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@JerseyLynne4 ай бұрын
I have been checking out your channel today. Very good work., and I should know, I watch a lot of KZbin. Science is one of my favorite topics.
@evalramman75022 ай бұрын
Your assumptions are too short-term. Give the whole endeavor a millennia or two.
@lordvadore1960Ай бұрын
@@evalramman7502 @wimkuijpers1342 Those achievements are infinitely smaller than interstellar star travel. Though these recent changes and discoveries in technology do suggest that travel to other star systems is possible. However, what is really the one reason the human race will never be able to travel to other star systems is not technological but social! We will have long destroyed ourselves millennium before such technological achievement would be possible. The universe is probably littered with civilizations that have destroyed themselves long before those civilizations could ever develop technology that would enable them to traverse their own galaxy, let alone extra-galactic travel. In other words, the major obstacle to such a technology is "us," our violence, hatred, greed, prejudice, nonstop, constant wars, etc. We are forever doomed to have existed in this solar system and perished within it. However, our probes laughed in 1977 will, in millions of years, reach other star systems, letting any advanced civilization know we once existed. Nuff said!
@georgegarvey7338Ай бұрын
We already have warp speed capability. We can create the bubble around a ship.
@champisthebunny60036 ай бұрын
This is the what I call the double bind of interstellar travel. Go fast, like near c, and any impact destroys you. Also, lethal levels of radiation so crew all dies. Go slow, and you avoid impact destruction and lethal rads, but, you are looking at an ultra-long voyage and you either run out of food, water, or supplies, or your ships systems fail with no means of repair long before reaching your destination. This only leaves some kind of wormhole, or 'jump type' drive, and those may not be possible no matter how advanced we managed to become. I come to conclusion years ago that interstellar travel in normal space is virtually impossible whether you go fast, slow, or somewhere in-between.
@johnmorelli37756 ай бұрын
Why not create a magnetic field around the ship to protect against solar radiation?
@champisthebunny60036 ай бұрын
@@johnmorelli3775 I can think of reasons. Enormous power requirements, and 2nd, magnetic fields cant really be shaped like a shield, they are omni-directional and magnetic fields are also harmful to humans. Such a scheme might be feasible at low-speeds(see run out of supplies, spare parts), but at high speeds, I am less sure an artificial mag shield would be feasible. The idea has been considered, but as of right now, the complexity and difficulties of creating such a screen are considerable.
@dzonikg6 ай бұрын
Intestelar space is almost nothing in it,and if you hit some particle your speed does not matter becase they allready travel at speeds close to speed off light
@Slo-ryde6 ай бұрын
We can certainly send a craft to the nearest star, but with our current propulsion… it would take 100k years to arrive…. We would need to invent some kind of deflector shield; and advanced AI and robotics in charge of running it…. We would not need to navigate the vessel!….and the robots could in theory send info back to earth through the voyage!
@tylerdurden37226 ай бұрын
@@dzonikg Almost nothing is still too much. Interstellar space is not truly empty...it's like an interstellar atmosphere that has a very very very low density. It's like traveling through any atmosphere. If you travel fast enough, even through the thinnest atmosphere, you'll inevitably start to encounter problems similar to reentry...and you'd have to slow down to reduce and slow down those effects (just like with reentry).
@wimkuijpers13426 ай бұрын
I have been living on this planet for a while now and I can tell you that I have seen many things that were once thought impossible. The first computers were as big as a building. The first televisions were incredibly heavy. To listen to music you needed a turntable. If you wanted to call someone far away, it cost a fortune. Now all of this is in a device in my inside pocket.
@benttranberg26906 ай бұрын
Well put. This video is incredibly pessimistic, and only see the future in terms of human lifetimes and current technological limitations. We will travel between the stars. Before that, or even while we do that, we have an enormous solar system to explore and colonize. In time, life from Earth will expand through the Milky Way galaxy, and beyond.
@tomrude70565 ай бұрын
Yes, we are in a very infantile stage of exploring the cosmos. What little we know we assume to be the law of the cosmos consistently. But we probably have not learned enough to make that assumption. Space travel could be happening somewhere using technology we earthlings never dreamed existed. Keep searching and we may keep finding solutions.
@rebwarwar51845 ай бұрын
First computers were not that big , and have been around for thousands of years and fit into the skull of a human head. Pretty amazing machines really.
@136760mas15 ай бұрын
You are talking about inventions to be used on this planet. Here we are talking about interstellar space. Unfathomable distances humans can't even live long enough to reach.
@jimmazurek55895 ай бұрын
Sorry guys, technology - no matter how advanced, will never change the laws of physics.
@margarita84427 ай бұрын
voyager 1 launched in 1976 has travelled about one light day
@teddypicker87997 ай бұрын
Because it has no propulsion. If we can achieve 1g of constant thrust we can reach near light speed after about a year
@Markcain2687 ай бұрын
Then many years travelling at near light speed, then a year decelerating at 1g then the journey back@teddypicker8799
@Daikini06 ай бұрын
@@teddypicker8799 1g for 1 year thrust sounds like insane amount of energy even for one single ton of goods/passangers
@jamestcallahanphotographer6 ай бұрын
1977. 😌
@donnie61786 ай бұрын
And yet in that ONE LIGHT DAY... It would require if a human was on board, a ship the size of the Titanic to have enough supplies to last for the half century long voyage.
@Ekofoyurittyt7 ай бұрын
We haven’t even started travelling to our own solar system yet
@samr.england6137 ай бұрын
Though our machines have. Which, when we ponder it, is amazing in and of itself!
@scottwhallin24616 ай бұрын
Voyager 1 and 2 are already past it
@josepablolunasanchez12836 ай бұрын
The resolution of the bottom of the sea is 5km per pixel. We do not even know hat is in the bottom of the sea. We plan on talking to aliens. But we cannot talk to whales, dolphins or even our dog.
@JudeTavonFenwick6 ай бұрын
@@Ekofoyurittyt we are already in our own solar system… we don’t need to travel « to » it
@andyjackson34146 ай бұрын
O yes we have -with machines. Which is the only means of travel in space that makes sense.
@badminton59206 ай бұрын
We are on Spaceship Earth, travelling through the universe. THAT is the real adventure.
@Fat122196 ай бұрын
Speed of ligth !
@robertallan63736 ай бұрын
@@Fat12219 about 67,000 miles per hour
@Frank-kp9le5 ай бұрын
@@robertallan6373 That's relative to the Sun. We are travelling faster than the speed of light relative to the distant unseen universe.
@robertallan63735 ай бұрын
@@Frank-kp9le Faster than the speed of light lol.
@ajithjojАй бұрын
@@badminton5920 safe travel!
@quarkcypher6 ай бұрын
I have crash landed on your planet. I come in pieces. Take me to your mechanic.
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
Take me to your drug dealer. :)
@piehound6 ай бұрын
I think that's funny. Mike and the Mechanics say All You Need Is a Miracle.
@Fat122196 ай бұрын
😂😂 + 😂
@PaulRossi-kh4fn6 ай бұрын
Your mechanics name is Joe Biden..lol..🤣
@richardarroyo30296 ай бұрын
@quarkcypher what galaxy are you from? Do. You want money
@stub2022Ай бұрын
We're not even close to having the life-support system for a Mars mission.
@pluck89137 ай бұрын
You know, For centuries there was the idea we couldn't fly. "If man was meant to fly he'd have wings!" This was a common saying for anyone that wanted to fly. It took people creating technology to overcome our limitations to be able to fly. Our need to expand is such that We will keep looking for a way to leave earth. Interstellar travel may be fantasy right now but it's not smart to think it cannot be done.
@cellb26197 ай бұрын
@@pluck8913 man can't fly, its the machines they operate that fly.
