I love the fact that whenever scientists and cosmologists make new discoveries, they discover more questions about our universe, pushing them to continue to study, and make more discoveries.
How did you know that I was watching your videos to go to sleep?? Genius.
Your sleep space with music while flying through space is perfectly delightful, it just makes you want to sit back and dream for a while. If it had been longer it would have been much better too but we're always asking for more aren't we, but thank you for this lovely dreamy diversion Astrum I really appreciate your time and imagination on creating this. 😍
So... we're not just being pulled through the cosmos—we're also being pushed by literal nothingness? 😲 The Dipole Repeller sounds like the universe’s way of saying 'don’t look back.' I love how something so empty can have such a massive impact. Gravity pulling, voids pushing, and our galaxy just vibing in between. Space is wild. 🔭💫 Amazing storytelling—made me feel like I'm floating through the filaments myself!
"This is still an EXPANDING field of research." Is deadpan pun if ever heard one. 🤣
If you think about it, voids are the closest thing to "up" in space. Everything is pulling you away from them because there's nothing in there to attract you. You're always falling out of them.
Every discovery like this giant bubble , just reminds us how much more there is to learn. The universe is full of surprises.
I love how every discovery in science doesn't just give us answers — it opens up even more questions. It's like the universe is inviting us to keep exploring, one mystery at a time.
I love this channel
Thank you for your videos, clearly alot of effort goes into making these and the narration is perfect. Thank you
I love these videos. Thank you
Just music and Stanfield. Genius.
The Universe is in motion; expanding and rotating
That music woke me up. Trumpets, really?
Bedtime and off to the Astrum universe dreamland. 🌌🖖🏻
I believe that in the same way our observations into the quantum realm can be very strange, our observations of matter on a galactic scale, can be difficult to understand. Hopefully some day we will be able to understand our observations with dark matter and dark energy, on a universe sized scale. It may also be impossible, almost like an ant being able to observe and understand how plant Earth orbits the sun. Never stop being curious, and letting your imagination run free.
13:01 beautiful music
I just pictured throwing lots of fishing floats into water close by each other and the affect the waves would have on each other. Wouldn’t the galaxies also be affected in a similar way from each others spacetime waves? And what affect would photon pressure on a galactic scale have on larger bodies?
Logic suggests that if we're moving in one direction, don't look for gravity in that direction, as the motion is usually transverse to the source of gravity...
@astrumextra