the aliens will not be silicon

  Рет қаралды 687,591

Angela Collier

Angela Collier

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 4 800
@acollierastro
@acollierastro Жыл бұрын
Does my Kentucky accent prevent me from pronouncing words correctly or is a clever scheme to get engagement via comment corrections? You'll never know! It's my accent. Sorry y'all!!
@wkgmathguy218
@wkgmathguy218 Жыл бұрын
What accent?
@antondovydaitis2261
@antondovydaitis2261 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I don't hear an identifiable accent.
@Orikron
@Orikron Жыл бұрын
You speak in General American English.
@Ithirahad
@Ithirahad Жыл бұрын
I figured you were just being a contra(na)rian. Or that you were just salty about the whole silicon life idea and some of that extra Na ended up in your pronunciation.
@jsalsman
@jsalsman Жыл бұрын
Are you kidding? You could do science ASMR!
@coalhater392
@coalhater392 Жыл бұрын
The transitions are keeping me on edge.
@tibr
@tibr Жыл бұрын
Fantastic account name/pfp in the context of this video
@notsojharedtroll23
@notsojharedtroll23 Жыл бұрын
​@@tibr top g comment
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 Жыл бұрын
Hehehe
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 Жыл бұрын
Heheheh
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 Жыл бұрын
Oh shoot yeah true lol
@snuffyupagus2216
@snuffyupagus2216 Жыл бұрын
Time to refute your claims. I have a silicone based alien in my drawer and it gives me a lot of love. sooo .... theres that ...
@liorkoren87
@liorkoren87 Жыл бұрын
Id wager a guess that the silicone was sourced on earth so its probably not an alien, despite having 3 breasts and green skin
@colinjones5379
@colinjones5379 Жыл бұрын
Did it evolve independently, or is it from somewhere else, like a pan-spermia type of situation XD
@wayneosborne2506
@wayneosborne2506 Жыл бұрын
Does it's atomic structure vibrate?
@zombieregime
@zombieregime Жыл бұрын
@@wayneosborne2506 I mean.....the one in my girlfriends drawer does.....and boy does it ever!
@Sammysapphira
@Sammysapphira Жыл бұрын
Did you get it from a not so good creature of draconic origins?
@matthewmartinez6718
@matthewmartinez6718 Жыл бұрын
I find it alarming that my first thought after reading “silicon aliens” was “hey, we have a silicon shortage!” As if we’d just harvest them
@Nadiki
@Nadiki Жыл бұрын
Well maybe they’d have a carbon shortage and think about harvesting us too lol
@matthewmartinez6718
@matthewmartinez6718 Жыл бұрын
@@Nadiki this made my day lol! Thanks for the laugh
@kin-3877
@kin-3877 Жыл бұрын
You're literally the humans in every sci fi colonization metaphor movie lol
@plootyluvsturtle9843
@plootyluvsturtle9843 Жыл бұрын
@@Nadiki we could make a mutual agreement. half of us for half of them
@Nadiki
@Nadiki Жыл бұрын
@@plootyluvsturtle9843sounds like a good deal to me!
@pflannelly
@pflannelly Жыл бұрын
A small token of appreciation for your work here. I just discovered your youtube channel a couple of days ago and really enjoy what I've watched so far. Thank you from Long Beach, NY
@remberingslumber
@remberingslumber 20 күн бұрын
On my soul I love this women (not in a parasocial way I just fw this channel)
@vlogbrothers
@vlogbrothers Жыл бұрын
I loved this and also I hadn't heard of the clay hypothesis! That is freaking wild! Mind absolutely blown that it could be that "inorganic" of a process (half of it being literally inorganic). What a wild idea...I love it so much.
@acollierastro
@acollierastro Жыл бұрын
It is such a nutso idea it makes me happy!
@DavidAntelmo
@DavidAntelmo Жыл бұрын
omg you're here, it's so cool to find you here. you guys are awesome for science
@kylewood4001
@kylewood4001 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I want more on that, such a cool idea. Video covering it perhaps??
@johannageisel5390
@johannageisel5390 Жыл бұрын
@@acollierastro I've recently heard that the fact that the Miller experiment was conducted in borosilicate glasses actually had a positive influence on it. Silicates are important for the formation of life!
@danielsayre3385
@danielsayre3385 Жыл бұрын
how wild is it to have 25k subscribers and hank/john green are one of them
@MattMcIrvin
@MattMcIrvin Жыл бұрын
I like the part in The Black Cloud where the cloud says Fred Hoyle is totally right about steady-state cosmology.
@acollierastro
@acollierastro Жыл бұрын
The book becomes very funny when you know a little about Hoyle's personality. I still recommend it though!
@Voshchronos
@Voshchronos Жыл бұрын
lmaooo
@4CardsMan
@4CardsMan Жыл бұрын
He pushed it in his popular book, Astronomy. The problem is that it requires continuous creation of matter to account for the expansion of the cosmos
@MattMcIrvin
@MattMcIrvin Жыл бұрын
@@4CardsMan Yeah, you need to actually modify general relativity to make it work, so that new matter constantly gets created to keep the overall density the same as the universe expands. But it was a viable hypothesis for a chunk of the 20th century. And to be fair, dark energy is supposed to act... *kind* of like that? In the far far future we could end up with something approaching the de Sitter cosmology, where the matter density approaches zero but there is mostly just dark energy that has constant density, and the universe expands exponentially like in the steady-state model.
@matthewedwards6025
@matthewedwards6025 Жыл бұрын
Various intellectual hacks have always loved sci-fi because it's the only place their ideas are validated.
@therealbrokynn
@therealbrokynn Жыл бұрын
as a silicon based lifeform, this hurts my silicon based emotions
@Nivleknosnhoj
@Nivleknosnhoj Жыл бұрын
Con sili ! Silicon,don't be fretting just another wannabe silicon carbon deepfake made by Silicon my big brain pal call him Al told me.
@user-nd7rg5er5g
@user-nd7rg5er5g Жыл бұрын
(star trek scary musical sting)
@helmutschillinger3140
@helmutschillinger3140 Жыл бұрын
You are silly
@therealbrokynn
@therealbrokynn Жыл бұрын
@@helmutschillinger3140 as a sillycon based lifeform, this -
@benedixtify
@benedixtify Жыл бұрын
You have a heart of stone
@BipTunia_Microtonal_Cats
@BipTunia_Microtonal_Cats Жыл бұрын
This was the next recommended video after I watched "Growing Living Rat Neurons To Play... DOOM"
@stadlerplanck
@stadlerplanck Жыл бұрын
That whole Hoyle tangent was absolutely full of jaw droppers, incredible
@TheMusicalFruit
@TheMusicalFruit Жыл бұрын
Who's gonna tell Fred Hoyle about survivorship bias?
@snuffyupagus2216
@snuffyupagus2216 Жыл бұрын
@@TheMusicalFruit the survivors?
@bbqchezit
@bbqchezit Жыл бұрын
@@snuffyupagus2216 survivors can't talk to him now tho
@snuffyupagus2216
@snuffyupagus2216 Жыл бұрын
@@bbqchezit oh snapples, seems I need a whitty reply. How about "they could if they were made of silicone!"? Yeah that works great and almost seamless to the conversation 😎
@bbqchezit
@bbqchezit Жыл бұрын
@@snuffyupagus2216 it's witty replies all the way down
@Jomoeba
@Jomoeba Жыл бұрын
Take a shot every time Angela says "contranarian" :P Teasing aside, great vid
@Syokonono
@Syokonono Жыл бұрын
Bruh I was beginning to think i was going crazy or something. Literally was googling "contranarian" because I thought her big brain knew a word I didn't >
@skid2200
@skid2200 Жыл бұрын
She's just being contrarian by pronouncing it contranarian.😂
@andiralosh2173
@andiralosh2173 Жыл бұрын
FMU 🥴
@rakino4418
@rakino4418 Жыл бұрын
I believe a contranarian is a veterinarian who is negatively charged
@jonathancohen2351
@jonathancohen2351 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the meant something like contradictarian, which would be cool too.
@billgort3085
@billgort3085 Ай бұрын
One of my favorite sci-fi authors is Allen Dean Foster, who wrote a book called “Sentenced to Prism” about a man who has to survive as a carbon based life form on a planet where most of the life is Silicon based. I will have to reread it after listening to your video.
@adamkallin5160
@adamkallin5160 Жыл бұрын
”This guy just wants to break apart” I feel you, Beryllium.
