being in a cosmic void is probably a blessing. less density means fewer things/asteroids to possibly be pelted by
@Ryan-kf7of7 сағат бұрын
Well I'm wondering if a void is the only place you could find life but we're just talking about probabilities in billions of stars and planets. There could easily be one planet that just misses everything and is as chill as Earth. But maybe it's like a further Goldilocks zone.
@ski3644 ай бұрын
The void of the KZbin algorithm looks back, and smiles favorably upon Fact Boy's offering.
@TylerAult4 ай бұрын
This episode is exceptionally good! Flawless narration & enthralling visuals.
@doomsdayprophecies17394 ай бұрын
I came across one of your channels a few months ago. Then something else interesting shows up in my feed and damn isn’t if it isn’t that same dude from the other channel, then another channel, then another channel. Thanks for the hours of information I actually trust. As you know, this is KZbin, so anything you watch, verify and if it’s titled, James Webb Destroys Big Bang Theory, maybe move on, not maybe, move the eff on! The things I love about your channels, you don’t clickbait and you’re honest about the subject matter. Total Respect Simon, nice job and same to the writers and support people, combined you guys make outstanding media!
@rustythecrown93174 ай бұрын
There are a few glitches here and there , but yeah , by and large this channel rocks.
@yvindwestersund97204 ай бұрын
@@rustythecrown9317yeah some proofreading would be good but byand large it's just minor faults so yeah Unlike some of the other channels here on KZbin where click bate is a given and then it is followed up with false information and lies so yo gotta choose your information carefully Just saying 🇳🇴
@DTredecim4 ай бұрын
As you explore more of Simon's channels keep in mind that when he does get click-baity it is almost always meant as a joke that goes with the video thematically.
@techmaster91234 ай бұрын
The gravity of simonverse draws everyone towards his channels, sooner or later... welcome aboard, soldier
@Spoodabandit4 ай бұрын
@@DTredecim or they put out the click bait titles knowing it’ll get clicks and the ai known as “Simon” LOVES clicks 😅😂
@markcentral4 ай бұрын
There's no problem having voids in this one universe, because as Feynman said -- I don't care if you don't like it, You're not going to tell nature how she's going to be. If it's worrying to people that it violates popular theories, then I regret to inform you that it's the theory that should be revised or thrown out
@dianapennepacker68544 ай бұрын
There isn't a single real scientist out there that does not know this. They all know we are missing stuff. Like over 80% is the usual number for dark matter/energy alone. A lot of experiments trying to test out why that is, and theroies trying to rule out where our errors occured, and how to detect the unknown. It is a large task requiring billions of dollars with researchers across the world being dedicated to just detect theortical particles and other things like this. Eventually till we can get the math right where our simulations can fit observations. (And the theroy of everything would be nice) James Webb is the right direction. We will get there as we get better sensors, and advance. Hopefully AI reaearch can lead us there too.
@Forsworcen4 ай бұрын
Ironically, giant voids would be exactly what we would see if multiple universes exist and one of them smacked into us at one point. It would push everything out of the way. Unfortunately, even these voids aren’t quite empty enough to be that sort of evidence though… 😢
@vince72074 ай бұрын
I like the theory that black holes could house universes themselves.
@Forsworcen4 ай бұрын
@@vince7207I personally enjoy that as well. It makes the fine-tuning argument meaningless. Natural selection would preferentially benefit universes with more black hole formations leading to the one we’re currently in. Making it not strange at all that our universe is has fine-tuned physical properties
@SeeingBackward4 ай бұрын
@@vince7207 Me too. As soon as I heard about the CMB, I assumed it was an event horizon from the inside. Lately I've been working through an understanding that it is simply a "frame of reference" which make a universe and density of the "frames of reference" in one location of spacetime creates gravity by differences of sidereal counts of rotations (like gear differentials), which would allow 3D space to be effectively limitless but scales of too small (quantum) or too fast (relativisitic) are literally 'outside' of 'our' universe, and we can only 'weakly' feel the effects.
