Please never stop making these astrophysics videos, they're so good.
@AyoolaLadapo-hg7vs2 күн бұрын
True that
@sulaimangigani2 күн бұрын
This one will most likely fall under the category of astrobiology
@pumpalin86612 күн бұрын
Space vids are the best
@RobinsMusic2 күн бұрын
@@mobilePCreviews astronomy is the most interest scientific topic imo
@neronius2 күн бұрын
Hot take
@teddyland71592 күн бұрын
Veritasium is fr one of the best channels on KZbin
@teddyland71592 күн бұрын
Especially the space videos
@rajdeepsingh262 күн бұрын
Vsauce enters the chat
@zerono57462 күн бұрын
Real
@WhalesLoveSmash2 күн бұрын
I am one of the best whales on KZbin
@adriansiebenrock-xr4hf2 күн бұрын
The best
@yeetzabois35822 күн бұрын
NOOO WAYYY! 3 Veritasium vids in about 2 weeks. Bro is cooking 👨🍳👨🍳👨🍳
@rangerrick56602 күн бұрын
Chillax
@dragoda2 күн бұрын
That is impressive indeed. But the video is bad. It is bad that it's only 18 minutes long. We want more :D I could watch Veritasium talk about space, planets, science for hours. I don t even need food.
@edmonddionne74082 күн бұрын
@@rangerrick5660 No YOU chillax buddy! This is an incredible event!
@edmonddionne74082 күн бұрын
@@dragoda Please don't say its bad, its better than my cooking, and my cooking is pretty good.
@KillianTwew2 күн бұрын
Inflation is hitting hard. Derek needs a new house in LA
@WunbaКүн бұрын
The thought of a 100km deep ocean on another planet is terrifying and fascinating. Hope we get answers in our lifetime!
@TanayBhedaКүн бұрын
Hey
@alveolateКүн бұрын
i wonder whether cthulu lives in europa or enceladus
@NxJ_Күн бұрын
Ayo a Minecraft youtuber in comments of veritasium video damn
@kaiperdaens7670Күн бұрын
What are u doing here 😂
@kaiperdaens7670Күн бұрын
Make this moon in your hardcore world
@mcs131313Күн бұрын
8:48 this guy is a super good communicator. No jargon or science speak. Like I’m sure the actual details are super technical and complicated and he made that so simple.
@TheCuriousNoob13 сағат бұрын
It takes a very intelligent person to explain extremely complex ideas in terms a teenager can understand.
@erikziak12492 күн бұрын
My deepest respect to all the scientists, engineers and technicians behind these projects. Such endeavors are the pinnacle of humble collective effort of thousands of talented people. I am not a part of the mechanism, but that does not mean I cannot share my enthusiasm and show support for projects of this kind.
@Pietrosavr2 күн бұрын
Technically, everyone is sort of part of the mechanism. Public interest is important for funding, and someone must make and deliver food to the scientists, others have to make the machines, roads and everything. This requires an entire civilisation. Think about it this way, if you've sent those scientists, along with all their equipment, back to the stone age, they couldn't have done anything really. No power lines, no easy access to food and water nor medicine. They would've had to hunt and gather to survive and most would die early. We are all contributing in a small way :)
@marpleka2 күн бұрын
project failed, they've wasted money and acknowledge faulty components, current year is historical shame for american space industry
@play0055172 күн бұрын
Most impressively NASA is consistently pulling these kinds of things with less than half a percent of the national budget
@sayhowling2 күн бұрын
@@Pietrosavr i like the way you think. i think its why butterfly effect theory is very dangerous because it shows how little things could affect major ones
@mkhanman123452 күн бұрын
it does mean you cannot share it
@TanayBheda2 күн бұрын
You know it's a great day when Veritasium uploads
@ahmedzakir23792 күн бұрын
facts
@rangerrick56602 күн бұрын
Take a knee
@rasulrahimov7442 күн бұрын
especially about math or physics (astronomy)
@mhsarker2 күн бұрын
yes 🎉
@ljushastighet2 күн бұрын
i have seen this type of comment on a lot of videos, it's a quick effortless way to get likes
@o_o.Alienn20 сағат бұрын
The fact that they named the probe "Galelio" is so beautiful. Galileo would be so happy if he knew about these researches
@Leyrann19 сағат бұрын
Nah he'd probably write a book making fun of them or something. Obligatory reminder that the church was actually quite open to his scientific ideas and it was Galileo's ridiculing of the Pope that got him excommunicated.
