Sunday, July 17, 2022
JWST First Full-Color Images Explained 575,294 viewsJul 12, 2022
JWST First Full-Color Images Explained
575,294 viewsJul 12, 2022
Fraser Cain
329K subscribers
NASA finally released James Webb's first full-color images. We have 5 great photos of different regions of space. So, in this video we're digesting all the great pictures we got from JWST.
00:00 - Intro
00:49 - Deep Field
04:37 - Exoplanet
07:26 - Stellar Death
10:12 - Galaxy
12:12 - Stellar Birth
14:27 - Outro
More about the first JWST images: https://www.universetoday.com/156696/...
The Big Q: JWST https://youtu.be/tadR5fUatHo
Interview with Noble Prize Laureate John Mather https://youtu.be/S1dOwht6D30
Interview with Dr. Klaus Pontoppidan https://youtu.be/6wg8d-gwTMI
Interview with Lee Feinberg, Optical Telescope Manager https://youtu.be/0pEmQ1zpKtI
Host: Fraser Cain
Producer: Anton Pozdnyakov
Editing: Artem Pozdnyakov
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You are free to use my work for any purpose you like, just mention me as the source and link back to this video.
Chapters
1,594 Comments
rongmaw lin
Add a comment...
VardaMusic
VardaMusic
4 days ago
Other videos on this were out yesterday, but after having watched prior videos of yours, I waited for your take. You are so good at methodically summarizing astronomy news in a way that isn’t frenetic, yet allows your genuine enthusiasm to shine through. :) Thank you for the fascinating reporting!
450
Dr. Scott C Case
Dr. Scott C Case
1 day ago
As a blind individual the audio description provided here is extremely helpful and appreciated. Being someone who wants to participate in the excitement created by this new development looking into our universe, I can now feel that I am apart of things. Please keep the descriptions coming as others like myself I’m sure appreciate it as well. Thanks very much.
32
Mirrorgirl
Mirrorgirl
4 days ago (edited)
I've watched many different presentations today and yours has been the most enlightening. Straight to the point, exceptionally well researched and great visuals. Thank you.
337
Dax
Dax
4 days ago
I've watched reports on national TV, YouTube and other media outlets and must say, your report and presentation on the JWST was the best boom! Hands down! Thank you so much!!
142
Shubham Raj
Shubham Raj
4 days ago
well explained and in great detail in a crisp manner for amateur like me, thanks for sharing your knowledge ,future feels so bright & we need to do so much work as a civilization.
8
sexbad
sexbad
4 days ago
Thank you for this presentation, Fraser! It’ll be exceptionally helpful to share with family members, especially compared to the awkward livestreams from NASA in the last 24 hours.
42
Valkyrie Frost
Valkyrie Frost
4 days ago (edited)
When I was in school, some ambitious scientists at NASA launched two probes to the outer solar system. This would be Voyagers 1 & 2.
By the time I was in high school, images from Jupiter and Saturn were coming back from those wonderful experiments.
A decade later, Hubble would become the star of photographic astronomy. A project only expected to last ~10 years, it has lasted 30 years and provided so many discoveries.
Now, the JWST is online and proving to be more than ever hoped for. I am amazed at the images coming from Webb and the new discoveries being found in the first images (data sets) from this amazing instrument. With some luck, Webb should last ~20 years. Perhaps by then, we will come up with a resupply mission to extend this amazing telescope's lifespan.
I know I have been fortunate to live in a time and a country where these amazing things have been made possible. I can only hope that my children and grand children will have a world where the pursuits of knowledge and science continue to be of importance and the discoveries made will be used to benefit all human kind.
52
Ron Hunter
Ron Hunter
4 days ago
They are so cool. Kudos to the image processors and everyone involved. I know just enough about stacking, stretching, and so on to be good and dangerous. The people who did these images did a very good job indeed. I can only imagine the amount of data they had to assemble. Thank you.
13
Mike Tries Motorsports
Mike Tries Motorsports
4 days ago
This is so cool! I love how galaxies that were not visible in the Hubble Deep Field just pop into existence with Webb. Imagine... those structures are so far away that they are invisible to Hubble, not because they are too small, but because the light they emitted is just to stretched out!
Great episode, Frasier!
53
Malkovith1
Malkovith1
4 days ago
It's great to hear the in depth explanation at what caused the structures to form. So long been a fan of the topic, but never heard about the motion of the gases and dust.
2
Mutant Ryeff
Mutant Ryeff
4 days ago
I have watched several different presentations of this information and I find your presentation to be the best.
51
snm359
snm359
4 days ago
Thanks Fraser, so happy the JWST is a success. I had my doubts with the shear complexity of it all. Well done NASA/ESA , the scientists, engineers, managers, administrators and the rest of the team, an amazing achievement.
2
Mark VanOuse
Mark VanOuse
4 days ago
Yours is the very best explanation of this historical moment that I have heard so far. You did an excellent job of putting things in context so that we can understand the significant meanings of these amazing images. What was particularly striking was the difference between the same image captured by Hubble versus the James Webb Space Telescope
7
eventide
eventide
4 days ago
It's crazy how "normal" these ancient galaxies look at first glance—like their structure seems really well established for the relative age.
52
dustman
dustman
4 days ago
We are going to learn some incredible new things about the universe. My personal belief is that this telescope will radically alter our understanding of the universe. Can't wait for the ultra deep field.
5
Jurij Slavec
Jurij Slavec
4 days ago (edited)
Thanks Fraser! With so many reviews of these images you put in a simple yet super detailed analysis. Love it. 👌
4
M Frusciante
M Frusciante
4 days ago
We don't even know the questions Webb will bring. I love that. Man, can you imagine being one of those working on this stuff. A passionate and obsessed scientist relentlessly examining the new data for discoveries. It must be like landing on an unexplored amazing planet and excitingly walking around exploring. What a dream.
10
Pedro Heck
Pedro Heck
4 days ago (edited)
I was waiting for your video on these images, and you delivered it perfectly as always! By the way, at 10:51 it's not even a grain of rice, but a grain of sand! That's how incredible JWST really is
35
Lewis Johnson
Lewis Johnson
3 days ago
This was exactly what I've been looking for. A good, interesting, detailed view of these images. Thank you.
4
Ferrari King
Ferrari King
3 days ago (edited)
These images are amazing. I can't wait to see what else the JWST will bring us.
1
John Soden
John Soden
4 days ago
Thank you for getting to the point and not being 19 minutes of click bait, we've been waiting long enough to see these images! Subbed 🤙🏽
4
James Diroff II
James Diroff II
4 days ago
NASA would benefit from this masterclass on how to give a presentation. Great job!
12
Esther Gagné
Esther Gagné
4 days ago
Thank you Fraser, you've made a very good explanation of the images, best one I've watched!
2
m4rk0x I
m4rk0x I
4 days ago
So glad Ive come across your channel, looking forward to taking this fantastic journey with you.
3
Jeff Boerst
Jeff Boerst
4 days ago (edited)
When I was in grade school, back in the late 70's, my class went to the local University's Planetarium.
It was an amazing experience for me, as a child who was already entranced by Space exploration.
Afterwards, I went up to one of the College Students who ran the show and asked him if we're ever going to have telescopes that could show planets orbiting other stars.
He said no because any other stars will only ever be undifferentiated dots to us...
I walked away disappointed but convinced he was wrong.
Good to know I was correct.
Stupid College Student...
45
John Shell
John Shell
2 days ago
+
The images you shown are absolutely incredible. I can't wait to see what they release in the upcoming weeks. Now that we see just how powerful JWST is and how well it is performing, are they speculating on the next telescope and what it might be able to provide us with? That question might be too soon.
Gouku X
Gouku X
4 days ago
I think as computer processing and AI get faster there will be even more learned from this instrument. Perhaps quantum computers will make a difference as it can look at everything all at once and pick out things of interest very quickly.
2
Moj Shar
Moj Shar
3 days ago
Great video, Fraser!!😀 Exciting times!! Question: has James Webb sent any photos of Teegarden B or any other earth-like planets? I"ve seen photos on social media, but cannot confirm them on the web on any space news agency!
