@InsaneCuriosity

Hey Insane Curiosity Squad! If you liked the video, we would love for you to share it with your friends or on other social networks like Facebook, Reddit Instagram, Tik Tok and Twitter, etc.. ( Since the algorithm is not cooperating in showing us to the public). In just 30 seconds, you will greatly help our Channel to grow and improve our future content. A big thank you from all of us.

@imakedookie

man, when a video asks more questions than it needs to, it feels like educational edging. im not gonna goon today, thanks!

@buddy_love

"Nobody knew the Americas existed yet" ?... yeah I'm gonna have to stop you right there.

@wabejoo

As we go gaga about Kepler-22b, let us remember that Venus, our moon, Mars, Phobos and Deimos are also in the so-called habitable zone.

@NeoFuturePredict

Kepler-22b is truly a mind-blowing mystery! 🌍✨ The fact that it's in the habitable zone and could have a temperate climate makes it one of the most intriguing exoplanets ever discovered. Could it be an ocean world, a super-Venus, or something entirely different? 🤯 The possibilities are endless! This just proves how little we still know about the universe and how many secrets are waiting to be uncovered. 🚀🔭 Amazing breakdown! Keep up the great work! 👏

@tyronegreen6536

Can’t wait til we catch up to spaceballs & create Ludacris speed so we can travel space without effecting time cuz I wanna see Kepler 22-b 1st hand..it’s famous now!!!

@samuellee8018

What would the surface gravity of 22B be? How would it affect water on the surface and the size of animal life?

@TheHiddenSecretsoftheUnive-n2d

With such a mysterious world, it is certain that no one would want to work “remotely” there.

@miketaylor7023

Flora and Fauna could alter the conditions of habitability in ways we don't understand possibly.                We don't have enough data to narrow any speculation closer to any fathomable possibilities .         We just don't know.   We cannot know in our era based on all that we haven't discovered that might raise the accuracies of our estimations by percentage points or fractions of percentage points there of.

@miketaylor7023

Because random factors can alter planetary conditions widely we wouldn't know if a Kepler 22b type of planet would be anything like Earth.   But probably it wouldn't.     Maybe it's like Venus .   or Mars.      Or mercury.       Certainly the star's type,size,age,and distance from the world would alter the calculus.     If we could actually do the calculus that exists.       Does the planet form in it's location ?  Or migrate there?       Is the star sucking material from the planet or blowing any atmosphere off?               If the planet  migrated to it's location ,when and how did it potentially being affected by other planets and the timing of migration paths potentially affecting atmospheric evolution and random initial life evolving in a timely manner affecting how life may evolve?

@jamessearson

Thank you from 🇬🇧

@miketaylor7023

We will have to catalogue the important questions as they occur to us in the future.          Like if we did find life what stage of evolution is it in?

@greenfive

What was the temperature of Earth when live emerged. That question is important. You need stability, protection so it can cook in that Pond, then tides, decent temperature to get it cooking. Kepler 22b could be an absolute hell hole or a cradle of Life or in between.

@infuriatedgerm

Love the channel. If you don’t mind a little critique, this video, whilst interesting was extremely repetitive.

@ExoLog

I think we're about to reach the nearest planet.

@fgtrhwu2

What about it's gravity?

@joshDilley1

I want teegarden B, please it is very interesting and possibly the most earth like world ever found? #teegardenb #yolo

@PotPot-r3m

In your dreams, before we go anywhere else, help our own planet period

@RichardHudziak-nn2wl

We seem to be the exception to what is going on all around us.

@andrewjack31

Considering the entire Earth could fit into Jupiter's red spot, I would say Kepler-22b is quite a bit smaller than a gas giant.