I have a pretty bad anxiety disorder. Something about listening to Anton just helps calm me down. I'll put on one of his playlists and fall asleep to it.
@MikeG_cptАй бұрын
You not alone! I do this aswell. Anton if you reading this it's not because we think your videos are boring it's because it's extremely calming and it gives us something nice to think about when as we falling asleep. Thank you!
@christophereelesАй бұрын
He is very good, isn’t he?
@EyebuckАй бұрын
It’s probably his smooth as butter tone.
@PeteOnTheBeatАй бұрын
Him talking about a potential world ending situation calms your anxiety disorder? :D
@wiktorm9858Ай бұрын
Anton is golden
@jimcurtis9052Ай бұрын
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. ✌️☺️😁
@ancientprogressive3343Ай бұрын
Many of Anton’s videos stop me in my tracks to ponder what he has just presented... this is one of those!
@MCsCreationsАй бұрын
Fascinating. That could've give us an evolutionary "push".
@1ProsperousPlanetАй бұрын
How?
@weegiewarblerАй бұрын
@@1ProsperousPlanethow no? . . . You didn't watch it did you? Radiation was one hypothesis.
@ListenToMcMuckАй бұрын
Increasing the mutation rate in a way that accelerates evolutionary processes should lead to rapid diversification. For example, look at the impact of the reactor accident on the surrounding ecosystem in Chernobyl. This increase should also be observed in the fossil record after the hypothetical events. If this is not apparent, the hypothesis can be considered falsified.
@grahambate1567Ай бұрын
Really interesting, thank you anton
@jaykaramales3087Ай бұрын
I watch all your videos, but this is one of the most intriguing. I wish Poul Anderson were still alive to write a story around this thesis.
@stusacks2220Ай бұрын
Thanks for another interesting video, Anton!
@NabiruBogdanАй бұрын
Please never stop making these videos please
@Gkitchens1Ай бұрын
You specify its correlation not causation twice while in the same breath saying these effects likely triggered mutations. I would say it’s more than plausible that mutations could be what led to us becoming smarter or different enough to advance.
@HeaDzmoldАй бұрын
We now are living in the effects of the planets last major impact
@MarkCarrick1Ай бұрын
One of the best videos you have ever done, the most obvious answer is the answer.
@kaarlimakela3413Ай бұрын
This is so reassuring and encouraging. Going through all these extreme conditions over the last several million years ... makes me say And We're Still Here! Like Jeff Goldblum proclaimed ... Life, uhhh, finds a way. 😊
@yvonnemiezis5199Ай бұрын
Fascinating video ,thanks👍❤
@fatasfordАй бұрын
Love the show great work thank you good sir and keep smiling ❤
@kyaaahmyloveАй бұрын
Fascinating discovery. Thank you so much for sharing 👍
Most of the radiation would impact the surface as a combination of heavy nuclei and gamma radiation. This would generate a high degree of DNA double-strand breaks, though the levels of radiation would be far below lethal levels. What this would lead to is a) a high level of cancer in complex organisms. b) large numbers of chromosomal crossover events and drastic gene rearrangements, hyper-accelerating genetic evolution.
@joeyvelarde5562Ай бұрын
Good stuff ❤❤❤❤
@henrythegreatamerican8136Ай бұрын
Sounds like the earth got high on space dust.
@SutairnАй бұрын
over a ton a day of space dust
@fleshanthosАй бұрын
When I brought forth the Hypothesis of SuperNovae affecting Earth due to our varying path thru the Galaxy in 1993, my Historical Geology prof basically dismissed and ignored it.
@DeadSlayer0683Ай бұрын
I think I would be fine with the end of the world if Anton was the one doing the announcement. 🤔
@rezadaneshiАй бұрын
Best motivational speech- In the absence of nearby butterflies, a very determined chaos grasps at space dust.
@stevenkarnisky411Ай бұрын
Thanks, Anton. The more we learn now, the more prepared our distant descendants can be!
@Jokers_Yugioh666Ай бұрын
We need a livestream with anton matt from pbs space time and dr becky 🔥🔥
@douglaswilkinson5700Ай бұрын
Anton is a science communicator. Matt and Becky both have doctorates. It would be interesting.
