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1
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If you wish to make
an apple pie from scratch...
2
00:02:58,291 --> 00:03:02,387
...you must first invent the universe.
3
00:03:02,596 --> 00:03:04,188
Thank you very much.
4
00:03:05,365 --> 00:03:07,799
Suppose I cut a piece...
5
00:03:08,668 --> 00:03:10,602
...out of this apple pie.
6
00:03:23,283 --> 00:03:25,751
Crumbly, but good.
7
00:03:29,089 --> 00:03:34,026
And now suppose we cut
this piece in half, or more or less.
8
00:03:35,629 --> 00:03:38,496
And then cut this piece in half...
9
00:03:39,099 --> 00:03:41,260
...and keep going.
10
00:03:41,468 --> 00:03:46,132
How many cuts before we get
down to an individual atom?
11
00:03:46,339 --> 00:03:51,038
The answer is about
90 successive cuts.
12
00:03:52,145 --> 00:03:55,478
Of course, this knife isn't
sharp enough...
13
00:03:55,682 --> 00:03:58,150
...the pie is too crumbly...
14
00:03:58,351 --> 00:04:01,752
...and an atom is too small
to see in any case.
15
00:04:01,955 --> 00:04:05,391
But there is a way to do it.
16
00:04:08,028 --> 00:04:12,260
It was here at
Cambridge University in England...
17
00:04:12,465 --> 00:04:15,764
...that the nature of the atom was
first understood...
18
00:04:15,969 --> 00:04:20,338
...in part by shooting pieces
of atoms at atoms...
19
00:04:20,540 --> 00:04:23,703
...and seeing how they bounce off.
20
00:04:23,910 --> 00:04:27,437
A typical atom is surrounded...
21
00:04:27,647 --> 00:04:31,413
...by a kind of cloud of electrons.
22
00:04:31,618 --> 00:04:35,554
The electrons are electrically
charged, as the name suggests...
23
00:04:35,755 --> 00:04:39,122
...and they determine the chemical
properties of the atom.
24
00:04:39,326 --> 00:04:43,387
For example, the glitter of gold...
25
00:04:46,366 --> 00:04:48,300
...or the transparency of the solid...
26
00:04:48,501 --> 00:04:51,527
...that's made from the atoms
silicon and oxygen.
27
00:04:52,806 --> 00:04:55,036
But deep inside the atom...
28
00:04:55,241 --> 00:04:59,302
...hidden far beneath
the outer electron cloud...
29
00:04:59,512 --> 00:05:03,539
...is the nucleus, composed chiefly
of protons and neutrons.
30
00:05:03,750 --> 00:05:06,116
Atoms are very small.
31
00:05:06,319 --> 00:05:10,881
100 million of them, end to end,
would be about so big.
32
00:05:11,091 --> 00:05:15,994
And the nucleus is 100,000 times
smaller still.
33
00:05:16,496 --> 00:05:20,227
Nevertheless, most of the mass
in an atom is in the nucleus.
34
00:05:20,433 --> 00:05:23,493
The electrons are by comparison...
35
00:05:23,703 --> 00:05:26,672
...just bits of moving fluff.
36
00:05:26,873 --> 00:05:30,036
Atoms are mainly empty space.
37
00:05:30,243 --> 00:05:34,304
Matter is composed chiefly
of nothing.
38
00:05:37,217 --> 00:05:40,345
When we consider cutting this
apple pie, but...
39
00:05:40,553 --> 00:05:43,989
...down beyond a single atom...
40
00:05:44,257 --> 00:05:49,092
...we confront an infinity
of the very small.
41
00:05:49,295 --> 00:05:52,264
And when we look up
at the night sky...
42
00:05:52,465 --> 00:05:56,458
...we confront an infinity
of the very large.
43
00:05:56,670 --> 00:06:01,369
These infinities are among the most
awesome of human ideas.
44
00:06:01,574 --> 00:06:06,011
They represent an unending regress
which goes on...
45
00:06:06,413 --> 00:06:10,543
...not just very far, but forever.
46
00:06:10,750 --> 00:06:14,618
Have you ever stood between two
parallel mirrors...
47
00:06:14,821 --> 00:06:16,220
...in a barbershop, say...
48
00:06:16,423 --> 00:06:19,915
...and seen a very large
number of you?
49
00:06:20,126 --> 00:06:23,061
Or you could use...
50
00:06:24,297 --> 00:06:26,765
...two flat mirrors...
51
00:06:27,200 --> 00:06:29,600
...and a candle flame...
52
00:06:29,803 --> 00:06:33,102
...you would see a large number
of images...
53
00:06:33,306 --> 00:06:37,106
...each the reflection
of another image.
54
00:06:39,012 --> 00:06:42,243
You can't really see an infinity
of images...
55
00:06:42,449 --> 00:06:45,782
...because the mirrors aren't
perfectly flat and aligned.
56
00:06:45,985 --> 00:06:49,386
And there's a candle or
a candle flame in the way...
57
00:06:49,589 --> 00:06:52,319
...and light doesn't travel
infinitely fast.
58
00:06:52,525 --> 00:06:54,959
When we talk of real infinities...
59
00:06:55,161 --> 00:06:59,029
...we're talking about a quantity
larger than any number.
60
00:06:59,232 --> 00:07:03,692
No matter what number you have in
mind, infinity is larger.
61
00:07:07,407 --> 00:07:11,707
There's a nice way
to write large numbers.
62
00:07:11,911 --> 00:07:13,310
You can...
63
00:07:14,380 --> 00:07:16,814
...write the number 1000...
64
00:07:17,016 --> 00:07:19,610
...as 10 to the power three...
65
00:07:19,819 --> 00:07:23,755
...meaning, a one
followed by three zeros.
66
00:07:23,957 --> 00:07:28,894
Or a million is written as
10 to the power six...
67
00:07:29,229 --> 00:07:33,996
...meaning, a one
followed by six zeros.
68
00:07:34,734 --> 00:07:38,864
There's no largest number. If anybody
gives you a candidate...
69
00:07:39,072 --> 00:07:41,063
...you can always add the
number one to it.
70
00:07:41,274 --> 00:07:44,209
But there certainly are
very big numbers.
71
00:07:44,410 --> 00:07:49,109
The American mathematician Edward
Kasner once asked his nephew...
72
00:07:49,315 --> 00:07:52,716
...to invent a name for
an extremely large number:
73
00:07:53,419 --> 00:07:56,513
10 to the power 100...
74
00:07:56,723 --> 00:08:01,660
...which I can't write out all the
zeros because there isn't room.
75
00:08:01,861 --> 00:08:06,628
The boy called it a googol.
76
00:08:08,334 --> 00:08:13,135
If you think a googol is large,
consider a googolplex.
77
00:08:13,840 --> 00:08:16,400
It's 10 to the power of a googol.
78
00:08:16,609 --> 00:08:20,067
That is, a one followed, not by
100 zeros...
79
00:08:20,280 --> 00:08:23,443
...but by a googol zeros.
80
00:08:24,517 --> 00:08:26,280
Now, by comparison...
81
00:08:26,486 --> 00:08:29,148
...with these enormous numbers...
82
00:08:29,355 --> 00:08:32,552
...the total number of atoms
in that apple pie...
83
00:08:32,759 --> 00:08:35,728
...is only about 10 to the 26th.
84
00:08:35,929 --> 00:08:38,796
Tiny compared to a googol and...
85
00:08:38,998 --> 00:08:42,559
...of course, much, much less
than a googolplex.
86
00:08:42,769 --> 00:08:44,361
The number
of elementary particles...
87
00:08:44,571 --> 00:08:46,539
...protons, neutrons and electrons...
88
00:08:46,739 --> 00:08:48,434
...in the accessible universe...
89
00:08:48,641 --> 00:08:50,939
...is of the order of 10 to the 80th.
90
00:08:51,144 --> 00:08:53,169
A one followed by 80 zeros.
91
00:08:53,379 --> 00:08:55,438
Still much, much less than a googol...
92
00:08:55,648 --> 00:08:59,243
...and vastly less than a googolplex.
93
00:08:59,452 --> 00:09:04,219
And yet, these numbers, the googol
and the googolplex...
94
00:09:04,424 --> 00:09:09,157
...do not approach, they come
nowhere near infinity.
95
00:09:09,362 --> 00:09:14,197
In fact, a googolplex is precisely
as far from infinity...
96
00:09:14,400 --> 00:09:17,267
...as is the number one.
97
00:09:17,470 --> 00:09:20,701
We started to write out
a googolplex...
98
00:09:20,907 --> 00:09:22,704
...but it wasn't easy.
99
00:09:24,544 --> 00:09:27,172
It's a very big number.
100
00:09:46,532 --> 00:09:50,832
Writing out a googolplex is a
spectacularly futile exercise.
101
00:09:51,437 --> 00:09:55,464
A piece of paper large enough to
contain the zeros in a googolplex...
102
00:09:55,675 --> 00:09:59,873
...couldn't be stuffed into
the known universe.
103
00:10:05,585 --> 00:10:06,552
Fortunately...
