it’s just so goddamn good; Best hard Sci-Fi SCP entry

    • @joaomaciel1661
      @joaomaciel1661 Před 2 lety +15

      There's several flaws in the article, physics wise. It's a interesting article non the less, with a few tweaks it would become amazing

    • @mvhcmaniac5616
      @mvhcmaniac5616 Před 2 lety +12

      It's not hard science fiction, it's just very intelligent-sounding pseudoscience. So regular science fiction.

    • @nicholasleclerc1583
      @nicholasleclerc1583 Před 2 lety

      @@joaomaciel1661 yeah, indeed

    • @nicholasleclerc1583
      @nicholasleclerc1583 Před 2 lety +7

      @@joaomaciel1661
      And what are the mistakes ? Are you talking about how, if you take away electron spin, there’s nothing to stop the strong nuclear force from contracting everything into a black hole ? Or the logical implications of a single tweak in a few values of quantum physical equations such as the cancellation of the spins ? Oh ! Did the author(s) forget about the relativistic deformation of the observations of the objects, due to how incredibly dense the object is, and close to its incredible centre of mass we are ? Is it also in the cataclysmic predictions of its fall into & through the Earth ?

    • @RobertSzasz
      @RobertSzasz Před 2 lety

      @@nicholasleclerc1583 if you can't hit any of the other stuff, there's no reason for the stuff to lump together.

  • @BlackSailPass_GuitarCovers

    SCP Foundation: *Safe*
    SCP-2460: I'm about to perform what's called a pro Physics move
    SCP Foundation: *Keter*

  • @777MrTibbs
    @777MrTibbs Před 2 lety +4

    Founder: That object is safe right?
    Doctor: ....Yes?
    *The object was in fact, not safe*

  • @ngcf4238
    @ngcf4238 Před 2 lety +13

    Loved this one, I'm a physics major myself and I found this very interesting. As always love your narration! Keep up the great work! :^)

  • @enceladus-117
    @enceladus-117 Před 2 lety +2

    I am a big fan of this one. All the amount of real world science that actually went into this SCP is amazing. Pauli's Exclusion Principal, Schwarzschild radius, Quantum spin, etc. all this made me feel I'm taking Atomics class again. Honestly one of the best detailed SCPs I've seen. And great narration to go along.

  • @SaddestTV
    @SaddestTV Před 2 lety +27

    volgun you're batting a thousand, i can only respect your level of productivity and quality, loving your content

  • @koinzellthegrayed7860
    @koinzellthegrayed7860 Před 2 lety +19

    So, since last bit of the SCP implies they know exactly what it is (dark matter), I'm assuming the only reason it isn't "explained" is because it's an imminent threat to the Earth?

    • @guesswhatthisisnotmyrealna9510
      @guesswhatthisisnotmyrealna9510 Před 2 lety +19

      They know what it is, but that doesn't make it explained. I think explained, means explained by science, not understanding it. They could know everything about an anomaly, but if it doesn't follow the laws of physics, it's still an anomaly and therefore unexplained with respect to the rest of science.

    • @DarkJediPrincess
      @DarkJediPrincess Před rokem

      They know it’s Dark Matter, yes (and they’ve even solved the MaCHOs [Massively Compact Halo Objects] vs WIMPs [Weakly Interacting Massive Particles] debate-the WIMPs won), but it’s still anomalous because 2460 has broken quantum physics a bit. Dark matter shouldn’t be able to co-locate like 2460 can. So it’s not completely explained by consensus science, therefore, cannot be reclassified as Explained.

  • @thepyrokitten
    @thepyrokitten Před 2 lety +5

    This was fantastic. VERY much more in line with what I expect SCP entries to be like. Tons of science and analytics but also mind bending spook factor.

  • @monolithic7739
    @monolithic7739 Před 2 lety +1

    This is so cool.
    Your format of narration as well as the effects you use in conjunction with a persona make your videos the most entertaining SCP videos to watch and listen to.

  • @kingcreation3045
    @kingcreation3045 Před 2 lety +7

    Good afternoon Dr. J Millar. My name is Everyone.

  • @hengedraws
    @hengedraws Před 2 lety +17

    Reminds me of the “dark knight” satellite that was debunked but in this its real

    • @hoonterofhoonters6588
      @hoonterofhoonters6588 Před 2 lety +4

      Debunked? That's what the Foundation wants you to think.