@GoldenMinotaurАй бұрын
As if he's not busy enough keeping us informed, but yes. Interviews with Anton would be cool af
@gravitonthongs1363Ай бұрын
I think Fraser Cain would have the best rapport with Anton. Matt is on another level and Becky would probably just chat him up 😂
@catsdrooltooАй бұрын
Thank you Anton. ❤
@michaelneal6589Ай бұрын
Thank you Anton
@mikewilliams1140Ай бұрын
Much love Anton. I like your work.
@philochristosАй бұрын
That's really interesting.
@internetmachineАй бұрын
It's amazing to wonder if these space clouds have their own sentience and consciousness and how complex it can be and how that influences us.
@mrJety89Ай бұрын
2:35 looks like this map was made by Kurzgesakt.
@tinkerstrade3553Ай бұрын
We need probes ahead of where our star is going, to help us prepare for changes. We've been sightseeing out the side windows and back glass too much. And not looking ahead. It's like driving at high speed with the windshield painted over.😮
@footballlife1543Ай бұрын
I agree
@George-rk7tsАй бұрын
Very nicely done video. Here in the US, it's election campaign season, so these daily doses of sanity are even more appreciated. Keep up the good work, wonderful sir.
@MentalTaxiАй бұрын
The question is, how will they tax it to save the planet from this interstellar pollution?
@nadahereАй бұрын
Hahaha. Good point.
@noprivacyvernerАй бұрын
they call it Climate crisis funny you dont see there Info boks about it hehe
@charlespancamo9771Ай бұрын
@@noprivacyverner info boks about it?
@Pasta_watcherАй бұрын
@@charlespancamo9771 yes
@TimJCOOL-ng8puАй бұрын
Hey, it's Anton!
@andycordy5190Ай бұрын
Super complicated combination of possibilities. If a supernova goes off, the radiation reaches us way sooner than the ejecta, so materials found on earth from interstellar space will not correspond precisely with environmental effects from the increased radiation, right?
@rezadaneshiАй бұрын
Space dust is the dome and we're all playing Jim Carrey in the Truman show.
@chrwi5848Ай бұрын
Cheers pal :)
@existenceisillusion6528Ай бұрын
1:55 Iron 16? 😂
@andreypopov6958Ай бұрын
A black hole in our galaxy has swallowed interstellar clouds.
@NancyRode-u9iАй бұрын
🙋🏽♀️💖anton everyday
@TerviczАй бұрын
About 3 million years ago the ice age/warm age cycles started. In a very distant past we had an occasional snowball earth. Could these clouds be part of the cause?
@bidet1515Ай бұрын
i like your content !
@JoeH-f1eАй бұрын
I wonder what the gravitational effect is from these clouds on the solar system and oort cloud. I wonder if it could lead to increased comet and astroid impact.
@501MobiusАй бұрын
Do we know if the local bubble travels with us or do we intersect it as it travels on its own path?
@UnfollowYourDreamsАй бұрын
We travel through the bubbles and clouds. It's anwered several times in the video.
@xBINARYGODxАй бұрын
we/the sun are traveling through a "bubble" created by several supernovae that 'cleared out' a region that would stay that way (ignoring the sun farting out along its travels, of course) for many, many, many(, many....) years - enough for us to enter it and travel to the other side and leave. We already knew the sun was in a low-activity area for it being relatively empty around us just from our relative position between two traffic jam spiral arms, but this means we would also be in an even "emptier" region. We will leave both empties and reenter areas of more stuff and therefore statistically more events eventually. No one reading this message will be alive for it, not even with the wayback machine being around for thousands of years. That said, the left-over gasses from those supernovae left plenty of crap around and some of that had affected the sun in indirect and direct ways, and enough of it has entered our solar system and the planet over very long periods of times - so even when you are not in a traffic jam or high-density area, you are still affected by other things. It's possible there is not true "cleared" areas in the Galaxy, at least not for perhaps billions of years, unless you go very far out there at the 'galactic rim'.
@cjmahar7595Ай бұрын
All the rocks and dust and gas and us are on our own trajectory around the galaxy
@Yea_I_Got_NothingАй бұрын
Both.
@CriminalonCrimeАй бұрын
@@UnfollowYourDreams I think he's asking if it's similar to tectonic plates which are traveling opposite directions, which causes the worst Earthquakes. Or maybe I just read it that way because that's my question, if these bubbles are like plates,then the opposite directions would cause friction and thermal and magnetic energy, if the bubbles intersect each other crossing over each other, energy "mountains" are created. Which if they aren't stable can collapse and that energy would be more likely to fall into the emptier region as there's little pushback. Bubble flares essentially.