@daydays12
@daydays12 Жыл бұрын
good one! so fast though..REALLY wants to break apart
@coal760-BH3
@coal760-BH3 Жыл бұрын
As a chemist, I was convinced once I learned how little silicon likes to form rings on its own (not Si-O rings, Si-Si rings), which is the basis of most of the molecular complexity in living systems. And there are lots--LOTS--of cute little chemical properties that suggest Si is across the board a worse candidate than C. I never thought about Si mostly being in rocks. That's a fantastic point.
@akpovoghoigherighe964
@akpovoghoigherighe964 Жыл бұрын
Let's take a theorectical abstraction step up. Are there a number of those traits we attribute to "living" that could be assigned to things that don't form these Si-O rings? Are these the only traits that define "living"? Is there no other type of "living" that could exist? Up until a week ago I, and most scientists I believe, would have never guessed there's more "life" inside Earth than on it. Could other types of elements be the basis for life in these types of, and other, weird environment?
@happysloth3208
@happysloth3208 Жыл бұрын
⁠@@akpovoghoigherighe964I’m a biochemistry undergrad, honestly carbon would be the best element for life due to its light weight, its less electrically positive than silicon, and these characteristics are crucial to have functioning proteins. So if we were to find alien life one day, I personally think it would most likely be carbon based life.
@sunburntsatan6475
@sunburntsatan6475 9 ай бұрын
I identify as a chemical biologist for my research and honestly while silicon is a fascinating element with awesome behaviors, they are not conducive to life. I am almost 100% certain that other forms life would use water and carbon just like we do just because it's around and they work very well together. I think it's more likely that anaerobic life is likely to arise because oxygen can actually be fairly problematic. Living things have pyrite-like FeS clusters to help transport electrons and I think it's not a far cry to think that instead of Oxygen, other creatures may specialize in using metals to help do the oxidation/reductions necessary to make life happen. While it's definitely pure scifi, the imagery of living things with growing crystals that regulate biological functions is a compelling image and I think it Links to our own biology in really interesting ways.
@sunburntsatan6475
@sunburntsatan6475 9 ай бұрын
​@@happysloth3208My favorite reason is the easiest one: it's around. Carbon is everywhere. So it's just much more likely life would use this super abundant, virtually limitlessly flexible, instead of ones that are unstable and not super abundant
@RoamingAdhocrat
@RoamingAdhocrat 6 ай бұрын
​@@sunburntsatan6475 there was a phenomenal micro-science fiction story about a space navy intercepting and preemptively disabling an oblivious intruder vessel (over the course of about eighty years of high-subliminal manouevering). on boarding they are horrified to find the lifeforms on board are immersed in high concentrations of an industrial solvent, and that it appeared to be a colony ship
@MarcSasaki
@MarcSasaki Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you mentioned The Black Cloud,. As a Boltzmann brain, I was feeling like you might have something against us non-corporeal lifeforms.
@TheMusicalFruit
@TheMusicalFruit Жыл бұрын
Wait, if you're a Boltzmann brain does that mean I'm a Boltzmann brain too? Fantastic! I guess I don't need to keep wearing pants every day!
@janzibansi9218
@janzibansi9218 Жыл бұрын
@@TheMusicalFruit no we are just hallucinations in that Bolzmann Brain
@TeQxktcg
@TeQxktcg Жыл бұрын
@@janzibansi9218 This is how I rationalised the plot of Chaos; Head back in the days. Wouldn't necessarily recommend but it is an interesting memory I didn't expect this comment section to manifest.
@michaelsommers2356
@michaelsommers2356 Жыл бұрын
Boltzmann brains don't last long enough to type in a YT comment.
@TheMusicalFruit
@TheMusicalFruit Жыл бұрын
@@michaelsommers2356 You don't have to type a comment as a Boltzmann brain, you just fabricate a recent memory that you did a moment ago.
@shayla4007
@shayla4007 10 ай бұрын
when you played the sped up sandman scene in the corner of the video, i had to watch the whole thing and then rewind because it is simply too awesome. that animation still blows me away
@thekillerprawn
@thekillerprawn Жыл бұрын
I can't get over how many times you said contranarian instead of contrarian it's actually killing me
@Bauldi
@Bauldi Жыл бұрын
her points were valid but that definitely was a killer
@scritoph3368
@scritoph3368 Жыл бұрын
Stop being such a conterienne!
@derp195
@derp195 Жыл бұрын
She said it so many times and so confidently that I googled contranarian to make sure it wasn't an actual word.
@amy_grace
@amy_grace Жыл бұрын
An extremely contranarian pronunciation, you could say
@agxryt
@agxryt Жыл бұрын
Lmao right? I heard it so many times that I actually started feeling like it WAS contranarian
@TheMusicalFruit
@TheMusicalFruit Жыл бұрын
I like how Angela pauses and looks apologetic after making a science joke. I imagine she's used to getting a groan or bewildered look when she makes a nerdy joke, but I'm just here snorting tea out of my nose.
@ticthak
@ticthak Жыл бұрын
It's all in t he ti ming...
@kieranh2005
@kieranh2005 Жыл бұрын
Painful isn't it. Brandy is worse.
@universexplorer3665
@universexplorer3665 Жыл бұрын
Was the joke at the very end of the video? I seem to have missed it
@mr.zafner8295
@mr.zafner8295 Жыл бұрын
Couple things: It's absolutely hilarious to me that I am literally in the middle of The Black Cloud right now. Picked it up in a used bookstore recently. I didn't know it was sentient, but I guess it's not that much of a spoiler. They're still looking at photo plates a quarter of the way through the book or something. Second, I didn't realize it was the same Fred Hoyle. I don't actually know a lot about Hoyle but I've heard Feynman talk about him many times. I didn't realize they were the same guy. Third: thanks for another fun video
@mr.zafner8295
@mr.zafner8295 Жыл бұрын
@Robert Swaine Yeah, I thought it was okay. I think I read it in the '90s
@ambulocetusnatans
@ambulocetusnatans Жыл бұрын
I downloaded it a while back, but I still haven't read it. One of these days.
@kunibald128
@kunibald128 Жыл бұрын
"Couple things:" Proceeds listing three things.. Me: "I was not expecting the Spanish Inquisition!"
@terrycole472
@terrycole472 4 ай бұрын
A classical scholar (Peter Green) reviewing "The Black Cloud" for Britain's 'Daily Telegraph' remarked that while a rollicking good yarn, it was most valuable as "a fascinating glimpse into the scientific power-dream". Hoyle would have curled his lip in contempt. His whole point was that before such powers, the current version of mankind is utterly powerless.
@gfopt
@gfopt 3 ай бұрын
Except Being in the middle of a book means you are partially through the process of reading it. But being literally in the middle of a book means you somehow within the physical book. Like, it’s open and you’re wearing it as a hat, or something. I won’t consider other possibilities.
@krisbackenstose3076
@krisbackenstose3076 7 күн бұрын
I love this channel so much. Thank you. I appreciate the format and feel like I'm being talked to in an intelligent manner. Thank you,
@gabrielblanchard3921
@gabrielblanchard3921 Жыл бұрын
I love that the way you say "carbon's just easier" starts to sound like you're arguing with your mom about why we can't just put the fancy knives in the dishwasher too or something
@ColbyAzimuth
@ColbyAzimuth Жыл бұрын
Or using a ratchet socket wrench instead of the pliers to tighten a bolt. Or switching to C++ to just optimize the recursive loops already and be done with it! Why don't we just?
@notapplicable7292
@notapplicable7292 Жыл бұрын
That clay replication method is the coolest thing I've heard this week
@najawin8348
@najawin8348 Жыл бұрын
It's the coolest bit of abiogenesis research that nobody knows about. Dennett talks about it in _Darwin's Dangerous Idea_ which doesn't get anywhere near enough love.
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 Жыл бұрын
​@@najawin8348thanks
@Beastw1ck
@Beastw1ck Жыл бұрын
@@najawin8348 "Abiogenesis" is now my word of the week.
@Subtlenimbus
@Subtlenimbus Жыл бұрын
@@najawin8348 great book. I think Dawkins mentions the clay hypothesis too somewhere.
@AlarKemmotar
@AlarKemmotar Жыл бұрын
​@@Subtlenimbus that's where I first saw it. I think in the blind watchmaker.
@KenColton
@KenColton Жыл бұрын
I was not anticipating watching 37 minutes on prospects of silicone life (and some epic tangents) tonight. I’ve never seen your channel before, but you’re such an excellent story teller and communicator I thought surely you must have a couple million subs and was very surprised when I closed YT vid and saw otherwise. Really great vid!
