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STAR SYSTEM - DJE DANCE - CAMEROUN
published: 18 Dec 2015
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How Sun's Lost Twin Is Still Affecting The Solar System
In the 1980s, astronomers proposed that the Sun actually had an evil trouble-making twin called Nemesis that swings past the solar system every 26-27 million years. Its gravitational turbulence sends a cloud of comets hurtling our way. And it's possible that the twin was the culprit that kicked an asteroid into Earth's orbit, which eventually collided with our planet, triggering the fifth mass extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs.
But the question is that if Nemesis is out there, where do we search for it?
REFERENCES:
[Paper] Embedded binaries and their dense cores, Sadavoy and Stahler, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society - http://bit.ly/3mDXCTA
[Article] Our Sun May Have Been Born With a Trouble-Making Twin Called 'Nemesis,' Mike Mcrae - ScienceAlert - https:/...
published: 09 Mar 2023
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Universe Size Comparison | Planet Size Comparison | Stars Size Comparison
Universe Size Comparison | Planet Size Comparison | Stars Size Comparison
Explore the comparison of celestial bodies, galaxies, and astronomical structures in terms of size, measurement, and scale using light-years, astronomical units, and parsecs. Our visual aids provide unique perspectives on the vastness of the universe, including a comparison of its size to the cosmos and the galactic size comparison. Get an in-depth look at the scale of the universe and the astronomical sizes, as well as the size of space and its comparison to the cosmos. Delve into the astronomical discoveries and wonders of the cosmic structures, including star systems, black holes, and nebulae. Join us in our explorations and sky viewing of outer space, and compare the size of stars and galaxies, including the Mil...
published: 07 Feb 2023
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Binary and Multiple Stars: Crash Course Astronomy #34
Double stars are stars that appear to be near each other in the sky, but if they’re gravitationally bound together we call them binary stars. Many stars are actually part of binary or multiple systems. If they are close enough together they can actually touch other, merging into one peanut-shaped star. In some close binaries, matter can flow from one star to the other, changing the way it ages. If one star is a white dwarf, this can cause periodic explosions, and possibly even lead to blowing up the entire star.
Check out the Crash Course Astronomy solar system poster here: http://store.dftba.com/products/crashcourse-astronomy-poster
--
Chapters:
Introduction: Binary & Multiple Stars 00:00
Visual Binary Stars 1:45
Spectroscopic Binaries 3:05
Multiple Star Systems 4:15
Eclipsing Binaries...
published: 01 Oct 2015
-
The Living Universe is Unimaginably BIG and You're a Part of it!
How big is the universe? Let's take a journey from Earth to the solar system, closest stars, the Milky Way, and the observable universe. Along the way we will stop by the Oort cloud, Alpha Centauri, radiosphere, Andromeda galaxy, Virgo supercluster, and Laniakea.
After watching this video, you can think a couple things. Either - I’m this tiny, separate thing on a distant planet in the middle of nowhere special. I’ll live for several decades and that will be that. Or you may be thinking, wow, I’m a part of this unimaginably large, possibly infinite universe, that is potentially teeming with life. A part of this thing that I don’t really understand. A thing that, well, no one truly understands. A part of this planet, this node in the sea of space that is coming to life. and things can get ...
published: 29 Apr 2023
-
Our Closest Stars. What Lies beyond the Solar System?
➥ Telegram - https://t.me/kosmo_eng
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➥ Advertising, cooperation - [email protected]
There are approximately 1,400 stellar systems in space within the radius of 50 light years from the Solar system. Some of them are multiple and contain two and more objects, which makes the overall number of our stellar neighbours over 2,000. These are all sorts of stars, from dim red dwarves to dazzling giants whose temperatures are beyond our imagination. The incredible scale and great abundance of space objects in all their diversity can’t but amaze. Life’s too sh...
published: 26 Sep 2021
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Alpha Centauri. What Does the Closest Stellar System Conceal?