@CastleTechLock4 ай бұрын
Once more, Simon is on point! - just massive; not to mention while not a map of the cosmos exactly this episode gets quite granular on the cosmic scale - beautiful. 🔥
@turtleboy41114 ай бұрын
Awesome, always love a good Astrographics episode. Thank you, Simon, and team!
@KamaGivson4 ай бұрын
The difficulties of life are intended to make us better, not bitter.
@BrandonDenny-we1rw4 ай бұрын
Both
@ldsiverling4 ай бұрын
Supervoids. Like the space between my ears.
@lionelarucy47354 ай бұрын
Ah yes, another channel yet discovered. This man is a machine 😅
@UltimaMan3 ай бұрын
I have never seen or heard of this channel, but this video is genuinely fantastic. I can't wait to watch more, thank you!
@melektaus29064 ай бұрын
How many friggin channels does this guy have? You can’t throw a stick on KZbin without him narrating something
Mega-parsec (3.3M light years) is an astronomical term but most people have some notion of light years. We are 4 light years from our nearest star, our galaxy is 100,000 light years in diameter, we are about 2.5 million light years from Andromeda (our most significant galactic neighbour), our super-galaxy cluster (100K+ galaxies) is 500M light years in diameter, and the universe is 93 billion years wide.
@yvindwestersund97204 ай бұрын
If you would be nitpicking it is actually 3.26 light years not 3.3 but on the scales were talking about that onl😢gets significant in large scale computations And the 93 billion light years is of the observable universe it is probably much larger than what we can see at the moment And the distance to Andromeda is also a bit of a challenge some say that the distance is 2.3 million some say 2.6 million but that is mostly because of how you measure it from the senter ore the edge of it Some science also seems to suggest that the outer edges of Andromeda and the milkyway is already in contact because of the size of the galaxies their halos are most likely already touching and the interplay and the gasses and other detritus have been mingling for eons already And it will only get better from her on out there is no living creature ore its descendents that will be able to see thus happen but through science we know it will happen and that's why science is so fuckin awesome Not like these dumdums that thinks the earth is flat and when you ask them for some proof they say trust me 😂😂 yeah right that's what I'm gonna do 😂😂 Science is the backbone of everything I tells us what happened what is happening and what is going to happen
@tommonk76514 ай бұрын
Another nitpick: the observable universe is 93 billion light years wide. The actual universe is likely much, much larger….
@mikeguilmette7764 ай бұрын
@@yvindwestersund9720 3.262 ly 😜
@sonofbr4 ай бұрын
@@yvindwestersund9720 If you would be nitpicking, "ore" is a naturally occurring rock or sediment that contains valuable minerals that can be mined and seems out of place in this context. Also. It is customary to end sentences with a ".".
@yvindwestersund97203 ай бұрын
@@sonofbr shure you write about this in my native language and I'll try and do what you want me to
@sinjin85764 ай бұрын
Average Bethesda map building
@Trucking4Jesus4 ай бұрын
Rip bethesda
@Liminal-Galaxy-System68194 ай бұрын
LMAOOOOOOOO 💀💀💀
@mattgallagher53644 ай бұрын
🎉I 🎉🎉@@Trucking4Jesusto the 😅of 😢😊and I nb😊🎉😅😊😢🎉
@mattgallagher53644 ай бұрын
I love you h😊😊so ohg@@Liminal-Galaxy-System6819
@Avaa-vanilla9953 ай бұрын
Yoooo 😂
@Jcs574 ай бұрын
Saying it breaks the laws of cosmology is like saying it breaks the laws of speculation. Thanks to new instruments scientists are learning more at a faster rate so change in understanding is to be expected.
@captain_context99914 ай бұрын
The main point is... Whenever scientists say this or that "should not exist", its them that is wrong. Not the universe. But also... There is no such thing as a "void" or super voids. Its 100% a complete misconception from the 80s before we knew what galactic filaments were. Now that we have known what galactic filaments are for a couple of decades, its ridiculous to keep creating clickbait and "mystery" around non-existant voids. Claiming they are out there is pure misinformation.
@FIGHTER8max4 ай бұрын
When somebody says that something massive within the universe "should not exist", then and only then should you consider that there is something that is beyond our comprehension.
