Head to 80000hours.org/veritasium to start planning a career that can help change the world for the better.
@milesprowrАй бұрын
If there was extraterrestrial life in such a vast, old and life-friendly universe, then all the matter within it would've become self-replicating nanomachines created by it since long ago, which massive collective AI would've figured out faster-than-light intergalactic travel and endless energy sources, with "good" and/or bad intentions. 🤷♂
@punisherleeАй бұрын
I've been saying I'll watch this later until I noticed the thumbnail change. I know you'll add it to your data but I'm just letting you know that the reason I clicked to watch wasn't because the thumbnail was better or worse, but just because I noticed it was different. Maybe that's a win-win.
@TrockenfurzАй бұрын
uhhhhhhhm....mr veritasium....i have VERY bad news for ya....sorry for me laughing x'D skip to 07:22 and see how your knuckles move into the white target-cross, right when the temperature goes up. the ball isn't magically heating up by 3-4 degrees whenevver you squeeze it, you're just getting your own hand thermometered........ x'D i love your vids so much and this lil mistake just makes it more lovely, but i'd recommend to pay more attention in future recordings :'D
@honor9lite1337Ай бұрын
I'm just doing it with hydrolic pressure, the metal surface that touching the ball is cooler than the surface of the ball but the pressed ball still got heated more then 4 degree in difference. @@Trockenfurz
@RAHULR-x9y29 күн бұрын
Waiting for a new video on ANN, which got the Nobel prize in 2024 : physics.
@WunbaАй бұрын
The thought of a 100km deep ocean on another planet is terrifying and fascinating. Hope we get answers in our lifetime!
@TanayBhedaАй бұрын
Hey
@alveolateАй бұрын
i wonder whether cthulu lives in europa or enceladus
@NxJ_Ай бұрын
Ayo a Minecraft youtuber in comments of veritasium video damn
@kaiperdaens7670Ай бұрын
What are u doing here 😂
@kaiperdaens7670Ай бұрын
Make this moon in your hardcore world
@mobilePCreviewsАй бұрын
Please never stop making these astrophysics videos, they're so good.
@AyoolaLadapo-hg7vsАй бұрын
True that
@sulaimangiganiАй бұрын
This one will most likely fall under the category of astrobiology
@pumpalin8661Ай бұрын
Space vids are the best
@RobinsMusicАй бұрын
@@mobilePCreviews astronomy is the most interest scientific topic imo
@neroniusАй бұрын
Hot take
@queson5229 күн бұрын
"ATTEMPT NO LANDINGS THERE" still gives me the chills.
@zeycus25 күн бұрын
Yes, I read that single sentence and at once I knew where it was coming from.
@pm14624 күн бұрын
"Attempt no landings there" ... anyways, scientists are attempting landings there
@ythegamerita24 күн бұрын
@@zeycuseven the aliens are terrified of oceans
@BigBrotherMateyka23 күн бұрын
Watch us land there and accidentally disturb some kind of extraterrestrial thalassic balrog or something that irradiates the entirety of the Earth with ionized particles out of vengeance in its hunt for the intruder.
@bipolarminddroppings23 күн бұрын
@@ythegamerita that's because they're smart enough to know they don't belong there.
@MrExplosion44916 күн бұрын
Finding proof of alien life would be one of the most significant discoveries ever
@Horriblerandom16 күн бұрын
Right after the discovery of Sgt. James Doakes being the bay harbour butcher ofc
@DragonTamer31K16 күн бұрын
@@HorriblerandomI can't believe he was black
@jakabgips16 күн бұрын
They have to exist somewhere I refuse to believe we are alone in such a big world
@codrs266215 күн бұрын
We are proof lmfao
@vindemia15 күн бұрын
@@jakabgipsuniverse
@teddyland7159Ай бұрын
Veritasium is fr one of the best channels on KZbin
@teddyland7159Ай бұрын
Especially the space videos
@RSingh_26Ай бұрын
Vsauce enters the chat
@zerono5746Ай бұрын
Real
@WhalesLoveSmashАй бұрын
I am one of the best whales on KZbin
@adriansiebenrock-xr4hfАй бұрын
The best
@erikziak1249Ай бұрын
My deepest respect to all the scientists, engineers and technicians behind these projects. Such endeavors are the pinnacle of humble collective effort of thousands of talented people. I am not a part of the mechanism, but that does not mean I cannot share my enthusiasm and show support for projects of this kind.
@PietrosavrАй бұрын
Technically, everyone is sort of part of the mechanism. Public interest is important for funding, and someone must make and deliver food to the scientists, others have to make the machines, roads and everything. This requires an entire civilisation. Think about it this way, if you've sent those scientists, along with all their equipment, back to the stone age, they couldn't have done anything really. No power lines, no easy access to food and water nor medicine. They would've had to hunt and gather to survive and most would die early. We are all contributing in a small way :)
@marplekaАй бұрын
project failed, they've wasted money and acknowledge faulty components, current year is historical shame for american space industry
@play005517Ай бұрын
Most impressively NASA is consistently pulling these kinds of things with less than half a percent of the national budget
@sayhowlingАй бұрын
@@Pietrosavr i like the way you think. i think its why butterfly effect theory is very dangerous because it shows how little things could affect major ones
@mkhanman12345Ай бұрын
it does mean you cannot share it
@ThatGuyCream20 күн бұрын
The fact that the title changes every day to the correct amount of days... Amazing!