1
Chris Schrimpf
Chris Schrimpf
4 days ago
THIS is the video I’ve been waiting for, listening to Fraser’s take on the first scientific images from JWST. So exciting!!!
8
eamonia
eamonia
4 days ago
Finally! This is the video we've all been waiting for. If you want to interest someone in the brilliant scientific miracle that is the JWST, this is how you do it. By far the most comprehensive, easy to understand and concise article on the topic. I'm honestly amazed that I haven't yet stumbled across your channel. You've earned yourself another satisfied subscriber, guys and I thank you for all your hard work and look forward to all your future contributions. Thanks a million. Or 13.8 billion, I should say ;)
Jeff Wilkie
Jeff Wilkie
4 days ago
You are the best with these types of videos! Your explanation of each image made this more enlightening and can’t wait for more.
AakashHaider
AakashHaider
4 days ago
Incredible achievements. I'm so excited to see what JWST can produce in the coming years. Nothing short of spectacular.
11
rJaune
rJaune
4 days ago
I'd love to see if the chemical spectra of galaxies matches what it should be for their distance! Thanks for the video!
Jim Martin
Jim Martin
3 days ago
Thank you for your time and effort in giving a very comprehensive account that permits the watcher to also draw conclusions and create further thoughts. I applaud your account and look forward to seeing and hearing more from you. Keep up such sterling work!
Alex Grissom
Alex Grissom
4 days ago
This was excellently presented, thank you
1
Rin C.
Rin C.
3 days ago
This maybe an "uninformed" question, but the images we are seeing, are they truly those colors? Or since they are also identifying elements present, are the colors assigned? Is space truly so colorful and stunningly beautiful? Or simply color coded for our understanding?
5
Timothy Shouldice
Timothy Shouldice
4 days ago
The sheer volume of science data that Webb will send us over it's lifetime is staggering. I'd love to learn more about the technical operation of the telescope.
10
Joanna
Joanna
17 hours ago
I've waited 25 years for these pictures. Worth it despite the frustration every time there was a delay and nail-biting when they launched and deployed. Absolutely astonishing.
Masquerola
Masquerola
4 days ago
Great analysis! found your channel a few days ago and have been watching all the new updates as they come out
1
Sergeant Bilko
Sergeant Bilko
2 days ago
Thank you for explaining in easy to understand terms what exactly is going on in the pictures.
I hope that these pictures will spark intrest in younger generations so the exploration of space will always continue because it is all a part of us and as the great Carl Sagan said' "We are Star Stuff."
"Teary_Eyes"_Anderson
"Teary_Eyes"_Anderson
3 days ago
The most interesting project that I would like to see the James Webb Telescope do is to take the deepest image ever, then go to the exact opposite side of the sky, and see if any of the objects in the two deepest ever images actually overlapped, or possibly would be identical.
BronzDano
BronzDano
4 days ago
You sir, are an absolute legend. Thank you for the outstanding explanations, which accompanied by these superb graphics…Just…you’re doing a great service 👏🏽🥹
Pe1a0
Pe1a0
4 days ago
Best explanation and visuals I've seen, now I'm finally understanding the real importance of these images.
thank you for this.
7
Lee Cheshire
Lee Cheshire
1 day ago
Super well done Fraser! Beautiful pictures fully enhanced by the way you presented it with comparisons to Hubble and the details of what we are looking at. Keep up the great work!
Ardent Dfender
Ardent Dfender
1 day ago
This is the best commentary perspective and coverage that gives great credit to the stunning images released. So many of us hoped for seemingly a lifetime for the JWST launch success and to get to the point so we can start getting these images. Many news outlet didn’t give real good perspective on these images which often left you jumping around to different sites. So much appreciate the time an actual science spaceman takes to give perspective to each these first observed images released. Bravo!
Rainy
Rainy
4 days ago
Thank you so much for teaching us in a simple way. I learned so much. I really appreciate you. 😀
rage spell
rage spell
1 day ago
I have been waiting awhile to see the photos that JWS was going to take I'm not disappointed at all it truly shows how beautiful the universe is its honestly breathtaking and I don't say that often
RedHeadForester
RedHeadForester
4 days ago
I searched on YouTube for a video explaining these images, and while this wasn't the top result, it's the one I chose to click on. Thank you for providing me with some insight into what's going on in the images. I'm no space nerd by any means, but these images are stunning enough that I needed to know more!
Kaz Empire
Kaz Empire
4 days ago (edited)
Fraser I'm so happy to see your channel growing and gaining traction. You definitely deserve it. 👏🏼
4
Douken
Douken
1 day ago
The wait was long. 18 years waiting myself. I'm excited to say the least for all the future discoveries. So far the images are just beautiful. Best Christmas gift ever.
Elinore Koenigsfeld
Elinore Koenigsfeld
3 days ago
So glad I found your site! I saw 4 other programs, all interesting--and how could they not be exciting?--but yours is the best. The level of the explanations is perfect for an audience very interested in science but without deep or wide knowledge. Very cool. Thank you!
Jack Lee
Jack Lee
3 days ago
Great video, Fraser. Question regarding the “distorted” galaxies that we see due to the forefront galaxy acting as a lens from our perspective: Does it mean that /without/ the lensing effect the JWST would still not have seen the earliest galaxies being?
Henri M
Henri M
1 day ago
You are the best at explaining this stuff. This is amazing how science is progressing to get to the bottom of where we came from. That's why I love Science and Technology.
Robert Prevost
Robert Prevost
4 days ago
Great video Fraser! Loved the detail analysis of each photo!
Rich Roberts
Rich Roberts
4 days ago
Wonderful overview! The best one I’ve seen so far. You are a gifted speaker and explainer.
4
MA
MA
3 days ago
Thank you so much for this explanation. You made it easy to understand what we're seeing.
K R
K R
4 days ago
Thank you for this! I'm so excited to see what new discoveries JW will reveal 🌌⭐
Prosper With Groove
Prosper With Groove
4 days ago
This is some of the best video editing, voice over and explanation of something truly fascinating. Well done!!
3
Sylvia Hoffman
Sylvia Hoffman
3 days ago (edited)
Excellent breakdown of these incredible images. Thanks for doing this. First time viewer and new subscriber, Joe Scott referred us to you!
miinyoo
miinyoo
4 days ago
There is so much to talk about with these images. Content for many years. Go Webb!
4
Zebulon Citanul
Zebulon Citanul
2 days ago
I am in complete awe. When trying to understand all of these happenings my head feels like a nebula...it physically feels as if it is expanding then contracting. What amazing beauty. My regret is that I am 75 and will not see what comes in 25 - 30 years, but for now, I am awe-struck. Hubble was beyond amazing; Webb is a gift from the gods.
Xrm550
Xrm550
4 days ago
Great video. Extremely informative!
3
JMS1134
JMS1134
4 days ago
Thank you for this in-depth look into these pictures. So beautiful, so many questions
Supreme Reader
Supreme Reader
2 days ago
I appreciate how you noted the differences between Hubble and Webb. Little details like being able to see the chemical make up of different worlds, but not resolve images of different worlds for example.
John Sikes
John Sikes
1 day ago (edited)
Interesting, I didn't realize a star dying into a red giant pulsed, and even more interesting that it leaves a nebula as it does that. I was obviously aware of supernova nebulae, but not this mode.
Doesn't the Milky Way have 'interacting galaxies" right now? I realize they are dwarves, but still it doesn't seem that they would be THAT rare if the one we are in qualifies. I don't know how many there are, I expect that those are exceedingly rare, but there are galaxies I've seen imaged that are commingled right now, with those spectacular S shapes and the like.
Blaine Cameron
Blaine Cameron
1 day ago
Outstanding explanations. Thank you so much. It truly is an exciting time of my life. I’ve seen men walk live on the moon and now I get to see the center of the universe. Life is good!
Sudhakar Reddy
Sudhakar Reddy
4 days ago
Yes , your explanations are more lucid and understandable than the ones put out by others yesterday
4
Edgar Gonzalez-Kozlova
Edgar Gonzalez-Kozlova
4 days ago
Thank you! I love these images! Looking forward to more exoplanets!