@DasE30Cuz4 ай бұрын
"The local hole" was the well earned nickname I gave my ex.
@vedymin14 ай бұрын
Otherwise known as the village bicycle.
@TheCurrentThing4 ай бұрын
That's the joke.
@ThePleasantDevourer4 ай бұрын
…too easy
@samuelgarrod83274 ай бұрын
He must be livid.
@gomahklawm44464 ай бұрын
@samuelgarrod8327 Found the TRIGGERED wokester :-) HAHAHAHHA Enjoy November 5th...
@illogicmath4 ай бұрын
Astonishing
@TinchoX4 ай бұрын
So basically... We are Voidlings!
@poonoi19684 ай бұрын
😂😂
@fuseblower81284 ай бұрын
No wonder the aliens haven't contacted us yet. We're in the backwater part of the universe 😆
@thomasmcnamara59294 ай бұрын
That would be an answer to the Fermi paradox as well as an excellent idea for a sci-fi story.
@DukeOfJam75914 ай бұрын
DBZA Freeza: "I can't believe we flew all the way out to the space boonies for nothing! They don't even have a Space Radio Shack, much less a Space Best Buy-Buy-Buy- Circuit City"
@ignitionfrn22234 ай бұрын
The empty parts of the Whistlerverse: *XPLRD...*
@goosenotmaverick11564 ай бұрын
I forgot he started that one 😂
@robertreid20024 ай бұрын
Because we don't like vowels
@glennrugar92484 ай бұрын
Science Unbound... Highlight History...
@goosenotmaverick11564 ай бұрын
@@glennrugar9248 highlight history at least has content lol
@goosenotmaverick11564 ай бұрын
@@glennrugar9248 so does science Unbound. Xplrd has literally no content as of this morning when I checked 🤣
@stevensiwinski4 ай бұрын
Voids have always intrigued me.
@LordOfThePancakes2 ай бұрын
Oh? Intrigue this 🖕
@NovaDeb4 ай бұрын
Very interesting!
@dougwalker49444 ай бұрын
...The Unfashionable End of the Western Spiral Arm...
@neondystopian4 ай бұрын
Voids have always intrigued me. I've always wanted to go there and see what was in it. I mean, I know that it's mostly nothing, but imagine all the cold, ancient dead things that still reside there. I bet it would be fascinating.
@BrandonDenny-we1rw4 ай бұрын
Mostly rocks ice and frozen mushroom spores. Some strains of bacteria that breakdown to basic life enzymes. Mostly rocks and ice. Most life ends up inside black holes sadly
@robertanderson8094 ай бұрын
If particles pop into existence, symmetry points to inverses; anti mass, anti-matter. A bulging inverse outside the gravity dots of matter, shoving stellar masses into strings around the bulges.
@daniellestepien90624 ай бұрын
Yay-i found a new Simon channel! Well, new to me. His web of channels is so vast, it spreads across the internet universe, like filaments of matter 😂
@tommonk76514 ай бұрын
He’s trying to fill the void with channels….
@goosenotmaverick11564 ай бұрын
Maybe the void was neccesary to allow life to evolve in a less interupted way than it otherwise would be, if it wasnt in one of these voids. Stability seems to be a major key in the overall development of, well.... us.
@djunior8744 ай бұрын
This comment made me feel better
@goosenotmaverick11564 ай бұрын
@djunior874 seems like a logical explanation for us residing within one. Life barely made it through some of what it went through as it is, and this technically could be considered not only a void, but an area of relative calm, I would think. Comparatively of course. Interesting to think about, to say the least.
@PossumKommander4 ай бұрын
I was just thinking this, maybe being in the void keeps us safe from the greater dangers of the universe.
@ZZ-sb8os4 ай бұрын
love it, could you do a video on The Great Attractor next please?
@KesselRunner6064 ай бұрын
Yes, they are a mystery. And I am both terrified and reassured to know that there are still wonders in the universe, that we have not yet explained everything. _G'Kar_ _Babylon 5_
@timradde43284 ай бұрын
Nicely done.