@cuz989220 күн бұрын
wait... really? thats so cool
@simongiesen266420 күн бұрын
@@cuz9892yes, this came by my feed yesterday. I distinctly remember it being 2337 days. As of writing, the tile is 2336 days.
@Cakebraincat20 күн бұрын
2336 here as well. Didn't realize this was a shifting title video. It's always neat seeing those.
@PipMane19 күн бұрын
real?
@portatil867619 күн бұрын
it's just a script lol
@Kyiwa17 күн бұрын
Just obtained my PhD on the study of Europa's surface, glad to see that people love to learn about it!
@johnd.560114 күн бұрын
Great, how do you pay for that education? I guess you're going to drag and drop trades for a hedge fund. Thanks for robbing hard-working Americans of their savings.
@danielwarpaint196312 күн бұрын
PhD in utter nonsense, do you work in fast food for income?
@lilbean925612 күн бұрын
@@danielwarpaint1963who cares what he’s making, as long as there’s passion who gives??
@lilbean925612 күн бұрын
Whoever*
@DrumToTheBassWoop12 күн бұрын
@@danielwarpaint1963 maybe you can do a Mickey Mouse PhD in fast food serving. 😂
@mcs131313Ай бұрын
8:48 this guy is a super good communicator. No jargon or science speak. Like I’m sure the actual details are super technical and complicated and he made that so simple.
@TheCuriousNoobАй бұрын
It takes a very intelligent person to explain extremely complex ideas in terms a teenager can understand.
@Blex_040Ай бұрын
@@TheCuriousNoob One famous quote (that is often misattributed to Albert Einstein but is great nonetheless) goes "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." and I think this is a great example of that. Only if you have really understood a matter you can come up with analogies for the layman, while people who haven't really understood something tend to deliberately use highly technical language so only someone on the same level of knowledge or above is able to call them out.
@hl2paulАй бұрын
His PHD is in physics education
@mcs131313Ай бұрын
@@TheCuriousNoob agree, although I’d say it’s also just a skill one needs to use with intentionality and practice. Engineer nerd stereotypes aside, i feel like with most projects / specialized fields, figuring out the how and then executing are your goals 95% of your time. And it’s super easy to forget that to the audience or consumer, often pretty much the only thing that matters is what you found or build
@mcs131313Ай бұрын
@@hl2paul it’s good to see they’re focusing and finding more ways to reach a wider audience. Space exploration budget was untouchable during the Cold War. But the moment voters idea of nasa goes from “wow cool” -> “why are they spending my money on that”, that budget gets slashed. That being said, I imagine that there will be increasing use of space in warfar at some point. Which isn’t great - but a nice side effect will be renewed focus. Not as in another space race, but as in - if the military starts spending $100b on space stuff, it’s not gonna be hard to piggy back and use the military pays for and develops to do pure science stuff as well.
@yeetzabois3582Ай бұрын
NOOO WAYYY! 3 Veritasium vids in about 2 weeks. Bro is cooking 👨🍳👨🍳👨🍳
@rangerrick5660Ай бұрын
Chillax
@dragodaАй бұрын
That is impressive indeed. But the video is bad. It is bad that it's only 18 minutes long. We want more :D I could watch Veritasium talk about space, planets, science for hours. I don t even need food.
@unfunnyfailureАй бұрын
@@rangerrick5660 No YOU chillax buddy! This is an incredible event!
@unfunnyfailureАй бұрын
@@dragoda Please don't say its bad, its better than my cooking, and my cooking is pretty good.
@KillianTwewАй бұрын
Inflation is hitting hard. Derek needs a new house in LA
@Alienn-o_oАй бұрын
The fact that they named the probe "Galelio" is so beautiful. Galileo would be so happy if he knew about these researches
@LeyrannАй бұрын
Nah he'd probably write a book making fun of them or something. Obligatory reminder that the church was actually quite open to his scientific ideas and it was Galileo's ridiculing of the Pope that got him excommunicated.
@DanyalArcadioАй бұрын
@@Leyrann is this true? can you provide sources?
@nocturn9xАй бұрын
@@Leyrannsource?
@suspicioussandАй бұрын
@@Leyrann I too, want to know the source
@jitenyasuАй бұрын
@Leyrann This is a factually untrue statement. While I don't doubt there was possibly some criticism of the pope from Galileo, his theories were seen as directly contrary to contemporary interpretations of scripture, and therefore the ideas were labeled criminal heresy. Individual human pettiness drives a lot of the individual actions in a situation like this, to be sure, but it is the threat to a larger power structure that sees dissenters convicted.
@mrwoodcat17 күн бұрын
16:01 giving NASA a permission to land on a PLANET'S MOON is one of the biggest flex one can have in this planet
@Seblak5 күн бұрын
It technically also happened in 1969, someone had the moon on his name and he gave permission to NASA to make the landing
@DraykshaperАй бұрын
I've heard lots of videos and articles say Jupiter has big radiation belts, but this is the first time the "why" is actually explained. Thank you so much!
