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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,829 --> 00:00:08,897 The Milky Way galaxy... 2 00:00:08,932 --> 00:00:13,735 a vast cosmic city of 200 billion stars. 3 00:00:15,572 --> 00:00:17,940 We live in a quiet neighborhood, 4 00:00:17,974 --> 00:00:22,911 tucked away in a safe neck of the woods. 5 00:00:22,946 --> 00:00:27,916 But what if we could take our planet on a journey across the galaxy? 6 00:00:29,886 --> 00:00:34,223 From the violent graveyards where stars, billions of years old, 7 00:00:34,257 --> 00:00:36,625 go to die... 8 00:00:41,998 --> 00:00:46,902 to the cosmic cradles where new stars burst to life. 9 00:00:49,239 --> 00:00:54,209 Dare to travel through billions of years of space and time 10 00:00:54,244 --> 00:00:58,147 to find out how our galaxy came to be... 11 00:00:59,315 --> 00:01:02,818 and the dark fate that awaits us. 12 00:01:02,852 --> 00:01:06,922 It's the ultimate journey to uncover the secrets that lie... 13 00:01:06,956 --> 00:01:09,925 inside the Milky Way. 14 00:01:11,000 --> 00:01:17,074 Advertise your product or brand here contact www.SubtitleDB.org today 15 00:01:23,473 --> 00:01:25,507 Modern cities are a testament 16 00:01:25,542 --> 00:01:30,379 to some of the greatest accomplishments of human civilization-- 17 00:01:30,413 --> 00:01:35,851 feats of engineering that dazzle with millions of lights. 18 00:01:35,885 --> 00:01:40,355 But the bright lights conceal something even more amazing. 19 00:01:43,159 --> 00:01:49,097 Turn them off and behold... a great city in the sky. 20 00:01:52,335 --> 00:01:56,872 - What is this? - Well, this is the Milky Way. 21 00:01:56,906 --> 00:01:59,274 This is our galaxy. 22 00:01:59,309 --> 00:02:03,545 Well, if you'd like, you could think of the galaxy as a city of stars. 23 00:02:08,184 --> 00:02:12,020 Our sun is just one of the 200 billion stars 24 00:02:12,055 --> 00:02:15,657 that make up a vast cosmic city. 25 00:02:21,097 --> 00:02:25,734 A city we're just beginning to know. 26 00:02:25,768 --> 00:02:28,704 It's really a wonderful time to be an astronomer, 27 00:02:28,738 --> 00:02:30,706 especially in studies of the Milky Way. 28 00:02:30,740 --> 00:02:32,975 We're undergoing something of a revolution. 29 00:02:33,009 --> 00:02:37,980 In fact we can take you places that are really quite remarkable. 30 00:02:38,014 --> 00:02:41,350 We're about to make a major move. 31 00:02:43,720 --> 00:02:45,287 We're picking up the earth 32 00:02:45,321 --> 00:02:48,257 and traveling across thousands of light years-- 33 00:02:48,291 --> 00:02:52,227 relocating to distant neighborhoods of the galaxy. 34 00:02:54,130 --> 00:02:57,332 From our new address the sky looks different... 35 00:02:57,367 --> 00:02:59,635 full of wonder and beauty... 36 00:02:59,669 --> 00:03:03,538 lit by a multitude of brilliant suns... 37 00:03:15,018 --> 00:03:20,255 ...revealing the power of stars that lived billions of years ago. 38 00:03:22,859 --> 00:03:29,865 Out here we'll get a glimpse of the future, when our sun exists no more. 39 00:03:32,535 --> 00:03:38,006 It's a journey to unravel some of the greatest mysteries of the universe: 40 00:03:39,609 --> 00:03:42,344 how the Milky Way was born, 41 00:03:42,378 --> 00:03:45,213 how it survived for so long 42 00:03:45,248 --> 00:03:48,150 and how it will eventually die. 43 00:04:00,963 --> 00:04:04,032 But before our trip can begin, 44 00:04:04,067 --> 00:04:06,968 we need a map of where we're headed. 45 00:04:09,005 --> 00:04:11,406 And making one is the job of astronomers 46 00:04:11,441 --> 00:04:15,510 like Robert Kirshner and James Bullock. 47 00:04:21,551 --> 00:04:27,723 The first obstacle is simply figuring out what kind of galaxy the Milky Way is. 48 00:04:29,192 --> 00:04:31,093 The Hubble Space Telescope 49 00:04:31,127 --> 00:04:36,798 gives astronomers the capability to see billions of other galaxies. 50 00:04:36,833 --> 00:04:38,934 Each one is different. 51 00:04:38,968 --> 00:04:43,105 But it turns out there is a pattern. 52 00:04:43,139 --> 00:04:46,408 When we look out to study other galaxies in the universe, 53 00:04:46,442 --> 00:04:50,946 We see that there are basically two types of galaxies. 54 00:04:50,980 --> 00:04:54,049 The first type, elliptical galaxies, 55 00:04:54,083 --> 00:04:58,787 appear as large balls of stars, 56 00:04:58,821 --> 00:05:01,523 and no matter what angle they're viewed from, 57 00:05:01,557 --> 00:05:04,760 they always look rounded. 58 00:05:06,963 --> 00:05:13,135 The other main class is the so-called "spiral galaxies," 59 00:05:13,169 --> 00:05:19,741 because their stars are contained in arms that spiral out from their centers. 60 00:05:22,645 --> 00:05:28,116 From a distance, a spiral galaxy looks something like a Frisbee. 61 00:05:30,620 --> 00:05:34,022 The key to correctly identifying the Milky Way 62 00:05:34,056 --> 00:05:37,359 is written across our night sky. 63 00:05:43,299 --> 00:05:48,103 The Milky Way, we believe, is a spiral galaxy. 64 00:05:48,137 --> 00:05:49,304 So what we're really seeing, 65 00:05:49,338 --> 00:05:51,473 when we look up at night at this band, 66 00:05:51,507 --> 00:05:53,475 is we're seeing our place in the universe. 67 00:05:53,509 --> 00:05:57,512 We're part of a giant disc of stars. 68 00:05:57,547 --> 00:06:01,416 But that's just an insider's view. 69 00:06:05,655 --> 00:06:09,558 Now, of course I can't show you a picture of the galaxy in all its glory. 70 00:06:09,592 --> 00:06:13,995 We can't fly above the galaxy and take a picture of it and show you. 71 00:06:14,030 --> 00:06:16,164 We're stuck in the disc of the galaxy, 72 00:06:16,199 --> 00:06:18,300 but we can still image it from the ground. 73 00:06:18,334 --> 00:06:22,304 In fact, this image is a picture of our galaxy, the Milky Way, 74 00:06:22,338 --> 00:06:23,839 taken from Earth. 75 00:06:26,476 --> 00:06:28,810 This is one of the most detailed images 76 00:06:28,845 --> 00:06:31,713 of our galaxy ever created. 77 00:06:33,583 --> 00:06:36,651 It's made from 800 million pixels 78 00:06:36,686 --> 00:06:40,789 contained in over a thousand individual photographs, 79 00:06:40,823 --> 00:06:44,426 taken from the darkest places on Earth. 80 00:06:47,630 --> 00:06:50,499 The photos have been painstakingly stitched together 81 00:06:50,533 --> 00:06:54,536 to create this breathtaking view. 82 00:07:01,477 --> 00:07:06,815 But impressive as it is, it's only part of the picture. 83 00:07:08,150 --> 00:07:09,417 It's something like a pizza. 84 00:07:09,452 --> 00:07:11,953 And if you were in the pizza, if you were a pepperoni, 85 00:07:11,988 --> 00:07:16,491 your view would not be a very clear one of what the whole story was. 86 00:07:16,526 --> 00:07:21,096 In the same way, we don't see the whole reach of the Milky Way. 87 00:07:21,130 --> 00:07:26,535 What astronomers really need is a bird's eye view. 88 00:07:26,569 --> 00:07:27,936 You would need to get out of the Milky Way 89 00:07:27,970 --> 00:07:30,338 to really see what it looks like. 90 00:07:30,373 --> 00:07:32,140 We don't have a way to do that, 91 00:07:32,174 --> 00:07:36,444 but we can look at other galaxies and see what they look like. 92 00:07:40,182 --> 00:07:44,953 Hubble's cameras capture nearby galaxies in amazing detail-- 93 00:07:44,987 --> 00:07:48,290 like Messier 74. 94 00:07:48,324 --> 00:07:51,626 Although it's over 30 million light years away, 95 00:07:51,661 --> 00:07:54,863 it's one of our closest neighbors. 96 00:07:58,568 --> 00:08:04,306 Messier 74 is a beautiful spiral galaxy. 97 00:08:04,340 --> 00:08:09,311 Its large, starry arms sweep out from a bright core. 98 00:08:13,382 --> 00:08:15,250 This is an example of a galaxy 99 00:08:15,284 --> 00:08:18,787 that astronomers think looks a lot like our galaxy, the Milky Way. 100 00:08:18,821 --> 00:08:23,291 This is a great representation of our own star city. 101 00:08:23,326 --> 00:08:26,227 In the central region we have the downtown. 102 00:08:26,262 --> 00:08:28,930 This is the bulge, this bright spot in the middle, 103 00:08:28,965 --> 00:08:32,367 and from that we see, spiraling out, these arms, 104 00:08:32,401 --> 00:08:36,438 these beautiful spiral structures we see in this galaxy. 105 00:08:40,309 --> 00:08:44,079 Astronomers compare Hubble's incredibly detailed images 106 00:08:44,113 --> 00:08:46,247 of other spiral galaxies 107 00:08:46,282 --> 00:08:48,617 with the best images of our own galaxy 108 00:08:48,651 --> 00:08:52,454 taken from the ground. 109 00:08:52,488 --> 00:08:55,457 Using satellites to measure the distance and density 110 00:08:55,491 --> 00:08:58,393 of stars in different directions, 111 00:08:58,427 --> 00:09:04,332 astronomers reveal the grand plan underlying our star city. 112 00:09:15,945 --> 00:09:18,847 At its heart, a bright central region-- 113 00:09:18,881 --> 00:09:21,683 the galactic core-- 114 00:09:21,717 --> 00:09:26,254 our galaxy's downtown district. 115 00:09:26,288 --> 00:09:31,826 From here two majestic spiral arms, bright bands of billions of stars, 116 00:09:31,861 --> 00:09:34,496 sweep out-- 117 00:09:34,530 --> 00:09:37,065 Scutum Centaurus 118 00:09:37,099 --> 00:09:39,234 and the Perseus arm. 119 00:09:41,771 --> 00:09:45,240 There are also three smaller arms. 120 00:09:55,284 --> 00:09:56,985 From one end to the other, 121 00:09:57,019 --> 00:10:03,925 our galaxy measures a staggering 600,000 trillion miles. 122 00:10:08,164 --> 00:10:14,135 It takes light 100,000 years to cross our galaxy. 123 00:10:14,170 --> 00:10:15,737 This is a big galaxy, 124 00:10:15,771 --> 00:10:18,540 and it's quite amazing, if you think about it, 125 00:10:18,574 --> 00:10:22,010 that we understand as much as we do about this system. 126 00:10:25,981 --> 00:10:30,819 Our sun and the solar system are located here-- 127 00:10:30,853 --> 00:10:36,224 in a quiet neighborhood nestled between two spiral arms. 128 00:10:37,326 --> 00:10:41,496 This is the galactic home address that we know so well. 129 00:10:43,365 --> 00:10:48,069 But our surrounding neighborhoods are wildly different. 130 00:10:50,306 --> 00:10:54,943 Like any large city, there are dynamic industrial zones... 131 00:10:54,977 --> 00:10:57,779 where heat and pressure forge new stars 132 00:10:57,813 --> 00:11:01,783 and others die in violent explosions. 133 00:11:05,187 --> 00:11:08,590 Downtown, in the very heart of the galaxy, 134 00:11:08,624 --> 00:11:13,128 stars jostle for space, pulled by mysterious forces. 135 00:11:18,367 --> 00:11:22,504 Our galaxy also has quaint, historic neighborhoods 136 00:11:22,538 --> 00:11:27,408 that tell the story of how our star city was founded. 137 00:11:30,646 --> 00:11:36,251 Now we head to one of the most spectacular locations in the Milky Way-- 138 00:11:38,721 --> 00:11:41,122 a place that holds the clue 139 00:11:41,157 --> 00:11:45,059 to how the 200 billion stars of the galaxy 140 00:11:45,094 --> 00:11:48,630 were first created-- 141 00:11:48,664 --> 00:11:51,900 and it's just around the corner. 142 00:11:56,505 --> 00:11:59,374 We're picking up and leaving home. 143 00:11:59,408 --> 00:12:02,310 We're taking our planet on a journey. 144 00:12:02,344 --> 00:12:03,778 The destination? 145 00:12:03,813 --> 00:12:06,714 A place where stars are born. 146 00:12:06,749 --> 00:12:11,452 It may look close by, but even traveling at the speed of light-- 147 00:12:11,487 --> 00:12:14,789 186,000 miles a second-- 148 00:12:14,824 --> 00:12:20,428 the trip takes 1,500 years. 149 00:12:23,866 --> 00:12:28,770 We arrive at a vast glowing cloud of gas and dust: 150 00:12:28,804 --> 00:12:31,606 the Great Orion Nebula. 151 00:12:34,543 --> 00:12:39,280 Beautiful new colors fill our evening sky. 152 00:12:44,220 --> 00:12:47,889 But this cloud isn't just a work of art. 153 00:12:47,923 --> 00:12:53,428 It holds the key to how our sun, and every star in the galaxy, 154 00:12:53,462 --> 00:12:55,430 came to be. 155 00:12:59,101 --> 00:13:04,505 The Milky Way is filled with billions of stars in every direction. 156 00:13:06,508 --> 00:13:08,243 From Earth the naked eye 157 00:13:08,277 --> 00:13:13,882 also picks out large, dark, seemingly starless patches. 158 00:13:18,554 --> 00:13:20,655 To astronomer James Bullock, 159 00:13:20,689 --> 00:13:25,460 in these areas, there's more than meets the eye. 160 00:13:26,695 --> 00:13:28,963 Perhaps the most beautiful part of this image 161 00:13:28,998 --> 00:13:31,499 is that we have this contrast of dark and light regions 162 00:13:31,533 --> 00:13:35,470 running through the plane of the disc. 163 00:13:35,504 --> 00:13:38,006 What that really is, it's dust. 164 00:13:38,040 --> 00:13:39,574 There are clouds of dust 165 00:13:39,608 --> 00:13:42,577 that are casting a shadow from the back of the stars, 166 00:13:42,611 --> 00:13:45,179 and the stars are trying to shine their light through, 167 00:13:45,214 --> 00:13:47,615 there are dust clouds there that are blocking the light, 168 00:13:47,650 --> 00:13:50,418 much like a cloud on Earth would block the Sun. 169 00:13:54,256 --> 00:13:57,692 These vast clouds of cosmic gas and dust 170 00:13:57,726 --> 00:14:02,130 stretch thousands of light years across the Milky Way. 171 00:14:05,334 --> 00:14:10,972 Hubble finds them in most spiral galaxies. 