Ive been watching you since i first started highschool and its been because of you why i became so interested in space and the stars. I am now 2 years into college and i have been accepted into a NASA stem program and it all started here so i have got to thank you for all of the incredible content you have put out throughout the years and i hope for many more incredible videos!
@AntichristKittyStarАй бұрын
Wow, that’s such an awesome & inspiring story!! Congratulations and best of luck in what will no doubt be a fascinating experience & eventual career!
@barbthegreat586Ай бұрын
Congratulations! Enjoy your studies!
@AndyTernayАй бұрын
Good for you! That’s awesome and I know many of us Anton fans wish you the absolute best!
@Sci-Fi-MikeАй бұрын
That's fantastic! Congrats! As an aside, have you met Nobel Prize laureate John Cromwell Mather? I met him a year ago. It's amazing to meet someone who gives a lecture and seems so down to earth but still blows your mind with his knowledge, even while we eat a slice of pizza.
@janewayofchaos3255Ай бұрын
Congratulations! That's awesome!!
@acid_8Ай бұрын
Anton, been following your channel for years now, early supporter, didn't think we would see that smile again man. Regardless of what life has thrown your way, you should know a lot of people genuinely enjoy your daily work.
@TheSilmarillianАй бұрын
I be one of them Anton never doubt that.
@kalyasaifyАй бұрын
YES❤️
@clauslangenbroek9897Ай бұрын
When you are talking about seeing that smile again, are you referring to the situation in South Korea or a past occasion in this channel's lore? If it is the latter, could you explain? I strongly concur with your statement about his work, though!
@Ana_MystikАй бұрын
Anton, you are awesome. Thank you truly for all that you do. Love out from the UK 🇬🇧
@filonin2Ай бұрын
@@clauslangenbroek9897 One of his infant sons died some time ago.
@fgadenzАй бұрын
When I was young I use to seek SciFy movies and series to get thrilled about the future and the wonders of Science. Now I watch Anton, that brings me the same thrill, but with the plus of bring the future that is “one minute” ahead of humanity! What a wonderful teacher and human being!
@morgan696manningАй бұрын
Same but wish he did more research into the mars rock since someone is lying about that since many can prove its life 1000% but the few lying have a bigger voice and say its tampered with so it's getting very hard to believe those elite's now
@jeffmccloud905Ай бұрын
@morgan696manning who can prove it's life 1000% ?
@morgan696manningАй бұрын
@@jeffmccloud905 since the 1800s
@morgan696manningАй бұрын
@@jeffmccloud905 they discredited the findings but anyone that studies the field why do you think panspermia works? so its 1000% but not that rock why
@jeffmccloud905Ай бұрын
@@morgan696manning we don't know panspermia works. It probably does. But we don't know how life started in earth, and we haven't found proof of life anywhere else.
@Alondro77Ай бұрын
A ton of water hidden deep within Mars.... I can only respond thusly, "Quaid! Start the reactor! Free Mars!" ;D
@fgadenzАй бұрын
Man, I recalled the exact same movie and scene before reaching your comment!
@mattimeo7612Ай бұрын
Haha! I was about to say "so Total Recall was right!?"
@chrisanderson2368Ай бұрын
Don't forget that David Bowie was right about the spiders too
@SMacCuUladhАй бұрын
"Give them the air Kohagan!!"
@benjaminjiin8432Ай бұрын
Awesome!
@3characterhandlerequiredАй бұрын
Decade already for rover. Feels like it was send there recently. Time really flies.
@jackesiotoАй бұрын
Time flies faster on Mars due to lower gravity.
@Giovanni-GiorgioАй бұрын
Time flies due to lack of real updates by Nasa.
@tr7b410Ай бұрын
And the battery shelf life was 6 years & its stilli in operation. Not to mention how does it cleans the dust off its solar panels.? Hmm see Tr3b astra night time footage powering up its gravity wave propulsion system=crewmembers..