    • @Jesus_Offical
      @Jesus_Offical Před 2 lety

      I remember this i was about to look it up again How was it debunked

    • @cybermang878
      @cybermang878 Před 2 lety

      @@Jesus_Offical It was just a space blanket (or something like that) lost during a mission. I think "Trey the Explainer" made a pretty solid video about it a few years back.

    • @Jesus_Offical
      @Jesus_Offical Před 2 lety

      @@cybermang878 thank you

  • @aliensinmyass7867
    @aliensinmyass7867 Před 2 lety +5

    This was definitely written by a first year physics undergrad

    • @JustinKoenigSilica
      @JustinKoenigSilica Před 2 lety

      Doesn't seem to matter, as the big words Intimidate most people in the comment section.

  • @joshkeitz2990
    @joshkeitz2990 Před 2 lety +9

    When graduate students write scp fiction

  • @erikruhl446
    @erikruhl446 Před rokem +1

    I have just started listening to these and quickly subscribed. Love the page and the stories. I haven't googled this many words I didn't know in one sitting ever.

  • @UraniumChef
    @UraniumChef Před 2 lety +8

    Dark satellite, or tungsten rod velocity ejection satellite in real life? 🤔

  • @skepticalmagos_101
    @skepticalmagos_101 Před 2 lety +6

    I knew those lessons in Quantum mechanics would come in handy. 😃

  • @KintokiSan
    @KintokiSan Před 6 měsíci +1

    What I find most fascinating
    about this one is how objects
    introduced to the anomaly
    "stay together". What I mean by
    that is things like the spaceship
    and the foundation probe stay
    in "one piece" instead of all
    the nuts and bolts phasing
    through each other like the
    fuel phased through the hull
    when the agent tried to escape
    the pull. This leads me to think
    that the anomaly affects objects
    in order of higher to lower
    density. Meaning it started with
    the metals and affected the
    fluid at the end of the process.

  • @styrax7280
    @styrax7280 Před 2 lety +6

    I really appreciate that it's comes down to dark matter.

  • @RelativelyBest
    @RelativelyBest Před 2 lety +13

    This is the sort of stuff that makes me wonder what actually qualifies for SCP status. I mean, there's nothing _paranormal_ about dark matter - it's been an establish theory since the 19th century and we've spent decades trying to prove that the damn stuff actually exists. If a huge chunk of it showed up near Earth, why not make it public knowledge? Sure, it would cause a bit of panic, but it would also make it easier to gather the resources required to do something about it. Nobody would want that thing to hit the Earth, after all.
    It's not like the purpose of the Foundation is to hide the existence if anything that might make the public upset, even if it's explainable by mainstream science. The Foundation seeks to preserve normalcy as defined by accepted scientific principles, hence their concern is specifically stuff that defy our perception of reality. They want to hide the fact that our understanding of what is possible is very flimsy and ambiguous, and that it could all collapse at any moment because an anomaly got out of hand. However, SCP-2460 isn't an _anomaly,_ strictly speaking. It's completely explainable.
    This is as if aliens suddenly showed up: It would be a pivotal moment in human history, sure, but one we've sort of been expecting and even searched for. It''s not going to throw our understanding of existence itself into question.

    • @VelociraptorsOfSkyrim
      @VelociraptorsOfSkyrim Před 2 lety +12

      I think the SCP isn't Dark Matter itself, but what it's doing.
      It's turning Fermionic matter into something else.
      SCPs don't have to be _paranormal_ to be SCPs. Just unexplained or unknown.

    • @melhupby
      @melhupby Před 2 lety +5

      The Foundation doesn't concern itself with _paranormal_ activity. It contains the _anomalous._ Paranormal suggests something parallel to the normal, something 'different'. Anomalous is something Normal-but-wrong.
      For example plenty of SCP's exist that indicate a multiverse is very, very real and there are at _least_ dozens of other universes and realities, all paranormal because they're all running differently, 'adjacent' to our normal. The Foundation doesn't contain or even bother keeping records on most of them. It _does_ however, contain and classify the otherwise normal reality overrun with a sapient human-parasitic hive-mind, the reality that's one stray bird away from bringing Death with an immediate and capital D to the entire universe, and the universe somehow connected to ours by a pinhole wormhole firing a constant ever increasing laserbeam through at us.
      Because they're all anomalous. They're all normal(alternate universes)-but-wrong.
      Dark matter in this case is normal-but-wrong. Our state of normal is fermionic matter, and dark matter just _ends_ that for unknown and uncontrollable reasons. It's an anomaly we don't understand.

