Props to the cameraman for having to go into such a hostile atmosphere
@ryandavid61013 роки тому
🤣🤣🤣
@ryandavid61013 роки тому
@John Sanborn CGI? REALLY?
@billy47343 роки тому
@John Sanborn wow, did you study at Yale?
@chase11463 роки тому
@John Sanborn you don’t know what your talking about XD they totally went to the planet.
@necrobabe61903 роки тому
Awards deserved.
@Magic_dawn3 роки тому
its frightening and also weirdly exciting to think that Venus was once like Earth. 10/10 video
@RazorM972 роки тому
And our earth could be like venus one day. Due to global warming. Sister plants I guess
@N.i.E.M.O2 роки тому
Not only that, but life actually originated on Mercury until pollution destroyed the atmosphere, so we had to go to Venus. Then we destroyed Venus with global warming, so we had to go to Earth. Then we destroyed the earth with Nuclear radiation, so we went to Mars. Then we all died.
@kyranblack51622 роки тому
@@N.i.E.M.O... Jupiter's moons
@chrisholt48042 роки тому
@@RazorM97 so what does this tell us exactly? Global warming will happen on human infested planets or not... Not global warming. Pull your head out your ass.
@user-jy1xr1nh8s2 роки тому
@@chrisholt4804 Don't fall to much under globalist propaganda about climate crap. We do pollute but not like they want you to believe. They need more taxes and control..Wait and see .
@mike814031Рік тому
I love how they narrate these videos, it's like it takes you on a ride through the solar system and you forget about everything else because it's so captivating, that's the difference between such a good documentary like this one, and others
@melissasalasblair527311 місяців тому
Love it too!! I leave myself markers lol
@mayconsilva76797 місяців тому
Verdade, uma voz tão bonita
@grimuk38173 місяці тому
Ye. It is very easy to manipulate reality, when human beings are so easily dazzled by pretty pictures ...
@BlackFlagHeathenРік тому
The Venus cloud city concept is an insane, super cool idea. Human ingenuity and hardiness will never cease to amaze me.
@MercurialRed911 місяців тому
Scary, though. Imagine being in one of those balloons when it somehow fails and you know you’re gonna sink down to a searing, crushing surface.
@P.A.C.E.automotive3 роки тому
I liked the Venus snippets in between the commercials
@juarezderrick96473 роки тому
Anytime you don't want to watch commercials skip to the end of the video and start it over.
@edt56153 роки тому
Premium 🙌 🙌
@tylormerkley51833 роки тому
@@edt5615 lol I was about to say the same!
@RexToTheMax3 роки тому
@@juarezderrick9647 Holy shit
@krazykuz13cmc3 роки тому
Word
@Foxxnioxx3 роки тому
You know the video's gonna be intense when the first subtitle is (intense music).
@MrFancyFingers3 роки тому
As soon as I heard it I wanted a $10 cup of popcorn.
@0929Roz3 роки тому
@@MrFancyFingers Good everything!
@R1Willem3 роки тому
@@MrFancyFingers 10$ Popcorn crazy
@rudolphguarnacci1973 роки тому
@@MrFancyFingers And $5 dollar Starbuck coffee
@eggbirdtherooster3 роки тому
@Larry Lynn Davis Jr. Moaning porn chicks with a cheap ass ‘elevator (german) song I guess 😂
@greghelton46682 роки тому
The lack of a large moon may be a factor in venus’ condition as well. Lack of rotation also allows the surface to get hotter. The lack of rotation may be due to a large collision that didn’t form a moon and due to Venus being closer to the sun, making it locked to the sun’s gravity. Fascinating stuff regardless.
@davidsheckler8417Рік тому
Thr lack of independent thought is amazing 🐑🐑🍑
@rafars2246Рік тому
Yeah whatever you say sherlock....
@tamara_diamonds422Рік тому
@@rafars2246 Right. Shows like these brings out the know it alls.
@rafars2246Рік тому
@@tamara_diamonds422 it is beyond absurd, none oof those statements can be proven. People don't realize we are primitive species still....
@rafars2246Рік тому
@@chiggsytube yeah sure 😂😂
@StaticBlaster2 роки тому
Venus is a remarkable planet despite its harsh and extreme atmosphere.
@stormysampson12573 роки тому
This is the first time I've heard that there is a 'habitable' zone 54 miles from the surface of the planet in the atmosphere. Amazing.
@stormysampson12573 роки тому
@Etusnimi Sukusnimi But not a deal-breaker, right?
@toddkurzbard3 роки тому
If we do go there, we'll have to elect Lando Calrissian to administer it.
@stormysampson12572 роки тому
@Carson Lowe Carson, you are a funny guy! What a breath of fresh air...
@Krystalmyth2 роки тому
Think of all the lives lost in such an endeavor. Entire cities of people, inevitable. Extremely best case scenario.
@stormysampson12572 роки тому
@@Krystalmyth Whoa.
@jus10lewissr2 роки тому
The fact that 3 planets within one solar system (Venus, Earth and Mars) all had liquid oceans and were likely all capable of supporting life at one time really supports the belief that our galaxy (and the entire universe, for that matter) is riddled with Earth-like exoplanets. I know we've discovered plenty in the last couple decades but I hope I live long enough to see a technologically advanced telescope capable of getting a close-up look at some of them, even if it's only about as close as looking at the earth from the moon.