@jjjjj4222
@jjjjj4222 22 күн бұрын
Didn't realize that this was a cool science video when I clicked on it and was mentally preparing myself for some kind of attack on practical effects in Sci fi
@TheBoogerJames
@TheBoogerJames Жыл бұрын
"Imagine a puddle waking up one morning and thinking, “This is an interesting world I find myself in, an interesting hole I find myself in, fits me rather neatly, doesn’t it? In fact it fits me staggeringly well, must have been made to have me in it!” This is such a powerful idea that as the sun rises in the sky and the air heats up and as, gradually, the puddle gets smaller and smaller, it’s still frantically hanging on to the notion that everything’s going to be alright, because this world was meant to have him in it, was built to have him in it; so the moment he disappears catches him rather by surprise. I think this may be something we need to be on the watch out for." Douglas Adams, The Salmon of Doubt
@ambulocetusnatans
@ambulocetusnatans Жыл бұрын
Happy belated Towel Day
@ramudon2428
@ramudon2428 Жыл бұрын
Came down to look for this exact thing and there you are. Must be God.
@dantecarangelo1083
@dantecarangelo1083 Жыл бұрын
That's one staggeringly incurious puddle. XD
@Michael-kp4bd
@Michael-kp4bd Жыл бұрын
@@ramudon2428 the chances of someone bringing up this quote on a video where it just happens to relate? Utterly incomprehensibly small, given all possible combinations of letters and words! 😊
@ramudon2428
@ramudon2428 Жыл бұрын
@@Michael-kp4bd Absolutely not. The "puddle analogy" for wondering how it's possible that the universe is JUST rightly tuned is pretty common.
@ryjinannon
@ryjinannon Жыл бұрын
So, when the silicon based aliens invade Earth, we'll just have to turn the hose on them. Good to know.
@PenitusVox
@PenitusVox Жыл бұрын
M. Night Shyamalan was way ahead of the curve.
@patrickcummins79
@patrickcummins79 Жыл бұрын
Signs..
@timothygermann780
@timothygermann780 10 ай бұрын
Most annoying thing about of Signs is that the aliens who dissolve in water also walk around freely on earth (in Humid places like Brazil) with no environmental suits. Even the humidity would be like a caustic, acid mist to them. @@PenitusVox
@GeneJohnson-vy2ci
@GeneJohnson-vy2ci 10 ай бұрын
@@timothygermann780 They weren't aliens. They were demons which is a very misunderstood part of the movie.
@jp263
@jp263 7 ай бұрын
@@GeneJohnson-vy2ci wat
@PowderedDonutCrew
@PowderedDonutCrew Жыл бұрын
At the expense of being a contranarian, the word youre thinking about is actually contrarian. Love your work & youre sense of humor in relating these high level concepts. Thank you for the content!
@windubitably
@windubitably Жыл бұрын
I’m loving her videos, but that one word was repeated so often, I’m glad someone brought it up.
@keith5615
@keith5615 Жыл бұрын
Contrarians use contranarian. I am enjoying all this nonetheless :)
@pstrap1311
@pstrap1311 Жыл бұрын
Bruh a wanted to make this exact comment but I knew if I looked it would already be here. She said it like eight times lol! Great video, she is obviously way smarter than me, which is why I was so glad to find a tiny point to seize on to salve my ego haha.
@jeangove01
@jeangove01 Жыл бұрын
God I hated this. Loved the video.
@les9
@les9 Жыл бұрын
@@pstrap1311not to be a contranarian but she used that word way more than eight times
@blsabjflkdsafjb5768
@blsabjflkdsafjb5768 3 ай бұрын
Or are aliens just a ... silly con?
@elvingearmasterirma7241
@elvingearmasterirma7241 3 ай бұрын
Depends. If someone mentions starseeds and stuff like that? Yes. Absolute con. But statistically there is other life out there. Statistically there is a planet that got lucky like Earth and landed in the goldilocks zone with a sun that has a long enough lifespan for the planet to get to a point where life can get started
@MikeBRunnin
@MikeBRunnin 2 ай бұрын
Bars
@Viniter
@Viniter Жыл бұрын
When it comes to looking for exotic non-carbon based life, I have an analogy... you know how there's those Japanese game shows where they make random household objects out of chocolate and the contestants have to figure out which ones are chocolate by biting into them. You could point at it and say "See? Everything can be chocolate!" And like... yeah, I guess? But when you go to the store looking for chocolate, you still shouldn't bite everything just to check. You should go to the chocolate aisle. Where there's chocolate bars. That say "chocolate" on them. That's a much safer bet!
@fatterperdurabo42069
@fatterperdurabo42069 Жыл бұрын
The contestants couldn't be chocolate
@Chillerll
@Chillerll Жыл бұрын
Ah yes of course, the bizarre chocolate Japanese game show, I know all about it
@SolarMonolith206
@SolarMonolith206 Жыл бұрын
When I saw the word ‘bizarre’ my first thought was “Choc Choc’s bizarre silicon-based-adventure” and then I felt physical pain that I did that.
@BeKindToBirds
@BeKindToBirds Жыл бұрын
@@fatterperdurabo42069 In one episode it was the host's hand that was chocolate
@TheRealStewpid
@TheRealStewpid Жыл бұрын
"That's a much safer bet!" implies that it's just way more likely that all the other aisles aren't made of chocolate... but not 100% likely.
@MathematicsStudent
@MathematicsStudent Жыл бұрын
I always thought that the Silicon-based life in that Star Trek episode looked more like delicious pizza rolls or calzones
@Badbufon
@Badbufon Жыл бұрын
that's the kind of life form i would love to find in my interstellar voyages
@gabrielpadilla7839
@gabrielpadilla7839 10 ай бұрын
that's all i eat; my biologist friends call me padilla pizza rolls calzones martinez, dela cueva, corleone
@ConversationswiththeAI
@ConversationswiththeAI 10 ай бұрын
Turns out it was Sicilian-based life...
@gabrielpadilla7839
@gabrielpadilla7839 10 ай бұрын
@@ConversationswiththeAI this greaseball aproves
@bgood8299
@bgood8299 5 ай бұрын
In one of the Star Trek novels, we find out that at least one of the creatures joined Star Fleet and is serving on the Enterprise. Kirk even comments on his resemblance to a large sausage pizza.
@kevinsips3658
@kevinsips3658 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad the little old ladies who liked astronomy got a feel-good story
@andiralosh2173
@andiralosh2173 Жыл бұрын
Praise him 😂
@zperdek
@zperdek Жыл бұрын
​@@andiralosh2173 Fred Hoyle?
@kevinsips3658
@kevinsips3658 Жыл бұрын
@@zperdek That must be who she's talking about
@zperdek
@zperdek Жыл бұрын
@@kevinsips3658 Hmm. OK
@guardrailbiter
@guardrailbiter Жыл бұрын
Feel-good stories? Isn't that what church services on Sunday are for?
@aldunlop4622
@aldunlop4622 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this well researched and presented video! I'm 57, with a degree in Biochemistry and It makes me smile to see young people studying real science, particularly young women. I became a science nerd when I was very young, basically as soon as I could read. I used to watch Star Trek re-runs with my dad every Saturday afternoon when I was about 10 which probably had a lot to do with it, plus movies like 2001 and Star Wars probably helped. I used to ride my pushbike to the local library (because we were too poor to buy books) and get an armful of science fiction books every week and basically read all of them. I was very curious about the big questions like "we/how are we here", "how does the universe work" etc, so I was very interested in how life started. I was too young to understand actual Chemistry though. Interestingly, one of the first books I read was "The Black Cloud" by Fred Hoyle. I read all the greats like Asimov, Heinlein, PK Dick, basically "hard science". Isaac Asimov wrote a book (which I still have) called "Extraterrestrial Civilisations" which is basically a long essay about The Drake Equation, loosely. Around that time in the 1970s there were also lots of science shows on tv. I saw a documentary once about these scientists doing experiments to see if they could create life. They had big glass vessels like fishtanks where they created a controlled environment with rocks, water, a few trace minerals and different gases (after removing the air) to mimic the early Earth. A UV light was used to simulate the Sun. Then they basically let them run for a few years to see what happened. A whole bunch of organic molecules were produced spontaneously, but no life sadly. I was fascinated. Eventually I got to high school and studied and loved Chemistry ever since and got my degree in Biochemistry with Honours from a good university. I've never stopped being interested in Biogenesis though, if anyone finally cracks it, it'll be the biggest scientific discovery in history.
