Thanks for providing content that doesn't feel like a waste of time.
@SamtheIrishexanАй бұрын
Yeah this is like 3 weeks of going to bed!
@oguzhan9424Ай бұрын
Approximately, yes! 🥰
@KaizenSteelDrumsАй бұрын
I'm on day 3
@jonathanestridge8490Ай бұрын
I really hope KZbinrs don't take offense to this lol. I can only put a video on to fall asleep to if I'm actually interested in it
@Dice_0neАй бұрын
@@jonathanestridge8490they get clicks and watch time, i guess they are fine with that xD
@ronnieripzАй бұрын
Bro I can’t wait
@P.BarnesTaserАй бұрын
I work night shift so I have trouble falling asleep during the day. Thank you Kozmo for making it easier with the extremely high quality and in depth videos!!
@tonybuckley6413Ай бұрын
@@P.BarnesTaser worked them too for years..not nice, feel your pain
@stewartharries6334Ай бұрын
@@tonybuckley6413
@wezc940928 күн бұрын
Snap
@aboutmandiraАй бұрын
Why do I always love to watch these documentaries when I'm feeling low?
@tonybuckley6413Ай бұрын
know what you mean, maybe cause even when feeling low somehow we know we are connected to something so much bigger than us that we belong to it , we are after all made of the elements of stars gone super nova
@crake345Ай бұрын
Because it makes you realize how small our lives are compared to the scale and age of the universe
@alexs1984Ай бұрын
It redimension our problems
@jefflaitila9799Ай бұрын
When you understand the vastness and unlimited potential of the Universe, all of our personal problems and accomplishments suddenly are put into proper perspective. We are nothing more than the Universe contemplating itself.
@kzeichАй бұрын
Yeah I think that's it, what everyone else has said. It works, it's therapeutic. Cures loneliness, sadness and daily strife. I also read civil war diaries. Perspective. Everything's going to be okay :-)
@jimwinchester339Ай бұрын
So the universe is, in a nutshell, unimaginably colossal.
@GreenTeaViewerАй бұрын
It's pretty big I guess
@struttux5156Ай бұрын
Understatement
@jamesdolan4042Ай бұрын
Why, were you not expecting the Universe to be so colossal? I am just wondering how Homo Saapians can garner such amazingly detailed information, and correspondingly make precise micro and macro deductions and behaviors, from a vast array of miniature and massive mobile stars and planets so, so far away. I, for my part have a severe knowledge deficiency not just in this, but many areas of science and life.
@johnbrimmer940329 күн бұрын
Wow, cool. Ive never imagined infinity inside a nutshell b4. Thx what kind of nut does your universe live inside? Mines a sloan wallnut
@Th3Wick3dOn3YT25 күн бұрын
Forget the size of the Universe, Just our Solar System is freaking mind-boggling Colossal , now think about how colossal is the Galaxy. No need to even think about the universe. We haven't even mapped our entire ocean floor on our own planet!. AND we don't see that as "Colossal"
@phillipschaber7836Ай бұрын
New Kosmo video means going to bed early like it’s Christmas. These videos have always reminded me of what discovery and science channel were before reality tv took over and I love it. 😃
@mkhanman12345Ай бұрын
Damn, you dudes don’t even discuss the subject. What does your bed have to do with anything
@phillipschaber7836Ай бұрын
@@mkhanman12345 because when you have 2 kids, telling everyone you're "going to bed early" you're really just giving yourself some alone time so you can watch KZbin videos. 🤣
@ryanundead1383Ай бұрын
@@phillipschaber7836💯 absolutely
@joeberliner109Ай бұрын
I swear I'm the only one that watches these when I'm not trying to sleep. How do people sleep with the existential nihilism videos like this cause.
@chrisl2366Ай бұрын
Your not the only one buddy.