@CharontheElder7 ай бұрын
If you told a person 200 years ago that you could make a bomb from a few pieces of metal that would split the very fabric of our universe and that would flatten a city in a split second they would think you are nuts, if you told the same person you could create a life form on a piece of special wafer thin material that is so convincingly human that you couldnt tell it apart from an actual human they'd probably call you a heretic, If you told them we could build a machine so advanced that it can see back to the beginning of time they would just laugh at you. Thats only 200 years ago and yet here we are. As a species we have only really been on the path of scientific advancement for 1000 years (if I am being generous) and every century or so we go back to the drawing board with a new theory that essentially overrides or significantly rewrites what was believed before. If you think our understanding of the universe (indeed existence) is almost complete you are as bad as the people of antiquity believing that sacrificing a pigeon on a fire will have any bearing on the days ahead.
@TheStephaneAdam7 ай бұрын
Except that we had birds showing air flight was perfectly doable, just an engineering challenge. Same for cross ocean travel, polynesians did it basically on canoes. The more we know about space the harder it gets. By orders of magnitude.
@fightwithbiomechanix7 ай бұрын
@@pluck8913 I am a mechanical engineer and I can tell you that the laws of physics don't permit faster than light travel which is the speed of cause and effect. While mankind flying was an anatomical limitation. The speed of light is a physics limitation. Even getting to smaller significant fractions of light speed if dust hit a ship it would be equivalent to a nuke. While 10% may be possible it's still dangerous. I'm hopeful but our current understanding of physics (not technology) is the limit. We are more likely to figure out how to help people live for centuries than faster than light. As that is not a physics limit, it's only anatomical
@samr.england6137 ай бұрын
@@fightwithbiomechanix One need not be a mechanical engineer, or even a phycisist, to know that faster-than-light travel is impossible. It is, however, possible to, 'approach' the speed of light. But hey, even if we could achieve 1% c, ie, 1,860 miles per/second (which would be an amazing achievement), it would still take us 430 years to get to Alpha Centauri system, and that includes ship time, as time dilation would be insignificant at that relativistically speaking, 'low' speed.
@antaresix93475 ай бұрын
"The Earth is the cradle of humanity, but mankind cannot stay in the cradle forever!" - Tsiolkovsky
@SeattlePioneer3 ай бұрын
The babble of intellectuals is not science.
@vordman7 ай бұрын
Not a chance, however advanced we get. We better make sure we look after this wonderful world we call Earth.
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
Even if we eventually CAN do all these things these dreamers and futurists fantasize about, we should still take care of this living Earth, this truly fantastic planet!
@Fat122196 ай бұрын
😢
@PaulRossi-kh4fn6 ай бұрын
Totally agree..👌
@calogerohuygens44305 ай бұрын
@@samr.england613 your logic will be our extinction.
@samr.england6135 ай бұрын
@@calogerohuygens4430 How will taking care of this fantastic planet Earth lead to our exinction?
@gregoryjackson9033Ай бұрын
Interstellar travel is tens/hundreds of thousands of years away..That’s the optimistic outlook. The reality is we’re millions of years away, if ever.
@hermancmАй бұрын
If we’re still around then.
@jimpett880225 күн бұрын
Only one hundred and twenty years ago, we managed to take our first flight. Since then, we sent probes that left our solar system and built space stations. We now are entering a world of advanced AI and quantum computing. I don’t think Gene Roddenberry was that far off when he envisioned a Star Trek universe in the mid 2100’s. Minus warp drive engines and advanced replicators, we have the technology to build the Enterprise in space today with much of the same technology. IE communicators, human/computer interfaces, universal translators, advanced mris and ct scanners. The cost would be about a trillion dollars but that isn’t much considered the US spends that much on shit that blows up, a few times a year. If a global effort was to go into this, we very well might develop a warp drive or close to it in a hundred years or so.
@RobertBergman-c5d4 күн бұрын
If earth remanes
@justinparks52806 ай бұрын
Makes sense!! They said man could never fly & when the wright brothers did fly, the newspaper’s didn’t even print it straight away!! I wouldn’t bet against mankind given enough time!!!
@rebwarwar51845 ай бұрын
Yes , but then again birds and insects fly , so we just needed to work out the mechanics. Yes light speed is also possible, but our current real life example is only the humble MASSLESS photon. So I guess that means we just need to figure out how to lose all of our mass. No easy task.
@Kerry-G4 ай бұрын
Even a child can make a paper glider. It shouldn’t have taken even THAT LONG.
@The1stDukeDroklarАй бұрын
That's because those things do not violate the laws of physics 🙄
@douglasparise39867 ай бұрын
A lifetime is not long enough for a person to see this entire planet. I haven't even seen every town in NJ
@scottwhallin24616 ай бұрын
Then go for a really long walk or mountain bike
@douglasparise39866 ай бұрын
@@scottwhallin2461 I don't think you understand what I meant.
@sciuriware6 ай бұрын
@@douglasparise3986 But I do!
@owlcowl6 ай бұрын
And in the latter case, why would you want to? ;-)
@douglasparise39866 ай бұрын
@@owlcowl there are some nice towns and natural beauty
@Joe-ym6bw7 ай бұрын
We will never reach the speed of light and even if we could it means nothing in vastness of the universe
@Markcain2687 ай бұрын
@Joe-ym6bw very true, take years to reach the nearest solar system.
@richkavanagh27787 ай бұрын
Exactly
@relentlessmadman7 ай бұрын
which is a good thing for the nearest solar system and those what already live there!
@richkavanagh27787 ай бұрын
@@relentlessmadman yeah I’m starting to think could be life everywhere but the distances are so vast and even reaching the speed of light (which is impossible) would still take well over 4 years to reach the next star system. No one will ever meet in the cosmos.
@scottwhallin24616 ай бұрын
Not so fast Joe Going the speed of light is supposed to be impossible because of the amount of energy required to do so. Going fractions of that speed IS POSSIBLE from all that I've read even as much as 50% provided you have a warp bubble and Not the kind in star trek. I urge you to research both Fusion Reactor Tech. and the new Warp bubble. I believe by 2080 man could go to Proximus B which is a planet that is in the habitable zone of it's Star Alfa Centauri which is 4.3 light years away. Going 50% the speed of light would take 9 years to get there. May as well forget about coming back but you never know. Also unmanned crafts would have to be sent in the decades before. Another thing : Anti - matter might be obtainable by then.
@outbackeddie2 ай бұрын
Staying here on Earth while sending a bunch of other people on a one way trip to another solar system is a risk I am willing to take.
@Washington-Dreaming7 ай бұрын
I’m pretty skeptical of Interstellar travel myself. If humans don’t kill themselves off in a couple hundred years - I wouldn’t bet on it - I think we might reach near light speed travel. But even so, light speed is actually pretty slow in the big scheme of things. And human lifespans are short too. There is the paradox where it doesn’t make sense to send out astronauts on long journeys because if you do, in short order technology improves and if you send up a ship later it could pass the previous one. There’s a name for the idea but it’s slipped my mind. But we humans are probably stuck in our solar system which isn’t too bad though. If we could, say, go to Pluto with a manned mission that would be pretty impressive.
@Wild1BillS7 ай бұрын
I have often thought about this and thought how cool it will be to be able to send a ship out to bring the voyager probes back with the total trip only taking a few days or even just a few weeks.
@josepablolunasanchez12836 ай бұрын
With the first interstellar engine they will design a weapon that will kill us all.
@PNW_Sportbike_Life6 ай бұрын
Relativity:)
@Slo-ryde6 ай бұрын
It would be easier and cheaper in the long term to terraform Venus ( a planet similar in size and properties to earth) if we could find a way to cool it down and stop the green house effect!
@josepablolunasanchez12836 ай бұрын
Heat is energy. Find something that eats that energy.
@lv40776 ай бұрын
All we have to do to accomplish interstellar travel is to make vehicles that will travel at the speed of imagination.