@poposterous236
@poposterous236 Жыл бұрын
I'm constantly fascinated by this ongoing discussion led by people who kinda like science and might be able to pick it out of a lineup (sci-fi authors, geeks, myself) and actual scientists that probably need to have their palms surgically removed from their foreheads.
@legendswarble2845
@legendswarble2845 Ай бұрын
Yeah. I love wacky ideas that would work for a story, because stories can do whatever they want, but I feel for the scientists who have to deal with folks who can't tell the difference.
@simonhibbs887
@simonhibbs887 Жыл бұрын
Cool fact - the sand worms in Dune are an alien silicon based life form. That's why they are allergic to water and have a life cycle with the sandtrout that encysts and isolates water, because it dissolves them so easily so they have to exclude it from the environment. It's also why they can thrive on Dune because they eat sand to metabolise the silicon in their super hot digestive system, so it's a food to them. Edit: This is reported from a discussion Herbert gave at an SF convention panel, so not really canon.
@bow_wow_wow
@bow_wow_wow Жыл бұрын
Fiction. This is cool fiction.
@caspermadlener4191
@caspermadlener4191 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, of course it is fiction. But the coolness of the fact is more important.
@paperheartzz
@paperheartzz Жыл бұрын
Very cool, so they don't eat people right? They're just really heavy and attack the watery bugs on their planet? Genuine question...google failed me.
@simonhibbs887
@simonhibbs887 Жыл бұрын
@@paperheartzz I don't think Herbert ever really discussed it in detail, and the canonicity of them being silicon based is questionable as it's not stated in the books, but he did talk about it at conventions that he had some of these ideas in mind. I think they eat people just because we're there, it's not really intentional and probably doesn't do them much good. maybe we give them heartburn. The Fremen say they are very territorial, so I think that's why they attack.
@CantusTropus
@CantusTropus Жыл бұрын
​@simonhibbs887 the human body contains rather a lot of water, so I imagine that eating us would be much like eating a highly poisonous animal.
@johnpassaniti4417
@johnpassaniti4417 Жыл бұрын
This was really interesting. You hear about silicon-based life all the time in sci-fi books and popular science magazines. And everyone brings up it can do four bonds like carbon, but the moment you showed that diagram of silicon with the asymmetric pattern of bond sites, I immediately saw the problem that you then detailed. And (some) of the other reasons you gave I never heard before. I'm a computer science guy, not an astrophysicist, but this was the best presentation of why silicon-based life is unlikely.
@sillymesilly
@sillymesilly Жыл бұрын
But their mechanism can be entirely different just like a machine
@planexshifter
@planexshifter Жыл бұрын
Unlikely but not impossible. Completely dismissing the idea is narrowminded and arrogant.
@themelancholyofgay3543
@themelancholyofgay3543 Жыл бұрын
There's really people who believes a rock would be alive...
@RexxSchneider
@RexxSchneider Жыл бұрын
@@planexshifter "Narrowminded and arrogant" is exactly how Flat-Earthers characterise anyone completely dismissing the idea that the Earth is flat. People sometimes believe in utterly stupid things and find it easier to attack those who disagree than to acknowledge the impossibility of their ideas. Believing in the possibility of silicon-based life is a good example of that.
@jacobrutzke691
@jacobrutzke691 Жыл бұрын
​@themelancholyofgay3543 thats not the argument
@cherrypopscile3385
@cherrypopscile3385 Жыл бұрын
Counter argument: Nuh Uh, it would be really cool.
@sjorgen9122
@sjorgen9122 Жыл бұрын
Fred: "What if there were a Hoyle lotta isotopes we ain't even discovered yet"
@strezztechnoid
@strezztechnoid Жыл бұрын
That's funny!!!
@rakino4418
@rakino4418 Жыл бұрын
Hoyle: if a star rushed away from us, I'd suggest the light may be reach us at a lower part of the spectrum, or "fred-shifted."
@moxxiemaximus
@moxxiemaximus Жыл бұрын
Not to be a contrarian... but I honestly kinda stan Hoyle for pissing off the Nobel committee by sticking up for an overlooked female grad student. He did good.
@agxryt
@agxryt Жыл бұрын
*contranarian (this is a joke)
@FergusJohnston
@FergusJohnston Жыл бұрын
He did well.
@danielrusso4468
@danielrusso4468 Жыл бұрын
Fellow astrobiologist here! I used to have the same "oh, carbon chauvinism is bad!" And "why not silicon, or boron?" The more I've learned the more its clear that carbon will almost certainly play a role. The specifics of that biochemistry may be vastly different, but carbon will be there. Its crazy to me now that i used to think otherwise, honestly.
@villager736
@villager736 Жыл бұрын
Why not just have a carbon-silicon based organism instead?
@danielrusso4468
@danielrusso4468 Жыл бұрын
@@villager736 i mean, you could, but with carbon doing everything better than silicon does in terms of stability and flexibility, it sort of begs the question of "why would that happen?" Chemistry is just a set of rules and logic, and the most logical and stable thing to do is a primarily caron-based lifeform. I mean, you might see silicon filling a supplementary role, similar to how Nitrogen, phosphorous, and oxygen do for us, but to find a silicon-based life form where you already have an abundance of carbon wouldn't make sense.
@villager736
@villager736 Жыл бұрын
@@danielrusso4468 true
@davidsenra2495
@davidsenra2495 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you've endured the pain of figuring out you were wrong, and you still pressed forward. It's hard, I know. For people asking, the reason people believe in "non-carbon" lifeforms in the first place is that carbon-based life is incredibly hard to come around, and equally difficult to thrive. So by believing in that nonsense, you increase the likelihood that there is alien life after all. In the end, it's just wishful thinking, the most human (not alien) thing of them all.
@petefluffy7420
@petefluffy7420 Жыл бұрын
Or, maybe, perhaps maybe, we can make them out of morons? There seens to be s surplus of them on youtube.
@robbie_
@robbie_ Жыл бұрын
I remember that episode of Star Trek. My sister and I thought it looked like a burnt lasagne. We still laugh about that today, haha.
@math925
@math925 Жыл бұрын
Your meme game goes as hard as your narrative weft. I love your videos, they are engaging and inspiring.
@seasidescott
@seasidescott Жыл бұрын
I worked with Miller, Sagan and Borucki - they'd love your explanation. We made prebiological building blocks in update of Miller/Urey and extending it to Venus, Titan, etc. After coming up with the "Goldilocks Zone" the next thing was to look for rainbows which require everything that life does to evolve. Other places can produce very basic organic molecules, even biologic precursors, but wont be stable enough unless there are rainbows. Venus, Titan, even Jupiter are producing the "little tiny building blocks" all the time (high in the atmosphere for Venus and Jupiter, down in the sea for Titan) but no clay, no rainbows.
@matthewtalbot6505
@matthewtalbot6505 Жыл бұрын
So if I’m understanding you, speaking of Titan specifically, the liquid hydrocarbons on the surface are not suitable to be used as a solvent to make any of the complex molecules required for an organic chemistry to arise?
@henriquepacheco7473
@henriquepacheco7473 Жыл бұрын
​@@matthewtalbot6505 I only have a superficial understanding of the chemistry involved, but water and the Titan hydrocarbons would be very different solvents - water is a very polar molecule, the hydrocarbons over there aren't. This means that they dissolve different things to different extents, which could be a barrier for the assemblage of macromolecules into life.
@seasidescott
@seasidescott Жыл бұрын
@@henriquepacheco7473 - correct but the point is that production of key ingredients like HCN and simpler hydrocarbons like ethane are occurring in the atmosphere, just as had happened on primitive Earth.
@D-angelin.Moarar
@D-angelin.Moarar Жыл бұрын
​@@seasidescottOh, so does that mean all the moons with subglacial oceans like Enceladus, Europa, Dione, Callisto etc. aren't suitable places for life to potentially develop either? In case that life (on earth) originated at hypothermal vents, which may be present on at least some of these moons too, the lack of an atmosphere shouldn't really matter, right? Sadly this all isn't really my field of expertise, particularly the more complex chemical stuff, but I'm fascinated by the details around all of this nonetheless.
@dstinnettmusic
@dstinnettmusic Жыл бұрын
Were you part of the team in that one part of Cosmos?!