Abhijit
Abhijit
2 days ago
Your explanations are always easy to understand. Thanks Fraser.
Mickey G.C.
Mickey G.C.
4 days ago
Thank you so much for this video. It is the most detailed and concise interpretation I have seen yet. Kudos and carry on!
1
Andy Pandy
Andy Pandy
4 days ago
Just found your channel and so glad i did. Your presentation is superb. Clear and easy to understand. Thankyou Sir.
1
Rose
Rose
3 days ago (edited)
These images at times make me feel so small and insignificant yet at the same time their sheer beauty make seeing them worth it. They are humbling images and a clue to where humans came from
3
Kahldria Leighsun
Kahldria Leighsun
4 days ago
Been waiting for days to see the data laid out in clear concise manner such as this! Thank you! Happy to find you & become new subscriber 😁
Zap
Zap
4 days ago
Thank you very much !! Your video is clear, to the point and yet very accurate...
A new subscriber for you !
1
Threedog
Threedog
4 days ago
Your excitement is contagious. I've been watching this channel for maybe 6 years and with the Webb images being released, you seem like a kid opening presents on Christmas morning. Thanks for all you do and thanks for explaining everything the way you do.
javier olguin
javier olguin
4 days ago
Best summary of nature and implications of new JWST imagery/data that I’ve found on YouTube, thus far. Loved it!
Cassie
Cassie
1 day ago
Thanks Fraser! With so many reviews of these images you put in a simple yet super detailed analysis. Love it. 👌
🔞Don't read profile photo
🔞Don't read profile photo
4 days ago
I've watched many different presentations today and yours has been the most enlightening. Straight to the point, exceptionally well researched and great visuals. Thank you.
hen ko
hen ko
1 day ago
These images are amazing. I can't wait to see what else the JWST will bring us.
opzz xsin
opzz xsin
6 hours ago
This was exactly what I've been looking for. A good, interesting, detailed view of these images. Thank you.
Jeniffer-H0T Girl-C0me 0ver L!ve
#JamesWebbSpaceTelescope #JWST #Telescope
Ultimate Space Telescope | Full Documentary | NOVA | PBS
365,885 viewsPremiered Jul 13, 2022
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Discover how NASA engineers built and launched the most ambitious telescope of all time.
Official Website: https://www.pbs.org/nova/
| #NOVAPBS
How did NASA engineers build and launch the most ambitious telescope of all time? Follow the dramatic story of the James Webb Space Telescope—the most complex machine ever launched into space. If it works, scientists believe that this new eye on the universe will peer deeper back in time and space than ever before to the birth of galaxies, and may even be able to “sniff” the atmospheres of exoplanets as we search for signs of life beyond Earth. But getting it to work is no easy task. The telescope is far bigger than its predecessor, the famous Hubble Space Telescope, and it needs to make its observations a million miles away from Earth—so there will be no chance to go out and fix it. That means there’s no room for error; the most ambitious telescope ever built needs to work perfectly. Meet the engineers making it happen and join them on their high stakes journey to uncover new secrets of the universe.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: https://www.pbs.org/donate
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS Video App: https://to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
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#JamesWebbSpaceTelescope #JWST #Telescope #NASA #Space #SolarSystem #Universe
614 Comments
rongmaw lin
Add a comment...
Randi Bagley-Goodwin
Randi Bagley-Goodwin
1 day ago
It was difficult enough to try to grasp the size of our galaxy. This is just beyond mind blowing!
12
teej143
teej143
1 day ago
What an incredible feat of human ingenuity and cooperation!
22
ACE
ACE
3 days ago (edited)
I can't express how much joy it brings me that this was posted to Youtube!!!! Thanks PBS and NOVA!!!!!!
149
Jose L Pinedo
Jose L Pinedo
1 day ago
This is so freaking amazing! It makes me reflect on how humans are capably of things that were so unbelievable not many years ago. The only thing that keeps unchanged is also how horrible we can be to each other. I really hope as a race at almost point of extinction we get better.
6
poivre22
poivre22
1 day ago
It’s feats like this that give me some faith in humanity. I look forward to all the discoveries that lie ahead. Well done.
5
Whit B
Whit B
2 days ago
This is so well done. Incredible stuff as always NOVA and PBS!!!
16
william wilcox
william wilcox
2 days ago
This documentary brought me to tears a couple of times. This is one of those few moments where I’m proud of my species. So much work, from so many people. And it worked! It friggen worked! I’m so glad to be living in this time in history.
8
Kenneth Harris II
Kenneth Harris II
4 days ago
Amazing job everyone! Honored to be included in this.
220
David Holland
David Holland
2 days ago
Absolutely amazing. Both the JWST and this Nova episode - kudos to all, and thank you!
6
Aisle of View
Aisle of View
3 days ago
I struck up a friendship several years ago with an 80 year old retired physician and the Webb was a topic of constant conversation. Can’t tell you how happy I am that he’s still around to enjoy the first photos.
40
jim stewart
jim stewart
23 hours ago
I have followed NASA since the Gemini program, and have been intrigued with every project. Alan Shephard, first American into space; John Glen, first orbit of the earth, the Apollo program which let to Neil Armstrong taking the first steps onto an alien planet; the space shuttle, the ISS, NASA's partnering with private aerospace enterprises, and now to the most recent gem, James Webb Telescope. I am fortunate enough to have witnessed so many advances in human endeavors. My next adventure will be to observe a live launch of the Artemis program and the activation of the leading edge Orion deep space capsule. Right now I give thanks to the Lord, NASA, and NOVA.
2
Family Groms Cars & Fun
Family Groms Cars & Fun
2 days ago
It's amazing to see how small we truly are. In this vast Universe we live in.
11
G S
G S
2 days ago
I love the fact that we know nothing about what to expect - just a spec is magnificent, very humbling.
4
David H
David H
3 days ago
Thank you JWST team for 27 years of very hard work! The telescope is extraordinary!
17
Kevin Tate
Kevin Tate
1 day ago
This what PBS should be doing! Well done PBS and nova. Thank you to every single person that was a part of the team that made this amazing piece of equipment come to life!
12
Xaq Chilly
Xaq Chilly
21 hours ago
I'm glad to have been alive for this, one of mankind's greatest achievements. I hope it can unite us and help propel us in to a brighter future.
2
Donald Pearson
Donald Pearson
2 days ago (edited)
This show was absolutely amazing and they seriously put in the work to make it happen. I have always been obsessed with the universe, space and technology.
29
iamwatching
iamwatching
1 day ago
Other than seeing galaxies a billion light years away I'm more interested in seeing planets revolving around Stars 100 light years or less and searching them for true Life.
6
Jason Tonelli
Jason Tonelli
2 days ago
I followed this project for years and I can remember saying how ridiculous this project was for being so much over budget and so extremely delayed. Now I understand it and I am glad they took their time. Just these first images are mind blowing. Excited to see what we discover
25
unknown Soldier
unknown Soldier
5 hours ago
Absolutely amazing, a proud day to be a human being on this tiny planet in this unimaginably infinite universe.
Timothy E
Timothy E
2 days ago
Totally mind boggling; I can’t comprehend seeing something over ten billion years ago/distant?!?!…The overwhelming quality of this universe is mystery
7
T G
T G
12 hours ago
I've been following the JWST for 12 years, been excited for it for a very very long time. I couldn't help it, when it launched, I sat on my couch and just cried. What an amazing moment.
1
ooBoFaDeeZoo
ooBoFaDeeZoo
1 day ago
Those last shots of JWST leaving gave me goosebumps for 10 minutes. Inspiring!
2
Jen Klen
Jen Klen
4 hours ago
Wow, the relief the team felt after the telescope was fully deployed must’ve felt AMAZING!! I wish I could’ve been in that room, where everyone was at! 😆
Old Uncle Bob
Old Uncle Bob
3 days ago
Astounding engineering and science! Astounding cosmos!!!
4
joeflosion
joeflosion
3 days ago
I've been looking forward to this exact NOVA for so many years, and it's everything I had hoped for. Absolutely STELLAR!