@Alienn-o_oАй бұрын
also the way they showed how the magnetic fields would look from earth
@beckydoesit933117 күн бұрын
Spectroscopy needs to be done in a container.
@QuantumNinja1.910 күн бұрын
True
@williamk106024 күн бұрын
Since I was a kid, I've always wanted to witness life being discovered elsewhere in the universe. Europa was always the #1 place to look. When I got cancer last year, I cried thinking that I would never get a chance to see life discovered on another world. Thankfully, I survived for now, and I hope I can live long enough to see the Europa mission to its conclusion!
@dalegreenaway20 күн бұрын
I am sorry to hear sir. Hope you recover. Stay strong. Peace be with you.
@z_monty20 күн бұрын
Best wishes for you and your family, William ❤
@kisnpisn491920 күн бұрын
best wishes to you. i hope we all will be able to see it happen. i wish my dad will still be with us to see this. he‘s my nerdy friend i can share these things with. it will be so exciting to witness it together. i wish you and him great health. the celebration is not too far away, that day will be amazing ;)
@lionelmessithegoatLM1019 күн бұрын
Wish you a happy and healthy life buddy.
@dalegreenaway19 күн бұрын
@@williamk1060 give this man a thumbs up! 👍🏼
@confusedgoann22 күн бұрын
My Mom was the project manager for the first mass spectrometer you mentioned (MISE)!! and one of the project managers for an instrument on the ESA JUICE mission you talked about (RIME). I had the honor to hear Dr. Pappalardo give a deeply heart-felt speech as well as meet many of the people who played a role in getting Europa Clipper and her various instruments into space the night before the launch on the 14th at the pre-launch event in Florida. Then had the amazing opportunity to be an invited guest for one of the private viewing areas and sitting among the same people I met the night before at Kennedy Space Center. Seeing you specifically talk about a mission that I've been quite involved in just by extension through my mom brought a smile to my face and one to hers when I shared your video. The crowd couldn't stop cheering from engine ignition to atmospheric escape. Thank you for making this video!
@casgal243121 күн бұрын
your mom is a Chad genius
@vitasnova21 күн бұрын
Great work on your mom's part!!! That's so cool!! Also, JUICE mention. Might I ask everyone on this reply section to read 17776? Please?
@taha-ks3gj21 күн бұрын
How are you just like me fr
@ionescuandrei124521 күн бұрын
Mass spectrometer? Like the one gordon freeman blew up?
@Soda_Bobinski21 күн бұрын
@@ionescuandrei1245 close enough, that's the anti-mass spectrometer
@16spartaman15 күн бұрын
42 years later? 42 the answer to life? No way 0:34
@Sauor12 күн бұрын
hitchhikers !!
@NPCvapor11 күн бұрын
wish I was the 42nd like 🥲
@cricketboy01497 күн бұрын
42
@NickerJones-g9c4 күн бұрын
We need to build another supercomputer
@Drelyn56Күн бұрын
Yes, another cultured skin sack
@TanayBhedaАй бұрын
You know it's a great day when Veritasium uploads
@ahmedzakir2379Ай бұрын
facts
@rangerrick5660Ай бұрын
Take a knee
@rasulrahimov744Ай бұрын
especially about math or physics (astronomy)
@mhsarkerАй бұрын
yes 🎉
@ljushastighetАй бұрын
i have seen this type of comment on a lot of videos, it's a quick effortless way to get likes
@CEOofPhoneCo19 күн бұрын
All my hours on barotrauma has prepared me for this
@fomingera6518 күн бұрын
Regalis knew something
@Exoreya18 күн бұрын
dont forget to bring the clown, it can get boring down there
@dz88318 күн бұрын
If you want a sci fi book about being in an ocean like that of Europa Driving the Deep by Suzanne palmer might be smth that interests you And yes the isolation is absolutely terrifying
@beckydoesit933117 күн бұрын
Spectroscopy needs to be done in a container.
@legacy790016 күн бұрын
Don't worry, I'll make sure to give you guys the best genes
@chuckbatson595Ай бұрын
Genuinely exciting. I can't wait to start seeing half-meter/pixel images of Europa 7 years from now!
@wavion2Ай бұрын
"And as you can see from these 30 pixels, this is clearly a Nissan Sentra."
@gemtun2Ай бұрын
ocean aliens with nissans
@drcgaming4195Ай бұрын
@@gemtun2 this is so funny to me
@patrickmorris3721Ай бұрын
@@gemtun2 you’ve completely lost it .😂 To even think of bringing Nissan Sentra anywhere near the ocean and the salt water would be like sunshine to ice cube 🧊😂🤣🔥 Melt right in front of you’re eyes 👀 🤣🤣😂🔥.
@markusklyver6277Ай бұрын
Bruh
@beardalaxy4 күн бұрын
It's cool knowing that this will be done by the time I'm 35. What a great time to be alive, honestly. I wish my grandpa were here to see it. His main passion in life was the heavens. Godspeed to him and Godspeed to Clipper!
