What Is Beyond Edge Of The Universe?

2024 ж. 5 Мам.
3 064 226 Рет қаралды

Beyond the edge of the universe lies a realm of infinite wonders and enigmas that have captivated the human spirit for millennia. From the vast voids that punctuate the cosmos to the very moments before the Big Bang, join us on an epic timelapse journey as we traverse the timeline of the universe. We'll venture back to the very dawn of existence, witness the intricate evolution of galaxies and stars, and peer into the distant, speculative future. As we seek the boundaries of the cosmos, we'll ponder the profound question: Is there truly an edge to the universe, or does it stretch beyond our wildest imaginations? Join us as we journey beyond the known and into the mysteries that await.
00:00 The Edge of The Universe
17:57 Timelapse off The Universe
34:42 Future of The Universe
50:46 The Mysterious Boötes Void
1:14:29 Before the Big Bang

Пікірлер
  • When the bear went over the mountain he saw another mountain.

    @normanlefkowitz5197@normanlefkowitz51977 ай бұрын
    • No actually

      @stingingmetal9648@stingingmetal96487 ай бұрын
    • But first he saw a valley with a river running through it. Huge salmon swimming in it. Just what he had been looking for.!

      @stephenanderle5422@stephenanderle54227 ай бұрын
    • This was a fav song during our family trips in CA in the sixties.

      @louisesmalling@louisesmalling7 ай бұрын
    • Then he saw man.

      @Quentin-rr7ib@Quentin-rr7ib7 ай бұрын
    • best quote i have ever seen

      @sweetdreamzzzz@sweetdreamzzzz7 ай бұрын
  • A cowboy explaining the universe is not what I expected but I’m so here for it

    @AmericanWeather@AmericanWeather6 ай бұрын
    • Real

      @naimulislamrumi3028@naimulislamrumi30283 ай бұрын
    • Bacon n eggs coffe and brown beans, together they create a force so strong that the expansion of the stomach will open a black hole in space and time.

      @dststh5440@dststh54402 ай бұрын
    • wtf

      @KnightsofComputation@KnightsofComputationАй бұрын
    • @@PJxpanterx the accent, silly! It's a joke.

      @naimulislamrumi3028@naimulislamrumi3028Ай бұрын
    • @PJxpanterx And on a steel horse he rides.

      @svenjansen2134@svenjansen2134Ай бұрын
  • I’m on acid

    @Youngdanny45@Youngdanny453 ай бұрын
    • Hell yea brother

      @Slicknutz444@Slicknutz444Ай бұрын
    • Get off it, it doesnt like that

      @PerpetualWane@PerpetualWane25 күн бұрын
    • Hydrochloric?

      @user-kp6vu6tw7f@user-kp6vu6tw7f12 күн бұрын
    • BRO-

      @Egillard3@Egillard310 күн бұрын
    • @@PerpetualWaneI know what kind of man you are

      @randomguyonyoutube4833@randomguyonyoutube483310 күн бұрын
  • So refreshing to hear the voice of a HUMAN narrator. Thank you.

    @user-wv9pw9tq1g@user-wv9pw9tq1gАй бұрын
    • Huh? As opposed to?

      @ridinwithjake@ridinwithjakeАй бұрын
    • ​@@ridinwithjakeAs opposed to an A.I. voice

      @HelpMeFindTheseSongs@HelpMeFindTheseSongsАй бұрын
    • I'm not convinced that this isn't an AI.. There isn't a lot of inflection and a LOT of uniform spacing in the pacing. The AI voices are getting much better. Edit - To add on to this, I heard a Joe Rogan AI the other day that even faked microphone peaking and face rubs into the my mic.

      @JMRSplatt@JMRSplatt28 күн бұрын
    • This is 100% AI. Listen to the mistake around 7:10, start at 7:00. .... ...".. The whole image of the past is revealed to scientist". Clearly a human would have corrected on the spot. The constant uniform tone is just terrible too.

      @JMRSplatt@JMRSplatt28 күн бұрын
    • ​@@ridinwithjake ... Your sister !!

      @huf67@huf6721 күн бұрын
  • I've seen so many of these videos and recognize the words/concepts that are explained. I still can't wrap my mind around it. I'd like to think I'm not stupid, but it's so difficult to grasp the life of the universe vs the distance of the observable universe, event horizon, etc. And what makes me feel even stupider, is that I still enjoy watching this type of content even when i don't really get it.

    @devonmarcus101@devonmarcus1015 ай бұрын
    • It’s okay 👍🏾. As long as you keep watching it, your brain will start to understand it and you’ll be smarter than most people ^^ edit: TYSM FOR THE LIKES!

      @Andromeda_5@Andromeda_55 ай бұрын
    • @@Andromeda_5 Thank you Andromeda

      @devonmarcus101@devonmarcus1015 ай бұрын
    • I don't get it either

      @bugsea54@bugsea545 ай бұрын
    • ur exactly like me and i kwep watching

      @puppupya@puppupya5 ай бұрын
    • None of you are “stupid”, consider, all the so called “smart” people don’t understand any of this stuff either. Yes an astrophysicist is usually really good with math, (at the end of the day it’s all math all the way down, after all “The Answer” is 42.) but the Universe could give a pair of fetid dingo kidneys (it really is a great book, lol) what some psychotic hairless apes on a relatively speaking grain of dust think. So then the problem is, what do “we” think, and there in lies your solution. You may “think” of or another word, comprehend, the Universe in any way you choose because as we know, it does not care. Now if you wish to understand the quantum nature (which is one of an almost infinite number of natures in the Universe) of the Universe then most likely you are really good at math, if you wish to understand the reason of the Universe then most likely you really enjoy talking, (most philosophers love to talk) if you wish to travel the Universe then consider yourself very intelligent and a happening cat that has an excellent imagination. Your perception makes up 100% of your reality. So many worry about this and that, sometimes it’s just nice to get away from it all. Understand “it” however you wish and be satisfied that whatever your understanding, it is enough. Who cares if you suck at math. It’s literally how a bunch of psychotic hairless apes are trying to understand something so gargantuan and complex that when they actually figure it out, they’ll realize it was all just a huge waste of time, the math that is…….although there are some who think this of the Universe as well. None of you are stupid.

      @user-om7ft2ms8r@user-om7ft2ms8r5 ай бұрын
  • The reason why we think there is an end to the universe is that we are unable to comprehend the concept of eternity.

    @matthewgolden3277@matthewgolden3277Ай бұрын
    • Exactly. Our finite minds cannot comprehend eternity or infinity.

      @matthewchicago5288@matthewchicago5288Ай бұрын
    • Not really... this universe started from chaos for a reason . (Both sides agree) 6 day creation and materialistic atheistim. As far as we obverse, light gives us the scientific measures of what a livable universe needs to allow intelligent life to exist, and our limited universe is exactly ... L I M I T E D.

      @paulgarduno2867@paulgarduno2867Ай бұрын
    • ​@@matthewchicago5288 And you do? Stop acting like an expert

      @user-od8mj3rr5h@user-od8mj3rr5hАй бұрын
    • Our minds cannot comprehend the greatness of God.

      @asabir141@asabir141Ай бұрын
    • No.. not really.. want to take a stab at it… look at a fractal amigo

      @icyvolts@icyvoltsАй бұрын
  • Could not sleep last night. Put on this video and fell asleep during most of it. Great for insomniacs.

    @bobflari@bobflariАй бұрын
    • Doing that right now

      @basmdaka6954@basmdaka6954Ай бұрын
    • Same

      @EZ_Case@EZ_CaseАй бұрын
    • +3 gn guys

      @illchangethislaterpigsandmater@illchangethislaterpigsandmaterАй бұрын
    • Excellent. That's exactly what I'm looking for

      @lilmike2710@lilmike2710Ай бұрын
    • Just finished the video while trying to fall asleep, I’m happy for your success tho (boiling with jealousy)

      @loganweber08@loganweber08Ай бұрын
  • The greatest injustice about life...is having ALLLLLLL OF THIS STUFF AROUND US...trillions of galaxies,planets,stars... and NEVER....being able to reach and explore them 😢😢😢 it makes my heart ache for some reason

    @Tater4200@Tater42003 ай бұрын
    • Same! 😢

      @martinaavona@martinaavonaАй бұрын
    • I feel the same way

      @Blackhammerforge@BlackhammerforgeАй бұрын
    • Don’t lose hope, maybe teleportation or some form of FTL travel will be invented in our lifetime.