@jbstepchildАй бұрын
I use these for my treatments an ive woken up saying were all going to die more times than not an my nurse sits with me while I habe my ketamine induced panick attack it's great I have no idea what's happening an no real memory of it but good times so I'm told
@FragnetАй бұрын
Like a baby 👶
@b3n5-ck7fsАй бұрын
I find having hope too energizing
@JVP_thephobicАй бұрын
I find it gives me crazy space themed dreams. 🥰🥰
@mintmallow4503Ай бұрын
We are not aware of how incredible of a thing we are living in
@coryhardcastle3031Ай бұрын
I think that everyday..we live on aball of rock ...floating..spinning...flying thru space...truth truly is stranger than fiction
@mintmallow4503Ай бұрын
@@coryhardcastle3031I totally agree
@jamiethomas4079Ай бұрын
@@coryhardcastle3031Imagine being in a car that can accelerate 0-60 in 2.7secs. Thats a constant 1g. Thats how much force is pulling down on you constantly everyday. You can also temporarily overcome the force of the entire mass of the earth by simplying jumping. Have you seen the giant rock flying across the sky everyday?
@alexdiggins1372Ай бұрын
Elements forged billions of years ago, trillions of kilometers away, self assembled to form your waking mind.
@quick_ness101612 күн бұрын
Man I think about this everyday people just don't realize the beauty of our planet, solar system, galaxy, universe Ect it's absolutely incredible !!
@witchsteticianАй бұрын
Waited until tonight to watch this because i just washed all my linens and now I'm able to snuggle down into a fresh clean bed and be carried away into dreamland with my favorite content narrated by my favorite voice 💖 absolutely glee is what I'm feeling
@JVP_thephobicАй бұрын
VIBE
@k4mik4zeTVАй бұрын
2,5h+ hour's of goodness... I know to what I'm falling asleep tonight 😊 Thanks Kosmo!
@kerrywayne2010Ай бұрын
Same
@meppie1922Ай бұрын
That is exactly where I wanna stay for a while, far from the crazy.
@rachkate76Ай бұрын
I can’t wait to go out there and explore away from this insane place.
@johnbrimmer9403Ай бұрын
@@rachkate76they say the universe is inside us, i agree, but still i would also love to hop on a human built spaceship with my dog and cruze 😊 i really hope we will somenight soon
@oguzhan9424Ай бұрын
What a treat! A nearly 3 hour upload of Kosmo! Thank you very very much! 🥰
@damonciccozzi4764Ай бұрын
Yaaaas! What a fantastic surprise to see another one of your epic videos in my inbox! It’s a long one and I am so glad you put in such amazing time and effort into the final product as I absolutely adore them. You’re one of the best space channels on KZbin should be very proud.
@1nvertedRealityАй бұрын
I've watched a lot of your vids while operating what is in this video at 12:21. 10hr shifts on long targets in the read out room, observers reducing their data remotely, on campus, detached from it. Climbing the steps and ladders inside, in the dark, to the top of that dome listening to my machinery humming its tune, peering out into space right along with the telescope like old friends stargazing together. Not sure which I love more, the universe or the machinery that lets us witnesses it. Keep making great content so that when I retire or pass away there will be no shortage of people to take my place.
@Nexxuxx18 күн бұрын
How do I do this job? Genuinely like what are the steps to take to get into that field? That sounds like a dream job, machines and stars
@1nvertedReality16 күн бұрын
@@Nexxuxx I've got a strong mechanical, electrical background. Was in the sign industry before this. As a telescope tech the primary ability is the ability to figure things out, not already having some superior skill. All telescope operations was OJT for the first year, all graveyard shifts. Most of these jobs are through the state universities. Check their employment websites. Positions don't open up often. Linux experience helps, PC skills. The job ad read like they were looking for Einstein to apply as a lowly technician, ignore it and apply anyways if you have good mechanical, electrical and problem solving skills.
@1nvertedReality16 күн бұрын
@@Nexxuxx We have techs that aren't strong in those things but they have some other skill from networking to coding. Almost any tech skill could get you through the door.