    • @mervinreyes3008
      @mervinreyes3008 Před 2 lety +3

      holy shit it just hit me the foundation are the ones that don't give up in Lovecraft's world

    • @RelativelyBest
      @RelativelyBest Před 2 lety

      @@VelociraptorsOfSkyrim But by that reasoning, shouldn't the Foundation have suppressed every new scientific mystery since their founding? Everything is unexplained until someone, you know, explains it.
      Did you know we calculated how many neutrinos are generated by the sun, but when we measured them we could only find a third of that amount? Nobody could explain why, it didn't seem to make any sense. It took thirty years to figure out a theory for how this was possible and almost another twenty to prove it in practice.
      Sometimes science just runs into stuff that doesn't seem to make any sense, but that's a good thing because it means we may have something new to discover.
      We don't even know for sure if dark matter even exists, just that it seems like it should, and we sure as heck don't know _what_ it actually is. So, who knows what it might be capable of?

    • @VelociraptorsOfSkyrim
      @VelociraptorsOfSkyrim Před 2 lety +2

      @@RelativelyBest Sometimes SCPs get explained, that's a known thing. When they're explained, they're removed from the list.
      There's a massive difference between discovering how to launch a rocket and finding out Dark Matter can break the fundamental laws of physics.

  • @neonsilver1936
    @neonsilver1936 Před 2 lety +17

    This video and the last about the cognitohazardous entity passing through our reality have genuinely been my favorite SCP entries of all time so far, and that isn't just because I'm a massive nerd :P
    You're doing great man, thank you for the videos

  • @elbrando6491
    @elbrando6491 Před 2 lety +2

    I really, really like your channel. I dont know why but I feel like these SCPs are getting better and better :D
    Please keep up this amazing work for us to enjoy and thank you very much.

  • @bkondrk
    @bkondrk Před 2 lety +2

    I really liked this one, and your presentation of it too. Thx Volgun.

  • @grumpyed58
    @grumpyed58 Před 2 lety +6

    FYI Its spelled "Millar". See the nameplate on the desk

  • @MrSmashySmash
    @MrSmashySmash Před 2 lety +4

    God, stuff like this really does put the fear of the unknown into you, huh?

  • @frogisis
    @frogisis Před 2 lety +2

    What a brilliant, clever, and terrifying idea-This is definitely my favorite in a while. I love it when the writer knows their science, it grounds it all so much more and makes it feel much more immediate, real, and closer to home. Nice bit of foreshadowing building in its description, too-The minute it mentions the difference between bosons and fermions I knew we were in for a treat, and as soon as it came out that the thing only weakly interacts with matter or radiation but is totally present with gravity, I was like "ohhhhh noooooooo..."

  • @jpapel2815
    @jpapel2815 Před 2 lety +2

    The graphics look so good, you are doing magnificent work with these

  • @mcintoshpc
    @mcintoshpc Před 2 lety +4

    Yep my brain is not big enough for this one
    Excellent job author

  • @loopslytle
    @loopslytle Před 2 lety +6

    I love these videos! It was interesting that a male voice was used for Dr. Cordelia Argent who is female.

    • @hotelmario510
      @hotelmario510 Před 2 lety +4

      I'm guessing that was a convenience thing. I would have preferred a woman to play Cordelia but of course Volgun is clearly producing these videos on a very limited budget, so I can understand why certain changes have to be made.

  • @lvciferus
    @lvciferus Před 2 lety +1

    @thevolgun I love all of the SCP Vids from A-Z/1-♾
    Keep it up.

  • @charlethemagne5466
    @charlethemagne5466 Před 2 lety +1

    Just wanted to say how much I love your content, keep it up

  • @peluchin5404
    @peluchin5404 Před 2 lety +4

    That shit looks like it belongs from Star Wars💀

  • @freddyandfoxy7526
    @freddyandfoxy7526 Před 2 lety +18

    I love this Scp because it's about a real life conspiracy theory and I love it

    • @polyarthus4282
      @polyarthus4282 Před 2 lety

      For real ? not that it would surprise me but..