➥ Telegram - https://t.me/kosmo_eng
➥ Subscribe - http://bit.ly/SubbKosmo
➥ Support us on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@kosmo_off/join
➥ Support us on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/kosmo_off
➥ Kosmo DOC - youtube.com/@KosmoDOC
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➥ Advertising, cooperation - [email protected]
Distances between objects in space are often so staggering that the human mind is barely able to fully appreciate them. Sometimes even light takes thousands of years on end to travel from one object to another. However, among myriads of stellar systems scattered across the vast expanses in the universe there is only one that may be truly called closest to us. There are three stars mutually bound by invisible threads of gravitation that lie comparatively nearby by spa...
published: 05 Apr 2022
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Stars System - 2.11.2024 - S08EP3
#StarsSystem #asibiliou #starchanneltv
Δες εδώ την αγαπημένη σου εκπομπή:
https://www.star.gr/tv/psychagogia/stars-system
Συνδεθείτε με τα Social Media του σταθμού:
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/StarChannelGrTV/
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Δείτε όλα τα δελτία ειδήσεων και τις εκπομπές του Star στο http://www.star.gr/tv/
Subscribe @StarTvGreece https://bit.ly/3KO9WZs για να έχετε άμεση ενημέρωση για τις νέες εκπομπές και δελτία που ανεβαίνουν στο YouTube
published: 02 Nov 2024
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The Reality of Life in a Binary Star system #space #universe #cosmos #astronomy #solarsystem
published: 04 Nov 2024
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Contact with the Pleiadians: Working with the Pleiadian Star System to Co-Create a Brighter Future!
The pleiadians reside on earth to help us in our transition into the golden age, as well as to assist us with the ascension process. They have a wide range of ships that they use to travel and transport goods throughout the universe, and some of these ships have been seen by humans on earth.
published: 26 Apr 2023
4:55
How Sun's Lost Twin Is Still Affecting The Solar System
In the 1980s, astronomers proposed that the Sun actually had an evil trouble-making twin called Nemesis that swings past the solar system every 26-27 million ye...
In the 1980s, astronomers proposed that the Sun actually had an evil trouble-making twin called Nemesis that swings past the solar system every 26-27 million years. Its gravitational turbulence sends a cloud of comets hurtling our way. And it's possible that the twin was the culprit that kicked an asteroid into Earth's orbit, which eventually collided with our planet, triggering the fifth mass extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs.
But the question is that if Nemesis is out there, where do we search for it?
REFERENCES:
[Paper] Embedded binaries and their dense cores, Sadavoy and Stahler, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society - http://bit.ly/3mDXCTA
[Article] Our Sun May Have Been Born With a Trouble-Making Twin Called 'Nemesis,' Mike Mcrae - ScienceAlert - https://bit.ly/3ZYOasx
[Press Release] New Evidence That All Stars are Born in Pairs, Robert Sanders, Berkley News - https://bit.ly/3ynbbtk
[Article] Nemesis Star Theory: The Sun's 'Death Star' Companion, Space.com - https://bit.ly/3J1JxH3
Created by: Rishabh Nakra and Simran Buttar
Narrated by: Jeffrey Smith
https://wn.com/How_Sun's_Lost_Twin_Is_Still_Affecting_The_Solar_System
In the 1980s, astronomers proposed that the Sun actually had an evil trouble-making twin called Nemesis that swings past the solar system every 26-27 million years. Its gravitational turbulence sends a cloud of comets hurtling our way. And it's possible that the twin was the culprit that kicked an asteroid into Earth's orbit, which eventually collided with our planet, triggering the fifth mass extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs.
But the question is that if Nemesis is out there, where do we search for it?