@Fat122196 ай бұрын
To fast 😮
@PaulRossi-kh4fn6 ай бұрын
Your imagination is your vehicle for interstellar space travel.
@lv40776 ай бұрын
@@PaulRossi-kh4fn That’s about the only way to cover the distances necessary to reach these incomprehensibly distant planets.
@markwilliams8369Ай бұрын
The improbability drive.
@Louis-rr3py6 ай бұрын
It's been 52 years since humans went to The Moon. Don't think we'll be travelling to the stars anytime soon.
@Fat122196 ай бұрын
Anytime 😊
@billmiller25224 ай бұрын
That's simply because of politics, AND the fact that the private sector was essentially forbidden to pursue spaceflight. Now that that restriction has been eliminated, I expect that we will see much greater progress.
@ComezehereАй бұрын
They claim. Not buying it.
@antilaw9911Ай бұрын
@@Louis-rr3py nobody ever went to moon. Fact
@yusufhussain-th1ruАй бұрын
Went to the moon my ar5e
@ricklayeux56887 ай бұрын
If aliens have never been here this could be why, and if they have then light speed travel must be possible.
@alfonsklapa33537 ай бұрын
or there is nothing special about us and our planet and not worth the problems.
@michaelselz33897 ай бұрын
They’ve always been here.
@ricklayeux56887 ай бұрын
@@michaelselz3389 Maybe, if so interstellar travel must be possible. We'll see.
@MAGA_Extremist7 ай бұрын
Aliens have been here thousands of years ago and probably are still here if you think about it we've only had electricity the last 250 years there could be planets out there they had electricity for a million years we wouldn't even understand their technology if we saw it you can't say we can't make it to the nearest star that's just silly. We have to figure out how
@isaackitone7 ай бұрын
Yes. It's just impossible for all of us. Note that for many of these worlds, the asteroid didn't stop the dominance of the dinosaurs. So, perhaps they've had 1 billion years of uninterrupted dinosaurs with no opposable thumbs.
@IllyaLeonovMorganFreepony6 ай бұрын
I am glad to hear someone saying all of this. We can look at microbes. But we can never go and visit them. We can look at stars....
@Mr_Oggie7 ай бұрын
If a civilization ever got advanced enough to where they could safely and quickly travel between solar systems they would be advanced enough to realize what a tremendous waste of time, energy and resources it is. The "problem" is that other than curiosity there will never be a reason or need to travel amongst the stars: if we get to a point where Earth can no longer support our needs, IE: we need more minerals, food, water, space to live - there is by far more than enough of what we will ever need within our own solar system. We have stories in the form of books, TV and movies about travelling in space to satisfy our curiosity and see what is out there, but realistically we would instead turn to finding some way to communicate with another civilization if we located one or if we REALLY need to go there we would send unmanned probes.
@8bitnation4197 ай бұрын
Colonising the Universe and becoming an intergalactic species is the benefit that we would get out of interstellar travel and colonisation. We would be imprinted throughout the universe and would have the ability to last for Eons and beyond. But travelling in conventional ways will be an impossible task. We will need to develop our Solar System terraforming planets, developing technology and then hopefully then, we may figure out ways to create portals to other points in the universe. In summary there is a lot of work to do until we get to that point.
@Beanskiiii7 ай бұрын
@@8bitnation419This will never happen lmaooo
@8bitnation4197 ай бұрын
@@Beanskiiii We will never know since we won't live to see it.
@davidburrows34387 ай бұрын
Anything is possible. Aliens have already crashed on earth don't be so small minded the universe is teeming with life
@jerrytroy26777 ай бұрын
Yeah until our sun dies
@SKINNY_HUMAN6 ай бұрын
Finally a science channel being real and honest. Keep up the good work ❤
@InsaneCuriosity6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@Ruda-n4h6 ай бұрын
Gene Roddenberry skipped over warp drive vaporising the Enterprise!
@Kerry-G4 ай бұрын
A very rare thing indeed. Most channels want clicks so they figure that’s better. I agree reality is light years better (pun intended)!
@garymalone547Ай бұрын
But Elon Musk lol.
@brennan60100Ай бұрын
It's been 52 years since we even went to the moon. The notion of intersteller travel is just pure fantasy when you consider the vastness and the dangers involved.
@heidetermeg4277 ай бұрын
It's frankly mind blowing how humankind's imagination is so narrowly limited that we, in good conscience, can make such bold claims without knowing all the facts, down to the most minute of variables. If that isn't the definition of ignorance, such a concept as 'ignorance' does not exist.
@gilsonsangulukaniphiri50187 ай бұрын
@heidetermeg427 I quite agree. We have severe limitations. I am sure that there are things that we will never know and also not do due to biological, physical, etc, constraints.
@scottwhallin24616 ай бұрын
Do you realize how extremely difficult it was to land on the moon in 1969 with the computation power literally less than a smart phone and yet it was done. If it was fake they would not have gone through all the trouble to Fake it 4 times. Also Houston did most of the heavy lifting for them with tons of calculations and constant communications. They directed their every move almost.
@scottwhallin24616 ай бұрын
You are not as intelligent as you think you are. There will Never be a time when All the Facts Can be known or the variables sometimes you have to take risks and you have to LEARN ON THE FLY. That's how we learn and Build on that Forever.
@jeanlouis18986 ай бұрын
@@scottwhallin2461lol saying a stranger is not as intelligent as they think they are without knowing them is pretty “unintelligent” lol….you sound very pretentious dude
@Brunoburningbright5 ай бұрын
Amen. We can claim our brains out. Nature isn't listening because Nature doesn't care. We, on the other hand, love to hear ourselves talk.
@pedrosteam87107 ай бұрын
We are too slow and tiny into the universe speed of light is too slow 😢
@josepablolunasanchez12836 ай бұрын
We live in a small ball of dust. And this is where all empires existed.
@billinct8607 ай бұрын
I agree... we are stuck here, and aliens stuck wherever they exist.
@samr.england6137 ай бұрын
Agree. And I think it's probably a good thing! For one, we ourselves, and any hypothetical alien beings, have no moral or ethical right to, 'colonize' or invade other LIVING worlds! If there is a Supreme Creator/Intelligence behind the Universe, and I believe there is, He purposedly spaced the stars, on average, about 5 lightyears apart, to make it impossible for his intelligent species to ever personally travel to other star systems.
@RichCwm7 ай бұрын
Alien AI probes aren't, though..
@billinct8607 ай бұрын
@@RichCwm Yes... I think we could meet their machines, possibly long after the aliens themselves went extinct or evolved into something else.
@longbowshooter52917 ай бұрын
I really wish you could have witnessed what I witnessed. They have some kind of portal or dimension port, or a stargate or whatever you want to call it, because I watched as 3 bright white overlapping ovals lit up in the night sky, flashed several times, a BB sized dot of light flew out, the ovals closed, and the BB flew about 2 seconds and shrunk down to about half sized, continued flying off into the distance. I watched that repeat 5 more times in the same spot in the sky, and at one point I saw a second set of ovals in the distance doing the same thing. There may have been others I didn't see, don't know. It wasn't a small thing in the sky, the 3 ovals' overall length was about 1 1/4", and around 3/8th" wide - it was VERY obvious, not something tiny. I watched over 2 dozen round portals pop up in the sky on another occasion - and I had my binoculars that time. I SAW a round white circle of light light up, a BB size light fly out, fly 2 seconds, shrink, continue out of sight. I SAW that in my binoculars, but even without binoculars the round circles of light were VERY visible. Hold your thumb and index finger 1/2" apart and hold it at arm's length, that's how big the circles were. I watched as one after another circles opened and closed and had a dot of light fly out, shrink, fly off. I even ran across the street to show a neighbor, but, of course, by the time I got there, got her outside, they had stopped. But I lost count around the 2 dozen mark, they were popping up so fast and in different parts of the sky that I lost count. So, since I saw these things happen, I don't think vast distances, debris, gases, solar radiation, or much of anything troubles them getting around in space. ,
@billinct8607 ай бұрын
@@longbowshooter5291 How do you know they aren't from Earth... just much more advanced and hiding from us? I have seen lights speed by me overhead at night while driving on a back road. I even went back to the same stretch of road the next day to see if wires or something could have caused it. Unexplainable to me, but I still don't believe it was aliens. I'm 75 and changed from believing that aliens are here in "flying saucers" to being very skeptical on the subject.
