How Far Beyond Earth Could Humanity Spread?
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Top Comments (10)
It's funny how you weren't planning on ever visiting that galaxy 100 billion light years away, but when science says you can't it's suddenly all you've ever wanted. So weird how these limits are still unfathomably huge, but still feel depressingly small when you realize they might be absolute limits of travel for the entirety of forever.
I love the thought experiment of the Slow Starship, that puts humans in stasis to travel to a distant star system only to awaken and find that future humans have already arrived by a faster starship and evolved both biologically and technologically!
For some reason, the phrase “…humanity, or whatever succeeds us…” really caught my attention.
One of the biggest things I drew from this episode, that I've never really put much thought into, is that the speed in which we expand from Earth ultimately reduces the amount of communication we can have with it (same for any origin point).
I always thought of space and time being on such unfathomably massive time scales that we could never perceive a change without multigenerational record-keeping. Hearing that every *year* we lose 3 galaxies is so mindboggling.
hey matt, long time watcher and fan. The world is getting scarier as time marches on, but watching space time has consistently been there and given me something I can think about. Thank you for the work you and the rest of space time do. ❤
I am a simple man and i dont understand many of the things touched on in these videos, but i still enjoy them
That light cone and spacetime diagram animations was really neat and made the concept so much easier to follow.
I can’t shake the massive universe size of FOMO, thinking about the exploration and experiences we are missing out on by being born before we could explore any exoplanet…. It’s devastating.
I'm British and was at the Natural History Museum in NYC last month when I saw a very familiar, albeit beardless, Aussie physicist participating in one of the video exhibits in the space wing of the museum. Never knew you were quite so prolific, Matt!
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Top Comments (10)
It's funny how you weren't planning on ever visiting that galaxy 100 billion light years away, but when science says you can't it's suddenly all you've ever wanted. So weird how these limits are still unfathomably huge, but still feel depressingly small when you realize they might be absolute limits of travel for the entirety of forever.
I love the thought experiment of the Slow Starship, that puts humans in stasis to travel to a distant star system only to awaken and find that future humans have already arrived by a faster starship and evolved both biologically and technologically!
For some reason, the phrase “…humanity, or whatever succeeds us…” really caught my attention.
One of the biggest things I drew from this episode, that I've never really put much thought into, is that the speed in which we expand from Earth ultimately reduces the amount of communication we can have with it (same for any origin point).
I always thought of space and time being on such unfathomably massive time scales that we could never perceive a change without multigenerational record-keeping. Hearing that every *year* we lose 3 galaxies is so mindboggling.
hey matt, long time watcher and fan. The world is getting scarier as time marches on, but watching space time has consistently been there and given me something I can think about. Thank you for the work you and the rest of space time do. ❤
I am a simple man and i dont understand many of the things touched on in these videos, but i still enjoy them
That light cone and spacetime diagram animations was really neat and made the concept so much easier to follow.
I can’t shake the massive universe size of FOMO, thinking about the exploration and experiences we are missing out on by being born before we could explore any exoplanet…. It’s devastating.
I'm British and was at the Natural History Museum in NYC last month when I saw a very familiar, albeit beardless, Aussie physicist participating in one of the video exhibits in the space wing of the museum. Never knew you were quite so prolific, Matt!