@JungleJargonАй бұрын
Until cosmologists take into account the various rates of causation due to the amount of gravity, I can’t have any confidence in what they say.
@therealfluxgateАй бұрын
Great, so how much time do we have left before we leave the local bubble and see the heliosphere stripped again?
@mikescholz6429Ай бұрын
Can interstellar gas fall into the suns poles the same way solar particles do on earth? Then wouldn’t they join the solar wind and be blown to all the planets? Do we even know what the axial cross section of the heliosphere looks like?
@ebutuoyotwenАй бұрын
Are you still plumping up and enjoying the flavors of your guest country? We want to know the best foods when you get back :) Well I do 😬
@swissbiggyАй бұрын
Is it correct that Earth (Our solar system) will leave our local interstellar cloud in about two thousand years from now ?
@chrishawth1589Ай бұрын
Hey Anton , ive had a thought can energy become a solid, if not i think pentrose is correct, when the last blackhole pops all there will be is energy ,with a timeless masless universe, perhaps over eons upon eons timed by a Google, gravity congregates the energy and the next eon begins with a BIG BANG, just a thought, i like thinking me i do, ;)
@tripleheadedmonkey6613Ай бұрын
Energy and mass are interchangeable. Likely "mass" is simply "energy" in a stable form and "energy" is simply "mass" that isn't stable enough to form. An unstable particle of mass acts like a wave and a stable wave acts like a particle of mass. Also it's becoming increasingly more likely that there was no big bang at all. Neither was there a "singularity" in the sense that all matter was condensed into a single point. Rather the expansion of the universe, from what we in our current state would perceive as a smaller scale, is actually a physical state change. What people refer to as the "big bang" is actually the energy state shift, in a metaphorical sense, from a solid to a liquid state. With the "singularity" actually being an almost identical universe, with identical physics that simply worked within smaller boundaries. As the state change came into effect the boundary between particles moved from 1 value to the next value up in the universal scale. And it was the suddenness of that boundary change which created the initial push we now understand to be the expansion of the universe. In other words think of it like the space which a particle in the universe occuppies by itself increasing. Such that other particles around it are now pushed out of that space by its influence and furthermore their own influences are now expanded at the same time. Simultaneous expansion of the boundaries between particles, which initially sends matter off in all directions at high speed before gathering back together over time once again into pockets of mass. This time those pockets of mass simply having larger boundaries between each individual particle that makes up its entirety. Soemthing like that.
@gravitonthongs1363Ай бұрын
@@tripleheadedmonkey6613 You said there was no big bang before explaining why there is a Big Bang 😊 We don’t have evidence of the singularity so I understand why many choose dense space as the starting point, but that possibility violates thermodynamics (as mentioned in last PBS Spacetime vid), and it is still referred to as the Big Bang (as BBT does not specify a singularity).
@allankolenovsky7028Ай бұрын
Ok, I have to ask the obvious question here. Where are all the remnants of these nearby supernovae? At this point in time I am less concerned about our planet having passed through the ejecta of these exploded stars than I am about the neutron stars and black holes that were created and may be a tad bit too close for comfort to us.
@vadzimkapichenka3654Ай бұрын
Дзякуй!
@Dr.GunsmithАй бұрын
Aliens 👽
@thexfile.Ай бұрын
Earth suffers from an explosion of plastic.
@fairygurl9269Ай бұрын
Resource George Carlin For Practical Theory In Regards To Plastic
@bb5979Ай бұрын
Oh no plastic! Forget about constant existential threats! Its the bloody plastic
@RemusKingOfRomeАй бұрын
Another great video. Should i start singing that famous Joni Mitchel song ? Nah. :D k
@fairygurl9269Ай бұрын
Maybe Aliens? 👽🎈
@dustinswatsons9150Ай бұрын
You r badass
@RebornrefreshАй бұрын
Nova in October? Some websites are saying we are going to see a Nova this month. Is this true?
@SockPuppet-q4xАй бұрын
Well, 7 million years ago our lineage split off from chimpanzees, and about 2 million years ago humans (not our species, homo erectus) first left Africa. Maybe it was the space dust....