172 00:14:11,006 --> 00:14:17,612 Dark, ghostly bands, woven through the spiral arms-- 173 00:14:17,646 --> 00:14:21,482 and spreading across the entire disc. 174 00:14:27,122 --> 00:14:31,592 But there's something strange about this gas and dust. 175 00:14:31,627 --> 00:14:35,029 Sometimes it glows. 176 00:14:37,599 --> 00:14:42,170 These bright glowing clouds are called nebulas. 177 00:14:44,373 --> 00:14:50,044 Each one is unique... and breathtakingly beautiful. 178 00:14:53,949 --> 00:15:02,190 The Eagle Nebula, with towering pillars up to four light years in size, 179 00:15:02,224 --> 00:15:07,395 and the Carina Nebula, with its distinctive green glow. 180 00:15:12,201 --> 00:15:17,438 These vibrant colors reveal what gases nebulas are made of. 181 00:15:19,241 --> 00:15:21,609 So, for example, if there's oxygen gas, 182 00:15:21,643 --> 00:15:23,177 you get a green glow. 183 00:15:23,212 --> 00:15:25,980 If there is hydrogen gas, you get a red glow. 184 00:15:26,015 --> 00:15:29,684 So analyzing the light from a nebula turns out to be very instructive. 185 00:15:29,718 --> 00:15:33,054 It tells us what's there, it tells us what the physical conditions are, 186 00:15:33,088 --> 00:15:35,123 we can tell how dense it is, how hot it is 187 00:15:35,157 --> 00:15:38,126 and what it's made of. 188 00:15:38,160 --> 00:15:40,895 We can find out a lot about the neighborhood 189 00:15:40,929 --> 00:15:47,668 by looking at these clues that come directly from the glowing gas. 190 00:15:47,703 --> 00:15:50,905 The gases glow at thousands of degrees, 191 00:15:50,939 --> 00:15:57,178 heated from a mysterious source hidden deep within the nebulas. 192 00:15:57,212 --> 00:16:03,951 To figure out what the source is, we need to peer deep inside. 193 00:16:03,986 --> 00:16:06,654 But of course the gas and dust is in the way. 194 00:16:06,688 --> 00:16:09,190 So it's not so easy. 195 00:16:09,224 --> 00:16:12,860 It's a very mysterious part of the galaxy. 196 00:16:12,895 --> 00:16:17,098 It's a place that we have to use these special tricks to look into. 197 00:16:17,132 --> 00:16:20,468 And Kimberly Weaver is an astrophysicist 198 00:16:20,502 --> 00:16:24,238 who's got a few tricks up her sleeve. 199 00:16:24,273 --> 00:16:27,108 I've got a really neat way to show you this. 200 00:16:27,142 --> 00:16:30,378 This is a bag that you can't see through with your eye. 201 00:16:30,412 --> 00:16:33,147 So a normal telescope that looks at optical light 202 00:16:33,182 --> 00:16:35,116 could not see through this. 203 00:16:35,150 --> 00:16:39,153 In infrared light, a telescope can see through it. 204 00:16:39,188 --> 00:16:40,588 The infrared camera, 205 00:16:40,622 --> 00:16:44,358 if I put my hand inside, can see my hand. 206 00:16:44,393 --> 00:16:47,161 I'll wiggle my fingers to show you. 207 00:16:47,196 --> 00:16:50,998 But you're seeing the heat from my hand inside the bag, 208 00:16:51,033 --> 00:16:55,970 and this is just like a star that's hidden inside a cloud of gas and dust, 209 00:16:56,004 --> 00:17:00,675 that infrared astronomers can detect by using an infrared telescope. 210 00:17:03,679 --> 00:17:08,049 This is a picture of the Orion Nebula in visible light. 211 00:17:08,083 --> 00:17:10,518 We can see all of the gas here 212 00:17:10,552 --> 00:17:14,388 located in front of what we know are stars in the background, 213 00:17:14,423 --> 00:17:19,427 and we want to be able to look inside this nebula and see the stars. 214 00:17:19,461 --> 00:17:21,696 In infrared light, in this image, 215 00:17:21,730 --> 00:17:26,534 we can now pick out the stars inside the nebula, 216 00:17:26,568 --> 00:17:31,005 and we can see dusty cocoons around the stars. 217 00:17:31,039 --> 00:17:36,944 But scientists still need a way to strip away the remaining dust. 218 00:17:39,948 --> 00:17:42,416 How do we get rid of all this haze and fog? 219 00:17:42,451 --> 00:17:45,086 The way to do that is with an X-ray picture. 220 00:17:45,120 --> 00:17:47,855 Now when we transition into the X-ray image, 221 00:17:47,890 --> 00:17:50,158 you can see just the stars themselves, 222 00:17:50,192 --> 00:17:53,427 the X-rays coming from the surfaces of the stars, 223 00:17:53,462 --> 00:17:56,531 and now we can study them in great detail. 224 00:17:59,568 --> 00:18:02,436 By analyzing the light from these stars, 225 00:18:02,471 --> 00:18:06,507 astronomers make an astounding discovery. 226 00:18:09,311 --> 00:18:15,917 Hidden within the Orion Nebula are some of the youngest stars ever found-- 227 00:18:15,951 --> 00:18:19,887 stars just a few hundred thousand years old-- 228 00:18:19,922 --> 00:18:24,091 a mere heartbeat in the life of the galaxy. 229 00:18:24,126 --> 00:18:27,295 And it's not just the Orion Nebula. 230 00:18:29,231 --> 00:18:35,636 Nebulas house baby stars in every spiral arm of the galaxy. 231 00:18:38,140 --> 00:18:41,275 These regions are the nurseries for new stars. 232 00:18:41,310 --> 00:18:43,177 There are young stars in these regions 233 00:18:43,212 --> 00:18:45,947 that are heating up gas clouds that surround them 234 00:18:45,981 --> 00:18:49,584 and making those gas clouds glow pink. 235 00:18:49,618 --> 00:18:52,320 Stars are made out of gas, basically, 236 00:18:52,354 --> 00:18:54,255 and our galaxy has gas. 237 00:18:54,289 --> 00:18:56,324 In fact, our galaxy, you can think of it 238 00:18:56,358 --> 00:18:58,426 as having an atmosphere of gas and dust 239 00:18:58,460 --> 00:19:00,895 that surrounds all of the stars that we see in the disc, 240 00:19:00,929 --> 00:19:04,999 and it's from this gas that new stars are born. 241 00:19:05,033 --> 00:19:09,470 By observing nebulas at different stages in their evolution, 242 00:19:09,504 --> 00:19:15,643 the story of a star's birth begins to emerge. 243 00:19:15,677 --> 00:19:22,350 It all starts inside a cold, dark cloud of dust and hydrogen gas, 244 00:19:22,384 --> 00:19:26,821 where a quiet tug of war begins. 245 00:19:26,855 --> 00:19:31,459 The cloud wants to dissipate, like smoke in the air, 246 00:19:31,493 --> 00:19:35,563 but gravity wants to pull it together. 247 00:19:35,597 --> 00:19:36,931 They're in a kind of balance 248 00:19:36,965 --> 00:19:42,570 between gravity pulling in and gas pressure pushing back out. 249 00:19:42,604 --> 00:19:46,974 Gravity wins, and the material crunches down into a disc 250 00:19:47,009 --> 00:19:51,712 that is the beginning of becoming a star. 251 00:19:51,747 --> 00:19:54,181 As gravity pulls more and more gas 252 00:19:54,216 --> 00:19:56,817 towards the center of the disc, 253 00:19:56,852 --> 00:20:02,223 it gets denser and denser and hotter and hotter.... 254 00:20:05,794 --> 00:20:09,864 ...until finally, at 18 million degrees, 255 00:20:09,898 --> 00:20:14,001 a miraculous transformation takes place. 256 00:20:14,036 --> 00:20:18,172 Hydrogen atoms fuse together to form helium-- 257 00:20:18,206 --> 00:20:24,045 and with a burst of nuclear energy, a star begins to shine. 258 00:20:24,079 --> 00:20:29,083 These stars eventually get their nuclear fires going in the core. 259 00:20:29,117 --> 00:20:31,319 And when they do, they heat up, 260 00:20:31,353 --> 00:20:34,221 they can expel the material that's around them 261 00:20:34,256 --> 00:20:38,659 so that it kind of clears up the neighborhood. 262 00:20:38,694 --> 00:20:41,796 Over the next few million years, 263 00:20:41,830 --> 00:20:48,102 winds blow the surrounding gas into spectacular swirling patterns. 264 00:20:51,506 --> 00:20:55,042 It blows away the gas, it blows away the dust 265 00:20:55,077 --> 00:20:57,111 and it lets us see this beautiful new thing, 266 00:20:57,145 --> 00:20:59,146 this place where the star has been born. 267 00:21:20,902 --> 00:21:23,471 A human lifetime is too short 268 00:21:23,505 --> 00:21:28,175 to witness the wonder of a star's birth in the spiral arms. 269 00:21:28,210 --> 00:21:34,648 But by speeding up millions of years of cosmic time into just a few seconds, 270 00:21:34,683 --> 00:21:38,219 we can see one star born after another. 271 00:21:45,727 --> 00:21:50,765 Here and there are even more brilliant flashes of light, 272 00:21:50,799 --> 00:21:55,336 coming from some of the most violent and dangerous neighborhoods 273 00:21:55,370 --> 00:21:59,440 in the entire Milky Way galaxy. 274 00:21:59,474 --> 00:22:03,544 Here stars aren't born... 275 00:22:03,578 --> 00:22:05,312 they die. 276 00:22:18,093 --> 00:22:19,927 We're taking the Earth 277 00:22:19,961 --> 00:22:22,196 from the familiar neighborhood of the sun 278 00:22:22,230 --> 00:22:25,332 to visit the wonders of the Perseus Arm, 279 00:22:25,367 --> 00:22:30,037 nearly 6,500 light years away. 280 00:22:30,739 --> 00:22:36,477 Here lies one of the galaxy's most beautiful sights-- 281 00:22:36,511 --> 00:22:40,581 the Crab Nebula. 282 00:22:40,615 --> 00:22:48,222 Although it's made of gas and dust, this nebula hasn't created stars...yet. 283 00:22:51,593 --> 00:22:53,527 But for Alex Filippenko, 284 00:22:53,562 --> 00:22:58,165 this area does represent the industrial zone of our galaxy, 285 00:22:58,200 --> 00:23:03,337 where the building blocks of Earth were manufactured long ago. 286 00:23:03,371 --> 00:23:07,608 Look at that molten iron. Holy moly! 287 00:23:07,642 --> 00:23:10,377 The Crab Nebula is a fascinating object. 288 00:23:10,412 --> 00:23:13,881 We see these very rapidly expanding gases. 289 00:23:15,884 --> 00:23:20,321 The crab may look static, but gases are racing out from its center 290 00:23:20,355 --> 00:23:26,126 at over three million miles an hour, 291 00:23:26,161 --> 00:23:32,466 put into motion by a phenomenally powerful and violent event in the past. 292 00:23:37,072 --> 00:23:39,773 When we examine the gases of the Crab Nebula, 293 00:23:39,808 --> 00:23:41,876 which are expanding outward, 294 00:23:41,910 --> 00:23:45,679 and we extrapolate that expansion backward in time, 295 00:23:45,714 --> 00:23:48,282 we find that all of the gases were at a common point 296 00:23:48,316 --> 00:23:51,418 about a thousand years ago. 297 00:23:55,090 --> 00:23:58,092 Back on Earth, a thousand years ago, 298 00:23:58,126 --> 00:24:02,129 early civilizations watched the heavens. 299 00:24:02,163 --> 00:24:10,538 In 1054, Chinese manuscripts describe the sudden arrival of a brilliant new star. 300 00:24:10,572 --> 00:24:17,945 It shines brighter than any other star, so brightly it's visible during the day. 301 00:24:17,979 --> 00:24:22,182 But then it mysteriously disappears. 302 00:24:24,853 --> 00:24:30,124 Today, the Crab Nebula lies in exactly the same part of the sky 303 00:24:30,158 --> 00:24:33,794 where the Chinese observed their brilliant star. 304 00:24:36,064 --> 00:24:40,534 What they witnessed was the moment the crab was born. 305 00:24:42,971 --> 00:24:44,538 The Crab Nebula was produced 306 00:24:44,573 --> 00:24:49,910 by the colossal titanic explosion of a star at the end of its life. 307 00:24:49,945 --> 00:24:52,112 It's a supernova remnant. 308 00:24:54,649 --> 00:24:57,117 The spiral arms of our Milky Way 309 00:24:57,152 --> 00:25:01,722 are littered with these colorful remnants. 310 00:25:01,756 --> 00:25:05,659 Tombstones of stars that died violently 311 00:25:05,694 --> 00:25:10,464 in cataclysmic explosions called supernovas. 312 00:25:13,568 --> 00:25:18,606 To figure out this mystery, astronomers need to locate the next victim-- 313 00:25:18,640 --> 00:25:22,543 a massive star at the brink of death. 314 00:25:24,613 --> 00:25:26,647 Astronomers are like detectives. 315 00:25:26,681 --> 00:25:29,583 We have to figure out what's going on in the universe 316 00:25:29,618 --> 00:25:32,886 sometimes based on a minimal number of clues, 317 00:25:32,921 --> 00:25:38,058 and in the case of most astronomers, the clues come from only the light. 318 00:25:40,028 --> 00:25:43,631 Andy Howell knows catching light from a supernova 319 00:25:43,665 --> 00:25:46,634 is all about timing. 320 00:25:48,136 --> 00:25:51,305 Supernovae happen about once every 70 years 321 00:25:51,339 --> 00:25:52,706 in a galaxy on average, 322 00:25:52,741 --> 00:25:55,075 so about the human lifetime. 323 00:25:55,110 --> 00:25:58,379 So chances are you're not going to see one in your lifetime. 324 00:25:58,413 --> 00:26:01,415 In fact the last one in our galaxy that anybody saw 325 00:26:01,449 --> 00:26:03,550 was about 400 years ago. 326 00:26:03,585 --> 00:26:05,753 So it's been a long time, 327 00:26:05,787 --> 00:26:08,522 and, you know, I study supernovae for a living. 328 00:26:08,556 --> 00:26:13,927 I couldn't do this if I had to just wait for one in our galaxy. 329 00:26:13,962 --> 00:26:16,864 But thankfully for Howell and Filippenko, 330 00:26:16,898 --> 00:26:19,767 there's no shortage of galaxies. 331 00:26:22,037 --> 00:26:26,774 So what we do is we look at other galaxies, more distant galaxies. 332 00:26:26,808 --> 00:26:29,209 There are billions of galaxies out there, 333 00:26:29,244 --> 00:26:33,580 and we see the supernovae that happen in those galaxies. 