@NothingXemnasАй бұрын
3:26 To those who don't know, clippers are a type of cargo ships. To my knowledge, they were never used for leisure or passenger transport. Clippers were specifically used for tea, born from an era when, rather than focus on bulk volume, some traders focused on freshness. So clippers were made, with tiny cargo spaces but lots or sails, and such traders would actually compete with each other for the fastest arrival. The first to arrive in England would get extra payment. That said, of course tea delivered by clippers were way above premium; super fresh and extremely limited amounts meant they were for the nobility.
@amcneil662511 күн бұрын
And NASA is barely squeaking ahead of ESA… tea
@DyingVoiceDudeАй бұрын
from the thumbnail did not think this was a veritasium video... but it is! 😀
@NairodYoutubeАй бұрын
he experiments a lot with thumbnails, I wouldn't be surprised if it changed soon x)
@veerakarthikeyan6650Ай бұрын
looks like something you would find on one of the AI-voice misinformation garbage channels. good thing Veritasium is the exact opposite of those channels.
@noxabellusАй бұрын
i was like oh, a new astrum video
@JoJiXАй бұрын
When I read your name in my head i read it with your voice for some reason
@zweisteinyaАй бұрын
A C Clarke blew up the wrong planet
@paulmichaelfreedman8334Ай бұрын
So cool, that you used clips from " 2010: the year we make contact" THE most underrated scifi sequel of all time.
@danielehiagwinaАй бұрын
😂😂 All I see is fiction.
@jgischerАй бұрын
Yeah, I really loved that movie.
@chaomatic5328Ай бұрын
I didnt even know it existed, eveybody is about 2001 😅
@erichurst7897Ай бұрын
@@chaomatic5328 it's a much better movie, with Helen Mirrin, Roy Scheider, and John Lithgow.
@alexhemsath6235Ай бұрын
@@chaomatic5328 It's such a good movie. Problem was that people saw it as the sequel to 2001, even though it had a completely different creative team, so the reviews were inevitably "meh". 2001 is a hard act to follow.
@AngryKittens15 күн бұрын
I read 2010 first, before 2001. The section on Europans fascinated me the most.
@TheEretАй бұрын
I'm currently in Florida as I have been invited by NASA to see the launch of Europa Clipper! I can't wait! :D
@aeuludagАй бұрын
Congratulations!! That's so cool
@ameliamorrow9938Ай бұрын
Wooow! That sounds so cool! By any chance, how is it possible to get an invitation from NASA?
@spookysquirtleАй бұрын
Eret you lucky ducky
@therealmovetomarsАй бұрын
Cool! Congrats on the invitations
@nonamenofame2243Ай бұрын
bruh
@TheStrategyWargamer19 күн бұрын
I love watching interviews with NASA scientists their passion and love of space, life, exploration is intoxicating
@clinch440217 күн бұрын
It's mainly just autism.
@Sammysan12328 күн бұрын
Jupiter imploding and turning into a star is one of my favorite movie moments, I replay it at least once a year. So well done.
@sanujop518121 күн бұрын
Name?
@danielhenze818221 күн бұрын
@@sanujop51812010: The year we make contact
@Sammysan12321 күн бұрын
@@sanujop5181 '2010: The Year We Make Contact'
@burningmisery21 күн бұрын
@@sanujop5181 2010
@ThoughtCabin19 күн бұрын
@@sanujop5181 Dude. 2010: The Year We Made Contact. The sequel to Space Odyssey. Mentioned by name three minutes in
@dangerZization6 күн бұрын
Love that Robert has a whole shelf of Carl Sagan books!
@StillSahanАй бұрын
As a science fan, I always admired Arthur C. Clarke. I’m proud to be Sri Lankan because he made Sri Lanka his home from 1956 until he passed away in 2008. I think he’s the most respected foreigner in our country. When I was a kid, people celebrated him a lot. Even today, schools here teach about him, and he’s remembered with love and respect. His name is still alive in Sri Lanka, even after his death. 🥰
@Ignirium26 күн бұрын
Are the allegations about him false?
@wgt-golf-lover26 күн бұрын
@@Ignirium yes, all allegations are fake
@ChaosCat7923 күн бұрын
@@Ignirium Yes, they were.
@macho_mayo21 күн бұрын
it's great to meet a fellow sri lankan and I can most definitely second the claim of him being the most respected foreigner
@UtsavGarg-qi9ng21 күн бұрын
What allegations? @@Ignirium
@PakishwanАй бұрын
Veritasium pumping out videos like there no tomorrow, I’m not complaining.
@KavaitsuАй бұрын
Uhh ohhh
@GJgators24Ай бұрын
Exactly
@GJgators24Ай бұрын
@@Kavaitsuhold up; I guess he would know
@adhirathpatil26 күн бұрын
@@GJgators24 wait what happened
@GJgators2423 күн бұрын
@@adhirathpatil like there’s no tomorrow
@giornaguirne25 күн бұрын
Fun fact: The novel and screenplay for "2001: A Space Odyssey" were both written at the same time by Arthur C. Clark and Stanley Kubrick. The book wasn't published until after the film released. The sequels, 2010, 2061, and 3001, were written independently by Clark.