104
00:10:08,087 --> 00:10:09,554
...there's a...
105
00:10:10,857 --> 00:10:13,189
...much simpler
and more concise way...
106
00:10:13,393 --> 00:10:15,486
...to write a googolplex.
107
00:10:23,736 --> 00:10:25,135
Like this.
108
00:10:25,338 --> 00:10:27,329
And infinity...
109
00:10:30,510 --> 00:10:32,944
...can be represented like this.
110
00:10:33,513 --> 00:10:37,415
This is the Cavendish Laboratory
at Cambridge University...
111
00:10:37,617 --> 00:10:41,576
...where the constituents of the atom
were first discovered.
112
00:10:41,788 --> 00:10:45,747
The realm of the very small.
113
00:10:47,026 --> 00:10:51,053
From the time of Democritus,
in the fifth century B.C...
114
00:10:51,264 --> 00:10:54,995
...people have speculated
about the existence of atoms.
115
00:10:55,201 --> 00:10:58,568
For the last few hundred years,
there have been persuasive...
116
00:10:58,771 --> 00:11:02,332
...but indirect arguments that all
matter is made of atoms.
117
00:11:02,575 --> 00:11:07,171
But only in our time, have we actually
been able to see them.
118
00:11:07,380 --> 00:11:11,976
Here the red blobs are the random
throbbing motions...
119
00:11:12,452 --> 00:11:13,942
...of uranium atoms...
120
00:11:14,153 --> 00:11:17,145
...magnified 100 million times.
121
00:11:18,424 --> 00:11:22,952
How Democritus of Abdera
would've enjoyed this movie.
122
00:11:27,967 --> 00:11:32,734
We pretty much take atoms for granted.
123
00:11:33,539 --> 00:11:36,531
And yet, there are so
many different kinds...
124
00:11:36,743 --> 00:11:41,146
...lovely and useful at
the same time.
125
00:11:41,347 --> 00:11:42,473
Look.
126
00:12:09,776 --> 00:12:13,803
There are some 92 chemically
distinct kinds of atoms...
127
00:12:14,280 --> 00:12:16,111
...naturally found on Earth.
128
00:12:16,315 --> 00:12:20,081
They're called the chemical elements.
129
00:12:35,635 --> 00:12:38,160
Virtually everything
we see and know...
130
00:12:38,371 --> 00:12:40,771
...all the beauty
of the natural world...
131
00:12:40,973 --> 00:12:44,465
...is made of these
few kinds of atoms...
132
00:12:44,677 --> 00:12:49,046
...arranged in harmonious
chemical patterns.
133
00:13:05,465 --> 00:13:09,162
Here we've represented
all 92 of them.
134
00:13:09,368 --> 00:13:13,702
At room temperature, many of
them are solids.
135
00:13:13,906 --> 00:13:15,601
A few are gases.
136
00:13:15,942 --> 00:13:17,273
And two of them...
137
00:13:18,578 --> 00:13:21,604
...bromine and mercury,
are liquids.
138
00:13:23,282 --> 00:13:27,048
They're arranged in order
of complexity.
139
00:13:27,253 --> 00:13:31,087
Hydrogen, the simplest element,
is element number 1.
140
00:13:31,290 --> 00:13:34,453
And uranium, the most complex...
141
00:13:34,894 --> 00:13:37,294
...is element 92.
142
00:13:40,633 --> 00:13:43,466
Some elements are very familiar.
143
00:13:44,137 --> 00:13:45,365
For example...
144
00:13:45,571 --> 00:13:49,667
...silicon, oxygen, magnesium,
aluminum, iron...
145
00:13:49,876 --> 00:13:51,400
...those that make up the Earth.
146
00:13:51,677 --> 00:13:56,171
Or hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen,
oxygen, phosphorus, sulfur...
147
00:13:56,382 --> 00:13:58,873
...the elements that are
essential for life.
148
00:13:59,085 --> 00:14:03,044
Other elements are
spectacularly unfamiliar.
149
00:14:03,256 --> 00:14:06,225
For example, hafnium.
150
00:14:06,826 --> 00:14:08,225
Erbium.
151
00:14:08,427 --> 00:14:10,327
Dysprosium.
152
00:14:10,930 --> 00:14:13,228
Praseodymium.
153
00:14:13,432 --> 00:14:16,333
Elements we don't bump
into in everyday life.
154
00:14:17,136 --> 00:14:22,073
By and large, the more familiar an
element is, the more abundant it is.
155
00:14:22,375 --> 00:14:24,707
There's a great deal of iron
on the Earth.
156
00:14:24,911 --> 00:14:28,506
Not all that much yttrium.
157
00:14:28,714 --> 00:14:29,942
The fact...
158
00:14:30,149 --> 00:14:33,744
...that atoms are composed of only
three kinds of elementary particles...
159
00:14:33,953 --> 00:14:36,421
...protons, neutrons and electrons...
160
00:14:36,622 --> 00:14:39,022
...is a comparatively recent finding.
161
00:14:39,225 --> 00:14:41,693
The neutron was not discovered
until 1932.
162
00:14:41,894 --> 00:14:46,354
And it, like the electron and
the proton, were discovered here...
163
00:14:46,566 --> 00:14:48,534
...at Cambridge University.
164
00:14:48,734 --> 00:14:52,830
Modern physics and chemistry
have reduced the complexity...
165
00:14:53,039 --> 00:14:57,601
...of the sensible world
to an astonishing simplicity.
166
00:14:57,810 --> 00:15:02,042
Three units, put together
in different patterns...
167
00:15:02,248 --> 00:15:06,184
...make, essentially, everything.
168
00:15:11,624 --> 00:15:15,116
A neutron is electrically neutral...
169
00:15:15,328 --> 00:15:17,819
...as its name suggests.
170
00:15:18,397 --> 00:15:22,231
A proton has a positive
electrical charge...
171
00:15:22,802 --> 00:15:27,068
...and an electron an equal,
negative electrical charge.
172
00:15:27,273 --> 00:15:29,798
Since every atom is
electrically neutral...
173
00:15:30,009 --> 00:15:32,239
...the number of protons
in the nucleus...
174
00:15:32,511 --> 00:15:36,572
...must equal the number of electrons
far away in the electron cloud.
175
00:15:36,782 --> 00:15:40,843
The protons and neutrons, together,
make up the nucleus of the atom.
176
00:15:41,921 --> 00:15:46,858
Now, the chemistry of an atom,
the nature of a chemical element...
177
00:15:47,059 --> 00:15:49,289
...depends only on the number
of electrons...
178
00:15:49,495 --> 00:15:53,090
...which equals the number of protons,
which is called the atomic number.
179
00:15:53,299 --> 00:15:55,597
Chemistry is just numbers.
180
00:15:55,801 --> 00:15:58,895
An idea which would have
appealed to Pythagoras.
181
00:15:59,105 --> 00:16:00,504
If you're an atom...
182
00:16:00,706 --> 00:16:03,903
...and you have just one proton...
183
00:16:04,110 --> 00:16:05,577
...you're hydrogen.
184
00:16:05,778 --> 00:16:07,973
Two protons, helium.
185
00:16:08,180 --> 00:16:10,011
Three, lithium.
186
00:16:10,216 --> 00:16:12,980
Four, beryllium.
Five protons, boron.
187
00:16:13,185 --> 00:16:17,747
Six, carbon, and seven, nitrogen.
Eight, oxygen, and so on.
188
00:16:17,957 --> 00:16:20,687
All the way to 92 protons...
189
00:16:20,893 --> 00:16:23,885
...in which case your name is uranium.
190
00:16:24,497 --> 00:16:27,625
Protons have positive
electrical charges...
191
00:16:27,833 --> 00:16:31,030
...but like charges repel each other.
192
00:16:31,237 --> 00:16:33,637
So why does the nucleus hold together?
193
00:16:33,839 --> 00:16:37,070
Why don't the electrical
repulsion of the protons...
194
00:16:37,276 --> 00:16:39,210
...make the nucleus fly to pieces?
195
00:16:39,812 --> 00:16:42,337
Because there's another
force in nature.
196
00:16:42,548 --> 00:16:45,108
Not electricity, not gravity...
197
00:16:45,318 --> 00:16:46,751
...the nuclear force.
198
00:16:46,952 --> 00:16:49,853
We can think of it as short-range...
199
00:16:50,056 --> 00:16:52,456
...hooks which start working...
200
00:16:52,658 --> 00:16:56,185
...when protons or neutrons
are brought very close together.
201
00:16:56,395 --> 00:16:58,886
The nuclear force can overcome...
202
00:16:59,632 --> 00:17:02,192
...the electrical repulsion of the
protons.
203
00:17:02,401 --> 00:17:05,461
Since the neutrons exert
nuclear forces...
204
00:17:05,971 --> 00:17:07,632
...but not electrical forces...
205
00:17:07,840 --> 00:17:12,334
...they are a kind of glue which holds
the atomic nucleus together.
206
00:17:13,879 --> 00:17:18,407
A lump of two protons
and two neutrons...