@762rk95tp4 ай бұрын
The universe is run by the complex interweaving of three elements. Energy, matter, and enlightened self-interest.
@mikeguilmette7764 ай бұрын
I remember that episode . . .
@LordOfThePancakes2 ай бұрын
I don’t believe in atheism
@SaidAlSeveresАй бұрын
This is crazy. My mind cannot handle all this. Like what.
@sheldonwheaton8814 ай бұрын
Neutrinos were one of my favorite things to think about while tripping!
@MrTryAnotherOne4 ай бұрын
The KBC Void is the quarantine zone around Earth. All fun aside: Maybe voids should be seen as remnants of bubbles (i.e. like balloons) and all the galactic matter was pushed to the bounderies by explosions (matter / anti-matter).
@HandyMan6574 ай бұрын
Simon, how much of this information do you retain? Thanks for the upload, Crew. Take care.
@goosenotmaverick11564 ай бұрын
As proven by some of his other videos, very little. It's usually only mentioned on the more casual style channels like Brain Blaze, but it does get brought up fairly regularly that he forgets most of it. "In the eyes, out the mouth" is a phrase I believe I've heard him use in regards to this particular subject 😂
@Hillbilly0014 ай бұрын
Not much. He's said himself that it goes in through the eyes and out through the mouth. Just saying....
@goosenotmaverick11564 ай бұрын
@@Hillbilly001 me and you; same page 🤣
@Hillbilly0014 ай бұрын
@@goosenotmaverick1156 I saw that. Long time visitor to the Whistlerverse I am. LOL!! Cheers
@goosenotmaverick11564 ай бұрын
@Hillbilly001 same here! The number of hours I've watched Simon's face, is probably a shamefully high number 🤣 Cheers!
@KennethBulwer4 ай бұрын
Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.
@SomethingScotty4 ай бұрын
0:40 That's not entirely true. There isn't just "nothing" in the vastness of space. There is, in fact, War.
@stancil834 ай бұрын
The spatial dimension is the only commonality I can see. Gravity seems to go through changes on the extreme large end dealing with Galactic clusters and supervoids and then at the Quantum level.
@pooryorick8314 ай бұрын
Even where there's nothing, there's still something. Besides, nothing itself is still something. 😁✌🏻
@religionoffreedom4 ай бұрын
I couldn’t avoid this video
@HeathenHammer804 ай бұрын
It’s probably a good thing that we live in a sparsely populated area of the universe. Otherwise we would be bombarded by cosmic rays constantly.
@thegrr13464 ай бұрын
Off in The Void they will find multiple KZbin channels and Simon will be talking about everything there is.
@420nerdgirl4 ай бұрын
i just got dumped and my coping mechanism is binge watching every simon video
@NeedlessJ934 ай бұрын
Stay strong and just watch Simon. I'm sure they were a jerk anyway.
@watcher8054 ай бұрын
Huge.
@lostpoundpuppy4 ай бұрын
*Stares at Simon as he pronounces 'Laniakea' multiple ways...* xD
@rhd754 ай бұрын
His pronunciation of Canes and Boötes was off too.
@jorgelotr37524 ай бұрын
@@rhd75 yeah, that thing above the second o is there so that you don't read it like "boot".
@lostpoundpuppy4 ай бұрын
@@rhd75 I didn't feel like editing. xD Also I adore the goofball, so I didn't want to come down too hard on him. xD
@lostpoundpuppy4 ай бұрын
@@jorgelotr3752 Apparently it's supposed to be pronounced boo-oh-teez. I pronounce it Boh-oh-teez instead. Like Zoh-Ah-logy for zoology, not Zoo-ah-logy. xD
@jorgelotr37524 ай бұрын
@@lostpoundpuppy according to wikipedia, boh-OH-teez and zoo-OL-ə-jee (UK)/zoh-OL-ə-jee (US) respectively. The first pronunciation (the one at hand) clearly indicates that the ¨ is telling us to just read each o individually, which was what I was getting at.