334 00:26:33,615 --> 00:26:38,686 And if you look at 70 galaxies, on average you'll find one a year. 335 00:26:38,720 --> 00:26:42,623 If you look at 700 galaxies, you'll find ten a year, and so on. 336 00:26:42,657 --> 00:26:44,158 There's power in numbers. 337 00:26:44,192 --> 00:26:50,664 If we look at thousands of galaxies, we improve our odds tremendously. 338 00:26:50,699 --> 00:26:52,599 This is a supernova 339 00:26:52,634 --> 00:26:56,737 that Filippenko and his colleagues are lucky enough to catch-- 340 00:26:56,771 --> 00:27:04,812 an exploding star on the outskirts of a galaxy 55 million light years away. 341 00:27:04,846 --> 00:27:08,849 It briefly outshines the entire galaxy-- 342 00:27:08,883 --> 00:27:15,022 the light of a billion suns distilled into one dying star. 343 00:27:16,958 --> 00:27:18,726 It takes supernova light 344 00:27:18,760 --> 00:27:21,595 a million, or even a billion years to get here 345 00:27:21,629 --> 00:27:24,264 if they're millions or billions of light years away. 346 00:27:24,299 --> 00:27:26,400 But they only shine for about a month, 347 00:27:26,434 --> 00:27:29,670 so we have this little tiny window to study these things 348 00:27:29,704 --> 00:27:32,306 before that light is gone forever. 349 00:27:32,340 --> 00:27:35,109 In the workshop, Howell and his team 350 00:27:35,143 --> 00:27:38,545 are busy preparing their telescopes. 351 00:27:39,614 --> 00:27:42,449 - Pretty cool. - That's right. 352 00:27:42,484 --> 00:27:44,785 We're building a network of telescopes 353 00:27:44,819 --> 00:27:47,554 so that we can study supernovae in greater numbers, 354 00:27:47,589 --> 00:27:51,125 in greater detail, than we've ever been able to before. 355 00:27:53,361 --> 00:27:55,362 Let me show you the telescopes we're building. 356 00:27:55,396 --> 00:27:57,831 These are the 0.4 meter telescopes 357 00:27:57,866 --> 00:27:59,733 and there are four of them here, 358 00:27:59,768 --> 00:28:03,237 and we're building them, 20 of them in total, 359 00:28:03,271 --> 00:28:05,072 and putting them all around the world. 360 00:28:05,106 --> 00:28:07,841 So some of these first ones will go to Chile, 361 00:28:07,876 --> 00:28:10,577 we have some in Hawaii already. 362 00:28:10,612 --> 00:28:12,379 So let me show you one of the bigger telescopes 363 00:28:12,413 --> 00:28:14,314 we're building here. 364 00:28:14,349 --> 00:28:16,550 Here we have the one meter telescope. 365 00:28:16,584 --> 00:28:18,385 We're building about fifteen. 366 00:28:18,419 --> 00:28:21,121 The mirror's not here yet, but this is where it's going to go. 367 00:28:21,156 --> 00:28:24,091 That will reflect the light we gather from the supernova. 368 00:28:24,125 --> 00:28:26,326 We have to be able to point anywhere in the sky, 369 00:28:26,361 --> 00:28:29,663 and so you can see that the telescope pivots along this axis, 370 00:28:29,697 --> 00:28:31,965 and this C ring moves. 371 00:28:35,069 --> 00:28:36,870 The great thing about this kind of observing 372 00:28:36,905 --> 00:28:38,939 is that it's totally robotic, 373 00:28:38,973 --> 00:28:41,241 and I can just sit here in Santa Barbara 374 00:28:41,276 --> 00:28:44,645 and have a beer and pizza while the telescopes do their work. 375 00:28:44,679 --> 00:28:49,983 All new discoveries about supernovae from all different places in the universe. 376 00:28:50,018 --> 00:28:52,986 Once they've caught the light of a dying star, 377 00:28:53,021 --> 00:28:55,455 the detective work begins. 378 00:28:57,258 --> 00:29:00,828 We collect that light and we analyze it in great detail 379 00:29:00,862 --> 00:29:03,330 in order to determine what's going on, 380 00:29:03,364 --> 00:29:05,566 what's the chemical makeup of the star, 381 00:29:05,600 --> 00:29:07,768 what's the pressure inside, what's the temperature, 382 00:29:07,802 --> 00:29:10,337 what kind of nuclear reactions are going on, 383 00:29:10,371 --> 00:29:12,339 how does a star explode. 384 00:29:12,373 --> 00:29:17,477 All of these things we figured out through the analysis of light. 385 00:29:20,181 --> 00:29:24,384 Astronomers deduce that only stars with a huge mass 386 00:29:24,419 --> 00:29:26,520 go out with a bang. 387 00:29:29,123 --> 00:29:32,826 A massive star has a very interesting and vigorous life. 388 00:29:32,861 --> 00:29:36,396 Initially it fuses hydrogen to form helium, 389 00:29:36,431 --> 00:29:37,731 and that produces energy. 390 00:29:37,765 --> 00:29:39,967 That makes the star shine. 391 00:29:40,001 --> 00:29:42,870 Then the ashes of that reaction, the helium, 392 00:29:42,904 --> 00:29:45,439 fuse together to form carbon and oxygen, 393 00:29:45,473 --> 00:29:47,474 releasing yet more energy. 394 00:29:47,508 --> 00:29:51,078 Then the carbon and oxygen can fuse into still heavier elements, 395 00:29:51,112 --> 00:29:54,681 magnesium and sodium and neon and things like that, 396 00:29:54,716 --> 00:29:58,886 and then silicon and sulfur, and finally iron. 397 00:29:58,920 --> 00:30:04,324 When it starts to make iron, the giant star is doomed. 398 00:30:06,828 --> 00:30:10,764 In the core a fierce battle takes place: 399 00:30:10,798 --> 00:30:15,035 energy pushes outwards, holding it up, 400 00:30:15,069 --> 00:30:18,672 while gravity wants to crush it inwards. 401 00:30:20,742 --> 00:30:27,080 The battle continues as the star makes heavier and heavier elements-- 402 00:30:27,115 --> 00:30:31,685 producing energy while fending off total collapse. 403 00:30:34,989 --> 00:30:40,260 But once it starts to form iron, the battle is lost. 404 00:30:44,532 --> 00:30:47,734 Fusion of iron nuclei into heavier things 405 00:30:47,769 --> 00:30:51,104 does not release energy, it absorbs energy. 406 00:30:51,139 --> 00:30:53,440 So an iron core builds up, 407 00:30:53,474 --> 00:30:57,444 but finally it becomes so massive that gravity wins. 408 00:30:57,478 --> 00:30:59,746 The iron core collapses. 409 00:30:59,781 --> 00:31:03,450 In less than a second the outer layers collapse inward, 410 00:31:03,484 --> 00:31:07,254 then rebound and get blown to smithereens. 411 00:31:27,508 --> 00:31:34,014 But from this death comes new life. 412 00:31:53,234 --> 00:31:54,901 We're at a foundry here, 413 00:31:54,936 --> 00:31:59,773 and they're pouring molten iron from old machinery, 414 00:31:59,807 --> 00:32:03,276 and they're going to make parts for new machines out of that iron. 415 00:32:03,311 --> 00:32:05,178 So they're recycling it. 416 00:32:05,213 --> 00:32:09,282 But all that iron was created and ejected into the cosmos 417 00:32:09,317 --> 00:32:13,987 by gigantic stars that exploded as supernovae. 418 00:32:15,723 --> 00:32:19,793 Those explosions created the iron, ejected it into the cosmos, 419 00:32:19,827 --> 00:32:23,797 and then it got incorporated into planetary systems like ours. 420 00:32:23,831 --> 00:32:30,504 But ultimately the atoms of iron were created by exploding stars. 421 00:32:30,538 --> 00:32:36,710 Supernovas are the industrial zones of our star city-- 422 00:32:36,744 --> 00:32:41,081 cosmic foundries that forge new elements. 423 00:32:44,452 --> 00:32:46,653 In catastrophic explosions 424 00:32:46,687 --> 00:32:50,390 heavy elements are spewed out into our galaxy, 425 00:32:50,425 --> 00:32:54,261 enriching it over billions of years. 426 00:32:54,295 --> 00:32:57,164 So if some stars were not to explode 427 00:32:57,198 --> 00:33:01,401 in the industrial zones of galaxies like our Milky Way, 428 00:33:01,436 --> 00:33:05,405 then we wouldn't have these industrial zones here on Earth. 429 00:33:05,440 --> 00:33:06,807 It all is linked. 430 00:33:06,841 --> 00:33:10,610 We're all linked to the cosmos. 431 00:33:10,645 --> 00:33:13,747 Our lives today are only possible 432 00:33:13,781 --> 00:33:18,652 because of events that happened thousands of millions of years ago 433 00:33:18,686 --> 00:33:22,289 in the hearts of supernovas. 434 00:33:28,529 --> 00:33:33,266 It's fascinating to realize that the heavy elements in our bodies, 435 00:33:33,301 --> 00:33:36,770 the carbon in our cells, the calcium in our bones, 436 00:33:36,804 --> 00:33:40,974 the oxygen that we breathe, the iron in our red blood cells, 437 00:33:41,008 --> 00:33:44,478 all of those heavy elements were synthesized, 438 00:33:44,512 --> 00:33:47,948 created through nuclear reactions in stars 439 00:33:47,982 --> 00:33:52,519 and ejected into the cosmos by supernovae. 440 00:33:56,824 --> 00:34:03,096 But only a handful of stars are massive enough to die as supernovas. 441 00:34:03,131 --> 00:34:09,369 Most stars, like our sun, suffer a more gentle death. 442 00:34:09,403 --> 00:34:13,106 Most stars don't die in a cataclysmic explosion. 443 00:34:13,141 --> 00:34:15,976 Our own sun, for example, a typical star, 444 00:34:16,010 --> 00:34:18,678 will die with a whimper, not a bang. 445 00:34:23,584 --> 00:34:26,753 Death comes when the gravity pulling in 446 00:34:26,787 --> 00:34:32,192 finally succumbs to the nuclear energy pushing out. 447 00:34:35,429 --> 00:34:41,401 When this happens, any star, even our sun, will die. 448 00:34:43,704 --> 00:34:45,872 In about four or five billion years 449 00:34:45,907 --> 00:34:50,177 it'll grow into a much bigger star, a star called a red giant, 450 00:34:50,211 --> 00:34:52,579 and the outer atmosphere of gases 451 00:34:52,613 --> 00:34:56,449 will be held so loosely by the sun at that time 452 00:34:56,484 --> 00:35:02,088 that the gases will be blown away gently, in what I call a cosmic burp. 453 00:35:04,125 --> 00:35:08,161 These cosmic burps leave behind dying stars 454 00:35:08,196 --> 00:35:14,534 that litter the spiral arms as they slowly shed layers of elements. 455 00:35:15,903 --> 00:35:19,206 Some layers are oxygen and some layers are silicon 456 00:35:19,240 --> 00:35:21,174 and some layers are sulfur, 457 00:35:21,209 --> 00:35:23,109 and those are the different colors we see 458 00:35:23,144 --> 00:35:25,879 in the Hubble Space Telescope images. 459 00:35:28,182 --> 00:35:34,187 Not far from our sun 460 00:35:34,222 --> 00:35:37,390 the Helix Nebula. 461 00:35:37,425 --> 00:35:42,295 It sheds light on how most stars end their lives. 462 00:35:45,900 --> 00:35:50,103 Our sun is destined to follow a similar path when it dies, 463 00:35:50,137 --> 00:35:53,073 five billion years from now. 464 00:35:58,045 --> 00:36:00,747 But in other neighborhoods in the galaxy, 465 00:36:00,781 --> 00:36:04,384 stars suffer a fate worse than death. 466 00:36:04,418 --> 00:36:05,919 At the center of the galaxy 467 00:36:05,953 --> 00:36:10,357 lies a place where stars disappear altogether. 468 00:36:21,535 --> 00:36:25,138 We're taking the Earth from the safety of home 469 00:36:25,172 --> 00:36:29,643 to go downtown, to the heart of the Milky Way. 470 00:36:33,447 --> 00:36:40,620 It's a dynamic, exciting district, but it's also a risky place to hang out. 471 00:36:43,057 --> 00:36:49,095 Andrea Ghez has spent over 15 years exploring this neighborhood. 472 00:36:50,364 --> 00:36:52,899 If we were to take a trip from the spiral arms, 473 00:36:52,933 --> 00:36:54,968 out where we are by the sun, 474 00:36:55,002 --> 00:36:58,305 down to the center of the galaxy, it would be an interesting trip. 475 00:36:58,339 --> 00:37:01,274 It would be very much like moving from the suburbs 476 00:37:01,309 --> 00:37:08,081 into the heart of a very busy metropolitan area. 477 00:37:08,115 --> 00:37:13,653 As we head downtown, the number of stars increases. 478 00:37:13,688 --> 00:37:18,091 So the density of stars is tremendous at the center of the galaxy. 479 00:37:18,125 --> 00:37:22,128 It's about a billion times higher than out here by the sun. 480 00:37:24,965 --> 00:37:28,101 Here, at the center of the galaxy, 481 00:37:28,135 --> 00:37:31,404 there are so many stars in the sky 482 00:37:31,439 --> 00:37:35,241 that the Earth is bathed in perpetual light. 483 00:37:38,212 --> 00:37:43,983 It's a stunning but dangerous sight to behold. 484 00:37:44,018 --> 00:37:47,854 The stars aren't just close together. 485 00:37:47,888 --> 00:37:50,857 They're moving at super speed. 486 00:37:55,463 --> 00:37:56,896 Going to the heart of the galaxy 487 00:37:56,931 --> 00:38:00,900 might not be dissimilar to going to an amusement park. 488 00:38:00,935 --> 00:38:03,370 The rides are somewhat similar 489 00:38:03,404 --> 00:38:06,906 to how the stars orbit the center of the galaxy. 490 00:38:08,809 --> 00:38:13,046 Ten million miles per hour, compared to, say, our sun, 491 00:38:13,080 --> 00:38:17,117 is about a factor of 50 times faster. 492 00:38:17,151 --> 00:38:20,653 So something has to be going on at the center of our galaxy 493 00:38:20,688 --> 00:38:22,822 to make that happen. 494 00:38:24,725 --> 00:38:29,028 But figuring out what is no small task. 495 00:38:29,063 --> 00:38:34,768 The heart of our galaxy lies 26,000 light years away. 496 00:38:34,802 --> 00:38:36,503 It's difficult to observe 497 00:38:36,537 --> 00:38:41,808 through the vast amounts of stars, gas and dust. 498 00:38:41,842 --> 00:38:45,879 And there's another problem even closer to home: 499 00:38:45,913 --> 00:38:48,581 the Earth's atmosphere. 