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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:25,117 BRIAN COX: The night sky is ablaze with stars. 2 00:00:27,400 --> 00:00:31,359 Hundreds of billions in our galaxy alone. 3 00:00:32,480 --> 00:00:37,838 Many larger, brighter and more majesticthan ourSun. 4 00:00:43,200 --> 00:00:46,954 On the scale of galaxies and stars, the planets of our solar system 5 00:00:47,080 --> 00:00:49,036 are little more than grains of sand 6 00:00:49,160 --> 00:00:51,390 caught momentarily in the light of the Sun. 7 00:00:51,520 --> 00:00:55,832 But on those motes of dust, for over 4 billion years, 8 00:00:55,960 --> 00:00:58,599 great stories have played out unseen. 9 00:01:02,880 --> 00:01:04,791 Stories of worlds born... 10 00:01:06,000 --> 00:01:07,911 ...and worlds lost. 11 00:01:13,680 --> 00:01:16,353 Planets forged amongst the calm... 12 00:01:18,000 --> 00:01:19,718 ...and the chaos. 13 00:01:22,800 --> 00:01:27,316 Their destinies more entwined than we ever imagined. 14 00:01:31,520 --> 00:01:33,272 We know this... 15 00:01:33,400 --> 00:01:36,358 ...because in the last few decades, 16 00:01:36,480 --> 00:01:42,077 we've sent spacecraft to all seven of the worlds beyond our own. 17 00:01:46,520 --> 00:01:49,432 These are the stories that they return to Earth, 18 00:01:49,560 --> 00:01:51,755 the stories of the planets. 19 00:02:18,360 --> 00:02:21,670 For the first few million years after the Sun formed, 20 00:02:21,800 --> 00:02:24,234 there were no planets to see it rise. 21 00:02:31,960 --> 00:02:35,350 Just clouds of dust and gas. 22 00:02:39,680 --> 00:02:42,558 The leftovers from the birth of the Sun. 23 00:02:47,520 --> 00:02:52,958 Over tens of millions of years, the dust began to stick together 24 00:02:53,080 --> 00:02:54,832 and form the first rocks. 25 00:03:00,840 --> 00:03:06,995 Eventually, gravity assembled the rocks to create planetary embryos... 26 00:03:08,840 --> 00:03:13,914 ...that, in time, formed the four closest planets to the Sun. 27 00:03:32,600 --> 00:03:35,672 Today, Mercury is the closest of all, 28 00:03:35,800 --> 00:03:38,314 enduring the Sun's full glare. 29 00:03:40,360 --> 00:03:44,194 Further out lies Venus... 30 00:03:47,320 --> 00:03:49,550 ...choked by a thick atmosphere. 31 00:03:52,000 --> 00:03:54,958 Then Venus‘s neighbour - Earth. 32 00:03:57,800 --> 00:04:00,678 And farthest of all - Mars. 33 00:04:05,000 --> 00:04:07,389 A cold desert world. 34 00:04:09,920 --> 00:04:14,277 Together, they form the only rocky so-called terrestrial planets 35 00:04:14,400 --> 00:04:15,719 in the solar system. 36 00:04:17,440 --> 00:04:20,989 And of the four, one is unique. 37 00:04:23,480 --> 00:04:26,870 (BIRDSONG) 38 00:04:34,200 --> 00:04:38,318 Just look at this...and listen to it. 39 00:04:38,440 --> 00:04:41,113 This is what a planet looks and sounds like 40 00:04:41,240 --> 00:04:44,789 after 4 billion years of evolution by natural selection. 41 00:04:44,920 --> 00:04:49,550 There is nowhere else in the solar system that looks and sounds like this, 42 00:04:49,680 --> 00:04:51,875 which is interesting when you think about it, 43 00:04:52,000 --> 00:04:55,595 because all the planets and moons are made out of the same stuff - 44 00:04:55,720 --> 00:04:59,190 the carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, iron - 45 00:04:59,320 --> 00:05:03,108 all those atoms were present in the cloud that collapsed 46 00:05:03,240 --> 00:05:06,949 to form the solar system 4.5 billion years ago. 47 00:05:07,080 --> 00:05:10,755 And yet, Earth appears to be exceptional, 48 00:05:10,880 --> 00:05:15,431 a lone living planet in an otherwise desolate solar system. 49 00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:20,793 So, what is it that makes this place so special? 50 00:05:20,920 --> 00:05:25,232 Is it fate? Is it chance? These are important questions, 51 00:05:25,360 --> 00:05:27,396 because Earth is the only place we know of 52 00:05:27,520 --> 00:05:31,479 where the most complex phenomena in the universe exist, 53 00:05:31,600 --> 00:05:35,832 the thing that brings meaning to the universe - life. 54 00:05:57,800 --> 00:06:01,873 Earth is a special world in our solar system, 55 00:06:02,000 --> 00:06:05,675 and perhaps even for thousands of light years beyond. 56 00:06:13,440 --> 00:06:16,955 Our world certainly has unique properties. 57 00:06:18,120 --> 00:06:21,192 It‘s the right size and distance from the Sun 58 00:06:21,320 --> 00:06:23,197 to have retained an atmosphere 59 00:06:23,320 --> 00:06:28,110 that's protected its oceans of life-giving water for billions of years. 60 00:06:33,560 --> 00:06:39,874 But as we've left the Blue Planet and explored our sister worlds... 61 00:06:43,320 --> 00:06:48,394 ...we‘ve discovered that each appears to have had a moment 62 00:06:48,520 --> 00:06:51,432 when it's enjoyed almost Earth-like conditions. 63 00:07:01,200 --> 00:07:07,514 Every one of our rocky neighbours has a story of what might have been. 64 00:07:27,760 --> 00:07:30,911 Mercury is a small, tortured world. 65 00:07:35,200 --> 00:07:37,077 More than any other planet, 66 00:07:37,200 --> 00:07:42,115 it‘s endured the unflinching glare of the Sun for billions of years. 67 00:07:46,960 --> 00:07:50,270 Mercury is a world of mystery and apparent contradictions. 68 00:07:50,400 --> 00:07:52,197 It's in quite an elliptical orbit, 69 00:07:52,320 --> 00:07:56,108 which means it can be as far away from the Sun as 70 million kilometres 70 00:07:56,240 --> 00:07:58,993 but as close as 46 million. 71 00:07:59,120 --> 00:08:01,076 That means that temperatures at midday 72 00:08:01,200 --> 00:08:06,115 can rise to 430 degrees Celsius on the surface, but at night, 73 00:08:06,240 --> 00:08:08,800 because it's a small planet and it‘s got no atmosphere, 74 00:08:08,920 --> 00:08:12,515 temperatures fall to minus 170 degrees. 