@DanyalArcadio16 сағат бұрын
@@Leyrann is this true? can you provide sources?
@TheEretКүн бұрын
I'm currently in Florida as I have been invited by NASA to see the launch of Europa Clipper! I can't wait! :D
@aeuludagКүн бұрын
Congratulations!! That's so cool
@ameliamorrow9938Күн бұрын
Wooow! That sounds so cool! By any chance, how is it possible to get an invitation from NASA?
@spookysquirtleКүн бұрын
Eret you lucky ducky
@therealmovetomarsКүн бұрын
Cool! Congrats on the invitations
@Beautiful-ModelBarbara-Hut-s1jКүн бұрын
This is my personal favorite astronomical subjects of conversation. The idea and possibility of life existing elsewhere in the solar system is so exciting.
@Writer_Productions_MapКүн бұрын
Get out bot
@BillAnt18 сағат бұрын
Very unlikely, maybe some micro organisms at best. By now we would have discovered intelligent life in our solar system. It's lonely at the top. ;D
@Writer_Productions_Map18 сағат бұрын
@@BillAnt they're a bot. Look at the pfp
@paulmichaelfreedman83342 күн бұрын
So cool, that you used clips from " 2010: the year we make contact" THE most underrated scifi sequel of all time.
@danielehiagwina2 күн бұрын
😂😂 All I see is fiction.
@jgischer2 күн бұрын
Yeah, I really loved that movie.
@chaomatic53282 күн бұрын
I didnt even know it existed, eveybody is about 2001 😅
@erichurst78972 күн бұрын
@@chaomatic5328 it's a much better movie, with Helen Mirrin, Roy Scheider, and John Lithgow.
@alexhemsath62352 күн бұрын
@@chaomatic5328 It's such a good movie. Problem was that people saw it as the sequel to 2001, even though it had a completely different creative team, so the reviews were inevitably "meh". 2001 is a hard act to follow.
@Defuzehaz2 күн бұрын
This is one of the few channels that seriously delivers.. every time
@Pakishwan2 күн бұрын
Veritasium pumping out videos like there no tomorrow, I’m not complaining.
@Kavaitsu2 күн бұрын
Uhh ohhh
@GJgators242 күн бұрын
Exactly
@GJgators242 күн бұрын
@@Kavaitsuhold up; I guess he would know
@EthelJung-j5w2 күн бұрын
I literally just finished reading the odyssey series a few days ago. Such an exciting time that we can see this happening in real life 🤩
@user-tr1zjКүн бұрын
read the "three body problem" series instead, it's absolutely suicid@I to search for aliens
@chuckbatson5952 күн бұрын
Genuinely exciting. I can't wait to start seeing half-meter/pixel images of Europa 7 years from now!
@wavion22 күн бұрын
"And as you can see from these 30 pixels, this is clearly a Nissan Sentra."
@gemtun22 күн бұрын
ocean aliens with nissans
@drcgaming4195Күн бұрын
@@gemtun2 this is so funny to me
@patrickmorris3721Күн бұрын
@@gemtun2 you’ve completely lost it .😂 To even think of bringing Nissan Sentra anywhere near the ocean and the salt water would be like sunshine to ice cube 🧊😂🤣🔥 Melt right in front of you’re eyes 👀 🤣🤣😂🔥.
@markusklyver627714 сағат бұрын
Bruh
@DyingVoiceDude2 күн бұрын
from the thumbnail did not think this was a veritasium video... but it is! 😀
@NairodYoutube2 күн бұрын
he experiments a lot with thumbnails, I wouldn't be surprised if it changed soon x)
@veerakarthikeyan66502 күн бұрын
looks like something you would find on one of the AI-voice misinformation garbage channels. good thing Veritasium is the exact opposite of those channels.