207
00:17:18,617 --> 00:17:20,517
...is the nucleus of a helium atom...
208
00:17:20,720 --> 00:17:23,188
...and is very stable.
209
00:17:23,389 --> 00:17:27,883
Three helium nuclei, stuck together by
nuclear forces...
210
00:17:28,094 --> 00:17:29,925
...makes carbon.
211
00:17:30,129 --> 00:17:33,530
Four helium nuclei makes oxygen.
212
00:17:33,733 --> 00:17:36,600
There's no difference between
four helium nuclei...
213
00:17:36,836 --> 00:17:39,396
...stuck together by nuclear forces
and the oxygen nucleus.
214
00:17:39,605 --> 00:17:41,095
They're the same thing.
215
00:17:41,474 --> 00:17:44,773
Five helium nuclei makes neon.
216
00:17:44,977 --> 00:17:47,377
Six makes magnesium.
217
00:17:47,580 --> 00:17:51,243
Seven makes silicon.
218
00:17:51,450 --> 00:17:54,010
Eight makes sulfur, and so on.
219
00:17:54,220 --> 00:17:56,620
Increasing the atomic
numbers by two...
220
00:17:56,822 --> 00:17:59,689
...and always making
some familiar element.
221
00:17:59,892 --> 00:18:00,824
Every time...
222
00:18:01,794 --> 00:18:03,819
...we add or subtract one proton...
223
00:18:04,029 --> 00:18:06,725
...and enough neutrons
to keep the nucleus together...
224
00:18:06,932 --> 00:18:09,400
...we make a new chemical element.
225
00:18:09,602 --> 00:18:12,366
Consider mercury:
226
00:18:12,571 --> 00:18:16,337
If we subtract one proton
from mercury...
227
00:18:16,542 --> 00:18:20,740
...and three neutrons,
we convert it into gold.
228
00:18:20,946 --> 00:18:25,042
The dream of the ancient alchemists.
229
00:18:26,051 --> 00:18:29,919
Beyond element 92, beyond uranium...
230
00:18:30,122 --> 00:18:32,590
...there are other elements.
231
00:18:32,792 --> 00:18:34,953
They don't occur naturally
on the Earth.
232
00:18:35,161 --> 00:18:37,595
They're synthesized by
human beings and...
233
00:18:37,797 --> 00:18:40,425
...fall to pieces pretty rapidly.
234
00:18:40,633 --> 00:18:44,262
One of them, element 94,
is called plutonium...
235
00:18:44,470 --> 00:18:48,201
...and is one of the most
toxic substances known.
236
00:18:48,407 --> 00:18:52,844
Where do the naturally occurring
chemical elements come from?
237
00:18:53,045 --> 00:18:57,482
Perhaps a separate creation
for each element?
238
00:18:57,683 --> 00:19:00,550
But all the elements are made of the
same elementary particles.
239
00:19:00,753 --> 00:19:03,745
The universe, all of it,
everywhere...
240
00:19:03,956 --> 00:19:07,357
...is 99.9% hydrogen and helium.
241
00:19:07,593 --> 00:19:09,458
The two simplest elements.
242
00:19:09,662 --> 00:19:10,856
In fact, helium...
243
00:19:11,297 --> 00:19:15,199
...was detected on the sun before it
was ever found on the Earth.
244
00:19:15,401 --> 00:19:19,201
Might the other chemical elements
have somehow...
245
00:19:19,405 --> 00:19:23,364
...evolved from hydrogen
and helium?
246
00:19:23,576 --> 00:19:25,942
To avoid the electrical repulsion...
247
00:19:26,645 --> 00:19:31,105
...protons and neutrons must be brought
very close together so the hooks...
248
00:19:31,317 --> 00:19:33,080
...which represent nuclear forces...
249
00:19:33,285 --> 00:19:34,650
...are engaged.
250
00:19:34,854 --> 00:19:37,982
This happens only at very high
temperatures, where particles...
251
00:19:38,190 --> 00:19:42,854
...move so fast that there's no
time for electrical repulsion to act.
252
00:19:43,128 --> 00:19:48,065
Temperatures of tens of
millions of degrees.
253
00:19:48,334 --> 00:19:51,735
Such high temperatures are
common in nature.
254
00:19:51,937 --> 00:19:53,234
Where?
255
00:19:53,439 --> 00:19:56,374
In the insides of the stars.
256
00:20:11,790 --> 00:20:15,556
Atoms are made in the
insides of stars.
257
00:20:15,761 --> 00:20:20,198
In most of the stars we see, hydrogen
nuclei are being jammed together...
258
00:20:20,399 --> 00:20:21,957
...to form helium nuclei.
259
00:20:22,368 --> 00:20:26,896
Every time a nucleus of helium is made,
a photon of light is generated.
260
00:20:27,873 --> 00:20:31,331
This is why the stars shine.
261
00:20:38,851 --> 00:20:42,844
Stars are born in great
clouds of gas and dust.
262
00:20:43,055 --> 00:20:46,786
Like the Orion Nebula,
1500 light-years away...
263
00:20:46,992 --> 00:20:50,985
...parts of which
are collapsing under gravity.
264
00:20:58,637 --> 00:21:03,040
Collisions among the atoms heat
the cloud until, in its interior...
265
00:21:03,242 --> 00:21:05,904
...hydrogen begins to fuse
into helium...
266
00:21:06,111 --> 00:21:08,909
...and the stars turn on.
267
00:21:15,020 --> 00:21:17,716
Stars are born in batches.
268
00:21:17,923 --> 00:21:20,323
Later, they wander out
of their nursery...
269
00:21:20,526 --> 00:21:23,154
...to pursue their destiny
in the Milky Way.
270
00:21:23,362 --> 00:21:26,195
Adolescent stars, like the Pleiades...
271
00:21:26,398 --> 00:21:29,162
...are still surrounded
by gas and dust.
272
00:21:29,368 --> 00:21:33,828
Eventually, they journey
far from home.
273
00:21:37,643 --> 00:21:42,580
Somewhere there are stars formed from
the same cloud complex as the sun...
274
00:21:42,948 --> 00:21:45,109
...5 billion years ago.
275
00:21:45,317 --> 00:21:47,877
But we do not know which
stars they are.
276
00:21:48,087 --> 00:21:49,987
The siblings of the sun...
277
00:21:50,322 --> 00:21:55,055
...may, for all we know, be on the
other side of the galaxy.
278
00:21:56,662 --> 00:22:01,599
Perhaps they also warm nearby
planets as the sun does.
279
00:22:04,203 --> 00:22:07,104
Perhaps they too have presided...
280
00:22:07,306 --> 00:22:11,208
...over the evolution
of life and intelligence.
281
00:22:32,765 --> 00:22:37,498
The sun is the nearest star,
a glowing sphere of gas...
282
00:22:38,003 --> 00:22:42,030
...shining because of its heat,
like a red-hot poker.
283
00:22:46,378 --> 00:22:51,315
The surface we see in ordinary visible
light is at 6000 degrees centigrade.
284
00:22:51,550 --> 00:22:53,347
But in its hidden interior...
285
00:22:54,086 --> 00:22:57,544
...in the nuclear furnace where
sunlight is ultimately generated...
286
00:22:57,756 --> 00:23:01,351
...its temperature is
20 million degrees.
287
00:23:09,735 --> 00:23:10,724
In x-rays...
288
00:23:10,936 --> 00:23:14,667
...we see a part of the sun
that is ordinarily invisible...
289
00:23:14,873 --> 00:23:17,501
...its million-degree halo of gas...
290
00:23:17,710 --> 00:23:19,803
...the solar corona.
291
00:23:20,245 --> 00:23:23,339
In ordinary visible light, these
cooler, darker regions...
292
00:23:23,549 --> 00:23:25,449
...are the sunspots.
293
00:23:28,187 --> 00:23:32,647
They are associated with
great surges of flaming gas...
294
00:23:32,858 --> 00:23:37,227
...tongues of fire which would engulf
the Earth if it were this close.
295
00:23:37,563 --> 00:23:41,329
These prominences are guided
into paths determined...
296
00:23:41,533 --> 00:23:43,763
...by the sun's magnetic field.
297
00:23:56,415 --> 00:23:58,645
The dark regions of the x-ray sun...
298
00:23:58,851 --> 00:24:01,547
...are holes in the solar corona...
299
00:24:01,754 --> 00:24:05,747
...through which stream the protons
and electrons of the solar wind...
300
00:24:05,958 --> 00:24:10,156
...on their way past the planets
to interstellar space.
301
00:24:12,664 --> 00:24:17,363
All this churning power is driven
by the sun's interior...
302
00:24:17,569 --> 00:24:21,471
...which is converting 400 million
tons of hydrogen into helium...
303
00:24:21,673 --> 00:24:23,197
...every second.
304
00:24:23,408 --> 00:24:27,003
The sun is a great fusion reactor...
305
00:24:27,246 --> 00:24:29,714
...into which a million Earths
would fit.