75 00:08:12,640 --> 00:08:15,916 It's also locked into what‘s called a spin-orbit resonance, 76 00:08:16,040 --> 00:08:20,716 which means the planet spins precisely three times on its axis 77 00:08:20,840 --> 00:08:22,353 for every two orbits, 78 00:08:22,480 --> 00:08:27,474 and that, in turn, means that its day is twice as long as its year, 79 00:08:27,600 --> 00:08:31,912 and that means that I could walk over the surface like this, about 2mph, 80 00:08:32,040 --> 00:08:34,315 and keep the Sun at the same point in the sky. 81 00:08:34,440 --> 00:08:37,876 I could stroll in eternal twilight. 82 00:08:42,200 --> 00:08:45,909 Mercury is the least explored of the inner rocky worlds... 83 00:08:48,800 --> 00:08:53,351 ...because getting to a planet in such a strange oval-shaped orbit, 84 00:08:53,480 --> 00:08:56,199 so close to the Sun, 85 00:08:56,320 --> 00:08:58,629 is a tremendous challenge. 86 00:08:58,760 --> 00:09:02,196 COMMS: Five, four, three, 87 00:09:02,320 --> 00:09:05,630 main engines stan‘, two, one and zero, 88 00:09:05,760 --> 00:09:09,753 and liftoff of Messenger, on NASA '5 mission to Mercury. 89 00:09:13,240 --> 00:09:16,073 A planetary enigma in our inner solarsystem. 90 00:09:21,680 --> 00:09:23,238 Now going through the sound barrier. 91 00:09:25,120 --> 00:09:27,918 BRIAN COX: A direct route to Mercury is impractical. 92 00:09:28,040 --> 00:09:33,592 COMMS: Now going through the period of maximum dynamic pressure. 93 00:09:33,720 --> 00:09:36,314 BRIAN COX: A spacecraft would arrive with so much speed 94 00:09:36,440 --> 00:09:38,237 that it would need vast amounts of fuel 95 00:09:38,360 --> 00:09:41,272 to slow down and enter orbit around Mercury. 96 00:09:41,400 --> 00:09:44,039 We just had spacecraft separation. 97 00:09:46,400 --> 00:09:48,391 COMMS: Ground-lit solids have jettisoned 98 00:09:50,560 --> 00:09:53,313 BRIAN COX: So Messenger controlled its trajectory 99 00:09:53,440 --> 00:09:56,637 by stepping from one planet to the next, 100 00:09:56,760 --> 00:09:59,274 using gravity to slow itself, 101 00:09:59,400 --> 00:10:02,153 spiralling inwards towards its target. 102 00:10:17,400 --> 00:10:21,678 Even so, Messenger approached Mercury at such high speed 103 00:10:21,800 --> 00:10:25,349 that it was forced to fly past the planet three times... 104 00:10:28,040 --> 00:10:29,712 ...slowing on each pass... 105 00:10:39,320 --> 00:10:43,757 ...until, after almost seven years of flawless navigation, 106 00:10:43,880 --> 00:10:46,155 it arrived safely in orbit. 107 00:11:08,360 --> 00:11:12,558 Messenger set about its mission to map Mercury‘s surface... 108 00:11:16,040 --> 00:11:17,996 ...and began revealing the secrets 109 00:11:18,120 --> 00:11:21,590 of the most-cratered planet in the solar system 110 00:11:21,720 --> 00:11:23,631 in exquisite new detail. 111 00:11:49,680 --> 00:11:52,478 Messenger was able to do much more 112 00:11:52,600 --> 00:11:55,239 than just take images of Mercury's surface. 113 00:11:56,800 --> 00:12:00,236 By tracking radio signals emitted by the spacecraft, 114 00:12:00,360 --> 00:12:04,751 we're able to see very slight changes in the orbital path around Mercury, 115 00:12:04,880 --> 00:12:06,199 as seen from Earth, 116 00:12:06,320 --> 00:12:09,551 and that allows us to map out Mercury‘s gravitational field. 117 00:12:09,680 --> 00:12:14,310 There are also instruments that allow us to see how the planet wobbles around 118 00:12:14,440 --> 00:12:15,793 as it spins on its axis, 119 00:12:15,920 --> 00:12:18,514 and putting all these measurements together allows us 120 00:12:18,640 --> 00:12:21,632 to take a cross section through the planet 121 00:12:21,760 --> 00:12:23,034 to see what it‘s made of. 122 00:12:23,160 --> 00:12:26,630 And when we do that, we find something very strange. 123 00:12:26,760 --> 00:12:31,197 Mercury's core extends out about 85% 124 00:12:31,320 --> 00:12:33,629 from the centre of the planet to the surface. 125 00:12:33,760 --> 00:12:37,719 It‘s almost entirely an exposed planetary core. 126 00:12:37,840 --> 00:12:42,038 It‘s as if the rocks of the surface were smashed away 127 00:12:42,160 --> 00:12:44,310 and removed at some point in its past. 128 00:12:48,680 --> 00:12:49,908 And there was more. 129 00:12:51,320 --> 00:12:54,710 The tiny probe began detecting chemical elements 130 00:12:54,840 --> 00:12:59,709 in concentrations that no-one had thought possible this close to the Sun. 131 00:13:06,360 --> 00:13:09,352 The discovery of relatively large concentrations 132 00:13:09,480 --> 00:13:15,077 of elements like sulphur and potassium on Mercury's surface was a huge surprise. 133 00:13:15,200 --> 00:13:18,510 If you think back to the time when the planets were forming, 134 00:13:18,640 --> 00:13:21,518 you don't expect high concentrations of those elements 135 00:13:21,640 --> 00:13:24,552 close to the Sun, where Mercury orbits today, 136 00:13:24,680 --> 00:13:27,114 because they‘re so-called volatile elements - 137 00:13:27,240 --> 00:13:31,677 they boil away easily - so you‘ll only find high concentrations further out, 138 00:13:31,800 --> 00:13:34,234 in the colder reaches of the solar system. 139 00:13:34,360 --> 00:13:37,193 So Mercury isan enigma, 140 00:13:37,320 --> 00:13:39,788 and discoveries like these have forced us 141 00:13:39,920 --> 00:13:44,277 to completely rethink our theories about the formation of the planet. 142 00:13:56,200 --> 00:13:59,112 Just a few million years after its formation, 143 00:13:59,240 --> 00:14:03,233 Mercury was still seething with the heat of its violent birth. 