The video masterfully grounds cosmic horror in hard science, turning existential threats into a compelling lesson on planetary physics. It is a rare piece of educational content that uses a sensationalist hook to deliver genuine intellectual substance.
Deep Dive
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Deep Dive
Ranking The Worst Ways To Die In SpaceAdded:
and lightning bolts wider than Earth that could fry everything inside it.
>> Did you say LIGHTNING BOLTS WIDER THAN EARTH? The worst places to die in space.
>> Mars. Mars is the most habitable planet in the solar system besides Earth.
>> Yeah, it is. I remember I took a trip down there last last year around September. Honestly, great place. Little hot. Little hot. Grounds a little little unstable. Very boring planet. There's not that much different scenery. Uh when I talk about natural disasters, bro, like natural disasters are happening like that, you know. So, it's not very it's not a very fun place, but you know, it's nice to see. You know, you can get a little bit of a different siding that you don't normally see on Earth.
>> Summer day near the equator, temperatures can reach a comfortable 68° F. You could walk around, check things out, and honestly feel pretty okay. But the air is 95% carbon dioxide. So, one breath without your helmet and you'd be out in seconds.
>> That explained why my my cat passed away. RIP Tubler, bro. I went out. You know what I'm saying? I didn't have their helmet strapped on all the way. As soon as we stepped out of the ship, I heard a beep beep beeping coming from the helmet. I went and I tightened it like immediately. But by then, Tubler was already knocked out. RIP Tubler, bro.
>> Radiation is 40 to 50 times higher than on Earth. Enough to damage your DNA every hour you're outside. Even though it's freezing, the air pressure is so low that any crack in your suit would cause the liquids in your body to start boiling.
>> Are you saying that I have permanent semen damage from going to Mars? I have permanent semen damage now, bro. Oh my gosh. Does that at least turn into like a vitramite or something? I don't even know what that is. I'm not going to lie. I just seen it on Twitter.
I just know it's from Invisible. I never watched it. My baby better come out mighty. Better not come out like slush.
Imagine the babies coming out and it's just liquidy, bro. It's moving like a slime.
Oh no. Mars also has dust storms that can cover the entire planet for weeks.
>> NASA's Opportunity Rover was killed by one in 2018. Its solar panels buried under dust until the power ran out. For a human relying on those same panels, that means no heating and temperatures dropped to -200° F.
>> Dang, I must have been lucky. There weren't no dust storms when I was there.
>> So now you're in a freezing dark habitat breathing air that's slowly getting worse with the nearest help 7 months away. The moon. The moon is Earth's closest neighbor sitting about 240,000 m away. There's no atmosphere swing from around 260° F during the day to - the moon isn't the temperature, it's the dust. Billions of years of tiny space rocks smashing into the surface have grounded into a fine powder made of microscopic glass shard. You know what's crazy about that though? The moon, like he said, in the concept of space. The concept in the world of space, the moon is very close to us, right? And it's getting smashed, smashed by by giant rocks out the sky, out out of space. We're not getting smashed like that. We We did take a good one, you know what I'm saying? A few million years back. RP to my T-Rexes.
You know what I'm saying? My pterodactles and whatnot. My brothers, I hope I can see you again one day. But the moon is really getting smashed.
Like, the moon don't get no break. As soon as the moon get a water break, it gets hit from THE BACK. WE LUCKY THAT'S NOT US CUZ I NEED MY WATER breaks personally.
>> Unlike sand on Earth, which gets worn smooth by wind and water, lunar dust has never been smoothed down. The particles are so small they can pass through most filters. It also sticks to everything it touches, including your suit, helmet, and gear. During the Apollo missions, just three days of moonwalks were enough to almost lock up the suit joints.
>> OH MY GOSH.
>> EVERY TIME THE astronauts came back inside, they brought the dust with them.
They said it smelled like spent gunpowder. If you're breathing that in, >> gunpowder.
Oh yeah, I know. America going crazy in Area 51 getting gunpowder from the moon.
From the moon, bro. Oh my goodness. It tears through your lung tissue like ground up broken glass, scarring it a little more with every breath. Over time, your lungs slowly lose the ability to take in oxygen.