@3characterhandlerequiredАй бұрын
@@tr7b410 This is different rover, no solar panels, nuclear battery. The one you are talking is probably Opportunity which lasted way longer than anticipated. This decade ago sent was Curiosity, much bigger car-size rover. There is one newer, Perseverance, which had that helicopter. I was remembering that, it landed 2022. Other than that helicopter pretty much same as Curiosity (but just slightly bigger, improved version)
@tr7b410Ай бұрын
@3characterhandlerequired Did Anton have a stroke.?
@tortysoftАй бұрын
There was more information about Mars in this video than I have heard in a decade ! Thanks Anton !
@mikejones-vd3fgАй бұрын
check out ariken777 he releases videos of new Mars pictures weekly it seems from Nasa's rovers, very nicely put together. A lot more colourful planet then I imagined, or any CGI artist for that matter. Black sand dunes and blue rocks... truth is truly stranger then the fiction we can come up with.
@jehizkiaveenhuizen2790Ай бұрын
Bedankt
@GTAGMODZАй бұрын
Bedankt
@XL-5117Ай бұрын
Hi Anton in South Korea (who knew until recently) Hope things have improved now diplomacy has been restored. I love hearing about science updates from you, your English speaking is so good now. Keep going with your updates, kindest regards and best wishes to you and your family from England.
@lucidstream5661Ай бұрын
Yesterday Venus and today Mars! This is a good week. Fingers crossed for Titan, Europa or Ganymedes tomorrow!
@Atok595Ай бұрын
Ha, you said Uranus.
@AndyJarmanАй бұрын
I thought Ganymede was destroyed in the great Dalek wars?
@SpaceShebАй бұрын
Callisto :(
@MangoIiteАй бұрын
@@Atok595no they didn’t.
@wakewakeyАй бұрын
Glad S Korea held its' democracy wonderful Anton.
@williamhollister9274Ай бұрын
now let's hope the USA does...not that either of our comments has anything to do with this
@UnfollowYourDreamsАй бұрын
Oil? I see mars needs democracy!
@ms-jl6dlАй бұрын
That's olive oil,calm down.
@spiralsun1Ай бұрын
What they need is to turn on that giant alien oxygen generator that Schwarzenegger did in that one instruction or learning video called “recall” or something 🤔
@MartinMiznerАй бұрын
same. In my oppinion the space is full of complex hydrocarbons caused by solar radiation (tholins) or primitive life.
@UnfollowYourDreamsАй бұрын
@@MartinMizner there can be trace ammounts of methane and other short hydrocarbon molecules on geologically active bodies. But not what we know as crude oil. For that to occur you need biomass in an oxygen free environment and pressure-cook it for a few thousand years.
@jackesiotoАй бұрын
Operation Martian Freedom!!!!
@ShivahoАй бұрын
I've seen those Spider Formations on Earth... In my youth I painted houses & would see it in area of excess paint that dries like that on the underside of something & excess drips would form & eventually harden like that.
@BillHilly-i3yАй бұрын
Thank you so much Anton, you make me happier while you make me smarter. Something about your insatiable curiosity I guess, it's infectious brother.
@RissaFirecatАй бұрын
This is the first time I have been here. Your content is amazing. Glad I found you! You have a new subscriber.
@grahamokeefe9406Ай бұрын
The next beverage craze - Martian spring water. Only 42200 per bottle!
@andrewepp6763Ай бұрын
I would drink it
@OMADRevolutionАй бұрын
For a limited time only!
@TheRealQuartzАй бұрын
Now with added solar radiation and extra carbon to make sure you feel that extraterrestrial fizz!
@tautalogicalАй бұрын
and the rest.
@fgadenzАй бұрын
Here we have a real entrepreneur mindset!
@nilo70Ай бұрын
I always watch Anton as soon as he post a new video , But Anything about Mars has my attention! Cheers From California 😎
@JJ33438Ай бұрын
anton you are the best educator on the internet. Anton so much on mars looks like strikes from plasma plumes I love your videos wish every classroom would educate with your videos. thanks for this one.