@jus10lewissr2 роки тому
I would definitely settle for these exoplanets that are light-years away appearing as if they were only a quarter million miles away through a telescope.
@skywatcher19722 роки тому
@@jus10lewissr I would settle for seeing them as point of light, separate from their parent star. The rest of the data is telemetry, not a "visual" like our views of Solar planets. . . .
@jus10lewissr2 роки тому
@@skywatcher1972 I could settle for that if I absolutely had to. It's definitely better than what we see now, that's for sure.
@eyeball67932 роки тому
Venus could have been Earthlike, but uh, Mercury, really? It’s whole elemental composition is different than either earth or venus, let alone it’s mass, electromagnetic field, distance to the sun, and a whole host of other differences
@jus10lewissr2 роки тому
@@eyeball6793 You wanna explain to me why you're trying to correct me when I never even said a word about Mercury? 🤣🤣🤣
@shuearie68693 роки тому
As always, thank you for another great documentary Space Rip. +
@johnnyhshify3 роки тому
I'm your Venus, Ism your fire and your desire
@googiegress74592 роки тому
Suddenly the urge to buy a ladies' razor
@vdubb4751Місяць тому
All I can think about is the dude from American Dad 😂
@MrTaxiRob3 роки тому
Screw Mars, let's terraform Venus! First, we build a moon...
@timmartin76643 роки тому
2 funny, but I think we could do it!
@MrTaxiRob3 роки тому
@@timmartin7664all we have to do is dismantle Mercury.
@timmartin76643 роки тому
@@MrTaxiRob Dude, your a genius, why didn't I think of that! lol
@tariqahmad13713 роки тому
Isaac Arthur did two episodes on Venus, one involves colonization and their economy and the other one is about terraforming it in the most realistic way possible
@DarkTheFailure3 роки тому
Well we could meet mercury into venus orbit in like a million years and yeet ceres into mars orbit
@michaelransom58413 роки тому
sounds like one of the most important parts of forming an "earth" is getting hit by a mars size planet at just the right angle to send it spinning like a topand turning the core into a dynamo
@tedbunder20263 роки тому
Yea, seems almost designed...weird
@jackcarterog0013 роки тому
And creating a moon to stabilize it's orbit. So many factors were required for human beings to arise. Sadly, I bet life that at least rivals our own is rare in this universe.
@Only_God_Is_Allah_SWT3 роки тому
The coincidence lies in human's hands but it's not what created the life.
@neilpeartspurplenose87393 роки тому
@@jackcarterog001 Probably one in a trillion odds. But there are so many planets out there, there are hundreds of thousands, if not millions of our kind of civilizations in the universe.
@Immashift3 роки тому
@@neilpeartspurplenose8739 Unless we're the first. Or the first intelligent enough to sharpen sticks and go after lions. Fourteen billion years past, several hundred trillion in the future. Universe is young. We may just be the start. I would hesitantly say microbes, maybe plants and basic animals are common, but as of now the dice haven't rolled enough times for there to be much intelligent life. But that's just my guess at the Fermi paradox. Maybe we're just way too far apart. Who knows.
@BoardwalkBullies2 роки тому
I find it fascinating that Venus spins at the same speed that a person walks. Lol, you could basically fast forward your day by driving in to the direction of the sunrise if you wanted.
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
Or just go for a jog.
@ROT8TEDРік тому
stuff is such hight quality that it feels like I am sneaking into the cinema without a ticket lol thank you for making this free and available for the public eye
@zinmomo71923 роки тому
I've always loved space documentaries like this, ever since I was 10 :) Thank you for uploading this! Its like a sort of asmr, I'll sleep well after this💫🌠
@TheShootist2 роки тому
well this one is still presented at a 10 year old's level. dang I wished they'd warn of of the grade level or viewer's expected IQ.
@shanephillips6172 роки тому
@GRAPHENE IS IN THE MASKS, SWABS and PCR TESTS!!! Lol, willful ignorance at it's best. Time to climb out from under your rock and think.
@xiiDenTiiTy2 роки тому
@@shanephillips617 love how these people throw around the word "theory", whilest having no idea what it actually means.
@andrejrockshox2 роки тому
@GRAPHENE IS IN THE MASKS, SWABS and PCR TESTS!!! watch Behind the Curve documentary. a doco where flat earthers accidentally prove the earth is flat. twice.
Thank you David Sky Brody. It is magnificent. I hope more people get the chance to behold this epic story of our sister planet. So much we don’t know yet
@davidskybrody3 роки тому
Thank you!
@elmergomez82382 роки тому
7
@FortyTwoAnswerToEverything8 місяців тому
@@davidskybrody hi david, can you tell me the artist name of the song at 7:30? I love it!
@davidskybrody8 місяців тому
Hey @@FortyTwoAnswerToEverything That cue is titled: "Not From This World" by William Pearson. His performing rights organization is BMI. The track was licensed via AudioBlocks to my Executive Producer: Thomas Lucas. (There's some additional melodic parts and "musical effects" added by me.) Thanks for watching!!
@garywarburton31802 роки тому
I think we should start exploring venus as much as possible you never know how much we may find out things which we need to know. Airships are indeed a way to do that. I would love to see what it looks like in visable sunlight.
@skywatcher19722 роки тому
Just go to 2:14 - 2:21, and THAT is what it "looks like" in visible sunlight.
@ericwhitemore59228 місяців тому
Do you know that every video that they put out is computer-animated not real
@josiahdaniels24993 роки тому
I'm not sure why but this documentary puts me to sleep so well. That notwithstanding, once I finally watched it I found it fascinating.