>> I'm so glad I went to Mars instead. Oh my goodness, I'm so glad I went to Mars instead.
>> Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system. And before you even get close to it, >> imagine watching walking butt booty naked on the moon. Does that mean glass shards are going to go inside your bro? Imagine glass shards on your butthole, bro. Every time you poo, it pushes the glass shards in your butt.
My fault, bro. My fault. My That's on me.
That's on me.
>> You have to deal with its rings. They're made of billions of chunks of ice and rock. Some as small as others the size of a house.
>> These chunks move at up to 45,000 mph.
Is Saturn an Earth and water bender?
Hold on, Saturn. Okay. If there was an alien burn born born on Saturn, HE WOULD BE THE AVATAR.
OKAY. OKAY.
>> Any one of them hitting your ship would be enough to destroy it. If you make it past the rings, the planet itself isn't any safer. Saturn's atmosphere is mostly hydrogen and helium.
>> Yeah. Isn't >> at the top. So that means no one can be born on the planet cuz you would just like it's just gas. You would just fall into it infant infinitely. Temperatures drop to -48° F. As you fall deeper, winds pick up to around 1,100 mph.
Five times stronger than the most powerful hurricanes on Earth. Enough to throw your spacecraft completely out of control. Below that, the pressure keeps building. The gases around you get thicker and thicker until they turn into liquid. Your ship and suit would be crushed long before you ever reach the core, where temperatures hit around 21,000° F. I would hope it would never hit the core of any planet. Personally, HD1897 over here have an industry plant of a planet. That thing is not real. That's a marble. I used to play with those when I was kid. Mr. HD1 189733B.
Don't forget that. Come on, bro.
>> 3B. HD189733b is a gas giant about 64 light years from Earth.
>> We're talking about gas planets again, bro. I'm not worried about no gasy planet. I'll out gas a planet. Let's go to for two.
>> Slightly larger than Jupiter. From a distance, it looks bright blue, almost exactly like our own planet. But that color has nothing to do with water. It comes from tiny particles of glass floating in the atmosphere.
>> Why is glass everywhere? The way this is making it sound, it sounds like glass is one of the most common forms of matter in the universe. You know what I'm saying? Cuz everything just has glass particles. And when you really think about that, that's really cool because glass for us, we had to go out our way to make glass where other planets just has glass. Oh, that's kind of cool.
>> The planet is tidily locked, meaning one side always faces its star. On that side, temperatures reach around 1,700.
1,700 >> height hot enough to turn rock into gas.
As that gas rises and cools, it hardens into tiny glass shards that get caught in winds, blowing up to 5,400 mph. About seven times the speed of sound. So instead of rain, >> sorry, what?
>> About seven times the speed of sound.
>> Glass moving at the speed of sound. I don't even know what the speed of sound looks like. What does the speed of sound look like?
Let me see if I can find something moving at the speed of sound. Seven times the speed of sound. Okay, this is the speed of sound.
Okay, this has not really helped me that much.
I'm not going to lie. Mach 10 speed town sound. Okay, so I'm pretty sure there's like jets and things that can go Mach 10. So 10 times the speed of sound.
Okay, so All right. So this is like a light jog.
How many uh hours is the speed of sound? 767 mph.
Oh, okay. Okay. Okay. I know what the speed of sound look like now. Yeah. The speed of sound looks like me when I go on an evening jog. Okay. So, instead of rain falling down like on Earth, HD189733b has glass flying at you sideways at over a mile per second. At those speeds, the shards would tear through your spacuit and your body in seconds. These winds circle the entire planet, so there's no calm spot to fly toward. And since it's a gas giant, there's no solid surface to land on either. Nope.
>> The Orort cloud. The Orort cloud is the farthest edge of our >> cuz or either sounds dorky or clean. I can't decide which one it is. I can't decide if it's a dorky or a clean name.
>> Solar system. A huge shell of icy objects start cloud is the farthest edge of our solar system. a huge shell of icy objects starting about 2,000 times farther from the sun than Earth. Out here, the sun looks like just another star. Temperatures sit close to -450° F, just above absolute zero. The coldest anything can possibly get. Oh, the coldest anything can possibly get. Right before my diamond chain. Of course, I don't have it on right now, but trust like it's it's icy, bro. I put it on my neck. I go I can hardly breathe. That's why that's why you'll never see it with me on see it on me because it's just it's so cold.