      @PerpetualWane@PerpetualWane25 күн бұрын
    • We need phasers to explore space and we ain't got them yet 😢😂

      @nubie1100@nubie110023 күн бұрын
    • I truly feel like once God call us home just maybe we get reborn as sum or somebody else on a different planet, different universe imma firm believer n that so ua get yo shot to kno what's out there 🫡

      @antoniofrancis4825@antoniofrancis48254 күн бұрын
  • Nice to hear a well-spoken, appropriately expressed, non-robotic and fluent delivery.

    @myriaddsystems@myriaddsystems6 ай бұрын
    • The southern accent is unfitting

      @ihateyoutubecomments8100@ihateyoutubecomments81006 ай бұрын
    • @@ihateyoutubecomments8100 Better than him sounding like Chills.

      @kennyl4699@kennyl46996 ай бұрын
    • @@kennyl4699agreed

      @josephdavis1704@josephdavis17046 ай бұрын
    • Just enough mispronunciations to be aggravating... I'm not so sure this is not computer-generated.

      @veritas41photo@veritas41photo6 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ihateyoutubecomments8100Not in the least.

      @InuranusBrokoff@InuranusBrokoff6 ай бұрын
  • It’s so weird that all this is happening and most people never talk about it. What the hell do we live in? Haha

    @yajy4501@yajy45017 ай бұрын
    • We live in our own little bubble. Trying to figure out what is a woman. God help us😢

      @jerojero7111@jerojero71117 ай бұрын
    • We live in an ape body that has ape instincts that supersede such things.

      @Robert-ch2jw@Robert-ch2jw6 ай бұрын
    • right? sometimes I think about it like damn what the fuck is going on? some infinite universe and shit and were just down here chillin

      @profilen5181@profilen51815 ай бұрын
    • ​@@profilen5181made of infinitely small pieces forming one being. That's the really wild part.

      @ethanwells2676@ethanwells26765 ай бұрын
    • The overwhelming vast majority of people can't be bothered beyond what they can see and experience every single day. And when it comes to this stuff..... Most people just don't care. Nobody wants to learn anything. You know it was once thought of that perhaps the reason there were so many stupid fucking people globally is because of a lack of access to information. But you see as technology has improved....... It's been proven that that's not the case.

      @SouthOfSanity79@SouthOfSanity794 ай бұрын
  • Unknown Infinity: As I gazed up at the night sky, I couldn't help but feel a sense of wonder and awe at the unknown infinity stretching out before me. The stars seemed to twinkle with secrets and mysteries, and the vastness of space filled me with a sense of both excitement and insignificance. It was a humbling reminder of how much there is still left to discover in the universe, and how small our place in it truly is.

    @ahmadmahdavi8607@ahmadmahdavi86074 ай бұрын
    • The real stars are on the In star gram firmament channel .

      @loulou-zd1dz@loulou-zd1dz3 ай бұрын
    • It's the same thing. There is nothing beyond the universe because the empty hypothetical space is still just space

      @HermeticChaosofficial@HermeticChaosofficial3 ай бұрын
    • The question may be, is space empty or just millions, billions, trillions of Big Bangs forever going.

      @bradmiller3557@bradmiller35573 ай бұрын
    • @@HermeticChaosofficial The defnition for the universe: The universe is commonly defined as the totality of everything that exists, including all matter, energy, planets, stars, galaxies, and the contents of intergalactic space.

      @ahmadmahdavi8607@ahmadmahdavi86073 ай бұрын
    • ​@@HermeticChaosofficialif there were empty space there, that space would still be part of the universe. The science of "nothing" is a very interesting topic. Empty space brims with virtual particles, etc. When they say the universe is expanding, it is space itself they are referring to- not necessarily just matter, which occupies space. So ask yourself: what is on the other side of space itself? What is the shape of the universe? Does it curve back on itself, like a sphere, both infinite and finite, or does it just keep going, a flat universe?

      @jonathanhorvat2452@jonathanhorvat24523 ай бұрын
  • There are theories and models for the universe. But in reality, the age and extent of the universe ...is not known to humans.

    @sasharamirez2335@sasharamirez233524 күн бұрын
    • But they explain their theories as if they are facts. Is that ok? I mean, it's not a lie if they believe it, right?

      @user-si7qi4xtriad@user-si7qi4xtriadКүн бұрын
  • More than likely, what lies beyond what we can see is probably just more of what we can see.

    @pugowner1347@pugowner13477 ай бұрын
    • At distances so vast because of expansion that you can't see it even as you reach that edge.

      @bethrains3105@bethrains31057 ай бұрын
    • Except it's a whole lot tamer

      @Quentin-rr7ib@Quentin-rr7ib7 ай бұрын
    • while I agree with you, we don't know for sure so that is an assumption

      @MrTweetyhack@MrTweetyhack7 ай бұрын
    • @@MrTweetyhack Technically, it's all assumption until we can get out there and prove it..

      @pugowner1347@pugowner13477 ай бұрын
    • My thoughts are, if outer space is nothing, and the universe has a limit of how far out the stars and galaxies go (like fireworks). Then outside of the universe edge is simply, nothing. Nothing but black empty nothingness. It's easy to comprehend that because nothing is nothing. A true void.

      @mikewillett5076@mikewillett50767 ай бұрын
  • Crazy how you can learn more about space in a one hour KZhead video than in 12 years of school

    @Exile_6655@Exile_66556 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, you don’t learn anything in school except how to survive. These days, I learn what I want to learn.

      @mattdelany6799@mattdelany67996 ай бұрын
    • They don't teach much about the stars at most schools that is why.

      @MrBashem@MrBashem5 ай бұрын
    • ... wrong, you learn to put 12 school yrs into an hour 😂

      @Cubano.Marica@Cubano.Marica4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MrBashemThey don't teach you much of anything that actually matters and is helpful in the real world, nor do they teach you how to engage in critical thinking.

      @jaysmith2858@jaysmith28584 ай бұрын
    • lol

      @golddenstar@golddenstar3 ай бұрын
  • In an infinite universe, anything that could be imagined might somewhere exist..

    @Logan2k23@Logan2k234 ай бұрын
    • In an infinite universe they DO exist.

      @variant101@variant1012 ай бұрын
    • Interesting

      @kimlippu5017@kimlippu501729 күн бұрын
    • Mathematical fact my friend.

      @leogets2006@leogets20066 күн бұрын
    • In a infinite universe everything exists, and exists an infinite number of times, with an infinite number of variations.

      @stephane9544@stephane95443 сағат бұрын
  • Love this video already. Usually with these videos I’m constantly looking up questions because they aren’t explained. So far, you’ve explained every question I’ve had

    @plexxar2@plexxar22 ай бұрын
  • I've always wondered: What is the difference between an empty space, (like beyond the edge of where energy has reached since the big bang), and something that does not exist at all.

    @bobbarclay316@bobbarclay3166 ай бұрын
    • Damn…. That’s a good question. I am going to think that one over for a long time now. Great one honestly

      @albertaoridge@albertaoridge6 ай бұрын
    • Maybe I misunderstood you, but matter and energy of the big bang isn't reaching anywhere. They were always everywhere because big bang happened everywhere all at once. It's a common misconception that big bang happened at a fixed location and is filling out empty space as it spreads out. This is not so. Space itself is expanding everywhere and matter has always been everywhere.

      @danielbaech4272@danielbaech42726 ай бұрын
    • In addition, matter curves spacetime. If all matter was centered to a spherical big bang burst and space was empty beyond it, spacetime would curve hyperbolically the further matter was from the "center" of the big bang. This is not observed as spacetime is flat as far as we can observe.

      @danielbaech4272@danielbaech42726 ай бұрын
    • ​@@albertaoridgedon't do it !! You will go crazy!!😂

      @valistrutu@valistrutu6 ай бұрын
    • There isn't empty space in the Electric Universe...Neither was there a Big Bang..These people throw around " Dark Matter" as if as real as the morning Sun.. Every attempt to prove Dark Matter has failed...Slowly but surely the best are moving to the Electric Universe..Energy is abundant to the fartest reaches...The best places to have a civilization is a Brown Dwarf star...They are much less violent..Black Holres are Plasma Tharus...Velecovski proved this to Einstien..

      @marcgottlieb9579@marcgottlieb95796 ай бұрын
  • Accepting the concept of infinity allows the possibility that the universe has always existed, and is limitless.

    @Reach41@Reach417 ай бұрын
    • no, not really, or rather, the universe both cannot be infinite in time and also be infinite in spacetime.

      @xBINARYGODx@xBINARYGODx7 ай бұрын
    • @@xBINARYGODx Mechanical engineering is my field, not astrophysics, so an explanation would be appreciated.