    • @thomashayhurst6547
      @thomashayhurst6547 Před 2 lety +1

      @@polyarthus4282 Look up the Black Knight satellite conspiracy

    • @nibblrrr7124
      @nibblrrr7124 Před 2 lety

      ​@@thomashayhurst6547 Not sure how many parallels the article has with the conspiracy theory, but the picture seems to the same 1998 NASA photo of space debris that is commonly associated with it.
      Anyway, didn't know about the Black Knight thing... silly humans and their imaginations - I mean, fellow humans. :^)

    • @polyarthus4282
      @polyarthus4282 Před 2 lety

      @@thomashayhurst6547 ohh I know this one !
      I thought there was a conspiracy about dark matter or something.

  • @Dunmerdog
    @Dunmerdog Před rokem +1

    It’s an absolute joy when you find SCPs like this written by someone who knows their shit and did a lot of research. They add so many cool touches

  • @soulcrusher7192
    @soulcrusher7192 Před 2 lety +1

    You are hands down the most bestest scp informer. Thank you for risking your life to relay this information. Best scp channel on the market

  • @nathanielgrey4091
    @nathanielgrey4091 Před 2 lety +5

    Ok, who showed the theoretical physicist the SCP wiki?

  • @DaDude1998
    @DaDude1998 Před 2 lety +5

    So its not an anomaly, just dark matter?

  • @christiangauthier727
    @christiangauthier727 Před 2 lety +2

    A great take on an all time classic! Choosing the "Young & Eager British Scientist" Voice from the Volgun's Repertoire was spot on! The quiet, unsettling unease & nervousness expressed in this Researcher's voice lets us know from the start that something is very deeply wrong, something of such magnitude and implication that it requires a full explanation to slowly unravel the horror that's awaiting all of us...
    Again, the voice acting adds so much to this article and, combined with a creepy background ambiance music & a minimalist visual support (it's so much better this way, as it allows for the real magic of the SCP Universe to shine through: the text breeding amazing, impossible horrors and wonders in our imagination.), it brings the original Article's content to a whole new level, giving it life, depth and dimension! Truly a Master Storyteller's work, as always!

    • @dingdongshush
      @dingdongshush Před rokem

      Text breeding? That sounds like a whole as SCP in itself!

  • @1986djackson
    @1986djackson Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome as always thank you

  • @jukeincorporated
    @jukeincorporated Před 2 lety +4

    I love scp articles that don't redact anything, just pure existentialism

  • @vexxama
    @vexxama Před 2 lety +11

    My immediate thought “wait, if that touches the earth, won’t everything become intangible and we’ll all starve to death when we can’t hold food? Or suffocate when we can’t interact with oxygen?”
    But no, they made it much more horrifying for the whole earth

    • @DarkJediPrincess
      @DarkJediPrincess Před rokem +1

      Oh, it gets worse. The Foundation isn’t monitoring its Schwarzschild radius for nothing; this thing could turn into a _black fucking hole_ with the same anomalous properties as the original mass of dark matter if it keeps accumulating mass the way it is.
      Sleep well!

  • @TJlolbagger
    @TJlolbagger Před 2 lety +1

    This is definitely one of my new favorites.

  • @paulohsa22
    @paulohsa22 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you PBS Space Time, for allowing me to understand the description of this SCP

  • @talideon
    @talideon Před 2 lety +5

    Let's just be thankful that clown milk has never interacted with this SCP. I can't think of anything more dangerous than bosonic matter transforming into the hitherto unobserved bozonic form of matter. Were that to happen we would truly be doomed...

  • @Dubanx
    @Dubanx Před 2 lety +3

    If an object "hits" the anomaly, wouldn't conservation of momentum still apply? That is, any object that gets captured by SCP-2460 would still have its momentum added to the total (seemingly through gravitational force?) and the anomaly's trajectory would be diverted by a corresponding amount.
    So couldn't you just "slam" objects into it at high velocity to add momentum and eventually kick it out of orbit or, at the very least, sustain its orbit?

