You made the largest explosion ever discovered sound even more fascinating...and your delivery made it feel somehow peaceful...I was just finally curling up in my bed when this video dropped, and I believe you could talk about almost anything and it would still help me reach that calm place where I find good, deep sleep. Explosions like this scare me. If one were to happen anywhere near to us...nope! Thank you for another well-made video, sir...I hope your night is as peaceful as your narration.
Whether these videos end up as viewed as your previous ones or not- I hope you find your passion again. Some of your older videos were on some abstract and fascinating topics but it was your passion that made them special. I miss the old intro too but maybe that’s just personal taste. Thanks for all your hard work over the years.
@@diyeana where tho. Not the main comment and there's only the 3 so nothing said it didn't and how doesn't it? You think it's safe enough? I mean astronauts do it but they brave/crazy.
Mate I haven't watched your videos in bloody ages! I've still got my notifications on but never got any notifications for your channel in a long time! Thank you for still posting. Hopefully RU-vid can fix this somehow. Cos it's not fair
@@StrangeMysteries that makes me sad. Your channel is awesome and ik you work hard at it. I appreciate you still being here man. I hope you're okay. Pls don't let this crush your spirit xx
Love this channel, but black holes do not suck in matter from all around it, if matter gets too close, it then will be pulled into the black hole, but b.holes are not giant vacuums... Just want to make that clear
I truly wonder how scientists calculate distances like 100B light years for example... how do we know? i mean whatever we see is 100B years in the past... and there isn't something to compare the distance with visually because the distances are so massive... do they just tell the age of the light? or what? if they do then how? id love to see this covered by someone.
Correct me if I'm wrong but afaik one of the tools to measure distance is looking for the color shift of the incoming light. Stars emit more light in some specific frequencies than oothers and then these photons that travel across space lose some of their energy on the way. Since energy is proportional to the frequency of the lightwave oscillations (E = hυ where E is energy, h is Planck's constant and υ is frequency), and energy is lost, then the frequency decreases. And since frequency and wavelength are inversely connected (υ = c/λ where λ is wavelength and c is speed of light), the wavelength increases, which causes the perceived color shift.
Sounds like it may have been multiple huge stars (something on scale of VY Canis Majoris (only one i know by name because its name being very helpful)). So much matter, going kaboom. Speaking of unfathomably massive things happening in universe: I find things like great attractor exceptionally horrifying. How could that much mater be pulled in one direction whatever dose that must be ridiculously powerful.
So due to the distance of this explosion, that means the explosion itself happened hundreds of millions of years ago right? And we on earth can just now see it?
So like, are we back in motion for a bit? It's been 2 or 3 uploads- and I'm really happy to see them. I used to *binge*" this channel. Its always so nice to see things return