      @Reach41@Reach417 ай бұрын
    • @@xBINARYGODx That's the "theory". But theories aren't facts. So we really can't be sure.

      @pugowner1347@pugowner13477 ай бұрын
    • Expansion is not possible without an external force. Infinite space claims constant expansion. It isn't possible.

      @Kenneth-ts7bp@Kenneth-ts7bp7 ай бұрын
    • I doubt our minds are actually able to understand the universes totality. Infinite or otherwise. We might literally not be able to understand the scope and scale of our reality.

      @SmartAss4123@SmartAss41237 ай бұрын
  • Define the word NOTHING. Words such as this are used so we can relate to and understand in our own language for some comprehension. In reality, we don't know our position to our existence and all there is. It is simply beyound our comprension. It is like asking, where is the limit ir the end from our point? This in turn reflects back to us... in.... Why does there have to be a nothing, end destination , a nothing, time e.t c. Rather we should be accepting that all is, because it simply is. We only live with what can comprehend. All else is way above our intelligence.

    @H-jb4tf@H-jb4tfАй бұрын
  • One of the best collaborations i didnt expected to experience,voices,visuals and music on my road to self awareness ❤

    @user-iw2nb7ns4e@user-iw2nb7ns4e3 күн бұрын
  • I have successfully stopped sleeping pills since i have found this channel

    @ryanh6980@ryanh69807 ай бұрын
    • Well if you were on the the benzodiazepines good for you cuz that's a hard one! 👌👊👍

      @bruce92106@bruce921063 күн бұрын
  • Its 2.00 AM and i think this is something that everyone should know.

    @DevilishCat897@DevilishCat8975 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for the heads up 👍

      @mattc825@mattc8252 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂

      @kau0303@kau03032 ай бұрын
    • Acid is fun

      @Dirt_McGirt_ODB@Dirt_McGirt_ODBАй бұрын
    • I mean, it's not. But if it is for you, I guess I'll take your word for it.

      @user-si7qi4xtriad@user-si7qi4xtriadКүн бұрын
    • It's 2am.

      @user-si7qi4xtriad@user-si7qi4xtriadКүн бұрын
  • To know what is beyond the universe, the universe is still to be explored fully.

    @FMSVoice@FMSVoiceКүн бұрын
  • I imagine no boarders, but instead "forever" being defined as how long it takes to wind up back where you started. All there is is all there is and thats how it is. To wonder about the edge of the universe is akin to wondering about the color of integrity; pure folly.

    @mhermit@mhermit29 күн бұрын
  • Lets face it the universe is unfathomable.

    @44mickd@44mickd5 ай бұрын
    • And a figment of science fiction😂 How can you have an atmosphere inside of a vacuum? Is it selective? Don't forget to look at how many folks get rich off this nonsense NASA milks us for billions of dollars. BTW, rocket motors don't work in a vacuum, nothing to push off of! Hence why this crap is incomprehensible!

      @everyonelovesLewi@everyonelovesLewi3 ай бұрын
    • yea but, we have absence of evidence, but that doesn’t mean there is no “beyond the universe” Just like extraterrestrial Theory.. could possibly just be the scientific Telescope and it’s external Limit

      @miamihonduran9954@miamihonduran99543 ай бұрын
    • universe is unfathomable but maaannn Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce had their first argument as a couple.

      @speedytypermananswers5551@speedytypermananswers55513 ай бұрын
    • ​@@speedytypermananswers5551 yep haha. I try and remember were just barely evolved chimps in a sense and that helps me forgive the madness and shocking simplicity of the minds of the masses.

      @TheirIAre@TheirIAreАй бұрын
  • The one thing that turns this whole video on it's head is technology. Everything is based on our current ability. All it takes is one breakthrough to change it all. Just because we can't, doesn't mean it's impossible.

    @durtyred86@durtyred866 ай бұрын
    • ofc, if we had the technology to understand dark matters for example, we might understand so much more of this nonsense lol

      @synhet84@synhet845 ай бұрын
    • ​@@synhet84dark matter theory you mean. Because it still hasn't been proven because if it can be proven then there would be something there to show for it but there's really not. And some of the new science actually has different theories entirely that have nothing to do with the dark matter theory.

      @SouthOfSanity79@SouthOfSanity794 ай бұрын
    • Technology you say, how about spiritualnology. Have you tried that?

      @johnjacksonjackson4487@johnjacksonjackson44874 ай бұрын
    • @@johnjacksonjackson4487once someone shows me one shred of scientific evidence and not just “he said she said” about a spirituality, I’ll consider it

      @imasealarparparparp2714@imasealarparparparp27144 ай бұрын
    • "nothing is impossible" and you loop back to philosophy. can technology make a rock so heavy thay technology can't lift it?

      @trustytrest@trustytrest4 ай бұрын
  • If you watch at 55:48 there is a huge inconsistency in information Boötes Void has diameter of 330 million light years and it’s 23x bigger than our Milky Way galaxy Canes Venatici Void had diameter of 1,2 billion light years and it’s 8x bigger than our Milky Way galaxy… Am I missing something?

    @UnrealSolver@UnrealSolver4 ай бұрын
    • I'm surprised this comment is so far down, how did they miss that?

      @ChiefBograt3100@ChiefBograt3100Ай бұрын
    • The void they describe is actually 3,300 x wider than the milky Way. They arsed up the math. But you could fit 18,800,000,000,000 Milky Ways into the void. So tired of correcting simple math for KZhead channels.

      @HE-pu3nt@HE-pu3ntАй бұрын
    • This is a very nice presentation, however it’s not all that current.

      @tonybazz53@tonybazz533 күн бұрын
  • Watching from Greece.hi everybody. Great documentary.

    @user-un8zk5fo7i@user-un8zk5fo7i2 ай бұрын
    • Watching from Edinburgh. ❤❤

      @riseandshine75@riseandshine75Ай бұрын
    • hello Greece. with love from Townsville Australia. 💥🇦🇺

      @OziBlokeTimG@OziBlokeTimGАй бұрын
    • Watching from Houston Texas

      @chrisontenmillion@chrisontenmillionАй бұрын
  • I don't think we can comprehend the infinity of the universe. Our minds are limited, yet we are smart enough to realize it.

    @johnmadison3472@johnmadison34727 ай бұрын
    • I believe infinity it self doesn't exist here is why.If time accually started you know there was a 0 moment then nothing can be infinite in only one exeption it existed before time itself so based on the big bang theory the universe accually started at one point so it can't accually be infinite because time itself isn't infinite and we humans how we understand infinity its related to time because if the universe is growing over time and time itself isn't infinite the universe can't be infinite.think about it lets imagine time as a line and lets say we are know at moment 10000 it won't matter how much we go further on the line it always will be a number not infinity. why? Because it started i believe for something to be infinite it should just be just exist.and it's not logical for something just to exist but it can if it was before time itself

      @redippo@redippo6 ай бұрын
    • I totally agree

      @tyronescott7712@tyronescott77125 ай бұрын
    • Quite a few people in this comment section are not smart enough to realize it.

      @SouthOfSanity79@SouthOfSanity794 ай бұрын
    • @@SouthOfSanity79 You've just nailed it. Most people can't really comprehend that about which they define in terms of themselves.

      @leelarson107@leelarson1074 ай бұрын
    • It's weirdly frustrating because we can all easily imagine dividing a ruler into infinite parts or creating a computer that counts for all eternity We don't see division ending or numbers ending but for some reason humans assume that the universe or all known existence/reality needs to end even though we don't have one scrap of proof in support

      @knyghtryder3599@knyghtryder35994 ай бұрын
  • Who says there's an edge.. every time we peer over an edge there's more to see

    @vannjunkin8041@vannjunkin80417 ай бұрын
    • If time accually started you know there was a 0 moment then nothing can be infinite in only one exeption it existed before time itself so based on the big bang theory the universe accually started at one point so it can't accually be infinite because time itself isn't infinite and we humans how we understand infinity its related to time because if the universe is growing over time and time itself isn't infinite the universe can't be infinite.think about it lets imagine time as a line and lets say we are know at moment 10000 it won't matter how much we go further on the line it always will be a number not infinity. why? Because it started i believe for something to be infinite it should just be just exist.and it's not logical for something just to exist but it can if it was before time itself

      @redippo@redippo6 ай бұрын
    • But nothing cannot create something. So, there's that.

      @user-si7qi4xtriad@user-si7qi4xtriadКүн бұрын
  • Stunning visualization and beautiful narration. Thank you for making it.

    @dadolin01@dadolin013 ай бұрын
    • Urine in your ear buddy.

      @blokin5039@blokin50392 ай бұрын
    • No big bang. In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. Beyond the universe is God and eternity.