@MrSaemichlausАй бұрын
No matter how difficult drilling on Mars is, leave it to the private sector to figure it out for profit. At least this time around the barrel makers can't be bought out to run the competition dry (looking at you, Standard Oil Company).
@deadiemeyers1661Ай бұрын
Great report on what we are learning about Mars! Many thanks.
@renejeanson788Ай бұрын
Thank you for this good report which allows us to keep up to date with current research.
@draganpianic1961Ай бұрын
I learnt much from this video. Many thanks and greetings from Bosnia!
@andrewclimo5709Ай бұрын
Great work Anton!
@SweetSunrisingАй бұрын
Kinda feel better knowing Mars truly didn’t end up with its current ‘Amazonian’ Epoch stretched over 3Ga but if it’s started 140Ma I think that’s the same time as our early Cretaceous. Excited to see how they update Mars’ geological timeline.
@Sneaky1neАй бұрын
Thank you Anton, for all your work.
@Kelly-m6l4hАй бұрын
Great video with lots of good content, Can't wait for your upcoming videos.
@E.DougK.Ай бұрын
Wow! So much of this is new to me that I had to pause play to let it sink in.
@jeannedenbigh8919Ай бұрын
I love information about Mars Thank you for the photos and explanation Anton
@MrFlamer000Ай бұрын
Thank You sir been watching you for several years now again thank you.
@anthonydsouza7174Ай бұрын
THANKS 🙏 ANTON HEARING YOU IS ALWAYS A PLEASURE
@jenslodholm3071Ай бұрын
Great episode. Can't wait to learn more about Mars!
@jimcurtis9052Ай бұрын
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. 🫶😊
@visnuexeАй бұрын
This news is amazing! Water had to be on Mars, and now we know where to find it! Just cooler than all news!
@stevenkarnisky411Ай бұрын
A lot of great information about Mars! Thanks, Anton.
@CaberbalschnitАй бұрын
Fun fact. The Kola superdeep borehole (12.2 kilometers) is the deepest thing we've drilled on earth. And according to NASA, the crust appears to be much easier to bore through on Mars as well as it not getting hot nearly as quick. Anyway, carry on sir.
@jackesiotoАй бұрын
Based on all the parameters, it's estimated that boreholes could be drilled up to (down to) about 39 kilometers deep
@CaberbalschnitАй бұрын
@@jackesioto assuming you mean on earth, that would easily be able to make it plenty far enough on Mars, plus some. But I feel like you meant on Mars, because that's about what NASA said they think they could get to on Mars. The real issue would be getting all the equipment to Mars for such an endeavor...and relying on automated equipment to never fail. Unless of course we're sent with the equipment to repair it. I guess price goes without saying. But not only is it doable. I think we're pretty dumb for not even trying, since we've pretty much always thought there was water there.
@meesalikeuАй бұрын
easier to drill than earth? umm, tell that to mars insight lander 😂
@CaberbalschnitАй бұрын
@meesalikeu hard rocks, intentionally drilled, ≠ earth's crust nor do the soft samples. They predict that there's a point that they both are similar. But drastically different depths. Best part is, with hard tap equipment, it's even easier. Fluids used to cool the tap(drill head/tip) seem to be what's called for. Turns out we specialize in boring through super dense material. Sooo....a full boring rig is waaaaaay more efficient and affordable. Sheerly because the science is simpler. No need for an over engineered rc. Just flipping drill.
@TheDude-w5l19 күн бұрын
It's what I keep talking about for a couple of months by now. I think of drilling deep down and just let all the water jut out in the atmosphere and let the pressure increase. Much easier that adding gasses from outside.
@kitwest61Ай бұрын
Superb. Absolutely captivated. Long live Anton
@LelandReviewАй бұрын
If you apply a gravity well map from Earth onto Mars it reveals something major. The Great Circle line known for ancient sacrifice here also connects 3 of the largest Volcanoes on Mars.