12
Johnny-Estuardo Espinoza
Johnny-Estuardo Espinoza
9 hours ago
What infinity grateful 🥲 to all people involved in this great humanity event. Thanks to PBS to Edit this great documentary, wanted watch it several more times. 👌🏻
1
chad carroll
chad carroll
1 day ago
Mind-blowing what can be accomplished when humans work together.
P K
P K
1 day ago
* crying * I'm lost for words........ Everything about this is AMAZING!!!
3
Robert Lehman
Robert Lehman
1 day ago
I was watching a world science festival video on their you tube channel about the webb. Hosted by physicist Brian Greene. He had a panel of scientists whom had helped build the webb. They got to discussing the mirrors. First they had to precision polish them at room temp to a degree that if the total surface area of the mirrors had been laid out over the surface of the Atlantic ocean, the biggest wave tolerable on the oceans surface would have been only three quarters of an inch. That in itself is crazy. But there's a problem. As explained in this documentary, the webb specializes in the infrared spectrum and has to be cold to operate right. 375F cold. At those temps, materials warp and twist and change shape. So these guys literally cooled the mirrors to operating temp, analyzed every single imperfection caused, brought the mirrors back to room temp, and then, they re polished the imperfections they measured into the mirror so when it got to space and deployed the mirrors would warp into the perfectly aligned shape at operational temp. There are 18 mirrors which arrange the single lens. The shear feat of engineering that is this telescope is pretty dn amazing. Like humans on the moon for the first time.
1
Carlos Estrella
Carlos Estrella
2 days ago
I can't help but think of Jodie Foster's words in, "Contact," when, crying, she said, "poetry... they should've sent a poet..." The beauty visible to us because of the efforts of so many at NASA, ESA, Canada's Space Agency, the Contractors and Sub-contractors and the patience of family, friends and even Congress... Is simply awe inspiring. Thank you all for a glimpse.
8
Rebecca Cardenas
Rebecca Cardenas
2 days ago
I LOVE the mind boggling thought of all those Galaxies being out there. Infinite mind spiral.🤩🤘🏻
21
David Gatzen
David Gatzen
1 day ago
I watched this Nova Documentary before, but I love the fact that they updated the documentary showing the latest images from the telescope in July 2022 in the last 5 minutes of the documentary.
1
clatey
clatey
3 days ago
I'm so thankful to be alive during a time where something like this is possible. It really opens up the door seeing the universe in a way we have never done before. Thank you PBS for getting this made and put out so quickly after the first images were released. Amazing.
13
Skylar’Love
Skylar’Love
1 day ago
this was the most amazing thing I ever seen in my life. congratulations to you all who got a chance to work on this truly amazing project... this is huge!!!!!
5
J D
J D
2 days ago
This NOVA show about the JWST is perfect. My utmost thanks to all who made the success of the JWST possible.
2
Arizona Hobbies & Rec
Arizona Hobbies & Rec
3 days ago
If I was rich, I would have the most LEGIT private observatory. Like full on giant white dome and huge scope and everything. And I'd wear a lab coat too.
9
Falcofurious
Falcofurious
3 days ago
Hubble took 2 weeks whereas Webb took 12 hours for the deep field. Just think about that.
5
cristmh
cristmh
1 day ago
Having worked on this program for 10 years, it's so gratifying to see the hard work of so many people come to fruition. Thank you NOVA and PBS for such a fine overview of what it took to construct the greatest time machine ever built!
2
J N
J N
3 days ago
I #*%>ing love every single person who helped bring these images to the minds of Earth.
10
TI5QU4NTUM
TI5QU4NTUM
4 days ago (edited)
Another NOVA Masterpiece of human Innovation and Perseverance. 🙌🏼🙏🏼🗽🇺🇲🦅🌌 Thank you PBS. 🙏🏼
We need a Webb Telescope Emoji now, hello...
26
Sheps
Sheps
3 days ago
I would not be a happy human without SCIENCE in my life and around my life, WE are science :)
8
Graham Combs
Graham Combs
1 day ago (edited)
There is an important name missing in this documentary. Gregory L. Robinson. I would suggest that viewers check out the July 8, 2022 edition of the Wall Street Journal, the Exchange section. Dr. Robinson was the NASA engineer and administrator who took the mess that the Webb telescope program had become and got the project back on track and completed. It could not have happened without him. It should not be that significant, but Gregory Robinson is African-American and grew up in poverty in the South. It's an extraordinary story and his absence from the narrative of this documentary is a disgrace to Nova and PBS and perhaps even NASA for not vetting this film. There was also a New York Times article and an interview with Dr. Robinson on NPR. So there is no excuse for this particular instance of neglect.
3
Ronald Garrison
Ronald Garrison
2 days ago
More and more, I feel like, "Who needs fiction?" Reality has just become so extreme. "You can't make this stuff up."—That seems like the catchphrase of our time.
1
Jack Komisar
Jack Komisar
2 days ago
Congratulations to the 20,000 scientists, engineers, and technicians on a terrific job building, launching, and. commissioning this telescope! But I wouldn't call it the "Ultimate Space Telescope". "Ultimate" means "last". JWST will not be the last telescope to improve on its predecessors. Twenty or thirty years from now, there will be a better one. Perhaps it will be able to resolve individual stars in galaxies that appear as fuzzy blobs in a JWST image. Perhaps it will be able to see dark matter, or allow us to see detailed pictures of exoplanets. Perhaps it will allow us to see further backwards in time than the JWST, closer to the Big Bang.
14
TheDizzleHawke
TheDizzleHawke
3 days ago
I haven’t been more excited about a scientific technology since the large hadron collider. I can’t wait to see what it will reveal about the cosmos!
17
Ronald Garrison
Ronald Garrison
2 days ago
I don't know why anyone would be outraged that JWST cost $10 billion and took decades. From my perspective, I'm in awe that it happened at all.
1
MammaDuck
MammaDuck
3 days ago
Just imagine getting three radio telescopes of that size up there in L-2... how far and what could we see with something like that? Not that this isn't damn cool. I mean I sat here and stared all day yesterday and into the night at just the Stephan's Quintet picture, zooming in and out, first looking at what I could see with that galactic traffic accident, then checking out all the other things there are to see in the image. It makes an ignorant idiot like me drop my jaw to the floor, then wax poetic. I pay taxes. I'm retired. The space telescope had nothing to do with the job I did (professor of music), but I feel I absolutely got my money's worth, and I'd pay it all over again. If we ever ditch academics and stop asking questions, that will be the day our society starts to die.
2
Myra Craig
Myra Craig
4 days ago
500 billion stars in a galaxy! To see the 5 galaxies in Stephen's Quintet brought me to tears. Let us use the peaceful pics from the Webb telescope to unite our world. Are you not moved by the universe Mr. Putin?
9
Jose luis perez
Jose luis perez
1 day ago
I TRULY,TRULY RESPECT THE JOB THESE PEOPLE DO PROJECTS LIKE THIS IS WHAT MAKES AMERICA 🇺🇸AMERICANS IT'S WHAT MAKES US STAY STRONG AND TRUE TO ONE ANOTHER EVEN THO IT SHOCKED OUR DEMOCRACY TO IT'S CORE AND WE ARE STILL STANDING TALL BECAUSE DEMOCRACY IS EVERYTHING THANK YOU PBS AND NOVA FOR THE GREAT WORK YOU ALWAYS DO FOR YOUR FEWERS COMMENT FROM CHICAGO..
2
Nadia Rawls
Nadia Rawls
4 days ago
Thank you so much for joining us, Nestor and Kenneth! And thank you all for watching! Hope you enjoyed :)
10
Arnold Sherrill
Arnold Sherrill
18 minutes ago
There are a lot of textbooks that are going to have to either be revised or just created from the ground up from the amount of science that we are about to discover. The science of astronomy is about to be turned on its head
William Julien
William Julien
15 hours ago
"The nearest galaxies are 10s of thousands of light years away" While the nearest dwarf/satellite galaxies start at about 100,000 light years away the closest "comparable" galaxy, Andromeda is over 2.5 million light years away. The Milky Way itself is over 100,000 light years in diameter so "10s of thousands" is an exceedingly low number when referring to the distance between galaxies.