@noxabellus2 күн бұрын
i was like oh, a new astrum video
@JoJiX2 күн бұрын
When I read your name in my head i read it with your voice for some reason
@zweisteinya2 күн бұрын
A C Clarke blew up the wrong planet
@varshaith18_242 күн бұрын
Veritasium + Space is my favourite combo
@Sarikaegtx7eКүн бұрын
Fr man
@kevincampbell38652 күн бұрын
Literally never stop making videos, the world needs it
@m242132 күн бұрын
So it takes 7 years to reach just Jupiter, god we are slow. Mad respect for the patience of scientists and engineers working on the project.
@myth1210Күн бұрын
I feel like that too. We are actually slow, unless there is alternative for rocket fuels
@linecraftman3907Күн бұрын
There is a caveat After launch it will go back to fly by Earth, then Mars and only then go to Jupiter. This is done to take advantage of gravity assists, which is more efficient meaning the spacecraft needs less fuel and more mass can be spent on science. New horizons probe flew directly to Jupiter and it only took a year but it's a smaller spacecraft and it didn't stop at Jupiter
@theunknowman12Күн бұрын
Its not like we are slow, its just space are stupidly big
@saintIpie0000Күн бұрын
Its so damn far, much further distance earth to sun. Damn space
@jeffspaulding983418 сағат бұрын
We *could* get there fast. We'd have to build a much larger spacecraft that could take a direct route and decelerate hard at Jupiter (or air-brake in Jupiter's atmosphere). We don't normally build spacecraft like that so there'd be lots of new development required. That's more money (a LOT more money) and a higher chance of failure, but also a lot more time. Using a design like Clipper is actually faster than developing a spacecraft that could travel there directly. If we had a cheap way of getting mass into orbit, it'd be a different story.
@DraykshaperКүн бұрын
I've heard lots of videos and articles say Jupiter has big radiation belts, but this is the first time the "why" is actually explained. Thank you so much!
@o_o.Alienn20 сағат бұрын
also the way they showed how the magnetic fields would look from earth
@bigtomar2 күн бұрын
this is actually crazy groundbreaking, to think that if we do actually find life on a microbiological level on europa and that it could evolve one day into something more is absolutely mindboggling. it's like looking back through time to when life on earth was still in its early stages.
@supercyberdigi2 күн бұрын
congrats, your comment was so good that a thot bot decided to copy it.
@bigtomar2 күн бұрын
@@supercyberdigi i hope the thot bots comment gets thousands of likes and for mine to be in the wastelands, it'd be funnier that way
@NatTardis2 күн бұрын
If there is life on Europa, how many more planets/moons harbor life in our solar system? And outside of it? It would be mind-boggling.
@JustThatWeeb2 күн бұрын
According to recent discoveries in mars about the huge water oceans below the surface there's also a chance for mars to have microbiological life @@NatTardis
@AncientWildTVКүн бұрын
@@bigtomar and I woner if it could change our perspective on life here on Earth
@topherthe11th23Күн бұрын
10:45 - This device was later renamed "NotSnotBot" to avoid offense. Later, it was miniaturized (the TotNotSnotBot) to reduce weight, extending flight-times for the same fuel or battery. It now has containers that are jettisoned when full of sample so that the full weight of sample isn't borne for the entire flight, which is thus lengthened further. Human eyes easily locate the flotation-equipped TotNotSnotBotPots for collection because of the vividly-colored circles (TotNotSnotBotPotDots) decorating each, delivered by the manufacturer a million at a time (the standard TotNotSnotBotPotDotLot).
@drcgaming4195Күн бұрын
fr
@spookysquirtleКүн бұрын
Yeah what he said
@jeffspaulding983418 сағат бұрын
Total genius, I take my hat off to you sir/ma'am.
