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Can't that be just lot's of space debris orbiting that star? Maybe ice or other crystals?
ОтветитьGreen star… thats where the wizard lives..
ОтветитьIs it possible for a purple star to exist?
ОтветитьI think you're wrong there. Boron burns green and its only the 5th element on the periodic table. There should be stars that produce enough boron to change their color. So there should be "green giants" in the same way there are "red giants". And if we can allow that stars burn through their fuel until they get to iron they should be able to do it until they get to copper, which also burns green.
ОтветитьI had no idea I was sad about this until now
ОтветитьRed blue and yellow.
ОтветитьJust discovered your channel a day ago. Loving the content and especially the ideas and thoughts surrounding these subjects. Thank you for your efforts.
ОтветитьWhat if you had a whole bunch of planets made from copper which were continuously crashing into the star? Couldn't you color a star green by adding elements which contain a lot of green in their emission spectrum?
ОтветитьI want a purple star
ОтветитьIf you could travel the cosmos for eternity and eventually did encounter a green star, unpack your Elder sign and brush up on your Necronomicon studies - you've pierced beyond to a place where the laws of science as we understand them no longer apply.
ОтветитьLaunching a food coloring filled rocket into the sun WILL break the universe.
ОтветитьIsn't red, yellow, and blue the primary colors?
ОтветитьTechnicaly speaking there are no colors all is white even the stars themselfes..
ОтветитьWow. We’re probably wrong about a lot of things
ОтветитьThe sun is green.
ОтветитьYou made a general assumption that the aliens perceive color as we do. Their color receptors could be in the infrared, which would make any changes noticeable only with our instruments.
ОтветитьSuper-hot stars that glow bluish/UV - if they are distant and moving very quickly away from us, there will be a red-shift, potentially into green. Unfortunately, red stars moving very fast towards us are unlikely to blue-shift enough to appear green, as they would likely have passed us already.
ОтветитьBlue red yellow
ОтветитьSooo... green colored aliens 👽 aren't a thing? 😮
ОтветитьHeres a thought to put out there and if im forgetting something please people in the comments correct me if I'm wrong. The sphear of a star is made out of plasma change the plasma elements and we narrow the spectrum of to light down. If the star is burning a different set of elements and its left over elements aka its outer sphere is made with a different plasma then that plasma changes color by the fact of what this plasma is. This narrows the wave spectrum down significantly. Which makes a star that burns the toght temperature and has the right plasma construction possible for a green star. If it was 100% dictated by heat you would be right but as we already know on earth that the matter of plasma plays a role in its color. Sense we don't know what's really going on in a stars core we cannot rule out the possibility of other byproduct of a different nuclear synthesis. Therefore changing the color of plasma sphere. Again if i missed something let me know.
ОтветитьWE DUMP A FEW PLANET WORTHS OF COPPER SULFATE (III) and boric acid into the sun to create a green star, ez! Y’all gotta do better
ОтветитьMaybe the issue isn’t that the universe can’t make green stars. Maybe the issue is that we just can’t perceive it. If you have another creature that absorbs color differently into their eyes.
ОтветитьSince this is something that we haven’t observed before, I assume that it wouldn’t work, but what stops having a mostly blue but still significantly green star viewed from within our atmosphere blocking most of the blue and leaving mostly green?
ОтветитьOutstanding narrative, I really appreciate the manner in which you have presented this, absolutely, beautifully intelligent, thankyou!
ОтветитьYELLOW, red, blue…. Orange, purple, GREEN.
ОтветитьRed, yellow, and blue. Yellow and blue makes green.
ОтветитьHadn't watched the video yet, but I'm guessing he's going to talk about black hole stars
ОтветитьI'm gonna make my own green star. With blackjack...and hookers.
ОтветитьLike the green light in the Great Gatsby
ОтветитьI thought the primary colors were red, yellow and blue
Ответитьman everyone smart here
ОтветитьThe sun is green. That's the frequency of light that it has max output. It's just our eyes are calibrated to see it as white.
ОтветитьGame design cosmology -- green light means go over there.
ОтветитьWhat if Quasi-Stars are green, and we're looking at one
Ответитьwhat if you had a blue star that had a redshifted spectrum because it is moving away from an observer?
ОтветитьYes it does,i took a pic of one green star, it was close to earth
Ответитьwhy dont you ever mention our sun peaks in green
ОтветитьCould a star appear green on planets with a certain atmosphere?
I should probably watch the video to see if he answers this before posting it.
The short answer is: the reason there are no green stars in the universe is because nature forbids it. The laws of physics forbid it.
Slightly more technical: on the light spectrum, the temperatures of stars "lean" over either to the red side of the light spectrum ('on the left side"), or over towards the blue side ("on the right side"). In the middle of the color spectrum, where there should be green, the stars' colors mix, resulting in white stars (such as our Sun), but never green stars. So there are only reddish, to orange-ish, to yellowish stars, and then white stars, and then further on to varying shades of blue stars.
Wouldn't it be more accurate to say that there are green stars in that their single most emitted color is green, we just can't see them as green with our eyes because our perception of the visible spectrum blends the colors together into white? If you were someone who couldn't see blues or reds very well then you very likely would see the star as a greenish hue rather than white when the top of the curve is in the green spectrum. Similarly, if you simply didn't have cones that absorbed blue light, then the hottest stars would look green rather than blue, and vice versa for the cool stars. Our concept for the color of stars are based entirely on the common perception of color, but if we had cones that could see higher frequencies then we may not see stars as blue, we might see them as ultraviolet or in xrays, and if we saw colors in lower frequencies then we may SEE them in infrared or radio wave "colors".
ОтветитьThere is no way science can say anything can't exist in space they dont really know anything at all they just think they know god is in control who are to say he cant do anything its just laughable
ОтветитьVery strange video, pointless
ОтветитьYes, yes, yes -- we know, our sun can't exist. Yes, our universe was created in a computer program. We have no existence -- so, just cut the power & end it.
ОтветитьIt's going to be real embarrassing.Whenever he finds out sol is actually green
ОтветитьI'm beginning to prefer hearing actual astronomers give straight lectures. The background music and over-written narration can only cover up Nature's astounding beauty. Besides, I don't need somebody to tell me how to feel about what I'm seeing. Believe me, I'm already in awe of what actual astronomers have found. I'd rather hear them tell me about it.
ОтветитьIn fact, if we follow De Tegmark's theories of the four types of Multiverse, it is possible for Green, Pink and Purple Stars to exist, following the Fourth type and final type of the Theory of Multiverse Levels, we obtain a Multiverse that combines Possible Universes and Impossible Universes, where in this Multiverse everything that is Possible and Impossible exists, the Possible Universes are the ones we live in with theories of physics and everything is fine, while the Impossible ones are with things that are Impossible for us or that don't make sense, like a Universe where 1+1=3 or one where the Speed of light is infinite, based on this it is very easy to find a Universe with different colors where stars are green, pink and even purple, or to find a universe where White Holes exist.
ОтветитьYou missed to mention Hannys Voorwerp. Ok, not a star, but a rare green object in space!
ОтветитьStarting this is a really weird experience after I just watched a video explaining how the Sun is actually green
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