REFERENCES:
[Paper] Embedded binaries and their dense cores, Sadavoy and Stahler, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society - http://bit.ly/3mDXCTA
[Article] Our Sun May Have Been Born With a Trouble-Making Twin Called 'Nemesis,' Mike Mcrae - ScienceAlert - https://bit.ly/3ZYOasx
[Press Release] New Evidence That All Stars are Born in Pairs, Robert Sanders, Berkley News - https://bit.ly/3ynbbtk
[Article] Nemesis Star Theory: The Sun's 'Death Star' Companion, Space.com - https://bit.ly/3J1JxH3
Created by: Rishabh Nakra and Simran Buttar
Narrated by: Jeffrey Smith
- published: 09 Mar 2023
- views: 335301
5:51
Universe Size Comparison | Planet Size Comparison | Stars Size Comparison
Universe Size Comparison | Planet Size Comparison | Stars Size Comparison
Explore the comparison of celestial bodies, galaxies, and astronomical structures in ...
Universe Size Comparison | Planet Size Comparison | Stars Size Comparison
Explore the comparison of celestial bodies, galaxies, and astronomical structures in terms of size, measurement, and scale using light-years, astronomical units, and parsecs. Our visual aids provide unique perspectives on the vastness of the universe, including a comparison of its size to the cosmos and the galactic size comparison. Get an in-depth look at the scale of the universe and the astronomical sizes, as well as the size of space and its comparison to the cosmos. Delve into the astronomical discoveries and wonders of the cosmic structures, including star systems, black holes, and nebulae. Join us in our explorations and sky viewing of outer space, and compare the size of stars and galaxies, including the Milky Way. Discover the cosmic wonders of the universe and the size of celestial bodies in our celestial size comparison. Experience the size of space and the scale of the cosmos, and learn about the astronomical scales, star size comparison, and the comparison of universe sizes in our space size comparison.
#UniverseSize #universe #planet #stars
https://wn.com/Universe_Size_Comparison_|_Planet_Size_Comparison_|_Stars_Size_Comparison
Universe Size Comparison | Planet Size Comparison | Stars Size Comparison
Explore the comparison of celestial bodies, galaxies, and astronomical structures in terms of size, measurement, and scale using light-years, astronomical units, and parsecs. Our visual aids provide unique perspectives on the vastness of the universe, including a comparison of its size to the cosmos and the galactic size comparison. Get an in-depth look at the scale of the universe and the astronomical sizes, as well as the size of space and its comparison to the cosmos. Delve into the astronomical discoveries and wonders of the cosmic structures, including star systems, black holes, and nebulae. Join us in our explorations and sky viewing of outer space, and compare the size of stars and galaxies, including the Milky Way. Discover the cosmic wonders of the universe and the size of celestial bodies in our celestial size comparison. Experience the size of space and the scale of the cosmos, and learn about the astronomical scales, star size comparison, and the comparison of universe sizes in our space size comparison.
#UniverseSize #universe #planet #stars
- published: 07 Feb 2023
- views: 8121699
12:01
Binary and Multiple Stars: Crash Course Astronomy #34
Double stars are stars that appear to be near each other in the sky, but if they’re gravitationally bound together we call them binary stars. Many stars are act...
Double stars are stars that appear to be near each other in the sky, but if they’re gravitationally bound together we call them binary stars. Many stars are actually part of binary or multiple systems. If they are close enough together they can actually touch other, merging into one peanut-shaped star. In some close binaries, matter can flow from one star to the other, changing the way it ages. If one star is a white dwarf, this can cause periodic explosions, and possibly even lead to blowing up the entire star.
