Today I Found Out
The Sun is White, Not Yellow... and 8 other Astronomy Facts (2015x30)
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→Subscribe for new videos every day! http://bit.ly/todayifoundoutsubscri→× 10^33 joules or 7.3551 × 10^29 watt hours or 6.3285*10^17 megatons of TNT. For reference, the largest nuclear explosion ever detonated (the Tsar Bomba by the Soviet Union) produced 50 megatons of TNT worth of energy. So assuming the Earth wouldn’t be obliterated in the process, it would take about 12,657,000,000,000,000 of those nuclear bombs detonated at the correct location to stop the Earth in its tracks.
2. In 2011, astronomers discovered an enormous 12 billion year old water reservoir floating in space estimated to be about the volume of 140 trillion Earth oceans! This further confirmed the theory that water has been present in the universe for much of its existence, with our universe about 13.8 billion years old. (QF 723)
3. Russian cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev has spent more time in space than any other human in history. How long? 803 days, 9 hours and 39 minutes. That is approximately 2.2 years, over the span of six spaceflights. (QF 775)
4. You are simultaneously hurtling around the sun at 66,600 mph while sitting on a rock that is spinning at 1,070 mph. On top of that, our whole solar system is rocketing through space around the center of the Milky Way at around 559,234 mph. On top of that, our galaxy is hurtling through space at around 671,080 mph, with respect to our local group of galaxies. On top of that, for all we know, our entire Universe is hurtling through some unknown medium at some other ridiculous speed.
5. It takes approximately 225 million Earth years for our solar system to make one trip around the Milky Way. Our solar system has made this trip approximately 20.4 times since it formed about 4.6 billion Earth years ago.
6. In 5 to 6 billion years, the Sun will be around the peak of its Red Giant phase, and according to many of the latest models, even with the Sun losing quite a bit of mass during this process, thus making the Earth’s orbit farther out