144 00:14:05,120 --> 00:14:06,599 (RUMBLING) 145 00:14:13,880 --> 00:14:17,509 Slowly, it cooled, and a crust formed. 146 00:14:25,440 --> 00:14:29,991 Overtime, the crust became enriched in the volatile elements 147 00:14:30,120 --> 00:14:32,554 that were escaping Mercury's interior. 148 00:14:34,960 --> 00:14:38,430 But this could only happen if Mercury started out 149 00:14:38,560 --> 00:14:42,439 not in the position we see it today, 150 00:14:42,560 --> 00:14:44,232 but much further out. 151 00:14:46,440 --> 00:14:49,079 We now think Mercury was born 152 00:14:49,200 --> 00:14:53,478 perhaps 170 million kilometres further away, 153 00:14:53,600 --> 00:14:55,670 close to the orbit of Mars, 154 00:14:55,800 --> 00:14:59,793 a place where, if it had stayed, 155 00:14:59,920 --> 00:15:02,878 its destiny could have been very different. 156 00:15:20,720 --> 00:15:22,119 But it wasn‘t to be. 157 00:15:23,440 --> 00:15:27,752 The young planetary embryo was ripped from its promising position 158 00:15:27,880 --> 00:15:29,791 long before it could mature. 159 00:15:40,560 --> 00:15:43,711 Today, it's hard to imagine the planets in orbits 160 00:15:43,840 --> 00:15:46,559 other than the ones we see in the night sky. 161 00:15:46,680 --> 00:15:49,956 They feel eternal, permanent. 162 00:15:51,320 --> 00:15:55,233 It‘s natural to think of the solar system as a piece of celestial clockwork, 163 00:15:55,360 --> 00:15:57,476 almost like a Swiss watch, 164 00:15:57,600 --> 00:16:01,149 so if we knew where all the planets were at some point in time, 165 00:16:01,280 --> 00:16:04,477 let's say today, then we could imagine calculating 166 00:16:04,600 --> 00:16:07,990 exactly where they‘re going to be at any point in time. 167 00:16:08,120 --> 00:16:12,432 Now, that is true if there's only one planet and one star. 168 00:16:12,560 --> 00:16:15,518 So imagine that's the Sun and this is Mercury. 169 00:16:15,640 --> 00:16:19,189 Now, we know the gravitational force between Mercury and the Sun, 170 00:16:19,320 --> 00:16:21,914 and, indeed, if that's all there is, 171 00:16:22,040 --> 00:16:25,669 then we can calculate its orbit around the Sun 172 00:16:25,800 --> 00:16:28,109 with essentially infinite precision. 173 00:16:28,240 --> 00:16:32,995 But add in one more planet, let's say Jupiter over there. 174 00:16:33,120 --> 00:16:37,432 Now there's a gravitational force between all three of these objects 175 00:16:37,560 --> 00:16:40,836 and it turns out that, even in principle, 176 00:16:40,960 --> 00:16:42,712 it is not possible to calculate 177 00:16:42,840 --> 00:16:45,673 exactly where they're all going to be in the future 178 00:16:45,800 --> 00:16:50,316 or where they were at some point in the past. 179 00:16:50,440 --> 00:16:54,479 This means that any uncertainty, even of a few metres, 180 00:16:54,600 --> 00:16:58,513 in our knowledge of the position of the planets 181 00:16:58,640 --> 00:17:00,949 can lead to radically different predictions. 182 00:17:02,520 --> 00:17:06,672 And that‘s because the system itself, the orbits of the planets, 183 00:17:06,800 --> 00:17:10,349 are not stable over very long timescales. 184 00:17:13,480 --> 00:17:18,315 So planets don't necessarily remain in the same orbits for ever. 185 00:17:25,440 --> 00:17:26,839 And the evidence we've gathered 186 00:17:26,960 --> 00:17:31,829 from the volatiles on Mercury's surface and the unusual size of its core 187 00:17:31,960 --> 00:17:34,838 suggests that this may have been what happened. 188 00:17:38,320 --> 00:17:40,880 (WHOOSHING) 189 00:17:44,480 --> 00:17:46,152 If Mercury began its life 190 00:17:46,280 --> 00:17:49,989 170 million kilometres further away from the Sun... 191 00:17:52,560 --> 00:17:54,915 ...then it would have been in a region of space 192 00:17:55,040 --> 00:17:57,156 where the young Mars was also forming. 193 00:18:03,840 --> 00:18:07,515 This region was full of scores of planetary embryos, 194 00:18:07,640 --> 00:18:09,471 all fighting for position. 195 00:18:18,120 --> 00:18:23,433 Amongst the chaos, something large kicked Mercury inwards, 196 00:18:23,560 --> 00:18:25,073 towards the Sun. 197 00:18:49,360 --> 00:18:51,920 Mercury collided with another embryo. 198 00:19:01,640 --> 00:19:07,317 A glancing blow saw much of its crust and mantle lost to space. 199 00:19:16,200 --> 00:19:18,953 Much of this material remained behind, 200 00:19:19,080 --> 00:19:21,992 perhaps helping to form the early Venus. 201 00:19:25,960 --> 00:19:29,236 If the theory is correct, then Mercury, 202 00:19:29,360 --> 00:19:31,749 now little more than a planetary core, 203 00:19:31,880 --> 00:19:34,269 continued towards the Sun 204 00:19:34,400 --> 00:19:38,996 and ended up in the peculiar elliptical orbit we see today. 205 00:19:50,640 --> 00:19:53,712 The idea that Mercury's outer layers were stripped away 206 00:19:53,840 --> 00:19:56,832 in some violent collision many billions of years ago 207 00:19:56,960 --> 00:19:58,871 is a superficially attractive one. 208 00:19:59,000 --> 00:20:01,833 But the theory does have problems. 209 00:20:01,960 --> 00:20:05,589 Any collision violent enough to do that heats up the planet, 210 00:20:05,720 --> 00:20:08,154 and that boils away the volatiles. 211 00:20:08,280 --> 00:20:12,319 So you have to think of a vew specific kind of collision, 212 00:20:12,440 --> 00:20:16,069 or perhaps even multiple, more delicate collisions, 213 00:20:16,200 --> 00:20:18,395 in orderto fit the data. 214 00:20:18,520 --> 00:20:20,795 So, I think it's fair to say 215 00:20:20,920 --> 00:20:24,196 that the precise nature of Mercury‘s formation 216 00:20:24,320 --> 00:20:29,519 is still one of the great unsolved mysteries in planetary science. 