I think that we are not alone in the universe.Universe is huge about 100000 bilion galaxy, and there must be life somewere ( bacteria, virus or inteligent life) i belive in that.
"a waste of space" is a human oriented self-important comment. Scientifically, it took having the whole universe in size and time to have earth and intelligent life here to be possible. It takes three generations of stars to get enough heavy elements for life to have what it needs, and for our sun to be the way it is. It takes the exact matter density of the universe to have stars be right, as in not all neutron stars/black holes or no stars at all. So, say we were either by accident or by purpose (designer?) to be the only planet with intelligent life -- it would still take the whole universe as it is for it to happen. Still loved the movie, though -- creative and fun. But, new discoveries, not in having a bunch of planets out there, but in astrophysics is showing that it is mathematically increasingly harder for life to have a chance to start anywhere but here. The "follow the water" idea is nice, but so incomplete in that it takes NINE habitable zones, not just one. Besides water is the most plentiful molecule in the universe (other than H2 and H3). The universe is a "wet" place, and yet we can't find a really good candidate planet, yet.
imagine if there are other civilizations out there, wondering too if aliens (us) exist. I can't wait to know other life forms exist outside the solar system
I've always wondered that what if there is life in planets completely different from ours. Because since it's a different world, the way organisms sustain life there would be different. Like for example there's a planet like Uranus out there, it might be 100% impossible for organisms on earth to live there but the planet might be sustaining life in its own way. Like if we breathe oxygen, life there breathe methane. But that is what's normal for them. Just like how life here on earth adapts to its environment, it might be the same there. It's just that how they live life is way way different from how every organism live life here on earth.
When the skies and the grounds were one, the legends, through their twelve forces, nurtured the tree of life. An eye of red force created the evil which coveted the heart of tree of life, and the heart slowly grew dry. To tend and embrace the heart of tree of life, the legends hereby divide the tree in half and hide each side. Hence, time is over-turned and space turns askew. The twelve forces divide into two and create two suns that look alike into two worlds that seem alike. The legends travel apart. The legends shall now see the same sky but shall stand on different grounds, shall stand on the same ground but shall see different skies. The day the grounds be kept a single file before one sky in two worlds that seem alike, the legends will greet each other. The day the red force is purified, the twelve forces will reunite into one perfect root, a new world shall open up.
Frankly there might be already, in the case that we could attempt interstellar travel with FTL vehicles to get to them within a reasonable span of our perceivable lives, like 2-5 years. In that case people who would’ve left this planet by 2040 and as far as we don’t go extinct would have arrived by this time (by that I mean reversing time by a significant multiplier) in another reality and had set up base on an exoplanet exceeding 20ly away.
@@topsecret1837 interestingly the binary star Wolf Rayet 104, which is 6900 LY distant may have already expired give or take a few hundred LY. It may have already formed a Supernova and in doing so sent its energy beam in two directions one I am told is at us.
"Hey, we found another exoplanet in our galaxy!" "What should we name it though? We have already named the previous one as Kepler-15829-2" "Kepler-15829-2A" "Perfect!"
As a millennial, I was a bit of a space nerd in middle school and was really fascinated with all the planets and moons of our solar system, but to just find out that there’s even more planets out there beyond Pluto bigger than Jupiter that actually exist is just mind blowing, I’m shook
In one of your previous videos from this playlist, the one about solar systems, you had stated that only 15% of stars do hold planetary systems, and now you claim that every star does hold at least one exoplanet, leading to a total of 1 trillion. Could you please clarify?
They are light years away, that means we are seeing the past of that planet because light travelled from that planet has taken years to reach us on earth.
Jonathan Soko obviously we are alone and that’s what we think because the government hides many things from us. I’m not saying that aliens exist but you never know there could be stuff out there
*humans once praised to the planets, sun stars etc, as living conscious beings. This also helped us as a species have appreciation at a level we need for survival. We have taken from the tree and devoured it*
I think alien life could adapt and grow on the "non habitable worlds", we are not the center of the universe so technically there could be life on venus and we just arent looking for it
I' am searching about the exo boy group, and this suddenly appeared, I click it because I' m also interested in history and planet. thanks for the info.
I think there'll be as many planets which sustain life as there'll be a planet where someone exactly like you is watching a video about exoplanets in his phone at this moment.
Please stop making everything about kpop it’s not even funny anymore get back to the serious world, not a world of a fandom where your Idols don’t even know who you are
Thinking: By the TRANSIT method, exoplanets refer to the planets we discover in our galaxy (mostly), for which we are fortunate enough to have those solar systems in the same plan with Earth. I ask: what percentage in our galaxy the solar sistems are in same plan (geometrical) with our viewpoint - for which the TRANSIT method can be applied? To what extent does the rotation motion of the galaxy force the solar systems to be perpendicular to the axis of the galaxy?