"Exploring the Dwarf Planet Ceres" says the title, yet in the video "Vesta, Vesta, Vesta..." oh hey they're talking about how the probe is going from Vesta to Ceres... at about 20.5 minutes into a 22.5 minute video... "... but they really want to explorer near Earth asteroids" .... *face palm*
A simple question on these two statements: 10:21 - In the early days of the solar system asteroids like Vesta were built up from smaller bodies that collided and stuck together. 10:45 - In the location that is known today as the asteroid belt it's thought that the strong gravitational influence of Jupiter, the solar systems largest planet, scattered the asteroids and kept them from forming something larger. Instead many were broken apart by collisions, with fragments still occasionally raining down on Vesta right up to the present time. Q - When rocks collide, do they stick together or break apart?
It looks more like a spaceship than "a great bird in flight" to me. I wish they would raise the age of their target audience a skosh. I love the images but I get tired of narration aimed at 2nd graders.
@@paultheaudaciousbradford6772 But the measuring system which you claim as American is actually a British system which belongs to the exact country George Washington did fight to gain independence! :))