Moon Has a Really Long Tail That Strikes Earth Every Month
151,763 views • Apr 2, 2021
150K views - 1 day ago
Anton Petrov
752K subscribers
151,763 views • Apr 2, 2021
150K views - 1 day ago
Anton Petrov
752K subscribers
I took a photo tonight of Sirius and found an interesting artifact.
In the middle of the dark half circle there is what appears to be an object coming out of or going into the darkness. The object is at 90 degrees, which the last time I checked we can’t see light being bent at 90 degrees.
But then there is this.
If the angle of incidence is 90 degrees, then the angle of reflection will also be 90 degrees. However, an angle of incidence of 90 degrees means that the wave is parallel to the surface it’s incident on. The wave will never come in contact with the surface since they are parallel to each other.
The object central is definitely curving space time around it, thus the reason the object is curved.
470,483 views
470K views - 2 months ago
Viper TV Science
40.8K subscribers
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74,160 views
74K views - 1 month ago
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6,773 views
6.7K views - 2 weeks ago
Just waiting, and hoping for the JWST to launch, and after (hopefully) the completed constructed ELT (in chile)
92,939 views • Apr 6, 2021
92K views - 11 hours ago
Anton Petrov
754K subscribers
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2. - 1 day later, at 14:35 Thu Apr 8, 2021:
#DrakeEquation #AreWeAlone #CoolWorlds
60,543 views • Apr 2, 2021
60K views - 5 days ago
Cool Worlds
330K subscribers
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3. - 5 days later, 4 days after the last update at 07:15, Mon Apr 12, 2021:
76,571 views • Apr 11, 2021
76K views - 9 hours ago
Anton Petrov
757K subscribers
Possibly.
During the early formation of the Sol system, planets like Mars and Earth would have been very molten at one point before solidifying. Another smaller object, most likely a very large ice chunk with a metal core, collided with the Earth, caused the Earth to cool down very rapidly along with depositing water on the surface.
If you look at the wobble of the Earth, something had to have struck Earth to create the wobble as the natural spinning of matter at the core of Earth would have created a symmetrical rotation of the Earth on its axis.
It seems that volcanoes are also related to this event on Earth.
Similar events on Mars may have caused the tallest Volcano on the solar system, which may be the asteroid belt.
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303,764 views • Apr 13, 2021
304K views - 1 day ago
PBS Space Time
2.27M subscribers
CC with … Open Transcript
12 minutes 20 seconds audio-video.
A project that I am working on that involves grapes and plasma being created in a microwave, The Great Pyramid of Giza, Khufu and King Tut.
I think I might have found two planets orbiting a star hidden in various images of Khufu, King Tut and the Great Pyramid.
88,751 views • Apr 10, 2021
88K views - 4 days ago
Anton Petrov
759K subscribers
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2. - 1 day later, at 05:11, Fri Apr 16, 2021:
28,357 views • Apr 15, 2021
28K views - 7 hours ago
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2. - 6 days later, at 08:24, Wed Apr 21, 2021:
3,303,658 views • Jun 6, 2016
Fermilab
519K subscribers
In this one-hour public lecture Josh Frieman, director of the Dark Energy Survey, presents an overview of our current knowledge of the universe and describe new experiments and observatories. Over the last two decades cosmologists have made remarkable discoveries:
Only 4 percent of our universe is made of ordinary matter - atoms, molecules, etc.
The other 96 percent is dark, in forms unlike anything with which we are familiar.
About 25 percent is dark matter, which holds galaxies and larger-scale structures together and may be a new elementary particle.
And 70 percent is thought to be dark energy, an even more mysterious entity which speeds up the expansion of the universe.
Josh Frieman is senior staff scientist at the Fermilab and Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics and member of the Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics at the University of Chicago.
The Dark Energy Survey is a collaboration of 300 scientists from 25 institutions on 3 continents, which built and uses a powerful 570-Megapixel camera on a telescope in Chile to carry out a 5-year survey of 300 million galaxies and thousands of supernovae to probe dark energy and the origin of cosmic acceleration.