      @gmabailey296@gmabailey296Ай бұрын
    • no bg god either. @@gmabailey296

      @colinjames2469@colinjames2469Ай бұрын
    • @@gmabailey296 Who is to say that it was God who created the big bang. After all, you don't know the mind of God, nor does _anyone_ .

      @philwilliams8328@philwilliams8328Ай бұрын
  • This man's voice is nice and pleasant. He's easy to listen and pay attention to. Some speakers voices are overly loud and dramatic and turns me off. Great video and great speaker/presenter.

    @heatherprincipe8537@heatherprincipe853727 күн бұрын
    • It’s AI

      @evokinevo@evokinevo24 күн бұрын
    • It’s not AI … it’s me

      @troyholdenvoices@troyholdenvoices10 күн бұрын
  • I've always felt that the universe was a sphere rather than flat and the "edge" of what we can see is simply the horizon of that curvature the same way we can only see so far while looking at the ocean from the shore. But still, that would leave something else "outside" the universe, I haven't worked that part out yet.

    @alexs.362@alexs.3626 ай бұрын
    • I feel the same, from the point of the bang out in all directions. Like the skin of a basketball, or say the surface of the earth? Mind boggling to think of such things! If you could travel far enough, could you end up back on future earth, such as an airplane would bring you back to your starting point by flying in a straight line around the equator? Another strange thought, if you could travel perpendicular, such as traveling from the inside surface of the balls skin to the outside surface, as a rocket does penetrating our atmosphere on its way to space, what would become of you if you didn't stop? If there's "nothing" there, is the "edge" as impenetrable as a brick wall and you crash your ship? If you are able to continue then it's no longer nothing because you are there. So nothing is now something. Is your ship now expanding the universe behind it? Crazy stuff! We will never know.

      @notnuff2264@notnuff22646 ай бұрын
    • Tellus when you figure it out will ya

      @balsham137@balsham1375 ай бұрын
    • The observable universe is simply where light can reach us from. There unfortunately isn’t anything unique or mysterious about the unobservable universe. This isn’t a perfect analogy but it’s close enough: Imagine you are standing on a beach and looking out into the ocean. You can only see so far, right? But you know what’s beyond what you can see: it’s just more ocean. You can think of it in a similar way.

      @connoranastasio@connoranastasio5 ай бұрын
    • The true edge of the universe would be where time hasn't yet reached.

      @wessla@wessla5 ай бұрын
    • @@wessla Interesting thought!?!

      @notnuff2264@notnuff22645 ай бұрын
  • So basically, we have a limited time to get to know other possible lifeforms or else they'll literally be moving too fast for us to reach

    @Mr--_--M@Mr--_--M7 ай бұрын
    • As long as they're in our galaxy, we dont need to worry about it. The gravity within a galaxy overpowers the expansion of the universe.

      @JordanTheMann@JordanTheMann7 ай бұрын
    • We won't last as a species long enough to worry about getting to another galaxy!

      @LuciferMornStar@LuciferMornStar7 ай бұрын
    • All this true

      @Joe-ym6bw@Joe-ym6bw7 ай бұрын
    • The expanding universe theory is not the only explanation for the redshifting we see over long distances, just like dark matter is not the only explanation for the gravity discrepancy in galaxies. The big bang is not even the only explanation for the CMB. Unfortunately these theories are constantly being championed in popular culture as if they are hard scientific facts, rather than as the currently prevalent theories. If those theories where perfect, there would not exist so many discrepancies, paradoxes, and outright mysteries in theoretical physics.

      @1112viggo@1112viggo7 ай бұрын
    • That period long passed. If anything were able to reach earth it would be beyond our comprehension as humans. Hawking!

      @gigas801@gigas8017 ай бұрын
  • The universe can not have an edge, it goes on for ever

    @user-se2xm5yp6u@user-se2xm5yp6u4 ай бұрын
    • ALLAH SAID (When the sun Kuwwirat (wound round and lost its light and is overthrown). (1)And when the stars shall fall; (2)And when the mountains shall made to pass away; (3)And when the seas shall become as blazing Fire or shall overflow; (6)And when the heaven shall be stripped off and taken away from its place; (11) At-Takwir 81:1 AND THERE IS MORE ABOUT THE ENDING OF THE UNIVERS

      @user-rt9bj7zt2d@user-rt9bj7zt2d2 ай бұрын
    • The observable universe has an edge. This is not the same thing as the entire universe.

      @sean748@sean748Ай бұрын
    • ​@user-rt9bj7zt2d that's literally the most pointless gibberish how do people get sucked into religions I will never understand

      @gomiladroogies5951@gomiladroogies595129 күн бұрын
    • @@gomiladroogies5951 💯💯💯

      @MrBronx61@MrBronx6121 күн бұрын
  • Thank you "Space Matters" for this beautiful space video! 😊 There are no boundaries in the sense of demarcation, at least not in this vast space that we (wrongly) call our only universe. Rather, this is a collection of so-called pocket universes with flowing, invisible transitions. All of these bubble or pocket universes merged over time into a single gigantic universe. Then there are most likely other universes/ multiverses that are outside what we are calling our universe, but that's still a guess at the moment...

    @thekingofmojacar5333@thekingofmojacar53332 ай бұрын
  • My experience of "Edge of the universe" videos are that they conclude that the universe continue beyond the "observable universe" but that really isn't more interesting than me agnowleging that there are more houses out there that I cannot see a certainly foggy morning. The real question is what is beyond the true edge of the universe. And "nothing" doesn't say much unless we are talking about a lack of anything including a lack of the "nothing", that is, there isn't even an empty room.

    @michaelpettersson4919@michaelpettersson49197 ай бұрын
    • That "room" is space-time. Imagine a room covering an entire sphere, with no rooms outside it. No walls, yet finite. If the universe is finite, scientists think it could be the surface of a 4-dimensional sphere.

      @ericgolightly8450@ericgolightly84507 ай бұрын
    • @@ericgolightly8450 Could be. I was just a bit annoyed about so many videos talking about the edge of the universe when they really mean the observable universe.

      @michaelpettersson4919@michaelpettersson49197 ай бұрын
    • Interesting

      @kevinbaskovich7973@kevinbaskovich79737 ай бұрын
    • ​@michaelpettersson4919 the unobservable universe is akin to the supernatural. It it can't be studied, it doesn't exist.

      @lennonwilson6407@lennonwilson64077 ай бұрын
    • @@lennonwilson6407 It do indeed exist. It is just a horizon basically. You cannot see beyond the horizon but you know that the world continues beyond what you can see.

      @michaelpettersson4919@michaelpettersson49197 ай бұрын
  • Amazing channel. Thanks a lot for this episode and your hard work.

    @historiadeluniverso@historiadeluniverso6 ай бұрын
  • This documentary was truly brilliant! 💚

    @Domzdream@Domzdream4 ай бұрын
    • And you apparently are pretty dim! Wake up! this is science fiction. For instance, if our sun is 93 million miles away, why do the sun rays eminate at an angle that shows it is close when seen through a cloudy sky?

      @everyonelovesLewi@everyonelovesLewi3 ай бұрын
  • I have dared to think about the end, not of time (because it is man-made, it's measure questionable and irrelevant), but of Space...this crazy unimaginable, unanswerable question gives me shivers😮if we could even find an end, like a wall, you still have to wonder what's behind that, and infinitum...OUR Universe is only a tiny part of a never-ending whole that has no boundaries, so weird!!

    @junemoonchild69@junemoonchild694 ай бұрын
    • Time is not man made only the significance we put on certain intervals, it is a different dimension to the same property as space ie space time Both space and time could easily be infinite , remember infinity or eternity is not a specific quantity but a property The default position for both based off of empirical evidence is that both are infinite , you would need empirical evidence to show that either space or time end , which we don't have , we have the opposite, we keep building bigger and better telescopes , looking further and further and all we see is more of the universe and that universe looks more similar to our modern universe than previous scientists assumed , so every year it looks more and more likely that both space and time are infinite without a shred of evidence to the contrary

      @knyghtryder3599@knyghtryder35994 ай бұрын
    • ​@knyghtryder3599 Ya, it's hard to wrap your head around it. An infinite universe with no beginning or end. What is a memory, or a "sense"? A dream? We think we can explain and understand these phenomenon, but do we? And if you do, can you explain them to me??

      @user-si7qi4xtriad@user-si7qi4xtriadКүн бұрын
  • How and Why the Universe came about is the most fascinating question in the universe, sadly we will never know but it will be fun trying:)

    @CR250rSMITH@CR250rSMITH7 ай бұрын
    • we could we just need more people helping

      @Cyanunikittygaming@Cyanunikittygaming7 ай бұрын
    • humanity is never to be underestimated. we will find out one day, next year or a trillion years from now. we have to, as we are the only ones capable.