Check out the Crash Course Astronomy solar system poster here: http://store.dftba.com/products/crashcourse-astronomy-poster
--
Chapters:
Introduction: Binary & Multiple Stars 00:00
Visual Binary Stars 1:45
Spectroscopic Binaries 3:05
Multiple Star Systems 4:15
Eclipsing Binaries 5:44
Contact Binaries 6:53
Stellar Novae 8:31
Review 10:50
--
PBS Digital Studios: http://youtube.com/pbsdigitalstudios
Follow Phil on Twitter: https://twitter.com/badastronomer
Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse
Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse
Tumblr - http://thecrashcourse.tumblr.com
Support CrashCourse on Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse
--
PHOTOS/VIDEOS
Big Dipper http://www.deepskycolors.com/archive/2011/05/14/The-Big-Dipper.html [credit: Rogelio Bernal Andreo]
Sirius https://www.spacetelescope.org/images/heic0516a/ [credit: NASA, ESA, H. Bond (STScI), and M. Barstow (University of Leicester)]
Sirius A and B http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2000/0065/index.html [credit: NASA/SAO/CXC]
Clashing Winds (video) http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/details.cgi?aid=11680 [credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center]
The Radial Velocity Method (artist’s impression) http://www.eso.org/public/images/eso0722e/ [credit: ESO]
Mizar+Alcor https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thomas_Bresson_-_Mizar%2Balcor_(by).jpg [credit: Wikimedia Commons, Thomas Bresson]
Polaris http://imgsrc.hubblesite.org/hu/db/images/hs-2006-02-e-print.jpg [credit: NASA, ESA, and G. Bacon]
Does the Sun Have Long Lost Siblings? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaWg2ACMspk [credit: SciShow Space]
Clashing Winds (image) http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/details.cgi?aid=11680 [credit: NASA/C. Reed X-ray images courtesy of NASA/GSFC/S. Immler]
Artist’s impression of the pulsar PSR J0348+0432 and its white dwarf companion http://www.eso.org/public/images/eso1319c/ [credit: ESO/L. Calçada]
Artist’s impression of eclipsing binary http://www.eso.org/public/videos/eso1311b/ [credit: ESO/L. Calçada]
Artist’s impression of the yellow hypergiant star HR 5171 http://www.eso.org/public/images/eso1409b/ [credit: ESO]
Nova http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2008/keck_ophiuchi_prt.htm [credit: NASA, Casey Reed]
Artist's impression of RS Ophiuchi http://www.jodrellbank.manchester.ac.uk/news/2006/rsoph-radio/ [credit: David A. Hardy/http://www.astroart.org & PPARC]
An artist's impression of Sirius A and B http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/heic0516b/ [credit: NASA, ESA and G. Bacon (STScI)]
Artist's impression of vampire star http://www.spacetelescope.org/videos/astro_bn/ [credit: ESO/M. Kornmesser]
Type Ia supernova http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/details.cgi?aid=10532 [credit: Walt Feimer, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center]
https://wn.com/Binary_And_Multiple_Stars_Crash_Course_Astronomy_34
Double stars are stars that appear to be near each other in the sky, but if they’re gravitationally bound together we call them binary stars. Many stars are actually part of binary or multiple systems. If they are close enough together they can actually touch other, merging into one peanut-shaped star. In some close binaries, matter can flow from one star to the other, changing the way it ages. If one star is a white dwarf, this can cause periodic explosions, and possibly even lead to blowing up the entire star.
Check out the Crash Course Astronomy solar system poster here: http://store.dftba.com/products/crashcourse-astronomy-poster
--
Chapters:
Introduction: Binary & Multiple Stars 00:00
Visual Binary Stars 1:45
Spectroscopic Binaries 3:05
Multiple Star Systems 4:15
Eclipsing Binaries 5:44
Contact Binaries 6:53
Stellar Novae 8:31
Review 10:50
--
PBS Digital Studios: http://youtube.com/pbsdigitalstudios
Follow Phil on Twitter: https://twitter.com/badastronomer
Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse
Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse
Tumblr - http://thecrashcourse.tumblr.com
Support CrashCourse on Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse
--
PHOTOS/VIDEOS
Big Dipper http://www.deepskycolors.com/archive/2011/05/14/The-Big-Dipper.html [credit: Rogelio Bernal Andreo]
Sirius https://www.spacetelescope.org/images/heic0516a/ [credit: NASA, ESA, H. Bond (STScI), and M. Barstow (University of Leicester)]
Sirius A and B http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2000/0065/index.html [credit: NASA/SAO/CXC]
Clashing Winds (video) http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/details.cgi?aid=11680 [credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center]