>> But the real problem isn't the cold.
It's the emptiness. There are no planets, moons, or landmarks anywhere.
>> I think it's lonely like depressing.
>> Few chunks of ice spread across trillions of miles of dark silent space.
>> What if like planets can communicate with each other just in a language we don't we can't perceive. What's so crazy about life is that we think we know so much but we don't know nothing at all still. So that is a positive pl possibility. That's the one thing about life. It's hard to write anything completely off, you know, cuz who says who says planets can't? Cuz if planets hold life, why can't the planet be life?
You know what I'm saying? Like even hold it, why can't they be alive? WHO WHO KNOWS? WHO know what if in the earth's core it's beaten? We don't know. We might know, bro. Some scientists probably went to the earth's core, probably gave them a little bit of earth corness, you know, got a little sample, ate it or something like that.
I'm talking about nothing.
>> Voyager 1, the farthest object humans have ever launched, has been traveling over 47 years and still hasn't reached it. At its current speed, it would take about 300 more years just to get to the inner edge. If your ship broke down out here, no one could get to you. No distress signal would arrive in time.
>> Just >> How tanky is that? whatchamacallit we sent to space for it to be up there for 47 years and just and just straight going.
How tanky is that?
Cuz cars be breaking down every day. How are cars breaking down? But oh oh the thing we sent INTO SPACE JUST GOING THAT WAY. 47 JUST GOING THAT WAY. 47 YEARS and no breaking down. I'm calling BS.
Somebody's lying. Either make our cars better or that thing has been lost in somewhere's gravity and they're lying to us. One or the other.
>> Be stuck with whatever food, water, and oxygen you had left. Watching it all slowly run out. Nothing out here kills you fast. You most likely die of suffocation once the oxygen was gone.
>> Oh no.
>> Enceladus. Enceladus is one of Saturn's.
>> Is it Enceladus or Enceladus?
Which one is it?
>> Enceladus. Enceladus is Which one's the right one?
Enceladus or Inceladus? I like Enceladus more. Enceladus is kind of uh Yo, hold up. It's shining from the bottom. Is that real? Does it have like a real shine? This This planet look like I don't want to talk about what this planet look like. Actually, >> one of Saturn's moons only about 314 miles across. Small enough to fit inside the state of Texas. The surface is covered in ice at around - 330° F.
>> That's where they got that's where they got the structure for my chain from. I'd love to be able to show y'all, but it's so cold. I just can't I can't even bring it in here. But that's where they that's where they got the metals for my chain from.
>> So, your suit is the only thing keeping you alive. Saturn's gravity constantly pulls and squeezes this tiny moon, which causes cracks in the surface.
>> It's cracking the south pole. Through those cracks, these geysers blast ice and gas into space. The gravity here is so weak that some of this stuff drifts far enough to become part of Saturn's rings.
>> These geysers aren't just ice and water vapor.
>> So basically, Saturn's slowly destroying one of its moons.
>> Scientists have found hydrogen cyanide in the mix, the same chemical used in poison gas. If one of those blasts hit you, the gas alone would kill you within a minute. And if it didn't, the wave of freezing material would lock your body in ice almost instantly. Yeah, the universe is so unforgiving. Gravity that sends geyser material into Saturn's rings could do the same to you. A supernova, a supernova is what massive star runs out of fuel and explodes in just a few seconds.
>> Like, first off, why does it explode?
Like, people die every day and they don't be exploding. So, why does the star got to explode? That's selfish low key. Why can't it just stay to itself?
Why does that have to affect everybody else? Car batteries die all the time.
You don't see it exploding.
I'm just saying we've seen so many animals die and then not explode. This supernova is tweaking, bro.
>> It can release more energy than our sun will produce in its entire 10 billionyear lifetime.
>> Sorry, what? More energy than the sun.