@yvonnemiezis5199Ай бұрын
Very interesting findings,thanks Anton 👍❤
@williamhollister9274Ай бұрын
This is a rare one that left me scratching my head
@jim.franklinАй бұрын
Good overview of recent research. Thanks
@susannebrunberg4174Ай бұрын
This was a good video. Everything about Mars is very interesting
@jamesleatherwood5125Ай бұрын
Great vid, Anton! Keep up the good werk!
@theanthill22Ай бұрын
Who has two thumbs and is the coolest person alive? You bro. YOU.
@Mike-tg7djАй бұрын
I've been to Wind Cave NM in south Dakota. It is fascinating in that most caves are formed by water. Wind cave is formed by wind and if you have been to the western US you'd know the wind blows constantly and little to no moisture. That's why you get unusual formations. I saw the biggest American Bison in my life there in Custer State Park. It had to be at 3,000 lbs.and as tall as the van we were traveling in. I can still see that monster step out of the woods that fast😮 needless to say I bolted for the van without getting closer to the bison.
@DanielEngsvang27 күн бұрын
Always extremely educational. I sure love this channel of yours 😇😄
@skf4664Ай бұрын
thank you Anton. You're the best 🤗
@hawkbartril3016Ай бұрын
Brilliant video Anton thanks bruv
@D3adP00IАй бұрын
We should start a pool to guess how far along the evolutionary path mars got (or never started). Once we know, this will help identify the great filter event and where it lies in our chronology.
@JonofthemadlifeАй бұрын
Very good Anton. Very interesting
@BackUp-z4tАй бұрын
More good stuff. Thanks again.
@BeccaTheBoringАй бұрын
I’m trying to wrap my head around Mars basically being a huge sponge that soaked up all its atmosphere. 😮
@mainy1984Ай бұрын
Hello wonderful Anton, this is person.... Again =)
@kryts27Ай бұрын
No you're not. You're an AI bot 😂
@AvargatothАй бұрын
Great Job Anton!!!
@kingsuperbusАй бұрын
it'd be neat to see the percentages of different asteroids, like ones from mars vs somewhere else
@helios7170Ай бұрын
Thank you, Anton ❤
@donready119Ай бұрын
Thanks for another great video Anton. I read the spider paper and the results are not the same as the images from Mars. The Martian spiders are raised and appear to be Lichtenberg figures from electrical discharge.
@djackson603Ай бұрын
Dropping a spin laucher onto the martian surface might make sample return missions easier. Just a thought.
@coweatsmanАй бұрын
Oil on Mars. 4 questions. 1) what is the price of oil per barrel, 2) what is the cost of transporting a barrel of oil from Mars to earth, 3) how much energy can a barrel of oil yield and 4) how much energy is needed to produce that barrel and freight it to earth?
@TheCrossroads533Ай бұрын
Use the oil in situ. Earth has plenty of oil, oil shale, etc.
@NorthernChimpАй бұрын
Bring more in to burn than the Earth even has? I don't think we need that.
@beardyben7848Ай бұрын
Yep, Oil on Mars is only really valuable to be used on Mars. I don't believe there's enough oxygen to combust in their atmosphere, but you can make a lot of different kinds of plastics and fibers out of oil. And you can make Kerosene for single use rockets or use condensed Methane for reusable rockets to get out of Mars gravity well. Incredibly valuable to have anything on the planet because leaving Earth's gravity well and making the trip there is National budget item expensive. Ultimately there is no resource extraction that will make a profit. That's why space colonies aren't like historical colonies. The main value of leaving Earth is to see what's out there and to be someone who lives a life that no one else has before. We're probably two generations from viable long-term, mostly self-sustaining human habitats off this planet. We could have already discovered, at minimum, if humans can live for years or decades on Luna, if NASA had gotten the R&D budget that was cut from the US military budget in the '90s.
@tuberroot1112Ай бұрын
It would be good see more about the Spiders from Mars. Not convinced by what they did in the lab. I can't see the spiders.