500 00:38:50,117 --> 00:38:51,418 The atmosphere is great for us. 501 00:38:51,452 --> 00:38:53,086 It allows us to survive here on Earth, 502 00:38:53,120 --> 00:38:56,756 but it's an absolute headache for astronomers. 503 00:38:56,791 --> 00:38:58,324 It's very much like the problem 504 00:38:58,359 --> 00:39:00,994 of looking at a pebble at the bottom of a stream. 505 00:39:01,028 --> 00:39:03,863 The water in the stream is moving by and it's turbulent 506 00:39:03,898 --> 00:39:06,599 and it makes it very difficult to get a clear vision. 507 00:39:06,634 --> 00:39:09,102 In the same way, looking through the Earth's atmosphere 508 00:39:09,136 --> 00:39:14,774 prevents us from getting clear pictures of the stars at the center of the galaxy. 509 00:39:14,809 --> 00:39:16,843 So astronomers like Ghez 510 00:39:16,877 --> 00:39:20,380 turn to a technique called adaptive optics 511 00:39:20,414 --> 00:39:23,483 to get a better view. 512 00:39:23,517 --> 00:39:28,188 By measuring how a laser beam is distorted in moving air, 513 00:39:28,222 --> 00:39:32,892 it's possible to compensate for the atmosphere's blurring effect. 514 00:39:34,261 --> 00:39:36,296 So let me show you an example 515 00:39:36,330 --> 00:39:38,998 of how powerful adaptive optics is. 516 00:39:39,033 --> 00:39:40,200 The stars that we want to see 517 00:39:40,234 --> 00:39:42,635 are the ones that are at the very center, 518 00:39:42,670 --> 00:39:43,870 and we think the heart of the galaxy 519 00:39:43,904 --> 00:39:47,540 is right within the center of this box, which is panned out here. 520 00:39:47,575 --> 00:39:51,077 Without adaptive optics, this region looks completely blurry. 521 00:39:51,111 --> 00:39:53,012 You don't see the individual stars. 522 00:39:53,047 --> 00:39:58,651 With adaptive optics you see the individual stars. 523 00:39:58,686 --> 00:40:02,655 For 15 years Ghez has taken infrared images 524 00:40:02,690 --> 00:40:05,558 of the stars at the heart of the galaxy 525 00:40:05,593 --> 00:40:10,763 to produce an extraordinary time-lapse movie. 526 00:40:10,798 --> 00:40:13,299 So if we zoom in to the very heart of the galaxy 527 00:40:13,334 --> 00:40:15,068 we can actually see the data that we've taken 528 00:40:15,102 --> 00:40:16,769 over the last 15 years, 529 00:40:16,804 --> 00:40:18,171 and you can see the stars 530 00:40:18,205 --> 00:40:20,073 and you can see the tremendous motion that they've gone through. 531 00:40:20,107 --> 00:40:23,510 in particular SO-2, which is my favorite star-- 532 00:40:23,544 --> 00:40:25,545 every astronomer has a favorite one-- 533 00:40:25,579 --> 00:40:27,614 so you can see SO-2 goes around 534 00:40:27,648 --> 00:40:30,750 and in particular you can see, as it gets to the center of the frame, 535 00:40:30,784 --> 00:40:32,352 it moves much more quickly. 536 00:40:32,386 --> 00:40:35,255 So something's interesting as it goes through that region. 537 00:40:35,289 --> 00:40:38,525 So putting everything together, all the measurements that we've made, 538 00:40:38,559 --> 00:40:40,293 we've been able to make an animation 539 00:40:40,327 --> 00:40:45,932 that shows how the stars have moved over the course of 15 years. 540 00:40:45,966 --> 00:40:49,636 Each star goes whipping around the center of the galaxy. 541 00:40:49,670 --> 00:40:52,372 in particular the most striking thing that you'll notice 542 00:40:52,406 --> 00:40:55,608 is the motion of SO-2. 543 00:40:55,643 --> 00:40:59,279 So SO-2 goes on an incredible roller coaster ride. 544 00:40:59,313 --> 00:41:03,182 it comes whipping around and then back out. 545 00:41:03,217 --> 00:41:05,985 For an object to have enough gravitational pull 546 00:41:06,020 --> 00:41:11,824 to send SO-2 on rapid orbit around the center of the galaxy... 547 00:41:11,859 --> 00:41:16,195 it must also have a huge mass. 548 00:41:21,702 --> 00:41:25,104 SO-2 goes around once every 15 years, 549 00:41:25,139 --> 00:41:30,743 and what it tells us is that there is four million times the mass of the sun 550 00:41:30,778 --> 00:41:33,646 confined within its orbit. 551 00:41:36,884 --> 00:41:39,786 Astronomers know of only one contender 552 00:41:39,820 --> 00:41:44,724 that has a giant mass but is so small. 553 00:41:44,758 --> 00:41:46,960 So that's an incredible amount of mass 554 00:41:46,994 --> 00:41:48,861 inside a very small volume, 555 00:41:48,896 --> 00:41:53,533 and that's the key to proving a black hole. 556 00:41:53,567 --> 00:41:56,269 And so at the center of our galaxy 557 00:41:56,303 --> 00:41:59,272 lies a massive black hole, 558 00:41:59,306 --> 00:42:05,345 an object whose gravity is so strong not even light can escape it. 559 00:42:08,048 --> 00:42:13,052 This is a real image of the center of our galaxy. 560 00:42:14,421 --> 00:42:16,856 We can't see the black hole-- 561 00:42:16,890 --> 00:42:23,830 but we can see bright clouds of dust and gas spiraling toward it. 562 00:42:26,867 --> 00:42:29,602 We're nearing the black hole. 563 00:42:29,637 --> 00:42:34,207 It's at the center of a stream of dust and gas... 564 00:42:36,877 --> 00:42:42,415 ...the debris of stars blown apart after straying too close. 565 00:42:46,620 --> 00:42:48,554 Black holes grow with time, 566 00:42:48,589 --> 00:42:51,924 and that happens by material falling onto it, 567 00:42:51,959 --> 00:42:53,493 accreting onto it, 568 00:42:53,527 --> 00:42:56,763 and that material can come in the form of either gas 569 00:42:56,797 --> 00:43:02,602 or stars that get torn apart by the black hole itself. 570 00:43:02,636 --> 00:43:07,674 At the center is the invisible black hole. 571 00:43:07,708 --> 00:43:12,478 This is the material it feeds on. 572 00:43:12,513 --> 00:43:16,883 The glowing region is the accretion disc. 573 00:43:16,917 --> 00:43:19,619 Here star debris falls inward 574 00:43:19,653 --> 00:43:22,955 and whips around at astonishing speed. 575 00:43:22,990 --> 00:43:27,226 Friction heats the debris up to such high temperatures 576 00:43:27,261 --> 00:43:30,863 that it glows white hot. 577 00:43:30,898 --> 00:43:33,332 So at the center of our galaxy we do have a black hole. 578 00:43:33,367 --> 00:43:35,001 We now know that today, 579 00:43:35,035 --> 00:43:38,705 but it's not producing a tremendous amount of energy. 580 00:43:38,739 --> 00:43:42,408 So it's perhaps, we could say, it's a black hole that's on a diet. 581 00:43:42,443 --> 00:43:47,146 It simply doesn't have a lot of material to feast on. 582 00:43:47,181 --> 00:43:51,284 But what would happen if SO-2 and the other stars 583 00:43:51,318 --> 00:43:55,421 were pulled inward by the black hole? 584 00:43:55,456 --> 00:43:58,357 What happens when that material falls onto the black hole 585 00:43:58,392 --> 00:43:59,859 is that the black hole, 586 00:43:59,893 --> 00:44:02,528 there's radiation associated with the black hole 587 00:44:02,563 --> 00:44:04,597 and it can generate these jets, 588 00:44:04,631 --> 00:44:08,534 squirting out from the center of the galaxy. 589 00:44:08,569 --> 00:44:12,839 Spewing out subatomic particles close to the speed of light, 590 00:44:12,873 --> 00:44:17,210 the beams are like vast cosmic searchlights. 591 00:44:28,956 --> 00:44:31,524 This is Messier 87, 592 00:44:31,558 --> 00:44:37,930 a large elliptical galaxy that has a super massive black hole at its heart. 593 00:44:37,965 --> 00:44:42,635 It's feasting on its own stars. 594 00:44:42,669 --> 00:44:45,071 Shooting out from its bright core 595 00:44:45,105 --> 00:44:49,709 are jets that travel over 5,000 light years. 596 00:44:51,445 --> 00:44:55,014 I like to call these the prima donnas of the galaxy world. 597 00:44:55,048 --> 00:44:59,452 These are the ten percent of galaxies that are showoffs. 598 00:45:02,556 --> 00:45:05,725 Astronomers believe that the massive black hole 599 00:45:05,759 --> 00:45:07,460 at the heart of the Milky Way 600 00:45:07,494 --> 00:45:10,930 has been there from the very start. 601 00:45:13,333 --> 00:45:17,103 But in order to get back to where the galaxy first began, 602 00:45:17,137 --> 00:45:23,276 we have to travel out to the oldest neighborhood in our star city. 603 00:45:34,121 --> 00:45:38,157 We're traveling upward, away from our solar system, 604 00:45:38,192 --> 00:45:42,862 out of the spiral arms of our Milky Way. 605 00:45:42,896 --> 00:45:50,369 Up ahead lie vast clusters of stars that orbit the heart of our star city. 606 00:45:52,940 --> 00:45:56,742 There are over 150 of them. 607 00:45:59,313 --> 00:46:03,583 These satellite towns, called globular clusters, 608 00:46:03,617 --> 00:46:09,622 hold the answer to one of the greatest mysteries in astronomy: 609 00:46:09,656 --> 00:46:13,459 the true age of our galaxy. 610 00:46:16,496 --> 00:46:20,366 Globular clusters are really fascinating groups of stars. 611 00:46:20,400 --> 00:46:22,869 They contain about a million stars each, 612 00:46:22,903 --> 00:46:24,971 and the thing that's really cool about them 613 00:46:25,005 --> 00:46:29,675 is the stars are really tightly packed. 614 00:46:29,710 --> 00:46:31,244 If you could visit a globular cluster, 615 00:46:31,278 --> 00:46:34,347 the night sky would be spectacular, 616 00:46:34,381 --> 00:46:38,317 where many of the stars would be as bright as the full moon. 617 00:46:38,352 --> 00:46:43,022 And the nighttime sky in all directions would be filled with bright nearby stars. 618 00:46:43,056 --> 00:46:45,458 There'd be like fireworks all the time. 619 00:46:48,729 --> 00:46:51,564 Besides the sheer number of stars, 620 00:46:51,598 --> 00:46:56,802 there's something even more intriguing about these clusters. 621 00:46:56,837 --> 00:46:58,871 One of the very interesting aspects of globular clusters 622 00:46:58,906 --> 00:47:03,109 is there's no sign of young stars. 623 00:47:05,812 --> 00:47:09,882 Stars are like people. 624 00:47:09,917 --> 00:47:14,387 Look at them, and you can guess their age 625 00:47:14,421 --> 00:47:18,324 and the lives they've led. 626 00:47:18,358 --> 00:47:24,030 With people, gray hairs and wrinkles are the telltale signs. 627 00:47:24,064 --> 00:47:27,867 With stars, it's color and size. 628 00:47:29,937 --> 00:47:31,904 So the biggest stars, the most massive stars, 629 00:47:31,939 --> 00:47:35,308 the ones with the most gas, live life in the fast lane. 630 00:47:35,342 --> 00:47:37,443 They live very short amounts of time. 631 00:47:37,477 --> 00:47:40,313 But they burn very brightly and they're very, very hot, 632 00:47:40,347 --> 00:47:43,516 and so they tend to be blue. 633 00:47:43,550 --> 00:47:45,818 On the other hand you have the red stars, 634 00:47:45,852 --> 00:47:49,021 which use their energy very conservatively, 635 00:47:49,056 --> 00:47:52,224 last for a long time, don't glow too brightly. 636 00:47:52,259 --> 00:47:55,394 And those stars last for a very long time. 637 00:47:55,429 --> 00:47:57,263 So by measuring the brightnesses 638 00:47:57,297 --> 00:48:00,299 and the colors of the stars in a globular cluster, 639 00:48:00,334 --> 00:48:01,968 we can figure out how old they are. 640 00:48:02,002 --> 00:48:03,369 And here's the remarkable thing. 641 00:48:03,403 --> 00:48:05,538 They're very old. 642 00:48:05,572 --> 00:48:08,741 Globular clusters, at least the stars in globular clusters, 643 00:48:08,775 --> 00:48:13,079 in many cases are almost as old as the universe itself. 644 00:48:17,217 --> 00:48:21,520 Globular clusters are living fossils. 645 00:48:21,555 --> 00:48:24,423 They're like discovering a community of people 646 00:48:24,458 --> 00:48:27,793 who've been around since the stone age. 647 00:48:30,664 --> 00:48:36,302 Some stars here have been shining for 12 billion years-- 648 00:48:36,336 --> 00:48:39,705 more than twice as long as the sun. 649 00:48:39,740 --> 00:48:44,610 And that's a helpful tool in placing an age on the Milky Way. 650 00:48:46,713 --> 00:48:49,048 Globular clusters are part of our galaxy. 651 00:48:49,082 --> 00:48:50,182 They orbit our galaxy. 652 00:48:50,217 --> 00:48:53,252 In some sense they're tracers of our galaxy itself. 653 00:48:53,286 --> 00:48:55,821 And so by the fact that the globular clusters are so old, 654 00:48:55,856 --> 00:48:58,691 it suggests that the galaxy is old. 655 00:49:01,695 --> 00:49:05,031 And our galaxy isn't just old-- 656 00:49:05,065 --> 00:49:08,734 it's very old. 657 00:49:08,769 --> 00:49:14,974 In fact, the Milky Way is one of the oldest objects in the cosmos. 658 00:49:15,008 --> 00:49:19,612 It's been around almost since the beginning of the entire universe-- 659 00:49:19,646 --> 00:49:22,581 at least 12 billion years. 660 00:49:24,684 --> 00:49:30,122 Globular clusters also show that the chemistry of the galaxy back then 661 00:49:30,157 --> 00:49:34,360 was very different from how it is today. 662 00:49:36,763 --> 00:49:39,665 We can measure the chemical properties of those stars. 663 00:49:39,699 --> 00:49:44,170 Turns out they have very low abundances of the heavy elements. 664 00:49:44,204 --> 00:49:47,973 Things like iron are very rare in globular cluster stars, 665 00:49:48,008 --> 00:49:50,609 compared to a star like the sun. 666 00:49:52,646 --> 00:49:58,284 That means the early galaxy was a far less colorful place. 