@niksmoret27442 роки тому
Coz you're sleepy already😁😆
@usernotfound24712 роки тому
I'm with you I usually watch the videos from melodysheep when I have insomnia.
@doorran3 роки тому
my biggest problem with Venus is that I can't live there. "Earth managed to survive." ....for now. life is a story with a beginning and an end that is tied to a segment of time that may or may not overlap any other story.
@sikemo94323 роки тому
You don't have to live there: sometimes it's just nice for a picnic!
@eclipse45072 роки тому
@GRAPHENE IS IN THE MASKS, SWABS and PCR TESTS!!! lmao
@alangarland85713 роки тому
This is a good balance of real science with spectacular pop science.
@moxavenger2 роки тому
Totally. Practical imaginative projection.
@snakeplissken10872 роки тому
And propaganda. It's a veritable trifecta!!!
@alexzee89262 роки тому
@@snakeplissken1087 How lol
@shanepatrick641Рік тому
@@alexzee8926 yep propaganda
@daviniarobbins92983 роки тому
It is amazing how they can know all this from a handful of missions considering we barely scratched the surface when it comes to knowing Venus.
@danieljones20483 роки тому
Exactly! And so one can conclude that a lot of guess work and fancy names like 'tessera' is being done here so that Congress can grant money to a few 'scientist' who want to make Venus their play ground. What have they found on Mars after, what?, 3/4 Mars rovers? NOTHING. Here we are, we can't figure out viruses and pandemics yet we want to spend billions collecting rocks on Mars...and now Venus? Sad.
@genevamoore45292 роки тому
@@danieljones2048 bravo well said and I totally agree with you. Yet we are supposed to trust our government enough to take a shot it took only 7 months to make come on they act like were guinea pigs. I'm no sheep.
@danieljones20482 роки тому
@@genevamoore4529, I am sorry you missed the gist of my comment. For the record, I am NOT against vaccines. My comment has nothing to do with vaccines. I believe in vaccines and I have many swimming in me today - polio, German measles, rubella, meningitis, annual flu vaccine, and most recently the COVID-19 vaccine called Moderna. It is swimming in my immune system and I've not turned into a guinea pig. You mention seven months of developing the Covid-17 vaccine. I am not a scientist, but I can venture to answer that one. The Covid-19 virus is NOT a new virus. It is part of the Corona viruses (CoV). CoV are a large family of viruses that cause illness ranging from the common cold to more severe diseases such as MERS-CoV and SARS-CoV. A novel coronavirus (nCoV) is a new strain that has not been previously identified in humans. So, if you have ever had a cold you actually have had a strain of the Corona virus swimming in your body. Most of the work on the virus has already been done, like mapping the viruses DNA, etc. So, if you have not received the virus, kindly get in line and receive your shot...Let us help to build herd immunity. Can herd immunity be built over time without a vaccine? Yes, but it will take years. In that time, grandma will be dead! Okay back to Venus, Mars and outer space...;) :)
@genevamoore45292 роки тому
@@danieljones2048 it's not about the vaccine it's more about trust in our gov. And the way we all not just me mind you, but we all have struggled and had our jobs shut down my husband still is not working I can't work my back is broke in 4 places. And our gov hung us out to dry. I know corona virus's have been around for a long time I don't know what to believe anymore I truly hope you understand and know where I'm coming from and why I have fears of putting anything in my body....
@futotesan2 роки тому
I guess it's the argument to be made for knowing what we know. I mean, it's like in the video @10:50. Just a single prob orbiting over 4000 times, taking pictures/scans the whole way. How many hundreds of thousands (millions?) of snapshots is that waiting for the right eyes to look upon them in order to make a connection never before made by humans. A treasure trove that should be made available for the benefit of all mankind.
@mark.0833 роки тому
For a split second I thought he said venereal landers, and spat my coffee out!!!
@tommygreist95603 роки тому
I love Space Rip. I've been watching it since I first discovered it on Hulu years ago. I miss the old commentator. He was the perfect guy for the job.
@nmcgunagle3 роки тому
Good ol Dick Rodstein
@timothyward66443 роки тому
I miss Mr. Rodstein. His voice taught me so much.
@godfreecharlie3 роки тому
@@nmcgunagle Off subject but this guy is running the risk of being looked at like an eccentric old man in a few years. A beard trim would do wonders to alleviate this. Beards are nice but when it looks like a fungal growth .....
@giancarlogonzales4333 роки тому
What about Pierre Anne Norton?
@R1Willem3 роки тому
I like David Brody also
@awalton3 роки тому
That end music though. What a bop.
@alexlupini43683 роки тому
One of the best documentaries regarding Venus.
@scottdark93310 місяців тому
Quite possibly the most informative documentary on Venus I've ever seen!
@peterwall5832 місяці тому
What's a very frightening place
@toddkurzbard3 роки тому
So, the answer for survival on Venus is to build Bespin's Cloud City? Someone make a call to Lando Calrissian.
@carolyna44843 роки тому
I just wish the Star Wars universe was real. Sigh.
@sikemo94323 роки тому
No way Jose! I suggest the repatriation of the co2. The tech exists only not on an industrial scale.
@victortorres37763 роки тому
It’s possible to have floating cities but first have to compensate for radiation infiltration from the proximity to the sun...possible not practical though
@adamloverin2313 роки тому
If we get to Mars, we get to Venus. Lando is a necessity. Just sayin.
