SUPERB COSMIC VIDEO FROM AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY

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Peter Haan

Trad climber
San Francisco, CA
Topic Author's Original Post - Dec 25, 2009 - 12:06pm PT
This is a don't-miss scientifically correct video depicting Earth’s location in the cosmos from the American Museum of Natural History. Watch in in HD, full-screen. This video--- a four dimensional map---is part of an exhibition “Visions of the Cosmos” now at the Rubin Museum of Art (in Manhattan).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17jymDn0W6U&feature=player_embedded
DonC

climber
CA
Dec 25, 2009 - 12:13pm PT
wow! Thanks Peter. Sure makes you think about what it all means...
happiegrrrl

Trad climber
New York, NY
Dec 25, 2009 - 12:46pm PT
That was way, way, cool.

So vast I couldn't even begin to imagine comprehension, but I did get the most fleeting of glimmers at the point where it showed the Milky Way and started to go beyond. Perhaps because the Milky Way would be the last part I have any familiarity with, but....wow.

The Rubin museum is three blocks away from me.... closed for today's holiday, but perhaps I will check out the exhibit this weekend.

cintune

climber
the Moon and Antarctica
Dec 25, 2009 - 01:09pm PT
Dab.

Here's one at the other end of the scale, macro to micro, infinity cuts both ways:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEw8xpb1aRA
Captain...or Skully

Social climber
Top of the 5.2-5.12 Boulder
Dec 25, 2009 - 02:58pm PT
Pretty cool shizz, there.
Klimmer

Mountain climber
San Diego
Dec 25, 2009 - 05:26pm PT
Thanks for posting this link.

It is like the modern update version of the classic film "Powers of Ten."

I will be making a copy of this and burning it to dvd to show my Earth Science class. Very well done. Thanks.
TripL7

Trad climber
san diego
Dec 25, 2009 - 10:24pm PT
Thanks much, Peter!

Truly fascinating! Something that has perplexed, and bewildered me since I was a youth. I always marvel at the fact that more than a million earths could fit inside the Sun. And that our Sun is considered a 'dwarf star'. And compared to 'giant stars' such as Betelgeuse and Antares, which are about 600 times larger than our Sun. And the largest known star Mu Cephei, is over 1,000 times the size of the Sun, and is over one billion times larger than the earth!

And then there's the relation of all of this to the speed of light, which this video defines so well. I'll be wrapping my head around this for some time to come.

Thanks Again! Sincerely, Trip~

EDIT: Correction, VY Canis Majoris-is the largest known star(hyper-star) at an estimated 2,000 times larger than our Sun! Which would make it two billion times larger than the earth. And the largest star in our galaxy(The Milky Way)is Eta Carinae at 400 times larger then our Sun!

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Dec 25, 2009 - 10:57pm PT
over the next ten years it will be remade and even more amazing... with the dark matter and dark energy mapped onto what we know...


Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
Dec 26, 2009 - 02:31pm PT
MAN IN PINK:
Whenever life gets you down, Mrs. Brown,
And things seem hard or tough,
[clunk]
And people are stupid, obnoxious, or daft,
And you feel that you've had quite enough,
[boom]

[singing]
Just remember that you're standing on a planet that's evolving
And revolving at nine hundred miles an hour,
That's orbiting at nineteen miles a second, so it's reckoned,
A sun that is the source of all our power.
The sun and you and me and all the stars that we can see
Are moving at a million miles a day
In an outer spiral arm, at forty thousand miles an hour,
Of the galaxy we call the 'Milky Way'.

Our galaxy itself contains a hundred billion stars.
It's a hundred thousand light years side to side.
It bulges in the middle, sixteen thousand light years thick,
But out by us, it's just three thousand light years wide.
We're thirty thousand light years from galactic central point.
We go 'round every two hundred million years,
And our galaxy is only one of millions of billions
In this amazing and expanding universe.
[boom]
[slurp]

The universe itself keeps on expanding and expanding
In all of the directions it can whizz
As fast as it can go, at the speed of light, you know,
Twelve million miles a minute, and that's the fastest speed there is.
So remember, when you're feeling very small and insecure,
How amazingly unlikely is your birth,
And pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space,
'Cause there's bugger all down here on Earth.
[clunk]

MRS. BROWN: [sigh] Makes you feel so, sort of, insignificant, doesn't it?