306
00:24:29,915 --> 00:24:33,043
Luckily for us, it's safely placed...
307
00:24:33,252 --> 00:24:36,779
...150 million kilometers away.
308
00:24:53,305 --> 00:24:57,207
It is the destiny of stars
to collapse.
309
00:24:58,310 --> 00:25:01,711
Of the thousands of stars you see
when you look up at the night sky...
310
00:25:01,914 --> 00:25:06,544
...every one of them is living in
an interval between two collapses.
311
00:25:06,752 --> 00:25:08,242
An initial collapse of...
312
00:25:08,453 --> 00:25:11,945
...a dark interstellar gas cloud
to form the star...
313
00:25:12,157 --> 00:25:14,625
...and a final collapse
of the luminous star...
314
00:25:14,827 --> 00:25:16,590
...on the way to its ultimate fate.
315
00:25:17,062 --> 00:25:21,999
Gravity makes stars contract unless
some other force intervenes.
316
00:25:22,401 --> 00:25:25,302
The sun is an immense ball
of radiating hydrogen.
317
00:25:25,504 --> 00:25:29,804
The hot gas in its interior tries
to make the sun expand.
318
00:25:30,008 --> 00:25:33,409
The gravity tries to make
the sun contract.
319
00:25:33,645 --> 00:25:36,876
The present state of the sun is
the balance of these two forces...
320
00:25:37,082 --> 00:25:41,644
...an equilibrium between
gravity and nuclear fire.
321
00:25:42,321 --> 00:25:44,983
In this long middle age
between collapses...
322
00:25:45,190 --> 00:25:47,886
...the stars steadily shine.
323
00:25:48,093 --> 00:25:51,927
But when the nuclear fuel is exhausted,
the interior cools...
324
00:25:52,130 --> 00:25:54,928
...the pressure no longer supports
its outer layers...
325
00:25:55,133 --> 00:25:57,294
...and the initial collapse resumes.
326
00:25:58,103 --> 00:26:00,401
There are three ways that stars die.
327
00:26:00,606 --> 00:26:03,040
Their fates are predestined.
328
00:26:03,242 --> 00:26:05,176
Everything depends on their
initial mass.
329
00:26:05,377 --> 00:26:07,971
A typical star with a mass
like the sun...
330
00:26:08,180 --> 00:26:10,774
...will one day
continue its collapse...
331
00:26:10,983 --> 00:26:13,884
...until its density becomes very high.
332
00:26:14,086 --> 00:26:15,815
And then the contraction is stopped...
333
00:26:16,021 --> 00:26:17,886
...by the mutual repulsion of...
334
00:26:18,090 --> 00:26:21,355
...the overcrowded electrons
in its interior.
335
00:26:21,560 --> 00:26:24,324
A collapsing star twice as
massive as the sun...
336
00:26:24,529 --> 00:26:27,054
...isn't stopped by the
electron pressure.
337
00:26:27,266 --> 00:26:29,632
It goes on falling in on itself...
338
00:26:29,835 --> 00:26:32,531
...until nuclear forces
come into play...
339
00:26:32,738 --> 00:26:35,832
...and they hold up the
weight of the star.
340
00:26:36,041 --> 00:26:39,204
But a collapsing star three times as
massive as the sun isn't...
341
00:26:39,411 --> 00:26:41,470
...stopped even by nuclear forces.
342
00:26:41,680 --> 00:26:46,617
There's no force known that can
withstand this enormous compression.
343
00:26:46,852 --> 00:26:49,912
And such a star has
an astonishing destiny.
344
00:26:50,122 --> 00:26:51,851
It continues to collapse...
345
00:26:52,124 --> 00:26:54,854
...until it vanishes utterly.
346
00:26:56,094 --> 00:27:00,554
Each star is described by the force
that holds it up against gravity.
347
00:27:00,766 --> 00:27:04,202
A star that's supported by
the gas pressure...
348
00:27:04,403 --> 00:27:08,100
...is a normal, run-of-the-mill star
like the sun.
349
00:27:08,307 --> 00:27:12,004
A collapsed star that's held up
by electron forces...
350
00:27:12,210 --> 00:27:13,837
...is called a white dwarf.
351
00:27:14,046 --> 00:27:17,880
It's a sun shrunk to
the size of the Earth.
352
00:27:18,083 --> 00:27:21,450
A collapsed star supported
by nuclear forces...
353
00:27:21,653 --> 00:27:23,518
...is called a neutron star.
354
00:27:23,722 --> 00:27:27,249
It's a sun shrunk to
the size of a city.
355
00:27:27,459 --> 00:27:30,394
And a star so massive that
in its final collapse...
356
00:27:30,595 --> 00:27:32,290
...it disappears altogether...
357
00:27:32,497 --> 00:27:34,158
...is called a black hole.
358
00:27:34,366 --> 00:27:37,358
It's a sun with no size at all.
359
00:27:38,036 --> 00:27:40,732
But on their ways to their
separate fates...
360
00:27:40,939 --> 00:27:45,603
...all stars experience
a premonition of death.
361
00:27:45,811 --> 00:27:48,279
Before the final
gravitational collapse...
362
00:27:48,480 --> 00:27:53,315
...the star shudders and
briefly swells into some...
363
00:27:53,785 --> 00:27:56,219
...grotesque parody of itself.
364
00:27:56,421 --> 00:28:00,790
With its last gasp,
it becomes a red giant.
365
00:28:04,529 --> 00:28:07,020
Some 5 billion years from now...
366
00:28:07,232 --> 00:28:11,635
...there will be a last,
perfect day on Earth.
367
00:28:14,639 --> 00:28:18,166
Then, the sun will slowly change...
368
00:28:18,377 --> 00:28:21,403
...and the Earth will die.
369
00:28:24,549 --> 00:28:27,450
There is only so much
hydrogen fuel in the sun.
370
00:28:27,652 --> 00:28:30,052
When it's almost all
converted to helium...
371
00:28:30,255 --> 00:28:33,918
...the solar interior will continue
its original collapse.
372
00:28:34,126 --> 00:28:38,586
Higher temperatures in its core will
make the outside of the sun expand...
373
00:28:38,830 --> 00:28:42,288
...and the Earth will
become slowly warmer.
374
00:28:42,534 --> 00:28:45,799
Eventually, life will be
extinguished...
375
00:28:46,171 --> 00:28:49,106
...the oceans will evaporate
and boil...
376
00:28:49,307 --> 00:28:53,334
...and our atmosphere will
gush away to space.
377
00:28:56,148 --> 00:28:59,948
The sun will become a bloated
red giant star...
378
00:29:00,152 --> 00:29:01,676
...filling the sky...
379
00:29:01,920 --> 00:29:06,084
...enveloping and devouring
the planets Mercury and Venus.
380
00:29:06,291 --> 00:29:09,351
And probably the Earth as well.
381
00:29:09,561 --> 00:29:14,498
The inner solar system will
reside inside the sun.
382
00:29:17,736 --> 00:29:20,603
But perhaps by then, our
descendants...
383
00:29:20,806 --> 00:29:23,366
...will have ventured somewhere else.
384
00:29:27,479 --> 00:29:31,882
In its final agonies, the sun
will slowly pulsate.
385
00:29:32,084 --> 00:29:34,985
By then, its core will have
become so hot...
386
00:29:35,187 --> 00:29:38,623
...that it temporarily converts
helium into carbon.
387
00:29:38,824 --> 00:29:42,726
The ash from today's nuclear fusion
will become the fuel...
388
00:29:43,028 --> 00:29:47,897
...to power the sun near the end of
its life in its red giant stage.
389
00:29:49,701 --> 00:29:52,534
Then the sun will lose
great shells...
390
00:29:53,071 --> 00:29:55,266
...of its outer atmosphere to space...
391
00:29:55,474 --> 00:29:58,875
...filling the solar system
with eerily glowing gas.
392
00:29:59,077 --> 00:30:02,137
The ghost of a star, outward bound.
393
00:30:02,347 --> 00:30:05,839
Perhaps half the mass of the sun
will be lost in this way.
394
00:30:07,786 --> 00:30:11,085
Viewed from elsewhere, our system
will then resemble...
395
00:30:11,289 --> 00:30:13,416
...the Ring Nebula in Lyra...
396
00:30:13,625 --> 00:30:18,255
...the atmosphere of the sun
expanding outward like a soap bubble.
397
00:30:19,131 --> 00:30:22,362
And at the very center will be
a white dwarf.
398
00:30:22,601 --> 00:30:25,069
The hot exposed core of the sun...
399
00:30:25,270 --> 00:30:28,831
...its nuclear fuel now
exhausted, slowly cooling...
400
00:30:29,074 --> 00:30:32,510
...to become a cold, dead star.
401
00:30:35,514 --> 00:30:38,142
Such is the life of an ordinary star.
402
00:30:38,350 --> 00:30:41,547
Born in a gas cloud,
maturing as a yellow sun...
403
00:30:41,753 --> 00:30:43,584
...decaying as a red giant...
404
00:30:43,788 --> 00:30:48,725
...and dying as a white dwarf
enveloped in its shroud of gas.
