Spaced Out: Crash Course Kids #25.1
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So... how big is the Universe? It's big... really big... no, bigger than that... it's big. In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina gives us some perspective on this whole Universe thing and how we fit into it. Watch More Crash Course Kids: https://www.youtube.com/user/crashcoursekids ///Standards Used in This Video/// 5-ESS2-1. Develop a model using an example to describe ways the geosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere, and/or atmosphere interact. [Clarification Statement: Examples could include the influence of the ocean on ecosystems, landform shape, and climate; the influence of the atmosphere on landforms and ecosystems through weather and climate; and the influence of mountain ranges on winds and clouds in the atmosphere. The geosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, and biosphere are each a system.] [Assessment Boundary: Assessment is limited to the interactions of two systems at a time.] Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet? Crash Course Main Channel: https://www.youtube.com/crashcourse Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/thecrashcourse Tumblr - http://thecrashcourse.tumblr.com Credits... Producer & Editor: Nicholas Jenkins Cinematographer & Director: Michael Aranda Host: Sabrina Cruz Script Supervisor: Mickie Halpern Writer: Alyson Shaw Executive Producers: John & Hank Green Consultant: Shelby Alinsky Script Editor: Blake de Pastino Thought Cafe Team: Stephanie Bailis Cody Brown Suzanna Brusikiewicz Jonathan Corbiere Nick Counter Kelsey Heinrichs Jack Kenedy Corey MacDonald Tyler Sammy Nikkie Stinchcombe James Tuer Adam Winnik
Comments
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if the observable universe is 93 billion light years in diameter and only 16 billion years old, how is it 93 billion in diameter? shouldn't it be 16 billion at the most since nothing can travel faster than light?
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It's a great video but... I think you should leave some time to assimilate the information, maybe with images or music or whatever... watching this type of videos it seems that the person is kind of hyperactive. If kids watch this we are creating a new generation of hyperactives.... slow down a bit! give your brain a chance to process each part of this. I felt dizzy in the end.
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In my school we use you're information for exams and quizzes THANK YOU :) XD
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that's how great our god is. did you know that for god the whole universe is a microscopic bacteria. and did you know that God just spoke and the whole universe was created. i know all that and i'm only 10 years old. :)
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:) thank you a lot. These videos are so useful to me
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Is the ngss correct? I thought it might be 5-ESS1-1.
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Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space.
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Hahaha this is so nice, the address messed me up a little though ahah!
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wow
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alpha centauri
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Do kids even watch crash course kids or is it all just nerdfighters
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In the immortal words of Hank Green, "The Universe is weird". So big we can't really imagine it, and so interesting that we can't resist trying to figure it all out.
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I wonder if she was actually holding a grain of salt there. The skeptic in me says no... 3:03
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As a child, I would contemplate infinity and the endless expanse of the universe and just get lost in my thoughts for hours. I still haven't been able to wrap my head around it fully to this day.
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The universe is unimaginably large, yet beautifully intricate.
We exist for a blink of an eye, huddled on a grain of sand.
A minuscule ember bathes us in its life-giving glow, burning ever hotter until it depletes itself.
All of this is carried in a swirling swarm of cinders, blown around the expired remains of a briefly lit flame.
Scattered in the distance, more glowing twisters dance away, towards and around each other.
One by one the lights come on, ignited in their whirling path.
The drifting dance will cast these sparkling spirals further apart, until not one can see another.
By then the universe will be so large, but how little of it we would observe.
As one by one the lights go out, who will be left to wonder?
Will tales of a sky alive with distant specks of light, be nothing but a fairy-tale to comfort the last of us?
And so those future lonely souls stare into the cold, dark void;
Their destiny to fly alone, through the vast and empty universe. -
(^_^)
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