217 00:20:35,560 --> 00:20:37,437 After four years of observation 218 00:20:37,560 --> 00:20:42,156 and its discoveries that hint at Mercury‘s turbulent past, 219 00:20:42,280 --> 00:20:44,748 Messengerfinally ran out of fuel... 220 00:20:53,480 --> 00:20:57,678 ...and added yet another crater to this tiny world that, 221 00:20:57,800 --> 00:21:01,839 just perhaps, could have had a different story to tell. 222 00:21:26,080 --> 00:21:29,675 50 million kilometres beyond Mercury, 223 00:21:29,800 --> 00:21:33,998 shrouded by an unbroken blanket of cloud, 224 00:21:34,120 --> 00:21:37,078 lies a world which, at first sight, 225 00:21:37,200 --> 00:21:40,715 has the potential to be far more Earth-like. 226 00:21:56,160 --> 00:22:00,039 You see that bright point of light out there in the evening sky? 227 00:22:00,160 --> 00:22:01,673 That's Venus. 228 00:22:01,800 --> 00:22:04,792 It's so bright because it's quite a large planet, 229 00:22:04,920 --> 00:22:07,718 about the same size as the Earth, it's not too far away, 230 00:22:07,840 --> 00:22:13,039 but in particular because it's shrouded in highly reflective clouds. 231 00:22:13,160 --> 00:22:17,870 Now, that's the frustrating but also tantalising thing about Venus. 232 00:22:18,000 --> 00:22:20,355 Even through a big telescope, when you look at it, 233 00:22:20,480 --> 00:22:23,119 it is featureless - you never see the surface. 234 00:22:23,240 --> 00:22:25,800 And that meant that, even until the 19505, 235 00:22:25,920 --> 00:22:29,310 astronomers speculated that it might be a living world 236 00:22:29,440 --> 00:22:33,194 with jungles and forests and rivers and oceans. 237 00:22:33,320 --> 00:22:34,435 So much so, in fact, 238 00:22:34,560 --> 00:22:38,633 that when we first sent a spacecraft to land on the surface of Venus, 239 00:22:38,760 --> 00:22:40,876 we prepared for a splash landing. 240 00:22:42,560 --> 00:22:45,358 (IN RUSSIAN) 241 00:23:00,440 --> 00:23:03,432 (IN RUSSIAN) 242 00:23:23,160 --> 00:23:24,991 Throughout the 19605 and '705, 243 00:23:25,120 --> 00:23:30,558 the Soviet Venera programme sent multiple missions to explore Venus. 244 00:23:34,280 --> 00:23:35,474 Many failed... 245 00:23:36,920 --> 00:23:38,831 ...but with each attempt, 246 00:23:38,960 --> 00:23:42,873 we learned a little more of the extreme conditions on the planet. 247 00:24:14,160 --> 00:24:19,518 After 20 years of twing, Venera 13 began its perilous descent. 248 00:24:46,360 --> 00:24:49,272 The craft was prepared to withstand pressures 249 00:24:49,400 --> 00:24:51,516 that could crush a car in seconds... 250 00:24:53,400 --> 00:24:56,312 ...and temperatures that would melt lead. 251 00:25:01,040 --> 00:25:03,429 On 1st March 1982... 252 00:25:06,600 --> 00:25:09,751 ...the Soviets took the first full colour picture... 253 00:25:11,760 --> 00:25:13,239 ...of the Venusian surface. 254 00:25:34,520 --> 00:25:37,114 Even underthe most extreme of conditions, 255 00:25:37,240 --> 00:25:40,391 the probe sent its precious data home to Earth... 256 00:25:49,400 --> 00:25:55,839 ...until, 127 minutes after touchdown, it finally succumbed. 257 00:25:57,120 --> 00:25:59,714 Farfrom a benign ocean world... 258 00:26:00,920 --> 00:26:02,751 ...Venus is a vision of hell... 259 00:26:04,200 --> 00:26:06,031 ...where no life can survive. 260 00:26:16,160 --> 00:26:18,549 So, where did it all go wrong for Venus? 261 00:26:18,680 --> 00:26:22,639 Well, that is a good question, and it‘s an important one. 262 00:26:22,760 --> 00:26:25,115 It‘s been said that we won't fully understand the Earth 263 00:26:25,240 --> 00:26:26,389 until we understand Venus, 264 00:26:26,520 --> 00:26:28,954 and that‘s because the planets are so similar. 265 00:26:29,080 --> 00:26:32,152 Venus is the same size as the Earth, 266 00:26:32,280 --> 00:26:35,636 and it‘s the same composition, as far as we know, 267 00:26:35,760 --> 00:26:39,799 and although it's closerto the Sun, it's not as close as Mercury. 268 00:26:39,920 --> 00:26:43,629 So why is it that one world remained heaven 269 00:26:43,760 --> 00:26:46,479 whilst the other became hell? 270 00:26:54,160 --> 00:26:55,832 Counterintuitively, 271 00:26:55,960 --> 00:27:01,318 the surface temperatures today on Venus are hotter than those on Mercury. 272 00:27:08,080 --> 00:27:11,675 And the story of Venus's climate is further complicated 273 00:27:11,800 --> 00:27:15,429 by the fact that, over the lifetime of the planet, 274 00:27:15,560 --> 00:27:18,632 the Sun itself has been evolving. 275 00:27:21,600 --> 00:27:27,072 As the Sun gets older, the star burns hotter and hotter and hotter. 276 00:27:27,200 --> 00:27:30,112 That means that, in the past, when the Sun was younger, 277 00:27:30,240 --> 00:27:32,151 it must have been cooler. 278 00:27:32,280 --> 00:27:34,430 It‘s called the faint young Sun. 279 00:27:34,560 --> 00:27:36,710 And that has a big impact on the planets. 280 00:27:36,840 --> 00:27:40,958 At the time when life wasjust about beginning on the Earth, 281 00:27:41,080 --> 00:27:43,594 3.5 to 4 billion years ago, 282 00:27:43,720 --> 00:27:44,914 the Sun was fainter. 283 00:27:45,040 --> 00:27:47,554 And that means that Venus was cooler. 284 00:27:47,680 --> 00:27:50,035 In fact, temperatures on Venus at that time 285 00:27:50,160 --> 00:27:54,039 would have been like a pleasant spring day here on Earth. 286 00:28:05,280 --> 00:28:07,919 Within a few millions years of its formation, 287 00:28:08,040 --> 00:28:10,349 the surface of Venus had cooled. 288 00:28:14,240 --> 00:28:17,437 The planet now found itself atjust the right distance 289 00:28:17,560 --> 00:28:19,835 from the faint young Sun 290 00:28:19,960 --> 00:28:25,193 for Venus to experience a sight familiarto us here on Earth. 291 00:28:43,800 --> 00:28:45,074 The heavens opened. 292 00:29:02,920 --> 00:29:06,515 Great torrents flooded the surface. 