Ken Albertsen
Ken Albertsen
20 hours ago
Mucho respecto to everyone involved with the magnif eye in the sky.
1
RegisTerslow Bear
RegisTerslow Bear
1 day ago
“It started with a lie” is the understatement of the century.
1
Feeber Izer
Feeber Izer
3 days ago
The ultimate ASMR with those pics!!! 🤯 Thank you PBS for making the entire episode available!
2
Adam Forest
Adam Forest
3 days ago (edited)
"It told us once again, we think we're smart. Haha we have no clue. " Great quote
4
theBidon
theBidon
21 hours ago
Great job!! This doc was fantastic!
SigmaMan
SigmaMan
1 day ago (edited)
Thank you for helping me get my geek on! I am so grateful to be able to see and experience this in my life.
Uninitanium115
Uninitanium115
2 days ago
I love Nova it's the best programming on TV if you ask me I would love to see many more programs like this one though more about space and technology and rocket science cool engineering and stuff like that this telescope is an absolute engineering marvel humans have created something that 50 years ago could only be dreamed about in the farthest of future one of the amazing program I love it thank you
david jones
david jones
1 day ago
Time is perfect because there will always be another second that will happen. Time is unstoppable.
1
Cameron
Cameron
1 day ago
Absolute precision. Well Done.
Jason Urban
Jason Urban
10 minutes ago
I still can't wrap my head around the whole time thing like seeing back in time
Sally Luken
Sally Luken
1 day ago
I've been obsessed the last few days about these images and trying to understand their immense meaning. I am so grateful to PBS and NOVA for this program. It was a beautiful and informative documentary. Please, keep them coming as new images are released!
1
Skeptical Otter 🦦
Skeptical Otter 🦦
7 hours ago
Absolutely amazing!
star forge
star forge
3 days ago
Yo, the amount of work that is put into this episode and this telescope is nothing short of absolutely incredible and the moment that I saw the James Webb Space Telescope version of the Hubble deep field I was like “gravitational lensing is present in this picture” like I was just utterly blown away to see that picture and I was blown away to really see the whole journey of this telescope, from its inception to today July 13, 2022. Like it’s just really nothing short of incredible to me how far these men and women have gone to give is these amazing pictures and discoveries. To NOVA and the James Webb Space Telescope team you guys are awesome and keep up the absolutely amazing work!!!!
24
Mark Best
Mark Best
3 days ago
I watched the launch and deployment of JWST... I screenshot that moment of separation and it's priceless to me!
J D
2 days ago
I remember I was so excited seeing the Shuttle launch the TDRS system. My...how we have progressed.
RegisTerslow Bear
1 day ago
I stalk the night sky just as anyone would, but unlike everyone else, I found a mirror on a gigantic planet 10 billion light years away, so I was actually able to see, in that mirror, two t-Rex banging missionary style, since that’s theoretically the only possible way they could mate. They were correct, it was a missionary orgy between 2 T-Rex and 4 pterodactyl. It’s was glorious to see all the way back to a totally real time in our history of Earth, I was blown away. Literally I was getting blown at the same time. Well I guess not at the same time as the orgy, but definitely while I was watching the orgy 20 billion years later. Math checks out so I expect full credit on this discovery. Thank you all for your consideration.
1
harrowgateguy
10 hours ago
What can we discover with a telescope that can improve the lives of people on earth?
KCAA TV
2 days ago
If the Earth is spinning and moving, how can a telescope look back 14 billion years in time at a fixed point in space for two weeks and capture a perfectly focused image?
2
Oscar Sabitini
2 days ago
Great show. How wonderful for the kids to see this.
Brandon Savitski
2 days ago
Is the Webb telescope ever going to take highly detailed photos of planets in our own solar system or is it only going to focus on outer reaches of the universe? I'd like to see more pictures of our own planets of the magnitude of the likes we've never seen too. Wish they'd also focus on what they can discover about the our closest neighboring galaxy the Andromeda galaxy.
1
Robert Weldon
2 days ago
And to think, there are still stiff necked, narrow minded people who insist that we on earth are the only intelligent life in the universe.
Not billions of stars, but billions of galaxies with billions of stars, billions of years older than the Milky Way.
Big Bang or some other method of the creation no longer matters, We are not alone, we just can't reach out to those out there.
This is not Star Wars nor Star Trek, but something far beyond both. Now we need to find a way to visit THEM.
Thank you Nova for sharing the story about Webb. ;-)
1
Richard Castaldi Sr.
2 days ago
This is Truly Mind Boggling Thanks I’m Impressed
Anonymous Mouse
3 days ago
Man I loved this documentary! Teared up the whole time. Science is awesome
1
Ole Olson
2 days ago
Sometimes I forget how good NOVA is.
Natalia Oleksander
1 day ago
We need to aim for building a telescope on the moon and launch it from there.
dumpling
3 days ago
It's almost like this telescope turned on a lightbulb inside a dark room.
1
Tech for the disabled
3 days ago
All the people that made jwst are heros
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James Webb's First Images Revealed. What's next?
1,777 viewsJul 12, 2022
33
Kyplanet
43 subscribers
The James Webb Space Telescope has unveiled it's very first images, including exoplanet atmospheres, the Webb Deep Field, the Southern Ring Nebula and Carina Nebula, Stephan's Quintet and exoplanet WASP 96b. Webb has the capabilities to find alien life on exoplanets like kepler 22b or kepler 186f, and systems like TRAPPIST-1, Alpha Centuari and Tau Ceti. Webb will see the first galaxies, created just a few million years after the big bang.
6 Comments
rongmaw lin
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BR0K0
BR0K0
5 days ago
Underrated channel, you definitely need more subs
2
Kyplanet
chris kraut
chris kraut
3 days ago
What a Creator!!!
1
sarah
sarah
4 days ago
it was very moving
thank you 💫
1
Kyplanet
#NBCNews #NeilDeGrasseTyson #NASA
Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson On The New Telescope Images Released By NASA
1,072,325 viewsJul 12, 2022
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NBC News
6.9M subscribers
NASA released a full batch of images and data from the massive James Webb Space Telescope that provides a first look at cosmic mysteries yet to be untangled. NBC News’ Tom Llamas is joined by America’s top astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson to analyze what these images mean for the future of space exploration.
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#NBCNews #NeilDeGrasseTyson #NASA
4,220 Comments
rongmaw lin
Add a comment...
William Croft
William Croft
4 days ago
To NBC execs: Neil deserves more than 5 minutes of air time. This could have easily been a 15 minute spot on the Today show.
5.7K
Oziumentisis
Oziumentisis
12 hours ago
I feels sorry for Neil. He gets so little time to explain such deep phenomena. He's vibrating because he has so much to explain and loves it. His excitement alone draws me to the subject.
64
Naufal Sallehin
Naufal Sallehin
22 hours ago
Calling on one of the greatest Astrophysicist to the show and only giving him a 5 minute window to go through one of mankind’s greatest breakthroughs.. Great job NBC. 🙄
523
RedMidget27
RedMidget27
7 hours ago
They need to give Neil an entire hour - maybe an hour session every day for a week. It was painful to watch him try to compact so much information in 4 minutes. He does it really well, but man you just can't do the science justice in that short amount of time.
27
Rob Louis
Rob Louis
1 day ago
I love how Neil broke down the high level of science and made it easier to understand while still being technical. I also loved his genuine excitement and energy when talking about this!
146
Gethin Harries
Gethin Harries
1 day ago
Neil Degrasse Tyson is awesome. I love how he explains things about the Universe. I wish this man had been my teacher at school.
10
Zamdrang
Zamdrang
3 days ago (edited)
One of the greatest scientific instruments ever created with a great mind to explain and NBC gives it a fraction of the time it spends reminding us of the ills of the world. Bravo.
968
Kgosi ya Bokone
Kgosi ya Bokone
1 day ago
You can feel the passion Neil has for the subject when he talks. Imagine if a lot more people were this passionate about their work..from carpenter to builder to mechanic.