667 00:50:02,289 --> 00:50:05,491 Without heavy elements there weren't the beautiful hues 668 00:50:05,525 --> 00:50:10,362 we see in nebulas and supernova remnants today. 669 00:50:10,397 --> 00:50:15,701 Even more importantly-- it was a galaxy without life. 670 00:50:17,437 --> 00:50:22,708 It took billions of years for stars to form enough heavy elements 671 00:50:22,742 --> 00:50:27,780 for the evolution of life to begin anywhere in the Milky Way... 672 00:50:32,552 --> 00:50:34,520 ...leaving many to wonder 673 00:50:34,554 --> 00:50:39,091 how the galaxy has managed to keep going for so long. 674 00:50:44,931 --> 00:50:47,466 One of the puzzles about our galaxy 675 00:50:47,501 --> 00:50:51,036 is that we know that it's had stars forming continuously 676 00:50:51,071 --> 00:50:53,372 for about the last ten billion years. 677 00:50:53,406 --> 00:50:56,075 But at the rate it's eating up its gas now, 678 00:50:56,109 --> 00:50:58,744 it's forming new stars, it should burn out that gas soon. 679 00:50:58,778 --> 00:51:00,079 It should run out of fuel. 680 00:51:00,113 --> 00:51:02,548 And so there has to be some source for new fuel. 681 00:51:02,582 --> 00:51:06,652 That source must be outside the galaxy. 682 00:51:06,686 --> 00:51:12,358 And recently astronomers made a startling discovery: 683 00:51:12,392 --> 00:51:17,363 Globular clusters aren't the only groups of stars orbiting the Milky Way. 684 00:51:17,397 --> 00:51:21,667 There are other tiny galaxies circling our galaxy 685 00:51:21,701 --> 00:51:25,538 called ultra faint dwarf galaxies. 686 00:51:25,572 --> 00:51:27,239 The reason why we haven't known 687 00:51:27,274 --> 00:51:29,542 about these dwarf galaxies for very long, 688 00:51:29,576 --> 00:51:32,511 these so-called ultra faint dwarf galaxies, 689 00:51:32,546 --> 00:51:35,114 is that they contain just a few hundred stars, 690 00:51:35,148 --> 00:51:36,916 a thousand stars. 691 00:51:36,950 --> 00:51:40,219 So you try to find a clump of a thousand stars 692 00:51:40,253 --> 00:51:42,655 while looking through a mass of a billion stars. 693 00:51:42,689 --> 00:51:43,689 It's not easy. 694 00:51:43,723 --> 00:51:45,491 This is a needle in a haystack problem. 695 00:51:45,525 --> 00:51:47,693 And it's only because we have the precise maps, 696 00:51:47,727 --> 00:51:50,129 it's the precision of modern astronomy 697 00:51:50,163 --> 00:51:51,597 that's allowed us to discover 698 00:51:51,631 --> 00:51:54,667 these extremely interesting dwarf galaxies. 699 00:51:56,970 --> 00:52:00,706 These elusive bodies may help solve the mystery 700 00:52:00,740 --> 00:52:03,609 of what's fueling the galaxy. 701 00:52:05,212 --> 00:52:09,014 So these dwarf galaxies are whizzing around our galaxy. 702 00:52:09,049 --> 00:52:10,549 They're in orbit around it. 703 00:52:10,584 --> 00:52:12,518 Now sometimes they get too close, 704 00:52:12,552 --> 00:52:14,987 and when they get too close they get ripped apart. 705 00:52:15,021 --> 00:52:19,825 In fact they get eaten, in some sense, by our galaxy. 706 00:52:19,859 --> 00:52:24,463 This computer model shows dwarf galaxies as colored discs 707 00:52:24,497 --> 00:52:27,633 with our galaxy in the center. 708 00:52:27,667 --> 00:52:33,005 Over time, our galaxy pulls dwarf galaxies in, 709 00:52:33,039 --> 00:52:36,642 devours them, and uses their gas and dust 710 00:52:36,676 --> 00:52:40,646 to eventually form new stars. 711 00:52:43,016 --> 00:52:44,283 So in much the same way 712 00:52:44,317 --> 00:52:47,386 that a large city might sort of cannibalize its neighbors, 713 00:52:47,420 --> 00:52:52,324 the Milky Way is cannibalizing its dwarf galaxy population. 714 00:52:52,359 --> 00:52:55,394 Globular clusters and dwarf galaxies 715 00:52:55,428 --> 00:53:00,199 provide crucial insight to just how old our galaxy is... 716 00:53:00,233 --> 00:53:04,970 and how it's managed to survive for so long. 717 00:53:05,005 --> 00:53:09,975 These bodies were once thought to mark the Milky Way's city limits, 718 00:53:10,010 --> 00:53:14,713 the very outer reaches of our star city. 719 00:53:14,748 --> 00:53:19,451 But today astronomers are rethinking all that. 720 00:53:19,486 --> 00:53:24,323 Our galaxy might be bigger than what we can see, 721 00:53:24,357 --> 00:53:29,361 spreading out further than we ever imagined. 722 00:53:33,333 --> 00:53:35,000 We're picking up our Earth 723 00:53:35,035 --> 00:53:38,270 and moving from our quiet suburb to a new neighborhood 724 00:53:38,305 --> 00:53:41,507 in the outer spiral arm of our galaxy. 725 00:53:41,541 --> 00:53:43,842 Here we'll uncover the mystery 726 00:53:43,877 --> 00:53:48,947 of what holds all the stars in the Milky Way together. 727 00:53:51,551 --> 00:53:56,021 From our new address, the night sky looks a little different. 728 00:53:56,056 --> 00:54:01,026 The Milky Way is smaller and the sky darker. 729 00:54:01,061 --> 00:54:07,366 Here, tens of thousands of light years away from the center of our galaxy, 730 00:54:07,400 --> 00:54:11,770 we're still bound by the force of gravity. 731 00:54:14,341 --> 00:54:16,475 Gravity is the force that makes any two objects 732 00:54:16,509 --> 00:54:18,177 want to move towards each other. 733 00:54:22,315 --> 00:54:28,721 On Earth, cities are built with iron girders and concrete beams-- 734 00:54:28,755 --> 00:54:34,660 an invisible scaffold which holds buildings up against the pull of gravity. 735 00:54:37,364 --> 00:54:43,936 Without this scaffolding, skyscrapers would crumble and bridges collapse. 736 00:54:47,307 --> 00:54:52,411 Gravity governs Earth and the entire universe. 737 00:55:00,186 --> 00:55:05,424 Anything that has mass has a gravitational pull. 738 00:55:05,458 --> 00:55:09,261 The more the mass, the stronger the pull. 739 00:55:11,564 --> 00:55:18,370 With 200 billion stars, the Milky Way has a huge mass-- 740 00:55:18,405 --> 00:55:22,875 and a tremendous gravitational attraction to match. 741 00:55:22,909 --> 00:55:28,180 So, like a building, our galaxy also needs propping up 742 00:55:28,214 --> 00:55:31,316 against the force of gravity. 743 00:55:33,686 --> 00:55:35,754 Imagine the disc of our galaxy. 744 00:55:35,789 --> 00:55:37,689 If you just took a disc of stars 745 00:55:37,724 --> 00:55:38,724 and put it there, 746 00:55:38,758 --> 00:55:40,259 gravity would tend to make 747 00:55:40,293 --> 00:55:42,094 this disc collapse in on itself, 748 00:55:42,128 --> 00:55:44,163 and it would immediately just fall together. 749 00:55:44,197 --> 00:55:46,598 That's not what we see with the galaxy. 750 00:55:46,633 --> 00:55:49,902 What's actually going on is the stars are orbiting around the center, 751 00:55:49,936 --> 00:55:51,670 and that's what keeps them from falling in, 752 00:55:51,704 --> 00:55:55,674 in much the same way that the Earth is orbiting around the sun. 753 00:55:56,810 --> 00:56:01,747 The planets in our solar system are in a delicate balance-- 754 00:56:01,781 --> 00:56:04,516 gravity pulls them towards the sun 755 00:56:04,551 --> 00:56:10,722 while their orbital velocity wants to fling them out into space. 756 00:56:12,592 --> 00:56:14,693 In order to stay balanced, 757 00:56:14,727 --> 00:56:19,765 planets further from the sun must orbit more slowly. 758 00:56:21,134 --> 00:56:22,901 If you go to more distant planets 759 00:56:22,936 --> 00:56:24,369 at the edge of the solar system, 760 00:56:24,404 --> 00:56:27,105 they're going around the sun much more slowly than the Earth is, 761 00:56:27,140 --> 00:56:29,975 and that's because the gravity is weaker. 762 00:56:30,009 --> 00:56:35,080 The same should hold true for stars in the Milky Way. 763 00:56:35,114 --> 00:56:39,718 They all orbit the center of the galaxy, 764 00:56:39,752 --> 00:56:44,723 but the stars in the outer arm should be traveling more slowly 765 00:56:44,757 --> 00:56:48,393 than those closer to the galaxy's heart. 766 00:56:48,428 --> 00:56:50,696 What's interesting is that's not what's going on. 767 00:56:54,334 --> 00:56:56,401 The stars in the outer parts of the galaxy 768 00:56:56,436 --> 00:57:00,639 are spinning around just as quickly as those in the inner parts. 769 00:57:00,673 --> 00:57:03,675 And they're not the only ones. 770 00:57:03,710 --> 00:57:06,545 It's not just our galaxy; it's every galaxy we look at. 771 00:57:06,579 --> 00:57:13,018 Every galaxy we look at seems to be spinning too fast in its outer parts. 772 00:57:13,052 --> 00:57:14,419 These speeding stars 773 00:57:14,454 --> 00:57:18,190 should be flung out of the galaxy altogether. 774 00:57:18,224 --> 00:57:21,527 But they're not. 775 00:57:21,561 --> 00:57:24,129 That is a puzzle. 776 00:57:24,163 --> 00:57:26,465 This means that there's a lot more mass there 777 00:57:26,499 --> 00:57:28,433 that we just can't see. 778 00:57:30,503 --> 00:57:32,771 Mass that produces the gravity 779 00:57:32,805 --> 00:57:36,975 that holds these stars in their orbits. 780 00:57:39,579 --> 00:57:42,514 But when astronomers look for the mass, 781 00:57:42,549 --> 00:57:47,119 there appears to be nothing there... 782 00:57:47,153 --> 00:57:54,660 leading cosmologists like Joel Primack to an astounding conclusion. 783 00:57:54,694 --> 00:57:56,662 All of the galaxies, 784 00:57:56,696 --> 00:58:00,165 all of the stars and gas and dust and planets and everything else 785 00:58:00,199 --> 00:58:03,535 that we can see with our greatest telescopes, 786 00:58:03,570 --> 00:58:08,840 represent about half of one percent of what's actually out there. 787 00:58:08,875 --> 00:58:10,609 The rest is invisible. 788 00:58:10,643 --> 00:58:15,414 It's mostly some mysterious substance that we call dark matter. 789 00:58:15,448 --> 00:58:17,649 You can't see dark matter. 790 00:58:17,684 --> 00:58:20,152 The reason why you can see normal matter 791 00:58:20,186 --> 00:58:23,388 is because light shines on it and reflects off of it. 792 00:58:23,423 --> 00:58:25,123 That's how you can see me. 793 00:58:25,158 --> 00:58:26,291 Dark matter doesn't work that way. 794 00:58:26,326 --> 00:58:29,595 The light goes right through the dark matter. 795 00:58:29,629 --> 00:58:33,532 The way we detect dark matter is because it has mass. 796 00:58:33,566 --> 00:58:37,302 Anything with mass affects other things via gravity. 797 00:58:37,337 --> 00:58:39,738 That's the golden rule of mass, that's what mass does, 798 00:58:39,772 --> 00:58:43,942 it tugs on other things because of gravity. 799 00:58:43,977 --> 00:58:49,781 Without dark matter, the Milky Way couldn't exist. 800 00:58:49,816 --> 00:58:51,283 So the galaxy is spinning. 801 00:58:51,317 --> 00:58:54,720 The galaxy is spinning fairly rapidly. 802 00:58:54,754 --> 00:58:58,457 The reason why it can spin so rapidly is because it has so much dark matter. 803 00:58:58,491 --> 00:59:02,661 The dark matter has a lot of mass and therefore it has a lot of gravity, 804 00:59:02,695 --> 00:59:06,798 and that's what keeps the stars whizzing around. 805 00:59:06,833 --> 00:59:09,001 If you were to magically take all of the dark matter 806 00:59:09,035 --> 00:59:10,402 away from our galaxy, 807 00:59:10,436 --> 00:59:11,436 it would fly apart. 808 00:59:11,471 --> 00:59:13,071 The stars would just keep going straight 809 00:59:13,106 --> 00:59:16,441 and in a very short amount of time the galaxy would just be gone. 810 00:59:16,476 --> 00:59:20,979 There'd be just a mess of stuff flying every which way. 811 00:59:21,014 --> 00:59:22,714 And that's not just true of our galaxy, 812 00:59:22,749 --> 00:59:23,982 it's true of every galaxy 813 00:59:24,017 --> 00:59:26,752 and every cluster of galaxies in the universe. 814 00:59:26,786 --> 00:59:30,822 They're all held together by this invisible stuff 815 00:59:30,857 --> 00:59:33,225 that we call dark matter. 816 00:59:33,259 --> 00:59:36,762 So we need the dark matter. 817 00:59:36,796 --> 00:59:39,698 It's the glue that holds galaxies together. 818 00:59:42,368 --> 00:59:44,469 The discovery of dark matter 819 00:59:44,504 --> 00:59:49,207 has revolutionized our picture of the Milky Way. 820 00:59:49,242 --> 00:59:55,480 The stars of the galaxy represent just a fraction of its mass. 821 00:59:55,515 --> 01:00:01,286 The rest is made up of an invisible halo of dark matter-- 822 01:00:01,320 --> 01:00:07,626 surrounding every single star and every creature in the galaxy. 823 01:00:10,229 --> 01:00:12,964 The stars are just the central region. 824 01:00:12,999 --> 01:00:15,834 The halo is at least ten times bigger 825 01:00:15,868 --> 01:00:19,337 and weighs much more than ten times more 826 01:00:19,372 --> 01:00:23,241 than all the stars and gas and dust that we can see. 827 01:00:23,276 --> 01:00:28,613 It's that whole structure that's the real Milky Way galaxy. 828 01:00:28,648 --> 01:00:30,215 And that's not just true of our galaxy, 829 01:00:30,249 --> 01:00:33,251 it's true of every galaxy we've ever studied. 830 01:00:35,621 --> 01:00:41,860 But dark matter does more than simply hold galaxies together. 831 01:00:41,894 --> 01:00:45,397 Astronomers now think it binds the Milky Way 832 01:00:45,431 --> 01:00:52,704 into an extraordinary structure with billions of other galaxies-- 833 01:00:52,739 --> 01:00:58,310 a structure that reaches to the very edge of the universe. 