293 00:29:08,320 --> 00:29:10,754 Rivers of water flowed. 294 00:29:19,240 --> 00:29:21,993 Venus became an ocean world. 295 00:29:39,720 --> 00:29:43,713 The planet's atmosphere allowed it to hold on to the oceans... 296 00:29:47,640 --> 00:29:52,156 ...by acting as a blanket, keeping the surface temperate... 297 00:29:54,400 --> 00:29:56,391 ...thanks to the greenhouse effect. 298 00:30:02,800 --> 00:30:05,792 The greenhouse effect is pretty simple physics. 299 00:30:05,920 --> 00:30:08,832 Gases like carbon dioxide and water vapour 300 00:30:08,960 --> 00:30:12,191 in a planetary atmosphere are transparent to visible light. 301 00:30:12,320 --> 00:30:15,710 That is obvious, because there's a source of visible light, 302 00:30:15,840 --> 00:30:17,796 the Sun, and I can see it. 303 00:30:17,920 --> 00:30:21,356 So that radiation falls onto the surface of the planet 304 00:30:21,480 --> 00:30:22,913 and it beats it up. 305 00:30:23,040 --> 00:30:27,272 The rocks then re-radiate that out into the atmosphere again, 306 00:30:27,400 --> 00:30:30,551 but this time not as visible light, but as infrared, 307 00:30:30,680 --> 00:30:32,079 which my eyes can't see. 308 00:30:32,200 --> 00:30:36,830 Now, carbon dioxide and water vapour absorb infrared, 309 00:30:36,960 --> 00:30:40,191 and so they trap that energy and the planet heats up. 310 00:30:40,320 --> 00:30:43,312 Now, that's not necessarily a bad thing. 311 00:30:43,440 --> 00:30:45,670 The Earth would be at an average temperature 312 00:30:45,800 --> 00:30:50,396 of around minus 18 degrees Celsius without the greenhouse effect. 313 00:30:50,520 --> 00:30:56,197 But there is a thin line between heating a planet up and trying it. 314 00:31:02,000 --> 00:31:04,912 Gradually, over2 billion years, 315 00:31:05,040 --> 00:31:07,873 the young Sun grew brighter. 316 00:31:17,680 --> 00:31:19,796 Temperatures began to rise, 317 00:31:19,920 --> 00:31:23,276 lifting more and more water vapour into the atmosphere. 318 00:31:30,600 --> 00:31:33,273 The greenhouse effect grew more intense. 319 00:31:54,280 --> 00:31:58,193 Rain evaporated long before reaching the ground. 320 00:32:05,440 --> 00:32:08,352 Venus had reached a tipping point. 321 00:32:08,480 --> 00:32:12,314 A runaway greenhouse effect had taken hold. 322 00:32:31,760 --> 00:32:35,070 Venus's moment in the sun was over. 323 00:32:43,120 --> 00:32:47,875 Its cracked surface today is even hotter than Mercury's, 324 00:32:48,000 --> 00:32:51,629 making Venus the hottest of all the planets. 325 00:33:02,240 --> 00:33:05,835 As the young Sun‘s brightness continued to increase, 326 00:33:05,960 --> 00:33:09,157 the effects were felt across all the terrestrial planets. 327 00:33:22,000 --> 00:33:25,151 Mars, much further out than Venus, 328 00:33:25,280 --> 00:33:28,477 enjoyed its moment in the sun, too. 329 00:33:34,280 --> 00:33:38,273 With an atmosphere rich in greenhouse gases, 330 00:33:38,400 --> 00:33:42,757 rivers flowed across its surface for hundreds of millions of years. 331 00:33:48,960 --> 00:33:52,794 But Mars, being smaller than Venus, 332 00:33:52,920 --> 00:33:55,036 couldn't hold on to its atmosphere. 333 00:34:06,280 --> 00:34:08,191 Much of its water evaporated... 334 00:34:10,680 --> 00:34:12,511 ...and escaped into space... 335 00:34:21,440 --> 00:34:25,035 ...leaving only small traces behind, 336 00:34:25,160 --> 00:34:29,073 frozen in patches across the planet, 337 00:34:29,200 --> 00:34:35,116 where missions continue to search for the first signs of extra-terrestrial life. 338 00:34:42,440 --> 00:34:45,512 There's a crater on Mars called the Hellas Basin, 339 00:34:45,640 --> 00:34:50,634 which is 1,500 kilometres across and 9 kilometres deep. 340 00:34:50,760 --> 00:34:53,513 That means you could put Everest on the floor 341 00:34:53,640 --> 00:34:55,949 and the summit would not reach the rim. 342 00:34:56,080 --> 00:35:00,596 The air pressure is so high down there that liquid water can exist. 343 00:35:03,440 --> 00:35:07,558 So, I suppose it's not impossible to imagine microbes coming up 344 00:35:07,680 --> 00:35:11,559 from deep below the surface to bask in the midday sun 345 00:35:11,680 --> 00:35:17,357 before disappearing back down below again to survive the cold of the Martian night. 346 00:35:17,480 --> 00:35:23,271 But if life does exist out there, it will certainly only be simple life. 347 00:35:23,400 --> 00:35:27,632 There will be nothing anywhere near as complex as you or me, 348 00:35:27,760 --> 00:35:29,079 or even this plant. 349 00:35:58,480 --> 00:36:01,119 The story of the solar system is, in a sense, 350 00:36:01,240 --> 00:36:03,754 a stow of instability and constant change, 351 00:36:03,880 --> 00:36:05,950 at least for the inner rocky worlds. 352 00:36:06,080 --> 00:36:09,231 Mercury has changed its position radically - 353 00:36:09,360 --> 00:36:12,750 its orbit now takes it close to the searing heat of the Sun. 354 00:36:12,880 --> 00:36:16,793 Venus probably had water on its surface 355 00:36:16,920 --> 00:36:21,710 foraround 2 billion years before it became hotter than Mercuw. 356 00:36:21,840 --> 00:36:26,960 And Mars lost its oceans and rivers perhaps 3.5 billion years ago. 357 00:36:27,080 --> 00:36:30,356 But unique amongst those worlds is Earth, 358 00:36:30,480 --> 00:36:35,713 because it‘s remained pretty much like this - liquid water on the surface - 359 00:36:35,840 --> 00:36:41,472 for 4 billion years, and that has allowed complex carbon chemistry to develop. 360 00:36:47,440 --> 00:36:50,000 Today, our planet is dominated by life. 361 00:36:50,120 --> 00:36:53,669 It's in every nook and cranny. I mean, look at this place. 