    • @ethhics
      @ethhics Před 2 lety +2

      If this has a schwarzchild radius, it probably means that nothing can escape its gravitational well. Conservation of momentum still holds true- but no one knows where that object hits when it gets "sucked" in

    • @nibblrrr7124
      @nibblrrr7124 Před 2 lety

      ​@@ethhics IDK what that bit was going for. The Schwarzschild radius of a 10^13kg object should be around 10^-14m = 10fm = 0.00001nm. That's a bit bigger than a proton. If the matter isn't compressed into a sphere smaller than that, no event horizon exists. (In fact, inside a classical massive object, the gravitational pull cancels out near the center.)
      And it can't really be black-hole-like - we do see objects poking out of the boundary of the big 50m×30m×15m asteroid in it, and sometimes even up to 105m from the center.
      Finally, the containment procedures mention that the Schwarzschild radius is to be "remeasured", while Addendum 2460-B says "recalculated" - is it supposed to be something they can observe directly, or is it an idle calculation for funsies that isn't relevant to anything?

    • @nibblrrr7124
      @nibblrrr7124 Před 2 lety +1

      @Dubanx Yes, I think you're right in principle (e.g. gravitational slingshot maneuvers also exchange momentum between large & small objects via gravity). Though, it might be infeasible since you don't want high velocity projectiles that bounce back and forth (orbit) far out, now with their quantum spin erased and "infecting" anything they touch in turn.
      (If we're nitpicking, that would have already happened with most kind of space debris colliding with it - unless the "105m" is some kind of anomalous limit due to it being a "strange attractor" (But what about the dark particles further out that hit the Foundation probe?)).
      Anyway, you need to accelerate 10^13kg, and if you have to limit speed, you need _even more mass_ to get momentum. Maybe it could work to sustain its orbit, but not accelerate it to escape velocity? Plus, adding more mass to the anomaly might not be such a good idea.
      Also, IDK what's harder to conceal: firing rockets/rail guns at it constantly, or bringing in a huge asteroid from elsewhere to tractor the anomaly?

    • @Marc-rw3dd
      @Marc-rw3dd Před 2 lety +1

      i was thinking the same thing.

  • @jah4693
    @jah4693 Před 2 lety +1

    The love how he goes through the levels of depth into the individual SCP and how he goes thru every security clearance while narrating it all clearly and calmly keep it up
    👁187

  • @samshapira8295
    @samshapira8295 Před 2 lety +2

    I always enjoy when SCP articles decide to get technical and go into some real scientific ideas.

  • @smb6995
    @smb6995 Před 2 lety +3

    Now I know some rocket launches with secret US (or maybe Chinese, Russian) military payloads were actually Foundation installations 🤔
    Btw, am I the only one who created an SCP lore for themselves, where the Foundation has anomalies but no general advanced technologies and is pretty close in development to top militaries?

    • @xxXBig_BenXxx
      @xxXBig_BenXxx Před 2 lety +1

      No general advanced technology? Like fusion reactors or Scranton reality anchors, just plain old fission and warding charms?

  • @chrstfer2452
    @chrstfer2452 Před 2 lety +7

    Please pronounce "kg/m^3" (or any other units with a fraction) as "kilogram per meter cubed" rather than "kilogram meters cubed". The latter is a totally different unit that doesnt represent a density.

  • @Mysterialic
    @Mysterialic Před 2 lety +1

    What a way to end the lecture. Clear, concise, and effective.

  • @MrsCaranAmy
    @MrsCaranAmy Před 2 lety +2

    This was just an awesome anomaly that was dis cussed today. I particularly liked it's description. Thank you. Have a great day 🌟🌌

  • @zenrider_9622
    @zenrider_9622 Před 2 lety +3

    Just FYI for those that are interested, dark energy makes up roughly 68% of the known universe, dark matter roughly 27%, and the rest is the observable known universe. Also gravitation is the weakest fundamental force in the known universe. If I remember correctly i could be wrong but, we have only observed like barley 2% of the known observable universe so far. So wild and cool. Another wild thing is that the universe is not only expanding but is also collapsing in on itself if I remember right. Something about the closer you go to where the big bang happened the collapse is occurring due to the energy of the bang basically ending, and the farther from the bang is where the expanse is happening due to the bangs energy. A theory is that our universe is eventually going to "die" because all the stars will be dead, but then due to the density of all the sub atomic particles it will let off a new big bang thus creating a whole new universe and the cycle repeats. I think this also ties into the multiverse theory and how the infinite multiverse may be linked or at least a small part of how. Anyway sorry for long post my inner nerd/geek got excited.

