
Uranus & Neptune: Crash Course Astronomy #19
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Date: 2022-04-04
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Comments and reviews: 10
Oddball
In tradition of naming the planets after ROMAN gods they named it Uranus. a GREEK god. It-s name should be Caelus
Pronounced ky-loose I think. It-s a shame that one of the coolest if not the most interesting planet in our solar system will never get any respect or recognition because it-s name sounds like a butt hole.
On another note though, Uranus is the god of gods, the supreme god, so maybe having a name that sounds like butt hole, is more appropriate than anything else. you know cuz most gods are butt holes
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In tradition of naming the planets after ROMAN gods they named it Uranus. a GREEK god. It-s name should be Caelus
Pronounced ky-loose I think. It-s a shame that one of the coolest if not the most interesting planet in our solar system will never get any respect or recognition because it-s name sounds like a butt hole.
On another note though, Uranus is the god of gods, the supreme god, so maybe having a name that sounds like butt hole, is more appropriate than anything else. you know cuz most gods are butt holes
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WWTormentor
I would be curious to see a video on what would an alien life observing our solar system would see? What would earth look like to them under regular light as well as non visible light. Would they be able to see all the planets? What about the dwarf planets? Would they see things we can-t see? Such as a possible ninth planet? This is assuming that they have the same technology as we do. But most of all, would they be able to tell that there may be life in our planet?
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I would be curious to see a video on what would an alien life observing our solar system would see? What would earth look like to them under regular light as well as non visible light. Would they be able to see all the planets? What about the dwarf planets? Would they see things we can-t see? Such as a possible ninth planet? This is assuming that they have the same technology as we do. But most of all, would they be able to tell that there may be life in our planet?
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Fearofthemonster
Space exploration will be fun when we have the means to hop on a spaceship and go look ourselves. Right now people just point their telescope to a star and wait for a planet the cross over it then they calculate the reducing in the brightness. They don't even get to see what they have discovered until some artist comes up to draw it from imagination based on the known data.
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Space exploration will be fun when we have the means to hop on a spaceship and go look ourselves. Right now people just point their telescope to a star and wait for a planet the cross over it then they calculate the reducing in the brightness. They don't even get to see what they have discovered until some artist comes up to draw it from imagination based on the known data.
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Thortor121
We should go send a bunch more drones out to the deep solar system. Maybe, with newer tech, a probe will reach the Oort Cloud before Voyager 2, or at least get there way quicker with stuff like solar sails and stuff
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We should go send a bunch more drones out to the deep solar system. Maybe, with newer tech, a probe will reach the Oort Cloud before Voyager 2, or at least get there way quicker with stuff like solar sails and stuff
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Marcel
Don't forget that Uranus was extremely close to its equinox when Voyager 2 passed by, but now, as one hemisphere is at its summer- its weather becomes more intense, so it can be seen from our Blue planet.
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Don't forget that Uranus was extremely close to its equinox when Voyager 2 passed by, but now, as one hemisphere is at its summer- its weather becomes more intense, so it can be seen from our Blue planet.
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Gerard
5: 00 If magnetic north is closer to the 'south' pole, then why do we think it spins backwards? Wouldn't the south pole be the north pole and it actually spins the normal way? (Just tipped over a lot)
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5: 00 If magnetic north is closer to the 'south' pole, then why do we think it spins backwards? Wouldn't the south pole be the north pole and it actually spins the normal way? (Just tipped over a lot)
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ezgi
I wonder how that much gas sticks together in gas giants. I just can't bring myself to imagine a rocky core holding that much gas together? How does it do this?
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I wonder how that much gas sticks together in gas giants. I just can't bring myself to imagine a rocky core holding that much gas together? How does it do this?
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Soul
I-m 43 and too sophisticated an intellectual to be amused by adolescent toilet humor.
But. -I-d avoid breathing through your nose at Uranus-. he he he he.
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I-m 43 and too sophisticated an intellectual to be amused by adolescent toilet humor.
But. -I-d avoid breathing through your nose at Uranus-. he he he he.
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Juulian
Uranus is actually colder than Neptune because like you said it-s hypothesize that an astroid hit Uranus causing the heat within the planet to be released
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Uranus is actually colder than Neptune because like you said it-s hypothesize that an astroid hit Uranus causing the heat within the planet to be released
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zJoriz
I've heard all this stuff before, I think. but the way this guy tells it makes it that much cooler to listen to and absorb. Stellar job.
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I've heard all this stuff before, I think. but the way this guy tells it makes it that much cooler to listen to and absorb. Stellar job.
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