362 00:36:53,800 --> 00:36:56,872 This is a volcano in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, 363 00:36:57,000 --> 00:36:59,639 and it is literally teeming with life. 364 00:36:59,760 --> 00:37:04,914 And think of all the chance events that had to happen over 4 billion years 365 00:37:05,040 --> 00:37:08,953 just to produce the little creatures in this rock pool. 366 00:37:13,480 --> 00:37:17,871 Life has woven itself into the fabric of the planet. 367 00:37:23,440 --> 00:37:28,560 It's an integral part of every continent and every ocean. 368 00:37:33,280 --> 00:37:37,956 It plays a crucial role in maintaining the balance of our atmosphere 369 00:37:38,080 --> 00:37:40,833 that keeps our planet temperate. 370 00:37:45,880 --> 00:37:47,950 Of all the terrestrial planets, 371 00:37:48,080 --> 00:37:51,789 Earth has enjoyed the longest moment of them all. 372 00:38:00,840 --> 00:38:02,273 But it can't last. 373 00:38:04,360 --> 00:38:11,072 Earth will ultimately follow the fate of the other rocky planets, 374 00:38:11,200 --> 00:38:13,794 because even though we don't feel it day to day, 375 00:38:13,920 --> 00:38:17,674 the Sun's ageing process r's relentless. 376 00:38:19,720 --> 00:38:22,757 We can say with confidence what's going to happen to the Sun 377 00:38:22,880 --> 00:38:24,199 towards the end of its life, 378 00:38:24,320 --> 00:38:26,436 partly because we understand physics 379 00:38:26,560 --> 00:38:30,314 and the nuclear physics of what happens inside the cores of stars, 380 00:38:30,440 --> 00:38:35,912 but also because the life cycle of stars is written across the night sky. 381 00:38:36,040 --> 00:38:38,838 Take that bright star there, for example. 382 00:38:38,960 --> 00:38:40,757 It's called Arcturus. 383 00:38:40,880 --> 00:38:44,793 It‘s around the mass of the Sun, perhaps a little bit heavier, 384 00:38:44,920 --> 00:38:48,754 but it's between 6 and 8 billion years old, 385 00:38:48,880 --> 00:38:51,758 perhaps 3 billion years older than the Sun, 386 00:38:51,880 --> 00:38:54,758 and it is now a red giant star. 387 00:38:54,880 --> 00:38:57,599 It‘s exhausted the hydrogen fuel in its core 388 00:38:57,720 --> 00:39:00,154 and it‘s swollen up and cooled. 389 00:39:01,760 --> 00:39:04,718 And that is what we think will happen to the Sun 390 00:39:04,840 --> 00:39:06,796 in about 5 billion years' time. 391 00:39:17,200 --> 00:39:20,670 As the Sun exhausts its hydrogen fuel in the core, 392 00:39:20,800 --> 00:39:23,268 its outer edge will inflate. 393 00:39:28,480 --> 00:39:30,835 It will enter a red giant phase, 394 00:39:30,960 --> 00:39:34,635 expanding millions of kilometres out into space. 395 00:39:39,240 --> 00:39:42,152 Mercury will be the first to be engulfed. 396 00:39:53,320 --> 00:39:56,915 Then Venus‘s fate will be sealed. 397 00:40:09,720 --> 00:40:14,111 Earth mayjust escape the fiery fate of its neighbours... 398 00:40:16,920 --> 00:40:21,630 ...hanging on with Mars, beyond the edge of the dying star. 399 00:40:35,360 --> 00:40:40,070 The era of the four terrestrial planets will be over. 400 00:40:42,760 --> 00:40:45,479 The lives lived on the surface of one of them 401 00:40:45,600 --> 00:40:47,556 nothing more than a distant memory. 402 00:40:56,480 --> 00:41:00,359 But that's not quite the end of the story. 403 00:41:02,360 --> 00:41:06,239 Right at the end of the Sun‘s life, something wonderful will happen. 404 00:41:10,240 --> 00:41:12,834 A collection of icy worlds that have lain dormant 405 00:41:12,960 --> 00:41:16,191 for the entire history of the solar system will awake. 406 00:41:16,320 --> 00:41:19,198 These are the worlds that orbit the outer planets - 407 00:41:19,320 --> 00:41:22,357 the moons of Jupiter and Saturn. 408 00:41:27,880 --> 00:41:31,793 These distant worlds that circle the outer gas giants 409 00:41:31,920 --> 00:41:33,638 will begin to warm. 410 00:41:39,280 --> 00:41:42,033 Like Saturn's moon - Enceladus. 411 00:41:44,960 --> 00:41:47,315 OrJupiter‘s moon - Europa. 412 00:41:54,280 --> 00:41:55,554 Amongst all these moons, 413 00:41:55,680 --> 00:41:58,990 there is one above all others that we think, perhaps, 414 00:41:59,120 --> 00:42:03,113 has the best chance of becoming a place that we‘d recognise. 415 00:42:15,720 --> 00:42:19,918 Way out, in the cold, distant reaches of the solar system... 416 00:42:21,640 --> 00:42:22,868 ...pastJupiter... 417 00:42:25,360 --> 00:42:28,636 ...around the icy ringed-planet Saturn, 418 00:42:28,760 --> 00:42:30,591 orbits a gem. 419 00:42:31,720 --> 00:42:34,553 COMMS: And the Cassini spacecraft is on its way to Saturn. 420 00:42:42,120 --> 00:42:43,599 BRIAN COX: Titan. 421 00:42:55,760 --> 00:42:59,196 A planet-sized moon bigger than Mercury... 422 00:43:04,880 --> 00:43:09,158 ...surrounded by a thick atmosphere of nitrogen and methane... 423 00:43:10,640 --> 00:43:14,679 ...with a surface that has long remained a mystew. 424 00:43:20,520 --> 00:43:25,833 The Huygens probe was our first chance to explore beneath the clouds... 425 00:43:25,960 --> 00:43:31,193 ...and its camera sent back these first glimpses of the distant moon. 426 00:44:07,760 --> 00:44:12,072 Wonderfully, the craft made a soft landing 427 00:44:12,200 --> 00:44:16,113 and continued to beam back what it saw. 428 00:44:20,560 --> 00:44:24,348 This is a remarkable photograph, and as is always the case in science, 429 00:44:24,480 --> 00:44:27,552 the more you know about it, the more wonderful it gets. 430 00:44:27,680 --> 00:44:30,672 This is a photograph from the surface of a moon 431 00:44:30,800 --> 00:44:34,998 orbiting around a planet over a billion kilometres away. 432 00:44:35,120 --> 00:44:38,430 So we got a camera down onto the surface of a world 433 00:44:38,560 --> 00:44:41,870 in the frozen far reaches of the solar system. 