The Radial Velocity Method (artist’s impression) http://www.eso.org/public/images/eso0722e/ [credit: ESO]
Mizar+Alcor https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thomas_Bresson_-_Mizar%2Balcor_(by).jpg [credit: Wikimedia Commons, Thomas Bresson]
Polaris http://imgsrc.hubblesite.org/hu/db/images/hs-2006-02-e-print.jpg [credit: NASA, ESA, and G. Bacon]
Does the Sun Have Long Lost Siblings? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaWg2ACMspk [credit: SciShow Space]
Clashing Winds (image) http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/details.cgi?aid=11680 [credit: NASA/C. Reed X-ray images courtesy of NASA/GSFC/S. Immler]
Artist’s impression of the pulsar PSR J0348+0432 and its white dwarf companion http://www.eso.org/public/images/eso1319c/ [credit: ESO/L. Calçada]
Artist’s impression of eclipsing binary http://www.eso.org/public/videos/eso1311b/ [credit: ESO/L. Calçada]
Artist’s impression of the yellow hypergiant star HR 5171 http://www.eso.org/public/images/eso1409b/ [credit: ESO]
Nova http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2008/keck_ophiuchi_prt.htm [credit: NASA, Casey Reed]
Artist's impression of RS Ophiuchi http://www.jodrellbank.manchester.ac.uk/news/2006/rsoph-radio/ [credit: David A. Hardy/http://www.astroart.org & PPARC]
An artist's impression of Sirius A and B http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/heic0516b/ [credit: NASA, ESA and G. Bacon (STScI)]
Artist's impression of vampire star http://www.spacetelescope.org/videos/astro_bn/ [credit: ESO/M. Kornmesser]
Type Ia supernova http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/details.cgi?aid=10532 [credit: Walt Feimer, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center]
- published: 01 Oct 2015
- views: 1415022
19:03
The Living Universe is Unimaginably BIG and You're a Part of it!
How big is the universe? Let's take a journey from Earth to the solar system, closest stars, the Milky Way, and the observable universe. Along the way we will s...
How big is the universe? Let's take a journey from Earth to the solar system, closest stars, the Milky Way, and the observable universe. Along the way we will stop by the Oort cloud, Alpha Centauri, radiosphere, Andromeda galaxy, Virgo supercluster, and Laniakea.
After watching this video, you can think a couple things. Either - I’m this tiny, separate thing on a distant planet in the middle of nowhere special. I’ll live for several decades and that will be that. Or you may be thinking, wow, I’m a part of this unimaginably large, possibly infinite universe, that is potentially teeming with life. A part of this thing that I don’t really understand. A thing that, well, no one truly understands. A part of this planet, this node in the sea of space that is coming to life. and things can get very metaphysical after that.
Within our current scientific understanding, it’s easy to feel alone in the universe. We believe that we are separate beings, floating around on a tiny rock in a vast and seemingly dead universe. This is an old and outdated paradigm that needs to be updated. We need to re-examine a few key assumptions and learn to let go of these old beliefs for ourselves and for humanity. I’ll be covering these key assumptions in future videos, but to give you the sneak peek:
1 – First, the idea that you are somehow separate from the universe needs to be obliterated. We are taught that we are individuals, separate from the world out there. Of course, with assumptions and beliefs like that, you will feel like a lost soul, but it doesn’t have to be that way. Although we feel that we are independent creatures roaming around, we’re not really separate. We’re not independent of the world we live in. We’re in an intimate, inseparable symbiotic relationship with the world we live in. Humans and nature are one in the same. We are actually a part of it - a piece of the whole.
The universe is not outside of you - you're in it. You’re a function of the universe in the same way that one of your skin cells is a function of your whole body - a function of you. We are an aspect of the universe, so it doesn’t make any sense to set yourself apart and say you're an isolated object surrounded by a vast alien entity. You grew from that entity and you're inseparable from it. If you ever feel lost, just remember that the force that guides the stars, guides you too. You are a result of nature just as much as a star or planet is.
2 – The second key assumption that needs to be re-examined is our narrow definition of what life is. the distinction between living and non-living is a definitional difference. This division is actually just a concept in our minds, which is why there is so much debate on what is considered to be alive. For example, some say viruses are alive, while others say they are not.