@JamieAlice924 ай бұрын
Wizards did it
@alargefarva42744 ай бұрын
New Simon channel?? Sign me up👍🏻
@chancecherry60554 ай бұрын
new simon channel dropped
@ldfox114 ай бұрын
Just recently discovered, voids in space were created by giant exploding stars. The closest void to earth was created by a star going nova, and clearing a space of 16 million light years across.
@SitInTheShayd4 ай бұрын
Can you post a link to this discovery? I'd like to read about it!
I had a dream the other night where I was out in space by myself with no suit or anything. I was just floating out there. I could look 'down' or 'up' and all I could see were oceans of stars that went on to infinity in every direction. I couldn't even see the Milky Way's galactic bulge for reference! It was VERY alarming and I woke up in a slight panic! It was weird and cool all at the same time and the bonus is that I can remember it clearly!
@hrg_tv4 ай бұрын
Bro, how many channels do you have?
@AuntieTrichome4 ай бұрын
Interesting as usual. Certainly as my void knowledge doesn’t go further than Temple of Void, Void Rot, Void Witch.
@darthinfimus44504 ай бұрын
Voivod
@Joseph552204 ай бұрын
At 16:50 - the reason we wouldn't have realized that there weren't other galaxies until the 1960s if the milky way was in the center of the Bootes void isn't because we would have been so far that their light would not have reached us or anything like that - but because they would have been so far away that our early telescopes would not have been able to resolve them as galaxies - they would have merely looked like distant stars... that was his point. Just for clarification
@Joseph552204 ай бұрын
And it's not exactly a true conjecture. The Bootes void DOES contain galaxies (like all voids), they are just very sparsely populated... so it is possible that someone would have spotted one of the few galaxies out there and made the realization... or perhaps not. If it were not for Andromeda or the Magellanic Clouds - we probably would not have spent nearly the amount of time or energy innovating our telescopic technology as we did once we realized - there's A LOT of crazy stuff happening way, way out there.
@Joseph552204 ай бұрын
You could very easily make the conjecture that, absent a moon (or especially absent other exoplanets in our solar system), it would have taken humans a LOT longer to piece things together. Perhaps, we'd still not understand the Sun is at the center of the solar system (actually, absent the moon, the Earth probably wouldn't support life seeing as the tidal effects of the moon are chiefly responsible for keeping the core molten and the magnetosphere and ionosphere doing their jobs to make our little blue ball habitable... so, yeah, let's not start deleting the moon.
@stephenseymour5514 ай бұрын
Here in the uk we have the great kier stammer super void, there is nothing useful going on in the great MT space between his ears .
@CuritisHowell4 ай бұрын
Her fragrance of choice was fresh garlic.
@boyblue53204 ай бұрын
I like this...i hope im able to get it
@BrickZero4 ай бұрын
Maybe we see voids because we're looking at too little of a slice of the available space. We are small looking at something so large we can barely understand it in full. Another option we're looking at it from the wrong direction and instead looking at multiple different corners that just happen to have similarly empty space and were just accepting it as one empty space instead of multiple empty sections making a much larger empty space.
@auggiemarsh86822 ай бұрын
Reducing to 75% speed is the sweet spot for listening
@Hitchpster4 ай бұрын
I find it uplifting rather than depressing. If a seemingly dark and gloomy void includes our green and blue earth and gorgeous Milky Way, then that makes any Lovecraftian flight of fancy about the darkness of the universe quite unnecessary, while it also bolsters the soft anthropic principle that we couldn't possibly exist in our shape and form in a much more crowded, lighter, hotter, more chaotic area of the universe.
@timradde43284 ай бұрын
Some alien species is clearing "space" to make room for a new mall. :)
@rustythecrown93174 ай бұрын
We might end up as a hyperspace by-pass.
@Tommy-Tom-Tom4 ай бұрын
Audio on this one is very rough. Please adjust EQ. Sibilance is pretty extreme.
@thexanderthemander4 ай бұрын
The noisy transitions are annoying. BEEP. WHOOOSH.
@therevelistmovement46834 ай бұрын
So, we exist on a ball, with other balls, flying around another ball, with *other* balls, in a big whirlpool, in a hole, in a web?
@rock-bottom20234 ай бұрын
Bullock!