434 00:44:42,000 --> 00:44:44,878 What we see here is something that looks like a flood plain 435 00:44:45,000 --> 00:44:47,958 ora riverbed - very much like this, actually - 436 00:44:48,080 --> 00:44:51,277 and we can say that this is a riverbed, or a flood plain, 437 00:44:51,400 --> 00:44:55,359 because these rocks on the surface look like this. 438 00:44:55,480 --> 00:44:59,792 They‘ve been smoothed and eroded by flowing liquid. 439 00:45:02,440 --> 00:45:07,594 We know these are, in fact, boulders of frozen water. 440 00:45:07,720 --> 00:45:10,871 They're frozen solid because the temperature 441 00:45:11,000 --> 00:45:16,120 on the surface of this moon is minus 180 degrees Celsius. 442 00:45:16,240 --> 00:45:18,151 And that raises an interesting question - 443 00:45:18,280 --> 00:45:22,717 if it's so cold, then what was the flowing liquid? 444 00:45:31,000 --> 00:45:35,039 Huygens detected significant amounts of methane, 445 00:45:35,160 --> 00:45:37,071 a flammable gas on Earth. 446 00:45:39,240 --> 00:45:41,754 But the relatively high atmospheric pressure 447 00:45:41,880 --> 00:45:45,395 and cold temperatures at the surface of Titan 448 00:45:45,520 --> 00:45:48,990 means that this methane exists as a liquid. 449 00:46:07,520 --> 00:46:09,397 Titan could be wet... 450 00:46:11,120 --> 00:46:14,795 ...not with water, but with liquid methane, 451 00:46:14,920 --> 00:46:19,072 driving rock-like chunks of ice down mountain channels 452 00:46:19,200 --> 00:46:21,589 and out into open flood plains. 453 00:46:27,720 --> 00:46:30,871 Huygens sunrived forjust a few hours, 454 00:46:31,000 --> 00:46:35,630 but didn't detect any trace of liquid methane at its landing site. 455 00:46:42,800 --> 00:46:45,678 But the probe‘s mother ship, Cassini, 456 00:46:45,800 --> 00:46:47,677 remained in orbit around Saturn. 457 00:46:49,240 --> 00:46:51,470 A year after Huygens landed, 458 00:46:51,600 --> 00:46:55,957 Cassini again flew high above Titan‘s north pole 459 00:46:56,080 --> 00:47:02,758 and discovered something seen nowhere else in the solar system beyond Earth. 460 00:47:11,600 --> 00:47:18,551 Liquid pooling into notjust one but scores of great lakes. 461 00:47:41,640 --> 00:47:45,918 Cassini discovered lakes of liquid methane. 462 00:47:51,000 --> 00:47:54,788 Earth has a strange cold twin. 463 00:48:03,400 --> 00:48:07,791 In some ways, you could just imagine floating in a boat on those lakes, 464 00:48:07,920 --> 00:48:13,278 and it would look something like this, except this would be liquid methane gas, 465 00:48:13,400 --> 00:48:18,155 and those mountains there would be mountains of frozen water ice, 466 00:48:18,280 --> 00:48:19,713 as hard as rock. 467 00:48:22,280 --> 00:48:24,555 What's also fascinating, and in fact tantalising, 468 00:48:24,680 --> 00:48:27,877 is that Titan has a complex chemistry, 469 00:48:28,000 --> 00:48:32,278 and that chemistry is carbon chemistry, the chemistry of life. 470 00:48:32,400 --> 00:48:35,358 So we found molecules like hydrogen cyanide, 471 00:48:35,480 --> 00:48:37,630 which are the building blocks of amino acids. 472 00:48:37,760 --> 00:48:41,036 We found molecules called vinyl cyanides, 473 00:48:41,160 --> 00:48:46,792 which chemists and biologists speculate could form some sort of cell membranes. 474 00:48:46,920 --> 00:48:50,799 And so, all the ingredients for life are present on Titan. 475 00:48:53,680 --> 00:48:56,877 Now, venr few scientists think there will be life on Titan today. 476 00:48:57,000 --> 00:49:01,949 It is, after all, minus 180 degrees Celsius at the surface, 477 00:49:02,080 --> 00:49:05,231 but because of the presence of all those ingredients, 478 00:49:05,360 --> 00:49:09,717 it might be a very different story if you warmed Titan up. 479 00:49:27,080 --> 00:49:29,719 In the light of the old, expanding Sun... 480 00:49:32,280 --> 00:49:36,353 ...the far reaches of the solar system will receive more solar energy. 481 00:49:38,200 --> 00:49:41,510 Titan‘s atmosphere will begin to warm. 482 00:49:56,960 --> 00:50:02,717 Mountains of ice will shrink and melt as temperatures rise... 483 00:50:06,200 --> 00:50:11,433 ...the frozen water they contain replacing the liquid methane. 484 00:50:42,760 --> 00:50:47,470 Mountains will become oceans...of water. 485 00:50:56,440 --> 00:51:02,197 In a strange twist of fate, at the end of the life of the Sun, 486 00:51:02,320 --> 00:51:06,518 the solar system's last ocean world will wake up 487 00:51:06,640 --> 00:51:09,598 to its own biological possibilities. 488 00:51:15,600 --> 00:51:21,038 This distant moon will enjoy its brief moment in the sun. 489 00:51:28,000 --> 00:51:32,198 It's easy to think of habitability as a permanent feature of worlds, 490 00:51:32,320 --> 00:51:34,197 a defining characteristic, if you like. 491 00:51:34,320 --> 00:51:37,869 So the Earth is a living planet because it's in the Goldilocks zone 492 00:51:38,000 --> 00:51:41,197 around the Sun - not too close and not too far away. 493 00:51:41,320 --> 00:51:43,356 But things are more complicated than that. 494 00:51:43,480 --> 00:51:45,675 Solar systems are dynamic places. 495 00:51:45,800 --> 00:51:49,998 Planetary orbits can change, and stars can vary in brightness. 496 00:51:50,120 --> 00:51:54,238 So planets that were once heaven can become hell. 497 00:52:00,720 --> 00:52:04,076 We now understand that the Earth has been a fortunate world, 498 00:52:04,200 --> 00:52:07,078 an oasis of calm in an ever-changing solar system 499 00:52:07,200 --> 00:52:10,875 that's maintained a stable climate, perhaps against the odds, 500 00:52:11,000 --> 00:52:15,516 for the 4 billion years it took complex living things to evolve. 