@TheMrPeteChannel3 роки тому
@@victortorres3776 that's y will live on the underside of the blimps.
@douglaswilson953 роки тому
I have been recently fascinated by these space videos. I dont always understand what they are talking about but you do a great job of explaining these things to someone with very limited understanding if these things. Thanks for the education
@davidskybrody3 роки тому
"Everyone has deep questions..." - Carl Sagan Keep asking!
@wobbe66242 роки тому
@GRAPHENE IS IN THE MASKS, SWABS and PCR TESTS!!! ...nobody has ever proven gravity exists?
@poletooke4691Рік тому
Everything in this is pretty basic. What did you not understand? I can try to explain
@elnino46432 роки тому
NASA should do more missions to Venus imo. Mars gets all the attention, but Venus is the closest thing to Earth in our solar system. There's a lot to be learned there.
@Meow_Zedong_1949Рік тому
The problem is that any probe would be destroyed in hours upon entering the atmosphere at BEST.
@IamCoalfootРік тому
I would imagine its slow rotation probably contributes to its weak/dead magnetosphere, considering rotation is what makes the magnetic field in the first place. That would have contributed to, as the video suggests, a loss of water from radiation. I also wonder if the rotation or lack thereof could have contributed to the hard-capping of the hard crust, or if our moon might have stretched our surface _just_ enough to keep it pliable enough to keep it flowing. Interesting thoughts.
@gregoryhagen8801Рік тому
A planets magnetic field is due to it having a molten core. It has nothing to do with it's rotation.
@Leisurelee53Рік тому
Being tidally locked doomed Venus as an earth analogue. The moon does pull liquid water around and affect our crust and allow volcanic activity. But showing a face away from the sun does a tremendous amount of energy dissipation. Having one side constantly facing the sun played havoc with any kind of stable atmosphere. Imagine the ocean being heated at 90 degrees f always. Every day. Forever. Also, water vaopr is rhe best greenhouse gas. So the more water vapor in the atmosphere, the more energy is trapped, the hotter the oceans would have been. Thousands of years. Constantly heating up. The entire planet was essentially pressure cooked.
@chocvanr227Рік тому
@@gregoryhagen8801 actually it does. Earth and Venus both have iron molten cores, the fact that earth spins much faster is the reason a magnetic field is formed. Where the core works a stator and the inner mantel as a rotor. So because Venus is spinning so slowly there s hardly any magnetic field formed and therefore no protection from the sun.
@nevermind-he8ni3 роки тому
Make french fries and pizza without an oven?
@MobileSteel3 роки тому
Damn this is great i used this to write 41 page document about Venus for my homework for my tutor
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
ALWAYS, ALWAYS check your references.
@skywatcher19722 роки тому
A very entertaining video. I especially liked the Venera pictures from the surface @ 2:09 - 2:44. As a lad I read "Lost on Venus" [edit: 7:47] by Burroughs, so I am glad they made room for fantasy, as well. It's one hell of a World.
@nathancharles5Рік тому
It was good other than the ads were a bit too much.
@TinaStMarie3 роки тому
First time watching this channel... I like it. It's a nice complement to Suspicious Observers with Ben Davidson. Thanks... I subscribed & liked. GBU!
@christadauria43623 роки тому
At my younger age in my childhood life, I used to read the comic books and books about the pre-historical environment where the dinosaurs including T-Rex as the "King of Terror" and other ancient plants in vegetation with lakes and rivers on Venus as our astronauts armed with the army cannons to shoot T-Rex down if being approached in encounter while hiking on their trips in explorations. After our NASA's Mariner-2 made fly pass to Venus with new discoveries in year of 1962. Venus has had turned to be the volcano and lavish and thick toxic cloudy-covered planet with 900 F in its temperature in a fact. Our NASA has its long planned goals to explore in Venus with advanced protective & durable robotic rovers, orbiters, and "cloudy cities" that are floating in habitable cloudy levels that are permitted for scientific teams, scientists in different fields, astronauts, and planetary explorers on other missions for our future.
@lucygrey372 роки тому
What lol
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
The problem with floating things is that there are no habitable cloudy levels. it is all rather full of sulfuric acid and hurricane winds. the Balloons released so far have only lasted 3 days and were destroyed by unanticipated levels of turbulence.
@glynndraper4373 роки тому
I've been crying out for new astronomy material
@alenharris17943 роки тому
Watch it till the end, Well built, well researched, good narrations, everything was Awesome. What a nice channel.
@tylerk36163 роки тому
Cool to find this. Venus is the most facinating planet to me.
@impaugjuldivmax3 роки тому
good update of the old version
@feryfez2 роки тому
This documentary was amazing!
@MaliVinnyB2 роки тому
Props for the creativity of your Conjectures!!
@samsen39652 роки тому
Amazing content. Only wish, If we could live a few million years more or had a wider approach to our near by plants during our short lifetime!
@worfoz2 роки тому
The difference between our lifespan and a few million years, is a few million years.
@christopher198942 роки тому
I like how this video breaks down the mythological history of Venus before it gets into the science.
@shaquadradeloiserussell8659Рік тому
you cant do anything with science anyway, because youre no scientist and have no career in it.
@lalogreiner3 роки тому
Very nice documentary. Thank you! :)
@morenofranco92352 роки тому
Thanks, SpaceRip. Just imagine the next 2000 years of Exploration.