451
The Mango Mussolini
The Mango Mussolini
1 day ago
Neil's excitement and wonder is contagious. I can listen to this man all day, and still be ravenous for more at the end of it.
23
Coastal Seasider
Coastal Seasider
3 hours ago (edited)
Neil’s explanations & his ultimate enthusiasm are wonderful! There will be an influx of students in Astrophysics now between the amazing Webb telescope & Neil’s input. Wow! I’d enroll if I were younger & qualified.
1
Sarah Scarborough
Sarah Scarborough
1 day ago
I love how excited Neil is about this stuff! He’s also an AMAZING teacher
112
Mark W
Mark W
50 minutes ago
I love how Neil starts to explain the Einsteinian relativity that causes the galaxies in the picture to look curved, and Llamas is like "that makes my head hurt - um, are there planets in there?" 😂
2
Lathan Starnes
Lathan Starnes
3 days ago
The fact that he only got 5 minutes is a disservice to this achievement and Neil. I don’t care if 50% of what he says goes over some peoples heads, let him say what he wants to say.
1.4K
CL Ghost
CL Ghost
2 days ago
if they had made a real production with him talking as a full special show, they would have had massive ratings
26
Kai Zen
Kai Zen
1 day ago
NDT is always so passionate and I love how he explains stuff, sometimes geeky, sometimes simple but always interesting
6
Privacy Please
Privacy Please
2 hours ago (edited)
Say what you want about Neil, but this man can get across so much information clearly and with so little time while being absolutely engaging to newbs like myself. He's incredible!
2
WhatsUp
WhatsUp
1 day ago
"there could be planets" while he's explaining gravitational lensing and how einstein predicted this. he's the type of guy who cant name all of continents and say "sorry I'm bad at science"
3
Rose Gold
Rose Gold
1 day ago
I just love how enthusiastically Neil speaks on this 🥹 it’s truly beautiful and makes me want to learn more!
1
David Bond
David Bond
4 days ago
Limiting Neil and James Webb to less than 5 minutes is a crime against the universe.
683
J Lewis
J Lewis
9 hours ago
This needs to be a few hours long. I'd watch every minute. He's brilliant. Just let him explain things.
13
BTMS
BTMS
5 hours ago
I love the passion Neil has! It’s beautiful how dedicated he is to his craft! Makes it fun to hear and watch for intellectuals
fleafrier1
fleafrier1
21 hours ago
I like how Neil spent a minute describing how much more detail we can see while they had an old Hubble image on the screen.
1
Singular Space
Singular Space
1 day ago
Absolutely love Dr. Tyson! How he can explain such complex things in the simplest ways is mystifying itself.
James Scoville
James Scoville
2 hours ago
This sounds like a game show where you have to explain a complexity of the universe in an understandable way in 30s or less, Neil can obviously do that all day.
Brian Ward
Brian Ward
4 days ago
I sure wish they'd give Neil more time to go into detail here. This is seriously cool stuff!
1.4K
phaedrus000
phaedrus000
1 day ago
Neil: tries to explain gravitational lensing
guy: "There could be planets"
36
ALTN8NRG
ALTN8NRG
6 hours ago
Pretty exciting imagery especially when explained. Imagine what’s out there.
ʂɬơཞღ
ʂɬơཞღ
1 day ago
Love Neil, such a great guy. His energy is just so contagious 🚀 You can really see his passion for this stuff.
Bear Down
Bear Down
2 days ago
NDT is a national treasure! Love how passionate he is and excited he gets talking about it.
Toni Sno
Toni Sno
1 day ago
I’ve never seen Neil this excited and animated. You can tell he’s like a kid with a new toy seeing this imagery
Dave
Dave
2 days ago
This man needs hours to talk! Not just a measly 5 minutes… The way he talks and explains things makes me want to listen to him non stop.
335
கோ
கோ
1 day ago
I starting loving astronomy because of Neil deGrasse Tyson! Because he was the first person I saw on YouTube who talks about space! ❤️
Just Chris
Just Chris
2 days ago
I could literally listen to Neil ALL day. Tell me what’s out there, and which planets have life.
Rebel Radio
Rebel Radio
14 hours ago
Imagine, Einstein predicted some of these things despite having no equipment during their time. Geniuses are really amazing.
Vodkarage
Vodkarage
1 day ago
One thing I love about Neil is he is a teacher and knows how to explain things and get you excited about them.
D.B.
D.B.
13 hours ago (edited)
These images are just beautiful.
But let’s be frank here - NDT is a great educator and scientist, but “America/the world’s top astrophysicist”… let’s not exaggerate here.
2
Jared Polin
Jared Polin
2 days ago
I wish the commentator would just let Neil talk and go on and on because that's what we want to hear. Not someone who was having things whispered into his ear.
2.4K
boosted saleen
boosted saleen
1 day ago
He is a wealth of knowledge i love listening to him talk.
1
MeLoBeInG Gaming
MeLoBeInG Gaming
10 hours ago
The energy, love and passion of the universe itself is beautiful!
zoe 4real
zoe 4real
2 hours ago
5 minutes? Really? Neil is the definiton of being humble. And he's so passionate about our Universe. It's so beautiful to see.
mike johnson
mike johnson
2 days ago
Neil just answered just about every question I've had since these images were released. Thanks
Cam T.
Cam T.
1 day ago
Gotta love Neil!!! I listen to his podcast and it's entertaining, informative, and surprisingly funny for us space geeks!
Guy Incognito
Guy Incognito
3 days ago
Invite a genius on...then give him 5 seconds to explain astrophysics per slide. Brilliant. C'mon NBC, be better.
373
Nobody Earth
Nobody Earth
1 day ago
Reporter: “there could be stars and other planets”
That was a well thought out response holey moley!
Bethany Bonenfant
Bethany Bonenfant
2 days ago
That's fascinating! I wish it wouldn't have cut off early before he explained the five galaxies. I watched it live the other day from Maryland. But the five galaxies pics are really, really interesting!
Tarek Wazzi
Tarek Wazzi
16 hours ago
This needed an hour minimum. Its beautiful seeing Neils passion and knowledge
Mike Hancho
Mike Hancho
2 days ago
“Omg!!! Guys, this is the most groundbreaking achievement in this century. We need to get a famous astrophysicist to explain to us what this is to share with the world!!
NBC Execs: “Best I can do is 5 minutes. We have an hour segment about something really horrible that no one wants to hear, get ready to run it!”
52
GETJaby
GETJaby
19 hours ago
Just wanna add to the sentiment that this was entirely too quick and that the host needed to let Neil deGrasse Tyson just speak. He kept talking over him. Seems like the execs were so worried about losing peoples interest that the interesting details weren’t able to be effectively communicated at all. I feel like I usually understand the ideas Neil deGrasse Tyson is communicating and here it felt like he was trying his damndest and I got confused AF because he was being rushed and spoken over for the first two and a half minutes. The satellite used to capture these images was billions of dollars. Might be a worthwhile investment of air time to really understand why.
2
takigan
takigan
2 days ago
Giving the foremost astrophysicist a 5 minute spot to talk about some of the greatest scientific discoveries of the past decade is like tipping your waitress a nickel for serving your party of 20.
771
Kwam Green
Kwam Green
1 day ago
I’ve never seen him this excited. It’s amazing how much we don’t know.
1
These Eyes See Darkness Clearly
These Eyes See Darkness Clearly
9 hours ago
They should have let him talk longer. Really interesting stuff that never gets much coverage
1
Charles Ndung'u
Charles Ndung'u
21 hours ago
This man should be an educator. Share all that knowledge in such a simplified manner.
Swiiper
Swiiper
11 hours ago
My uncle works at NASA as a engineer and the same excitement Neil has is the same exact excitement my uncle experienced when looking at these images. Truly stunning how small we are in comparison to the universe
Blues Dragon
Blues Dragon
3 days ago
This was too quick and hurried. I wanted Neil to go more in-depth because this is so fascinating.
Thanks anyway NBC News!