Excuse me. Like the whole lifetime. You know what's crazy? It's so crazy when you sit down and think that Earth has an end date. Like it has an end. Like Earth literally no matter what is done. It's it's going to be cooked one day. That will give some people anxiety. Like dang like literally everything we ever known or will know will come to an end. That's going to give people anxiety.
I am people.
I am people.
>> That energy comes out as a blast of radiation and high-speed particles with the gamma rays and x-rays traveling at the speed of light. That's what makes it so dangerous because that radiation moves at the speed of light. There's no way to see it coming. By the time you could detect it, it's already hitting you. Within a few light years of the explosion, it would break apart every atom in your body almost instantly.
Nothing we know of is thick enough to block it. Even farther out, the damage is huge. Up to about 50 lighty years away, >> you know, like that's what I'm saying, bro. These stars are selfish, bro. Like extremely selfish. Cuz why why are y'all passing away and causing harm to everything around you in a radius, bro?
Stay over there, man. So, since it's producing out X-rays, does that mean we could see the bones of anything that goes like that it passes through since they're X-rays?
I'll play the video.
>> Supernova can destroy a planet's ozone layer and flood the surface with enough radiation to cause mass extinction.
>> Some scientists think this actually happened on Earth about 450 million years ago, wiping out around 85% of all marine life. Titan. Titan is Saturn's largest moon and the only moon in the solar system with aphere. It's bigger than Mercury and in a lot of ways looks surprisingly like Earth. It has clouds, rain, lakes, and even shorelines, but none of it is water. The rain is liquid methane, and the lakes and rivers are filled with it, too. The >> Hold up. Okay, look, >> NASA, I have a crazy business proposal.
All right, I have a I have a crazy business proposal. Y'all are going to want to hear me out, man. temperature sits at around -290° F, which is cold enough to make methane behave the way water does here on Earth.
The atmosphere is mostly nitrogen, similar to Earth's. The pressure is about 1.5 times what you'd feel at sea level, so you could walk around without a pressurized suit, but the cold would kill you in minutes without heavy thermal protection. Liquid methane is also about half the density of water, so if you fell into one of Titan, you wouldn't float. You'd sink straight down and freeze solid within seconds.
It's literally like quicksand.
They have quicksand puddles. Bro, I feel bad for the first person who finds this out. And I mean, we already know about it, I should say. But the first person who actually goes on Titan and walks around and that they're going to see an area they think it's okay to step on, but really it's just like it's a slightly different color. He didn't notice that there's a slight color change. He steps on it and he just like he just knows it's over the moment he steps on it. Maybe we'll have like boot thrusters by then and then they can get caught in there. And because of the thick orange haze in the atmosphere, you can't see the sun, Saturn, or anything above you from the surface.
>> What?
>> The sun. The sun is a ball of plasma about 864,000 m across, over 100 times the diameter of Earth. There's no solid ground to stand on.
>> How long does it take a plane to every outside layer of plasma? Before you even got close, you'd have to pass through the corona, a layer of gas that reaches around 3.6 million degrees F, way hotter than the surface. NASA's Parker Solar Probe got within about >> Okay, so the corona is hotter than the surface of sun.
>> Way hotter than the surface.
>> NASA's Parker Solar Probe got within about 4 million miles in 2024.
>> Oh, wa. How did you not know that? We learned this in grade school.
>> It's been years.
IT'S BEEN YEARS, MAN. I DON'T THINK ABOUT THE SURFACE of the SUN OR CORONA, ESPECIALLY IF IT'S NOT THE VIRUS. the closest any spacecraft has ever been.
The surface sits at around 10,000° F.
Hot enough to boil pretty much, including diamond. The gravity is about >> Yeah, but like 10,000 that's like like comparatively to the corona. Shout out big C. Can I say that? Shout >> I'mma I'm going not I'mma not say that.
We're going to act like I didn't say that.
>> 28 times stronger than Earth's, but the heat would kill you long before that matter. Your space suit would start to char within a tenth of a millisecond.
Within half a millisecond, boiling plasma would hit your body. By 10 milliseconds, your flesh, bones, and suit would all be turned to gas. Your nerves can't send pain signals that fast. So, you'd be gone before your brain knew something was wrong.