834 01:01:04,283 --> 01:01:07,119 We've left our home galaxy to take the earth 835 01:01:07,153 --> 01:01:12,057 across billions of light years of space and time. 836 01:01:17,463 --> 01:01:18,663 One of the great things about telescopes 837 01:01:18,698 --> 01:01:21,299 is they're time machines. 838 01:01:21,334 --> 01:01:23,769 Because light travels at a finite speed, 839 01:01:23,803 --> 01:01:25,403 when we look at distant objects 840 01:01:25,438 --> 01:01:29,407 we see them as they were when the light left them. 841 01:01:29,442 --> 01:01:33,245 As astronomers look back over billions of years, 842 01:01:33,279 --> 01:01:37,048 they see a universe teeming with galaxies. 843 01:01:40,353 --> 01:01:45,657 But these galaxies aren't scattered randomly through space. 844 01:01:48,161 --> 01:01:56,935 They cluster along delicate filaments woven in an intricate structure-- 845 01:01:56,969 --> 01:02:00,005 a vast cosmic web that holds the answer 846 01:02:00,039 --> 01:02:04,009 to the birth of galaxies themselves. 847 01:02:08,514 --> 01:02:12,984 It's a story shrouded in darkness. 848 01:02:13,019 --> 01:02:20,892 Look back far enough and gradually all the galaxies disappear. 849 01:02:20,927 --> 01:02:24,396 We've reached a mysterious period of time, 850 01:02:24,430 --> 01:02:28,233 12.5 billion years ago. 851 01:02:28,267 --> 01:02:30,569 There's this time period that we can't see 852 01:02:30,603 --> 01:02:32,270 because nothing's formed yet. 853 01:02:32,305 --> 01:02:36,041 It's this epoch that's called the dark ages. 854 01:02:38,978 --> 01:02:43,014 During the dark ages, the universe was a very different place 855 01:02:43,049 --> 01:02:45,984 than the one we live in today. 856 01:02:48,588 --> 01:02:52,624 It's filled with dense clouds of hydrogen gas. 857 01:02:54,894 --> 01:02:58,797 Just as gas obscures stars in the Milky Way today, 858 01:02:58,831 --> 01:03:05,303 these clouds of hydrogen block the view inside the early universe. 859 01:03:05,338 --> 01:03:08,440 It's extremely frustrating because this region, 860 01:03:08,474 --> 01:03:11,943 this time period, holds within it, in some sense, 861 01:03:11,978 --> 01:03:15,614 the Rosetta Stone of galaxy formation. 862 01:03:15,648 --> 01:03:18,183 But there is one clue to what's happening 863 01:03:18,217 --> 01:03:23,021 inside those dense hydrogen clouds. 864 01:03:23,055 --> 01:03:24,890 Look back further in time 865 01:03:24,924 --> 01:03:30,729 to a moment just 380,000 years after the big bang. 866 01:03:30,763 --> 01:03:34,099 The universe isn't filled with darkness... 867 01:03:37,436 --> 01:03:40,338 but with light. 868 01:03:40,373 --> 01:03:45,243 Its faint afterglow is still visible to astronomers today. 869 01:03:47,713 --> 01:03:48,914 In fact, this picture is amazing. 870 01:03:48,948 --> 01:03:51,316 This is a picture of the early universe. 871 01:03:51,350 --> 01:03:56,421 This is an image of the afterglow of the big bang. 872 01:03:56,455 --> 01:04:00,091 The universe is filled with a hot atmosphere 873 01:04:00,126 --> 01:04:02,928 of matter and radiation. 874 01:04:05,364 --> 01:04:09,868 But already the seeds of change are being sown. 875 01:04:14,640 --> 01:04:16,341 Everywhere we look around us in the universe 876 01:04:16,375 --> 01:04:19,744 we see structure; we see galaxies all over the place. 877 01:04:19,779 --> 01:04:21,613 Where do these galaxies come from? 878 01:04:21,647 --> 01:04:24,716 There's a big clue to this buried in this picture. 879 01:04:24,750 --> 01:04:26,384 If you look closely, you can see 880 01:04:26,419 --> 01:04:29,220 that there are red spots and there are blue spots. 881 01:04:29,255 --> 01:04:33,358 These red regions are regions where there's basically more stuff, 882 01:04:33,392 --> 01:04:37,996 and the blue regions are the regions where there's less stuff. 883 01:04:38,030 --> 01:04:40,799 This image reveals tiny variations 884 01:04:40,833 --> 01:04:45,537 in the density of the gas that fills the early universe. 885 01:04:48,007 --> 01:04:52,043 Minute ripples that will grow with time. 886 01:04:54,280 --> 01:04:57,782 We think that these ripples, these primordial ripples, 887 01:04:57,817 --> 01:05:00,685 are the seeds to all future structure. 888 01:05:00,720 --> 01:05:04,990 These ripples eventually grew into what became the first galaxies. 889 01:05:05,024 --> 01:05:06,958 It takes a powerful force 890 01:05:06,993 --> 01:05:11,429 to grow something so small into something so big. 891 01:05:11,464 --> 01:05:14,265 It's gravity that amplifies these ripples, 892 01:05:14,300 --> 01:05:18,436 and in fact we need an additional source of gravity 893 01:05:18,471 --> 01:05:22,140 to amplify those ripples to form galaxies like we see today, 894 01:05:22,174 --> 01:05:25,577 and that additional gravity comes in the form of dark matter. 895 01:05:28,748 --> 01:05:33,084 What happens is that first the dark matter forms the structure. 896 01:05:33,119 --> 01:05:36,454 The ordinary matter then follows the dark matter. 897 01:05:36,489 --> 01:05:39,491 The ordinary matter is hydrogen and helium at this stage. 898 01:05:39,525 --> 01:05:43,495 And the hydrogen and helium fall to the center 899 01:05:43,529 --> 01:05:46,164 of the dark matter halos that are forming, 900 01:05:46,198 --> 01:05:50,402 and that's going to become the galaxies. 901 01:05:50,436 --> 01:05:52,670 Dark matter may be the missing link 902 01:05:52,705 --> 01:05:56,574 between these minute ripples in the early universe 903 01:05:56,609 --> 01:06:01,379 and the vast cosmic web that now fills space. 904 01:06:06,986 --> 01:06:10,855 But dark matter is invisible. 905 01:06:12,091 --> 01:06:17,328 So there's no way to actually see it creating the cosmic web. 906 01:06:19,398 --> 01:06:21,533 But the process can be simulated 907 01:06:21,567 --> 01:06:26,037 in one of the world's most powerful super computers. 908 01:06:29,341 --> 01:06:32,777 Here we are at NASA Ames, 909 01:06:32,812 --> 01:06:38,550 the research center where we have the Pleiades super computer. 910 01:06:38,584 --> 01:06:43,955 Each one of these cabinets contains 512 processors. 911 01:06:43,989 --> 01:06:47,592 Let me show you. 912 01:06:47,626 --> 01:06:51,563 So that's half a terabyte in each one of these cabinets. 913 01:06:51,597 --> 01:06:53,631 There's 110 of these cabinets 914 01:06:53,666 --> 01:06:57,602 to make up the entire Pleiades super computer. 915 01:06:57,636 --> 01:06:59,804 So this is a really big super computer. 916 01:06:59,839 --> 01:07:01,906 This is NASA's biggest. 917 01:07:04,110 --> 01:07:06,211 The challenge is equally big-- 918 01:07:06,245 --> 01:07:08,680 to develop a virtual universe-- 919 01:07:08,714 --> 01:07:12,784 from its early beginnings all the way to the present day-- 920 01:07:12,818 --> 01:07:19,924 to see what role dark matter might have played in shaping the cosmos. 921 01:07:19,959 --> 01:07:23,228 If you tried to do this on a home computer, 922 01:07:23,262 --> 01:07:26,498 it would take over 680 years. 923 01:07:28,367 --> 01:07:30,101 If we're doing our job right, 924 01:07:30,136 --> 01:07:34,139 we can put the pictures into a video, if you like, 925 01:07:34,173 --> 01:07:37,909 that shows the whole structure of the universe. 926 01:07:37,943 --> 01:07:40,979 And this is the end result. 927 01:07:41,013 --> 01:07:43,148 It's called Bolshoi-- 928 01:07:43,182 --> 01:07:45,717 an amazing visualization 929 01:07:45,751 --> 01:07:48,786 of what the structure of dark matter might look like 930 01:07:48,821 --> 01:07:51,256 in the universe today. 931 01:07:55,094 --> 01:07:56,594 So what we're looking at 932 01:07:56,629 --> 01:08:02,133 is a region about 200 million light years across, 933 01:08:02,168 --> 01:08:05,637 which is actually just a small part of our really big simulation 934 01:08:05,671 --> 01:08:08,806 that we call Bolshoi, which is Russian for "big." 935 01:08:08,841 --> 01:08:12,243 Everything that you see here is actually completely invisible. 936 01:08:12,278 --> 01:08:16,214 It's not the visible universe that you're seeing. 937 01:08:16,248 --> 01:08:19,551 The bright spots are dark matter. 938 01:08:19,585 --> 01:08:25,657 They're the halos of dark matter within which galaxies form. 939 01:08:25,691 --> 01:08:30,962 And each one of these little blobs would represent probably one, 940 01:08:30,996 --> 01:08:35,133 or at most a couple of Milky Way size galaxies. 941 01:08:35,167 --> 01:08:41,472 And you can see that the galaxies are in long chains, 942 01:08:41,507 --> 01:08:43,775 filaments we call them. 943 01:08:43,809 --> 01:08:50,281 Basically all the structure is forming along these filaments of dark matter. 944 01:08:53,018 --> 01:08:56,254 Now comes 945 01:08:56,288 --> 01:08:59,591 Primack compares the Bolshoi predictions 946 01:08:59,625 --> 01:09:05,630 with the actual structure of galaxies scientists see in the universe. 947 01:09:05,664 --> 01:09:07,298 As far as we can tell, 948 01:09:07,333 --> 01:09:10,835 these simulated universes that we make in the super computers 949 01:09:10,869 --> 01:09:13,171 look just like the observed universe. 950 01:09:13,205 --> 01:09:15,573 There don't seem to be any discrepancies at all. 951 01:09:15,608 --> 01:09:19,010 This is exactly the way we see the galaxies distributed 952 01:09:19,044 --> 01:09:22,814 in the observed universe. 953 01:09:22,848 --> 01:09:27,685 The Bolshoi simulations are astounding. 954 01:09:27,720 --> 01:09:33,591 They match the pattern of galaxies seen in the cosmos today perfectly. 955 01:09:36,762 --> 01:09:38,396 It's persuasive evidence 956 01:09:38,430 --> 01:09:44,502 that dark matter has been sculpting the universe for billions of years. 957 01:09:48,741 --> 01:09:50,475 No, I'm really impressed with this 958 01:09:50,509 --> 01:09:52,410 because we stuck our necks way out 959 01:09:52,444 --> 01:09:55,580 when we made these first predictions, 960 01:09:55,614 --> 01:09:58,249 and they turned out to be right. 961 01:09:58,284 --> 01:10:00,652 And they keep turning out to be right. 962 01:10:00,686 --> 01:10:04,422 And, you know, this is, of course, great joy for a theorist. 963 01:10:06,592 --> 01:10:10,094 By going back to the beginning of the universe, 964 01:10:10,129 --> 01:10:12,664 astronomers have uncovered the origin 965 01:10:12,698 --> 01:10:18,269 of the underlying structure of the entire cosmos. 966 01:10:18,304 --> 01:10:22,440 But our time travel is far from over. 967 01:10:22,474 --> 01:10:29,547 The question of how the first galaxies kindled the very first stars still remains. 968 01:10:33,085 --> 01:10:38,856 We're taking the earth inside the dark age-- 969 01:10:38,891 --> 01:10:42,994 a time over 12.5 billion years ago. 970 01:10:43,028 --> 01:10:47,498 The sight is spectacular. 971 01:10:47,533 --> 01:10:52,637 Our skies are lit by the first stars of the Milky Way. 972 01:10:55,240 --> 01:10:59,143 Their light pierces the hydrogen fog-- 973 01:10:59,178 --> 01:11:04,248 bathing the earth in strong ultraviolet energy. 974 01:11:04,283 --> 01:11:11,456 These first stars will change the way we see the universe forever. 975 01:11:11,490 --> 01:11:15,927 Tom Abel studies the life and death of these early stars. 976 01:11:18,797 --> 01:11:21,766 The beautiful thing is that we now have computers. 977 01:11:21,800 --> 01:11:24,335 We program them with the laws of physics, 978 01:11:24,370 --> 01:11:26,471 put in some gravity, hydrodynamics, 979 01:11:26,505 --> 01:11:29,140 how gases move around, some of the chemistry, 980 01:11:29,174 --> 01:11:31,909 and as we evolve it all together, 981 01:11:31,944 --> 01:11:35,113 we gain an intuition of how stars come about, 982 01:11:35,147 --> 01:11:40,318 and in the case of the very first stars, this is absolutely crucial. 983 01:11:42,988 --> 01:11:45,289 Abel begins with the basic ingredients 984 01:11:45,324 --> 01:11:48,826 available during the dark ages: 985 01:11:48,861 --> 01:11:53,731 hydrogen, helium, dark matter and gravity. 986 01:11:55,734 --> 01:11:57,668 Using computer models, 987 01:11:57,703 --> 01:12:02,206 Abel recreates the lives of these early stars. 988 01:12:07,446 --> 01:12:10,248 Here we see one of the first stars in the universe. 989 01:12:10,282 --> 01:12:12,550 It's a hundred times as massive as the sun, 990 01:12:12,584 --> 01:12:16,053 a million times as bright. 991 01:12:16,088 --> 01:12:19,791 The first stars are huge-- 992 01:12:19,825 --> 01:12:23,261 swollen by the massive amounts of hydrogen gas 993 01:12:23,295 --> 01:12:28,399 pulled in by the gravitational force of dark matter. 994 01:12:28,434 --> 01:12:30,568 And so even though they have all this fuel to burn 995 01:12:30,602 --> 01:12:32,370 you'd think they could live for a long time. 996 01:12:32,404 --> 01:12:34,739 They run through it so quickly 997 01:12:34,773 --> 01:12:40,678 that even after a few million years they're already dead. 998 01:12:40,712 --> 01:12:42,713 The first stars in our Milky Way 999 01:12:42,748 --> 01:12:46,050 are fierce, high octane stars-- 1000 01:12:46,084 --> 01:12:50,421 burning their hydrogen fuel at tremendous rates-- 1001 01:12:50,456 --> 01:12:54,025 racing through their life cycle. 1002 01:12:54,059 --> 01:12:55,493 They're like the rock stars. 