@CloneShockTrooper3 роки тому
could be interesting to land a probe in the area of the other probes to see how they look like now.
@Methasulem3 роки тому
Try todo that on the moon
@wolfrunner64622 роки тому
@@Methasulem already done, Apollo 12 Landed withing hopping distance of either surveyor 1 or 2
@jaydelrosario81192 роки тому
JUVYNL
@seamuskennedy90522 роки тому
It is unlikely that any trace would be found of the other probes. The 465 degrees celsius can melt lead within hours, so I would imagine the probes are made of light metals and so would be totally destroyed by the intense heat.
@HoHhoch2 роки тому
@@seamuskennedy9052 Lead's melting temp isn't terribly high as far as metals are concerned. If the probes contained any aluminum or steel at least parts would still be there.
@ussindianapolis91373 роки тому
Earth quakes? I think you mean Venus quakes..... 😂
@andje_izidor_music2 роки тому
Yeahhh I guess
@whitneyhoustonstan24722 роки тому
Or they could’ve just said tremors
@lapiesta2 роки тому
Earth as ground 🙈🙈🙈
@jeromevincente29322 роки тому
Venus is a young exoplanet captured by our Sun. That’s why it’s volcanic and rotates backwards. If it had formed in our solar system it would be rotating in the same direction as earth. Finally the heat of Venus is all volcanic. It’s not a green house gas effect. If it was not volcanic it would literally freeze over and go into an ice age since the sun rays won’t penetrate. The majority of Scientists in attempts to make if earth like has had the wrong hypothesis. If we could ‘tip’ venus over by directing Asteroids to is poles simultaneously we may be able to start a process of cooling Venus as major parts of the atmosphere escapes the planet!
@odengkwasi2 роки тому
That is evolution language. Future immigrants to Venus will use earth related expressions without thought of their origins or meaning.
@brucebarnes48002 роки тому
wonderful. the best venus examination i've seen thx
@charlesblack2523Рік тому
This is an excellent video. I really enjoyed watching it. 👍🏼
@pavicopter2 роки тому
Tremendous documentary: I hope that we reflect enough to understand how important is to protect our planet earth and educate human to stop the process of destruction of our blue planet. This work is very informative and appeal to each person to compare Venus with the Earth. Congratulations to all the scientists who create this documentary.
@KnowledgeIsPower111Рік тому
Nope... republicans will destroy all life on Earth for short term financial gain. They just convince their cult followers that this mass suicide (not addressing man made climate change in any meaningful way) is ok because it's what Jesus wanted to happen... that's how we all die in slow motion, and there's nothing anyone can do about it.
@Mars-pc8zl2 роки тому
Venus used to have rivers and such and honestly I would like to see what it looked like with rivers :)
@dragonslayer9902 роки тому
Rivers of lava.
@shapphirethewolf88142 роки тому
It had water not lava
@littlespinycactus3 роки тому
Ripping! BTW, would love the ident of the end credits track. The credits themselves weren't much help!
@dolly6323Рік тому
That was a good research show you filmed. Thank you very much.
@AngelCatBaby3 роки тому
Very interesting video.....thank you for sharing...
@iamscoutstfu3 роки тому
It's almost like Venus WANTS life. Like it's trying to create an atmosphere but it can't. What if we gave her a moon?
@iamscoutstfu3 роки тому
@Destroy the child @Destroy the child It's already that. Theres no atmosphere to create a greenhouse affect with. We'd need to add the precursors to the mix which, of we're able to do that, we'll be able to stop the runaway greenhouse affect, by modulating the hydrogen mass on the planet to our ends. Essentially using the ocean to crack the crust and start continental subduction. That could work, there are a myriad of other ways to success. Its really just a matter of whether we deem it worth our time to do.
@chase11463 роки тому
I mean technically it’s got an atmosphere, just not one we can survive I
@Dragrath13 роки тому
@@chase1146 Yeah in fact it has the thickest atmosphere among all terestrial worlds For instance it has roughly 3 times the nitrogen in Earth's atmosphere despite making up a little less than 5% of the Venusian atmosphere. Interestingly It seems possible that early Earth back in the Hadean Eon may have once had a Thick atmosphere dominated by water vapor and Carbon dioxide and perhaps Methane which would likely have played a critical role in keeping Earth warm in the Early years when the Sun was much fainter. Our best evidence for the conditions of Early Earth comes from the extremely tough zircon crystals as they are one of the few minerals durable enough to survive tectonic recycling show trapped chemical traces of having formed in a water rich environment high in carbon dioxide (of more specifically carbonic acid when dissolved in water) It has been suggested as much as 70% of Early Earths atmosphere was Carbon dioxide with perhaps 40 bars of atmospheric pressure with surface temperatures perhaps around 500K (where the high pressure would keep the water liquid). This hypothesis based on interpretation of chemical signatures in zircon grains if true suggests abiogenesis might have taken place under very alien environment. Regardless we do have robust evidence that Earth's Carbon dioxide levels have generally decreased since the Early Hadean eon so as plate tectonics or similar processes sequestered carbon into the planets crust and mantle. And before 2.4 Ga (billion/Giga years ago). Whatever ultimately turned Venus into what we see today in geological terms happened quite recently, best estimates for cataclysm on Venus suggest around 750 Ma (million/Mega years Ago)+/- 250 Ma given rates of atmospheric losses and the extreme Deuterium isotope ratio observed by orbiters which suggests Venus used to have far far more hydrogen. These all involve quite a lot of guess work give extremely limited data but we don't know how long the current Venus has been around.