@adamredwine7743 ай бұрын
More or less
@Dave5843-d9m4 ай бұрын
How is it these voids are more or less spherical? What is it that keeps them so neatly round?
@SmashBrosAssemble4 ай бұрын
“Containing absolutely nothing. Could you imagine that Nothing?, no light no dark no up no down, no life, no time without end.” ~ The Doctor
@TaeSunWoo4 ай бұрын
14th Doctor mentioned? 💅🗣️✨
@SmashBrosAssemble4 ай бұрын
@@TaeSunWoo No, this quote is by the 10th Doctor
@TaeSunWoo4 ай бұрын
@@SmashBrosAssemble didn’t he say something similar in Wild Blue Yonder?
@WAHegle914 ай бұрын
*Hits blunt* What if a higher power or being put us in an empty void because it knew that we would eventually become a threat?
@shanewallace25644 ай бұрын
There was actually an observation recently that could help explain how these happen. The JWST spotted a couple of quasar that collided several million light years away from us and they wiped out everything around them for about 100 light years. Void created
@colonelradec59564 ай бұрын
To me it's the scariest mystery. Something absolutely caused it. It's not just some quirk. Not that we could do anything anyways so not scary in that sense but just that it can happen and how.
@henrysinclair59144 ай бұрын
given the microwave backgourd this is exactly what would be expecting
@agentcooper63614 ай бұрын
This is probably why complex life evolved here. Anywhere else is too busy to allow life to progress peacefully. Yet another factor in favor of the rare earth hypothesis.
@jorgelotr37524 ай бұрын
5:30 the ¨ over the second o means that both os must be pronouced separatedly (like in "cooperation", also spelled "co-operation" or, more to the pint at hand, "coöperation").
@mineduck30504 ай бұрын
Sounds like an optical effect of the Doppler effect being flawed at describing cosmic distance.
@federalbureauofinvestigati79042 ай бұрын
Looks like v-sauce brother
@michaelstreeter31254 ай бұрын
I knew about voids, but TIL I'm in one! The local hole 600 Mpc radius around us. Still, plenty of matter to go around. Onwards to Mars and the stars.
@Knsy4 ай бұрын
13:25 anyone else seeing a blue portrait of a chucky doll at the centre of that galactic picture
@holyassbutts4 ай бұрын
No! Not Chucky! Anything but Chucky! I hate Chucky! I... Hate... Chuckyyyyyy 😭
@leafykille4 ай бұрын
The grand structure of the universe looks like the pattern of dust on the hood of a van after a bit of rain.
@BrandonDenny-we1rw4 ай бұрын
I always thought it looked more like a vast nervous system branching out to smaller numerous limbs
@stancil834 ай бұрын
Domino's missed a pretty good marketing idea. They should have tried to buy naming rights or whatever. And name one of them voids. The Niod. hehe. Golden Age of American TV commercials.
@4362mont4 ай бұрын
Intro sounds like a passage from The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy.
@Benson_aka_devils_advocate_884 ай бұрын
Giant voids really aren't that unexpected. Think of a gentle babbling brook. Every now and again the chaotic nature of liquids means the waves of energy/motion will create air bubbles on the surface of the water. The chaotic motion during inflation will inevitably lead to areas of denser concentrations of matter. This movement will impart momentum and draw material away from some place, creating less dense areas. Finally, as stars, black holes and galaxies pop into the mix the energy they radiate will further push material away. Leaving a couple galaxies floating in the voids. Fast forward to today and the voids have grown so immense it seems impossible. But at one point in the past things were much closer. Plus, there are other inconsistencies in the early universe that point to different levels of inflation. So we have yet to show if there may have been slightly different values to the equations that may point to why these things can grow so massive, and just when they started or how quickly they grew and at what stage did that change in growth occur.
@watcher8054 ай бұрын
Well thanks for that existential crisis 😅
@mwolkove4 ай бұрын
Any chance of JWST update video?
@Enigma13364 ай бұрын
Imagine if there is a hyper advanced alien race that just travels around and consumes full super clusters of galaxies for all their energy.