@ericpode609521 күн бұрын
It also seems a lot of people are either unaware or have forgotten 2010 was also a movie.
@giornaguirne21 күн бұрын
@@ericpode6095 Understandable, honestly. People fawn over Kubrick more than Peter Hyams. 2001 is a film I rewatch on occasion, even as background noise, but not 2010. It's a decent movie and there's a GREAT cast, but it's a very different style. I might watch it again after my next 2001 itch.
@brigidsingleton159620 күн бұрын
@@ericpode6095 I have not only not forgotten that fact, I have both '2001, A Space Odyssey' _&_ '2010, Odyssey Two' on dvds.❤❤ I like (& got on better with the second film than it's novel version) ...the first film is still my favourite film.
@booglywoogly56618 күн бұрын
Glad you said this, I made the mistake of reading book 3 and 4. Arthur should not have wasted his time. Just awful books. 2 changed things from one and offered explanations that go contrary to Kubricks movie. But it's still a good read in and of itself. But gosh... 3 is a chore with 0 payoff and 4 is genuinely insulting. Do not read please
@beckydoesit933117 күн бұрын
Spectroscopy needs to be done in a container.
@toddchavez82742 күн бұрын
Finally, a video about Europa that doesn’t give people an excuse to trot out that Arthur Clarke quote about it.
@kevincampbell3865Ай бұрын
Literally never stop making videos, the world needs it
@clinch440217 күн бұрын
No we don't. Better to leave the world in darkness.
@someonei15 күн бұрын
@@clinch4402 alan wake ahh line
@clinch440214 күн бұрын
@@someonei I don't play video games, I play people.
@DefuzehazАй бұрын
This is one of the few channels that seriously delivers.. every time
@SirReginaldBumquistIIIАй бұрын
As opposed to delivering nonchalantly?
@PsRohrbaughАй бұрын
Dude chill you don't have to release bangers every week for months in a row 😂
@coyoteblue402720 күн бұрын
Yes he does it's the rules
@krzysztofhepner10014 күн бұрын
the analogue horror graphics rocked. some mandela rooms stuff
@CristianIonita-nm6xbАй бұрын
7:23 that is astoundingly fascinating. I would've never guessed tidal stretch-induced friction is what maintains the oceans liquid. Impressive.
@Tyler-z8rАй бұрын
It's bizarre. Most people don't think on the large scale of the universe (myself included) so it's hard to imagine that could actually generate that much heat.
@Its1paradoxАй бұрын
So happy that Veritasium made a video on Europa Clipper after I made one few days ago. Now I learn from the master. Thank you for inspiring us!
@catbertsisАй бұрын
you got Derek'd!
@robocu4Ай бұрын
I respect the subtle plug
@sidewaysdesignАй бұрын
Veritasium’s graphics production continues to get better and better. The explanation for Jupiter’s radiation zone was brilliant.
@Entertaiment_Oscar_Martinez14 күн бұрын
Incredible video caught my attention from the beginning to the end. This type of quality its what proves you are one of the best science youtubers !
@AntsCanada18 күн бұрын
Encelladus, too! I hope we find life! That would change our understanding of the nature of the Universe, i.e. it is meant to create life!
@commenteroftruth979018 күн бұрын
Maybe yours, the abundance of life that has cascaded and collapsed needs to be seen for value, hopefully simple-minded things can grow from it.
@PavF918 күн бұрын
20 likes and 1 reply? lemme fix that
@Unknown2711618 күн бұрын
I love ants....
@12sleep3416 күн бұрын
ant planet... hmmm...
@shirleyyap320814 күн бұрын
they’re planning an “orbilander” to encelladus on the future after the europa clipper and the uranus orbiter and probe mission
@rajmathew6220Ай бұрын
I love that this channel never died
@varshaith18_24Ай бұрын
Veritasium + Space is my favourite combo
@Sarikaegtx7eАй бұрын
Fr man
@Absurd0002 күн бұрын
this is so freaking cool. great watch. thanks for the great content!
@HauntedMushroom96Ай бұрын
And when we find the aliens living in the oceans of Europa. We shall call them... Europeans
@umtrain173020 күн бұрын
Outstanding.
@madd479919 күн бұрын
.
@LengaTenga19 күн бұрын
Glorios
@ultimaxkom872819 күн бұрын
Let's hope they're not the type that wear monocle or trade spices.
@CausticSpace19 күн бұрын
We can rename Europeans to Neanderthal
@northamericanpichuАй бұрын
My Space Exploration professor actually worked on the IR camera on the Clipper, we’re all so excited to see it launch
@Eduard190629 күн бұрын
I am a faithful follower of your Spanish channel Veritasium in Spanish and I adore your videos that make me feel part of a large and wonderful Universe and make me enjoy the scientific dissemination that you do. I am in love with your intelligence and how you teach us to understand the physical world around us. 😊
@sephrinx495816 күн бұрын
Best video of the year for sure!
@Castkett4everАй бұрын
Hey Derek! I'm in med school in Switzerland, and my physics teacher has used clips of your videos to explain some concepts! I thought maybe that would make you smile (or laugh, or cry, feel free to do whichever) :)
@drcgaming4195Ай бұрын
thats really sick ngl
@rafaelperalta167627 күн бұрын
15:39 The question and the answer that followed gave me a smile.
