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Fly to a black hole from Earth || FIRST IMAGE OF A BLACK HOLE EVER

If you were on Earth, what would it look like to get sucked into a black hole? Well, it would look like THIS. See the first image of a black hole ever! Read more about it on . for more Popular Science on YouTube ►► *** VIDEO BY : Tom McNamara MEDIA ESO NASA National…

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If you were on Earth, what would it look like to get sucked into a black hole? Well, it would look like THIS. See the first image of a black hole ever! Read more about it on .

for more Popular Science on YouTube ►►

***
VIDEO BY : Tom McNamara

MEDIA
ESO
NASA
National Science Foundation

MUSIC
APM

#blackhole #firstblackholeimage #flyintoblackhole #messier87 #m87 #science #popularscience #popsci #NASA #nationalsciencefoundation #blackhole #firstblackholepicture #eso

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16 Comments

16 Comments

  1. David Schrack

    April 10, 2019 at 9:33 pm

    This is the best discovery in physics of the beginning of 21st century

    • D.I.S. KING

      April 15, 2019 at 3:11 pm

      That’s pretty sad

    • David Schrack

      April 15, 2019 at 10:34 pm

      +D.I.S. KING how so? We have technology that can take a picture the most destructive force in the universe

    • David Schrack

      April 15, 2019 at 10:34 pm

      @D.I.S. KING how so? We have technology that can take a picture the most destructive force in the universe

  2. jlederman2

    April 10, 2019 at 11:00 pm

    Amazing!!!

  3. Hectore 21

    April 10, 2019 at 11:44 pm

    This is so epic!

  4. One Breath

    April 11, 2019 at 10:39 am

    Gonna post it on My community,they’ll be impressed!

  5. ROBIN WILTON

    April 11, 2019 at 4:50 pm

    This is actually a Flatulating Sphincter Muscle sucking back in it’s own Anal vapors.???????????

  6. _The tales of a smol potato_ 0

    April 13, 2019 at 3:36 pm

    U sure this a black hole it looks like a donut……

    • Amos Shapir

      April 18, 2019 at 2:25 pm

      There’s an astronomer somewhere still looking for his snack…

  7. SUDHARSHAN RAPOLU

    April 13, 2019 at 7:06 pm

    I have a doubt in NASA’s black hole picture…
    Black hole must be in center & light rotates around it in THREE DIMENSIONAL space… Right?
    If so, how come black hole (black spot) visible in center, while light rotating around 3D space covering black hole?

  8. Collin Daugherty

    April 14, 2019 at 8:20 pm

    Would love to see you this much effort put into cleaning up our oceans or something practical here on Earth sci-fi b*******

  9. Captain Peter R. Miller

    April 14, 2019 at 11:37 pm

    I appreciate the effort to make this video, but I think the title is erroneous. “Fly to a black hole” might be closer.

    • Popular Science

      April 22, 2019 at 4:30 pm

      Good point – check out the updated title!

    • Captain Peter R. Miller

      April 22, 2019 at 11:11 pm

      +Popular Science Great. Thanks Popular Science.

    • Captain Peter R. Miller

      April 22, 2019 at 11:11 pm

      @Popular Science Great. Thanks Popular Science.

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How to Make a YouTube Video in 1987

Decades before software like Premiere and iMovie made video editing cheap, easy, and accessible for everyone, the only option was chaining a conglomerate of vintage 80s technology – multiple camcorders or VCRs and a TV – to craft custom analog video. Then the Videonics system changed tech history forever. With professional-grade setups costing up to…

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Decades before software like Premiere and iMovie made video editing cheap, easy, and accessible for everyone, the only option was chaining a conglomerate of vintage 80s technology – multiple camcorders or VCRs and a TV – to craft custom analog video. Then the Videonics system changed tech history forever.

With professional-grade setups costing up to six figures at the time, the Videonics brought simple editing to the masses at a tiny fraction of the price… in theory. The reality of the Videonics video editing system was a jumbled mess of retro tech that took a near-miracle to make your kid’s 8th grade jazz band concert video look a little more polished.

And getting it all to work over 35 years later? It took 8 VCRs, 2 camcorders, 3 Videonics units and 4 remotes to create a 1987-era YouTube masterpiece. But in the end, it revealed the beauty and drive of the first-generation analog filmmakers and videographers who made YouTube possible for all of us.

GummyRoach:
Weird Paul:
TechnologyConnections:

#retrotech #analog #vhs #filmmaking

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The $68 Million Instant Movie Disaster (Polavision)

Nearly 50 years ago, the Polavision camera blended Polaroid’s revolutionary instant film with on-demand home video – and the result was a landmark advance in analog technology that would become a mystery of science and a winding international journey into vintage tech. Because now, generations after Edwin Land bet his half-century legacy of innovation and…

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Nearly 50 years ago, the Polavision camera blended Polaroid’s revolutionary instant film with on-demand home video – and the result was a landmark advance in analog technology that would become a mystery of science and a winding international journey into vintage tech.

Because now, generations after Edwin Land bet his half-century legacy of innovation and the company he founded on the success of the Polavision, I need to figure out how to get the thing to work… and only one man in the world could help me.

I traveled to Vienna, Austria to meet Florian “Doc” Kaps – the man behind ‘The Impossible Project’ that saved Polaroid from the dustbin of history. With his guidance and his private store of old Polaroid video tapes, perhaps I would be able to record a modern YouTube video with my vintage Polavision camera.

Through it all, Doc immersed me into his world of analog technology and the philosophy behind his mission to re-integrate analog into our daily lives. We cut lacquer records, we felt the fires of an analog restaurant, and we spent too much time trying to resurrect a relic of the past – because technology, vintage and modern, is all about people.

#polaroid #analog #vintagetech #history #cameras #documentary

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We Mapped a Fly’s BRAIN

A global team of 287 researchers have combined over 100 terabytes of data to create a full map of a fruit fly’s brain, which includes 139,255 individual neurons and 50 million connections. Popular Science, “Scientists mapped every neuron of an adult animal’s brain for the first time”: #science #sciencefacts #weirdscience #biology #research

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A global team of 287 researchers have combined over 100 terabytes of data to create a full map of a fruit fly’s brain, which includes 139,255 individual neurons and 50 million connections.

Popular Science, “Scientists mapped every neuron of an adult animal’s brain for the first time”:

#science #sciencefacts #weirdscience #biology #research

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