    • @Thomas.Wright
      @Thomas.Wright Před 2 lety +1

      I'm just glad I haven't seen any flerfers or thunderdolts expounding on how gravity doesn't exist.

    • @jwalster9412
      @jwalster9412 Před 2 lety +1

      2% is a surprising amount, ether the universe is really small, or us humans just get to board and (literally) state off into space for a long time.

    • @goodtimerobotboy4955
      @goodtimerobotboy4955 Před 2 lety +1

      cool

  • @ScionCrush
    @ScionCrush Před 2 lety +4

    Honestly one of the worsts SCPs out there, it reads as if someone from r/iamverysmart learned about a bunch of physics terms and decided to make an awful fanfiction with awful math trying to explain something we know about but still don't have an answer to in a condescending way...
    So many words to say so little, useless information people filter out because they don't understand them AND they don't contribute much to the SCP itself, some of the author's other SCPs also read like this, incredibly lame.

    • @Quadrohedron
      @Quadrohedron Před 2 lety +2

      Would you enjoy this SCP if it was stripped down to "there's a cloud of ghost space debris orbiting Earth and it can transform other matter into ghost matter, thus it threatens us a lot and there's only a little we could do, also it kinda answers one of the greatest questions of modern science"? I know I would. So maybe it's not really that bad, having at least an interesting idea?
      Also, I personally did not find the tone condescending at all.

    • @charlethemagne5466
      @charlethemagne5466 Před 2 lety +2

      This SCP is awesome what are you on about?

    • @ScionCrush
      @ScionCrush Před 2 lety

      @@Quadrohedron I hope the irony is not lost on you

    • @talideon
      @talideon Před 2 lety

      That describes 99% of SCP entries in one way or another. This is far from the worst of them.

    • @Quadrohedron
      @Quadrohedron Před 2 lety

      @@ScionCrush To be honest, it... Is?.. Care to elaborate, please? I'm genuinely uncertain of what you're hinting towards, sorry.

  • @Lunar994
    @Lunar994 Před 2 lety

    Oh, I recognize this one! Glad to see you cover this one.

  • @JP-dz5oj
    @JP-dz5oj Před rokem +1

    Thing is, this SCP could serve as a means of neutralizing SCP 2399 by slingshotting it into the Destroyer, however measures would need to be taken to ensure it doesn’t fall into Jupiter itself.

  • @Jacob-qz9fo
    @Jacob-qz9fo Před 2 lety +2

    When you need a PHD in astrophysics to understand a scp..lol

  • @mvslice
    @mvslice Před 2 lety +1

    I'm here every Sunday night before bed. This and The Exploring Series

  • @phoenixkarma9580
    @phoenixkarma9580 Před 2 lety +1

    What an interesting article. I really enjoyed this one!

  • @thomasjkearneyv4005
    @thomasjkearneyv4005 Před 2 lety +1

    I’ve honestly never heard anyone better covering anomalies and I don’t think I ever will. That being said, I’d love it if you did a video on SCP-2935 “O, Death.” I’d also be surprised if anyone disagreed with that sentiment since I’ve heard so many perspectives on it but after you did SCP-3935, it only proved to me, no one does these videos better than you do.

  • @AscendtionArc
    @AscendtionArc Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for this.

  • @Vaeris69
    @Vaeris69 Před 2 lety

    Nice now I can listen to you while going to sleep!

  • @arthurmiranda8896
    @arthurmiranda8896 Před 2 lety

    I was not expecting that end. Great entry

  • @RedX32
    @RedX32 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing read my man, crazy to think how close to reality this one really could be.

  • @banterclaus9432
    @banterclaus9432 Před 2 lety

    I need some more long ones! I adore them. Use them to fall asleep all the time 😃

  • @karl-erikvik3400
    @karl-erikvik3400 Před 2 lety +2

    Aight, this is my favorite scp so far, no contest

  • @midgefidget5796
    @midgefidget5796 Před 2 lety +1

    This is the best purely physics based SCP I've heard of. I found it absolutely fascinating and entertaining. I'm glad the report was made by The Volgun.

  • @erberor8007
    @erberor8007 Před rokem

    Oh DAMN that twist at the end was GOOD