>> Oh, at least that's good, right?
>> Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system, about 89,000 m across, over 11 times wider than Earth. It's a gas giant, so there's no solid.
>> Do they still say Jupiter is where you get stupider? Like, girls go to Jupiter to get more stupider or whatever. Is that still a thing or like h or have we have we moved on? Have we moved on from that? Is that is that is that gone in the olden text?
That might be old in text, bro. That might not be around no more.
>> Just layers of gas that get thicker as you go down. But before you even enter the atmosphere, the radiation is already a problem. Jupiter's magnetic field is about 20,000 times stronger than Earth's, trapping enough radiation to give you a deadly dose from 186,000 m away. Your electronics would stop working and your organs would start failing soon after. If you somehow made it into the atmosphere, you'd hit winds up to 400 mph strong enough to rip your ship apart. And lightning bolts wider than Earth that could fry everything inside it.
>> Did you say LIGHTNING BOLTS WIDER THAN EARTH? HOLD. WAIT, WAIT, WAIT. LIGHTNING LIKE KACHCHOW. WIDER THAN THE PLANET. I I KNOW. I DIDN'T hear that word or I didn't hear that right. I did it. and lightning bolts wider than Earth.
WHY? Like actually why like sit down and think about like why are planets like that? Like why? Like why is it just having constant storms and winds? Like for what? What is there to be gained?
Unless it's a living thing. Does have to be breathing a living thing that's angry all the time. Lightning bolts wider than Earth. Like that just I want to see it.
Does anyone got a picture?
You know what I'm saying? Hold on.
Picture of lightning on Jupiter. I'm going to need proof, bro. I I don't think we got I don't think we got good uh But you know, Okay, I know what I was going to say. You know what's cute? How similar these planets are. Like, cuz what do you mean? Earth and Jupiter both have lightning. Like, they don't h both have to have lightning. Like, is that not cute, bro? You can't tell me the planets aren't in a group chat texting each other like, "Oh, guys, I'm going to let off a little lightning today. I'm going to let off a little lightning.
What about you? What about you, Pluto?"
And then Pluto's there just like, "I thought I wasn't a planet just over there." The the the little brother nobody cares about. Poor Pluto, bro.
Pluto, you'll always be a planet in my heart. I don't care what people say.
Dwarf planet is not a real planet because it's a dwarf. It's not a real planet.
That sounds crazy to me.
>> That could fry everything inside it. The gravity is 2.4 times stronger. So you'd be training on Galileo made it about 87 miles in and lasted 58 minutes before the pressure and heat destroyed it.
Below that, the gas slowly thickens into liquid and eventually liquid metal.
>> How long did it take to get there though?
>> Cooked long before reaching the core. A magnetar. A magnetar is a type of neutron star. the leftover core of a massive star that exploded. It's only ABOUT >> SO YOU'RE TELLING ME WHEN THE STAR EXPLODES, it causes a problem and then its remnants causes a problem.
Like what what WE HAVE TO KILL KIDS, TOO.
>> 12 miles across, but so dense that a single teaspoon of its material would weigh about 5.5 billion tons.
>> What does that even mean? A teaspoon weighs billions of tons? Like, what are we talking about? What do you mean it's that dense? A teaspoon.
That means if you got a teaspoon and you put it in your teaspoon, it's falling through the earth. It's crushing the the earth might explode. That's how heavy it is from a teaspoon.
Keep it away from my kitchen, bro. Don't be near my silverware.
>> Its magnetic field is up to a quadrillion or a thousand trillion times stronger than Earth's.
>> We're just saying numbers.
>> The strongest magnetic force in the known universe.
That kind of force changes the shape of your atoms. From thousands of miles away, the field would already fry every piece of electronics on your ship. At about 600 miles, it's strong enough to squeeze the normally round atoms in your body.
>> You know how hard something has to be in astrology for it to get its own name without numbers like supernova, black hole, white hole, magnetar.
Once you get out of our solar system, names just start being names with numbers and random letters. That's how hard it is. Astronomy, my fault, not astrology. Astrology is the Or is it?
Are they not? Are they not hand in hand?
Who cares?