@Hunpecked3 роки тому
Kyle, check this reference: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terraforming_of_Venus
@prabhakarrao49226 місяців тому
Brilliant, highly informative. Great many thanks for putting together.
@peterwall5832 місяці тому
In 3 billion years from now Earth will be like Venus
@colmocallaghan6626Рік тому
Fascinating documentary, it would be incredible to get good photos of the surface of Venus, I've literally seen hundreds of photos of Mars, the Soviet Venera photos from the 70s and early 80s are the only photos I've seen, be interesting to see current photos with 21st century technology.
@Phoenix-rz7td3 роки тому
Earth is like a Thor and Venus is like a Hela, Thor's evil sister
@Cosmicmorales2 роки тому
😶
@LordSalazarsRevengeМісяць тому
Then is Mars Loki?
@PiskNx1233 роки тому
One minute of my math class feels like one week on Venus
@shapphirethewolf88142 роки тому
You mean 1 year rotation period
@LordSalazarsRevengeМісяць тому
Imagine how long work would last there
@stevesteve58048 місяців тому
A science city built in the clouds of Venus. Wow. These dudes are smokin some good stuff.
@myguitar5724Місяць тому
I like the analogy of paradise Earth and Venus hell. Too get to Venus you need something that withstands heat and toxic atmosphere. Good video. Cheers.
@davidstrandlien19263 роки тому
Well, it’s real disgusting that humans need help on Earth, right now! Yet, Billions of dollars are spent on trying t understand places we don’t belong!
@Immashift3 роки тому
Yeah. Big rock comes and wipes us all out. No more humanity to tell the story because people like you were too busy looking for government handouts instead of looking up. Hundred and fifty three THOUSAND people die on this planet every day. That's one every two seconds. I'm okay with a few more if it gets us to Mars.
@johncase13533 роки тому
I'm from the year 3324 and I can say in the year 2041 is when it's discovered complex life still lives on Venus just in underground caves but it takes until the year 2068 until Humans discover the first proof of ancient past intelligent life on Venus. Better yet in the year 2129 it was discovered this past intelligent life made there last escape from Venus to a nearby planet to not only save their race but to help teach what they called their "younger siblings living in paradise".
@brethager32653 роки тому
*their
@The_Deaf_Aussie3 роки тому
That must be one strong petrol you sniffed there...
@coyoteboy56013 роки тому
Underground caves as opposed to above ground caves?
@RR11333Рік тому
So basically we don't know much about Venus. Amazing they were able to drag this documentary out for 50 minutes.
@Knowledge.Seeker138 місяців тому
Loved it. Venus is my favorite planet !!!
@rogerdemaine57123 роки тому
Everybody was Kung Fu fighting..
@R1Willem3 роки тому
Great storytelling and editing skills!
@E_blanknamehereРік тому
Crazy how lucky earth is to sustain life. If one thing was off like its positioning, rotation and moon I'd be uninhabitable
@ericwhitemore59228 місяців тому
Has nothing to do with luck God created Earth
@jaysinha03 роки тому
Excellent documentary about this fascinating world, especially the part describing possible future balloon and mechanical rover exploration of Venus.
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
The problem with both is the lack of control over the mechanics.
@joshuaarmitt54012 роки тому
Venus is so fascinating. I’d love to know what happened to her. I reckon she had a moon once and it’s what we call Mercury, I mean it’s just like our moon and only abit bigger.
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
Mercury could not have been a Moon of Venus. if it were, it would still be orbiting Venus.
@fraxizztv64333 місяці тому
@@jessepollard7132can't moons get out of orbit? Doesn't our own moon slowly move away from us?
@areneesouder3 роки тому
It could be that Venus changed into a large eruption all over, because it was moved from it's original place. If it were a moon of another planet, for example, or were in a different position in our solar system, but was moved, by whatever means, that could very trigger a reaction that would disturb it this much. Right? 🤫💪🌌🌠💗😂 I just love this stuff!
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
So does a collision with something that stopped it from rotating.
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
NO evidence of that. Doing something like that would most likely have destroyed Mercurys orbit and had severe effects on the Earths orbit as well.
@esshor.2 роки тому
Fucking hell…. Ancient astronomers were unbelievably impressive.
@oBseSsIoNPC5 місяців тому
Wow, this is quite the documentary. It is very well put together and I very much appreciate the animations and transitions! 35:00 so, if the clouds are sulfuric acid, then why couldn't you just use that for batteries? Like heat sinks, expose the lead outside and have a unlimited source of power. Talk about tapping into the planet.
@stormysampson12573 роки тому
Looking as if Mars and Venus both supported oceans, lakes, rivers and life. There was plenty of time for life to adapt to the changing chemistry and geology of both planets. Mars would be underground and on Venus life would be in the atmosphere. I feel very comfortable imagining and saying, life will be the norm, not the exception
@mamavswild2 роки тому
And look at Europa and Enceladus, both excellent candidates for life DESPITE being outside the Habitable Zone
@PacesIII3 роки тому
Funding NASA might help...
@Lamaldo782 роки тому
i absolutely loved this
@trollkenobi67273 роки тому
"Build a Cloud City" Bespin: It's treason then
@liberalrationalist89053 роки тому
I read it was the impact of Thea (sp?) the removed "excess" crust from Earth, which possibly explains why Earth has tectonic plates.