      @samurai-butterfly7393@samurai-butterfly73937 ай бұрын
    • If people/government cared about real issues as much as they care about gay stuff then we could of been on Mars and figured out why we are here by now.

      @motojunkie8348@motojunkie83487 ай бұрын
    • @@motojunkie8348 I love your comment! I feel the same way. Might I add .. If our world governments had invested the same capital funding they spend on annual defense budgets and wartime expenditures since before the First World War on peaceful technology, higher education, and space exploration instead, we would have established colonies on Mars by now! It’s going to take the human race an extremely long time to get anywhere at this pace. But hey! We have gender neutral bathrooms now! 😂

      @jonkaminsky8382@jonkaminsky83827 ай бұрын
    • ​@jonkaminsky8382 I think this is the most likely solution to the fermi Paradox. It's very likely that once life gets to a certain level of development, it just annihilates itself.

      @machida58@machida587 ай бұрын
  • About time someone started making good docs and didnt have a british accent!

    @zephjackson7297@zephjackson72975 ай бұрын
    • I prefer an Indian accent 😂

      @RedPilledFit@RedPilledFit3 ай бұрын
    • 😏😏😏😏​@@RedPilledFit

      @amirkhusroohamid9705@amirkhusroohamid97052 ай бұрын
  • Finally came to the conclusion that there's no point in thinking about the topic. Feeling more at peace now that I've accepted my limited ability to understand certain things.

    @luckylambdin8269@luckylambdin826914 күн бұрын
  • I've wondered how long humanity will exist in some form or another. Will we transcend this universe and escape a seemingly inevitable doom of the one we're currently living in? Lots of experts say that things will break down and atoms might even break apart into their constituent parts once the universe expands enough and most of the stars have died.

    @christianroy5663@christianroy56633 ай бұрын
    • imagine discovering internets remenants after humanity has gone extinct. just reading these youtube comments and seeing how alive everything was

      @equation1321@equation13213 ай бұрын
    • Humans will be around as long as the universe is, throughout the universe life exist in all form of evolution on the planet it's on in about three,four hundred years humans will have Venice to point you and recognize them, as we mate with gadgets we're will love what our DNA deems not needed and write it out of our DNA as it's passed down, right now we are at the most dangerous time of our evolution going from a type zero to a type 0.1 civilisations, due to uranium, many civilisations that reaches this point, destroys themselves through nuclear war we just need to get past the next 50 years and humans have a better chance of survival mate is one of those that blew themselves up

      @derrickvargas3281@derrickvargas32813 ай бұрын
    • Bananas will remain. Always.

      @azalith8645@azalith86453 ай бұрын
  • They don't know how old the universe is. The James Webb telescope is proving its older than we think it is

    @Or3guns@Or3guns6 ай бұрын
    • No, the jwst proved there are GALAXIES older than we thought they would be. Not the universe itself.

      @Medic99z@Medic99z12 күн бұрын
  • this video saying everything other than whats beyond universe

    @parthparmar5666@parthparmar56665 ай бұрын
    • In the beginning he literally says that even if there are things beyond we don't know because we can't see that far

      @CupGreen@CupGreenАй бұрын
  • Brilliant narration. If the universe is truly endless , it's fascinating and scary at the same time.

    @giorgosarifoglu953@giorgosarifoglu953Ай бұрын
  • This always gives me existential angst. Picture the universe as a puddle slowly expanding in size in every direction. Is the puddle eventually going to stop expanding when it reaches the borders of the “container”(edge of universal limits) or, when it reaches the border of the “container” will the border expand with it? If the universe is the puddle, what is it expanding into?!?!?! What is the “container” that holds the universe? As it expands does it create reality itself out of nothing? Or is the universe just simply a more massive galaxy with smaller galaxies within it surrounded by other universes? All are equally as frightening and eventually we’ll collide with another universe.

    @joeyflvkko@joeyflvkko2 ай бұрын
  • I believe that you will find that after we can see farther out in space we will find more of the same things we see in the observable universe!

    @lincolng1456@lincolng14567 ай бұрын
    • I agree. its called eternity for a reason.

      @ronaldmartin4551@ronaldmartin45516 ай бұрын
    • "we will find more of the same things we see in the observable universe" as in... we will see more of similar things. But let's make that MORE interesting, shall we? _we will find the SAME things we see in the observable universe_ Meaning that, at some point, one of the far away galaxies that we see is actually our own seen from another angle... If it's not clear, imagine living on a small planet and light bending so much because of gravity that you can see the back of your head far in front of you... Google "Calabi Yau", these are "n dimensions" topologies, our universe might very well be like that. We know, thanks to calculations that the universe is a finite object without edges. The earth has such shape, so are donuts for example. It is very well possible that the universe wraps on itself and going straight forward for X amount of time would lead you exactly to where you started... Have fun thinking about that :)

      @SLRModShop@SLRModShop6 ай бұрын
    • @SPACE-RIDE

      @SpaceEx-28@SpaceEx-286 ай бұрын
    • Or.... see that "other bubble" floating next to ours ... We already KNOW there are more "universes"/"realities" than just the one WE are experiencing.... so.... maybe that IS where OURS ends and the next one BEGINS!!! And even if the next one has no solid mass in it... just pure energy and that is ALL that exists in it... it jives with physics and thermodynamics.... because energy = mass..... and.... black holes is likely to be where one of those OTHER ones bump into ours just like 2 bubbles that collide and join together but are still "separate" bubbles... at the spot they interact with each other... shit goes down the "drain" into theirs.... and all that SHIT that gets sucked in.... isnt getting CRUNCHED and CRUNCHED and CRUNCHED down into a point of infinately small "nothingness" just like that spinning "hole" that forms over the drain when you pull the plug... anything gets close to it... it's "event horizon" gets SUCKED down the drain... and cannot escape it once it hits the vortex.... It deos not "disappear" into nothingness... and on the other side... it does not just explode into existence from a point of nothing either... it don't get created, nor does it get destroyed... only equalizing the "pressure" from the "hole" that got created just like water does in a drain.... just like air does when it goes from high pressure to a area of low pressure till it equalizes... No crazy ass "theories" to explain why "impossible" shit is happening... we see it happening ALL THE TIME... ALL AROUND US and take it for granted... You don't have to invent new wild shit to explain away shit that happens everywhere... bridging 2 "realities" or "universes" is a little "out there" but Quantum Physics is telling us it IS there and it DOES exist... and with it EXISTING and it being a REALITY.... it is a STUID SIMPLE explanation to "magical shit" that isn't all that "magical" because the process that looks "magical" is the same processes we look at EVERY DAY....

      @rustykoenig3566@rustykoenig35666 ай бұрын
    • As with all exploration, more of the same, with some of the unique. That’s what is so valuable!

      @buntnik@buntnik6 ай бұрын
  • An eternal size of nothing would be simple to understand but nobody would exist to understand it. Now when we know that stuff exist we have to accept that more stuff must exist in the infinite cosmos.

    @birrextio6544@birrextio65446 ай бұрын
  • The crazy thing about this...when you get to the end of the last matter we can get to...there can be more clusters of galaxies a gazillion miles away....and on the other side of that. More clusters of galaxies...another gazillion miles away from that and it can keep on going...so mind blowing...no end...

    @slvalive@slvaliveАй бұрын
  • I've listened to this a few times n probably commented a couple time as well.. I'm blown away every time I hear this even if I think we're semi wrong,/clueless

    @RobertWilliams-ku5ix@RobertWilliams-ku5ix3 ай бұрын
  • With the help of an analogy to say the unstoppable force is time and immovable object is a singularity and upon their collision, we observe to the degree we can, a Big Bang. Wherever time has had time to reach, is where the expanding limits of space time is, based on our general relativity deductions in that scale. Where time has not arrived yet, is primed space waiting to become spacetime.

    @rezadaneshi@rezadaneshi7 ай бұрын
    • I dubbed that as the Nothing when I was a kid and explained the existence of dark matter and said simply when you have enough zeros ( where they come from I have no clue ) get together they spontaneous turn into something... Comparing it to spontaneous combustion.. the conditions have to be right for it to happen and that takes the existence of TIME... Exactly.. I think you get it ... What I was trying so hard to explain..