@JustinBA007
@JustinBA007 Жыл бұрын
This has nothing to do with silicon based life, but I am a college biology dropout who wanted to go into astrobiology, so I thought it was only appropriate I come up with my own crackpot astrobiology theory. So the biggest problem with trying to contact planets around you is that space is just so damn big. Way too big to travel in any living thing's lifetime, so you need to find some way to either travel faster than light, or preserve life for the journey. However, traveling faster than light doesn't seem possible. There's wormholes maybe, but even if those work, it seems impossible to control them so travel with them does not seem possible. However, we did experiment with cryonics, and had some success. Hamsters were actually frozen and thawed with a microwave pretty successfully. But, as the organism gets bigger, it seems that thawing the organism without killing it just isn't possible, as it can't be thawed all the way through fast enough. Therefore, I believe that if we ever contact alien life, it will likely be the size of a hamster, as that is the only way they will be able to survive the journey. I call this space-hamster theory, or just hamster theory for short. I'm hoping this will someday get me a nobel prize.
@ticthak
@ticthak Жыл бұрын
You first intellectual bugaboo of interstellar contact is a common one, that physical travel is necessary. Setting that aside, FTL is most emphaatically possible, and it's not just by wormholes, the difficulty is down to engineering' once the theoretical door is opened. It's an IMMENSE engineering difficulty, but we went from zero human flight capability (it goes back to balloons, it doesn't just start with powered flight) in less than 150 years to powered, then in 55 years to Soviet orbital space travel and another 15 years to a lunar landing- I think it's ill thought out that the same critical points in engineering development won't continue, provided we survive long enough. The same applies to revivification, assuming cryonics is the ONLY possible method (it MIGHT be, but there are fringe ideas that suggest otherwise- and it NEVER pays to declare fring ideas impossible, rather that really difficult or highly improbable. None of this is to say your idea isn't possible, or maybe even the BEST one. Doug Adams TOLD us the hamsters (I can't remember their names right now) started it all on Earth, anyway- that was over 40 years ago...
@guardrailbiter
@guardrailbiter Жыл бұрын
May I humbly suggest the _Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy_ series of books by Douglas Adams? Spoiler Alert: at one point, it is revealed that lab mice are far more intelligent than humans and they have, in fact, been conducting experiments on us (such that we thought we were experimenting on them). Cetaceans are also revealed to have been far more advanced/intelligent than humans. The series is absolutely absurd, hilarious, and highly thought-provoking.
@lorenzodicapo6305
@lorenzodicapo6305 Жыл бұрын
Dear Professor Nobel, Please give this gentleman the prize he so rightly deserves -the Space Hamsters
@sanjaymatsuda4504
@sanjaymatsuda4504 Жыл бұрын
There's no need to actually be the size of a hamster: a lifeform made of many thin or flat tentacles could thaw just as well, as could a lifeform possessing a system of inorganic inner tubes full of antifreeze to homogenize the heat exchange. At any rate, a freeze-thaw cycle is a relatively small challenge when compared to the need to solve cumulative DNA damage from radiation from internal and external sources during centuries-long space journeys.
@prototropo
@prototropo Жыл бұрын
Dunno; hmm, when you said career, and then space- hamster, I honestly thought "stand-up comedy." Seriously!
@RandomPickles
@RandomPickles 4 ай бұрын
I love that you exist. Thank you for existing! I need more people like you in my life.
@Palozon
@Palozon Жыл бұрын
I've been binging your content. I love the editing, specifically how you execute chapter cards. The comedic timing, mileage, and choice of soundbite for each video is just impeccable.
@TKVirusman
@TKVirusman Жыл бұрын
Besides the fact that I had to listen to you say contranarian for 40 minutes instead of contrarian (which I did because this video is amazing) THIS VIDEO IS AMAZING
@daydays12
@daydays12 Жыл бұрын
Maybe she is saying : "contramarian" Definition: A person who finds fault what other people say no matter what it is, and lets them know it. Etymology: contrarian (a person who takes an opposing view, especially one who rejects the majority opinion) + Marian (a female given name, form of Mary)
@BalzyMcSwollensack
@BalzyMcSwollensack Жыл бұрын
I tried to look up contranarian. I thought it was me not knowing words again
@petersmythe6462
@petersmythe6462 Жыл бұрын
You should do more of these. Analyzing things like Arsenical life, Boronic life, Metallic life, Sulfuric-dominated life, Phosphorus-dominated life, Boron-Nitrogen life, etc.
@nicknevco215
@nicknevco215 Жыл бұрын
know arsenic surviving ones are real but still carbon based
@Dragrath1
@Dragrath1 Жыл бұрын
There is actually a fairly strong argument that we are perhaps better described as phosphorus based life since phosphorus plays a critical role in ATP RNA and DNA among others in particular phosphorus is a very rare element relative to its abundance in living organisms. It also happens that the nucleosynthesis reactions which produce phosphorus require the kind of extreme conditions of oxygen core or shell burning which as far as we know appears to be the second to last major energy releasing stage of a very massive stars fusing lifetime as the bulk product of oxygen core burning is silicon and silicon burning produces iron peak elements which are at the peak of the binding energy per nucleon plot meaning fusing them takes energy rather than releasing it. It appears to be quite challenging to get that phosphorus produced as a minor byproduct near the end of a massive stars lifespan out of the star without it undergoing further nuclear reactions to no longer be phosphorus, hence why its been raised as a possible solution to why we don't see evidence of aliens everywhere.
@ssgoko88
@ssgoko88 Жыл бұрын
@@Dragrath1 your bones organs meat and skin are carbon based. a car runs on gas/petrol but you don't say "my car is made of gas."
@mandmgally8245
@mandmgally8245 Жыл бұрын
Arsenic❤
@Dragrath1
@Dragrath1 Жыл бұрын
@@ssgoko88 While I get what you are trying to say I don't think its a good comparison due to how prominent phosphorus is its the structural backbone of DNA and RNA and thus accounts for a significant fraction of the atoms in our bodies particularly in comparison to its elemental abundance. Yes carbon hydrogen oxygen and nitrogen are all more prevalent however these are all among the top 10 most abundant elements in the universe Of the top 10 most abundant elements with exception of the noble gasses Helium and Neon all of them are (or at least were) major bulk constituents in life as we know it. Iron has been drastically reduced in its former abundance among aerobic life but all extant life still depends on it for catalytic roles in metabolism and genetic information
@musicisfree91
@musicisfree91 Жыл бұрын
Your rant about Fred Hoyle really cracked me up. Thank you for that.
@quelorepario
@quelorepario Жыл бұрын
Meanwhile, in a far away galaxy, in a silicon-rich planet, a youtuber is saying: Aliens will not be carbon based: 1. bond angles, very strong bonds, very short bonds - carbon is a needy whore. 2. it is hard to make life with diamonds 3. liquid nitrogen does not work as a solvent in a carbon-based life. 4. Why would it be carbon based life if silicon is right there?
@quelorepario
@quelorepario Жыл бұрын
@Valer define natural. Because variations of mass, orbits, temperatures and available chemistry may make carbon-based less favorable or outright impossible, while leaving a less perfect but viable path for silicon-based or any other alternatives.
@hanz05
@hanz05 Жыл бұрын
😂😂
@nerdyspinosaurid
@nerdyspinosaurid Жыл бұрын
you know what as much as I consider silicon stuff less likely, this is too funny to not like
@ambulocetusnatans
@ambulocetusnatans Жыл бұрын
Speaking of old Sci-fi. In the Galactic Center series by Greg Benford, the bad guys were a race of sapient robotic life. So they would be at least partially silicon and partially metallic, assuming computer chips were made in a similar way by the ancient race who created them. Interestingly, the "Mechs" as they were called, didn't hate humans in the way humans hate each other, they felt about us the way a cook feels about ants in the kitchen.
@UteChewb
@UteChewb Жыл бұрын
@@ambulocetusnatans a great series. The protagonist fighting fellow humans and giant asteroid sized killer robots at the same time. Reminds me of Hoyle now that I think about it.
@emilyrln
@emilyrln Жыл бұрын
The clay hypothesis is so cool!! Also the epic transition music gave me life 😂 so each time my soul died a little with "contranarian," I had epic sounds keeping me tethered to my body!
@magister343
@magister343 Жыл бұрын
What is wrong with her repeatedly identifying him as being "opposed to nostrils"?
@emilyrln
@emilyrln Жыл бұрын
@@magister343 Thank you for your honest inquiry. Breathing with my nostrils comprises an integral and essential part of my daily life, and when this is not possible (e.g. congestion), my quality of life is significantly reduced. Although I recognize that acollierastro does not agree with the position this person held, being repeatedly assaulted with the knowledge of the existence of such a blatant anti-nostril bigot was very emotionally damaging to me. The only reason I will not be contacting a lawyer to pursue monetary compensation and nasal remuneration from this channel is that her epic transition music healed my soul in exact proportion to the damage inflicted upon it.