@sverebom7069Ай бұрын
A possible more optimistic solution to the Fermi Paradox could be that space travel at relativistic velocities is really easy. It would have to be really easy to reduce the time that any civilzation would spend at the "crawling through space at a fraction of c" stage that is so crucial the Fermi paradox. Any technology that enables space travel at relativistic velocities would do to this: - Give that civilization a tool to annihilate itself, thus creating the ultimate great filter. - Anyone who goes on a journey in such a space ship inevitably and irreversibly leaves the frame of reference of their home civilization and also our frame of reference. There might be countless ships out there zipping around at relativistic velocities which we cannot see and who cannot see us. Do I believe that to be the case? No, I'm just pointing out that any mode of travel for which time dilation becomes apparent would solve the Fermi Paradox (in possibly more than one way). I'm In the camp of "sufficiently advanced civilizations are very rare and even for them interstellar travel is so hard, that they rarely do it".
@halb3917 ай бұрын
Even if you could overcome all of the technical hurdles outlined in the video... There would still be the issue of finding another civilization that was at a similar point in their development as ours. Civilizations or even species can come and go over the course of tens of millions of years. Humans have only been technologically "advanced" for the last hundred years or so and we're probably closer to the end of our existence than the beginning. So finding a civilization that hasn't already come and gone would also be unlikely. Bottom line... It ain't gonna happen.
@FrancoM77476 ай бұрын
@@halb391 Precisely. Few people understand that concept.
@reddwarfer999Ай бұрын
@@FrancoM7747 Carl Sagan did. He said that the chances of meeting another civilisation at a similar development to our own would be virtually impossible. Stars are formed and then die over billions of years so the chances of two civilisations meeting with similar technologies are infinitesimally small. Just think how backward a civilisation with the technology of just 200 years ago would appear to us or indeed how advanced one 200 years in the future would appear. And that's a tiny fraction of the amount of time that life has been on this planet. So even if something like 'warp drive' exists there's no chance of there ever being a Star Trek type galaxy with hundreds of space-faring civilisations all at roughly the same level of technological development.
@netshaman99187 ай бұрын
The primary subject is not to believe, but to find relief in science.
@lawrencegoldworm7 ай бұрын
Your entire video comes down to stating one apparent fact and immediately following it up with saying, "on the other hand..." In the end you've told us nothing except to watch for future developments. Don't think we needed a video to know that.
@jamestcallahanphotographer6 ай бұрын
Thanks…you just saved me watching this! 😄
@jamie596856 ай бұрын
Thank you for saving me 13 wasted minutes
@tylerdurden37226 ай бұрын
So we're alone then? we can't have both, unfortunately (or at least, it extremely statistically unlikely) Either interstellar travel is an obstacle keeping space faring civilizations isolated...or we are alone. Pick one. We can't have both...that is the Fermi paradox. The guy who made the video understands this, hence the title of his video.
@PaulRossi-kh4fn6 ай бұрын
Good observation, he must specialize in "Click Bait Video".
@VOLKHVORONOVICH6 ай бұрын
Yeah. He says, "Believe me..." He's not given me a single reason to believe him. He's like folks who used to say, "Man will never travel by rail, because if a train goes faster than ten miles and hour all the air will be sucked out of the train and the passengers will suffocate!"
@PrimordialPunchbowl6 ай бұрын
We’re not even a Type 1 civilization yet. Until we reach Type 3 or 4, we’re stuck within our own solar system. We need thousands of years to get there.
@InsaneCuriosity6 ай бұрын
Yeah, we still have a long way to go before we can explore beyond our solar system. Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
@satorified16126 ай бұрын
We’re a Type .75 civilization!
@PrimordialPunchbowl6 ай бұрын
@@satorified1612 correct. We need approximately 200-300 more years to reach Type I.
@satorified16126 ай бұрын
@@PrimordialPunchbowl I'm not optimistic about our chances.
@david0290147 ай бұрын
Think about this, when we where caveman we could have never imagined traveling to other side of our planet or land on the moon! We have done it! If we survive long enough with robots, knowledge and AI we will have the tech to do it. But it will be long time from now
@josepablolunasanchez12836 ай бұрын
Darwin never expected us to have politicians that would turn having children and a house into a luxury.
@hubertwalters43006 ай бұрын
Yes, it will be a long time, probably a thousand years or more from now.
@thecomment94896 ай бұрын
@@david029014 The cavemen didn't really imagined about travelling to other side of the planet. Only the changing climate made them do that. And could do it because it was allowed in terms of nature allowing it.
@johnfranklin16626 ай бұрын
We didn't even know there was another side of the planet.
@Kerry-G4 ай бұрын
Landing on the moon is a VERY FAR CRY from going to a star which is 25 MILLION times farther and takes thousands of years more.
@PatibokeАй бұрын
Finally a video that talks about the danger of tiny specs of dust for interstellar spaceships. It is an issue that has to be thoroughly solved before even thinking about the next step.
@InsaneCuriosityАй бұрын
Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
@8bitnation4197 ай бұрын
It's a fantasy for us, but for future generations there is a possibility that they can become advanced enough to not only travel interstellar, but also terrform planets and form multiple civilisations throughout the universe. We on the other have to try and get to Mars first.
@samr.england6137 ай бұрын
And what are we going to do on Mars? Spend 99% of the rest of our lives in our underground, pressurized, and likely cramped, windowless habitats? Living on algae salad and green-slime pie?
@8bitnation4197 ай бұрын
@@samr.england613 To develop our nearby planets to build a 2nd or a 3rd earth. I think we still need a lot more technological advancement before setting foot on Mars.
@samr.england6137 ай бұрын
@@8bitnation419 We also need a lot more technological advancement to take better care of this precious Earth, especially if we keep reproducing like rabbits. There's no place like home, and that's not just something people say, it is the truth. Nowhere else in the Solar System will be as agreeable and comfortable to us as is this oxygenated, "normal gravity", "normal atmospheric pressure", blue, watery, fertile, beautiful planet.
@8bitnation4197 ай бұрын
@@samr.england613 I agree Earth is the most important planet. If we can't fix Earth, then we won't be able to fix these other planets. Mars and Venus come closest to Earth's gravity and size. So those two are the best candidates for terraforming in our Solar System. But also two opposites, one Venus has a Green House effect to an extreme, where Earth is heading, and the other Mars needs a Green House effect to form an Atmosphere and create a Magnetic Field.
@driftwood97056 ай бұрын
That is true if you try to do it through known physics. However, if you try to manipulate physics, it can be done.. Take a marble and put it in a plastic pipe stick it in a tank of water and tilt it and see how far it takes. It’ll take forever for the marble to go through the plastic pipe with the water, maybe it’ll even go in reverse because it’s getting resistance from the water and gravity. Now this time put the marble in a plastic pipe, but melted and seal it now stick it in a tank of water and tilted. You’ll hear the marble roll inside the pipe real fast. It has no resistance from the water, the material of space is the water if you can create something around your vehicle to allow you to travel without resistance of the material of space you will actually move faster than the speed of light and it will be possible by manipulating physics
@InsaneCuriosity6 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
@driftwood97056 ай бұрын
@@InsaneCuriosityFor now you’re definitely right and makes sense. But I hope in the future you’re wrong, about us not being capable of being interstellar. Because if you’re right, humanity has no future and no hope !