@6foottallAardvarkКүн бұрын
The output of this channel is second to none…any other channel would take weeks or months for one video like this. But Veritasium is putting out multiple documentary-calibre videos a week. Amazing
@rajmathew62202 күн бұрын
I love that this channel never died
@edvardpiano2 күн бұрын
Hey, a tip for you! Whenever showing space clips, put a little "CGI" or "Photo taken by probe/telescope xyz" in the top corner, like Astrum does. There are a lot of amazing pictures out there, would be a shame to assume it all to be CGI!
@foxxygearreviews7754Күн бұрын
Left lower corner
@josephmansfield32032 күн бұрын
The example with the blow torch was fire!🔥
@00Jay2152 күн бұрын
You're content is consistently good and never feels forced. Love it
@madjson1429Күн бұрын
These videos just keep getting better!
@Its1paradox2 күн бұрын
So happy that Veritasium made a video on Europa Clipper after I made one few days ago. Now I learn from the master. Thank you for inspiring us!
@catbertsis2 күн бұрын
you got Derek'd!
@robocu4Күн бұрын
I respect the subtle plug
@7616lydeth2 күн бұрын
15:23 okay 2030 and 2031, let's wait
@maliciousrobot95952 күн бұрын
I've got all 10 years
@JNJNRobin13372 күн бұрын
@@maliciousrobot9595 its moreso five to six, luckily
@Castkett4ever2 күн бұрын
Hey Derek! I'm in med school in Switzerland, and my physics teacher has used clips of your videos to explain some concepts! I thought maybe that would make you smile (or laugh, or cry, feel free to do whichever) :)
@drcgaming4195Күн бұрын
thats really sick ngl
@plopsanКүн бұрын
Which Kanton?
@anshkumar769Күн бұрын
When you showed me the picture of Europa took by Voyager 1, it genuinely brought a tear to my eyes. Humans have gone such a long way from making fire to launching spacecrafts to other worlds. One of the biggest reasons i wanted to become an astronaut when I was little. This video was so emotional to me, thanks Derek!
@PatriciaJPorterКүн бұрын
that is astoundingly fascinating. I would've never guessed tidal-stretch-induced friction is what mtainaints the oceans liquid. Impressive.
@ButzPunkКүн бұрын
bad bot
@northamericanpichu2 күн бұрын
My Space Exploration professor actually worked on the IR camera on the Clipper, we’re all so excited to see it launch
@something2222 күн бұрын
I love that the astronomer has a Star Trek book in his library xDD 15:30
@spinerexzilla67332 күн бұрын
Veritasium has been cooking recently 🔥🔥🔥
@sidewaysdesignКүн бұрын
Veritasium’s graphics production continues to get better and better. The explanation for Jupiter’s radiation zone was brilliant.
@vyacheslavrust297020 сағат бұрын
been watching your videos for a while and i always look forward to your explanation that keeps me constantly interested. never stop making videos im begging
@Verlisify2 күн бұрын
Never heard "Jupiter kills everything" growing up
@dogteam61782 күн бұрын
Boys/girls go to Jupiter to die.
@billychambers64002 күн бұрын
For some reason you remind me of my wrist
@bennyl92282 күн бұрын
"All these worlds are yours except Europa" 20w14infinite
@wavion22 күн бұрын
Neptune always said his brother was, and I'm quoting him here, "Kind of an A-hole."
@EebstertheGreat2 күн бұрын
In mythology, it's more like "Jupiter fucks everything." He does kill a lot of things too, though.
@CristianIonita-nm6xb2 күн бұрын
7:23 that is astoundingly fascinating. I would've never guessed tidal stretch-induced friction is what maintains the oceans liquid. Impressive.
@Tyler-z8rКүн бұрын
It's bizarre. Most people don't think on the large scale of the universe (myself included) so it's hard to imagine that could actually generate that much heat.
@norlore52162 күн бұрын
Veritasium semiweekly upload schedule is a gift from the gods
@faideye28332 күн бұрын
🦆
@jeffreyhoward8511Күн бұрын
Im soooo glad they did a video on Europa Clipper! I've seen other videos before, but I knew Veritasium would do an amazing job, and they did not disappoint!
@simonprecheurllarenaКүн бұрын
The pace at which Veritaseum puts out such high quality videos is just insane!