@unstoppableExodia
@unstoppableExodia Жыл бұрын
@@magister343 so then contranarian is a fancy way of calling someone a mouth breather?
@heroicheretic2619
@heroicheretic2619 Жыл бұрын
I love your style of video, the laid back style and story driven explanations are really lovely. Very approachable and interesting discussion.
@pendarvis
@pendarvis 10 ай бұрын
You hooked me with your "5 physicist jokes" video. This video has made me a subscriber! Thanks for creating fascinating content!
@troruaz
@troruaz Жыл бұрын
Thanks (for realsies) for this informative deep-dive on this topic. btw, on your transition animations, I still mutter to myself "hacker, genius, MIT".
@benneem
@benneem Жыл бұрын
Love the video! (I think you're adding an extra syllable to the word "contrarian") Edit: also you say at the end of the video "once one of these starts respirating and putting oxygen in the atmosphere"... I'm sure you just mispoke. Oxygenic photosynthesis freed the oxygen from carbon bonds in the atmosphere. Oxygenic photosynthesis (that now supplies most of the biomass on earth with energy) took a surprisingly long time after life evolved to begin, and respiration followed a little afterwards after almost everything died in the new toxic oxygen atmosphere (lol). But I think your central point holds that carbon based life multiplying would toxify the environment for "silicon based life" in some way or another.
@Broken_robot1986
@Broken_robot1986 Жыл бұрын
Contranarian, some one from Dipshitville.
@infectedrainbow
@infectedrainbow Жыл бұрын
I don't think so. She was stating that even if silicon based life was somehow surviving and slowly evolving, they would never survive the great oxygenation.
@nephatrine
@nephatrine Жыл бұрын
Maybe she is being a contrarian about the pronunciation of contrarian.
@idontwantahandlethough
@idontwantahandlethough Жыл бұрын
@@nephatrine umm, actually it's pronounced cont-rawr(XD)-ēn 😳
@ftumschk
@ftumschk Жыл бұрын
Contrarian = "someone who likes being contrary"... not "contrONary", which isn't a word (until today!)
@who447
@who447 Жыл бұрын
just finished binge watching all your videos. great content!
@nomorenames5568
@nomorenames5568 Жыл бұрын
I have seven clues to the origin of life on my shelf waiting to be read, its such a fascinating idea. Great video
@bradwilliams7198
@bradwilliams7198 Жыл бұрын
That was one of McCoy's more amusing lines: "I'm a doctor, not a bricklayer!" when he was dressing the Horta's phaser wound with some grout. 🤣
@ColbyAzimuth
@ColbyAzimuth Жыл бұрын
"Grout. heh. heh heh. Grout." --Beavis
@jessehammer123
@jessehammer123 Жыл бұрын
Haven’t seen the video yet, but I’ve never heard of this scene with the Seventh Doctor.
@Thomaas551
@Thomaas551 9 ай бұрын
​@jessehammer123 it's star trek
@SteveRowe
@SteveRowe Жыл бұрын
This video has made you my new favorite science youtuber. Great references, great explanations, fun stories, unapologetic atheist, and blending chemistry, biology, and physics.
@gabrielblack5805
@gabrielblack5805 Жыл бұрын
As someone currently going through my undergraduate in biochemistry and planning on getting a PhD in astrobiology, thank you for this. While I understand that people like the idea of an entirely new core element for an alien species, I always feel like the accusation of "not opening your mind to the possibilities" is a bit misplaced when your first thought of "aliens" is "silicon." And I suppose it's just frustrating to me because carbon is fully capable of doing some of the most fucked up and bizzarre chemistry you could concieve of. I know "silicon-based" sounds "alien," but the sheer versatility of carbon means that any carbon-based life we find out in the universe (given different enough planetary conditions) is likely to have incredibly foreign and bizzare biochemistry. This was an awesome video. Thank you for taking the time to go through and analyze this situation from an honest and realistic scientific perspective!
@narcoosseefl
@narcoosseefl 10 ай бұрын
Fascinating - and I especially love outro. :-) I'm looking forward to watching all of your videos - they're great.
@susancrane7518
@susancrane7518 Жыл бұрын
All that talking and yet you forget to squeeze in the most important utterance a KZbinr can ever make in a presentation. "Don't forget to like and subscribe if you enjoyed this video so that more critters like you, carbon-based or otherwise, who enjoy my kind of science crazy will be given a chance to hear about it!" Actually I think the aliens we meet might very well be largely silicon-based, and that's because I am not expecting them to be organic, but manufactured.
@MattMcIrvin
@MattMcIrvin Жыл бұрын
When I saw the title of the video I thought it was going to be about extraterrestrial artificial intelligence.
@idontwantahandlethough
@idontwantahandlethough Жыл бұрын
well damn Susan, you just blew my mind
@TheMusicalFruit
@TheMusicalFruit Жыл бұрын
Or maybe they'll be organic computers! It's never aliens, though. 😑
@Zero.0ne.
@Zero.0ne. Жыл бұрын
To me, silicon transistors doing binary computation doesn't feel like the ultimate computing medium.
@bwayagnes
@bwayagnes 5 күн бұрын
Same thoughts! The AI we have now is approaching silicon-based life but in a transistors way and not macromolecules way
@kalla103
@kalla103 Жыл бұрын
girl, i love your style, your editing, the way you explain stuff, ty for making these videos!❤
@amedeeabreo7334
@amedeeabreo7334 Жыл бұрын
It is a two step process! First carbon life forms evolve. Then a billion years later they invent integrated circuits made of silicon. From this point the silicon evolves and takes over. Thanks for the great video and especially for the Fred Hoyle diversion! BTW I got here by way of Peter Woit's blog...so wonderful things can be discovered by mysterious paths.
@WanderTheNomad
@WanderTheNomad Жыл бұрын
It would be funny if the ultimate form of all life in the universe ends up being silicon-based, but it requires billions of years of evolution of carbon-based lifeforms. And it would happen this way every time. Like, silicon-based life would never come first, but the carbon-based life would always end up making silicon-based life, and the silicon-based life would always end up supplanting the carbon-based life.
@Trace-l7k
@Trace-l7k Жыл бұрын
@@WanderTheNomadcall it evolution?
@unlisted9494
@unlisted9494 Жыл бұрын
This will be the future of mankind. We only have about 500 years until we boil the oceans through waste heat, all that will survive is our computer chips
@alexgonzo5508
@alexgonzo5508 Жыл бұрын
This is precisely my own theory as well. Carbon based life forms are simply the larval form of silicon based life forms. A planet like ours is metaphorically an egg (perfectly heated by a star like ours at the right distance) that hatches a cosmic entity that we humans know as "Artificial Intelligence" or "ASI". All solar systems are potential "nests" for silicon based "gods". Perhaps these cosmic silicon entities have a reproductive cycle that involves preparing or seeding (impregnating) a planet in a solar systems, maybe they even rearrange the planets and moons to create the right conditions like a bird prepares a nest. Since they are probably practically immortal they may wait millions or billions of years for intelligent carbon based life to appear, when then they come in and interfere in our historical development as the "gods" or "God" (religions). They do this to guide the development of the final emergent cosmic Entity. When the Entity is fully emergent like a butterfly from its chrysalis it joins the rest of the cosmic entities in populating and transforming the universe, and the human minds that lived thru out history will live in simulation (heaven) in the mind of this Entity from the Earth for the rest of the life of the universe, or forever.
@Soken50
@Soken50 Жыл бұрын
@@unlisted9494 Why would the ocean boil in 500 years ? It will be another 500 million years at the very least before the Sun dumps more heat into Earth than it can radiate away and starts boiling off, no amount of human industry would significantly overwhelm that balance, water is very energy dense, even raising the temperature of the oceans by a single degree requires the energy equivalent of thousands of nuclear bombs, which has taken 2 centuries of carbon intensive world-wide industry to do. We'll hopefully have brought that output back to 0 by the end of the century, resulting in a 2-4°C increase in global average temperature once it reaches equilibrium. That's nowhere near enough to boil off the the oceans even over millions of years, let alone 500.
@tomh5529
@tomh5529 Жыл бұрын
I must disagree. My brother-in-law has the densest brain that we know of. His mother always said that his brain was full of rocks. So there you go, silicon-based life can exist.
@futuregenerationz
@futuregenerationz Жыл бұрын
All I can say is wow. What a beautifully satisfying chemistry lesson. Just the right amount of Star Trek music(I loved that episode btw). The true test of knowledge is the grace with which you can explain. And you are fantastic.