@nicholaswilliams12967 ай бұрын
Just 150 years ago we didn’t have Airplanes, Helicopters, Space Stations, been to the Moon, have Satellite’s, Nuclear Power, internet, we do now, who’s to say what we will be doing in another 150 years.
@navret17077 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, physics has a habit of saying “oh, no you don’t.”
@dee00177 ай бұрын
@@nicholaswilliams1296 only our current understanding of physics
@stewiesaidthat7 ай бұрын
@dee0017 F=ma. To accelerate mass forward, you have accelerate mass backward. This is essentially what photon's are doing as they lose mass over distance. E=mc. Atomic energy converts to radiant energy with acceleration. The cosmic limit is c. The only way around it is to warp acceleration. E=mc^2 warps the natural radioactive decay process in the time frame. How do you do it in the space frame. Since physicists are still stuck on stupid with their stationary plane physics (mass as an actionable force). You aren't making in advancements in space travel. You still think space and time are one frame of reference for Pete's sake. E=mc. Everything is an emergent property of acceleration. Figure out what is acceleration and you might go far. I'd dump that idiot Einstein and his relativity nonsense. Motion is absolute. You need to redefine c as something other than the speed of light.
@seacoast167 ай бұрын
For the last 80 years, all we’ve done is refine the jet engine and the rocket. Nothing else has been brought forth since.
@dee00177 ай бұрын
@stewiesaidthat okay, one question is our current understanding of physics total complete ?
@mrScififan27 ай бұрын
Reality is so depressing. I hope that future humans discover ways to overcome these seemingly impossible challenges.
@JoseTorres-sl2eq7 ай бұрын
Some already did it, but won't go to your home to tell it or teach you!
@josepablolunasanchez12836 ай бұрын
Reality is not depressing. What happens is that we allowed the inmates to run the asylum. It was better before when we had mental institutions.
@mrScififan26 ай бұрын
@@josepablolunasanchez1283 I completely understand your point. I’m actually a pretty positive person by temperment, but I’ve seen a lot of reprehensible things done by people, who should know better. It seems the inmates have always run the asylum. It’s just that whatever inmates are momentarily in charge declare their insanity to be “sanity “
@MarkSmith-js2pu6 ай бұрын
@@JoseTorres-sl2eq mankind will destroy himself first the way we are regressing.
@jebes9090906 ай бұрын
We already can over come this, it just that it would take a monumental effort to do. Even with current technology. But its like people in the middle ages building an ocean liner like the titanic to settle the new world in one shot. They could do it but it would basically consume everything they were able to produce to do.
I promise we will never leave this solar system. Most people don't have a clue how big this solar system is and how many thousands of years it will take just to leave the solar system.
@Mr-wv1tu7 ай бұрын
People just wish, and think it will come true
@flavioaveraldo22807 ай бұрын
Never is much time
@CapitalMover7 ай бұрын
the voygers already have
@RH-ro3sg7 ай бұрын
@@CapitalMover Only in a specific sense of the word. Voyager has crossed the border of the heliosphere- the point where the solar wind is stopped by the interstellar medium. However, there are regions much, MUCH farther away that are still considered part of our solar system by other definitions (e.g. the Oort Cloud).
@larky3687 ай бұрын
@@CapitalMover Not even close to leaving the Kuiper Belt let alone the Oort Cloud.
@PeterFreiling-q3vАй бұрын
Great video! I wish more people would lean these simple facts. In other words, unless and until we can figure out how to travel faster than light (not likely) interstellar travel will remain just a pipe dream.
@bigsby6bender7 ай бұрын
Be bold, be persistent and never let anyone tell you that something is impossible!
@antiseize117 ай бұрын
I'm not saying it is impossible, but I'm gonna say that it's a one way trip to nowhere
@InsaneCuriosity7 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@mikewilson85136 ай бұрын
Travelling at light speed is impossible
@SeattlePioneer3 ай бұрын
GREAT! Let me know when you have a perpetual motion machine to demonstrate.
@GoodBeat1014 ай бұрын
"Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the Galaxy lies a small unregarded yellow sun. Orbiting this at a distance of roughly ninety-two million miles is an utterly insignificant little blue green planet whose ape-descended life forms are so amazingly primitive that they still think digital watches are a pretty neat idea."
@Hawkmoon269336 ай бұрын
I don’t think people understand how vast space is and inadvertently think of it as some black stuff you have to drive through with your really fast car like going to work. Try looking into how long it would take to reach the center of the galaxy at ten times the speed of light and then you will realize how isolated we truly are, the universe has conspired against us to keep us in our lane.
@Slo-ryde6 ай бұрын
Lest we jack up the whole universe, as we did to earth!
@Jjbird172 ай бұрын
Even at the speed of light it’s still too big
@mallymall703825 күн бұрын
I agree but I would go further and say The Creator meant for us to stay in our lane, not the universe. You can't have an intelligent design without an intelligent designer.
@MythRsR197929 күн бұрын
Excellent video. I think that there simply isn't enough energy available for us to do interstellar travel.
@InsaneCuriosity29 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@EnneaIsInterested7 ай бұрын
Basically all such analyses of interstellar travel ignore indefinite life extension and accompanying comprehensive cancer treatments.
@ujification3504Ай бұрын
1:23 its only a matter of time until we do. Maybee some Smart guy will build a new way
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
When was the last time an insect splattered on your car windshield? Used to happen all the time in Spring and Summer here in north Georgia, don't know about where you live. In the last ten years, NO insect has splattered on my car windshield in north Georgia. This should alarm all of us.
@Kerry-G4 ай бұрын
Do you have a possible reason for this? Just politely asking.
@samr.england6134 ай бұрын
@@Kerry-G Insect population decline is my reason, and recent (last 40 years) of insect population decline is a critical issue. For the last 20 or more years, no insects have splattered on my windshield while driving down the road. Before 20 or so years ago, I had scores of bugs splatter on my windshield in just a 5 mile trip. Many insect populations, especially the one's we value most, are dissappearing, becoming extinct. Do you understand now? We need the insects (and the plants), more than they need us. Truth!
@godzuks29 күн бұрын
we'll never have the technology ever..distances are beyond imagination, the human body cannot survive long term in space, and all the things you mention in this excellent video..best we can do is make a base on the moon and or the dead planet Mars..I vote for Elon Musk to be the 1st person to set foot on Mars
@InsaneCuriosity29 күн бұрын
Thanks for your thoughts! Yes, the challenges of interstellar travel are huge.
@tonymc-dx8xw7 ай бұрын
If you tell a Human he cant do somthing he will do it anyway to prove you wrong.
@PraveenSrJ017 ай бұрын
I’m not sure though this can me done but except through a miracle from the divine
@samr.england6137 ай бұрын
What if I told you that a man cannot run 100 miles an hour with his own natural body? What man among us is going to prove me wrong? Better yet, no man can fly like a bird by simply flapping his arms. Prove me wrong.
@ericgolightly84507 ай бұрын
@@PraveenSrJ01What did you type that on?
@Alexey655366 ай бұрын
Sure. Go build a perpetual motion machine, will ya?
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
@@Alexey65536 Like the, 'space-plane' (takes off like a plane, goes to space, lands like a plane). We've been hearing about the 'spaceplane' concept for over forty years, but it hasn't come to tangible fruition because it can't be done. But so many geeks out there, due to what's called the, "Marvel Effect", believe that we can do things that we have no technological capability of doing.
@JeddieT6 ай бұрын
NYTimes, 1908: “It will take a million years before man will be able to fly.” NY Times, 1985: “Computer laptops will never be a thing, no one will want one.” Good luck with your “we will never visit the stars” thesis.