@tomholroyd7519Ай бұрын
It's amazing that you can just look at a river basin from space and say, "that's not water" which is also what you say on Mars, other than "liquid icedust" (yeah we will need new words)
@jackesiotoАй бұрын
4:22 - So, parts of the Martian surface might have been habitable 740ish million years ago. This coincides with the estimate for how recently Venus might have been fairly habitable.
@tayzondayАй бұрын
So, over a million-year timeframe, we’re going to terraform Mars by initiating some sustainable or self-replicating digging ecosystem that brings carbon dioxide and water back to the surface. Once it’s warm enough, we’ll use genetically engineered Earth plants with accelerated metabolism to convert carbon dioxide into oxygen.
@generaleerelativity9524Ай бұрын
There's no molten core or strong enough gravity to hold an atmosphere. It ain't happening.
@BaldurGunnarssonАй бұрын
@@generaleerelativity9524 - The core is remeltable. Will happen within 500 years.
@generaleerelativity9524Ай бұрын
@BaldurGunnarsson oh yeah, all that alien stuff they found at the pyramid mines. Alot of people lost their jobs after they found it. Too bad Cohagen won't turn it on and gib deez people air 🤭
@VeronicaGorositoMusicАй бұрын
Inevitably, the Sun will start to inflate in its Red Giant Stage, burning Earth, and as Mars is so close to Earth, we will need to move further away, again, before the next Billion year mark. Yes it's too small range of time, because the Sun will become hotter much earlier than that! It'll fry Earth & Mars in the next 500 Million years. We should redesign our species as new Hominins, much more different than we are now. And in the next 5-6 Billion years, the Sun will reach it's maximum, burning almost all the entire Solar System, making it inhabitable, and then, setting back as a White Dwarf...completely hostile to life. At that time, we should've moved way before, to another stable Star System. Yes it's a looooot of time ahead, but it will happen.
@douglashanlon1975Ай бұрын
@BaldurGunnarsson ...lol
@Varnaj42Ай бұрын
I've known about fresh water aquifers on Mars for a long time. The best of these will be found between latitudes 30 to 45 north and south at average depths of 1500 meters. The do surface occasionally and gather salts on the way up. This is the source for the occasional spring like leaks in gullies that are seen to appear then evaporate. The ground water is also the source of those clear tubes that have been found, also in gullies. Yes. Mars is still geologically active. There are heat plumbs that, as in Yellowstone, heat water which rises and, when pressure is sufficient, bursts through and lengthens these tubes. Then the pressure abates and the flow stops resulting in another what appears to be a section of a "glass" tube. Perfectly natural. Simple bacterial life will be found in the aquifers. This will serve as the basis for the merging of Earth creating new forms which will eventually supply the soon to be Martian colony with a food source. This is not speculation.
@katiebarber407Ай бұрын
thats an interesting speculation
@569139Ай бұрын
Another great video... Keep them coming Anton! Tom L Buffalo NY
@mrbilly9917Ай бұрын
Another banger Anton, great job. Do you know about the youtuber Mars Guy? He is a geologist who posts incredible updates on the Mars missions every Sunday.
@_AVFАй бұрын
Best channel on KZbin!!
@KaosProject21Ай бұрын
I love Curiosity! She's like the Lada or Hilux of space vehicles! The little robot that could!
@Victura_GamingАй бұрын
Another great video, wonderful person.
@anthonybellmunt3103Ай бұрын
Hi Anton, Really enjoy your show! Any chance of doing a show about nitrogen on Mars; especially nitrogen compounds in the soil. Best Regards
@NCPapaАй бұрын
I think a lot of water's Frozen underneath many layers of sand dirt that's blown around doesn't have any rain so the sand hits the water can't break the tension. There's no raindroplets to slap it
@dawnerwin2097Ай бұрын
Love your channel and I just found it. Sorry, little late to the game but I'm sure happy I found you. Love this stuff. One of the hardest classes I've ever taken in college was Astronomy. Thinking I would learn about stars and such, goodness, I spent so much time studying for this class than I did for my other 4 biology classes combined. It's incrediblely intense information ❤
@garretteckhart8079Ай бұрын
Thank you.