501 00:52:23,760 --> 00:52:27,992 We don't know how many planets like Earth there are out there amongst the stars, 502 00:52:28,120 --> 00:52:32,477 places where the ingredients of solar systems have assembled themselves 503 00:52:32,600 --> 00:52:35,876 into structures that can dream of other worlds. 504 00:52:36,000 --> 00:52:40,994 But we have to take the possibility very seriously that there might be few, 505 00:52:41,120 --> 00:52:45,955 and that would make Earth - and us - extremely rare and precious. 506 00:53:27,280 --> 00:53:31,558 The real problem is that it's really hot. It's the planet closest to the Sun, 507 00:53:31,680 --> 00:53:34,513 and obviously that makes it challenging. 508 00:53:36,320 --> 00:53:38,993 So you have to protect the spacecraft 509 00:53:39,120 --> 00:53:41,588 from the heat from the Sun, and the way Messenger addressed this 510 00:53:41,720 --> 00:53:45,315 was to put the whole spacecraft behind a giant ceramic sunshade. 511 00:53:45,440 --> 00:53:48,113 It had this sunshade. If it didn't face the Sun, 512 00:53:48,240 --> 00:53:50,515 you would‘ve melted the instruments, literally. 513 00:53:53,600 --> 00:53:57,275 LARRY NITTLER: The other major challenge is you had to protect the spacecraft 514 00:53:57,400 --> 00:53:59,709 from the heat reflected from the planet, 515 00:53:59,840 --> 00:54:03,992 and the way we dealt with that was to be in an extremely elliptical orbit, 516 00:54:04,120 --> 00:54:07,829 where we flew in very close over the north pole and took obsenrations. 517 00:54:07,960 --> 00:54:09,951 The instruments would heat up, and then we'd fly, 518 00:54:10,080 --> 00:54:13,390 like, 10,000 kilometres farther out from the planet 519 00:54:13,520 --> 00:54:14,748 while we cooled off. 520 00:54:14,880 --> 00:54:17,235 And in this way - heat up, cool down - 521 00:54:17,360 --> 00:54:19,749 and kept everything below the danger temperatures, 522 00:54:19,880 --> 00:54:21,836 where instruments could be damaged. 523 00:54:32,640 --> 00:54:37,998 I was in charge of the camera team. I don't think I slept much the night before. 524 00:54:39,240 --> 00:54:42,312 I was really anxious to get that first image back. 525 00:54:44,840 --> 00:54:46,398 When that image came back, 526 00:54:46,520 --> 00:54:48,112 wejust started pointing at all the features 527 00:54:48,240 --> 00:54:50,515 that had never been seen before and saying, "Look at this, look at that." 528 00:54:55,200 --> 00:54:59,830 BRIAN COX: Overtime, the close-up flights of Mercury's north pole 529 00:54:59,960 --> 00:55:04,875 allowed the team to peer deep into the shadows of one particular crater. 530 00:55:09,560 --> 00:55:14,873 We realised that we could actually design a way to take a picture 531 00:55:15,000 --> 00:55:18,356 using a very long exposure to see inside these dark craters. 532 00:55:18,480 --> 00:55:21,040 Messenger was designed with instruments 533 00:55:21,160 --> 00:55:23,594 that could specifically look at their reflectance 534 00:55:23,720 --> 00:55:25,551 and also measure hydrogens. 535 00:55:25,680 --> 00:55:28,319 So we thought, “0K, there's a lot of hydrogen there," 536 00:55:28,440 --> 00:55:33,798 and there was, like, this fantastic case built for these ice deposits. 537 00:55:35,400 --> 00:55:37,834 BRIAN COX: Incredibly, Messenger detected 538 00:55:37,960 --> 00:55:41,794 hundreds of billions of tonnes of frozen water ice... 539 00:55:43,680 --> 00:55:47,639 ...scattered in the permanent shadows of the polar craters. 540 00:55:50,040 --> 00:55:53,669 The fact that water ice can survive for a very long period of time 541 00:55:53,800 --> 00:55:56,712 is a reflection of the fact that Mercury is rotating 542 00:55:56,840 --> 00:55:58,353 almost perfectly straight up, 543 00:55:58,480 --> 00:56:02,029 so that there are craters near the pole that are so deep 544 00:56:02,160 --> 00:56:05,436 and completely shaded from sunlight ever hitting them. 545 00:56:05,560 --> 00:56:08,120 So ice could be stable in those polar regions 546 00:56:08,240 --> 00:56:10,674 that are permanently shadowed for billions of years. 547 00:56:15,640 --> 00:56:18,108 BRIAN COX: Messenger had confirmed 548 00:56:18,240 --> 00:56:22,074 the existence of an essential ingredient for life... 549 00:56:24,640 --> 00:56:28,428 ...on the surface of the closest planet to the Sun. 550 00:56:30,880 --> 00:56:34,395 During Messenger‘s final orbit, all the fuel was depleted. 551 00:56:34,520 --> 00:56:36,078 There was nothing that we could do, 552 00:56:36,200 --> 00:56:40,079 and every orbitjust brought it slightly closer to the planet. 553 00:56:40,200 --> 00:56:41,792 One of our engineers realised 554 00:56:41,920 --> 00:56:44,798 that we still had some helium on board the spacecraft, 555 00:56:44,920 --> 00:56:47,639 and if you blew helium out the back, it would work like fuel, 556 00:56:47,760 --> 00:56:50,991 and that managed to extend us for a few extra weeks. 557 00:56:55,520 --> 00:56:58,318 But, of course, all things have to come to an end. 558 00:57:06,560 --> 00:57:09,233 The last day, many of us watched the signal 559 00:57:09,360 --> 00:57:11,396 as it went behind the planet and never came back, 560 00:57:11,520 --> 00:57:12,589 and we knew it had crashed. 561 00:57:12,720 --> 00:57:16,156 And it left us with a real bittersweet feeling 562 00:57:16,280 --> 00:57:20,990 because we were happy at the success but of course sad that it was over. 563 00:57:21,120 --> 00:57:25,033 We all took so much pride in this amazing spacecraft 564 00:57:29,119 --> 00:57:29,240 that lasted way longer than any of us had planned for it to last 565 00:57:29,240 --> 00:57:31,276 and that had told us so much about Mercury 566 00:57:31,400 --> 00:57:34,790 and really changed the way that we looked at this planet. 49246

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