How Eclipses Revealed Our Solar System
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Related videos
How to Launch A Spacecraft Out of the Solar System
StarTalk
67.6k views
Black Holes. Explained. For 1.5 Hours.
PBS Space Time
94.2k views
Do We Live in the Rarest Solar System In The Universe? We're about to find out!
PBS Space Time
262.8k views
How Many Black Holes Are In The Solar System?
PBS Space Time
976.7k views
Can Space Time Remember?
PBS Space Time
381.4k views
How Does The Nucleus Hold Together?
PBS Space Time
943.0k views
How Earth REALLY Moves Through the Galaxy
PBS Space Time
3.1m views
How Many States Of Matter Are There?
PBS Space Time
2.7m views
Is the Proxima System Our Best Hope For Another Earth?
PBS Space Time
1.0m views
How Does Gravity Escape A Black Hole?
PBS Space Time
1.6m views
Top Comments (10)
Hey Space Timers! As you'll hear in the episode Matt says "today" when referring to the Solar Eclipse. For clarity, the solar eclipse in North America will be on Monday, April 8th, 2024. We were originally going to publish this episode on eclipse day, but decided to push the release so more of our community could see it and enjoy it before Monday. We hope you enjoy the episode and that it can give you some more perspective on how important eclipses have been to the collective understanding of our place in the solar system!
0:00 _"A little later today..."_ Even though I *KNOW* what day the eclipse is, and have been planning for it, you still sent me into a panic. I'm much too easily swayed.🤣
What I love about this is it shows ancient people weren't dumb and we are as a species are not so much smarter. We just have better tools, built up from a foundation of those before us. If you would have dropped these ancient thinkers in modern day, with modern measuring tools, they would have gotten the same answers we get. I very much dislike when people don't understand evolution wouldn't make us smarter in 3000 years, it's too small of a timeline.
I said "wow" out loud at least 3 times during this video. Human curiosity is borderline obsessive!
5:46 If anyone IS asking why, the "first quarter" and "third quarter" are the 2 phases that occur when the moon is 1/4 and 3/4 of the way through its new moon -> new moon cycle.
Being able to deduce so much about the universe just with some shadows and math is absolutely incredible. The history of astronomy is fascinating. One of my favorite stories is Rømer's determination of the speed of light using nothing but the orbit of Jupiter's moon Io
I watched this whole video without wearing eye protection.
I can’t make this one, but in 2017, the full solar eclipse in Oregon was something i’ll never forget
Carl Sagan - Cosmos - Eratosthenes. ''Because Eratosthenes had the presence of mind, to experiment, to actually ask, whether, back here, near Alexandria, a stick cast a shadow near noon, on June, the 21st .. And it turns out - Sticks Do.''
Matt is my all-time favourite narrator. His Aussie accent, perfect pronunciations, and fluid delivery are awesome. Give this man a round of applause!
Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge
- Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
- Chat with videos, export text & PDF
- $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research
Free forever plan • All features unlocked
Top Comments (10)
Hey Space Timers! As you'll hear in the episode Matt says "today" when referring to the Solar Eclipse. For clarity, the solar eclipse in North America will be on Monday, April 8th, 2024. We were originally going to publish this episode on eclipse day, but decided to push the release so more of our community could see it and enjoy it before Monday. We hope you enjoy the episode and that it can give you some more perspective on how important eclipses have been to the collective understanding of our place in the solar system!
0:00 _"A little later today..."_ Even though I *KNOW* what day the eclipse is, and have been planning for it, you still sent me into a panic. I'm much too easily swayed.🤣
What I love about this is it shows ancient people weren't dumb and we are as a species are not so much smarter. We just have better tools, built up from a foundation of those before us. If you would have dropped these ancient thinkers in modern day, with modern measuring tools, they would have gotten the same answers we get. I very much dislike when people don't understand evolution wouldn't make us smarter in 3000 years, it's too small of a timeline.
I said "wow" out loud at least 3 times during this video. Human curiosity is borderline obsessive!
5:46 If anyone IS asking why, the "first quarter" and "third quarter" are the 2 phases that occur when the moon is 1/4 and 3/4 of the way through its new moon -> new moon cycle.
Being able to deduce so much about the universe just with some shadows and math is absolutely incredible. The history of astronomy is fascinating. One of my favorite stories is Rømer's determination of the speed of light using nothing but the orbit of Jupiter's moon Io
I watched this whole video without wearing eye protection.
I can’t make this one, but in 2017, the full solar eclipse in Oregon was something i’ll never forget
Carl Sagan - Cosmos - Eratosthenes. ''Because Eratosthenes had the presence of mind, to experiment, to actually ask, whether, back here, near Alexandria, a stick cast a shadow near noon, on June, the 21st .. And it turns out - Sticks Do.''
Matt is my all-time favourite narrator. His Aussie accent, perfect pronunciations, and fluid delivery are awesome. Give this man a round of applause!