405
00:30:57,769 --> 00:31:00,863
Suppose, as we traveled through
interstellar space...
406
00:31:01,072 --> 00:31:02,903
...in our ship of the imagination...
407
00:31:03,108 --> 00:31:07,477
...we could sample the cold,
thin gas between the stars.
408
00:31:07,679 --> 00:31:10,671
We would find a great
preponderance of hydrogen...
409
00:31:10,882 --> 00:31:13,442
...an element as old as the universe.
410
00:31:13,652 --> 00:31:16,348
We would find carbon,
oxygen, silicon.
411
00:31:16,555 --> 00:31:19,649
The most abundant atoms in the
cosmos, apart from hydrogen...
412
00:31:19,858 --> 00:31:23,294
...are those most easily made
in the stars.
413
00:31:23,495 --> 00:31:26,896
But we would also find
a small proportion of rare elements.
414
00:31:27,098 --> 00:31:29,896
Praseodymium, say, or gold.
415
00:31:30,101 --> 00:31:32,262
They're not made in red giants.
416
00:31:32,470 --> 00:31:37,100
Such elements are manufactured in
one of the most dramatic gestures...
417
00:31:37,342 --> 00:31:39,833
...of which a star is capable.
418
00:31:40,979 --> 00:31:44,244
A star more than about one and
a half times the mass of the sun...
419
00:31:44,649 --> 00:31:46,276
...cannot become a white dwarf.
420
00:31:46,484 --> 00:31:49,453
It will end its life by
blowing itself up...
421
00:31:49,654 --> 00:31:54,114
...in a titanic stellar explosion
called a supernova.
422
00:31:55,660 --> 00:31:59,323
There has been no supernova explosion
in our province of the galaxy...
423
00:31:59,698 --> 00:32:01,427
...since the telescope's invention...
424
00:32:01,633 --> 00:32:04,534
...and our sun will not
become a supernova.
425
00:32:04,736 --> 00:32:06,363
But in our imagination...
426
00:32:06,905 --> 00:32:10,204
...we can fulfill the dream of many
earthbound astronomers...
427
00:32:10,642 --> 00:32:15,375
...and safely witness, close-up,
a supernova explosion.
428
00:32:19,751 --> 00:32:23,653
Most of stellar evolution takes
millions or billions of years.
429
00:32:23,888 --> 00:32:27,415
But the interior collapse that
triggers a supernova explosion...
430
00:32:27,659 --> 00:32:29,092
...takes only seconds.
431
00:32:29,461 --> 00:32:33,454
The star becomes brighter than
all the other stars in the galaxy...
432
00:32:33,665 --> 00:32:35,064
...put together.
433
00:33:10,769 --> 00:33:13,033
If a nearby star became
a supernova...
434
00:33:13,238 --> 00:33:17,971
...it would be calamity enough for
the inhabitants of this alien system.
435
00:33:18,176 --> 00:33:20,576
But if their own sun went supernova...
436
00:33:20,779 --> 00:33:24,112
...it would be
an unprecedented catastrophe.
437
00:33:24,316 --> 00:33:26,750
Worlds would be charred and vaporized.
438
00:33:26,951 --> 00:33:31,411
Life, even on the outer planets,
would be extinguished.
439
00:33:31,623 --> 00:33:35,821
In our ship of the imagination, we
are now backing away from the star.
440
00:33:36,027 --> 00:33:37,688
But the explosion fragments...
441
00:33:37,896 --> 00:33:41,388
...traveling almost at the speed
of light, are overtaking us.
442
00:33:41,599 --> 00:33:46,195
Individual atomic nuclei, accelerated
to high speeds in the explosion...
443
00:33:46,404 --> 00:33:48,338
...become cosmic rays.
444
00:33:48,540 --> 00:33:52,806
This is another way that stars return
the atoms they've synthesized...
445
00:33:53,011 --> 00:33:54,876
...back into space.
446
00:33:55,647 --> 00:33:57,706
The shock wave
of expanding gases...
447
00:33:57,916 --> 00:34:00,441
...heats and compresses
the interstellar gas...
448
00:34:00,652 --> 00:34:03,644
...triggering a later generation
of stars to form.
449
00:34:03,855 --> 00:34:05,186
In this sense also...
450
00:34:05,390 --> 00:34:09,793
...stars are phoenixes
rising from their own ashes.
451
00:34:14,632 --> 00:34:18,466
The cosmos was originally
all hydrogen and helium.
452
00:34:18,703 --> 00:34:22,070
Heavier elements were made
in red giants and in supernovas...
453
00:34:22,273 --> 00:34:24,264
...and then blown off to space...
454
00:34:24,476 --> 00:34:27,206
...where they were available
for subsequent generations...
455
00:34:27,412 --> 00:34:29,039
...of stars and planets.
456
00:34:29,247 --> 00:34:33,013
Our sun is probably a
third-generation star.
457
00:34:33,218 --> 00:34:34,845
Except for hydrogen and helium...
458
00:34:35,053 --> 00:34:39,990
...every atom in the sun and the Earth
was synthesized in other stars.
459
00:34:40,258 --> 00:34:44,786
The silicon in the rocks, the oxygen
in the air, the carbon in our DNA...
460
00:34:44,996 --> 00:34:48,762
...the gold in our banks, the
uranium in our arsenals...
461
00:34:48,967 --> 00:34:52,562
...were all made thousands
of light-years away...
462
00:34:52,771 --> 00:34:54,636
...and billions of years ago.
463
00:34:54,839 --> 00:34:59,173
Our planet, our society
and we ourselves...
464
00:34:59,377 --> 00:35:02,642
...are built of star stuff.
465
00:35:07,652 --> 00:35:10,621
We're in a lava tube.
466
00:35:11,389 --> 00:35:15,723
A cave carved through the Earth...
467
00:35:15,927 --> 00:35:18,487
...by a river of molten rock.
468
00:35:19,497 --> 00:35:21,556
To do a little experiment...
469
00:35:22,567 --> 00:35:25,968
...we've brought a Geiger counter...
470
00:35:29,007 --> 00:35:32,602
...and a piece of uranium ore.
471
00:35:33,344 --> 00:35:38,281
The Geiger counter is sensitive to
high-energy charged particles...
472
00:35:38,650 --> 00:35:42,313
...protons, helium nuclei, gamma rays.
473
00:35:42,587 --> 00:35:45,988
If we bring it close
to the uranium ore...
474
00:35:46,191 --> 00:35:50,753
...the count rate, the number of
clicks, increases dramatically.
475
00:35:53,431 --> 00:35:55,729
We also have a lead canister here.
476
00:35:56,301 --> 00:35:58,861
And if I drop the uranium ore...
477
00:35:59,404 --> 00:36:04,103
...into the canister, which absorbs
the radiation, and cover it up...
478
00:36:06,478 --> 00:36:09,675
...I then find the count-rate
goes down substantially...
479
00:36:09,881 --> 00:36:11,576
...but it doesn't go down to zero.
480
00:36:12,784 --> 00:36:15,878
What's the source of the
remaining counts?
481
00:36:16,988 --> 00:36:21,448
Some of them come from radioactivity
in the walls of the cave.
482
00:36:21,659 --> 00:36:23,854
But there's more to it than that.
483
00:36:24,062 --> 00:36:27,498
Some of the counts are due to
high-energy charged particles...
484
00:36:27,699 --> 00:36:31,760
...which are penetrating the
roof of the cave.
485
00:36:31,970 --> 00:36:35,098
We are listening to cosmic rays.
486
00:36:36,274 --> 00:36:40,734
Every second they are penetrating
my body...
487
00:36:40,945 --> 00:36:42,207
...and yours.
488
00:36:42,413 --> 00:36:45,678
They don't do much damage. Cosmic
rays have bombarded the Earth...
489
00:36:45,917 --> 00:36:48,511
...for the entire history of
life on our planet.
490
00:36:48,720 --> 00:36:51,314
But they do cause some mutations...
491
00:36:51,523 --> 00:36:54,356
...and they do affect life
on the Earth.
492
00:36:56,494 --> 00:36:59,486
The cosmic rays, mainly protons...
493
00:36:59,697 --> 00:37:04,634
...are penetrating through the meters
of rock in the cave above me.
494
00:37:04,836 --> 00:37:07,532
To do this, they have to
be very energetic and in fact...
495
00:37:07,906 --> 00:37:10,966
...they are traveling almost
at the speed of light.
496
00:37:11,776 --> 00:37:13,175
Think of it.
497
00:37:13,645 --> 00:37:16,113
A star blows up...
498
00:37:16,447 --> 00:37:18,938
...thousands of light-years
away in space...
499
00:37:19,150 --> 00:37:21,948
...and produces cosmic rays which...
500
00:37:22,153 --> 00:37:25,418
...spiral through the Milky Way
galaxy for...
501
00:37:25,623 --> 00:37:28,649
...millions of years until,
quite by accident...
502
00:37:28,860 --> 00:37:31,624
...some of them strike the Earth...