Our line between living and non living always seems to be moving. We used to think that we were the only intelligent, living things. Then we expanded it from ourselves to animals, insects, plants, cells, and now we are asking -
Are viruses, bacteria, endospores (which can live without nutrients for millions of years – don’t grow, move, excrete, or do anything until the environmental conditions are right), and DNA alive in a sense?
There is no clear consensus on what life is because there really is no clear line where you can say this is living and this is not. We have definitions of what we think is required for something to be alive, life as we know it, but it’s a very incomplete understanding of what intelligence is and what being alive means.
What if life is more inherent and fundamental to the universe than we’ve assumed. The universe is not some static mechanistic material thing that we once believed it to be. It’s not a bunch of dumb matter floating around aimlessly. The idea of the universe being like a machine grew out of Newton’s ideas of a clockwork universe. We now know that the universe is not static like a clock – it is a process of constant change - of movement and evolution. The universe is more comparable to an organism than a clock. I’m not saying the universe is an organism - I’m simply stating that it behaves more like an organism than a clock. Could it be that the universe itself has some type of intelligence, awareness, or a different type of consciousness than our own? Is it possible that the universe is alive in a way that isn’t quite clear to us from our tiny perspective – in a way beyond our ability to comprehend? Kind of like how a cell in our body doesn’t know that it is part of a larger, more complex being.
This idea ties nicely into the previous idea that we are not separate from the universe. If we are intelligent and alive and not separate from the universe, then it would be logical to conclude that the universe is also intelligent and alive in a sense. In my opinion, a living being cannot be the product of a dead universe. These topics will be covered in more depth in future videos.
https://wn.com/The_Living_Universe_Is_Unimaginably_Big_And_You're_A_Part_Of_It
How big is the universe? Let's take a journey from Earth to the solar system, closest stars, the Milky Way, and the observable universe. Along the way we will stop by the Oort cloud, Alpha Centauri, radiosphere, Andromeda galaxy, Virgo supercluster, and Laniakea.
After watching this video, you can think a couple things. Either - I’m this tiny, separate thing on a distant planet in the middle of nowhere special. I’ll live for several decades and that will be that. Or you may be thinking, wow, I’m a part of this unimaginably large, possibly infinite universe, that is potentially teeming with life. A part of this thing that I don’t really understand. A thing that, well, no one truly understands. A part of this planet, this node in the sea of space that is coming to life. and things can get very metaphysical after that.
Within our current scientific understanding, it’s easy to feel alone in the universe. We believe that we are separate beings, floating around on a tiny rock in a vast and seemingly dead universe. This is an old and outdated paradigm that needs to be updated. We need to re-examine a few key assumptions and learn to let go of these old beliefs for ourselves and for humanity. I’ll be covering these key assumptions in future videos, but to give you the sneak peek:
1 – First, the idea that you are somehow separate from the universe needs to be obliterated. We are taught that we are individuals, separate from the world out there. Of course, with assumptions and beliefs like that, you will feel like a lost soul, but it doesn’t have to be that way. Although we feel that we are independent creatures roaming around, we’re not really separate. We’re not independent of the world we live in. We’re in an intimate, inseparable symbiotic relationship with the world we live in. Humans and nature are one in the same. We are actually a part of it - a piece of the whole.
The universe is not outside of you - you're in it. You’re a function of the universe in the same way that one of your skin cells is a function of your whole body - a function of you. We are an aspect of the universe, so it doesn’t make any sense to set yourself apart and say you're an isolated object surrounded by a vast alien entity. You grew from that entity and you're inseparable from it. If you ever feel lost, just remember that the force that guides the stars, guides you too. You are a result of nature just as much as a star or planet is.
2 – The second key assumption that needs to be re-examined is our narrow definition of what life is. the distinction between living and non-living is a definitional difference. This division is actually just a concept in our minds, which is why there is so much debate on what is considered to be alive. For example, some say viruses are alive, while others say they are not.