MAN: Yeah. Yeah. [sniff] Can we have your liver, then?

MRS. BROWN: Yeah. All right. You talked me into it.

Nice find, Peter! Had to inject a little dark/light matter me self!
Doug Robinson

Trad climber
Santa Cruz
Dec 27, 2009 - 12:02pm PT
One of my first sensations of the ineffable as a kid was laying on the ground in my sleeping bag watching the stars. Surrounded by vastness, suddenly I was falling backward. Vertigo on solid ground, starting to feel the depth of the Universe, getting a sense of it expanding, running away from us.

"In this sense, in respect to its own information, the Universe must expand to escape the telescopes through which we who are it are trying to capture it. --> --> --> which is us."

from Laws of Form by G. Spencer Brown


And then there's the relation of all of this to the speed of light

Yeah, I like the acceleration in the video, from merely jet speed at the beginning to way, way beyond the speed of light as you fly past the "cosmic horizon" at the end, out past the edge of the known universe.

'Nothing can go faster than the speed of light,' we've always heard. But we just did.
PhilG

Trad climber
The Circuit, Tonasket WA
Dec 27, 2009 - 02:00pm PT
Peter:
You find the coolest stuff.
Thanks for the post.
For me, "the holidays" are for cosmic reflections.
Jan

Mountain climber
Okinawa, Japan
Dec 28, 2009 - 12:48am PT

Thanks Peter! I've cross linked this with the Evolution vs Creation thread. The video provides enough thought and beauty to justify both positions.

As I noted there, I'm so glad they zoomed out and back in to earth from the view point of the Himalayas - the center of my cosmology anyway!
Brendan

Trad climber
Yosemite, CA
Dec 28, 2009 - 10:28am PT
awesome!

a lil arrogant to think that we are the only living things out there in allllll that spacetime eh?
survival

Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
Dec 28, 2009 - 10:49am PT
I hate it when my, widdu bwain hurts....
MH2

climber
Dec 28, 2009 - 06:24pm PT
Gorgeous.

On the zoom back in I was expecting a man sitting at a table with a mosquito biting his forearm:

Cosmic View: The Universe in 40 Jumps
Kees Boeke
1957

a book for kids I had as a kid


Question to a U of Chicago climber and physics undergrad:

"How big is the universe?"

Answer:

"About 10 to the 80th."

Follow-up question:

"But what units?"

Answer:

"It doesn't really matter."


Courtesy of Gabriel Lombardi who was told by a physics prof, in the 70s, to go into cosmology, "because a lot of stuff is happening there."
TKingsbury

Trad climber
MT
Dec 28, 2009 - 06:37pm PT
wow, thanks for the share!
L

climber
A place with poppies & flying monkeys...
Dec 28, 2009 - 07:18pm PT
That was Waaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyy cool, PH! Milky Way cool.


What a gorgeous jewel of a planet we live on, eh?





Thanks for posting this.
Fritz

Trad climber
Hagerman, ID
Dec 28, 2009 - 07:50pm PT
Peter: Thanks.

"Earth First!"

"We'll climb on all those other planets later!"
happiegrrrl

Trad climber
New York, NY
Dec 30, 2009 - 08:44am PT
WoW! The cosmos is so BIG!


But now, for something different....

















































This is a photograph of a baby in the womb.* Doesn't it look like stars in the background?

*From this article: "Fauxtoshop: 15 More Real Photos that Look Faked" at http://weburbanist.com/2009/06/28/fauxtoshop-15-more-real-photos-that-look-faked/
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 1, 2010 - 12:33pm PT
reviewed in the NYTimes today
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/01/arts/design/01cosmos.html?ref=arts

go here too: http://www.rmanyc.org/
and here is the direct link to the exhibit "Visions of the Cosmos"
http://www.rmanyc.org/nav/exhibitions/view/373

the eastern art is always amazing... here is a page that Werner can help annotate
http://www.charlesmorrison.net/MatrixUnderstood/index.htm

and the image of the relief: "Vishnu Sleeping on the Cosmic Ocean"
http://www.carlos.emory.edu/vishnu-sleeping-on-the-cosmic-ocean

"...reclining in creative repose..." I love that... I wish I did it more often...

the podcast is fun too...

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