Mercury: Crash Course Astronomy #13

Mercury: Crash Course Astronomy #13

CrashCourse

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@monkeymagic544576
@monkeymagic544576 - 07.09.2019 00:53

I hope one of the craters is called freddie

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@monkeymagic544576
@monkeymagic544576 - 07.09.2019 00:55

also. I never comment but I want to say that I love your videos and listen to them often.

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@eow714
@eow714 - 11.09.2019 15:36

I get so goddamn tired of your 'quick cuts', as if everyone had the attention span of microsecond.

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@AvatarAang_
@AvatarAang_ - 19.09.2019 09:50

I give him props for pronouncing aphelion correctly.

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@huntsmenentertainment1012
@huntsmenentertainment1012 - 23.10.2019 02:59

A crater on Mercury needs to be named Mercury (Freddie Mercury)

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@angelthesometimesangel2883
@angelthesometimesangel2883 - 14.11.2019 04:00

this is so much easier then when teachers explain it

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@1USACitizen192
@1USACitizen192 - 16.11.2019 08:20

This guy is a moron.

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@davidwilson7841
@davidwilson7841 - 22.11.2019 13:15

Ask you something mercury dont look like a planet i always thought it looks like a moon

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@rodney73991
@rodney73991 - 14.12.2019 04:10

if elements blown off like commits tail. make think possible collect elements from safe distance.

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@TheHelghast1138
@TheHelghast1138 - 19.12.2019 18:56

I want to visit Mercury :)

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@aegonconqueror5810
@aegonconqueror5810 - 28.12.2019 15:55

Cheers for this, I've been looking for "early astronomy facts" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Have you ever come across - Qanailey Riyhloe Domination - (do a search on google ) ? Ive heard some awesome things about it and my work buddy got amazing success with it.

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@vak.o
@vak.o - 07.01.2020 00:16

Mercury is also the mostly closest planet to all planets, its true, Mercury spins the fastest and since its like that, its usually the closest to any planet, for example, Earth is on its regular day, there is a time Mars is closest, and a time Venus is closest, but since mercury is faster, at some point mars and Venus would be on the other end of their ellipse and mercury would be closest now to earth for most of the Time while mars and Venus take a lot of time to come back for earth, this literally works the same way for all planets, but don’t take my word from it, watch CGP Grey’s video on “What planet is the closest?” I’m serious my mind was blown when I heard of it.

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@normanthornton9376
@normanthornton9376 - 16.01.2020 12:42

Why doesn't he mention the fact that Mercury appears to not close its orbit per revolution by some eighteen miles per orbit. That is it arrives at its calculated point in space on its orbit eighteen miles behind its scheduled time. The velocity of Mercury does not speed up technically because an object in motion keeps that same motion at all times unless it is altered or changed by some other force. What is occurring is the closer you get toward the Sun, the slower time elapses as a momentum.. When you calculate velocity it must be in the time sequence of its position relative to the Sun. This is also true for Earth and every other object in orbit around the Sun. At our perihelion point to the Sun, time is a tad slower than it is at our aphelion point. Our scientist choose to view this as an increase in speed rather than a slowing of time. .

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@normanthornton9376
@normanthornton9376 - 16.01.2020 12:52

Time on Mercury as an average is about 1.000000313 times longer than a second on Earth. Mercury c;loses its orbit on time every time but because we are calculating it using our time value it appears not to close on time. To a Mercurian, if their was one, he would see Earth as closing ahead of its calculated position by the same distance that we see Mercury as being late using his time sequence momentum. In the case of Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, all three Planets arrive earlier than calculated for at their determined orbit closing point. While astronomy doesn't mention this in its text books except to adjust their periods every ten years or so.

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@marekmasar5216
@marekmasar5216 - 17.01.2020 08:56

I love all your videos so much.. Amazing information educational and fun to study.. Thank you for everything 🙏

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@lukestrawwalker
@lukestrawwalker - 24.01.2020 20:33

Wow learned something new today... never realized or had heard that Mercury is in a 2/3 tidal lock rotation/revolution... that's really cool. I knew it had a ridiculously long day compared to its year length but never realized it was a 2/3 synchronization. This bodes well for potentially habitable planets circling red dwarf stars, like the Trappist-1 system... Potentially habitable planets around red dwarfs must orbit very close to the parent star to be within the small cool star's habitable zone, close enough that they would become tidally locked, and have year lengths of only a few Earth days (shorter than Mercury's 88 Earth days). Tidal locking is going to be "inevitable" for these planets due to their close proximity to the parent star, BUT, if they can be "tidally locked" at a fractional rotational speed other than 1/1, then that means they won't be "eyeball planets" with one side perpetually broiling in the star's light and heat, and the other side perpetually frozen in eternal night, with only a narrow band all the way around the planet from pole to pole along the "sunset zone" between the two being capable of supporting life, if that. Such a planet would undoubtedly also be lashed by a perpetual storm cooked up by the endless solar heating at the point on its surface closest to the star (particularly if there were an ocean basin there, if it were continental landmass, it would be a blazing perpetually cooked desert), and winds would blow from the hot storm around the planet to the cold and frozen night side where an eternally dark enormous ice cap would be forever present with no way of ever melting (except volcanism or impacts). Having a planet locked into a 2/3 rotational "tidal lock" would mean that the ENTIRE surface of the planet WOULD receive daylight, ameliorating the "eyeball planet" effect, and give actual days and nights, though like Mercury's they would be "strange" by Earth standards... on a planet with a 16 day orbit (which I recall reading some of the Trappist planets are in such short "year length" orbits around their star) that would mean a day length of about ten days or so, followed by about ten days of night, similar to Earth's Moon... Plant and animal life could adapt to those conditions easier than an "eyeball planet" type scenario (though there's no reason to believe life COULDN'T adapt to an eyeball planet either, just that it would be more difficult).