@MooreDoing2 күн бұрын
I love this channel. The fact the Galileo model had part of its antenna closed was so cool. Very thorough. ☺
@peepohappy63092 күн бұрын
Loving the frequent uploads
@ahmedzakir23792 күн бұрын
yea it da best
@Platinum_XYZКүн бұрын
yeah I'm honestly shocked by these coming out so fast. these are not easy videos to make at all
@ClutchCps2 күн бұрын
Woah this is a cool and actually very relevant video for me; a few days ago my engineering teacher at my highschool had the NASA press conference about the Europa Clipper mission on the projector, and it was fascinating to see that there's a chance for "alien" life in our very own solar system. Excited to see how the mission plays out! (in about 5 years)
@Roxy46072 күн бұрын
I love that you guys got a sponsorship with 80,000 hours! I was about to click off the video but when I realized you mentioned those wonderful human beings that are behind it I got so happy. I’ve been subscribing to their free newsletter for over half a year now so that was a nice surprise😄
@thetrueomnikingКүн бұрын
I was thinking this is an old video BUT NO you're better keep up the work man
@mandamiddle02782 күн бұрын
THIS CHANNELS IS AMAZING
@uriituw2 күн бұрын
@@mandamiddle0278 There’s no need to shout. “This channels…”, or _these_ channels are?
@ribunndraws2 күн бұрын
Missing the E in earth at 3:13
@siya.abc1232 күн бұрын
Borrow me your eyes and attention to detail for a while
@AzureImperium7701X2 күн бұрын
Caption mess up
@SamForShort2 күн бұрын
Arth is my favorite planet
@gustavskalnare78742 күн бұрын
When I noticed that I though to myself - is this auto-generated? No way right, but I still turned the subtitles off after that. Weird how mind works :D
@NCR-Trooper22 күн бұрын
E
@ashleyjaytanna1953Күн бұрын
4:09 - Europa is missing Kratos.
@Mc.Knight14 сағат бұрын
Oh I love it when you talk space Veritasium 🥺🥺🥺🥺
@s1ndrome11722 сағат бұрын
this has to be one of my fav veritasium video ever
@CaesarBro2 күн бұрын
Dr. Peter Hand is traveling around the US giving an excellent lecture on the mission. Find it on KZbin or read his book. Highly recommended. He is in charge of the salt lab briefly covered in this video with JPL.
@PiusBamigboye2 күн бұрын
Jupiter is pretty protective of it's moons
@toni61942 күн бұрын
Pimpiter
@Sviatoslav_The_Brave2 күн бұрын
@@toni6194 🤣
@Tyler-z8rКүн бұрын
@@toni6194 does that make Europa a professional whore?
@mrericsully2 күн бұрын
I've heard the facts of what we know about Jupiter's and it's moons and which missions discovered it, but not how the data told us about the salt. I also loved the basketball demonstration.
@aramako30702 күн бұрын
I literally get hyped when you post anything space related, the greatest KZbin channel ever
@WorldwideCycloneTracking2024Күн бұрын
I’m always happy when Veritasium uploads
@Elkabad2 күн бұрын
This tickles my brain. (edit) Its actually genius how they might be able to study the water by using geysers that shoot through the ice, my only concern would be over time, if ice buildup got too cluttered on Europa Clipper then it might cause stuff to shut. But I'm no rocket scientist so its just an assumption.
@wjspade2 күн бұрын
I had a similar thought. The plumes could also be corrosive. Passing through them could damage sensors, controls, and solar panels. It makes more sense to have the sensor on a tether so that the craft itself stays out of the plumes.
@HK237832 күн бұрын
I think it might not be that big of a problem. If I remember correctly, Cassini did that in Enceladus on the Saturn mission
@linecraftman3907Күн бұрын
Water ice evaporates in the vacuum so it'll dry off over time There could be tiny salt deposits left over
@o_o.Alienn20 сағат бұрын
There Definitely are Alien lives in universe 👾👾
@cunjozКүн бұрын
make a video about Uranus and its moons and start with "deep inside Uranus"
@familyzhou341Күн бұрын
Omg Europa Clipper launched! I remember seeing it just 7 months ago during a tour of JPL. Tysm veritasium for making a video on this and spreading cool knowledge to everyone.