@joemariejames47575 ай бұрын
Well space isn't real its all in the Bible
@sarah-janelambert89626 ай бұрын
At speeds we have now, we could explore the galaxy in a million years. No need for warp drives. We WILL travel amongst the stars. “When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong.” Clarke's first law.
@marveloussoftware49145 ай бұрын
They cant even make a space station last a human lifetime. There's no way any human will reach another system. All you need to do is the math.
@sarah-janelambert89625 ай бұрын
@@marveloussoftware4914 If it is an engineering problem, then it is JUST an engineering problem.
@marveloussoftware49145 ай бұрын
@@sarah-janelambert8962 LOL, a ball point pen solved an engineering problem. The saturn 5 rocket solved an engineering problem. Obviously you did not do the math. Making a pen work is much, much easier than going to the moon. They both solved engineering problems. Just choosing an adjective to describe a problem does absolutely nothing to indicate anything useful about the problem. A dyson sphere is an engineering problem. Theres not enough matter in the solar system to build one so unless you transport all the matter from AT LEAST ONE OTHER SOLAR SYSTEM you cant build one. That's an engineering problem. Interstellar travel encompasses 4 to 5 MAJOR engineering problems. It is not impossible. It is so impractical to be de facto impossible. Do the math, thats all you need to do to educate yourself.
@sarah-janelambert89625 ай бұрын
@@marveloussoftware4914 Since you emphasise it so vehemently, would you care to share your calculations? If a problem does not violate physical laws of nature, it is amenable to being solved by advanced engineering. Remember Clarke's first law? "When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong."
@marveloussoftware49145 ай бұрын
@@sarah-janelambert8962 did you even read my post? I explicitly state that it is not impossible. Then you claim, very unscientifically, that just because somebody said something you give it merit. That is the path to arrogance and being wrong. All throughout history people have made mistakes assuming what they wanted to believe is wrong.
@OconByrd519Ай бұрын
I am absolutely convinced that humans will never leave our own galaxy.
@Pecisk7 ай бұрын
Several things: * Fermi paradox is not solvable because there are just not enough information - we might not like idea but it is highly probable that answer to this will be provided not in our lifetimes; * Distances are HUGE, this alone makes querying data incredibly difficult; * Traveling between stars is highly likely probable, but decision to do such journey is most likely why it is not gonna happen in nearest 200 years or so - it is insane waste of resources; * I can only see it happening if our civilization overcomes it's worst instincts and is capable to harbor resources from rest of Sol to build such expedition; Definitely not gonna happen in next 100 years.
@iroamxx7 ай бұрын
You don't know that. Think of where we were 100 years ago. The Model T was just coming about, No cell phones, Tv was invented in 1927 but wasn't commercially available for a bit. The internet was not a thing for about another 50 years from 1920. Imagine telling somebody in 1920 that we would have a magic box that lets us watch whatever we want, or describing the internet to them, or even telling them that one say they will have a device in their pocket that would allow them to communicate with anybody in the world just by dialing their number. Now look at some new technology today, VR is still in it's infancy, the James Webb Telescope is incredible, and we are witnessing the birth of actual intelegent AI. I'm not saying for sure interstellar travel will be available in the next 100 years but I wouldn't close the door on it ether.
@Living897 ай бұрын
@iroamxx Nothing you described violates the laws of physics. Traveling between stars in a reasonable amount of time would require faster than light speed travel and, unfortunately, that does.
@bradysmith44057 ай бұрын
@@Living89the nearest star is 4.3 light years away so we wouldn’t need ftl to get there in less than a decade. And who knows, maybe we’ll eventually figure out wormholes or something
@iroamxx7 ай бұрын
@@Living89 like that other guy said, wormholes. Keep in mind, hundreds of years ago people thought the earth was flat (some still do). Who knows what we have not discovered yet
@Living897 ай бұрын
@@iroamxx My point is that it seems to me that many people believe that given enough time, humans will figure out how to do about anything and use the changes over the last hundred years or so as an example. My parents are 95 years old. Think about the difference in the world they were born into and what it is now (technology wise). The problem is that those changes are miniscule compared to what it would take to become an interstellar species. In order to do that, you need to find a way to beat what we know about physics today or prove everything we know is wrong. It would be awesome if we could make a "warp drive" like they had in Star Trek, but it's also possible and perhaps likely that no matter how much time humans have, it is simply impossible to develop technology that would allow us to safely explore outside of our own solar system. I'm too old to ever find out. I'll be lucky to see humans on Mars in my time.
@FrancoM77476 ай бұрын
No matter how you slice it we're alone.
@NJcruiser6 ай бұрын
Yea, I agree. I used to think that there was a lot of other civilizations out there. Now, not so much.
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
We may be alone in the Milky Way Galaxy, but I would never dare to presume that we're the only technical civilization in the entire Universe.
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
@@NJcruiser Life itself is probably rare, but fairly common. (I know that sounds like a contradiction, as well as counterintuitive.) Let me explain: Life itself is likely fairly common, but multicellular life is probably comparatively rare, and big animals or plants, similar to elephants and giant oak trees are probably rarer still. And creatures like us that can build radio telescopes, nuclear power plants, toasters and spacecraft, are probably EXTREMELY rare, in fact, so rare, as to be likely undetectable by any other similar such species, who would be scores, if not hundreds or thousands, of lightyears distant from Earth.
@Ruda-n4h6 ай бұрын
@@samr.england613 I wouldn't even say were're alone in the Milky Way, but this video shows that the chances of meeting anyone are infinitesimal.
@petertaylor47586 ай бұрын
@@NJcruiser Star Trek brainwashed us as kids
@KrystofDreamJourney2 ай бұрын
I absolutely love this channel !! IMHO without a profound and breakthrough discoveries into the gist of existence itself, we may be trapped in the Solar System for good. Our biological bodies prevent us from traveling anywhere outside of our neighboring vicinity. Only discoveries into the realm of our spiritual existence (non-material, non-atomic) may open other possibilities i.e. teleportation, transferring our consciousness into electromagnetic waves, bending space-time etc. Traveling inside giant spaceships is great for Sci-Fi movies 🎥 ! And that’s all.
@LionheartNh7 ай бұрын
The universe is outrageously big.
@Brunoburningbright5 ай бұрын
An exceedingly inconvenient truth.
@kennymoore6776Ай бұрын
Very good stuff...but do they have good baseball leagues in other star systems? ⚾ 🤔
@feltonhamilton217 ай бұрын
Space trains. To avoid being vaporized the spaceships have to be made with a rotating surface shape like a drill bit that can rotate extremely fast so when the nuclear proportion forces kick off and push the spacecraft forward this will open up a new force field causing the two forces to emerge into each other like sliding a hand into a glove, this beautiful connection creates a single and powerful moving wormhole balanced around the space craft so powerful it can maintain a safe pathway to other star systems throughout deep space at light speed because the more power the nuclear propulsion is applied on to the back of the spaceship to help boost the speed the greater the protection shield against debris and meteorites This Nuclear propulsion super boom spacecraft is guaranteed absolutely friction free basically there is no need to ever worry about the spaceship turning into a light wave while traveling to other star systems basically said you can enjoy the ride without losing time because of friction.
@riyaansheikh74707 ай бұрын
@@feltonhamilton21 i like this idea. Could you explain more?
@yusufhussain-th1ruАй бұрын
Raving loonies everywhere.
@feltonhamilton2113 күн бұрын
Casimer effect between two steel plates is all the energy needed for getting started on laser traveling. Friction for lasers can be molded through a casimer effect. Casimer effect between two steel plates is real and can be proven inside a vacuum.
@DJoseph-sp4ij2 ай бұрын
Your optimism is infectious.
@Scaretheghost7 ай бұрын
If Saturn hadn't pulled Jupiter back from the inner solar system, we wouldn't even be here. Earth exists because of pure luck. It took 13 billion years for us just to get to this point and we haven't even been around very long. For all we know, we might be the only intelligent life forms in the entire galaxy. There just may not be anyone else out there.