@skog5351Ай бұрын
Immediately I thought that sounds very likely but then I realized that the 2mill years ago emergence of homo erectus sort of fits if we then think they are a great leap forward from homo habilis which is hard to say as erectus changed a lot from its first apperance to its demice something like 100.000 years ago or possibly less. But the split from chimpanzees does not seem to be any special leap of evolution at all. its just a divergence between two types of relativily similar hominid apes, which one of happened to later develop much more intelligence and such then the other. The split itself is just our last common ancestor not any significant development
@TheLeonhammАй бұрын
In short, believe it or not .. as of the moment I am typing .. we know that the earth does rotate around the sun, and yet the sun is not the centre of the galaxy .. let alone our of cosmic understanding; so, technically and theoretically, practically and imaginatively, our wee ball of stuff is still the centre of = our universe (as we currently experience it). Whoddah thunk it? Well, quite a lot of folks .. but that is another story. Huzzah! for science. Yey! ;o)
@konradcomrade4845Ай бұрын
so when the Sol sys travelled through the int_stellar clouds 7 and 2 Millionyears ago it had effects on Earth's climate. Did it have an effect on the sun itself? Possibly accumulating some extra mass; more sun-grezing comets?
@npcknuckles5887Ай бұрын
Alarmists savaged Henrik Svensmark for proposing this ages ago.
@paulh5801Ай бұрын
Suns just refuelling
@Loan--WolfАй бұрын
dudes name was Runtz :)
@cjmahar7595Ай бұрын
Imagine driving the bypass around LA during rush hour, only rush hour lasts 24 hours 365 days a year and that's what it is like for Earth going around the galaxy.
@petepanteramanАй бұрын
😆 gold is really remnants of super novae/interstellar winds carrying particles (Note: this is sarcasm, not where people came from; or that silly theory that states why we like gold so much, since it's God's blood)
@OscarBernhardtАй бұрын
Wow!!!!
@m.pearce3273Ай бұрын
10 000 000 / 12000 = 833 extinction events we are the only species with near total amnesia
@gravitonthongs1363Ай бұрын
Ever heard of geological records? How many species don’t have this “near total amnesia” you propose?
@henrytroll3439Ай бұрын
Why don't you make a video about the mini moon we have now?
@gravitonthongs1363Ай бұрын
He covered previous visiting moons.
@Jenab7Ай бұрын
As always, bye bye? Okay.
@chriscrumlyАй бұрын
What it must be to have the brain where so much scientific knowledge is 'obviously' obvious!
@mossigАй бұрын
A short lived star that explodes! The question nobody asks is how it possibly formed? Isn't it more likely the cause of the bubble is the vacuuming of material from the surrounding space to build the star, then that debris from the explosion cleared out the region. I doubt an explosion would leave no remnants but rather create clouds. Otherwise a series of explosions are impossible. But my main objection is that I don't think a star can have a life span of just two million years.
@luketorkington8422Ай бұрын
The thing that says look deeper into this .....never had 3 sets of ads come up B4 Anton. Usually comes with more 'controversial' topics.! Cheers as ever Anton
@nomdeguerre7265Ай бұрын
☢
@boba2783Ай бұрын
Interesting. Only if any of it is remotely true
@danbeyer6333Ай бұрын
Just a note. Anton always gives credit to Canadian scientists
@osmosisjones4912Ай бұрын
Is our inventing complex technology the only Way life could get complex . Maybe evolve themselves to be advanced techno. Or maybe a global Brain
@DvpainterАй бұрын
!
@CriminalonCrimeАй бұрын
So the Ice age ended because of thermal friction and we're heating up again because we might be exiting which causes thermal friction...
@robertwood3970Ай бұрын
Wow, you talked about the climate on Earth and you didn't get the BS global warming disclaimer.
@roccovolpetti7363Ай бұрын
Climate change exists man
@Kaimelar8Ай бұрын
Thought the exact same thing.
@dearthditchАй бұрын
Wait whu? Glitch in the matrix
@internetmachineАй бұрын
Those supernova might have been used to isolate earth from the thick of the clouds. We are disconnected from the rest of the universe.
@Kaimelar8Ай бұрын
I always grin when I hear scientists talk about things that allegedly happened millions of years ago. We're not even clear what has happened on Earth in the ñast couple thousand years...