22
Scott Honan
Scott Honan
1 day ago (edited)
I was privileged enough to be able to contribute to the assembly of this fantastic piece of astronomical brilliance. Something to tell my future grandchildren about! Very proud to be a small part of this!
sanjuansteve
sanjuansteve
1 day ago
The most intuitive way to explain how or why a particle like a photon (or electron, etc) might behave as an uncertain location particle while also like a polarizable axial or helical wave ''packet'', given that everything in the universe from electrons to solar systems are in orbit with something else pulling them into polarizable axial or helical apparent waves depending on the orientation of their orbits as they travel thru space is that they’re in orbit with an undetectable dark matter particle pulling them into polarizable axial or helical apparent waves as they travel.
And given that we know we’re in a sea of undetectable dark matter but don’t know where it’s disbursed, we can imagine that they’re in orbit with an undetectable dark matter particle pulling them into polarizable axial or helical apparent waves as they travel where the speed of their orbit determines the wavelength and the diameter is the amplitude which would explain the double slit, uncertainty, etc. No?
Delilah
Delilah
1 day ago
Absolutely phenomenal!!! We are scratching the surface of what is out there beyond us and it's beyond explanation.
Benny Hernandez
Benny Hernandez
2 days ago
Love Dr. Tyson! Always a joy to hear this man speak!
Donna Vaughn
Donna Vaughn
1 day ago
What a treasure Neil is because he's excited and is so smart and able to communicate so that most people who understand just a bit of physics and such can totally get what he explains.
J Lindo
J Lindo
4 days ago
Neil was like a kid in a candy store! Very cool
1.3K
Vlican
Vlican
2 days ago
something amazing as this deserves more attention than 5 minutes. it's quite sad the majority of folks don't really care nor appreciate the beauty of our universe.
Farky
Farky
7 hours ago
NBC: "So we have the most famous and beloved astrophysicist Neild deGrasse Tyson to explain us, what are those new break-changing pictures of James Webb all about !"
Neil: "Thank you very much, so the first one is my favourite because..."
NBC: "Thank you so much for your time, it was an honor, now lets see a 30 minutes long documentary about biggest potatoe from Idaho."
6
Jones Matthew
Jones Matthew
1 day ago
love Neil and his passion for this work, his hands work shaking with excitement!
Clay Loomis
Clay Loomis
2 days ago
"Neil, we have 5 minutes and I'm going to interrupt you multiple times. Explain the universe." SCIENCE!
Bobby Ensminger
Bobby Ensminger
22 hours ago
Neil should have an hour long TV special, and soon!!! It would be so interesting and informative.
JamMasterJB
JamMasterJB
4 days ago
Wow, this was over 20 years in the making being explained by one of the greatest physicists of our generation and NBC gives it 5 minutes. Unbelievable.
352
varun prasad
varun prasad
41 minutes ago
The moment when NDGT describes how tiny thr part of the universe the picture with all the uncountable galaxies is showing, you can almost see the anchor’s jaw dropping to the floor.
Jason B
Jason B
1 day ago
Neil is the best!! I wish he had more time to explain these!
Brock Pace
Brock Pace
1 day ago
Neil was 1000% percent bricked up while talking about this.
1
Nandan Bhowmick
Nandan Bhowmick
11 hours ago
He explains so well. Love this guy.
skavoet
skavoet
1 day ago
"There's no such thing as a stupid question"
Tom Llamas: "Hold my beer"
16
Robert Dora
Robert Dora
3 days ago (edited)
This segment deserved an hour, nothing less!!! I get the commercialisation of most things in the modern world, but ‘story selection’ and ‘how’ stories are covered inherently influence people in what they are aware of and what the collective audience seems to want to see most. As such it’s sad that over-sensationalised stories (including about things in sport, royalty plus celebrity ‘life’ / trends) are regularly needlessly indulged and take away from incredibly important and mind blowing factual segments like this….understanding reality and the universe!!
Come on NBC, as a major media player you help shape common perceptions about ‘what’ the public apparently wants to hear about (and this how things are covered, and what is not covered) and if you just give far more segments on topics like this (incl. longer segments whenever possible) and ‘hype up’ anything in fields like this half a as much as is hyped up in the media about various other topics you’ll be pleasantly surprised about how much people do/can love hearing / learning about this stuff❤️
311
Mephistopheles
Mephistopheles
1 day ago
You can really feel how passionate he whenever space is the subject.
Carlos Bracero
Carlos Bracero
2 days ago
The fact that he received less than 5 mins to explain this shows how little the media cares about this
Drew Kane
Drew Kane
1 day ago
Neil deGrasse Tyson is like a real-life character from Hangin' With Mr. Cooper. Could have played the science teacher.
karon mcgregor
karon mcgregor
1 day ago
Love this man! Could listen to him all day long.
Don Lyfe
Don Lyfe
1 day ago
He looks nervous asf talking about this… it’s like someone told him “ you better not mess up “
2
Wild Foodie Tours
Wild Foodie Tours
3 days ago
Definitely caught off guard by the rushed segment with the great Neil Tyson. He could go on about the universe and we'd never get bored.
23
Jeroen Rat
Jeroen Rat
16 hours ago
Incredibly, beautiful, mindblowing, hard to comprehend the vastness of it.
Very interesting, but it also makes me kind of sad.
It's nothing like the early sifi where aliens came from Mars.
We are looking at images of events that happend millions of years ago, and no sign of alien life in sight?
Unless...they keep that hidden for us 'simple minds'🤔
Heck, I'm going to watch Star Trek,
Live long and prosper 🖖🏾
M. P.
M. P.
23 hours ago (edited)
Huge, humanity-changing history being made. "Only 10 seconds left--" after a nail-biting sprint through the cosmos. Come on, NBC, give the segment room to breathe. Do it over for people who missed it. Let us live a little.
fisheye42
fisheye42
1 day ago
One person’s “this is it?” is another person’s “it’s just… stupefyingly detailed!”
John Waters
John Waters
21 hours ago
This guy is the Bill Nye of the sky. Media frontman and always informative about “the official narrative”.
iamcoolstephen1234
iamcoolstephen1234
1 day ago
Neil's enthusiasm for these images was gripping and I am so much more excited because of that.
Roderick Rose
Roderick Rose
3 days ago
You know I was never really interested in science that much. Neil Degrassi Tyson convinced me to be really interested in it. That passion,that love for knowledge... It's very infectious. Now I'm thinking about the Stars. My head is in the clouds because of him.
88
B G
B G
1 day ago
I love how we take real important stories and cram them into short segments. 😅
EJR
EJR
1 day ago
Absolutely breathtaking. Thank goodness for Neil!
Jeff
Jeff
21 hours ago
Love Neil ! And, yes, the first views of these nebula's were apparently thought to look like "planets"...hence the misnomer ! Love everything now starting to trickle from the Webb ! Knew all that about infrared, of course---but did not know it extended to the "fog" lights on our cars !😁😁🤗 Thanks for highlighting the Webb in this short video !!
nagaguard
nagaguard
2 days ago
As much as I agree with the comments that we could have used more than 5 minutes of NDT, I give huge credit to the reporter for guiding the conversation as well has he did. It's not his fault that the producers gave the segment only 5 minutes. He interrupted NDT as little as possible and asked good questions.
Sean McAuliffe
Sean McAuliffe
13 hours ago
This is so interesting and I love that the JWT is in action but I also take whatever "Never A Straight Answer" has to say with a pinch of salt. Tell us more, we really can deal with the whole story.
SirSamTheTank
SirSamTheTank
3 days ago
I love how much Neil adores everything science. Dude gets giddy whenever he talks about space and its just, so perfect.
261
Az 786
Az 786
1 day ago
Making it interesting and easy to understand as always. NDT thank you
Jaber Jb
Jaber Jb
2 days ago
This should have been an hour atleast. I can watch him go like this whole day 🔥🔥
Scott Leonard
Scott Leonard
1 day ago
I wish they’d also have versions of the images tuned to visible light to see what if anything would be visible to the naked eye.
SomethingDifferent
SomethingDifferent
1 day ago
Love how simple he explains it
Alex Chiasson
Alex Chiasson
11 hours ago
Neil looks like he lost a lot of weight which awesome cause this guy needs to stay alive as long as possible. He's amazing at what he does and I can't wait to hear what he has to say every time I see him.