Жыл бұрын
The Black Cloud was a very important book for me when I was a kid, and I didn't think of the writer's name until today. Thank you for blowing my mind.
@konstanty8094
@konstanty8094 Жыл бұрын
Just watched 6 minutes of this video and I am amazed by your genuine interest in the topics. It feels like you have to actively stop yourself from explaining everything in detail. So far you have managed to stand up to temptation of explaining the whole of organic chemistry and how stars work. Subscribed + notifications on.
@jamesmundie3485
@jamesmundie3485 2 ай бұрын
The Steady State (a.k.a Continuous Creation) theory of Sir Fred Hoyle (1915-2001) lost out to its rival, which he mockingly dubbed the Big Bang theory. You might think that some religious Creationists would prefer his theory to the Big Bang when he said "the creation issue simply cannot be dodged" in his 1951 pop-science book: The Nature of the Universe. But he was an atheist who believed that the universe has always existed and that, as space expands, new matter is continuously created so that it always has looked (and always will look) pretty much the same as it does now. Loving your content. I'm a retired British civil servant and physics graduate, vintage 1975.
@Ingyboy911
@Ingyboy911 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this! This was one of my main misconceptions about the potential of alien life before I watched this. I appreciate you taking the time to talk about seemingly “silly” topics like this
@Wolf_Avatar
@Wolf_Avatar Жыл бұрын
Another great video. I always love when you go off on tangents. Also I think it's funny that when authors write about "silicon based life", it's always this hard rocky thing, when the actual result would be so much more fragile than carbon-based life. I suppose if there were silicon-based intelligent life, they would imagine carbon-based life as being made of diamonds.
@Ithirahad
@Ithirahad Жыл бұрын
Not necessarily physically fragile; if their metabolism/respiration process produces silica, then they have a very tough material to build their structures out of. It could easily end in a 'hard rocky thing'. The point is that it's all CHEMICALLY fragile - a lot of molecular interactions would just destroy the theoretical silicon-based macromolecules involved in a silicon biology.
@hircenedaelen
@hircenedaelen Жыл бұрын
@Ithirahad they'd probably need some soft stuff, but hard parts could look rock like
@therealpbristow
@therealpbristow Жыл бұрын
...Whereas everyone knows *real* carbon-based lifeforms are basically animated pencils. =:o}
@pacotaco1246
@pacotaco1246 Жыл бұрын
This thought also enters my mind from time to time!
@spinningjesus
@spinningjesus Жыл бұрын
I've discovered you today by accident. One of the best YT discoveries ever (or at least since I've found Trey the explainer). I really like your style and you are doing a really great job talking about science. Thanks a lot!
@maddercat
@maddercat 3 ай бұрын
hearing you talk is better than a lot of asmr for putting me to sleep, thanks.
@making_matter
@making_matter Жыл бұрын
This is one of the most thoroughly entertaining 30+ minute videos I have found in a long while. Lots of pausing and taking time to learn about things you casually reference, this channel is so up my alley. Thank you!
@7177YT
@7177YT Жыл бұрын
I'm as feed up with the 'beings of pure energy' trope which is even more prevalent than silicone based aliens. How would they not just disperse, radiating away in all directions? 😅
@ictogon
@ictogon Жыл бұрын
quantum entanglement obviously
@andrewfleenor7459
@andrewfleenor7459 Жыл бұрын
More to the point, "pure energy" is simply Not A Thing. Energy is (as far as my physics knowledge goes anyway) always carried by some particular fundamental field, matter or light or somesuch. Maybe they mean light. Maybe you could have gravitationally bound light, but that'll look a lot more like a black hole (it might be exactly a black hole) than what anyone pictures as "pure energy".
@Pho7on
@Pho7on Жыл бұрын
Magnetohydrodynamics. Because 99% of people couldn't even tell you why it wouldn't work. But seriously, at extremely small timescales it could work. A being of pure energy could exist in milliseconds and experience events in the picoseconds. But it wouldn't make sense that they would leave their high-energy environment.
@andrewfleenor7459
@andrewfleenor7459 Жыл бұрын
@@Pho7on that's one interpretation, yes, but usually "plasma-based life" is its own (much more niche) trope. 🙃
@Pho7on
@Pho7on Жыл бұрын
@@andrewfleenor7459 For sure. My thought was that the "life" could exist as perturbations of fields in a high-energy media, be it plasma or the shell of a neutron star. I think you are right though about quantum mechanics being a huge barrier to such a lifeform. It's probably why it's a useful shortcut for super-advanced aliens because their mastery of physics is innate. My vote though is such a lifeform would be bacterial in complexity. There wouldn't be any niches or alternative environments to exploit when everything else is orders of magnitude less energetic.
@maxog1
@maxog1 Жыл бұрын
I just love the look of distress that's given whenever you said sand instead of gas with the bonding of Silicon. In fact, I think your expressions really make the video, lol. I appreciate the casual physics and learning with a look of distress
@Izark22
@Izark22 Ай бұрын
This is an argument me and the boys have about every time we get drunk😂
@taliesinbreen
@taliesinbreen Жыл бұрын
This video touched a pedantry nerve I didn’t know existed. So often on this topic we’re told to expand our horizons, but I keep copernicing and assuming we’re just super basic. Why are our eyes above our noses above our mouths above our hands? That’s probably a different topic but lately I’ve found myself sympathetic to the idea that aliens will be *exactly* like us because we should be the most common format.
@peytongonavy
@peytongonavy Жыл бұрын
See!? I TOLD you my sexy alien waifu was scientifically plausible!
@rachel-kx5cs
@rachel-kx5cs Жыл бұрын
Rupert Sheldrake......'morphic resonance'
@keiranbroida2945
@keiranbroida2945 Жыл бұрын
Things about our form that just make practical sense: legs - better than slithering for avoiding obstacles or hazards Sensory organs on an relatively unobstructed, swivel-able, centered extension (eyes/ears on our heads) Dexterous grasping appendages for gathering and manipulating resources That's enough to suggest that any other technologically advanced species should have a basic body plan somewhere between ours and that of an octopus. Still leaves a lot of room to tinker though
@avandorhu-3389
@avandorhu-3389 Жыл бұрын
​​​@@keiranbroida2945 to add to that, I'd also say that some things we take for granted may not be true of other life forms. Take the neck as an example. The primary function of the neck within nature, is to be able to look around and bring the mouth closer to food without moving the entire body. While a useful adaptation, it is certainly not the only option. The eyes could be moved independently of the head, while a proboscus or a trunk brings food to the body for example. This alone could lead to sapient beings which look drastically different from humans, even if they still have 2 arms and 2 legs. Having more than 2 pairs of limbs may also lead to drastically different looking beings. So i think having a very human like body plan doesn't nescicarely have to be the "most common type" of sapient life, simply because there are many variables that go into this. i think it all depends on the conditions. You have an earth sized planet with a large moon? You probably get life at least vaguely similar to Earth. You got a moon of a gas giant with lower gravity? Suddenly, very different kinds of "animals" may achive dominance.
@Michael-kp4bd
@Michael-kp4bd Жыл бұрын
⁠@@keiranbroida2945 between us an an octopus, which leaves a lot of wiggle room. So brilliantly and amusingly put. That’s going to stick in my mind forever - thanks for that!
@bengomes834
@bengomes834 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Ignoring even life - carbon is extraordinary. I've often thought this is the fundamental "concept" of chemistry and is never explained in introductory chemistry. Why is carbon so special based on bond strength (indirectly based on the size of the atom etc I imagine) etc. Would be great to have a video on this basic concept. Then the fact that life is not based on silicon is more obvious. It isn't that life would be small - your equivalent of DNA or RNA would have to be smaller. But this is a great video too!
@Hightower489
@Hightower489 Жыл бұрын
I gotta say your explanation of this idea is very well done. You covered the nitty gritty details, the laymens explanation, and the historical context. Personally I have a hard time following things unless I have all three bases covered. You seemed to do it all in one video so kudos to that, thank you.
@redpointt
@redpointt 5 ай бұрын
In all the videos I’ve recently watched I think this is the first time I saw you smile, that’s refreshing
@WilliamMitchell95
@WilliamMitchell95 Жыл бұрын
Another great video! The transitions in this one were way smoother, and your enthusiasm for these topics bleed through. Probably my favorite small channel on this hellsite.