      @robertahrens5906@robertahrens59067 ай бұрын
    • @@robertahrens5906 And you explained it very well. By understanding every frame of space time has its own expanding shrinking distance ruler working entangled to a slowing speeding clock and they’re both present even if one is entirely absent (singularity), we can now measure the finite size of infinite complexity stage of spacetime at its infinite entropy unless existing matter is infinite! At that point entropy means opposite of what it means and does now, moving toward infinite symmetry. The transition between infinite symmetry and infinite complexity and back, is the arrow of time!

      @rezadaneshi@rezadaneshi7 ай бұрын
    • The edge of the universe in time is "here". Accelerating a particle to the speed of light tilts it into the direction of time. Also known as Lorenz-contraction. In the direction of time there are no objects around us and there is no elasticity snapping accelerated particles back into location. Time appears totally empty in both directions, except for what appears to be a the big kicker a long time ago.

      @comicomment@comicomment7 ай бұрын
    • @@comicomment At light speed all forces and emergents disappear. Matters duality can’t get into singularities. Just massless, dimension less charge less particles. So at light speed, there is no effect for someone to detect anything and the same applies for singularity. Inflation we predict in a singularity eruption, or a white hole, is where those massless particles pour into time and get mass and charge and momentum in their fields pushing each other apart. So time is never empty. If black holes are so infinitely packed and leaking self annihilating particle anti particles pairs right outside black holes event horizon, you could say time is running because something is going on. “Only at the speed of time, one can’t detect the particles and it will always appear empty.”Observer also disappears long before this observation point passing critical mass and becoming a singularity themself that strips any and all energy from their particles leaving a Susskind like hologram of their information in an almost frozen time dilated image of their last detectable evidence, prior to passing the event horizon with everything else that couldn’t get in the singularity being emergent. Nothing emergent gets in.

      @rezadaneshi@rezadaneshi7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@robertahrens5906well, a zero is a type of infinity. When the concept of zero came about, it frightened a lot of people.

      @NotSoNormal1987@NotSoNormal19877 ай бұрын
  • More universe! After that, even more universe.

    @muhammadsteinberg@muhammadsteinberg7 ай бұрын
    • 😅

      @mikesanchez5014@mikesanchez50146 ай бұрын
    • There is no universe. Just a dome made of everything. And we are stuck in it.

      @sacr4450@sacr44505 ай бұрын
    • I have been there. It’s very similar to the dome that was recently built in Las Vegas. We are in it.

      @sacr4450@sacr44505 ай бұрын
  • This is most detailed and understandable video. Great job👍

    @altrinhunt@altrinhunt4 ай бұрын
  • Scientists just discovered that the Universe is expanding faster in some directions than others. That is very interesting. Changes alot about what we thought we knew. A whole bunch of science gets tossed out.

    @peterzinia3767@peterzinia376713 күн бұрын
  • Its like how life ceases to exist between the time you fall asleep and get back up.

    @anonymous4gent@anonymous4gent6 ай бұрын
    • Time is the result of thought, only when there’s thinking process going on in the brain there’s time, that’s why life ceases to exist in sleep because there’s no thought then (if u are not dreaming) which is the prerequisite for time ;)

      @IIIIIIOOOOOO@IIIIIIOOOOOO3 ай бұрын
    • “Sleep is the practice of death.”

      @mordymountains1096@mordymountains1096Ай бұрын
  • The other possibility is that the last Universes shape effected by the concentration of energy in areas that were left behind, effected the shape of our Universe. That means that dark energy comes from the existence of past Universes. This uneven dark energy distribution is effected by an unlimited amount of Universes from the past. That means that one day our Universe will help to shape the next Universe and the one after that for eternity.

    @jroar123@jroar1235 ай бұрын
    • Where did you get that information from? I'm curious. What you just stated is a theory at best.

      @SouthOfSanity79@SouthOfSanity794 ай бұрын
    • @@SouthOfSanity79 a theory, but still a plausible one

      @ttraiin9974@ttraiin99743 ай бұрын
    • A plausible and logical for 2 main reasons one as a univers is a closed system and therefore will reach a state of maximum entropy one day and a big bang will leave a vacuum at the point where the big bang started leaving a perfect environment for quantum fluctuations to exist starting the process over again

      @user-xz5ym2yj1z@user-xz5ym2yj1z2 ай бұрын
    • UNIVERSE IN THE QURAN IN DETAIL (((21:30 Have those who disbelieved not considered that the heavens and the earth were a joined entity, and We separated them and made from water every living thing? Then will they not believe?) AND surah zariyat aya 47 ( 51:47 And the heaven We constructed with strength, and indeed, We are [its] expander. ) AND Yasin aya 38 (yaseen) (And the sun runs [on course] toward its stopping point. That is the determination of the Exalted in Might, the Knowing.) AND surah Anbiya aya 33 (21:33 And it is He who created the night and the day and the sun and the moon; all [heavenly bodies] in an orbit are swimming.) AGAIN AND AGAIN, ALLAH WHO CREAT THE UNIVERSE HE DESCRIBED EVERYTHING IN THE QURAN 1400 YEARS AGO. ALLAH SAID (41:53 We will show them Our signs in the horizons and within themselves until it becomes clear to them that it is the truth. But is it not sufficient concerning your Lord that He is, over all things, a Witness?) Quran 41:53 Surah Fussilat ayat 53 THERE is STILL A LOT ABOUT UNIVERSE IN THE QURAN.

      @user-rt9bj7zt2d@user-rt9bj7zt2d2 ай бұрын
    • ANDTHE CREATOR SAID IN QURAN 21:104 The Day when We will fold the heaven like the folding of a [written] sheet for the records. As We began the first creation, We will repeat it. [That is] a promise binding upon Us. Indeed, We will do it.((On the day in which I shall roll up the heavens like the rolling up of a scroll, and congregate the creation in the state they were created in the first instance. I have promised that it will happen; a promise that there is no going back on. I shall indeed fulfil My promise.)))

      @user-rt9bj7zt2d@user-rt9bj7zt2d2 ай бұрын
  • We exist in the mind only. We are nothing.

    @dogbone1065@dogbone106523 күн бұрын
    • Finally, a person who doesn't buy into climate hysteria!!

      @user-si7qi4xtriad@user-si7qi4xtriadКүн бұрын
  • Our understanding is what is limited . Also so is our language . In order to fill our ego , we became philosophical , no matter how much knowledge we acquire .

    @jamesluzenski@jamesluzenski23 күн бұрын
  • Loved the video, presentation and narrator. Thanks for the upload 😊

    @Bagle2605@Bagle26056 ай бұрын
  • There are narrators that makes me want to keep watching.

    @Kunfucious577@Kunfucious5777 ай бұрын
  • So beautiful and so sad. What a amazing bedtime story 💓

    @MssxykttnNYC@MssxykttnNYC3 ай бұрын
  • Seriously when I think about life it makes no sense. So we have a bunch of big rocks and here we are on this planet, we don’t know our beginnings, but we know our end. What exactly is the point, what is the purpose, time itself is limited for us. There’s a lot we don’t understand and we continue in pure ignorance, just watching the days go by. There’s no agenda to build as one to unravel some of these mysteries. We are divided and yes division can lead to competition which can lead to a form of growth but then there is corporate greed looking to make a profit. There is a community of scientists that need funding and sometimes they are ignored. The union drafts up all these policies that they can’t fully enforce. We talk space when we don’t even fully understand our planet. I typed this at 4:14am

    @dlikescheese@dlikescheese3 ай бұрын
  • I've been "eating" tons of astronomic documentaries, but this is WOW! Congratulations!

    @tibigeorgian9156@tibigeorgian91566 ай бұрын
  • the video is awesome. Thank you for the valuable knowledge you have brought to me.

    @universomisterioso68@universomisterioso686 ай бұрын
  • What a great new Christmas 🎄 song to listen to. The Ford is just handling business and dropping jaws. What an incredible unit. Hopefully we get to see that thing on a drag and drive soon

    @joshmontgomery9488@joshmontgomery94884 ай бұрын
  • What a superb video. I can see why you’re a PhD in Astrophysics at Oxford 😊👍⚒️👍 Thank you so much this was just so informative and well described.

    @johnnyenglishnyc9820@johnnyenglishnyc98202 ай бұрын
  • I think I learnt something there,, Just wish I knew what it was 😊👍👍

    @BLACK...11119@BLACK...111197 ай бұрын
  • I believe there are an unlimited number of universes. If you go through a black hole, there will be another universe on the other side, and so on.

    @mattdelany6799@mattdelany67996 ай бұрын
    • I think black holes are misunderstood. It’s crazy and radical but if I had to guess, it’s something as simple as black holes are indeed worm holes to other black holes. At the center of galaxies are these massive black holes. Can you imagine you enter black hole in the Milky Way and end up at the center of another galaxy and so on.