1003 01:12:55,527 --> 01:12:57,161 They live fast and die young. 1004 01:12:57,196 --> 01:12:59,030 They run through their fuel very quickly 1005 01:12:59,064 --> 01:13:03,134 and even afterjust a few million years they already die. 1006 01:13:03,168 --> 01:13:06,404 They die in some of the most violent explosions 1007 01:13:06,438 --> 01:13:10,308 ever to rock the universe-- 1008 01:13:10,342 --> 01:13:14,178 gigantic supernovas that shine brilliantly. 1009 01:13:18,250 --> 01:13:19,617 The energy given off 1010 01:13:19,651 --> 01:13:23,087 during the life and death of these massive stars 1011 01:13:23,121 --> 01:13:26,791 leads to a miraculous transformation. 1012 01:13:30,395 --> 01:13:33,464 In the first billion years of the universe's history, 1013 01:13:33,499 --> 01:13:37,602 galaxies start to form in a dark hydrogen fog, 1014 01:13:37,636 --> 01:13:41,005 their light not being able to get to us. 1015 01:13:41,039 --> 01:13:42,573 But as time progresses 1016 01:13:42,608 --> 01:13:46,544 and their most massive stars put out ultraviolet radiation, 1017 01:13:46,578 --> 01:13:50,281 it's that radiation itself that changes the fog around them, 1018 01:13:50,315 --> 01:13:53,117 and the universe becomes transparent in those regions. 1019 01:13:53,151 --> 01:13:58,389 These galaxies in here are clearing out the fog around them. 1020 01:13:58,423 --> 01:14:02,293 The blue voids are where energy from the new stars 1021 01:14:02,327 --> 01:14:05,930 is clearing the dark hydrogen fog. 1022 01:14:10,802 --> 01:14:13,371 But towards a billion years after the big bang 1023 01:14:13,405 --> 01:14:15,106 the entire fog has cleared 1024 01:14:15,140 --> 01:14:18,242 and we now see all the galaxies, 1025 01:14:18,277 --> 01:14:21,212 and the dark ages end. 1026 01:14:24,016 --> 01:14:26,317 As the hydrogen fog lifts, 1027 01:14:26,351 --> 01:14:32,089 we get our first glimpse of newborn galaxies... 1028 01:14:32,124 --> 01:14:36,627 including our very own Milky Way. 1029 01:14:51,176 --> 01:14:54,345 This remarkable image is the Hubble ultra deep field. 1030 01:14:54,379 --> 01:14:56,914 It's the longest exposure that's ever been taken 1031 01:14:56,949 --> 01:14:58,716 with the Hubble Space Telescope. 1032 01:14:58,750 --> 01:15:00,351 It's a truly remarkable image, 1033 01:15:00,385 --> 01:15:04,922 probably the most famous to professional astronomers. 1034 01:15:04,957 --> 01:15:10,361 For over eleven days Hubble pointed at a tiny patch of sky 1035 01:15:10,395 --> 01:15:14,699 about the width of a dime held 75 feet away. 1036 01:15:18,937 --> 01:15:22,773 Every faint smudge of light is a galaxy. 1037 01:15:26,678 --> 01:15:30,381 For Richard Ellis, it's a treasure trove. 1038 01:15:31,817 --> 01:15:34,885 So much like an archaeologist would piece together history 1039 01:15:34,920 --> 01:15:37,755 by digging into deeper and deeper layers, 1040 01:15:37,789 --> 01:15:41,092 so a cosmologist like myself uses this image 1041 01:15:41,126 --> 01:15:42,893 to look at the history of the universe, 1042 01:15:42,928 --> 01:15:46,764 how the most distant galaxies, seen as they were a long time ago, 1043 01:15:46,798 --> 01:15:52,336 evolve and grow to the bigger systems that we see around us today. 1044 01:15:52,371 --> 01:15:58,376 This image gives us a sense of the dawn of our Milky Way. 1045 01:15:58,410 --> 01:16:00,611 When we look at these early galaxies, 1046 01:16:00,646 --> 01:16:04,682 they don't resemble the star cities that we see today. 1047 01:16:04,716 --> 01:16:06,550 They're lumpy, they're irregular, 1048 01:16:06,585 --> 01:16:09,520 they appear to be interacting with their neighbors, 1049 01:16:09,554 --> 01:16:11,489 they're physically very, very small. 1050 01:16:11,523 --> 01:16:16,494 So clearly the universe was very different in those early times. 1051 01:16:16,528 --> 01:16:22,299 12 billion years ago the universe is a much smaller place. 1052 01:16:22,334 --> 01:16:26,170 It hasn't yet expanded to the size it is today. 1053 01:16:28,740 --> 01:16:34,245 Our young Milky Way is jostling for room. 1054 01:16:34,279 --> 01:16:36,414 So it's very difficult for these early galaxies 1055 01:16:36,448 --> 01:16:38,249 to establish themselves. 1056 01:16:38,283 --> 01:16:44,822 These early galaxies are struggling to survive at this very early time. 1057 01:16:46,091 --> 01:16:49,360 It's survival of the fittest-- 1058 01:16:49,394 --> 01:16:54,498 the largest galaxies grow bigger by devouring the smallest. 1059 01:16:56,702 --> 01:16:58,736 So it's tough for these early systems to form, 1060 01:16:58,770 --> 01:17:02,239 but clearly they do, and they eventually merge with their neighbors 1061 01:17:02,274 --> 01:17:05,109 and form the bigger systems that we see today. 1062 01:17:08,580 --> 01:17:10,715 These collisions in the early universe 1063 01:17:10,749 --> 01:17:16,220 created the beautiful spiral galaxy we live in today... 1064 01:17:18,690 --> 01:17:21,225 ...and they've never stopped. 1065 01:17:21,259 --> 01:17:24,128 Astronomers believe there's still one final collision 1066 01:17:24,162 --> 01:17:27,098 in store for the Milky Way. 1067 01:17:27,132 --> 01:17:30,768 One that will change it forever. 1068 01:17:43,648 --> 01:17:50,421 We've transported the earth three billion years into the future. 1069 01:17:50,455 --> 01:17:56,293 The sky is dominated by a massive galaxy called Andromeda. 1070 01:17:58,864 --> 01:18:02,032 The view may look peaceful, 1071 01:18:02,067 --> 01:18:04,869 but one of the greatest calamities in the universe 1072 01:18:04,903 --> 01:18:07,138 is about to take place... 1073 01:18:09,474 --> 01:18:15,479 ...and clues to the impending disaster lie in these mysterious Hubble images. 1074 01:18:17,249 --> 01:18:21,585 Galaxies unlike any other... 1075 01:18:21,620 --> 01:18:23,387 distorted... 1076 01:18:25,724 --> 01:18:28,893 deformed. 1077 01:18:28,927 --> 01:18:31,829 Astronomers rely on computers for help 1078 01:18:31,863 --> 01:18:36,367 in decoding what these mysterious objects represent. 1079 01:18:38,436 --> 01:18:41,806 What we do is we make galaxies 1080 01:18:41,840 --> 01:18:45,776 that look just like the Milky Way and similar galaxies. 1081 01:18:45,811 --> 01:18:48,879 And we let them evolve in the computer, 1082 01:18:48,914 --> 01:18:51,015 they develop the spiral structure, 1083 01:18:51,049 --> 01:18:53,551 they look quite realistic. 1084 01:18:53,585 --> 01:18:59,490 We then put them on a collision path. 1085 01:18:59,524 --> 01:19:01,859 Freeze frame these simulations 1086 01:19:01,893 --> 01:19:03,928 and match them with real images 1087 01:19:03,962 --> 01:19:09,533 and suddenly the picture becomes clear: 1088 01:19:09,568 --> 01:19:15,406 It's the greatest clash in the cosmos-- 1089 01:19:15,440 --> 01:19:18,309 galaxies in collision. 1090 01:19:22,848 --> 01:19:27,084 Like cities, galaxies tend to cluster. 1091 01:19:27,118 --> 01:19:29,386 Our Milky Way belongs to a cluster 1092 01:19:29,421 --> 01:19:31,889 called the local group, 1093 01:19:31,923 --> 01:19:35,726 made up of at least 50 galaxies. 1094 01:19:39,231 --> 01:19:42,399 The largest in the pack is Andromeda-- 1095 01:19:42,434 --> 01:19:46,170 a spiral galaxy that's even bigger than ours. 1096 01:19:48,240 --> 01:19:54,178 Today Andromeda lies 2.5 million light years away. 1097 01:19:54,212 --> 01:20:01,452 But astronomers like Abraham Loeb believe that distance is closing in. 1098 01:20:01,486 --> 01:20:03,721 When I started working in astrophysics 1099 01:20:03,755 --> 01:20:05,890 I noticed that most of my colleagues 1100 01:20:05,924 --> 01:20:09,793 are thinking about other galaxies interacting with each other, 1101 01:20:09,828 --> 01:20:11,962 colliding with each other, 1102 01:20:11,997 --> 01:20:15,165 and I was wondering why aren't they examining 1103 01:20:15,200 --> 01:20:19,103 the future of the Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy 1104 01:20:19,137 --> 01:20:22,673 as they will come together. 1105 01:20:22,707 --> 01:20:25,676 Trouble is brewing for our star city. 1106 01:20:27,712 --> 01:20:32,149 Our galaxy is rushing toward the great galaxy Andromeda, 1107 01:20:32,183 --> 01:20:33,784 they're rushing toward each other, 1108 01:20:33,818 --> 01:20:36,186 and they're going to encounter each other 1109 01:20:36,221 --> 01:20:39,023 in a couple billion years. 1110 01:20:42,227 --> 01:20:43,827 Loeb and his colleagues 1111 01:20:43,862 --> 01:20:48,599 decide to simulate this intergalactic clash of the titans. 1112 01:20:50,568 --> 01:20:55,139 This was the first simulation of its kind. 1113 01:20:55,173 --> 01:20:58,475 Initially the two galaxies plunge through each other 1114 01:20:58,510 --> 01:21:04,882 producing these beautiful tails of stars, due to the force of gravity. 1115 01:21:04,916 --> 01:21:08,285 They run away, turn around and come back together, 1116 01:21:08,320 --> 01:21:10,821 to make one big spheroid of stars, 1117 01:21:10,855 --> 01:21:14,658 which I called the Milkomeda Galaxy. 1118 01:21:14,693 --> 01:21:18,095 When the Milky Way merges with Andromeda, 1119 01:21:18,129 --> 01:21:22,232 almost one trillion stars will come together. 1120 01:21:28,139 --> 01:21:29,506 The beautiful spiral structure 1121 01:21:29,541 --> 01:21:31,008 of our Milky Way galaxy 1122 01:21:31,042 --> 01:21:33,177 is not something that's going to last forever. 1123 01:21:33,211 --> 01:21:37,214 It's going to be a mess, for a while. 1124 01:21:37,248 --> 01:21:39,283 The collision will not be one 1125 01:21:39,317 --> 01:21:41,318 in which these two things are destroyed, 1126 01:21:41,353 --> 01:21:44,388 but it is one where the gas in each system 1127 01:21:44,422 --> 01:21:46,991 will collide with the gas in the other. 1128 01:21:47,025 --> 01:21:50,694 That it'll have a burst of star formation. 1129 01:21:50,729 --> 01:21:53,397 And the formation of these new stars 1130 01:21:53,431 --> 01:21:57,868 will mark the rebirth of a new galaxy. 1131 01:22:02,240 --> 01:22:04,675 This spectacular Hubble image 1132 01:22:04,709 --> 01:22:08,412 shows the Antennae Galaxies-- 1133 01:22:08,446 --> 01:22:15,552 a grand cosmic collision between two spiral star cities. 1134 01:22:15,587 --> 01:22:20,324 The galaxies are in a frenzy of star birth-- 1135 01:22:20,358 --> 01:22:26,597 a multitude of nebulas glow pink in the darkness-- 1136 01:22:26,631 --> 01:22:29,733 one final flare of stellar activity 1137 01:22:29,768 --> 01:22:33,404 before the galaxies merge to become one. 1138 01:22:35,073 --> 01:22:38,609 This is the fate that awaits our Milky Way 1139 01:22:38,643 --> 01:22:43,914 when it merges with Andromeda three billion years from now. 1140 01:22:46,484 --> 01:22:47,751 When they collide 1141 01:22:47,786 --> 01:22:51,121 there will be a lot of new star formation that takes place, 1142 01:22:51,156 --> 01:22:55,459 there will be a kind of rejuvenation of the Milky Way for a little while 1143 01:22:55,493 --> 01:22:58,162 and then eventually this combined system 1144 01:22:58,196 --> 01:23:00,497 will settle down to become a new thing, 1145 01:23:00,532 --> 01:23:02,232 probably a bigger galaxy 1146 01:23:02,267 --> 01:23:06,737 than either of the galaxies out of which it was made. 1147 01:23:06,771 --> 01:23:13,410 But the real surprise is the shape of this new galaxy. 1148 01:23:13,445 --> 01:23:15,245 A new galaxy is formed 1149 01:23:15,280 --> 01:23:19,550 where instead of the discs that the original galaxies had, 1150 01:23:19,584 --> 01:23:22,953 where all the stars are going around more or less on a plane, 1151 01:23:22,987 --> 01:23:25,923 instead the stars are going every which way, 1152 01:23:25,957 --> 01:23:30,561 just like the elliptical galaxies that we see. 1153 01:23:30,595 --> 01:23:33,163 And so we're pretty sure that this process 1154 01:23:33,198 --> 01:23:38,602 must be a large part of how elliptical galaxies form. 1155 01:23:38,636 --> 01:23:41,105 The collision of the Milky Way with Andromeda 1156 01:23:41,139 --> 01:23:45,209 will leave behind a giant elliptical galaxy. 1157 01:23:49,247 --> 01:23:54,051 But before that happens there'll be one final sight to behold. 1158 01:23:55,587 --> 01:23:58,589 The image of Andromeda will be stretched across the sky, 1159 01:23:58,623 --> 01:24:03,961 looming as big as the Milky Way itself, 1160 01:24:03,995 --> 01:24:08,932 and it's conceivable that there would be human beings like ourselves 1161 01:24:08,967 --> 01:24:14,004 looking at the sky and seeing this spectacular image. 1162 01:24:14,038 --> 01:24:18,809 We might not be the only beings enjoying the view. 1163 01:24:18,843 --> 01:24:23,680 Could our galaxy be home to other civilizations? 1164 01:24:23,715 --> 01:24:29,286 Unknown life yet to be discovered inside the Milky Way? 1165 01:24:39,564 --> 01:24:45,569 There are around 200 billion stars in our galaxy. 1166 01:24:45,603 --> 01:24:51,508 But there's only one neighborhood we know for sure that sustains life: 1167 01:24:56,147 --> 01:24:59,550 Earth. 1168 01:24:59,584 --> 01:25:04,054 The sun powers almost everything here on the Earth. 1169 01:25:04,088 --> 01:25:06,957 It's the energy source; it's the engine 1170 01:25:06,991 --> 01:25:09,459 of life and many other processes. 