For the Last 33 Years, Hubble Has Been Seeing Something It Wasn't Designed For | Hubble Supercut

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Published 2023-10-19
Supercut of all the Hubble episodes on our solar system. A journey through the solar system.
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All Comments (21)
  • @TheGoldenPig.
    We definitely should have a telescope dedicated to taking super detailed high res images of our own solar system.
  • @t-vis6330
    Hubble is what got my love of space and science. Massive respect for the engineers and crews that have kept it going all these years
  • @zipster6393
    Listen, a mission on Europa may sound cool, but there's an entire game dedicated to exactly why we shouldn't ever go down there on a submarine mission.
  • @spiritinflux
    Hubble took the Deep Field Image. Which is for me the most amazing picture we've ever taken. It still (will always) leaves me in awe and lost in the musings that come with knowing this Universe that we're made out of, is indeed a great mystery, and we are it looking back at itself, it's everything. Hubble changed the world in a massive way. It's a very important and amazing sensory tool that we, humanity, have created. I'll always feel very grateful to Hubble and it's engineers. ❤ That it's found new life and a new usefulness is if no surprise, it will serve us for many year to come, I'm sure.
  • Thank you so much for highlighting the lack of "competition" between the Hubble, the Webb, and other space telescopes like the soon to be launched Grace. They aren't just different versions of the same thing, they're each invaluable because they do vastly different work.
  • @eekee6034
    I had some beautiful books on our solar system when I was a teenager, right after Voyager 2 saw Neptune. They were... formative. :) This video feels like catching up after all these years. Thank you Alex, from my heart.
  • @tolkkeen
    The most soothing narrator on the internet. Deserves every bit of success. Thanks Alex
  • @kidmohair8151
    Hubble. the telescope that had a difficult beginning. has grown into a most useful tool.
  • @BrandanTheBroker
    Hoping once Hubble wraps up we have something that can retrieve it and bring it back down to Earth so we can put it in a museum
  • I've stumbled across this channel by chance and I'm quite happy I did. Thank you, Alex, for your great narration and vast passing on of knowledge. I've been watching the supercut playlist for about..... 7 hours now.
  • @xenon3759
    This channel inspires me more and more to pursue a career in astronomy with every video I watch. Really incredible stuff
  • @MrYoumitube
    To me, HUBBLE will always be the "Father" of modern telescopes. Its images are unprecedented when you consider the images of what came before it. I understand JWST is used for different wavelengths but in comparison images, I'm honestly unimpressed with the difference to Hubble. Yes, there is more detail, but if I were to give a percentage of the images by telescopes before Hubble... I would say about a 95% definition and quality increase in Hubble images, for JWST I would say maybe a 10% increase at best....I think Hubble has spoilt us with its beautiful images through the years. Thank you Hubble!
  • @cassgraham7058
    Shoemaker-Levy was my introduction to astrophysics, thanks to my condensed matter physics grandfather. I got so many newspaper clips and discussions about how this adjusted Luis Alvarez's theories on dinosaur extinction due to the Yucatan impact (in not gonna try to spell the proper name!) Sadly, he passed this year, but seeing SL9 as a highlight of Hubble reminded me of going over the images frame by frame with him as we got then through dial up!
  • @kentd4762
    What a great tour, Alex. Thank you and thank you to Hubble.
  • @edenlopez1221
    Imagine the oceans of Mars with so many moons passing by so fast. It had to be crazy!
  • @jaymxu
    Now this is a video i am waiting for, it's gonna be one beautiful evening relaxing, viewing the video. Thank you so much for giving us a Premiere notification, Astrum, because your content is worth it for anybody, and i believe you are not even close to getting enough recognition for the work you do. You are very sadly, only one, of ONLY a handful of Channels who makes incredibly watch- or even listen-worthy videos, informative, based on evidence and facts, no clickbait, no misleading titles, straight to the point, all beautifully put together Professionally, just for us. So, or everything you do, please keep doing what you do, wether you are alone or a team... a massive thank you! For the people!
  • I think a study on the plumes of europa to see if any organisms get caught in the plumes and ejected, would be cool but probably really hard to detect something