>> into long, thin, needlelike shapes. Once that happens, the bonds that hold your molecules together stop working.
Everything in your body from your DNA to individual cells falls apart at once.
And nothing visibly touches you the entire magnet. There's no material that can block a magnetic field this strong.
In 2004, a magnet called SG180620 released a burst that stripped atoms apart in Earth's upper atmosphere from 50,000 lighty years away.
>> THEY ALREADY HIT US IN ' 04. THEY ALREADY HIT US.
OH, BROTHER. BRO, can we tell SGR to relax? Okay, relax. I'm trying to see SGAA win another finals first.
Good one. Oh man, I don't really care if SGA wins another finals. I just thought it was like a, you know, play on letters. You know what I mean? Cuz cuz like I'm a comedic genius off the top.
Didn't really have to think too hard about that one. I know. I know. Low key, it already HIT US, MAN. WE TANK THAT.
YO, BIG E REALLY STOPPING THINGS. HEY, SHUT UP EARTH, BRO. BIG E TANK THAT, BRO. BIG E TANKING IT. OKAY, now that I think about it, hold on. We really our planet different, bro. We really tanking things over here, RIGHT? BIG E.
>> VENUS. Venus is often called Earth's twin because of its similar size. But the >> I'm telling you, Earth and Venus are really, they don't even be texting the group chat to each other. They be on They be texting each other directly, bro. 29 is nothing like Earth's. The temperature sits at around 860° F, hotter than Mercury, even though Venus is nearly twice as far from the sun.
That's because the atmosphere is 96% carbon dioxide, which traps heat so well that it doesn't matter whether you're on the day side or the night side. The air pressure is about 92 times what you'd feel at sea level on Earth, the same as being about 3,000 ft underwater. The air is so thick that just moving through it would feel like pushing through a heavy liquid. That pressure would start crushing your suit almost instantly. At the same time, the heat would be cooking through it from the outside and the clouds above you are made of sulfuric acid. Eat through whatever was left. The Soviet vener yo yo n Venus is toxic, bro. We texting Venus on the side and they're just cussing us out. We're telling Venus like, "Hey, bro, you got to stop making fun of Pluto." And Venus is like, "F PLUTO. ASK WHAT HE STANDS FOR CUZ WHY ARE you raining acid, dog?"
>> 13 probe was built to survive these conditions and lasted just 127 minutes.
A human in a regular space suit wouldn't last a single breath.
>> Of course, >> Io. Io is one of Jupiter's moons.
>> Hold up. That's one of the ugliest things I've ever seen. Io, wait, no, never mind. No disrespect, Io. Hey, leave me alone, bro. Leave me alone.
Leave me alone. I don't want no problems, Io. I'm just saying you look like something out of Total Drama Island where they're like, "If you lose this challenge, you have to eat IO." Or it's going to be like, "Okay, this challenge, guys." Hey campers, the first one to completely eat 10 IO's gets immunity for the rest of the day. Like, that's what this looks like. It looks like something out of a cartoon. It looked like a a mean booger. Is that a dragon?
There has to be dragons on one of these planets. They got to be >> is one of Jupiter's moons about the same size as Earth's moon. It's the most volcanically active place in the solar system.
>> There got to be dragons on it.
>> 400 active volcanoes across its surface.
Some of them erupt lava at around 3,000° F, hotter than any volcano on modern Earth, and launch plumes over 300 m into space. Lava is also It shoots up 300 miles.
I'm not going to lie, that got to be one angry moon, bro. That moon, that moon got to be angry, dog.
Why is it shooting 300 miles? It sounds like it's trying, it has a statement it's trying to make. You think it's trying to talk to our moon? Like IO trying to cuss out our moon? Hey. Oh, you better not touch my moon. Uh-uh. Big E will come to the defense. Big E RUNS THIS SOLAR SYSTEM, BRO. So don't MESS WITH HIM OR THE MOONS.
>> Loaded with >> moon. We only got one >> sulfur compounds that would eat through a space suit on contact. The reason for all this activity is Jupiter. Its massive gravity constantly pulls and stretches Io, warping the surface by as much as 330 ft with every 42-hour orbit.