1171 01:25:09,494 --> 01:25:15,199 And life here on Earth is based heavily on water. 1172 01:25:15,233 --> 01:25:21,138 And it's liquid water that's the key to life as we know it. 1173 01:25:21,172 --> 01:25:25,108 And it's because liquid water serves as the solvent, 1174 01:25:25,143 --> 01:25:29,513 the cocktail mixer, for the biochemistry of life. 1175 01:25:32,317 --> 01:25:35,352 Earth is the only planet in our solar system 1176 01:25:35,386 --> 01:25:38,755 with abundant liquid water. 1177 01:25:38,790 --> 01:25:41,024 As with any prime real estate, 1178 01:25:41,059 --> 01:25:45,028 it's all about location, location, location. 1179 01:25:47,832 --> 01:25:50,067 Venus is closer to the sun, 1180 01:25:50,101 --> 01:25:53,403 Mars is farther from the sun, 1181 01:25:53,438 --> 01:25:57,808 and there's a zone in between the blazing hot furnace of Venus, 1182 01:25:57,842 --> 01:25:59,309 the frigid Mars, 1183 01:25:59,344 --> 01:26:02,246 that zone in between we call the habitable zone, 1184 01:26:02,280 --> 01:26:04,815 and the Earth lies smack in that thing, 1185 01:26:04,849 --> 01:26:08,485 where water would be in liquid form, 1186 01:26:08,519 --> 01:26:13,490 not in steam, too hot, not in ice form, too cold. 1187 01:26:13,524 --> 01:26:16,660 But rather a temperature that, as Goldilocks said, 1188 01:26:16,694 --> 01:26:19,162 is just right for life. 1189 01:26:21,766 --> 01:26:24,034 The location of a habitable green zone 1190 01:26:24,068 --> 01:26:26,637 depends on the star. 1191 01:26:29,374 --> 01:26:34,978 With hot blue stars, the green zone is further out. 1192 01:26:35,013 --> 01:26:40,050 With cooler red stars, it's closer in. 1193 01:26:40,084 --> 01:26:45,489 Every star in the Milky Way has a habitable zone. 1194 01:26:45,523 --> 01:26:49,626 But not every star has planets within that zone. 1195 01:26:52,063 --> 01:26:56,533 In 1995 something happened that was extraordinary. 1196 01:26:56,567 --> 01:26:59,369 I got a call from my collaborator, Paul Butler, 1197 01:26:59,404 --> 01:27:02,639 and all he said was, Geoff, come over here. 1198 01:27:02,674 --> 01:27:06,677 And it was a moment that I will never forget. 1199 01:27:06,711 --> 01:27:10,814 I was silent, Paul was silent, and we were just stunned. 1200 01:27:10,848 --> 01:27:12,783 There on the computer screen 1201 01:27:12,817 --> 01:27:18,021 I saw the unmistakable signature of a planet. 1202 01:27:20,124 --> 01:27:26,430 Marcy had discovered the first planet around another star. 1203 01:27:26,464 --> 01:27:28,699 But he couldn't actually see it 1204 01:27:28,733 --> 01:27:32,436 because the planet was too small and dim. 1205 01:27:36,107 --> 01:27:41,778 Any planet orbiting a star is lost in the glare of that host star, 1206 01:27:41,813 --> 01:27:45,048 that outshines it by a factor of a billion. 1207 01:27:45,083 --> 01:27:49,953 And so instead, to detect planets, we watch the stars. 1208 01:27:49,987 --> 01:27:53,423 And in fact a star will wobble in space 1209 01:27:53,458 --> 01:27:57,394 because it's yanked on gravitationally by the planet, 1210 01:27:57,428 --> 01:28:00,263 or planets, orbiting that star. 1211 01:28:00,298 --> 01:28:02,332 And by watching the star alone 1212 01:28:02,367 --> 01:28:05,402 we can determine whether the star has planets 1213 01:28:05,436 --> 01:28:09,706 and how far out those planets are from the host star. 1214 01:28:11,609 --> 01:28:15,645 So far astronomers have found over 400 planets 1215 01:28:15,680 --> 01:28:18,382 orbiting stars in our galaxy. 1216 01:28:18,416 --> 01:28:22,619 But none of them seem to be in habitable zones. 1217 01:28:22,653 --> 01:28:26,990 One type of giant planet orbits very close to its star. 1218 01:28:27,024 --> 01:28:28,492 We call them hot Jupiters, 1219 01:28:28,526 --> 01:28:31,395 because these Jupiter-like planets are so close 1220 01:28:31,429 --> 01:28:37,567 that they're blow-torched by the intense heat from the star. 1221 01:28:37,602 --> 01:28:41,104 The other sort of planet we've found is also bizarre. 1222 01:28:41,139 --> 01:28:45,108 We've found planets that orbit in elongated orbits, 1223 01:28:45,143 --> 01:28:47,544 elliptical, stretched out orbits, 1224 01:28:47,578 --> 01:28:49,646 but then the planets go very far from the star 1225 01:28:49,680 --> 01:28:53,383 where they would be quite cold. 1226 01:28:53,418 --> 01:28:56,153 And so the planets that we've found so far 1227 01:28:56,187 --> 01:28:59,423 are a little too weird for us to imagine 1228 01:28:59,457 --> 01:29:03,460 that life would have a good chance of surviving. 1229 01:29:03,494 --> 01:29:04,895 Power on. 1230 01:29:04,929 --> 01:29:06,163 External. 1231 01:29:06,197 --> 01:29:11,034 But all that may be about to change. 1232 01:29:11,068 --> 01:29:17,240 Recently NASA launched a powerful new telescope called Kepler, 1233 01:29:17,275 --> 01:29:19,276 to hunt for Earth-sized planets 1234 01:29:19,310 --> 01:29:23,647 that may orbit habitable zones around nearby stars. 1235 01:29:26,384 --> 01:29:29,653 Kepler works in the most simple way. 1236 01:29:29,687 --> 01:29:34,991 All Kepler does is monitor the brightness of 100,000 stars 1237 01:29:35,026 --> 01:29:37,594 with such exquisite precision 1238 01:29:37,628 --> 01:29:41,398 that it would detect a planet as small as an Earth-like one 1239 01:29:41,432 --> 01:29:44,835 as it blocks the starlight. 1240 01:29:44,869 --> 01:29:46,570 We see the same thing from Earth 1241 01:29:46,604 --> 01:29:50,941 when Venus and Mercury are silhouetted against the sun. 1242 01:29:54,045 --> 01:29:57,914 But Kepler's task is far more difficult. 1243 01:30:00,051 --> 01:30:02,819 It's a little bit like having a searchlight 1244 01:30:02,854 --> 01:30:06,323 in which you're trying to detect any dust on that searchlight 1245 01:30:06,357 --> 01:30:08,558 by noticing a dimming of the searchlight 1246 01:30:08,593 --> 01:30:13,864 when one dust particle falls on this massive searchlight. 1247 01:30:13,898 --> 01:30:15,432 From this tiny dimming, 1248 01:30:15,466 --> 01:30:19,536 the size of the planet can be measured. 1249 01:30:19,570 --> 01:30:24,007 And together with the way it causes its host star to wobble, 1250 01:30:24,041 --> 01:30:26,943 Marcy can work out its density. 1251 01:30:28,412 --> 01:30:30,313 And of course this is glorious 1252 01:30:30,348 --> 01:30:32,649 because by these measurements 1253 01:30:32,683 --> 01:30:35,452 we'll be able to distinguish gaseous planets, 1254 01:30:35,486 --> 01:30:37,754 probably not suitable for life, 1255 01:30:37,788 --> 01:30:43,460 from the rocky planets that may have a surface covered by liquid water. 1256 01:30:45,096 --> 01:30:50,000 Astronomers aren't sure how many planets Kepler will find-- 1257 01:30:50,034 --> 01:30:53,803 but with 200 billion stars in the Milky Way, 1258 01:30:53,838 --> 01:30:58,208 the odds look promising. 1259 01:30:58,242 --> 01:31:02,212 Seth Shostak has done the math. 1260 01:31:02,246 --> 01:31:03,747 You know, the indications are 1261 01:31:03,781 --> 01:31:06,149 a lot of those stars have planets, maybe half of them do. 1262 01:31:06,183 --> 01:31:08,351 And since planets, you know, being like kittens, 1263 01:31:08,386 --> 01:31:10,453 you don't just get one, you get a couple. 1264 01:31:10,488 --> 01:31:14,624 There are probably on the order of a million million planets out there. 1265 01:31:17,295 --> 01:31:19,229 A trillion planets. 1266 01:31:19,263 --> 01:31:23,233 It's an unimaginably vast number. 1267 01:31:23,267 --> 01:31:25,835 But what are the chances of them being in a location 1268 01:31:25,870 --> 01:31:29,706 where life can flourish? 1269 01:31:29,740 --> 01:31:34,110 We can expand the idea of a habitable zone around a star 1270 01:31:34,145 --> 01:31:39,749 to a habitable zone within our entire Milky Way galaxy. 1271 01:31:40,952 --> 01:31:43,186 The search for life begins 1272 01:31:43,220 --> 01:31:47,257 with the search for a galactic habitable zone, 1273 01:31:47,291 --> 01:31:50,994 the safe haven that allows life to flourish. 1274 01:31:52,763 --> 01:31:56,499 In close, at the hub there is an extraordinary amount 1275 01:31:56,534 --> 01:32:00,704 of X-rays, harsh radio waves, even gamma rays 1276 01:32:00,738 --> 01:32:05,375 that would certainly destroy fragile single-celled life 1277 01:32:05,409 --> 01:32:10,347 just getting a start toward evolution. 1278 01:32:10,381 --> 01:32:12,549 Downtown is dangerous. 1279 01:32:12,583 --> 01:32:14,651 There's a super massive black hole down there. 1280 01:32:14,685 --> 01:32:19,189 You get too close to that, all sorts of bad things can happen. 1281 01:32:19,223 --> 01:32:20,657 There are also a lot of stars down there 1282 01:32:20,691 --> 01:32:22,592 and, you know, a lot of stars sounds good, 1283 01:32:22,627 --> 01:32:25,695 but on the other hand if you have too many nearby stars 1284 01:32:25,730 --> 01:32:30,600 they tend to shake up all the comets in your solar system 1285 01:32:30,635 --> 01:32:32,002 that are constantly pummeling you 1286 01:32:32,036 --> 01:32:34,871 with these collisions that, just ask the dinosaurs, 1287 01:32:34,905 --> 01:32:37,974 are not always good for you. 1288 01:32:38,009 --> 01:32:39,743 The spiral arms may offer 1289 01:32:39,777 --> 01:32:43,446 the safest neighborhoods in the galaxy. 1290 01:32:43,481 --> 01:32:47,851 But even here, danger may lurk around the corner. 1291 01:32:49,220 --> 01:32:51,688 If you happen to be on a planet near a supernova, 1292 01:32:51,722 --> 01:32:54,724 that explosion could ruin your whole day. 1293 01:32:54,759 --> 01:32:56,793 Life might get started, and then, you know, 1294 01:32:56,827 --> 01:33:00,730 another couple of hundred million years later it gets wiped out. 1295 01:33:00,765 --> 01:33:03,600 So these areas are sort of no-go zones, no man's land. 1296 01:33:03,634 --> 01:33:06,469 Well, no alien's land, perhaps. 1297 01:33:06,504 --> 01:33:10,607 The outer reaches of our Milky Way are quieter. 1298 01:33:10,641 --> 01:33:15,512 But here life would still find it difficult to take root. 1299 01:33:15,546 --> 01:33:18,615 At the outskirts of our Milky Way galaxy 1300 01:33:18,649 --> 01:33:20,550 there aren't very many heavy elements 1301 01:33:20,584 --> 01:33:23,753 of which the cells of our bodies and life as we know it 1302 01:33:23,788 --> 01:33:24,954 are composed. 1303 01:33:24,989 --> 01:33:28,725 And so we may not have the essential building blocks of life 1304 01:33:28,759 --> 01:33:32,529 at the outer edges of our own Milky Way. 1305 01:33:35,299 --> 01:33:40,003 So it's not an accident that we are where we are. 1306 01:33:40,037 --> 01:33:44,340 Our neighborhood, tucked away between two spiral arms, 1307 01:33:44,375 --> 01:33:47,110 is prime real estate. 1308 01:33:47,144 --> 01:33:52,348 It's remained relatively unchanged for billions of years, 1309 01:33:52,383 --> 01:33:57,353 giving life time to establish and evolve. 1310 01:34:01,492 --> 01:34:05,028 Other advanced civilizations, if they exist, 1311 01:34:05,062 --> 01:34:08,331 are likely to live in similar neighborhoods, 1312 01:34:08,365 --> 01:34:11,835 cocooned from the dangers of the galaxy. 1313 01:34:14,672 --> 01:34:17,907 We haven't found them yet. 1314 01:34:17,942 --> 01:34:22,712 But then again, our galaxy's a big place. 1315 01:34:25,082 --> 01:34:26,750 We haven't found any life elsewhere, 1316 01:34:26,784 --> 01:34:28,084 we haven't found pond scum, 1317 01:34:28,119 --> 01:34:30,186 we haven't found dead pond scum anywhere else, 1318 01:34:30,221 --> 01:34:32,689 not convincingly, and why is that? 1319 01:34:32,723 --> 01:34:35,992 Well, fewer than a thousand stars have been looked at carefully 1320 01:34:36,026 --> 01:34:38,561 for planets that might have intelligent life. 1321 01:34:38,596 --> 01:34:41,631 So you know, it's sort of like going to Africa 1322 01:34:41,665 --> 01:34:44,834 looking for mega fauna, you know, elephants, giraffes, something like that, 1323 01:34:44,869 --> 01:34:46,569 and you land in Africa 1324 01:34:46,604 --> 01:34:49,172 and you look at the first square yard of real estate there 1325 01:34:49,206 --> 01:34:51,508 and you say no elephants here, then you give up. 1326 01:34:51,542 --> 01:34:54,644 Well, we shouldn't give up, we're just beginning. 1327 01:34:54,678 --> 01:34:59,616 Well, if we do find life, 1328 01:34:59,650 --> 01:35:06,489 it's amazing, if we find life elsewhere in the universe, 1329 01:35:06,524 --> 01:35:11,728 I think the stock market won't budge one bit. 1330 01:35:11,762 --> 01:35:16,432 But we humans will know, for the first time in human history, 1331 01:35:16,467 --> 01:35:18,902 that we're not alone. 1332 01:35:18,936 --> 01:35:23,006 That we have kindred spirits out among the stars, 1333 01:35:23,040 --> 01:35:28,344 and that our destiny may well be to venture to the stars, 1334 01:35:28,379 --> 01:35:30,213 communicate with them 1335 01:35:30,247 --> 01:35:35,018 and become members of a great galactic country club. 1335 01:35:36,305 --> 01:35:42,531 Please rate this subtitle at %url% Help other users to choose the best subtitles 113367

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