NEW Kepler Telescope Finds 7 Alien Worlds Better Than Earth!

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This is my Reaction to Kepler Telescope Found New Planets Better Than Earth

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I love stuff like this. It's crazy to think of what kinds of stuff is out there that we don't know of, let alone do. It's insane the amount of sifting they've had to do to even come up with a tiny list of relatively considerable and especially genuinely considerable exoplanets. Even still, a lot of those planets are so far out that we don't actually know specific and on-the-ground info as to their viability for human life. It's amazing to see that we're able to consider space exploration now, but it really is just a consideration on the smallest scale. Because of the travel and dependency risks involved, even making a base on a planet as close as mars is some solid years of tests and planning away.
But still, as humans, we're built for goals and aspirations higher than the stars, so it's good to think of all this stuff. This is why education is so important. We have 24 hr live feeds of the astronauts working on the outside of the space station, with the earth and sun in the background. Letting the younger generations get a scope of how much is out there and giving them the tools they need to carry on the work left to them is necessary for humans to progress in any big-picture way. I've heard that saying before about walking and growing off the shoulders of giants. I recently aged out of a social change youth choir where we bring the messages of diverse groups and backgrounds together to make music about what life should be and what needs to change, and we've met with a number of very impactful people in various social justice groups and one thing they all convey to us is that there are vast lifetimes of hard work and hope that have gone into getting us where we are. One of the best feelings of my life I've had to date was being in that choir and it finally clicking in my head "wait.... I'm not alone. I'm the furthest from alone. There are millions upon millions of people who worked to give me specifically (along with many others) a better life. They were passed the torch of progressing history and humanity, and now they've passed it to me, that I have generations and generations of unimaginable resilience built into me, and that unless every human is gone, it is impossible for us to fail. That's a slightly different context, but the same quote and same idea.

joshuaramirez
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The earth being tilted is what gives us seasons. During summer we are tilted towards the sun, and winter we are tilted away.

squirrelly
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I'd love to see you do more videos about the universe. I love this stuff.

crazizzle
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With current technology, it will take use tens of thousands of years to get to the closest star Proxima Centauri. Most likely we will see missions to moons of Jupiter and Saturn. Titan is a moon of Saturn that has a methane atmosphere, and other moons show signs of liquid water under icy crusts.

sarahkinsey
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I think we need a LOT more research and WAAAAY more advanced technology in order to visit any of these exoplanets.

Kepler-22b is 600 light years away. A light year is ≈ 6trillion miles. In space average spacecraft does ≈ 420 miles per hour. Mathing it out at that speed you would travel approx 3, 679, 200 miles in a year. Meaning it would take approx 1630 years to reach it.
(Thanks to my engineer hubby for helping me math it out 😂)

renaetieman
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Yes, the Mass Effect series makes me believe, they already know something. Like they are putting it in form of fiction in order for us to pass it off as meh. Lol.

MidoriDad
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hi please doing reaction to GALAXY - Revival

robertflores