Later! OL J R :)

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@PSkullKidDnazen
@PSkullKidDnazen - 25.01.2020 19:09

If we named all the other planets after ancient gods why not give the sun, earth and the moon a more fitting name like Helios, Gaea and Celine
It'd sound far more awesome in my opinion

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@BlackKnightsCommander
@BlackKnightsCommander - 03.02.2020 17:32

I hope we find a new crater and name it Shadman.

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@JAY9896864656
@JAY9896864656 - 12.02.2020 13:16

Wow you are so intelligent

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@radioboyintj
@radioboyintj - 19.02.2020 05:42

Earth is also a naked eye object

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@canonwright8397
@canonwright8397 - 02.03.2020 03:29

A Crater named Tolkien? Ok this is now my favorite planet. Now if we could just name the new planet (when its found) Gandalf.

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@goktimusprime
@goktimusprime - 14.03.2020 08:59

Okay, Boomer, you mean kilo for kilo, not pound for pound.

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@kathanayaki
@kathanayaki - 14.03.2020 11:59

Fast explanation ..

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@navagharkiran5769
@navagharkiran5769 - 18.03.2020 15:54

we can watch uranus also with naked eye

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@mozzstickdestroyer
@mozzstickdestroyer - 21.03.2020 05:52

Mercury has extensive ray systems, earth had extensive racism. Bah dum tss.

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@wilensgalette2253
@wilensgalette2253 - 23.03.2020 00:34

Where is the Tupac crater?

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@Blue-r4b
@Blue-r4b - 23.03.2020 16:39

So Mercury day is not longer than it's year. Only Venus day is longer than it's year. Use the Imperial System please.

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@FighterOfSwords3
@FighterOfSwords3 - 25.03.2020 10:46

Random question: when measuring Mercury's (or any object's) distance from the Sun, do they measure from the Sun's surface or from the edge of the corona? I know it wouldn't be much of a difference, but just curious.

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@voltaire3001
@voltaire3001 - 27.03.2020 05:18

👍👍👍👍

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@Religion-Is-Fiction
@Religion-Is-Fiction - 28.03.2020 04:13

There are places in Earth's Arctic, notably Alaska, where snow exists year round, 24/7, even though the short summers can get to room temperature and a bit more. This is just due to places where sunlight never reaches, even though the sun is up for long periods of time in the summer.

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@maciejzuk7756
@maciejzuk7756 - 28.03.2020 10:55

So, did anyone ever theorize that Mercury could be Sun's moon? Would that be even possible?

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@kylew.4896
@kylew.4896 - 29.03.2020 14:23

Unless you believe the earth is flat...in which case this is probably the most real "research" you've probably ever done...or think the drudge report is a scholarly source

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@RRW359
@RRW359 - 02.04.2020 06:03

"It has the most elliptical orbit of any planet"


That's been true for 14 years, well over half my life, and I still get upset when I hear it.

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@bullrun2772
@bullrun2772 - 10.04.2020 17:47

Gasvide shut up just watch you meant learn something new

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@chris-od7yb
@chris-od7yb - 22.04.2020 22:07

Homeschool life😎

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@ChromeStrand
@ChromeStrand - 06.05.2020 08:08

Scishow covered about the ice of mercury today, while i'm watching this!

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@seratonyn
@seratonyn - 06.05.2020 18:10

Totally epic~☆

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@didandijan8374
@didandijan8374 - 02.06.2020 23:38

The strange planet is mercury 🖤 I love you Mercury , and I can feel your weirdness

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@Allenryan819
@Allenryan819 - 13.06.2020 05:53

I hate when us Americans uses the metric system but I guess it’s only fair since the rest of the world uses it!😂

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@kamonic6571
@kamonic6571 - 07.07.2022 16:32

Fun Fact courtesy of CGP Grey, Mercury is the closest planet to every other planet in the solar system, if you look at a statistical average. Because it has a small, rapid orbit, it will be on the same side of the sun as every other planet more often than the others, so over time it averages out to be the closest to all of them.

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@Iz4yah
@Iz4yah - 24.10.2022 22:50

"Debussy" hehe

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@flippinfootproductions6505
@flippinfootproductions6505 - 19.03.2023 22:13

nice joke in the beginning.

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@clegsy
@clegsy - 02.04.2023 03:12

Phil you're my dad

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@Rip_StarHappi
@Rip_StarHappi - 30.04.2023 07:37

Fun fact on average mercury is closer to earth 🌎

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@mustafakamalrahi
@mustafakamalrahi - 15.06.2023 21:49

can we appreciate the fact that Phil broke out of prison just to deliver us this episode?

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@atomicplanets8226
@atomicplanets8226 - 16.06.2023 15:41

Mercury is actually Venus' moon.

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@CarlytheQueenofChaos
@CarlytheQueenofChaos - 22.01.2024 14:35

It's dissapointing to me that the crust of mercury is not made out of actual mercury metal.
Not even partially.

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@underwatergod1910
@underwatergod1910 - 29.01.2024 20:26

I want to live on mercury

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