503
00:37:31,829 --> 00:37:35,731
...penetrate this cave,
reach this Geiger counter...
504
00:37:36,000 --> 00:37:37,365
...and us.
505
00:37:37,735 --> 00:37:42,604
The evolution of life on Earth is
driven in part through mutations...
506
00:37:42,807 --> 00:37:45,901
...by the deaths of distant stars.
507
00:37:46,110 --> 00:37:48,908
We are, in a very deep sense...
508
00:37:49,147 --> 00:37:51,877
...tied to the cosmos.
509
00:37:54,552 --> 00:37:57,487
Our ancestors knew this well.
510
00:37:57,689 --> 00:38:00,351
The movements of the sun, the moon,
and the stars...
511
00:38:00,558 --> 00:38:05,154
...could be used by those skilled in
such arts to foretell the seasons.
512
00:38:05,363 --> 00:38:08,298
So the ancient astronomers
all over the world...
513
00:38:08,499 --> 00:38:10,592
...studied the night sky with care...
514
00:38:10,802 --> 00:38:14,863
...memorizing and recording the
position of every visible star.
515
00:38:15,073 --> 00:38:19,476
To them, the appearance of any new
star would have been significant.
516
00:38:19,677 --> 00:38:24,114
What would they have made of the
apparition of a supernova...
517
00:38:24,315 --> 00:38:27,807
...brighter than every other
star in the sky?
518
00:38:34,192 --> 00:38:38,856
On July 4th, in the year 1054...
519
00:38:39,063 --> 00:38:44,000
...Chinese astronomers recorded what
they called a guest star...
520
00:38:44,202 --> 00:38:46,295
...in the constellation of
Taurus the Bull.
521
00:38:46,504 --> 00:38:50,634
A star never before seen
burst into radiance...
522
00:38:50,842 --> 00:38:53,970
...became almost as bright
as the full moon.
523
00:38:54,178 --> 00:38:58,615
Halfway around the world, here in
the American Southwest...
524
00:38:58,816 --> 00:39:03,515
...there was then a high culture,
rich in astronomical tradition.
525
00:39:03,721 --> 00:39:07,953
They too must have seen this
brilliant new star.
526
00:39:08,159 --> 00:39:11,526
From carbon-14 dating...
527
00:39:11,763 --> 00:39:16,223
...of the remains of a charcoal fire,
we know that in this very spot...
528
00:39:16,434 --> 00:39:20,063
...there were people living
in the 11th century.
529
00:39:20,805 --> 00:39:25,742
The people were the Anasazi, the
antecedents of the Hopi of today.
530
00:39:26,244 --> 00:39:29,145
And one of them
seems to have drawn...
531
00:39:29,414 --> 00:39:32,747
...on this overhang, protected
from the weather...
532
00:39:32,950 --> 00:39:34,941
...a picture of the new star.
533
00:39:35,153 --> 00:39:39,590
Its position near the crescent moon
would have been just what we see here.
534
00:39:39,791 --> 00:39:42,692
And the handprint is, perhaps...
535
00:39:42,894 --> 00:39:45,624
...the artist's signature.
536
00:39:46,330 --> 00:39:50,790
This remarkable star is now
called the Crab Supernova.
537
00:39:51,002 --> 00:39:54,096
"Nova" from the Latin word for new
and "Crab" because...
538
00:39:54,305 --> 00:39:57,502
...that's what an astronomer centuries
later was reminded of...
539
00:39:57,709 --> 00:40:01,509
...when looking at this explosion or
remnant through the telescope.
540
00:40:01,713 --> 00:40:05,706
The Crab is a star that
blew itself up.
541
00:40:05,917 --> 00:40:08,681
The explosion was seen
for three months.
542
00:40:08,886 --> 00:40:12,754
It was easily visible
in broad daylight.
543
00:40:12,957 --> 00:40:15,824
And you could read by it at night.
544
00:40:17,962 --> 00:40:20,089
Imagine the night when that...
545
00:40:20,298 --> 00:40:22,926
...colossal stellar explosion...
546
00:40:23,134 --> 00:40:25,728
...first burst forth.
547
00:40:34,912 --> 00:40:36,311
A thousand years ago...
548
00:40:36,547 --> 00:40:40,074
...people gazed up in amazement
at the brilliant new star...
549
00:40:40,284 --> 00:40:42,718
...and wondered what it was.
550
00:40:46,758 --> 00:40:50,353
We are the first generation
privileged to know the answer.
551
00:40:50,561 --> 00:40:53,826
Through the telescope we have seen
what lies today...
552
00:40:54,031 --> 00:40:57,262
...at the spot in the sky noted
by the ancient astronomers.
553
00:40:57,468 --> 00:41:01,063
A great luminous cloud,
the remains of a star...
554
00:41:01,272 --> 00:41:06,209
...violently unraveling itself back
into interstellar space.
555
00:41:11,549 --> 00:41:14,882
Only the massive red giants
become supernovas.
556
00:41:15,086 --> 00:41:18,180
But every supernova was
once a red giant.
557
00:41:18,389 --> 00:41:19,651
In the history of the galaxy...
558
00:41:19,857 --> 00:41:23,953
...hundreds of millions of red
giants have become supernovas.
559
00:41:26,631 --> 00:41:30,294
The bit of the star that isn't blown
away collapses under gravity...
560
00:41:30,501 --> 00:41:33,766
...spinning ever faster like a
pirouetting ice skater...
561
00:41:33,971 --> 00:41:35,302
...bringing in her arms.
562
00:41:35,506 --> 00:41:38,907
The star becomes a single, massive
atomic nucleus...
563
00:41:39,110 --> 00:41:40,771
...a neutron star.
564
00:41:40,978 --> 00:41:44,209
The one in the Crab Nebula
is spinning 30 times a second.
565
00:41:44,415 --> 00:41:46,474
It emits a beamed pattern of light...
566
00:41:46,684 --> 00:41:50,518
...and seems to us to be blinking on
and off with astonishing regularity.
567
00:41:50,721 --> 00:41:54,452
Such neutron stars are
called pulsars.
568
00:41:56,093 --> 00:41:58,118
Neutron star matter...
569
00:41:58,329 --> 00:42:02,231
...weighs about a mountain
per teaspoonful.
570
00:42:02,433 --> 00:42:05,869
So much that if I had a piece of it
here and let it go...
571
00:42:06,070 --> 00:42:08,436
...I could hardly
prevent it from falling.
572
00:42:08,639 --> 00:42:11,574
It would effortlessly pass through the
Earth like a...
573
00:42:11,776 --> 00:42:14,142
...a knife through warm butter.
574
00:42:14,345 --> 00:42:17,746
It would carve a hole for itself
completely through the Earth...
575
00:42:17,949 --> 00:42:21,976
...emerging out the other side
perhaps in China.
576
00:42:22,186 --> 00:42:25,815
The people there might be
walking along when a...
577
00:42:26,023 --> 00:42:30,824
...tiny lump of neutron star matter
comes booming out of the ground...
578
00:42:31,028 --> 00:42:32,655
...and then falls back again.
579
00:42:32,864 --> 00:42:34,297
The incident might...
580
00:42:34,532 --> 00:42:38,195
...make an agreeable break in the
routine of the day.
581
00:42:38,402 --> 00:42:41,803
The neutron star matter, pulled
back by the Earth's gravity...
582
00:42:42,006 --> 00:42:44,474
...would plunge again
through the Earth...
583
00:42:44,675 --> 00:42:49,078
...eventually punching hundreds of
thousands of holes...
584
00:42:49,280 --> 00:42:54,081
...before friction with the interior
of our planet stopped the motion.
585
00:42:54,285 --> 00:42:56,446
By the time it's at rest at
the center of the Earth...
586
00:42:56,687 --> 00:43:01,386
...the inside of our world would look
a little bit like Swiss cheese.
587
00:43:16,540 --> 00:43:21,239
There are places in the galaxy
where a neutron star and a red giant...
588
00:43:21,545 --> 00:43:25,481
...are locked in a mutual
gravitational embrace.
589
00:43:25,683 --> 00:43:28,049
Tendrils of red giant star stuff...
590
00:43:28,252 --> 00:43:31,085
...spiral into a disc
of accreting matter...
591
00:43:31,289 --> 00:43:34,690
...centered on the hot neutron star.
592
00:43:44,669 --> 00:43:47,797
Every star exists in
a state of tension...
593
00:43:48,005 --> 00:43:50,030
...between the force that
holds it up...
594
00:43:50,241 --> 00:43:52,709
...and gravity, the force that
would pull it down.
595
00:43:52,910 --> 00:43:57,244
If gravity were to prevail, a
stellar madness would ensue...
596
00:43:57,448 --> 00:44:01,544
...more bizarre than
anything in wonderland.
597
00:44:03,154 --> 00:44:06,055
Alice and her colleagues feel,
more or less...
598
00:44:06,257 --> 00:44:08,817
...at home in the gravitational
pull of the Earth...
599
00:44:09,026 --> 00:44:11,824
...called one g,
"g" for Earth gravity.