Jd Will206
Jd Will206
3 days ago
I just love how excited he was to share and explain these photos. They really should've given him more time
82
Sarah Ferguson
Sarah Ferguson
2 days ago
You can literally feel the excitement from NDT. Like a kid on Christmas morning 🙂
G C
G C
17 hours ago
The way Neil describes this with child-like excitement is beautiful to see
Demarcus Faulkner
Demarcus Faulkner
1 day ago
Y'all should have gave him far more time Neil deGrasse Tyson is a brilliant man and this is an amazing subject.
Joao Antonio
Joao Antonio
1 day ago
I thought the interviewer did a great job. Most people watching TV don't know too much about astronomy, unlike ppl in the comment section here. His questions were quite good and he did let Neil speak. But yes, it was clearly rushed
Courtney
Courtney
19 hours ago
This is a prime example why Neil is so good for science. He has a brilliant mind, but can dummy it down so the majority of people can better understand and "see" the big picture.
Cheryl Sibson
Cheryl Sibson
4 days ago
Neil DeGrasse could talk for hours on these images the 7 mins doesn't cover and give him enough time for him to explain the imagines.
475
Obsidian Nebula
Obsidian Nebula
1 day ago
Love the guy. This should've had 10 minutes at least.
Visibly blew his mind with the grain if sand analogy
JOSCHKA HURST
JOSCHKA HURST
3 hours ago
This is totally amazing. The thinks that is happening outside of our heads.
soupbonep
soupbonep
2 hours ago
These images should be given time for the viewer to take in and to be explained to the viewer because they are amazing.
If the boneheads who produced this segment took the time to understand that they were looking at countless galaxies that are light years across yet are tiny blobs on the picture, and are billions of light years from earth, would they be in such a hurry to get to commercial break? And that is just the deep field image.
This host had no interest in what he was hearing and had no clue as to what he was seeing. He was just going through the motions. Walter Cronkite would have appreciated what the James Webb Telescope was giving us, and he would have asked the producers for a longer segment and asked smart questions to Neil and would have been prepared.
I encourage people to download and zoom in on some of the details on the deep field image. Seeing a tiny spec become a spiral galaxy is incredible.
I believe you
I believe you
6 hours ago
Just love the way Neil describes any mechanism,so easy to understand.
Gabriel
Gabriel
12 hours ago
“There could be planets”
Ya man like 100 billion in each one of those galaxies you’re looking at.
I wonder if he was prompted to say that because it was kind of out of left field.
j0nnicage
j0nnicage
4 days ago
Sure, jam pack the entire humanity’s understanding of the cosmos in 5 minutes. Be sure to include an impatient host making sure this genius of a man as his guest, spits out as many facts as possible while complying with the timeline set in place by the producer yelling in his ear. Great stuff.
380
Jamie Lord
Jamie Lord
2 days ago
"I thought there's no sound in space..." Perfect ending. 😂👍🏻
Lance McQuesten
Lance McQuesten
1 day ago
“And that’s enough science for our viewers, we know they can’t handle too much at once. Let’s turn back to something we’re all excited for; the hottest gadgets you never knew you needed, coming right up!”
Love My CITY
Love My CITY
1 day ago
NDT makes complex things seem simple, he has a gift for speaking and a beautiful mind!
Brigadier Badass S. Grewal
Brigadier Badass S. Grewal
14 hours ago
An absolute marvel of engineering. So impressed ! Bravo!!! 👏
Dan Harrison King
Dan Harrison King
21 hours ago
This is the most advanced example of beings of the universe, examining the latter. It shows us how vastly insignificant in size we are, when compared to the possibly endless nature of the cosmos.
5 minutes...
Russell Speight
Russell Speight
3 days ago
I love NDT. And I have to say that this is a man who is likely to make kids fall in love with science. He is an AMAZING teacher who has the greatest skill that a teacher can possibly have. He makes learning fun.
99
Matellena
Matellena
2 days ago
Fastest 5 minutes! I would love to hear him talk on this as long as he wants. Cancel the news and bring back Neil Degrasse Tyson! Please someone. He deserves a special Netflix show or something.
laeeque nadvi
laeeque nadvi
1 day ago
It is mind blowing ancient images ever captured in histody of space. Cluster of hundred of galaxies of early universe.
We are in age of new astronomy. It opened new window to our universe. It is just beginnin.
Thanks JWST and thanks for NASA, ESA and CSA.
Raheel Virk
Raheel Virk
6 hours ago (edited)
Why 5 minutes I wish it 60 minutes he’s so smart I wanna meet him so badly.
Also Einstein theory was right!!
yellowdeer 7
yellowdeer 7
1 day ago
Finally, someone that can explain what we are seeing. That doesn't mean that I understand it though.
U A
U A
3 hours ago (edited)
I give Neil respect for trying to teach to the most infamous audience in the history of the world
Jamie Lemay
Jamie Lemay
3 days ago
I get it’s time sensitive to shoot this in running with the rest of the news but don’t rush HIM! He’s so excited and it’s such good info your obviously not comfortable tackling in that time frame. Get someone who will keep it basic and board and quick like you like it, not someone passionate and informative cut off.
14
Kris Carter
Kris Carter
2 days ago
"Neil, what are we looking at here?" "Well Todd that's a great question! So this is the.. " (cuts to commercial - end of bit). And the short attention span of 90% of their viewers have already started forgetting about what they just saw. "Why were they all excited about stars ma?"
TheLegendaryTim
TheLegendaryTim
2 hours ago
Holy moly, Neil looking sharp in that star vest and freshly shined shoes. Neil brings swagger to modern day scientists and you can't deny the work he's done making intelligence and curiosity cool again!
hello jaja
hello jaja
1 day ago (edited)
Huge discoveries in science, Here's 5 min.
This needs an hour at least.
Edwin Hudson Hernandez
Edwin Hudson Hernandez
1 hour ago
What some more explination from Neil deGrasse, he is so passionate about astrophysic and know to deliver the info
Serena Round
Serena Round
14 hours ago (edited)
So they could be showing a picture of a Unicorn in space and claim is real. He just admitted these pics were modified for human eye since the telescope is designed for infrared images and we can’t see infrared but since they adapted the images for human eyes we should believe is real… 👏 👏👏👏
1
Κωστής
Κωστής
2 days ago (edited)
The newscaster interupting Tyson who is trying to hint at the obvious (and beautiful) gravitational lense effect depicted, to say "there could be planets..." is priceless.
240
matthew heffernan
matthew heffernan
1 day ago
This is my favourite Neil video, i love seeing him interrupted in the same way he usually interrupts everyone else.
SM Verde’
SM Verde’
1 day ago
I love Neil D. The Best Astrophysicist in all time. His enthusiasm is overwhelming.
Jean Kimbona
Jean Kimbona
1 day ago
The new images bring us back in time to the beginning of the universe still images shown here are galaxies fully formed and still images of how some stars die not how they are born and how the galaxies are in their of development
bignardo95
bignardo95
1 day ago
Mr. Tyson makes life worth living. What would we do without him?
Hassaan Qureshi
Hassaan Qureshi
4 hours ago
the fact that nasa released the images on birthday was like the best gift I could ask for 💗
FreakyT333
FreakyT333
2 days ago
I feel like none of these organizations that interview Neil ever give him enough time. He has so much to share, quit rushing him and just enjoy all that fascinating, astounding and rare knowledge being shared.
95
Charles
Charles
2 days ago
"I thought there was no sound in space?"
Got'em!
xuimod
xuimod
13 hours ago
Not a super big fan of Tyson (he's a bit too loud for my taste) but he explained the combining of the 3 bands of infrared into RGB brilliantly.
TheHuman
TheHuman
1 day ago
I love Neil... He had to grow on me but I must admit he is brilliant
TheDaydreammaster
TheDaydreammaster
2 hours ago
Friggin luv Neil.
There's no other physicist who expresses more passion.
Ricardo Zapata
Ricardo Zapata
1 day ago
Neil excited to explain why those galaxies were warped.
Jeniffer-H0T Girl-C0me 0ver L!ve
2 days ago
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