@Zer0_Cool69Ай бұрын
I can’t wait until we can catch up to the voyager probes
@daddustАй бұрын
It doesn’t take weeks to reach the moon… 12:30
@theastroguy6710Ай бұрын
Maybe he was including prep time? 🥲
@davidwallace4665Ай бұрын
It takes 3 days to reach the Moon pretty impressive since it's 364.000 KMs away. This must be a bad mistake from this Chanel.
@KayesseeАй бұрын
It does with my car... And it's a lease. Lol.
@junkequation20 күн бұрын
This is like astral projection. I've always fantasized about how awesome it'd be to be able to look up at the stars and send my consciousness flying through space to check out all the other planets in the galaxy. Now, if I close my eyes and play these vids, it's sort of like being granted that super power. And I don't have to worry about my consciousness getting lost in space and not being able to find earth and my body again.
@AmsztelАй бұрын
This is amazing. Thank you for your work Kosmo!
@williamcampbell53495 күн бұрын
This guy's been putting me to sleep for what most be going on 4 years.....and here I go again!!
@darkfox2076Ай бұрын
Amazing visuals and quality commentaries must be a Kozmo space video! Really enjoyed this one. Thanks for all your efforts Kozmo ❤
@dipomchemistry.1218Ай бұрын
Behind the emptiness we are just watching and exploring from the point where Voyager 1 captured and Scientists Carl Sagan wrote...' That's home, that's us' the sophisticated statement. Lastly we are traveling the next 3 hours towards the vast emptiness... Kosmo.. ❤
@ferolcat20096 күн бұрын
A statement like, two million light years, just rolls off the tongue but once you start to imagine that distance, it blows your mind.
@paulweaving8770Ай бұрын
Great complymation. It is one of the best space programs out there. Thanks, Kosmo, more please.
@henit5075Ай бұрын
One of the best videos on the internet
@rogerjohnson2562Ай бұрын
This video oozes the conventional ideas of 'Dark Matter' instead of MOND, and 'Dark Energy' from 'Red Shift' instead of some type of EM modification; still quite an enjoyable video...
@johnnycash578Ай бұрын
I dont think I will ever wrap my brain around wtf is going on and wtf is space its frightening
@brimstonemarcussternklev7407Ай бұрын
That background sound for a while atleast for 2 minutes, maybe more, haven't checked further yet, but it sounds really nice and i would love to have the name of that soundtrack or whatever to call it
@btspyglass4077Ай бұрын
I am humbled by how smart these scientists are to plan all of this
@hadrienlartАй бұрын
The quality of these videos remain unmatched
@solarfinder29 күн бұрын
I appreciate the content. The voice actually keeps me focused.
@pauledwards3055Ай бұрын
That was so enjoyable, exceptional quality, beautifully constructed and informative. Thank you.
@stewiesaidthatАй бұрын
I thought that the universe was filled to the brim with dark matter. Its a wonder that light could travel for billions of years in such a dense cloud of dark matter.
@nomofomo3995Ай бұрын
Dark matter interacts with normal Matter?
@stewiesaidthatАй бұрын
@nomofomo3995 Dark matter is supposed to be responsible for the missing 'gravity' that holds galaxies together. The problem is that 'gravity' is not a fundamental force of nature. Newton's Laws of Motion, acceleration is the actionable force, not mass. All the physics models wrongly use mass as the actionable force, which is why they don't work.
@magnetarlyfeАй бұрын
Always look forward to another long video to watch at work🎉
@SpankyKАй бұрын
Great compilation video!
@dexraikkonen7Ай бұрын
Wait, wait, wait; did you say "weeks" to get to the moon? Wasn't it 3 days? the Apollo missions took 3 days on average to get there, am I wrong? This AI voice is a little annoying.
@TheJoshuamooneyАй бұрын
Yes you’re totally right. Pointless error.