600
00:44:12,229 --> 00:44:15,687
What would happen if we made the
gravity less, or more?
601
00:44:15,900 --> 00:44:17,959
At lower gravity, things get lighter.
602
00:44:18,169 --> 00:44:20,933
Near zero g, the slightest motion
sends our friends...
603
00:44:21,138 --> 00:44:23,129
...floating and tumbling in the air.
604
00:44:23,341 --> 00:44:26,139
Little blobs of liquid
tea are everywhere.
605
00:44:26,577 --> 00:44:28,101
Curious.
606
00:44:28,646 --> 00:44:31,114
If we now return the gravity
to one g...
607
00:44:31,649 --> 00:44:35,710
...it's raining tea, and our friends
fall back to Earth.
608
00:44:37,088 --> 00:44:40,580
I've been to a couple of
parties like that myself.
609
00:44:42,593 --> 00:44:46,051
At higher gravities, two or
three g's, say, things get...
610
00:44:46,263 --> 00:44:48,891
...really laid back.
611
00:44:49,100 --> 00:44:53,093
Everyone feels heavy and leaden.
612
00:44:55,773 --> 00:44:59,209
Except by special dispensation...
613
00:44:59,510 --> 00:45:01,273
...the Cheshire cat.
614
00:45:02,079 --> 00:45:05,071
As a kindness, we remove them.
615
00:45:05,282 --> 00:45:08,774
At thousands of g's,
trees become squashed.
616
00:45:08,986 --> 00:45:13,423
At 100,000 g's, rocks
become crushed by their own weight.
617
00:45:13,624 --> 00:45:17,253
At all these gravities, a beam of
light remains unaffected...
618
00:45:17,461 --> 00:45:19,429
...continuing up in a straight line.
619
00:45:19,630 --> 00:45:21,325
But at billions of g's...
620
00:45:21,532 --> 00:45:26,060
...a beam of light feels the gravity
and begins to bend back on itself.
621
00:45:26,270 --> 00:45:29,728
Curiouser and curiouser.
622
00:45:29,940 --> 00:45:34,001
Such a place, where the gravity is so
large that even light can't get out...
623
00:45:34,211 --> 00:45:36,702
...is called a black hole.
624
00:45:36,914 --> 00:45:40,179
It's a star in which light
itself is imprisoned.
625
00:45:40,384 --> 00:45:42,682
Black holes were
theoretical constructs...
626
00:45:42,887 --> 00:45:46,186
...speculated about since 1783.
627
00:45:46,390 --> 00:45:49,985
But in our time, we've
verified the invisible.
628
00:45:50,194 --> 00:45:53,823
This bright star has a
massive, unseen companion.
629
00:45:54,031 --> 00:45:58,866
Satellite observatories find the
companion to be an x-ray source...
630
00:45:59,070 --> 00:46:01,595
...called Cygnus X-1.
631
00:46:01,806 --> 00:46:04,366
These x-rays are like
the footprints...
632
00:46:04,575 --> 00:46:09,308
...of an invisible man
walking in the snow.
633
00:46:14,618 --> 00:46:17,678
The x-rays are thought to be
generated by friction...
634
00:46:17,888 --> 00:46:21,380
...in the accretion disc
surrounding the black hole.
635
00:46:21,592 --> 00:46:24,789
The matter in the disc
slowly disappears...
636
00:46:24,995 --> 00:46:26,963
...down the black hole.
637
00:46:29,467 --> 00:46:33,563
Massive black holes, produced by the
collapse of a billion suns...
638
00:46:33,771 --> 00:46:36,365
...may be sitting at the centers
of other galaxies...
639
00:46:36,574 --> 00:46:40,567
...curiously producing great
jets of radiation...
640
00:46:40,778 --> 00:46:42,871
...pouring out into space.
641
00:46:45,783 --> 00:46:49,480
At high enough density,
the star winks out...
642
00:46:49,687 --> 00:46:53,555
...and vanishes from our universe
leaving only its gravity behind.
643
00:46:53,757 --> 00:46:58,592
It slips through a self-generated
crack in the space-time continuum.
644
00:46:58,796 --> 00:47:03,096
A black hole is a place
where a star once was.
645
00:47:03,801 --> 00:47:06,668
Here we have a flat two-
dimensional surface...
646
00:47:06,871 --> 00:47:11,638
...with grid lines on it, something
like a piece of graph paper.
647
00:47:12,543 --> 00:47:14,704
Suppose we take a small mass...
648
00:47:14,912 --> 00:47:19,645
...drop it on the surface and
watch how the surface distorts...
649
00:47:19,850 --> 00:47:23,718
...or puckers into
the third physical dimension.
650
00:47:27,591 --> 00:47:32,028
Gravity can be understood as
a curvature of space.
651
00:47:33,764 --> 00:47:36,790
If our moving ball approaches a
stationary distortion...
652
00:47:37,001 --> 00:47:40,368
...it rolls around it like a
planet orbiting the sun.
653
00:47:40,571 --> 00:47:44,974
In this interpretation, due to
Einstein, gravity is only a pucker...
654
00:47:45,176 --> 00:47:48,737
...in the fabric of space which
moving objects encounter.
655
00:47:48,946 --> 00:47:53,883
Space is warped by mass into an
additional physical dimension.
656
00:47:56,387 --> 00:48:00,983
The larger the local mass, the
greater is the local gravity...
657
00:48:01,192 --> 00:48:04,650
...and the more intense is
the distortion...
658
00:48:04,862 --> 00:48:08,059
...or pucker, or warp of space.
659
00:48:08,265 --> 00:48:10,358
So, by this analogy...
660
00:48:10,568 --> 00:48:15,198
...a black hole is a kind of
bottomless pit.
661
00:48:15,406 --> 00:48:17,271
What would happen if you fell in?
662
00:48:17,474 --> 00:48:20,671
Assuming you could survive the
gravitational tides...
663
00:48:20,878 --> 00:48:25,542
...and the intense radiation flux,
it is just barely possible...
664
00:48:25,749 --> 00:48:28,843
...that by plunging into
a black hole...
665
00:48:29,053 --> 00:48:32,819
...you might emerge in another
part of space-time.
666
00:48:33,023 --> 00:48:34,718
Somewhere else in space...
667
00:48:34,925 --> 00:48:38,520
...some-when else in time.
668
00:48:38,729 --> 00:48:40,663
In this view, space is...
669
00:48:40,864 --> 00:48:43,856
...filled with a network
of wormholes...
670
00:48:44,068 --> 00:48:45,933
...something like the wormholes
in an apple.
671
00:48:46,136 --> 00:48:49,230
Although by no means is this
point demonstrated...
672
00:48:49,440 --> 00:48:52,637
...it is merely an exciting suggestion.
673
00:48:52,843 --> 00:48:54,242
If it is true...
674
00:48:54,445 --> 00:48:58,438
...then perhaps there exist
gravity tunnels...
675
00:48:58,649 --> 00:49:02,050
...a kind of interstellar or
intergalactic subway...
676
00:49:02,253 --> 00:49:03,982
...which would permit you
to get from...
677
00:49:04,188 --> 00:49:06,679
...here to there in much less than
the usual time.
678
00:49:06,890 --> 00:49:10,849
A kind of cosmic rapid transit system.
679
00:49:13,564 --> 00:49:15,964
We cannot generate black holes...
680
00:49:16,166 --> 00:49:18,896
...our technology is far
too feeble to...
681
00:49:19,103 --> 00:49:21,799
...move such massive amounts
of matter around.
682
00:49:22,006 --> 00:49:24,998
But perhaps someday, it will be
possible to voyage hundreds or...
683
00:49:25,209 --> 00:49:29,077
...thousands of light-years to
a black hole like Cygnus X-1.
684
00:49:29,280 --> 00:49:31,441
We would plunge down to emerge...
685
00:49:31,649 --> 00:49:34,709
...in some unimaginably
exotic time and place.
686
00:49:34,918 --> 00:49:39,582
Our common-sense notions of reality
severely challenged.
687
00:49:41,825 --> 00:49:44,487
Perhaps the cosmos is infested
with wormholes...
688
00:49:44,695 --> 00:49:47,027
...every one of them a
tunnel to somewhere.
689
00:49:47,231 --> 00:49:51,463
Perhaps other civilizations, with
vastly more advanced technologies...
690
00:49:51,669 --> 00:49:56,072
...are today riding the
gravity express.
691
00:49:58,375 --> 00:50:02,072
It's even possible that a
black hole is a gate...
692
00:50:02,279 --> 00:50:05,646
...to another, and
quite different, universe.
693
00:50:43,687 --> 00:50:46,178
The lives and deaths of the stars...
694
00:50:46,390 --> 00:50:49,791
...seem impossibly remote
from human experience...
695
00:50:49,993 --> 00:50:53,895
...and yet we're related in the most
intimate way to their life cycles.
696
00:50:54,098 --> 00:50:56,066
The very matter that makes us up...
697
00:50:56,266 --> 00:51:01,203
...was generated long ago and far away
in red giant stars.
