Astronomers watched 35 explosive outbursts from a rare repeating "fast radio burst" (FRB) as it shifted in frequency like a "cosmic slide whistle," blinking in a puzzling pattern never seen before.
FRBs are millisecond-long flashes of light from beyond the Milky Way that are capable of producing as much energy in a few seconds as the sun does in a year. FRBs are believed to come from powerful objects like neutron stars with intense magnetic fields ββ βalso called magnetars βββ or from cataclysmic events like stellar collisions or the collapse of neutron stars to form black holes. Complicating the FRB picture, a few FRBs are "repeaters" that flash from the same spot in the sky more than once, while the majority burst once and then vanish.
Learning how empty s[pace is makes me uncomfortable. I watched a Kuzgesagt video last year about how the universe is expanding from all points and we'll never be able to travel to other galaxies.
I just hope one day we create a warp engine of some kind to make interstellar travel possible. Right now it feels like we're marooned on an island surrounded by dangerous ocean.
Kurzgesagt is a fantastic channel, but they don't focus on space, which would take them from a 10/10 to a 12/10 in my opinion.
If you want some more existential dread, fascination, or just to go "huh. Didn't know that", there's History of the Universe, SEA, Learning Curve, and a few others I'm sure would get recommended.
Some like Kosmos can get a bit sensational from time to time, but they also have solid videos.
PBS Space Time has a couple videos that were interesting to me but their format and voices don't mesh with me personally, not entirely sure why.