      @gregthegroove@gregthegroove3 ай бұрын
  • The masses are kept ignorant of ANYTHING that threaten their subjugation. Make no mistake, in this low, fallen dimension on earth, our individual potential is thwarted at every turn possible. But also, God IS driving this bus; and everything we experience is to our greatest eternal benefit. Enjoy this promise

    @mikecollier8152@mikecollier81524 ай бұрын
  • Anyone ever heard of infinity. We are wrong and the universe is infinite. Everytime we gone out more, we encounter more. Big bang been put to rest.😮

    @AngelRivera-wp9bg@AngelRivera-wp9bg3 ай бұрын
  • I have an objection; where did you get the assertion that gravitational waves can destroy objects? Some cursory research suggests that at a distance of 10k km from the barycenter of a pair of average sized merging black holes, the amount of stretching would be about 1mm. While this could certainly have seismic effects on a planet-sized object I strongly doubt it would tear one apart.

    @higgsbonbon@higgsbonbon6 ай бұрын
    • i kind of have an objection to when he said that our horizon will collapse and make our universe smaller which maybe he's explaining it in a way i can't understand. idk it's around the 16:34

      @thewokeagenda@thewokeagenda5 ай бұрын
    • @@thewokeagenda I think he just means expansion will push the galaxies we can see away from us to where we can't. The universe is still just as big, just separate from us.

      @gmork1090@gmork10905 ай бұрын
    • Do you have a single link to back up what you just said?

      @SouthOfSanity79@SouthOfSanity794 ай бұрын
    • @@SouthOfSanity79 I would if I could post links here. Just google "gravitational wave damage", there's a Forbes article by Ethan Siegel (a Ph.D. astrophysicist) on the subject.

      @higgsbonbon@higgsbonbon4 ай бұрын
    • Early on in the video he says that neutrinos transform into other particles. The whole video is riddled with factual inaccuracies and blatant falsehoods. All delivered in the most casual offhanded matter-of-fact fashion. Absolutely abysmal stuff.

      @deathmagneto-soy@deathmagneto-soy4 ай бұрын
  • The question "What lies beyond the universe" reminds me of man's thinking of going over the edge before we knew the earth was round. The only difference is space is infinite, what else would it be but more space.

    @summergivens242@summergivens2426 ай бұрын
    • Thinking about this question makes my mind go over the edge...nothing is so weeeird!...what if there was no space, what would there be?? 😮

      @junemoonchild69@junemoonchild695 ай бұрын
    • @@junemoonchild69nothingness which is far beyond our human imagination to comprehend

      @sounds0fmeows@sounds0fmeows5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@sounds0fmeowsit's pretty easy to imagine nothingness. it's completely dark since there's no light and absolute zero since there's no heat.

      @trustytrest@trustytrest4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@trustytrest Complete dark means space. Space is infinite.

      @amazingpeople9535@amazingpeople95354 ай бұрын
  • this is incredible. so much to learn from just one video!

    @pascalxus@pascalxusАй бұрын
  • Given the dynamic and very fluid nature of the universe, I would not be at all surprised to find that over billions of years the expansion rate actually changes, after all, it has already, in the early universe after initial inflation it slowed, only then to start speeding up again, my bet is that it will continue as is for some arbitrary time and then it will start to slow down again, once the density of matter/energy falls below some unknown value

    @ashleyobrien4937@ashleyobrien49372 ай бұрын
  • I'm subscribed to so many space channels, how am I just now discovering this one? This guy's voice is great. Is he always the narrator?

    @jasonfabo7126@jasonfabo71267 ай бұрын
    • It's AI generated.

      @w345345345@w3453453457 ай бұрын
    • @@w345345345 how can you tell

      @jasonfabo7126@jasonfabo71267 ай бұрын
    • Science?

      @loyertamara@loyertamara7 ай бұрын
    • I find the country twang very annoying

      @susandianasmith7150@susandianasmith71507 ай бұрын
    • ​@@w345345345it's not ai don't take breathes. Plus the guy has posted in comments

      @s0ldier898@s0ldier8987 ай бұрын
  • The problem is that there is the interplay between what is known and what is not known and there is an awful lot of speculation regarding what is not known. I don't think the problems will be resolved theoretically until a theory unifying general relativity and quantum mechanics has been done and maybe this will not be enough. Regarding string theory, I don't know if anyone has considered the possibility of more than one time dimension with a Lorentzian-type metric. However, everything is highly speculative and could easily be a mathematical diversion that does not correspond to our universe. This applies also to some of the other theories. Quite possibly the mathematics and physics that is known is not up to understanding the true nature of reality. Still, I don't believe we can assume space-time always existed but rather space-time itself began with the big bang. I very much enjoy this content and there are many things to learn.

    @noelwass4738@noelwass47386 ай бұрын
    • Not to mention the mistake that we've made in all of it. No one is 100% correct. You know

      @captainmarvel9610@captainmarvel96105 ай бұрын
    • we find the math does not yet exist that fills all the gaps in our understanding. new discoveries and theories are so exciting!

      @pauls5745@pauls57455 ай бұрын
    • Space-time likely always existed. Just not in the local universe. That's explainable if every black hole at the end of a parent universe spawns a new universe, making it seem to give birth to space-time. Not within the expanding event horizon, but into the infinite void as a black hole is exposed for its naked singularity, aka a white hole.

      @gmork1090@gmork10905 ай бұрын
    • Speculation leads to ideas which lead to theories which lead to tests. Your first sentence I just answered for you even though it wasn't a question.

      @SouthOfSanity79@SouthOfSanity794 ай бұрын
  • It’s great to see that science is still scienc-ing. I know it’s exciting when some new information comes in, but it’s a good excitement, not necessarily a mystical or concerning unknown.

    @RobBrogan@RobBrogan3 ай бұрын
  • The Adventureland/Frontierland building was not built as a single building but grew into connected buildings over time. The Tomorrowland and New Orleans Square 360 buildings have underground access. The Fantasyland gates can be opened, closing off Big Thunder Trail to make deliveries or emergency access during the day to Fantasyland and Frontierland without guests seeing service vehicles.

    @ocdan9616@ocdan9616Ай бұрын
  • Infinity lies beyond. Infinite universes❤

    @maxsaigon6477@maxsaigon64776 ай бұрын
  • People seem to forget that when you travel at the speed of light, time stops for you. So it wouldn’t take 330 millions years for you. It would be instant for you traveling at the speed of light. 330 million years would pass for everyone else that isn’t traveling at that speed.

    @Soysaucy328@Soysaucy3287 ай бұрын
    • People cannot travel at the speed of light because people are not photons. Therefore, this mention is purely a hypothetical and will never happen. Humans will never travel at the speed of light. With our best currently tech, it would take 70,000 years to reach Alpha Centauri, which is our nearest star, a mere 4 light-years away...

      @elastronata@elastronata7 ай бұрын
    • It would take a while to accelerate up to lightspeed, and you'd have to spend some time decelerating, as well, so you wouldn't arrive "instantly." 🤓

      @walterfristoe4643@walterfristoe46437 ай бұрын
    • I know, right!? I thought this dynamic of relativity was widely known by now, then I continue to hear phrases like this about the necessity of vast amounts of time to be traversed when traveling at light speed! And he says this over and over again! Not well thought through, for sure! He especially should have learned that when traveling at light speed, all of your motion would be alloted to traversing space and none of it would be through time!

      @BarronWinget-gc1te@BarronWinget-gc1te7 ай бұрын
    • good point but we'll never reach the speed of light or even close to it

      @MrTweetyhack@MrTweetyhack7 ай бұрын
    • @@BarronWinget-gc1te All of your motion from your frame of reference. From every other frame of reference 330 million years would have passed.

      @NaatClark@NaatClark7 ай бұрын
  • Sometimes I feel that the universe has been created as a test for consciousness to figure out how to escape the blue dot, unravel the mysteries of the universe, and travel anywhere we want.

    @thunken@thunken8 күн бұрын
  • I'm happy with what we've achieved as humans in terms of space research. I'm also happy that we've managed to work out that the observable universe is 93 billion light years across. Just one light year is a crazy amount of distance, so, to times that by 93 billion is more than enough for my humble, limited mind to comprehend

    @ItsLookingRatherGrim@ItsLookingRatherGrim2 ай бұрын
  • correction/ light speed is 186K miles per second, not miles per hour

    @funkyzero@funkyzero7 ай бұрын
    • its full of mistakes this video. He said that the objects travel at the speed of light too

      @lulasvob@lulasvob7 ай бұрын
    • @@lulasvob yea i got half way through and unsubbed.