@robinabernathy282927 күн бұрын
Not luck. If it were just an accident it would have accidentally failed a long time ago.
@vikingshpvs4656 ай бұрын
This guy clearly hasn't seen guardians of the galaxy and avengers end game and Infinity 😊
@proteus43016 ай бұрын
Humans have a greater chance of travelling to proxima centuri than I have of getting to the end of this video given the ridiculous amount of adverts.
@kumbah20065 ай бұрын
Ad-blockers exist, or even browsers that can make watching a video with less advers possible. On my tablet, that's a different story. Wow. :( "ad block plus" is what I use. :)
@Kerry-G4 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣. I’LL hit 3 powerballs and 2 mega millions in a row before we get to any star
@reddwarfer999Ай бұрын
Thankfully adblockers are a technology that already exists and don't break the laws of physics.
@braxxian6 ай бұрын
The sci-fi novel Three Body Problem made me realise the true scale of space. The sheer distances involved are mind boggling.
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
I find it disturbing that it took a sci-fi novel for you to grasp the true scale and dimensions of space (and time). But at least you've tried to grasp it. And of course it's all mind-boggling.
@davedsilva7 ай бұрын
Someone broke your toy spaceship as a child?
@brandonflorida1092Ай бұрын
No, he studied Physics.
@The1stDukeDroklarАй бұрын
No, he, like I, has learned enough about physics to understand why Star Trek will always be just a fun fantasy.
@Salvation_Setshedi6 ай бұрын
Whether or not we're alone, each thought is equally terrifying.
@Mr-wv1tu7 ай бұрын
Very good video, Insane Curiosity! Now I'm just waiting for the "No one thought it was possible to fly...!"-crowd, who ALWAYS have to try and compare things that totally un-comparable. "We broke the sound barrier, so why shouldn't we be able to break the speed of light?" and so on and on...... And the best (eg worst) one: "Nothing is impossible!".......... Wrong! Many things are, and will forever be Impossible. If you want to change the world for the better, school yourself. Realism is not the same as pessimism. Stop chasing clouds, and put your work where it can make a difference; not where you WISH it matters.
@sergioreyes2987 ай бұрын
Well said.
@ericgolightly84507 ай бұрын
They're not incomparable at all. It's literally the same situation in different time periods. Passing the speed of light is likely impossible. But we can still get close to it and get a similar effect.
@The53rrc6 ай бұрын
If aliens are here, they travel inter dimensional. Bend time and space. Emerge into our universe. They might even come from another universe. They could have capabilities we could never have. Such as certain elements on their world to harness. Have weapons beyond our scope of intelligence. Have technology we will never have because of resources we will always lack.
@Marc8167 ай бұрын
It was also once said that mankind would never fly or build a boat that could go underwater!!!
@thefrontier49887 ай бұрын
Those were achieved with the current laws of physics, but interstellar travel with matter and mass means going against or outside the laws of physics as we know it. How are you sure physics laws are the same across the universe? Do you know if there are laws of physics in outer space different from what we know or persieve? Do you know if there are lot more elements in outer space which we don't know yet? What we know about space could actually be 0.000001% of what is out there.
@ericgolightly84507 ай бұрын
@@thefrontier4988It's entirely within the laws of physics.
@Kerry-G4 ай бұрын
The ones who said that were using outhouses and eating ____. Fill in the blank.
@chrisbehr42856 ай бұрын
Someone in 1902: Believe me, We Will never be able to fly!
@jaroslav61096 ай бұрын
Something looking like magic would be needed
@Kerry-G4 ай бұрын
Or eat a few magic mushrooms.
@reddwarfer999Ай бұрын
Quite. But 200 years ago at the start of the Industrial Revolution the technology we have today would certainly seem like 'magic'. Just the very fact I am talking to you and you could be anywhere in the world.
@kerravon4159Ай бұрын
Well _"NEVER"_ is a long time, but yeah we'll be stuck on this planet for the foreseeable future and quite some distance beyond. I've recognized the inevitability of that for years.
@billymania117 ай бұрын
If interstellar travel was possible, we would have been visited by now. The Universe is not young and if life is possible elsewhere and technology progresses linearly, we would have evidence for this possibility. My immediate argument against interstellar travel is that star systems contain planets that individually lack enough free energy to initiate this type of travel. That is for a fly-by mission only. For a return mission , you would need 2 separate acceleration/de-acceleration power profiles. That amount of required energy is even hard to quantify.
@Lemarcus037 ай бұрын
@@billymania11 who says we haven't been visited?
@heidetermeg4277 ай бұрын
Think of it in terms as the concept of a literal "eternity" - and a mere 14 billion years is about as significant as the increment of time you know as a "second" - which is quite a pointless concept once you consider the length of time that even a single year is - in our timescale. Imagine what humans are capable of with another billion years of technological advancement - as apposed to conclusively stating we should have evidence for other space faring civilizations - only after a roundabout hundred years since we developed the ability to gain flight. Which has literally been written in stone - ever since humanity discovered the written word; people from "space" is literally what all major religions on earth are based upon.
@cochisecarter62987 ай бұрын
In a billion years, the earth won't even be habitable because of the sun's expanding size as it would be inching closer to its death!
@dzonikg6 ай бұрын
Maybe human cant survive 100 year travel but robot can ,you dont need to send human
@billymania116 ай бұрын
@@dzonikg True, but the ship and the robots need a robust power supply. The mission craft would reach a star but be completely dead. No power supply lasts that long.
@UpInSmoke247 ай бұрын
Stephen Hawking last famous words where “Deep space is most likely a hologram and we are living in a simulation”,
@jime66886 ай бұрын
I WISH it were possible to travel like they do in Star Trek. So much out there and we can never visit.
@tetraquark24026 ай бұрын
Imagine if you could travel to a pulser or black hole what you would see
@jime66886 ай бұрын
@@tetraquark2402 I’ve thought about this a lot over the years. I realize there’s all sorts of facts that go into theories about what’s in there, but I still say seeing is believing. Maybe someone will learn, but it will never be shared with the world.
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
@@tetraquark2402 I think it would be so incredibly awesome to view, close-up, alien planetary systems orbiting solitary G-class yellow dwarfs (like our Sun) and orange K-class dwarfs. But alas, I suspect that we'll only ever view them with our (hopefully) ever-increasing remote sensing and telescopic technology and capability.
@PaulRossi-kh4fn6 ай бұрын
You can interstellar space travel, just use your imagination.
@iloveitallАй бұрын
Oh, Thank you!!! I was waiting for a clip like this being haunted by masses of sci-fi fantasy crap. I really get headaches soon as I only hear words like wormholes or unlimited technical progress.
@oberstvilla12717 ай бұрын
Yes yes, and in the 19th century there were people who thought that a person could never survive the incredibly high speed at which a train travels...
@Mr-wv1tu7 ай бұрын
That is no argument for FTL Travel or anything else. It doesn't mean anything!
@thefrontier49887 ай бұрын
Of course there are lots of possibilities for humans to achieve but there are equally limits to possibilities we could attain. Like for example, what is the possibility that humans can swim across the Atlantic ocean west to east without ships, submarines, masks, nor swimsuits even in the next 1000yrs?
@44SirLoopalotАй бұрын
Not so long ago, many scientists declared that human flight will never be possible.
@Juan-ll6sf7 ай бұрын
We are dreaming of Star Trek Warp drive while we still depend on outdated chemical rockets to go to space. (We haven't found artificial gravity yet).
@ericgolightly84507 ай бұрын
1. Chemical rockets aren't outdated 2. Artificial gravity is centrifugal force
@cbozant34287 ай бұрын
@@Juan-ll6sf nasa actually didn’t use chemicals. They mixed hydrogen and oxygen for propulsion.
