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The Problem With Interstellar's Black Hole that Everyone Ignores
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988,130 Views • Jan 4, 2024 • Click to toggle off description
A scientific take on the movie Interstellar. Go to betterhelp.com/astrum for 10% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp and get matched with a therapist who will listen and help (advert)

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Credit: Ansh Bhatnagar (Writer)

#astrum #astronomy #astrophysics #quantum #quantumphysics #gargantua #interstellar
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Views : 988,130
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Jan 4, 2024 ^^


Rating : 4.92 (516/25,208 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-10T05:19:19.494611Z
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YouTube Comments - 1,598 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@dobieshep

4 months ago

I can’t get over how amazing Interstellar was as an experience. Still to this day, no other movie had as much of an impact on me than it did.

3.1K |

@skycloud4802

4 months ago

I think what i enjoyed most about movies like Interstellar and Gravity is that they make space very dangerous and creepy. No dramatic killer aliens involved.

2.4K |

@milesedgeworth132

4 months ago

I was very sleepy when this was recommended to me and I thought it said "The Truth about Orangutans" and my half-conscious mind believed there was some conspiracy regarding the existence of Orangutans.

851 |

@jdmiller82

4 months ago

I can't believe this movie is already 10 years old! It's one of my favorites!

664 |

@spencerholmes7602

1 month ago

It always bothered me that time dilation only began once they reached the planet and not the whole time growing as they approached the planet and it’s proximity to Gargantua.

254 |

@chetton93

4 months ago

The time paradox mentioned at the end miss states the film’s plot. He doesn’t communicate the equations to his past self to let his craft leave earth. His craft leaves conventionally and is already built when he arrives at the NASA base . He communicate with his daughter giving her the equation so she can develop the ships that will lift all of humanity off earth to seek out the new planet, which she does as an adult while he is away off planet.

78 |

@Russking23

4 months ago

Interstellar was one of the catalysts, that piqued (not peaked) my curiosity about space and time. Yes there are plenty of inaccuracies, but it's still a very powerful and beautiful movie

802 |

@androkles04

4 months ago

I adore this movie, it's probably in my top 5 of all time. Black holes have fascinated me ever since middle-school, so this movie's beautiful and terrifying portrayal of it was amazing.

56 |

@miyannaable

3 months ago

Your narration is simply and absolutely delightful. I am almost always thinking about black holes, even in the back of my mind when I'm doing something else. Sometimes magnetars. Black holes have transformed the way I see everything, and I often imagine that we are all inside one more massive than I could ever truly understand. For me, the best part of Interstellar was the moment he decides to brave the black hole.

17 |

@MajorTomFisher

4 months ago

I always thought the scene where he falls into the black hole was supposed to be the beings from the future teleporting him to the 5D dimension (IIRC the robot even says that the beings were the ones to show him the 5D world), maybe because the beings were supernatural in nature or maybe because the beings were future humans or sympathetic aliens who were able to save him using advanced future technology only available thousands of years in the future. Because of the time dilation, those thousands of years would've passed already.

176 |

@aaronwestley3239

4 months ago

This video 10 years late because of time dilation

353 |

@DoctorX149

4 months ago

I always understood spaghettification as being a less significant issue with supermassive black holes, as the gravity increase as you get closer is more gradual over a greater distance than smaller ones. Is that true? That still doesn’t solve the deadliness of the hot plasma or the photosphere

281 |

@tscoffey1

4 months ago

The first problem I thought of with the time dilation caused by the brief visit to Miller's Planet is this: If the gravitational change between the orbit of the main spacecraft, and the orbit of Miller's Planet is that extreme (20 years to 1 hour), how did the relatively small ship that visited the planet possibly have enough delta V capability to climb back up that gravity well?

213 |

@MikeMcCartney

4 months ago

Kip Thorne's written some brilliant books on the subject - one of the best is "Black Holes & Time Warps: Einstein's Outrageous Legacy" and another he wrote was on the science of this film which is also excellent. It's clear that one won't necessarily get spaghettified falling in towards the event horizon of a supermassive blackhole where the gravitational gradient is low enough, like those found at the centre of galaxies.

91 |

@larrywalsh9939

4 months ago

Colonizing a planet in orbit of a black hole is unlikely to be a good idea simply because of the radiation present nearby, as their accumulation discs are incredibly violent - but other than that, if you live on such a planet, you're in a different timeframe than the rest of humanity, and while not entirely causally disconnected, it would inevitably turn into cultural disconnection.

353 |

@GearForTheYear

4 months ago

I had a falling out with an old friend years ago. He loves watching Astrum and his favorite movie is Interstellar. While what happened between us is irreparable, I will always appreciate the positive impact he made on my life when I needed it most. I hope you’re doing well, buddy. Enjoy the video 👍

82 |

@vibhav_m

4 months ago

6:14 should note here that Kip Thorne said that the scene of them going through the wormhole was extremely unrealistic. There's an hour long presentation of Kip explaining the science behind the movie on the channel 'Science & Cocktails' where he shows what the transit would actually look like.

130 |

@BroadsideBob

4 months ago

Two things regarding Miller's planet: (1) When Cooper et al initially left Earth, they needed what appeared to be a Saturn V rocket to rendezvous with the Endurance. However, when they left Miller's planet with gravity stronger than Earth (10% stronger?), they did so in a craft approximately the size of a small plane. (2) If Miller's planet was so deep in Gargantua's gravity well that it created some pretty extreme time dilation,. their craft would also not be powerful enough to escape the gravity well. I think there's a misconception about an event horizon: true, nothing, not even light can escape once past the event horizon; however you cannot just (figuratively) walk right up to the event horizon and walk away. Even well short of the event horizon, very very few things will escape.

7 |

@chrimony

4 months ago

Kip Thorne gave a talk on the physics of Interstellar and his role in it, and he was asked to come up with a simulation of the wormhole transition scene. He did, but it was rather unspectacular, so Nolan took some artistic license.

28 |

@markmuller7962

4 months ago

Can't wait for part 2!

1 |

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