@MystiqueMacabre18 күн бұрын
It’s something to look forward to that we’ve been hearing about for the past 10 years
@arguedscarab798518 күн бұрын
I love watching Veritasium. Such high quality videos, super easy to understand but not too easy to understand either. Their just perfect. Thanks for posting this video I love it!!!
15 күн бұрын
Imagine loosing $15 only to veriterasium ignoring you
@arguedscarab798514 күн бұрын
I didn't donate to get a reaction from him. I donated because I chose to support his videos. You don't have to donate at all but I chose to. Stop being a hater.
14 күн бұрын
@@arguedscarab7985 im not hating you I just didnt had the knowledge that superchat wasnt actually only used to get attention
@pointlessspoon12 күн бұрын
@@arguedscarab7985 seriously lol. I don’t get why people need that external praise to validate a voluntary contribution, as if that’s the only reason to do so
@QuantumNinja1.910 күн бұрын
It was almost after 15 days of posting the video, so it's obvious he couldn't see the comment. Although donating for a like from the creater wasn't the target for him
@av_85962 күн бұрын
Some questions: If there is complex life on Europa, as complex as ordinary sea life (fish, eels, etc.), whether fauna or flora, *what would they look like?* What kind of crazy form would they have? Or could they appear similar to aquatic Earth-life? And if its the latter, does that mean evolution follows a certain pattern rather than being random? I am *SO* glad to be alive in such intriguing times!
@TheonethatjusthereКүн бұрын
It probably wouldn't look similar to Earth life like things in our deep ocean are already very different from other life on Earth and this is still the same planet I recommend looking into speculative biology and evolution to learn more about this kind of stuff there's this channel called Curious Archives that makes a lot of great videos on the topic
@av_8596Күн бұрын
@@Theonethatjusthere I know Curious Archives, and I *love* his videos. Even if we don't know what we'll find, it's always fun to imagine what it'll look like.
@TheonethatjusthereКүн бұрын
@@av_8596 Argee
@Penny-1620 күн бұрын
8:13 check out this guys bookcase. A whole shelf for Carl Sagan, with Star Trek on the other side. Plus he gets to work on the coolest of scientific experiments and work at NASA. That’s so awesome! What a legend! This is my childhood dream, right there.
@00Jay215Ай бұрын
You're content is consistently good and never feels forced. Love it
@FeNO33.9H2OАй бұрын
17:55 Sir I wanna thank you for making such an informative video
@jcoronet2000Күн бұрын
Life is incredibly tenacious, it doesn’t want to die any more than you do.
@6foottallAardvarkАй бұрын
The output of this channel is second to none…any other channel would take weeks or months for one video like this. But Veritasium is putting out multiple documentary-calibre videos a week. Amazing
@samutamus52620 күн бұрын
As a barotrauma player I see this as an absolute win!
@YataTheFifteenth19 күн бұрын
Praise the honkmother
@leonwesterlund319 күн бұрын
That's what i'm saying
@danielronhovde832318 күн бұрын
Makes me wanna get back to that game 😂
@aubreycutler65918 күн бұрын
Hell yeah barotrauma
@beckydoesit933117 күн бұрын
Spectroscopy needs to be done in a container.
@bigtomarАй бұрын
this is actually crazy groundbreaking, to think that if we do actually find life on a microbiological level on europa and that it could evolve one day into something more is absolutely mindboggling. it's like looking back through time to when life on earth was still in its early stages.
@supercyberdigiАй бұрын
congrats, your comment was so good that a thot bot decided to copy it.
@bigtomarАй бұрын
@@supercyberdigi i hope the thot bots comment gets thousands of likes and for mine to be in the wastelands, it'd be funnier that way
@NatTardisАй бұрын
If there is life on Europa, how many more planets/moons harbor life in our solar system? And outside of it? It would be mind-boggling.
@JustThatWeebАй бұрын
According to recent discoveries in mars about the huge water oceans below the surface there's also a chance for mars to have microbiological life @@NatTardis
@AncientWildTVАй бұрын
@@bigtomar and I woner if it could change our perspective on life here on Earth
@dodge33w16 күн бұрын
I’m ready to go ice fishing on Europa boys
@anshkumar769Ай бұрын
When you showed me the picture of Europa took by Voyager 1, it genuinely brought a tear to my eyes. Humans have gone such a long way from making fire to launching spacecrafts to other worlds. One of the biggest reasons i wanted to become an astronaut when I was little. This video was so emotional to me, thanks Derek!
@TheGesox27 күн бұрын
And there we are try to kill each other becouse of idiology and diffrent views
@Param_Hayaran24 күн бұрын
@@TheGesoxsome people can't see world beyond themselves
@TheGesox24 күн бұрын
@@Param_Hayaran the really sad thing about all of this is as far as we know all other planets we knew so far mankind can't inhabitate them without a suit and the only one we can survive without any gear this one we destroy slowly with our greed
@justdominik981220 күн бұрын
Then I would also recommend you to find the pictures from Venus, it's absolutely crazy we have pictures from an environment that is more hostile than anything we can imagine.
