Nuclear Engineer Reacts to Kurzgesagt 'The Last Thing to Ever Happen in the Universe'

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T. Folse Nuclear in my honest opinion is one of the best reaction channels due to him adding to the content he reacts to instead of just watching it and just repeating what the content is showing like most reaction channels do, but his adding of his experience in the nuclear field he actually adds to the content he reacts to.

YuriYamamoto-cgeh
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Every red dwarf that ever formed and wasn't pulled into another star is still around.
Even the first red dwarf that ever came into existence still should have 99% of its life ahead of it. They are stupidly long lived.

Yora
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Iron stars are a really cool concept.
However, it has not yet been proven whether protons might decay. Because if they do, it's a process so incredibly slow that it's pretty much impossible to observe.
But if protons do decay, then all atoms will have decayed away long before black dwarfs can turn into iron stars.
Which makes iron stars even more mind boggling.

Yora
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Something to emphasize here is that when black dwarfs explode, literally nothing will ever see it. After these unthinkable time intervals, space will have expanded so much that each black dwarf will be completely alone in its own observable universe and the light from its supernovae, even at the speed of light, will never reach anywhere.

nightgazr
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For a sense of scale, a year is really long

jackys_handle
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It's almost poetic knowing the universe will go out with a bang.

TylerMusgrave
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The bit about infinite monkeys with infinite typewriters and infinite time holds very true here. Given enough time; anything not downright impossible will happen.

Sir_Uncle_Ned
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I'm surprised this guy doesn't have millions of subscribers! You do reaction content perfectly!

pncka
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There is a short story, where a computer that is first constructed as humanity is heading twords the stars is repeatedly asked the same question in differant forms. "How do you reverse entropy?" And eventually as the universe nears the end it awnsers that question. "Let there be light." The whole story is about 5 paragraphs but it is one of those things that stick with you.

CosmicAggressor
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Finally a guy who understand the video and not just keep moving there head. I really like ur vids cuz u give ur own experience and knowledge into the topic which other guys don't! Really appreciated!

priyank
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The history of the universe can be summarised in:
"Cosmic fart makes stuff; blows up, repeat"

MrDoot-hjir
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7:35
Makes perfect sense to me. If it's exponential then if small black holes take any measurable time at all to evaporate (which they do, a black hole 1cm wide would be *very* stable) and the rate increases exponentially as they shrink then yeah, a large black hole is on a very early point in that exponential - it's going to be radiating extremely slowly.

alansmithee
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When I watched this Kurzgesagt vid, I kept thinking about the Restaurant at the End of the Universe--except instead of watching the universe "explode" like in the book--you'd watch the gradual fireworks show of the last black holes and dwarf stars.

The_Horse-leafs_Cabbage
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I’m so happy to see your sub count ticking up. You deserve it. Awesome channel bro. Keep rockin!

dubz
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“The difference between a second and trillions of years, has lost all meaning”

alternator
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just a man with a cool job reacting to sciency videos, i like him! new sub :)

yorick
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Isaac Asimov wrote a short story called The Last Question. It doesn't provide a solution, but it's an interesting take on Man (capital M for a reason clear in the tale) facing the end of the universe.

rog
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Huge amount of material, massive density packed so tightly together, over such a long time scale, and even with ANY probability it WILL happen.

mistressabysstress
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I enjoy when u keep the videos shorter form like this. I get NileRed’s videos are long but it’s hard to stay engaged with a reaction that adds 15min to an already long video

ENikolaev
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So question : do bose-einstein condensates not form with left over molecules as the universe cools closer to absolute zero? The research I've seen of these show molecules spreading out and overlapping (and maybe I'm just misunderstanding the concept, hence my question) wouldn't said left over material kinda act like sticky rice kinda holding the remains together or acting as the base for some new chain of retraction or the quiet field in which quantum fluctuation can randomly occur? Any light you could shed would be most appreciated, thanks for your videos

technicolortony