@cschleiger1991Ай бұрын
SLAVA UKRAINE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@ibrahiymmuhammad4773Ай бұрын
Hahahaha
@johnathanmandrake7240Ай бұрын
Galactic dust can cause nova like events...
@gravitonthongs1363Ай бұрын
Only on stellar remnants though.
@KraflynАй бұрын
relatively essentially. You forgot relatively :3
@haroldhahn7044Ай бұрын
You have just repeated the theories of climate physicist Henrich Svensmark! Read his book, "THE CHILLING STARS".
@gravitonthongs1363Ай бұрын
Is this the comment that you gave Anton thumbs down for censoring? lol
@daveknight8410Ай бұрын
🙄🧐🤔🤯🤪😊😎
@dustinswatsons9150Ай бұрын
Tell us how the the local bubble can help us all please
@swanclipperАй бұрын
FYI, it's common for us to forget the "like button" even when we like the content or wish to encourage the creator. you should remember, even if you found most of the video useless, you should "like" it if you learn anything new or were brought a thought you never considered before. good or bad "like" is about your expectations of the creator. that's why Disney hides the Dislike from public view... because it's expected that they do better and they just can't do better. they're deserving of the dislikes but don't want the hit to the ego. i wrote this because i didn't click a button and forgot because i got lost in the idea that cosmic rays and interactions could have played a severe role in the evolution of Sol and Sol 3 (that's the third planet from Sol, our sun is called Sol.... Sol system.) and if you learn from a comment it is also good to like it, even if the chain starts bad but the eventual conclusion is good or informative. the like/dislike system is for humans to know what other humans consider useful. please, continue to share videos with strangers. bring up random subjects then offer a youtuber to them as a sacrifice.... i mean, idealised version for that topic/subject.
@camilleruggiero3098Ай бұрын
Were they tiny bubbles ?
@cjmahar7595Ай бұрын
How long are we speculated to remain in the local bubble
@kastenolsen9577Ай бұрын
Sisirius A is a white dwarf. This blew up in a Nova event, did this event actu create our sun, Sol?thus affecting Earth in the past.
@nicholasslide6788Ай бұрын
Is the tale of the flood that old??😮
@rcfkd215Ай бұрын
I'm curious. @Anton have they ever found our Solor System's sister Star?
@douglaswilkinson5700Ай бұрын
Fraser Cain addressed this by saying that all stars which were born in the nebula with our Sun are scattered around the Milky Way by various gravitational interactions over the past 4.5 billion years -- however astronomers have spotted on G dwarf that might be a sibling.
@malachiteofmethuselah9713Ай бұрын
Would this not suggest that Sol is not moving in a homogeneous manner to other local objects? If all of the local stuff were moving together, then the void would be moving with the solar system, rather than the solar sytem moving through the void. Why wouldn't other local objects be moving in the same dirrection, i.e. towards the Great Attractor. Why would the void be moving in a diffenrt dirrection in relation to Sol?
@robertadsett5273Ай бұрын
Edmund Halley first observed proper motion in 1718 apparently so we’ve known that other stars aren’t moving in lockstep for about 3 centuries
@UnfollowYourDreamsАй бұрын
Can't wait for all the science-denial comments about climate change 🍿
@alphared4655Ай бұрын
It is more about carbon being a trace gas with little evidence it can cause such warming. No one denies climate change caused by nature.
@UnfollowYourDreamsАй бұрын
@@alphared4655 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
@Laxpro1369Ай бұрын
@@UnfollowYourDreams hes right though, if you actually studied anything about history you'd seen climate has changed more dramatically by nature than anything humans could ever do.
@UnfollowYourDreamsАй бұрын
@@Laxpro1369 where do you get this from? It's WRONG.
@gravitonthongs1363Ай бұрын
@@Laxpro1369he is not though. Carbon chemistry has a solid body of evidence supporting it 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
@osmosisjones4912Ай бұрын
What about under ground life on The moon. What if its hallow because of bacteria or worms 🪱
@shodan6401Ай бұрын
No. That iron more than likely came from Mars. Right within the same time that ancient myths across the planet describe a great cataclysm. This is corroborated by the tremendous electrical scarring on Mars, including a great excavation of material from one entire hemisphere that reduces the elevation by thousands of feet.