@tonybuckley6413Ай бұрын
@@dexraikkonen7 I missed that part.. did it say that ! , that’s a balls up now isn’t it
@antoniescargo1529Ай бұрын
Moonlanding hoax 😅
@bitharneАй бұрын
@@tonybuckley6413off by a power of seven 😅
@garyfrancis6193Ай бұрын
Not if you walk.
@kyleswart2800Ай бұрын
Thank you Kosmo, I will enjoy every minute of this
@burrito-townАй бұрын
I loved this! 🌟 You always produce such high-quality content. Thanks for sharing!
@solgarling-squire7531Ай бұрын
Errors like that at 42:05 where the symbol for Earth is wrongly that of the Sun and at 10:42 where Gliese is mispelled are present. Was there no editor of science review of this video?
@NothingverseOfficialАй бұрын
this is like 2 weeks of going to bed!
@shuvronath8939Ай бұрын
Amazing ❤
@orienboyer4001Ай бұрын
Ya I watch these because I watch and learn from them not sleep and absorb the knowledge
@davidwhiteman9919Ай бұрын
Good to have you back
@garyfrancis6193Ай бұрын
I want to “ get tready” to see pleyootayoo end Jyoopitah.
@SPACE-j2iАй бұрын
Your video is truly engaging
@Timewarp82Ай бұрын
Excellent explained and spoken. Amazing work! Greetings from Germany :)
@PuzzoozooАй бұрын
Amazing presentation.
@raymondsmith7942Ай бұрын
Please keep them coming! I love them!
@MrGoombasticveryFantasticАй бұрын
Another monster dab and chill for one of the best channels on YT
@nervana1Ай бұрын
OMG what a beautiful video!!!!
@emoji_page16 күн бұрын
The stellar universe: the glory of billions of years.
@andrewmarr4387Ай бұрын
I am so excited for this!
@tonysargent1699Ай бұрын
Yet another astonishing video of amazement and wonder!!! Thankyou all so much for your passion and dedication. 😎
@DamianRyseАй бұрын
1:16:17 Primary black holes? I'm pretty sure you meant "Primordial black holes".
@blastypowpowАй бұрын
They also said it takes 3 weeks to get to the moon. It takes 3 days. Big mistakes in this video.
@ice_tray2837Ай бұрын
@@blastypowpowMaybe I'll end up eating my words but this channel reeks of AI, so huge mistakes like that are unsurprising.
@PorkChopAChunkyАй бұрын
It's AI narration
@EthanNichols-l3eАй бұрын
Thank you
@bigjermboktown6976Ай бұрын
You know there's just something about Andromeda that fascinates me. Something about the name Andromeda that just sounds so cool and mysterious and there's definitely better than having a name like the Milky Way. I just wish there was a dedicated mission to study Andromeda almost like if we had another James Webb just to specifically focus on it constantly.
@MATOMTUАй бұрын
Thank you for helping me sleep
@victorleleiКүн бұрын
The view is a mind boggling.
@BeetsPerSecondАй бұрын
Can't wait to go home and watch it.
@edmonlessley4932Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing such a fascinating program such as this. 💜🌌🌠
@Zak6959Ай бұрын
2:24 excellent, I just hope Vger doesn’t show back up in the 23rd century.🤪
@Thejacked_oneАй бұрын
my daily dose of kosmo before sleep lol
@PudgeDreddАй бұрын
V'Ger is out there!
@Titus-as-the-RomanАй бұрын
Thanks once again for a quality show my UN-known Friends
@renjamoodyuo3689Ай бұрын
Another video to fall asleep to
@brittanylee2163Ай бұрын
30,000 years to travel through the oort cloud 😅 unfathomable distance ❤
@johannjohann65238 күн бұрын
Pretty good video, thanks.
@j-sin3344Ай бұрын
5:15 why does it show Jan 1930 while speaking about Pioneer 10 and 11? They were sent in the 70s? Just curious about the graphic.