Our line between living and non living always seems to be moving. We used to think that we were the only intelligent, living things. Then we expanded it from ourselves to animals, insects, plants, cells, and now we are asking -
Are viruses, bacteria, endospores (which can live without nutrients for millions of years – don’t grow, move, excrete, or do anything until the environmental conditions are right), and DNA alive in a sense?
There is no clear consensus on what life is because there really is no clear line where you can say this is living and this is not. We have definitions of what we think is required for something to be alive, life as we know it, but it’s a very incomplete understanding of what intelligence is and what being alive means.
What if life is more inherent and fundamental to the universe than we’ve assumed. The universe is not some static mechanistic material thing that we once believed it to be. It’s not a bunch of dumb matter floating around aimlessly. The idea of the universe being like a machine grew out of Newton’s ideas of a clockwork universe. We now know that the universe is not static like a clock – it is a process of constant change - of movement and evolution. The universe is more comparable to an organism than a clock. I’m not saying the universe is an organism - I’m simply stating that it behaves more like an organism than a clock. Could it be that the universe itself has some type of intelligence, awareness, or a different type of consciousness than our own? Is it possible that the universe is alive in a way that isn’t quite clear to us from our tiny perspective – in a way beyond our ability to comprehend? Kind of like how a cell in our body doesn’t know that it is part of a larger, more complex being.
This idea ties nicely into the previous idea that we are not separate from the universe. If we are intelligent and alive and not separate from the universe, then it would be logical to conclude that the universe is also intelligent and alive in a sense. In my opinion, a living being cannot be the product of a dead universe. These topics will be covered in more depth in future videos.
- published: 29 Apr 2023
- views: 3104456
17:40
Our Closest Stars. What Lies beyond the Solar System?
➥ Telegram - https://t.me/kosmo_eng
➥ Subscribe - http://bit.ly/SubbKosmo
➥ Support us on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@kosmo_off/join
➥ Support us on Pat...
➥ Telegram - https://t.me/kosmo_eng
➥ Subscribe - http://bit.ly/SubbKosmo
➥ Support us on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@kosmo_off/join
➥ Support us on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/kosmo_off
➥ Kosmo DOC - youtube.com/@KosmoDOC
➥ TikTok - http://tiktok.com/@kosmo_eng
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There are approximately 1,400 stellar systems in space within the radius of 50 light years from the Solar system. Some of them are multiple and contain two and more objects, which makes the overall number of our stellar neighbours over 2,000. These are all sorts of stars, from dim red dwarves to dazzling giants whose temperatures are beyond our imagination. The incredible scale and great abundance of space objects in all their diversity can’t but amaze. Life’s too short to give account of each and every one of them.
00:00 Intro
01:38 Ross 128
04:22 Luyten's star
07:19 Аltair
09:43 Fomalhaut
14:11 Аrcturus
16:37 Ending
#Stars #Closest #Film #Planets #Ross128b #Аltair #Аrcturus #Fomalhaut #Kosmo
https://wn.com/Our_Closest_Stars._What_Lies_Beyond_The_Solar_System
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There are approximately 1,400 stellar systems in space within the radius of 50 light years from the Solar system. Some of them are multiple and contain two and more objects, which makes the overall number of our stellar neighbours over 2,000. These are all sorts of stars, from dim red dwarves to dazzling giants whose temperatures are beyond our imagination. The incredible scale and great abundance of space objects in all their diversity can’t but amaze. Life’s too short to give account of each and every one of them.
00:00 Intro
01:38 Ross 128
04:22 Luyten's star
07:19 Аltair
09:43 Fomalhaut
14:11 Аrcturus
16:37 Ending
#Stars #Closest #Film #Planets #Ross128b #Аltair #Аrcturus #Fomalhaut #Kosmo
- published: 26 Sep 2021
- views: 1203967
12:32
Alpha Centauri. What Does the Closest Stellar System Conceal?
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Distances between objects in space are often so staggering that the human mind is barely able to fully appreciate them. Sometimes even light takes thousands of years on end to travel from one object to another. However, among myriads of stellar systems scattered across the vast expanses in the universe there is only one that may be truly called closest to us. There are three stars mutually bound by invisible threads of gravitation that lie comparatively nearby by space standards and naturally attract our closest attention. So what is the Alpha Centauri system like?
