Kudos for using your real voice. I have followed your reporting for a while now. For the Luddite method of measuring the brightness... Either fix it or stop complaining about us "Boomers" that still talk in GPM and standard cubic feet per minute..... I am going to die before I am completely converted, but working in world wide places that MOSTLY are in the metric and decimal systems, I am upgrading my work to be flexible. And as a older fellow who has traditionally been slow to update simply for the conveniences of others. But reporting has been metric for some time in many of the countries I work in... (what was that movie phrase??? Resistance is futile!!)
@SchmelvinMoyville5 ай бұрын
@@lpconserv6074really good impression of a bot, well done dude
@johnbrimmer94034 ай бұрын
Just gotta say that Paul was my favorite player on the show How the Universe Works. I was so excited to find he is involved in writing for one of my favorite channels on KZbin, The Entire History of the Universe. Now to find he has had his own channel on KZbin. It's a good day for me. Tyvm
@GeorgeStar5 ай бұрын
Do a video on future telescopes!
@ronfisher52595 ай бұрын
Not only very informative and understandable, this was a lot of fun too. Thank you
@DobrinWorld5 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@KuleRucket5 ай бұрын
I don't understand why this channel isn't a lot bigger
@redhaze80805 ай бұрын
Uranus is easily visible to the naked eye. I've always struggled to understand how it needed "discovering". Cool vid.
@redhaze80805 ай бұрын
You don't even need really good light levels hey
@redhaze80805 ай бұрын
seriously it's not just visible , it's pretty easy to find just by looking.
@7heHorror5 ай бұрын
I guess people previously thought it was a star.
@redhaze80805 ай бұрын
@@7heHorror Yeah but they knew the planets are along the ecliptic plane and they flicker less though.
@7heHorror5 ай бұрын
@@redhaze8080 Apparently the dimness and slowness of the planet fooled astronomers for 1900 years. 😅
@MeissnerEffect5 ай бұрын
Yay! Another moment of fascination and the magic of the Universe ✨🦋 Oh and a ‘Mega-Telescopes In The Works’ video huge please 🙏!!
@florianbuerzle27035 ай бұрын
As Bessel was the director of Königsberg observatory, I would regard him as professional astronomer, not as an amateur (although he had no formal university education, which was not all that uncommon in his day).
@drewg24035 ай бұрын
Great content. You should do a video on the different interpretations of quantum mechanics. Would be interested to hear your thoughts specifically on the Everettian (many worlds) interpretation.
@Joseph-z7s3b5 ай бұрын
I am fortunate. I live fairly high up in the mountains of N. California and every night I sit outside, looking at the greatest of all mysteries and wonder about the what, the when & the how of it. Thanks to Dr. Sutter,my caveman brain can grasp it just a little better. I don't believe that everything can ever be known about the universe, but that doesn't stop me from wanting to know everything that I can about it.
@0neIntangible5 ай бұрын
Your interspersed quips & clips are appreciated.
@anotherplatypus5 ай бұрын
If you entangle two particles and give one to someone at a distance, can you run yours through quantum computer gates to change the probability of your bit, so when they observe theirs it's a way to communicate? Or is quantum computing totally separate or something?
@EdwardHinton-qs4ry5 ай бұрын
I saw the Andromeda galaxy with my naked eyes when I was a kid but now I can hardly see a star.
@martyrosadil99895 ай бұрын
I live in a small village in Egypt and I hardly see a star how is that?
@KafshakTashtak5 ай бұрын
You can still see from remote locations like Grand Canyon, or Yellowstone.
@whichgodofthousandsmeansno53065 ай бұрын
The rate of expansion far exceeding the speed of light and still accelerating might answer some questions I am noticing in the comments. This stuff is mind boggling and I am certainly no astro/theoretical physicist much less one like Einstein that could break these things down to simpler forms. In this case I need to trust those advanced in the field.
@GuitarGears45445 ай бұрын
What I don't understand is how the CMB can be visible in all directions, but it originated when the universe was much, much older (and therefore smaller). So... why did it take so long to get to us? Why didn't it reach us, and then pass us, by now? Conceptually it's very difficult. Yes, the standard response is "Inflation!" But why can't the answer be "Because the universe is older than 13.8 billion years?
@whichgodofthousandsmeansno53065 ай бұрын
I could be wrong as I am no astrophysicist but could it have something to do with the expansion far exceeding the speed of light as the current theory suggests?
@chasteaparty87313 ай бұрын
I'm just waiting for your channel to explode in viewership @Dr. Paul M. Sutter. This is "million subscriber" content.