@mestis343Ай бұрын
Goodnight folks 😌😴
@george1la24 күн бұрын
Great show. The universe is so very large. Like large amounts of money most cannot get a grasp of these large dimensions and time it represents. The power and mass of it all and the super large voids. This is power.
@jillsy2815Ай бұрын
This is so good❤
@mRibbons17 күн бұрын
Imagine the panic if the Voyager probes were to be detected flying back toward Earth.
@1joshjosh1Ай бұрын
Learning is cool
@HealingwithCosmicSoundАй бұрын
i need more videos like this, awesome
@mumtaz.qureshi24 күн бұрын
Whenever I want to spend night on any interstellar body,I watched such documentary before sleeping
@CosmicOdyssey-g9nАй бұрын
"The universe is so vast! It's hard to imagine that we are just a small part of it."
@kjvailАй бұрын
Here’s a fun exercise. Get the game Elite Dangerous, use this route and follow along, visiting all these systems and see what the developers put there.
@Remguy2468Ай бұрын
No spot of space is actually "empty" empty suggests nothingness. Space is made up of the fields, the framework of all the forces.
@GoogolTVchannelАй бұрын
Some information in this video may be incorrect. Please double check.
@David-r3g2o11 күн бұрын
Uh, thank you poindexter!
@stargazer4683Ай бұрын
I keep ending up here and leaving when I remember I was here before lol
@crazyedo9979Ай бұрын
I watched this with my Pluto Goggles on.😁
@rehuapuru760013 күн бұрын
it's amazing what math can do, the amount of calculations they had to do to make those slingshots is mind-blowing 🤯
@JaysonCrutcherАй бұрын
I like watching this ...
@uzimako2519 күн бұрын
Aha! studying geography is my highly obsession since when I'm in highschool and I'm 26 rn.
@tapferertoast6923Ай бұрын
thanks
@doughboi42477 күн бұрын
yah this iissss exactly what i needed
@AlteringrealitystudiosАй бұрын
What would the view be like if Earth were in a similar location from the center of other galaxies 🤔 that would be interesting to see.
@struttux5156Ай бұрын
To some planet out there Earth is the most distant object in the universe
@scientific_exploration_space2 күн бұрын
I like this video so much
@MDSBockАй бұрын
Well done great graphics..
@Casshern_SinАй бұрын
Chris Eubank and space, awesome 😅
@lightlegion_Ай бұрын
Hi, Cecilia here. Nice to connect with you!
@charlesnewman6468Ай бұрын
This is the same stuff as before but different intro.
@treyvon4444Ай бұрын
Always 😂
@asdffdsa8863Ай бұрын
We know neither the limits of inner and outerspace. It IS a simulation.
@rogerjohnson2562Ай бұрын
Skip to 2:03:00 to learn about the "Emptiness of the Universe", the section is called 'Voids'. The title should actulally be something like "Our Amazing Universe"...
@cristianobarbaro329627 күн бұрын
Fell asleep within 30 secs. Love it!
@chinna1134Ай бұрын
Watching the emptiness with my empty mind
@zeul1337Ай бұрын
its illegal to be this early. thank you for the video.
@pauls5745Ай бұрын
I thought it is cool that 3-star trinary systems are all unstable and doomed to collapse. None yet found estimated to be older than 6 billion years.
@Splucked25 күн бұрын
If Artemis lifted off today, according to NASA it might take 2 days to reach high Earth orbit, after which it would take 4 days to reach the moon.
@MaddGameMaker4 күн бұрын
The Casimir effect doesn't generate "inexhaustable" energy. You get some energy from the plates being pushed together, but once they touch, the energy ends. You'd have to put it back in to repeat the process which means you get zero energy out of it. You misinterpreted something; no, humans did not find a magical infinite source of energy.
@hobeone1192Ай бұрын
I am recycled star dust living on Barrowed time, nothing is real, Love is everything, I know nothing.