      @funkyzero@funkyzero7 ай бұрын
    • As soon as I heard that I stopped watching. It lost all credibility to me if they can't even get the speed of light correct.

      @nathangram5042@nathangram50427 ай бұрын
    • Beyond the edge of the universe is the cookie monster 🤣🤣🤣🤣

      @glennquagmire1747@glennquagmire17477 ай бұрын
    • He also said 4.2 earth years when talking about light speed he definitely got it mixed up your all correct he made a lot of mistakes I quit watching it

      @Joe-ym6bw@Joe-ym6bw7 ай бұрын
  • I wish we could know what force, what creator designed infinity. No beginning and no end gives us no answers. It keeps us permanently in the dark. That's hard to swallow. There's got to be something that has a reason for all of this. i don't believe we will get answers in this life. If we still get no answers after we die, i will be really pissed!

    @jkbboston6051@jkbboston60516 ай бұрын
    • There is someone called God and humans knew about Him since begging of their existence.

      @ivankomadanvonrakovac8415@ivankomadanvonrakovac84154 ай бұрын
  • Now this is the stuff I can watch for days

    @WhiskeyToro@WhiskeyToro10 күн бұрын
  • Fantastic Program.. Frankie from Venice..

    @nickyshannon4600@nickyshannon46007 күн бұрын
  • This was a great op/ed. Such an imagination! So creative! I really admire people who can come up with stories like this. Very entertaining. Thank you!

    @ernie5229@ernie52296 ай бұрын
    • Stories?

      @dontuseyoutubefornews@dontuseyoutubefornews6 ай бұрын
    • @@dontuseyoutubefornewswhat Else are they? It’s not like anyone has been or seen any of these imaginary concepts

      @Instant_Nerf@Instant_Nerf6 ай бұрын
    • @@dontuseyoutubefornews. I’d call it a story too.

      @douglasskaalrud6865@douglasskaalrud68653 ай бұрын
    • ​@@dontuseyoutubefornewsyour comment 🤢🤢🤢

      @amirkhusroohamid9705@amirkhusroohamid97052 ай бұрын
    • ​@@dontuseyoutubefornewsStories.? Wow i'm just gonna write Stories with a question mark, like a dumb as.

      @amirkhusroohamid9705@amirkhusroohamid97052 ай бұрын
  • 46 billion light years in "our" universe...but there are endless Universes beyond...i have always subscribed to the idea that we can learn alot about our universe by looking at the smallest particles and how they behave and interact and I think the universe is a large scale version of our smallest particles.

    @beatlessteve1010@beatlessteve10104 ай бұрын
    • I agree, I have always thought,like a cell is our solar system, the sun is the nucleolus, and the planets is the electrons running around the nucleolus, and the outer part of our galaxy is the cell itself. And maybe every solar system is just a very small part of GOD himself? Just like the cell itself is largely empty and they don't know why each cell holds together, and what the empty space is inside each cell. Just like the think that all the space in between our galaxy's they have a theory and they call it dark matter. But they truly don't know as of yet anyway. GOD said we are made in his image? Yes?

      @staceyestes8730@staceyestes87304 ай бұрын
    • bro doesnt know what the "uni" in "universe" means 😂 dont tell me youre seriously believing in marvel multiverse memes

      @trustytrest@trustytrest4 ай бұрын
    • Word up dawg. It is silly to think that reality is somhow finite since that makes absolutely no sense.

      @warriordx5520@warriordx55204 ай бұрын
    • ​@@trustytrestour "universe" ( as in the one we can see) is MULTI-galactic and inside each galaxy it's MULTI-stars, solar systems,blackholes, solo planets, etc. If you follow the pattern it will make total sense. Even in different galaxies there can be very similar planets meaning similar different universes etc

      @warriordx5520@warriordx55204 ай бұрын
    • Universe is atom

      @jussikankinen9409@jussikankinen94093 ай бұрын
  • Excellent narrator!!!!

    @AlainTomaneng@AlainTomaneng11 күн бұрын
  • The fact that the universe is 46 billion light years across is already nearly unfathomable for the human brain

    @deantotheizzo@deantotheizzo23 күн бұрын
  • At the end of the universe, there is more universe, and at the end of that, there is still more universe

    @SeanJoseph708@SeanJoseph7085 ай бұрын
  • Between the music, the voice, and the science. You have earned another subscriber !

    @joeb2955@joeb29557 ай бұрын
    • We don't need that stupid music

      @Joe-ym6bw@Joe-ym6bw7 ай бұрын
    • This voice is almost assuredly AI generated text to speech my dude. This entire thing is AI generated. Listen to this compared to SEA or History Of The Universe.

      @Mayunholdup@Mayunholdup7 ай бұрын
    • ​@Mayunholdup oh no, I hope you're wrong, I dig the voice

      @jasonfabo7126@jasonfabo71267 ай бұрын
    • Its literally AI its so offputting, I could only make it about 2 min in

      @wozo9210@wozo92107 ай бұрын
    • Right. Probably the best video I've ever watched. Even though I went through an existential crisis.

      @jakemacdonald3872@jakemacdonald38727 ай бұрын
  • I really really wish I understood all this. Fascinating.

    @gabriel.954@gabriel.954Ай бұрын
  • From 5 year of age up to when I was 25 year old I never like to sleep because I just can’t seem to fall asleep. Why? Because every time I close my eyes my mind wonder into the universe seeking answers just like science do now. Where does it end, the deep I go into my mind the deeper the universe get. Finally at 25 year old I found my answer that put an end to my search and inability to fall asleep peacefully. So my answer is very simple what on the other side of the universe can’t be nothing other than “light” We are living in the mind of our creator.

    @leesportster@leesportsterАй бұрын
  • There is no edge… it just goes on…

    @davidpatterson5426@davidpatterson54267 ай бұрын
    • My problem with that is, if space is already infinite, how can it still be expanding at a finite rate?

      @1112viggo@1112viggo7 ай бұрын
    • @@1112viggo you might be misinterpreting the theoretical explanations. the prevailing theory is that the universe is and always has been infinite. "space" is expanding, not the universe. space and the universe are separate things.

      @ReconTechBF3@ReconTechBF37 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ReconTechBF3 The word "universe" is literally defined as "all existing matter and space considered as a whole." If space being part of the universe expands then it by definition expands the universe as a whole. The prevailing theory is that it was all created about 13 billion years ago in a violent eruption of unknown origin, and continues to expand at a finite rate that you can measure from redshifting. That don´t sound "infinite to me"...

      @1112viggo@1112viggo7 ай бұрын
    • @@1112viggo Well, yes and no. You are sort of right, sort of not right. It is true that typically we define the universe as "everything", but space is still a separate concept, and the two are separate things. Also, it is important to remember that the universe was not "created" during the big bang as we know it today. As I mentioned before, the universe has always existed, just in a different state or phase. This distinction is very important because something being created from nothing has some very serious implications if it were possible, which it is not. At any rate, I will probably end my participation in this discussion here, because I am neither an expert nor am I myself fully capable of comprehending or understanding all of these concepts. However, I would recommend looking up what the "inflaton" or "inflaton theory" is if you have not already done so. It is the current leading theory behind cosmic inflation, and I think it is an important aspect when trying to understand the concept of an infinite universe, and the implications that presents. Good luck!

      @ReconTechBF3@ReconTechBF37 ай бұрын
    • @@ReconTechBF3 Yeah, i find it hard to comprehend and i certainly am no expert either. I just can´t grasp the logic in a infinite universe that exists beyond finite space. If the universe is separate from space matter and energy, what exactly is it? And does the idea of an infinite universe not still lead to the "something from nothing paradox" seems like a hack to just say "it was not created, but always existed." Incidentally that is how Christians usually answers the "where did god come from" question.

      @1112viggo@1112viggo7 ай бұрын
  • 🤯

    @bigstackD@bigstackD2 ай бұрын
    • BRO HOW DO YOU NOT HAVE ANY LIKES YOU LITERALLY Hve 1M SUBS

      @NIEARTS@NIEARTS2 ай бұрын
    • You're awesome, i like your videos

      @xjaredx11@xjaredx11Ай бұрын
  • Well done video. Keep up this great work! Just one critique. Neutrinos cannot convey information from “hundreds of billions of light years away“. I know you miss spoke.… Edit twice, post once!

    @gerhardmoeller774@gerhardmoeller7742 күн бұрын
  • I always l'arnaque something new so rewarding bravo love it to expend m'y brainstorming.😊

    @dominiquedupont2061@dominiquedupont2061Ай бұрын
KZhead