@euchiron3 роки тому
This makes a lot of sense
@mamavswild2 роки тому
Not possible…Europa also has.tectonics. However you’re not far off…It was Thea that gave us our water. We used to think it was comets, but it just never passed the numbers test. Researchers think Thea was an ice world. And it is our large supply of liquid water that gives us our tectonic plates.
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
and the geomagnetic field and a core that rotates faster than the surface crust.
@emilioacosta5853 роки тому
Just because a planet is hostile to life as we know it doesn't mean it's a dead planet
@ACheshireCat20012 роки тому
Would have to listen again to catch something i thought i heard... winds slowing the rotation of Venus?... walking pace now.... but how long until rotation is reversed to normal direction by winds and how fast might those wind speed up a reversed rotation?....
@FortyTwoAnswerToEverything8 місяців тому
Anyone know who makes the song starting at 7:30? It sounds like it could be Lars Leonard but he has so many songs it'd take me forever to search
@gezzarandom3 роки тому
Cloud cities on Venus, just like the Bespin mining facility. Exciting times
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
Except Bespin didn't have hurricane force winds with heavy turbulence to tear it apart.
@antwan13573 роки тому
so basically ive learned that life cannot exist without plate tectonics on earth.
@ClassicRiki2 роки тому
Gotta love the “4K” of the 720p variety
@_LinusVanPeltРік тому
that’s really cool 🤓♥️ thanks for sharing
@wolftitan3 роки тому
I'm writing a book on Venus right now, strange how this just popped on my suggestions. But I don't call it Venus and it takes 750 million years ago.
@Dragrath13 роки тому
So right in the middle of the suspected cataclysm responsible for globally resurfacing Venus? That sounds like a interesting possibilities.
@wolftitan3 роки тому
@@Dragrath1 Globally resurfacing Venus? Not exactly, more like three distinct races that are seemingly living in peace but that all falls apart after one small act.
@wolftitan3 роки тому
@Dead Skull I may use that idea of organisms in the clouds for another purpose. I do reference Mars in my book but not in the way you'd expect.
@sammysoseOFFICIAL3 роки тому
It’s kind of funny that you are writing a book, but failed at two sentences. I guess that is what editors are for.
@wolftitan3 роки тому
@@sammysoseOFFICIAL Thanks for the constructive criticism.
@itsjustnopinionok3 роки тому
32:14 can't make a single mistake to live through this fantasy trip
@RileyRampant7 місяців тому
the biggest question - why doesn't Venus have a magnetosphere, and how to account for the 2 x increase in crust depth/volume (possibly related). The first pretty much, by itself, dooms any long-term atmospheric stability, since it renders Venus (like Mars) an open system.
@numberonepun41263 роки тому
Jason Segal sure knows a LOT about Venus!!
@DeathBloodRider2 роки тому
Sometimes I wish that we had today's technology back in ancient times and have the powerful telescopes and satellites that we have now to see how these planets looked like back then. My questions would be; were they always dead planets? Did they have some sort of life form back then when we didn't have today's technology and were we too late? If there was life on Mars and Venus way back then even before earth was given life. How did our planet Earth looked like from Mars and Venus perspective?
@ProjectYoutube2 роки тому
There weren't any people alive back then, also it is very unlikely Mars has ever sustained life, and is very unlikely it will ever sustain life. Yes we will colonize it but we will never be able to make it like earth, it has next to no atmosphere, has no geological activity and it is very cold, sure not cold enough to make life impossible but very far from ideal. The dream of Elon Musk and many others to terraform the planet is simply not possible and will not likely be possible ever. I always thought Venus to be much more interesting than Mars. Hell, even Titan and Europa are more interesting than Mars, I'd for sure rather live on a moon where I can see a huge gas giant in the sky every day, imagine. And they are not impossible to colonize either, very cold yes but both have lots of water so you can make all the oxygen you need
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
They were almost certaininly dead planets. Both lost the capability about 2.5 billion years ago.
@scruffyRe2 роки тому
@@jessepollard7132 no one knows I guess
@jerryantony1040Рік тому
@Jose Quintero They were alive and had earth like civilizations. They also had humans who evolved to become more advance than we are today. They were destroyed by a planetary collision. Let me know if you have more questions.
@shanepatrick641Рік тому
@@jerryantony1040 some spoke of mars being possibly nuked??
@stormysampson12573 роки тому
Did you guys know that even in SOLID ROCK, boulders, life is found? Procreation of the bacteria and worms inside boulders is once every 1,000 years.
@vladimirortega58463 роки тому
But thats cuz there is humidity!
@stormysampson12573 роки тому
@@vladimirortega5846 Do you mean to say the humidity in the air makes a niche for life in boulders? That is the thing, there is no air, thus no humidity, no sunshine.
@TheBaBaTV2 роки тому
Plus think, life can adapt to other places… just because it’s not “earth conditions” DOES NOT mean it can’t adapt to where it’s at for years …
@aaronsaunders6974Рік тому
Black drop: A teardrop illusion. Cool! 😎👀
@philsanderson33502 роки тому
Only thing I don't get is that we know so little about earth and we live here and alot of what we know is theory so how can scientists and such like know what other planets have in the centre of them or how thick the crusts are for certain, even though its said pictures can say a thousand words there's still alot that can not be said.