698
00:51:02,306 --> 00:51:05,969
A blade of grass,
as Walt Whitman said...
699
00:51:06,176 --> 00:51:08,406
"...is the journey work of the stars."
700
00:51:08,612 --> 00:51:10,136
The formation of the solar system...
701
00:51:10,347 --> 00:51:13,475
...may have been triggered by a
nearby supernova explosion.
702
00:51:13,684 --> 00:51:15,174
After the sun turned on...
703
00:51:15,386 --> 00:51:18,219
...its ultraviolet light poured
into our atmosphere.
704
00:51:18,422 --> 00:51:20,413
Its warmth generated lightning.
705
00:51:20,624 --> 00:51:23,525
And these energy sources sparked
the origin of life.
706
00:51:24,561 --> 00:51:26,893
Plants harvest sunlight...
707
00:51:27,097 --> 00:51:29,998
...converting solar into
chemical energy.
708
00:51:30,801 --> 00:51:33,895
We and the other animals are
parasites on the plants.
709
00:51:34,104 --> 00:51:38,040
So we are, all of us, solar-powered.
710
00:51:38,442 --> 00:51:40,933
The evolution of life is
driven by mutations.
711
00:51:41,145 --> 00:51:45,275
They are caused partly by natural
radioactivity and cosmic rays.
712
00:51:45,482 --> 00:51:49,782
But they are both generated in the
spectacular deaths of massive stars...
713
00:51:49,987 --> 00:51:51,978
...thousands of light-years distant.
714
00:51:53,524 --> 00:51:57,153
Think of the sun's heat on your
upturned face...
715
00:51:57,361 --> 00:51:59,625
...on a cloudless summer's day.
716
00:51:59,830 --> 00:52:02,958
From 150 million kilometers away...
717
00:52:03,167 --> 00:52:05,635
...we recognize its power.
718
00:52:05,836 --> 00:52:09,670
What would we feel on its seething,
self-luminous surface...
719
00:52:09,873 --> 00:52:13,331
...or immersed in its heart
of nuclear fire?
720
00:52:13,544 --> 00:52:18,481
And yet, the sun is an ordinary,
even a mediocre star.
721
00:52:18,715 --> 00:52:22,549
Our ancestors worshiped the sun
and they were far from foolish.
722
00:52:22,753 --> 00:52:25,551
It makes good sense to revere
the sun and the stars.
723
00:52:25,756 --> 00:52:29,715
Because we are their children.
724
00:52:32,696 --> 00:52:36,792
We have witnessed the life
cycles of the stars.
725
00:52:37,000 --> 00:52:41,437
They are born, they mature
and then they die.
726
00:52:41,638 --> 00:52:43,902
As time goes on, there are
more white dwarfs...
727
00:52:44,107 --> 00:52:46,598
...more neutron stars,
more black holes.
728
00:52:46,810 --> 00:52:49,643
The remains of the stars accumulate...
729
00:52:49,847 --> 00:52:51,940
...as the eons pass.
730
00:52:52,149 --> 00:52:55,915
But interstellar space also becomes
enriched in heavy elements...
731
00:52:56,119 --> 00:53:00,078
...out of which form new generations
of stars and planets...
732
00:53:00,290 --> 00:53:02,349
...life and intelligence.
733
00:53:02,559 --> 00:53:06,757
The events in one star can influence
a world halfway across the galaxy...
734
00:53:06,964 --> 00:53:09,194
...and a billion years in the future.
735
00:53:16,607 --> 00:53:20,134
The vast interstellar clouds
of gas and dust...
736
00:53:20,344 --> 00:53:21,971
...are stellar nurseries.
737
00:53:22,179 --> 00:53:26,240
Here first begins the inexorable
gravitational collapse...
738
00:53:26,450 --> 00:53:29,510
...which dominates the
lives of the stars.
739
00:53:29,720 --> 00:53:34,123
Massive suns may evolve through the
red giant stage in only millions of years.
740
00:53:34,324 --> 00:53:38,590
Dying young, never leaving the
cloud in which they were born.
741
00:53:40,631 --> 00:53:45,193
Other suns, longer-lived, wander
out of the nursery.
742
00:53:45,402 --> 00:53:47,529
Our sun is such a star...
743
00:53:47,738 --> 00:53:50,798
...as are most
of the stars in the sky.
744
00:54:01,985 --> 00:54:06,547
Most stars are members of double
or multiple star systems...
745
00:54:06,757 --> 00:54:11,057
...and live to process their nuclear
fuel over billions of years.
746
00:54:11,261 --> 00:54:14,321
The galaxy is 10 billion years old.
747
00:54:14,531 --> 00:54:16,123
Old enough to have spawned...
748
00:54:16,333 --> 00:54:20,099
...only a few generations
of ordinary stars.
749
00:54:24,908 --> 00:54:28,241
The objects we encounter
in a voyage through the Milky Way...
750
00:54:28,445 --> 00:54:32,575
...are stages in the life cycle
of the stars.
751
00:54:32,783 --> 00:54:35,013
Some are bright and new...
752
00:54:35,218 --> 00:54:39,211
...and others are as ancient as
the galaxy itself.
753
00:54:51,068 --> 00:54:54,595
Surrounding the Milky Way
is a halo of matter...
754
00:54:54,805 --> 00:54:57,797
...which includes
the globular clusters...
755
00:54:58,008 --> 00:55:01,444
...each containing up to
a million elderly stars.
756
00:55:01,645 --> 00:55:06,014
At the centers of globular clusters
and at the core of the galaxy...
757
00:55:06,216 --> 00:55:10,880
...there may be massive black holes
ticking and purring...
758
00:55:11,088 --> 00:55:13,613
...the subject of future exploration.
759
00:55:31,508 --> 00:55:34,443
We on Earth marvel,
and rightly so...
760
00:55:34,645 --> 00:55:37,671
...at the daily return
of our single sun.
761
00:55:37,881 --> 00:55:41,647
But from a planet orbiting a star
in a distant globular cluster...
762
00:55:41,852 --> 00:55:44,685
...a still more glorious dawn awaits.
763
00:55:44,888 --> 00:55:48,153
Not a sunrise, but a galaxy-rise.
764
00:55:48,358 --> 00:55:52,089
A morning filled with
400 billion suns...
765
00:55:52,295 --> 00:55:54,559
...the rising of the Milky Way.
766
00:55:54,765 --> 00:55:58,667
An enormous spiral form
with collapsing gas clouds...
767
00:55:58,869 --> 00:56:02,600
...condensing planetary systems,
luminous supergiants...
768
00:56:02,806 --> 00:56:04,774
...stable middle-aged stars...
769
00:56:04,975 --> 00:56:09,344
...red giants, white dwarfs, planetary
nebulas, supernovas...
770
00:56:09,546 --> 00:56:13,983
...neutron stars, pulsars,
black holes and...
771
00:56:14,217 --> 00:56:17,186
...there is every reason to think,
other exotic objects...
772
00:56:17,421 --> 00:56:19,616
...that we have not yet discovered.
773
00:56:22,626 --> 00:56:26,494
From such a world, high above
the disc of the Milky Way...
774
00:56:26,697 --> 00:56:30,724
...it would be clear as it is
beginning to be clear on our world...
775
00:56:30,934 --> 00:56:33,994
...that we are made
by the atoms in the stars...
776
00:56:34,204 --> 00:56:38,265
...that our matter
and our form are determined...
777
00:56:38,475 --> 00:56:42,070
...by the cosmos
of which we are a part.
778
00:56:50,420 --> 00:56:54,686
I only have a moment, but I wanted you
to see a picture of Betelgeuse...
779
00:56:54,891 --> 00:56:56,825
...in the constellation Orion.
780
00:56:57,027 --> 00:57:00,121
The first image of the surface
of another star.
781
00:57:00,397 --> 00:57:03,059
But the most exciting recent
stellar discovery...
782
00:57:03,266 --> 00:57:05,097
...has been of a nearby supernova...
783
00:57:05,302 --> 00:57:07,497
...in a companion galaxy
to the Milky Way.
784
00:57:07,704 --> 00:57:12,004
We are here seeing chemical elements
in the process of synthesis...
785
00:57:12,209 --> 00:57:15,770
...and have had our first glimpse
of the supernova...
786
00:57:15,979 --> 00:57:19,142
...through a brand-new field:
neutrino astronomy.
787
00:57:19,349 --> 00:57:22,546
And we're now seeing, around
neighboring stars...
788
00:57:23,120 --> 00:57:26,817
...discs of gas and dust just
like those needed to explain...
789
00:57:27,023 --> 00:57:29,753
...the origin of the planets
in our solar system.
790
00:57:29,960 --> 00:57:32,690
Worlds may be forming here.
791
00:57:32,896 --> 00:57:36,161
It's like a snapshot of our
solar system's past.
792
00:57:36,600 --> 00:57:39,728
And there are so many such
discs being found these days...
793
00:57:39,936 --> 00:57:44,464
...that planets may be very common
among the stars of the Milky Way.
66593
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