@someonei15 күн бұрын
@@TheGesox professional debbie downer
@notreal_id02Ай бұрын
Your videos on Astrophysics are so good. I find them best in the whole KZbin.
@hjpev646929 күн бұрын
10:42 “Snot Bot” is such a fantastic name for this machine
@Menskek13 күн бұрын
I actually watched the live Clipper launch on youtube starting luckily at 2:34 before launch during math class
@afterschool2594Ай бұрын
I really love when Veritasium makes content about Science History and Astrophysics. It really motivates me to learn more
@7616lydethАй бұрын
15:23 okay 2030 and 2031, let's wait
@maliciousrobot9595Ай бұрын
I've got all 10 years
@JNJNRobin1337Ай бұрын
@@maliciousrobot9595 its moreso five to six, luckily
@sino_diogenesАй бұрын
@@JNJNRobin1337 6/7
@JNJNRobin1337Ай бұрын
@@sino_diogenes 2025 is approaching rather quick, so i mean
@lilbacon_ig27 күн бұрын
id be an adult by now
@bolonature647824 күн бұрын
Have found this channel while i was cursorated at rikers island, re-entry has been awesome, thanks to veritasium.
@2001septeleven15 күн бұрын
I don't know why but it made me excited when he said there were hydrothermal vents
@edvardpianoАй бұрын
Hey, a tip for you! Whenever showing space clips, put a little "CGI" or "Photo taken by probe/telescope xyz" in the top corner, like Astrum does. There are a lot of amazing pictures out there, would be a shame to assume it all to be CGI!
@foxxygearreviews7754Ай бұрын
Left lower corner
@w0ttheh3llАй бұрын
it's worse the other way around. there are so many "artist's impressions" used to illustrate everything nowadays that people don't appreciate actual new high quality telescope pictures, because few realize that the best actual picture we have of something is often a handful of black and white pixels.
@jimL-6942023 күн бұрын
You do see the lower left corner yeah?
@tremapar25 күн бұрын
10:22 a noble sacrifice 🫡
@mukkupretskiАй бұрын
"Detecting multiple leviathan class lifeforms in the region. Are you certain whatever you're doing is worth it?"
@AlfredoKägi22 күн бұрын
Oh no
@casedistorted10 күн бұрын
7:20 that is fascinating! So that means many other planets could have water that we never thought could.. the universe is fascinating!
@josephmansfield3203Ай бұрын
The example with the blow torch was fire!🔥
@irrelevant_noobАй бұрын
2:50
@ClutchCpsАй бұрын
Woah this is a cool and actually very relevant video for me; a few days ago my engineering teacher at my highschool had the NASA press conference about the Europa Clipper mission on the projector, and it was fascinating to see that there's a chance for "alien" life in our very own solar system. Excited to see how the mission plays out! (in about 5 years)
@elliottorion423526 күн бұрын
If you want proof of alien life just watch the Las Vegas kenmore family video. Hasn’t been debunked and it’s been 6 months now since it’s been proven there’s entities in the video no cgi. Only “debunking” has been personal attacks on the people who helped prove it. Disclosure happened though it may have been small it will ripple eventually. You’ll likely need to watch videos where people point out or zoom in on the entities. There’s multiple. A 9 foot tall one. A really short one. All are cloaked though not perfectly. One’s cloaking even fails momentarily and you see it’s head pop into existence for one second before disappearing. Like I said no cgi.
@SidW-l4z3 күн бұрын
That Collaboration is HUGH! Exciting! 💙
@foreverofthestars471820 күн бұрын
I clicked on the video because I got excited about the "attempt no landing there" thumbnail, wondering if it was a reference to "Odyssey Two" and I was not disappointed.
@Friek55520 күн бұрын
Wow, this one is absolutely incredible. In about 16 minutes you learn more than a dozen crazy interesting things
@spinerexzilla6733Ай бұрын
Veritasium has been cooking recently 🔥🔥🔥
@jimboslice44685 күн бұрын
Cracks creating cycloid shapes due to the propagation of cracks at relatively constant speed, happening over many periods of orbit around Jupiter and therefore many cycles of squishing and relaxing, as long as there is a squishy ocean layer and not solid rock is brilliant
@JimmyTRUELOVE19 күн бұрын
I am not intelligent enough to understand some of your videos so I am overjoyed when one comes along that is intelligible for a non-scientist/mathematician like me. Thank you man!
@francescafrancesca355417 күн бұрын
It has nothing to do with intelligence friend :). It's like a new language, it's just a matter of practice.
@ScaleShiftАй бұрын
Derek, I just wanted to congratulate you on, against the odds, maintaining consistent quality while also increasing production value and content volume. Usually we see KZbinrs go down the easy route of becoming corporate puppets and sacrificing integrity for quick cash, but you seem conscientious of the sponsors you allow on your channel and you've never forgotten your name. Not just an element of truth, but highly accurate and engaging!
@GiganticFoot20 күн бұрын
We’re gonna find the Eliksni with this one 🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥
@jaymzOGКүн бұрын
Io, Europa, and Ganymede being in orbital resonance is just so damn cool. The physics of that happening on such a large scale is fascinating.