That's enough to crack the ground open beneath your feet without warning. Some of the lava lakes are over 100 m wide.
on top inside Jupiter's radiation belts, which deliver about five times the lethal radiation dose for a human every 24 hours. So even if Jupiter, you're not getting the ground split open beneath you, the radiation would. There's no atmosphere to protect you from any of it. Europa Europa is one of Jupiter's moons the size of Earth's moon. The surface is a shell of ice roughly 10 to 15 hoging all cracks from the constant pull of Jupiter's gravity. Underneath that ice is a >> Jupiter real life has a slave of moons and he just cracking them, just breaking them down, abusing. Yo, Jupiter a prick.
I'm not going to lie. And then Jupiter doesn't allow you to get away from them either. So it's cracking and cracking and cracking and you can't escape. Hey Big E, you going to have to run the ones with Jupiter. I'm not going to lie. You going to have to put Jupiter in in his place.
Nah, Big E probably can't can't touch Young Jup. I don't know if he can touch Young Jew, bro. Young Jup got weight on him. We in a different weight class, dog. Liquid saltwater ocean that could be up to 60 m deep. The surface temperature sits at around minus 260° F.
If one of those cracks opened beneath you and you fell through, you drop into a pitch black ocean with no way to tell which direction is up. The water is near freezing and the ice above you is miles thick, so no radio signal could get through. No one on the surface could reach you and no technology exists that could drill through that much ice fast enough to help in water that cold. You'd stay conscious for a few minutes before drowning your body.
>> LOW KEY, WHAT IF I'm on Jupiter's neck too hard? What if look look what if Jupiter is Big E's bodyguard? Every time anything big and dangerous gets into the solar system that could hurt the Big E, JUPITER SAYS, "NOPE, JOIN MY RINGS."
OKAY, NEVER MIND. HEY, NO, JUP MIGHT BE OUR HOLD ON. OKAY. OKAY. SO, JUPIT JUP IS LIKE THAT, BRO. SO, so Jup is really like Jup is like our older brother. I take back what I was saying, Jup. I take back what I was saying, Jup. I appreciate your hard work. Which other planet has rings? Is it Neptune? Hey, Neptune don't get no love, right? I don't think Neptune be getting loved on for real. What's the other What's the other planet that has um rings? Saturn and June. Dang. Neptune don't got no rings either. So, it's not it's not getting love at all.
>> Never be recovered. Scientists also believe this ocean could support life.
Meaning a human body down there could contaminate the only other ocean in the solar system that might have something living in it.
Wait, wait, wait. J, you didn't let us know that, J. Hey, J. You didn't let us know you could have life, J. Hey, I'm trying to see what your fish look like, J. I'm not going to lie to you. I'm trying to see what your fish look like.
I know you have to have a Leviathan down there, man. You got to have a giant Kraken.
>> A black hole. A black hole is what's left behind when a massive star collapses in on itself. It gravity is so strong that nothing can escape it, not even light. The point where escape becomes impossible is called the event horizon. What kills you is the difference in gravity between one end of your body and the other. As you get closer, the pull on your feet becomes so much stronger than the pull on your head that your body starts to stretch.
Scientists call this spaghettification.
The force would pull your spine apart and tear through your muscles until your >> You're telling me spaghetti is so iconic that we're calling or dying us dying in a stretchy way spaghettification.
We're running out of words.
We're running out of adjectives, guys.
snapped at the midsection. Then each half would snap again and again until you were stretched into a thin stream of atoms spiraling into the center for a distant observer watching you fall.
Something strange would happen. Your image would appear to slow down near the event horizon, eventually seeming to freeze there. Over time, your light would shift from visible to infrared to radio waves, slowly fading, but never fully disappearing.
>> What?
>> If you'd like to see more videos like this, >> Hold on. No, cuz that What do you mean?
So, our atoms are split apart and sucked in, but the visual of our body just fades.
Yeah. N bro, that's all this video is is an anxiety inducer.
That's all this is giving me. Hey, let me give you a way to to you know what I'm saying? Make your heartbeat a little bit a little bit harder. Anyways, amazing video. Simple paint. Man, that was that was not scary at
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