@edibleapeman5 ай бұрын
If we're living in a holographic universe, would there be a definite "edge" of the cosmos? If so, wouldn't it make sense then to observe the Big Bang in all directions - this just being the emitted beam(s) of photons constructing reality from all directions at once?
@yasirarafat92795 ай бұрын
What known am physical principles would answer the question of going beyond Big Bang?
@Limoncellodeceptobro5 ай бұрын
Yes!
@d_s_x4145 ай бұрын
Why doesn't the CMB cook everything on Earth like my microwave cooks my food? I thought maybe it had something to do with intensity? You did mention that we are bathed in the CMB so that threw me off a bit.
@mattstewart41995 ай бұрын
i have a stupid question. if we and everywhere is the center of the universe, how can we see so far back in time? Why hasn't the light from these 13-billion-year-old stars already past us?
@whichgodofthousandsmeansno53065 ай бұрын
The expansion far exceeds the speed of light.
@larrynelson49095 ай бұрын
We can see 13.8 billion years away that doesn't make the universe 13.8 billion years old only that it's as far as we can see the universe could be much much older than that
@edibleapeman25 ай бұрын
Unless you go in for Boltzmann Brains, the universe is almost definitely older than that.
@7heHorror5 ай бұрын
Yes there could be stuff outside or preceding what's observable and such concepts are discussed as varieties of multiverse.
@Milan_Openfeint5 ай бұрын
CMB wasn't created long after Big Bang, and we can measure age of CMB through redshift and Hubble constant. There can be some error but not "much much older".
@kricketflyd1115 ай бұрын
Does red shift have a wavelength?
@fatperson11525 ай бұрын
red shifting is just the doppler effect but for light
@philipcollins2185 ай бұрын
That’s an easy answer- labour in power
@larrynelson49095 ай бұрын
REALLY! name one star that wouldn't melt your face off if you approached it?
@adamdansiger5 ай бұрын
I love the Beastie Boys 19:16
@crispycritter70225 ай бұрын
I can see Uranus 👀
@Desertphile5 ай бұрын
Q: What's The Most Distant Thing You Can See? A: About four feet.
@chadbarnard36205 ай бұрын
I think one of Mark McGwire's home runs from 1998 just landed near JADES-GS-z13-0.
@PAULPRICE-e3v6 күн бұрын
Yes but have you learned all the Korvax words yet?
@rumirill5 ай бұрын
There is No edge to the uni verse
@martyrosadil99895 ай бұрын
What is going to happen if we shoot a neutron towards an anti-uranium atom?
@larrynelson49095 ай бұрын
The universe will turn inside out 😂
@Jon64295 ай бұрын
The most distant thing I can see? Getting a decent paying job is pretty much out there
@tabaccocubano5 ай бұрын
basically when we look out into the universe we are looking back in time.. minutes... when we look at our sun.. and billions of years when looking at the farthest star.. most people do not realize that.
@iMannyFest5 ай бұрын
I know you understand and your explanation is excellent. 👌🏾 I’d like to make a proposal to amend a couple of words but I think is important detail.. To travel the full diameter of our Galaxy is 100,000 light years. So anything we see further than this is definitely outside our Galaxy which means ANY light we see.. millions or Billions of light years away is DEFINITELY other galaxies and definitely NOT STARS. Lights takes 8 minutes to reach us on earth from the Sun our star. The Sun is approximately 93,000,000 miles away. The nearest star to our sun is Proxima Centaur & light takes 4 years to reach us. For light to reach us from our nearest Galaxy Andromeda.. The light takes 2,000,000 years to reach us here on earth. Speed of light c = 186,000 miles/sec or Approximately 300,000 Kilometres/sec Crazy to get your head around.
@polygonalmasonary5 ай бұрын
The most distant thing I see……….. a huge lottery win 😢🙏🇬🇧
@TakeAHikeMike5 ай бұрын
I've never managed to win a scratch off. Lol
@0neIntangible5 ай бұрын
@@TakeAHikeMike My neighbour recently won $250K on a crossword scratch play... mind you, they've been playing these regularly, for many years, before this big payout.
@7heHorror5 ай бұрын
Awesome. So the light from JADES-GS-z13-0 traveled only 13 billion ly to reach us and we're inferring that by NOW the galaxy must be 33 billion ly away? 🤯 Seems like cheating! 😉
@reinholdmathuni51345 ай бұрын
yes, the expansion of the universe is more than light speed in far distances