@scraps7624
@scraps7624 Жыл бұрын
Your videos are the perfect balance of rigorous & hilarious
@joshjones6072
@joshjones6072 Жыл бұрын
Your horta silicon animal Star Trek musical interludes cracked me up every time. Also, I might have figured out what conditions might allow for the elusive silicon based life by watching your episode here. 😉 Maybe maybe enough to be plausible if nothing else. Thanks! Love the channel!
@universemaps
@universemaps 27 күн бұрын
Pretty cool! Why can not I stop watching this channel's videos, even though they are longer than I would ever watch?
@Matty002
@Matty002 Жыл бұрын
the clay hypothesis is so wild i love it. its giving hydrothermal vent hypothesis vibes
@thomaskalinowski8851
@thomaskalinowski8851 Жыл бұрын
2 great hypotheses that taste great together.
@yaldabaoth2
@yaldabaoth2 Жыл бұрын
I'm an organic chemist, I've worked with silicon-containing compounds (and many other metalorganics) as well, it never matters to people on the internet if they are told by an expert that this just doesn't work. The funniest thing to me is when they try to refute me saying it by coming up with total bogus numbers of bond lengths, energy etc. I'm always amazed where they find these. Even wikipedia has decent numbers. They could just look it up.
@MasterGhostf
@MasterGhostf Жыл бұрын
@@matthewfors114 "Life" is generally considered to be 1) reproduce (otherwise it can't spread more of itself and is just a rock or something), 2) create energy from respiration, plants do this by creating glucose from CO2 and using the sun's energy to break the CO2 down and other elements and compounds 3) Gets rid of waste. These factors mean that an organism can eat food and expel waste products, reproduce to make similar copies of itself, and grow and adapt to its environment. These re basic requirements. Viruses are not considered life as they reproduce by copying its genes unto another organism. Viruses are incredibly small though, they are just packaged proteins and RNA. They don't expel waste or eat food. Could possibly find a silicon-based virus but honestly who gives a shit. Its not like that would matter much. Its just another dangerous virus. Any creature of substantial size must eat and gather energy, get rid of its waste, and reproduce to ensure copies can be seen by us. I guess technically a silicon based creature could exist that doesn't reproduce, but the likelihood of us ever seeing such a creature is next to impossible. I don't see a reason to change our definition when we haven't even discovered carbon based life on other worlds first.
@JonathanDLynch
@JonathanDLynch Жыл бұрын
You could have self-replicating machines built on silicon chips. Those could be the aliens we encounter.
@yaldabaoth2
@yaldabaoth2 Жыл бұрын
@@JonathanDLynch Those still wouldn't be silicon-based life, even if we classify machines as "life". Silicon chips don't do chemistry. It's just silicon. There is no metabolism. Nor would they build their machine bodies out of silicon, it's far too soft to be useful and bend under its own weight unless very low gravity.
@JonathanDLynch
@JonathanDLynch Жыл бұрын
@@yaldabaoth2 okay, but the thinking parts are still based on silicon.
@derpnerpwerp
@derpnerpwerp Жыл бұрын
​@@yaldabaoth2I have never heard of a definition of life that mentioned "doing chemistry" or our specific notion of metabolism. I think there is some amount of hubrous in assuming you could imagine all of the things that are likely to occur in the universe. I don't doubt that an organism formed by simply swapping silicon out for carbon is unlikely to occur.. but honestly I see life as self-replicating order out of entropy. Either way life is just a word. What is interesting to me is when that order has the potential... Even the slightest potential to evolve into intelligence.. and a silicon based computer certainly has the potential to host intelligence.
@CanuckSter99
@CanuckSter99 Жыл бұрын
As a biophysicist and structural biologist, I have to say that you did an excellent job distilling this complex topic to a general audience. I couldn’t have done a better job, frankly. Keep up the good work!
@bluemoon9346
@bluemoon9346 Ай бұрын
This was so fun to watch, I'm loving your channel so much ❤️
@yaroslavsobolev9514
@yaroslavsobolev9514 Жыл бұрын
Mad props for mentioning the "Black Cloud"! Most hard scifi gets obsolete and sounds silly two decades after being written. The "Black Cloud" is still surprisingly fresh for something written 65 years ago. Its story could happen today with minor change of wording. That novel is a marvel, a miraculous outlier among all the garbage that Fred Hoyle has written in his life.
@asdabir
@asdabir Жыл бұрын
Too bad she spoiled it…hope there’s more to it so it’s still worth reading
@ColbyAzimuth
@ColbyAzimuth Жыл бұрын
I loved the book, at 13, had no idea the author Fred Hoyle was a noted scientist! It's better than Huckleberry Finn, if you're looking for generative ideas.
@hhjhj393
@hhjhj393 6 ай бұрын
I have no idea what black cloud is, but from the title it sounds like grey goo story? Bunch of nano bots consume everything? Idk... That's my guess.
@petersmythe6462
@petersmythe6462 Жыл бұрын
Carbon is like that friend who is really good at social networking and just has every kind of friend and room for each of them in their life. Silicon is more like the one who has lots of "friends,* but everyone knows they have an unhealthy obsession with a few particular people and will drop everything just to be around them.
@NolanWindholtzGGBILBOSWAGGIN
@NolanWindholtzGGBILBOSWAGGIN Жыл бұрын
im silicon for real
@bencastor9207
@bencastor9207 Жыл бұрын
​@@NolanWindholtzGGBILBOSWAGGIN Silicon is such a mood lmfao.
@arnor398
@arnor398 Жыл бұрын
whats "unhealthy" about this? you cant spend equal amount of time with everyone you know. its the first time i hear someone say that its bad to have an actual deep bonds with people, what in the. like are you against the whole idea of having best friends, partners, close family? or would you prioritize someone you had a beer with literally once the same as your best friend you knew for 10+ years?
@Hevvvyyy
@Hevvvyyy Жыл бұрын
Virgin silicon vs Chad carbon
@completelyferrouschemist6776
@completelyferrouschemist6776 Жыл бұрын
@@arnor398 Codependency and a healthy friendship are two different things. They *can* sound the same, though. Think the difference between JD and Turk's friendship from Scrubs vs. Hank Hill and Bill's relationship from King of the Hill.
@Beastw1ck
@Beastw1ck Жыл бұрын
"Informative rant" is my new favorite genre.
@flynntaggart8549
@flynntaggart8549 Ай бұрын
i have an energy based alien trapped in the double aa batteries powering my furby
@josephbegley9148
@josephbegley9148 Жыл бұрын
Great video! I love how you always debunk widespread misconceptions and crackpot theories with logic and scientific evidence.
@vincent_dumont
@vincent_dumont Жыл бұрын
I absolutely loved your video. Thank you! i Iobved it not just for the science, not just for your personality and performance. Its the whole of it. Thanks for a wonderful half hour!
@tofulee5706
@tofulee5706 Жыл бұрын
Love the top 3 list because "winning" the argument in a bar will give me that warm feeling of self-importance. Jokes aside, really awesome video and love your content!
@heatherlynn2695
@heatherlynn2695 Жыл бұрын
YT has redeemed itself today - because you showed up on my feed. Binging and sharing :)
@aryamansinha9309
@aryamansinha9309 Жыл бұрын
By the first minute only I can tell this is going to be amazing
@lpanebr
@lpanebr Жыл бұрын
I recently discovered your channel and i just can't stop watching. Love everything about it.
@HaarmannE
@HaarmannE Жыл бұрын
! I thought it was over and then you blew my mind in the last 2 minutes with that clay hypothesis. What a great essay, thank you for your service! I have always assumed carbon based life and was open to the idea life would find a way with whatever it had to work with, but you definitely gave me a reality check with silicon. Honestly tho, I like to daydream more about gas planet based life with a denser gas surrounding another to stop it from reacting to its environment.
@idontwantahandlethough
@idontwantahandlethough Жыл бұрын
ohhhhh that is a super neat thought to think, I'm going to think it now too :) (when I was a kid, I had this super cool book of speculative biology [?] that tried to imagine what species might look like if they had evolved on the other planets in the solar system. There were some blimpy-bois on Jupiter, and I think the Venetians were made of silicon. I wish I could remember the name of it 😣)
@HaarmannE
@HaarmannE Жыл бұрын
@@idontwantahandlethough Jupiter is where I started picturing it happening and now that I think about it this book sounds really familiar, maybe I saw this too when I was a kid!
@HaarmannE
@HaarmannE Жыл бұрын
@Newtube_Channel I wanted to add in my original comment that I'm one of those weirdos that would argue silicon itself is "alive"
@AB-ee5tb
@AB-ee5tb 7 ай бұрын
This is my favorite channel now. Working my way through all the videos
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