@nolan43393 роки тому
With advances in carbon based polymers and micro-materials for building materials and electronics, many substitutes for common surface-based minerals are being realized and if you can ship and float modules capable of synthesizing these materials from the atmospheric elements to form the basic building materials needed, then developing aerostat infrastructure and maybe even a colony within the Venus clouds really does seem like a viable future endeavor. Developing the floating infrastructure on Venus may even be a little easier than developing surface-based infrastructure on Mars since working with rock, like you would on Mars, means a lot of wear and tear on equipment, which would likely mean maintaining a human presence for maintenance and on-site management work. On Venus, such a build-out of infrastructure could likely be easier to automate without a human presence because you do not need to deal with the rock and dust like you would on Mars, but only the atmospheric components. As long as the chemical processing and automated build processes can be made to run seamlessly then initial infrastructure may be able to be continually expanded as long as the processing and automated assembly equipment are provided the energy and chemicals that they need.
@liberalrationalist89053 роки тому
Floating colonies make little sense. Reflective sunshield would allow cooling (around 1,000 years). Once the atmosphere condenses to snow the excess CO2 could be thrown into space via a maglev system. A good size Oort cloud planetesimal could be used to remove crust, increase the rotation rate and shift Venus past Earth into a more favorable habitable zone position. Water could be added via Oort cloud planetesimal. Restoring what was likely the original rotation rate might restart a magnetosphere. All this would take a couple of thousand years.
@nolan43393 роки тому
@@liberalrationalist8905 Putting forth a huge investment into a solar shade (+ extras) for Venus, to freeze its atmosphere, with a payback period being thousands of years makes even less sense than developing floating colonies, at least those colonies would only need a couple generations before being useful. And while such a project could be a long-term goal, the amount of space development and infrastructure needed in the Venus sphere of influence would most likely result in a need for at least some atmospheric and planetary infrastructure, resulting in at least some level of floating infrastructure in the clouds. So, while floating colonies may not be the end-state of Venus development, some form of floating infrastructure will almost certainly occur before a solar reflector or other terraforming efforts could be completed, even if permanent settlement were to never take place.
@ceezb56293 роки тому
We can’t even do this here on earth... let alone Venus. But good idea.
@nolan43393 роки тому
@@ceezb5629 I would say that we are pretty much at the point where we could do it on earth if we really wanted to. But as far as building a floating city on earth goes, there is little reason to do so, since the surface is perfectly livable, and there are a few additional challenges to do so in a nitrogen/oxygen atmosphere because you would need to rely upon hydrogen/helium for your buoyancy, whereas on Venus even Nitrogen, Oxygen and various gaseous fuels can assist to provide lift. But on earth Helium is largely too rare to risk wasting it on such a test venture and using hydrogen in an oxygen rich environment to provide the lift is quite dangerous. But we are defiantly at the point were we could start working towards a proof of concept solar powered module by showing that atmospheric processing to create various polymers can be done and then work towards the flushing out of automation and colony blueprints that would allow for such a build, while working towards the miniaturization of these technologies so that they can be delivered to Venus on as few of modules as possible. Naturally there are some technologies on the horizon that should ideally be flushed out and be included to make such a colony even more feasible. These being largely graphene based electronics, energy storage choices and organic/polymer based solar cells. After all, if we can get synthesized carbon based materials to replace metal for the bulk of the electronics, then mineral/metal based building materials may only be needed for the chemical reactor processing vessels themselves, which may be able to be operable for many years before needing maintenance.
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
Eventually maybe, but none of the materials survive very well in acid
@clmk283 роки тому
Would be interesting to know what would happen to the planet if we give it a magnetosphere and build it a moon from debris from the asteroid belt?
@bananahitler3063 роки тому
Or, we can get a dwarf planet from there, so it’s already ready.
@admiralackbarscousininlaw57042 роки тому
Well the moon wouldn’t be much more than Ceres in terms of mass, it’s more worth it to build rotating habitats from the asteroid and Jupiter Trojan belts, but I bet it’s way easier to give it an internal magnetic dynamo like Earth, since to do it on Mars is basically just remaking half the planet, but even in Earth it would be a better use of resources to just hollow it out and put a black hole in it and make a layered world out of the matter, and just shield the planet artificially.
@catholiccrusader53282 роки тому
Lamii if we had that technology we might as well build a Dyson Sphere. Why do all that work terrafying when we can build our very own artificial world but a nice post anyway.
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
@@bananahitler306 Adding Venus to Mars for a single planet would actually get the result you ask for. AFter all, Earth had a collision with thea which was a Mars sized proto-planet.
@jessepollard71322 роки тому
@@admiralackbarscousininlaw5704 Only if you can keep the planet from collapsing into the black hole.
@rachelcaruthersonyou2 роки тому
I liked the snippets of venus, in between the adverts and the signal on the phone freezing. Maybe we should go their one day chuck sime of that stuff into the clouds that makes 🌧 rain.
@Mossyz.Рік тому
Thank you 😍😍
@hoodoovoodooyoodoo3 роки тому
Or it may have always been a noxious, solar blasted, volcanic hellhole.
@madcapper63 роки тому
Possible but since it's the only planet in the solar system that spins retrograde on its axis indicates that something massive struck it, not directly but a glancing hit like a flat rock skipping on water, causing it's rotation to reverse and spin much slower the other way. If something like that actually happened, that could have set in motion the process that killed the planet and turned it into a blast furnace.