@benoliver5593Ай бұрын
Well traveling alongside magnetic lines will be more viable now
@Flight_of_Icarus4 ай бұрын
When I was taking an astronomy course, the concept of nothing fascinated me. After all, if there truly was nothing between the stars, they'd all be on top of each other. There's always something, even if that something is stupidly thin. Still, I wonder just how thin that something can get, and why. Why can these portions of space exist where individual particles are so far apart, yet the fabric of space still wraps around them?
@NetanelZZZ4 ай бұрын
Also, yes, with Simon's picture on half the screen, it feels less robotic IMHO. You might want to make Simon a little smaller and the subject a bit better, (02:49 for example}
@Kmichaelcook874 ай бұрын
That’s weird. I’m opposite. It gets way MORE robotic-seeming whenever S1MON appears onscreen. Look at those mechanical, jerky hand motions and dead, lifeless eyes. The clipped, metallic diction. Lifelike, but ultimately, not confusingly so.
@daduzadude15474 ай бұрын
@@Kmichaelcook87nah. That’s just his disguise slipping… We all know he’s a leeezard people
@paulstevens31122 ай бұрын
Theyre ground zeros of super nova , there used to be a massive star there. It exploded w such forces everything blasted away.
@edwardgilmour90134 ай бұрын
A question for you Simon, If the speed of light is constant in a vacuum and the universe is only 13.8 billion years old how is it the size of the universe is quoted as being 92Billion light years across? Surely the limit of what we can see or is even possible is only 27.6 light years across?
@philippvoid18004 ай бұрын
lol. wasnt subscribed to this channel yet. hard to keep track ;p
@shawnkerr4 ай бұрын
How big does the emptiness have to be to classify as a void?
@1080KaTa4 ай бұрын
Hydrodynamics. 😮
@frequentuser3604 ай бұрын
I've heard a statistic that said if you shoot off into space and continue going until the edge of the universe (if you were able to do such a thing) the chances of you running into anything, assuming you are not making an effort to hit it, are zero. As in, empty space is so large despite the number of galaxies and stars and planets and rocks and whatever, you're just never going to hit anything. Can anyone help me source this or is it just wrong?
@MrBizteck4 ай бұрын
Not ZERO but very remote. There is a simulation of a shop going 3000 times the speed of light right through the center of the galaxy. ( Avoiding the black hole ofc) But they didn't hit anything.
@Max-js1mx4 ай бұрын
1:30 anyone have a term to find this image on google? or what the image is called?
@GirlPhoenix854 ай бұрын
It's very odd - very inconsistent scale, not clear what it's meant to communicate. But just screenshot at that timestamp, crop to just the image, and toss it in Google image search and you'll find it.
@mikeg.74244 ай бұрын
“Observable universe”
@WonderLure424 ай бұрын
Science is basically this: “this is what we know until we know more. stay tuned.”
@zeroreyortsed36244 ай бұрын
What are the chances that these voids were the remnants left behind when matter and antimatter came into contact when the universe was born.
@AndrewBrown-fq6vp4 ай бұрын
Wouldn't areas of increased gravity pull everything toward them clearing out the areas around them?
@J-CBertrand-tp6bg4 ай бұрын
Probably should a void them😀‼️
@PaulFenwick-t4x4 ай бұрын
It's my humble opinion that our verse rotates "like a galaxy" around the centre. Physics tells me that.the largest to the smallest all work the same
@daylate4 ай бұрын
There's a starman waiting in the sky He'd like to come and meet us But he thinks he'd blow our minds There's a starman waiting in the sky He's told us not to blow it 'Cause he knows it's all worthwhile RIP DB
@DerptyDerptyDUM4 ай бұрын
I wonder that every single day, sir.
@mblake04204 ай бұрын
Optical ilusion?
@sonofbr4 ай бұрын
Some voids are type 3 civilizations that have Dyson Spheres encompassing galaxy super clusters.
@Marisa_arts4 ай бұрын
268.901 septoduocillion Light-year radius. That is what I think a minimal size of our universe is, unless the Galaxy is MASSIVE, in just Weight, then we are creating a ring around us. Which is scary, which means. We are technically the center of the universe.