@TheSilmarillianАй бұрын
Hello wonderful person I wear that t-shirt with pride thanks Anton .
@ricklines8755Ай бұрын
Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars makes a lot more sense now...
@DianaLindeman-m9lАй бұрын
One of the rocks had a mark that looked like writing!
@MCsCreationsАй бұрын
Fascinating stuff!
@TheJimtankerАй бұрын
Damn we need to get people there so we can really explore Mars.
@Bradley-s5oАй бұрын
Hello wonderful person! * Is a greeting that I appreciate each time I click on one of these videos. Don't let it get lost in the chatter. Not that your descriptions of anything are ever just chatter. I appreciate the videos, anton. Be well. Have a good day.
@rsnell228 күн бұрын
Atmospheric pressure is very close to the freezing point of water. Add minerals and there should be visible water, like the lakes shaded gray.
@christopherwalls2763Ай бұрын
Great job Anton
@stuart4858Ай бұрын
Thank you for another wonderful video Anton. Stuart from Melbourne AU
@markhuebner7580Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@KuhnuhnundrumАй бұрын
Interesting that puts it roughly around the time life emerged on earth
@robertforsythe3280Ай бұрын
Ponder the events of when a planet loses its magnetic field. Loss of a planets field results in loss of its atmosphere. How long does it take and what effects does it have on its life forms. Thank you for reading this.
@neoisolationist8790Ай бұрын
Thank you for an exceptionally good video.
@tinasmith1391Ай бұрын
That's so exciting!
@mr.ch4rli3_Ай бұрын
Yoo i lost that rock in the washer when I was washing my camping jeans! I knew there was portal in there. But where are all the socks?
@joemono4727Ай бұрын
The zone changes you maaan.
@romazone101Ай бұрын
The Spiders from Mars? Is this where they got their name? Edit: Answered my own question...Thanks wiki. The band's name came from the UFO sighting on 27 October 1954, where a stadium crowd thought they had witnessed Martian spacecraft which cast off a thin filament material, later hypothesised to be webs from migrating spiders. The band's name did not come, as sometimes believed by Bowie fans, from the Martian aerographic features often labelled as 'spiders' and 'baby spiders
@MrPhillip2Ай бұрын
Kinda makes you wonder what they did witness,doesn’t it?
@MichaelWalker-v2oАй бұрын
Cool zebra rock !!! How did you get there Zebra Rock!?!?! Wow...
@DemonKing19951Ай бұрын
So from what I'm getting from this: If he dinosours had advanced as quickly in technology as we did, would they have had a whole different planet to live on right there? Also more wildly, life on mars is back as a possibility if there really is potentially liquid water that deep under the surface. Not anything large like us (maybe?) but certainly microbes.
@TheCrossroads533Ай бұрын
The zebra rock looks metamorphic at first glance...
@crazyunclebob6901Ай бұрын
Thank you, Anton. Please relocate to New Orleans.
@someguy-k2hАй бұрын
I'm not saying it's impossible for China to build a mission that could get to Mars, collect samples and then return to Earth, but none of the historical evidence supports the hypothesis that they could do something that hasn't already been done. It would be very exciting if they could do their own engineering, design, implementation and execution of such a mission. We just haven't seen anything like that happen in modern history.
@Indygo9Ай бұрын
Mars was like Earth. We will know soon enough.
@josephpaulduffey873Ай бұрын
Great stuff! Loving this discussion of CO2 ice. ❄️
@waynepatrick164621 күн бұрын
Great video
@ldpolliАй бұрын
Nice vídeo! Thanks❤
@AndrewHarris-t6kАй бұрын
fantastic video!
@TheWendell946Ай бұрын
Great show's
@84RabbitzАй бұрын
If that turns out to be from Aswan quarry I'm going to flip my lid.