00:00 Intro
00:44 How far our signals have travelled
01:31 The Alpha Centauri system
02:10 Alpha Centauri А
03:26 Alpha Centauri B
04:54 Proxima Centauri
07:02 Proxima Centauri b
08:25 Proxima Centauri c
10:45 Breakthrough Starshot
11:31 Ending
#AlphaCentauri #Closest #System #Space #Planets #Kosmo
https://wn.com/Alpha_Centauri._What_Does_The_Closest_Stellar_System_Conceal
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➥ Advertising, cooperation -
[email protected]
Distances between objects in space are often so staggering that the human mind is barely able to fully appreciate them. Sometimes even light takes thousands of years on end to travel from one object to another. However, among myriads of stellar systems scattered across the vast expanses in the universe there is only one that may be truly called closest to us. There are three stars mutually bound by invisible threads of gravitation that lie comparatively nearby by space standards and naturally attract our closest attention. So what is the Alpha Centauri system like?
00:00 Intro
00:44 How far our signals have travelled
01:31 The Alpha Centauri system
02:10 Alpha Centauri А
03:26 Alpha Centauri B
04:54 Proxima Centauri
07:02 Proxima Centauri b
08:25 Proxima Centauri c
10:45 Breakthrough Starshot
11:31 Ending
#AlphaCentauri #Closest #System #Space #Planets #Kosmo
- published: 05 Apr 2022
- views: 2269257
5:45
Stars System - 2.11.2024 - S08EP3
#StarsSystem #asibiliou #starchanneltv
Δες εδώ την αγαπημένη σου εκπομπή:
https://www.star.gr/tv/psychagogia/stars-system
Συνδεθείτε με τα Social Media του σ...
#StarsSystem #asibiliou #starchanneltv
Δες εδώ την αγαπημένη σου εκπομπή:
https://www.star.gr/tv/psychagogia/stars-system
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Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/StarChannelGrTV/
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Δείτε όλα τα δελτία ειδήσεων και τις εκπομπές του Star στο http://www.star.gr/tv/
Subscribe @StarTvGreece https://bit.ly/3KO9WZs για να έχετε άμεση ενημέρωση για τις νέες εκπομπές και δελτία που ανεβαίνουν στο YouTube
https://wn.com/Stars_System_2.11.2024_S08Ep3
#StarsSystem #asibiliou #starchanneltv
Δες εδώ την αγαπημένη σου εκπομπή:
https://www.star.gr/tv/psychagogia/stars-system
Συνδεθείτε με τα Social Media του σταθμού:
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/StarChannelGrTV/
Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/starchanneltv/
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Δείτε όλα τα δελτία ειδήσεων και τις εκπομπές του Star στο http://www.star.gr/tv/
Subscribe @StarTvGreece https://bit.ly/3KO9WZs για να έχετε άμεση ενημέρωση για τις νέες εκπομπές και δελτία που ανεβαίνουν στο YouTube
- published: 02 Nov 2024
- views: 9478
7:38
Contact with the Pleiadians: Working with the Pleiadian Star System to Co-Create a Brighter Future!
The pleiadians reside on earth to help us in our transition into the golden age, as well as to assist us with the ascension process. They have a wide range of s...
The pleiadians reside on earth to help us in our transition into the golden age, as well as to assist us with the ascension process. They have a wide range of ships that they use to travel and transport goods throughout the universe, and some of these ships have been seen by humans on earth.
https://wn.com/Contact_With_The_Pleiadians_Working_With_The_Pleiadian_Star_System_To_Co_Create_A_Brighter_Future
The pleiadians reside on earth to help us in our transition into the golden age, as well as to assist us with the ascension process. They have a wide range of ships that they use to travel and transport goods throughout the universe, and some of these ships have been seen by humans on earth.
- published: 26 Apr 2023
- views: 6576