@suly3243Ай бұрын
8:47 oh so they’re stretch marks
@thebush607728 күн бұрын
Flesh moon.
@EGH18123 күн бұрын
Totally
@AlfredoKägi22 күн бұрын
@@EGH181wdym
@kurtwinter442220 күн бұрын
We should send Diddy sized Baby Oil
@RuthwikRao19 күн бұрын
We GYATT to go sooner then.
@maxperson259221 күн бұрын
OMG SNOT BOT GOT A SHOUT OUT!!!!! THAT'S AMAZING. I had the opportunity to work with them for a senior engineering design project and they do incredible work. I nearly did a spit take seeing them pop up!!!
@norlore5216Ай бұрын
Veritasium semiweekly upload schedule is a gift from the gods
@faideye2833Ай бұрын
🦆
@m1-12 күн бұрын
props to all the smart people who could make that happen
@m24213Ай бұрын
So it takes 7 years to reach just Jupiter, god we are slow. Mad respect for the patience of scientists and engineers working on the project.
@myth1210Ай бұрын
I feel like that too. We are actually slow, unless there is alternative for rocket fuels
@linecraftman3907Ай бұрын
There is a caveat After launch it will go back to fly by Earth, then Mars and only then go to Jupiter. This is done to take advantage of gravity assists, which is more efficient meaning the spacecraft needs less fuel and more mass can be spent on science. New horizons probe flew directly to Jupiter and it only took a year but it's a smaller spacecraft and it didn't stop at Jupiter
@theunknowman12Ай бұрын
Its not like we are slow, its just space are stupidly big
@saintIpie0000Ай бұрын
Its so damn far, much further distance earth to sun. Damn space
@jeffspaulding9834Ай бұрын
We *could* get there fast. We'd have to build a much larger spacecraft that could take a direct route and decelerate hard at Jupiter (or air-brake in Jupiter's atmosphere). We don't normally build spacecraft like that so there'd be lots of new development required. That's more money (a LOT more money) and a higher chance of failure, but also a lot more time. Using a design like Clipper is actually faster than developing a spacecraft that could travel there directly. If we had a cheap way of getting mass into orbit, it'd be a different story.
@peepohappy6309Ай бұрын
Loving the frequent uploads
@ahmedzakir2379Ай бұрын
yea it da best
@Platinum_XYZАй бұрын
yeah I'm honestly shocked by these coming out so fast. these are not easy videos to make at all
@MooreDoingАй бұрын
I love this channel. The fact the Galileo model had part of its antenna closed was so cool. Very thorough. ☺
@FreakyLynx16 күн бұрын
I am also reminded of the movie Europa Report.
@katerrinah544212 күн бұрын
Scrolled way to far to find a mention of this movie. It was the start of my Europa obsession and I am SO EXCITED for this mission
@vibovitold10 күн бұрын
i quite liked it, i enjoy this sort of low key s-f
@rtoghraeeАй бұрын
Thanks!
@sethheristal956121 күн бұрын
Oh bboy the analog horror and the cosmic horror people gonna have a field day with this
@katerrinah544212 күн бұрын
The movie the Europa Report is one of my favourite movies. Space horror is awesome but I love when it's set in our own solar system!
@belleviewbibliophile983519 күн бұрын
Since you’re cool enough to put your ads at the end of the videos, I actually take the time to watch them 😂❤. Thanks for being cool.😎🤙
@leward778819 күн бұрын
i thought i was alone with that kind of quid pro quo
@wxles17 күн бұрын
Let’s hope that under the ice we don’t see horrors beyond our comprehension
@ItsMr_Z17 күн бұрын
*Barotrauma intensifies*
@AquelePequenoNiVy12 күн бұрын
Probably we will see horrors beyond our comprehension. Life on a gas giant moon could change evolution significantly
@something222Ай бұрын
I love that the astronomer has a Star Trek book in his library xDD 15:30
@angeluslupus23 күн бұрын
Not to mention the stuffed tribble and glommer (both from the animated series because the tribble is pink!)
@geokon320 күн бұрын
@angeluslupus Also Balok's puppet!!
@mrericsullyАй бұрын
I've heard the facts of what we know about Jupiter's and it's moons and which missions discovered it, but not how the data told us about the salt. I also loved the basketball demonstration.
@ElkabadАй бұрын
This tickles my brain. (edit) Its actually genius how they might be able to study the water by using geysers that shoot through the ice, my only concern would be over time, if ice buildup got too cluttered on Europa Clipper then it might cause stuff to shut. But I'm no rocket scientist so its just an assumption.
@wjspadeАй бұрын
I had a similar thought. The plumes could also be corrosive. Passing through them could damage sensors, controls, and solar panels. It makes more sense to have the sensor on a tether so that the craft itself stays out of the plumes.
@HK23783Ай бұрын
I think it might not be that big of a problem. If I remember correctly, Cassini did that in Enceladus on the Saturn mission
@linecraftman3907Ай бұрын
Water ice evaporates in the vacuum so it'll dry off over time There could be tiny salt deposits left over