@greendiamondglow6 ай бұрын
@@cbozant3428... aren't those chemicals?
@dzonikg6 ай бұрын
Many car EVs now can accelerate at 1G force ,so you have a artificial gravity with just more expensive car acceleration ,and accelerate for one year with just that 1G and you will reach almost speed off light
@Ruda-n4h6 ай бұрын
@@greendiamondglow No they're elements.
@GardenCamMan6 ай бұрын
Adam from @GardenCamMan Likes you're videos Keep it UP!
@InsaneCuriosity6 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@70mavgr6 ай бұрын
Without making quantum leaps in space&time manipulation technology traveling between star systems will remain a dream.
@InsaneCuriosity6 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
@charlescz19747 ай бұрын
So was something as common as an iPhone 50 years ago. ‘A significantly advanced technology would be indistinguishable from magic’, Arthur C Clark.
@iwams17 ай бұрын
@@charlescz1974 we are not talking about phonws here, kid. Its about travelling faster than the actual reality allows which will never happen even if we survive for more than a million years
@kvarnerinfoTV6 ай бұрын
@@iwams1 warp drive.
@iwams16 ай бұрын
@@kvarnerinfoTV okay, you go do that, kid. Good for you
@136760mas15 ай бұрын
Interstellar space is not an iPhone. We lived long enough to create it. However, here we are talking about interstellar travel and space, where the human body cannot live long enough to get there. Way different from creating an iPhone within fifty years.
@charlescz19745 ай бұрын
@@136760mas1 The point was that it would be perceived as impossible; likewise future interstellar space exploration is to you.
@JMaxwell10006 ай бұрын
It appears infinite knowledge and wisdom has spoken. Some people just apparently know everything.
@robertsonsid6 ай бұрын
Sending out space probes is far easier than keeping humans alive. New telescopes are always showing new views of the cosmos.
@scottbullock30454 ай бұрын
I do hope Earth isn't the "only game in town" if you will. If so, what a waste of space.😮😢❤
@thrdeye7 ай бұрын
It will be accomplished, though not for 100-200 years. We would need to discover extraterrestrial travel technology (antigravity, electromagnetic field controlled travel). If they can get here, we will get there. The problem is we'll likely become extinct before this discovery.
@vicvega36147 ай бұрын
Ok so no it will never ever happen
@Digitalsapien26 күн бұрын
They can't get here either. Ancient Aliens is science fiction my friend.
@casienwhey6 ай бұрын
Imagine if you could go back in time 12,000 years when agriculture began and you could tell these people that one day humans would walk on the moon. They would see that as impossible. So, at the rate our technologies are progressing (assuming we don't destroy the planet) imagine what humans will do 12,000 years from now. I'd never say interstellar space travel is a fantasy. It's just not currently achievable.
@InsaneCuriosity6 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
@jettslappy70286 ай бұрын
I wouldn't be so sure about what the humans 12000 years ago were thinking in regards to visiting the moon.
@scottcarter81555 ай бұрын
Ben Rich of Lockheed Skunkworks said "we have the technology to take ET home". It's buried in an unacknowledged special access programs. They answer to no one and are illegal, a senator from Hawaii gave a speech on this. You can find it yourself if you don't believe me I already got in trouble for telling someone were to go for information.
@Brunoburningbright5 ай бұрын
I could tell you where to go (snicker)
@Among_Other_Things_Be_KindАй бұрын
Seriously, we may need to wait until extraterrestials tell us how to ( how they) do it.
@jc4evur6616 ай бұрын
Considering the HUGE amount of energy needed to travel the speed of light to a destination, once there, wouldn't we need the same amount of energy to slow down?
@InsaneCuriosity6 ай бұрын
Great point! Yes, it would take a lot of energy to slow down too. Traveling at the speed of light is really tricky because of the enormous energy needed for both speeding up and slowing down.
@droe25706 ай бұрын
Yes. The ship used would be almost entirely filled with fuel. Half the distance would be acceleration, the second half would be deceleration. It's actually far more difficult and complicated than people realize.
@Slo-ryde6 ай бұрын
Exactly…. Which is why light speed travel is not an option, even if you send robots
@M3roadracerАй бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/hHK6fWubn8tlpK8
@johnlehtorinne753 ай бұрын
I thought you were going to debunk FTL, but, you left a glimmer of hope, like where there is smoke, there can be fire. Good.
@HerveMendell6 ай бұрын
My understanding is that it can be done through using "wormholes" that warp space snd time. A lot of science fiction uses this concept. But to produce a wormwhole, you need the energy of a star, so even if you could do it, that would use the Sun up. Not good. And then the 2nd problem; where are you going? And why? You need to arrive a a specific place. What if once you get there, it totally sucks. And most places will totally suck. Just lifeless rocks. If you are lucky maybe you'll find some slime molds. If you are unlucky, Cthulu will eat your brain for breakfast.
@kroon2756 ай бұрын
Ive been telling people this for decades, humans are going NOWHERE. We are far too fragile physically and psychologically to ever get to even our nearest star
@888jackflash6 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, all too true. Humans will be lucky to last another century, the way we're going
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
@@888jackflash We'll still be here, just even more effed up.
@samr.england6136 ай бұрын
As far as going beyond our Moon, or even there, it's more about finances, costs, than anything else.
@Slo-ryde6 ай бұрын
The only possible way to travel vast distances is by way of “ worm hole” means; although this is no where within reach …. Even if traveling at .2 c is still slow for interstellar travel.
@MasterMotivatorsClub6 ай бұрын
I agree with you, but Elon Musk refuses to give up.
@LanceMan6 ай бұрын
As for FTL travel, its impossible right up until it's possible. Just like most science in the history of mankind.
@1122stardust5 ай бұрын
The physics of lightspeed would kill us warping our bodies. Impossible to achieve.
@Wicked_Trojan6 ай бұрын
Despite our exponential advancement in technology in the last 120 years we managed to not learn the lesson that what seems impossible today could be possible within decades or centuries. No matter how far we’ve come we still have the arrogance to think we’re at the pinnacle of human achievement.
@mytreesloth6 ай бұрын
And once we figure out faster than light travel, crazy paradoxes start coming into play..
@hazzard87606 ай бұрын
If we look back on what humanity has achieved since Sputnik, and Telstar over 70 years ago and when The Wright Brother's first flew in the mid 1800's and wheeled vehicles first emerged between 4000 - 10,000 years ago then Fermi got it right. If we are not alone, where is everyone else? Many planetary systems far out in the galaxy and beyond have had a 2 or even 3 billion year head start over humanity because their home worlds evolved long before earth, giving them a huge time advantage over evolution. We have done much over the last 10,000 years, so imagine where we might have been if we had had an extra 2,990,000,000 year evolutionary start. Surely by then we would have advanced significantly enough to conquer far off space travel. So why haven't other species? Of course there are hundreds, possibly thousands of reasons why not. Natural disaster, plague, meteor impact, species extinction to name just a few. Bear in mind that 99,9999% of all species that ever existed in the past 10,000,000 years (10 million) years have long been extinct so what are the chances after 3 billion years that humanity still exists let alone the planet itself.
@InsaneCuriosity6 ай бұрын
Agree! There are many reasons why we might not have met them yet. Thanks for sharing your perspective!
@naffehumaar37597 ай бұрын
I do imagine there are days we are bound to be a space faring people.
@harrybaulz6667 ай бұрын
Nope
@d.c.monday41536 ай бұрын
Oh, ye of little faith! They used to say that it was unnatural for man to fly and we would never do it, but people are flying every day. And there are many other examples like this of misplaced negativity! "Never say never" as my dear old Pappy used to say. “There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” Human imagination and ingenuity is far greater than you think. (Quotes from the Bible, Shakespeare and other places.)