@utkarsh7846Күн бұрын
This is the most captivating video on your channel so far. Loved it.
@maxw.79242 күн бұрын
10:20 He was so disappointed
@dwigt123Күн бұрын
Do you think he's stupid?
@drushed7387Күн бұрын
@@dwigt123 This guy thinks that verita is a rando with no scientific background
@TanayBheda2 күн бұрын
Veritassium's channel is very educational and fun at the same time.
@caro7482 күн бұрын
This is both true and a very sweet comment ☀
@fabyr_2 күн бұрын
4:23 very recent indeed
@Marcel1984nlКүн бұрын
You really beat everything with this video, so well done. Big thumbs up!
@Alpha_NerdYTКүн бұрын
one of the best Veritasium videos ever created! Keep on cooking Derek!
@asicdathensКүн бұрын
The problem with extremophiles on Earth is that these organisms evolved to live in these conditions , but originated from organisms living in more temperate environments. Classic example high temperature polymerase. It's a evolutionary adaptation of a protein to work in high temperatures. The mammalian polymerase becomes inoperable in temperatures above 50C while Taq polymerase has optimal temperature 80C and can work up to 97C for brief time
@phaedrus000Күн бұрын
I thought the leading theory for the origins of life on Earth says it emerged around hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor. I wouldn't describe those temperatures and pressures as temperate.
@rajdeepsingh262 күн бұрын
Veritasium uploading videos every week while Vsauce uploads every 2 years
@rajdeepsingh262 күн бұрын
2 videos
@sujoms2 күн бұрын
Yeah, I miss Vsauce though.
@dimension2552 күн бұрын
He keeps uploading shorts
@investidoramador98502 күн бұрын
sounds nice but i still want to know when are we going deep into uranus aswell
@vedantkumar2807Күн бұрын
Few of the only good creators remaining on KZbin. Great Job Derek and team !!
@muha0644Күн бұрын
4:35 i love how the animation shows the broken antenna!
@TheClanBlade2 күн бұрын
Another Veritasium video, another mind blown.
@HauntedMushroom962 күн бұрын
And when we find the aliens living in the oceans of Europa. We shall call them... Europeans
@suly3243Күн бұрын
8:47 oh so they’re stretch marks
@wasoncethr7565Күн бұрын
This is one of the best channels on YT. Thanks Derek!
@dereklush93992 күн бұрын
Incredible how good you've gotten at this over the years
@RedFeint2 күн бұрын
Veritasium PLEASE oil up I BEG it's the only thing that can save my life!!!!
@abulkhayer48982 күн бұрын
We live on A pale blue dot
@pratikpaharia2 күн бұрын
“On” a pale blue… we live on the planet bro
@BonnieBouliane2 күн бұрын
Wow… we really do.
@JonnoPlays2 күн бұрын
I didn't even like the title or thumbnail and I still clicked cuz it's Veritasium 😅
@julz_swag2 күн бұрын
ur trippin
@zaenyКүн бұрын
Veritasium is hands down my fave channel on youtube
@kingphoenix12gamingofficia90Күн бұрын
Hi Derek! Thank you for posting so much lately!
@denvernaicker8250Күн бұрын
@16:20 Why does Arthur C Clarke need to give permission for NASA to land on Europa?
@laluilhams.Күн бұрын
You are not very bright, aren't you?
@IsmailSimbaКүн бұрын
It's just a nerdy joke. He wrote a novel that ominously said to not land on Europa.
@drcgaming4195Күн бұрын
@@laluilhams. or he doesnt engage in the same content you do
@whyisitsodifficultomakeahandleКүн бұрын
@@laluilhams. spit out the answer regard. It's a fair question, Arthur is just a novel fiction writer, he isn't affiliated with NASA, so why would his permission be necessary?
