Hubble Space Telescope, Planet 9, Curiosity Mars Rover, Cosmic Roulette | 60 Minutes Full Episodes



Bill Whitaker’s 2017 reports on the spectacular revelations courtesy of the Hubble Space Telescope, efforts to track down a ninth planet in our solar system, and the Mars rover Curiosity. And from 2013, Anderson Cooper’s report on the dangers posed by asteroids falling from space.

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00:00 Introduction
00:10 Hubble Space Telescope
12:18 The Hunt For Planet 9
23:52 Curiosity Mars Rover
36:46 Cosmic Roulette

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48 thoughts on “Hubble Space Telescope, Planet 9, Curiosity Mars Rover, Cosmic Roulette | 60 Minutes Full Episodes”

  1. Excellent. Paced slowly enough for young or elderly audiences. Basic understand ing of abstract concepts commensurate with education and cognitive abilities are only required. Strongly recommend,

    Reply
  2. I consider myself fairly intelligent, but I am glad there are people out there that understand the space stuff, cause some of that stuff I cannot wrap my brain around! It hurts my head. 👍🍀

    Reply
  3. This is so beautiful. Humans are so consumed by our petty differences, we have such tiny perceptions, we're so oblivious to the true nature of existence. We are so insignificant.

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  4. The stars and planets are so, so very beautiful but at the same time the distances in space are unfathomable and extremely staggering. I think they are just there for our enjoyment and to educate ourselves in it's beauty.
    WE will never be able to reach them but are just there to admire them.

    Proxima Centauri our closest star, next after our sun, is 4 or so light years from earth. Employing our technology today would take astronauts about 6,300 years, more or less, to arrive there.

    Peter
    (amateur astronomer since 1966)

    Reply
  5. How audacious! To demote, dwarfed Uselessness of Allah AlMighty Most Perfect Most Magnificent and Most Glorious Cosmic Creation The Infinite Universe which you will never be able to synthesize

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  6. In my view Pluto is and always will be Planet 9. I dont care if it happens to be smaller than the others. So if they want to hunt for planet 10 somewhere deep in the Kuiper belt thats cool.

    Also, the fact we dont even take advantage of the proximity of the moon to use it as a station for various advanced scientific equipment to help us see things within our solar system that currently we cannot is mind boggling.

    Reply
  7. Both the new James Webb and the old Edward Hubble SPACE telescope should be (in theory) way more efficient at finding said "Planet 9" using infrared or whatever other method as well as if there is a little bit of light of the Sun reflecting from the surface.

    Reply

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