@StuSavilleКүн бұрын
@@whyisitsodifficultomakeahandle NASA was jokingly referring to the line "All these worlds are yours. Except Europa. Attempt no landing there" from Arthur C Clarke's book 2010: Odyssey Two.
@sayhowling2 күн бұрын
GEO RAINBOLT gonna be excited for this expansion
@KillianTwew2 күн бұрын
0:20 You literally cant turn Jupiter into a star. That would be ao bad for us
@MythOfLight2 күн бұрын
it’s gonna be so bad for the economy
@foxinsocks75312 күн бұрын
Pretty cool way to go out though. Just a big firework. It would be remarkable and very human.
@timothynoll4886Күн бұрын
Stories like this make me so excited! Thanks for all the effort you (and any team members!) put into the vid!
@xhongi3390Күн бұрын
This is probably one of the coolest things I've seen in a while
@GJgators242 күн бұрын
4:29 when bro said recently to thought he meant since 2020 lol
@selimsajid70642 күн бұрын
Here to stop annoying bots from saying **VERITASIUM REAL FANS ARE YOU THERE?!!**
@Ian-1112 күн бұрын
There must be a comment war against the “Who’s here in 2024” bots
@NotBedwarsDad2 күн бұрын
Thank u kind sir
@taproot06192 күн бұрын
Not all heros wear capes.🫡
@Cytoplasm_2 күн бұрын
@@Ian-111 God i hate those comments
@mr_flor2 күн бұрын
i think i'll cry for a day, if we find life outside of Earth during my lifetime like, even if this is barely affects me, this would be the greatest achievement in the human history, future altering even...
@JuliosStudio2 күн бұрын
😂❤ same
@DevendraRane1Күн бұрын
For the love of all that's holy, please keep these epic videos coming at regular intervals! I was this close to setting up a support group for people suffering from Veritasium withdrawal during your last break.
@rishabhname1772Күн бұрын
Veritasium Astrophysics/Astronomy vidoe is everything one needs!!
@paulkartsyart44152 күн бұрын
🎵 “ALIEN OCEAN WORLDS”, by Paul Keller. Have a listen if you get a chance. Available on KZbin and all music platforms. Love your video! Can’t wait for the data to come back from the clipper mission. Cheers! Paul. 🚀
@Teraplexor12 күн бұрын
First
@kaiperdaens76702 күн бұрын
Cap
@stefanpatrick9112 күн бұрын
You are the actual first
@stefanpatrick9112 күн бұрын
just saying
@JuvianTacle21 сағат бұрын
*Amazing video, thanks for the steady stream. I'm favoured, $450k Returns the Lord is my saviour in times of my need!!!*
@HeleneMcCune21 сағат бұрын
Hello how do you make such?? I'm a born Christian and sometimes I feel so down myself because of low finance but I still believe in God
@Sheilamakers21 сағат бұрын
It's Maria Frances Hanlon doing, she's changed my life.
@CammyKessler-m3c21 сағат бұрын
Same here waking up every 14th of each month to 210,000 dollars it's a blessing to l and my family... I can now retire knowing that I have a steady income❤️Big gratitude to Maria Frances Hanlon
@Paulaslote21 сағат бұрын
I do know Ms. Maria Frances Hanlon, I also have even become successful....
@StumpyTurmelle21 сағат бұрын
Absolutely! I've heard stories of people who started with little to no knowledge but made it out victoriously thanks to Ms. Maria Frances Hanlon.
@EliasMheartКүн бұрын
Awesome to see you cover space, a topic that's close to my heart
@mpfmax02 күн бұрын
I forgot how awesome Veritasium videos are. Now I'm binge watching all his new videos and also letting the ad at the end play in full.
@Tyler-z8rКүн бұрын
He is a great person to have as a "social media influencer" (if you can call him that, I'd argue he has immense amounts of influence on pop culture). In a time where young people are obsessed with being internet famous, his work definitely is helping society.
@phycoman45612 күн бұрын
0:35 timestamping my comment for views
@kanadiankid2591Күн бұрын
Good plan
@AbqXayКүн бұрын
For views?
@learningCodingWithMeКүн бұрын
i want this guy to be the most popular channel on yt