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TYSON:
Seeing is not believing.
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Our senses can deceive us.
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Even the stars
are not what they appear to be.
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The cosmos, as revealed by science...
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...is stranger than we ever
could have imagined.
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Light, and time, and space, and gravity...
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...conspire to create realities
which lie beyond human experience.
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That's where we're headed.
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Come with me.
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Back in 1802, on a night like this...
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...the astronomer William Herschel...
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...strolled a beach on the English coast
with his son John.
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Herschel was the first person ever...
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...to see into the deeper waters
of the cosmic ocean.
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There, he glimpsed the magic trick
that light does with time.
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Father, do you believe in ghosts?
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WhY, Yes, my son.
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You-- You do?
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I would not have thought so.
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Oh, no. Not in the human kind of ghost.
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No. Not at all.
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But look up, my boy.
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And see a sky full of them.
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The stars, Father?
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I do not follow.
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Every star is a sun as big, as bright,
as our own.
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Just imagine, how far away from us
you'd have to move the sun...
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...to make it appear as small and faint
as a star.
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The light from the stars travels very fast.
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Faster than anything.
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But not infinitely fast.
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It takes time for their light to reach us.
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For the nearest ones, it takes years.
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For others, centuries.
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Some stars are so far away...
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...it takes eons for their
light to get to Earth.
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By the time the light
from some stars gets here...
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...they are already dead.
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For those stars, we see only their ghosts.
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We see their light...
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...but their bodies
perished long, long ago.
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John, I have seen further back in time...
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...than any man before me.
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Millions of years into the past.
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TYSON". William Herschel
was the first person to understand...
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...that a telescope is a time machine.
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We cannot look out into space...
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...without seeing back in time.
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In one second,
light travels 300,000 kilometers...
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...or 186,000 miles.
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That's nearly the distance
from the Earth to the moon.
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So the moon is about one light-second away.
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The next time you look at the moon,
you'll be seeing one second into the past.
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"A Sky Full of Ghosts"
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TYSON".
That sun?
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It's not really there.
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It won't be actually be above the horizon
for another two minutes.
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The sunrise is an illusion.
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Earth's atmosphere
bends the incoming rays of sunlight...
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...like a lens or a glass of water.
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00:04:57,547 --> 00:05:01,051
So we see the image of the sun
projected above the horizon...
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00:05:01,218 --> 00:05:04,518
...before the physical
sun is actually there.
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00:05:05,639 --> 00:05:07,607
That sun behind me is a mirage.
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00:05:07,766 --> 00:05:10,895
No more real than a shimmering image
that hovers in the distance...
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00:05:11,061 --> 00:05:13,905
...over at a desert road on a hot day.
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Sunlight takes about eight minutes
to reach Earth.
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So the sun is eight light-minutes away.
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From Earth, we can only ever see the sun
as it was eight minutes ago.
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00:05:27,160 --> 00:05:30,539
And another thing,
the sun doesn't really rise at all.
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The Earth turns and we turn with it.
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00:05:35,085 --> 00:05:39,807
It may not look like it, but right at this
moment, I'm moving faster than a jet plane.
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00:05:39,965 --> 00:05:42,138
So are you and everyone on Earth.
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00:05:42,300 --> 00:05:44,765
And while I'm at it...
...that horizon?
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It's not really there at all.
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There's no edge.
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The horizon is just another illusion.
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The distance between Earth
and the outermost planet, Neptune...
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00:06:10,912 --> 00:06:13,256
...varies as the planets orbit the sun.
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But on average, the light makes that trip
in four hours.
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00:06:17,127 --> 00:06:20,006
So for us on Earth, the Neptune we see...
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...is always four hours in the past.
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Four light-hours away.
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But the distances to the planets,
even the farthest one...
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...are mere baby steps
on a much grander scale...
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...of the stars and the galaxies.
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As soon as we leave
the sun's immediate neighborhood...
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...we need to change the unit of distance
from light-hours to light-years.
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A light-year is the
yardstick of the cosmos.
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A single one is nearly
10 trillion kilometers.
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00:06:51,786 --> 00:06:54,380
Or about 6 trillion miles.
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00:06:54,539 --> 00:06:57,668
It's a unit of distance just like a meter
or a mile.
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00:06:57,834 --> 00:07:00,053
It's the distance light travels in a year.
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The nearest star to the sun,
Proxima Centauri...
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...is a little more than four light-years
away from Earth.
95
00:07:07,344 --> 00:07:09,688
How far away is four light-years?
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00:07:09,846 --> 00:07:15,694
NASA's Voyager spacecraft moves at
more than 56,000 kilometers an hour.
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00:07:15,852 --> 00:07:17,946
Even at that astonishing speed...
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...it would take Voyager
more than 80,000 years...
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...to reach the nearest star.
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And the stars of the Pleiades cluster?
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Four hundred light-years away.
102
00:07:32,077 --> 00:07:36,207
The ship of the imagination is equipped
with a highly unusual capability.
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One of a kind, actually.
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It makes it possible for us
to see what was happening...
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...when the light
from a distant star or galaxy...
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...first set out on its
long journey to Earth.
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When that light left the Pleiades
about 400 years ago...
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...Galileo was taking his first look
through a telescope.
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00:07:58,603 --> 00:08:01,652
A few years later, he tried to measure
the speed of light.
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00:08:01,815 --> 00:08:03,158
But he couldn't do it.
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00:08:03,316 --> 00:08:05,034
He had a very clever plan.
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But the technology of that era
just wasn't good enough...
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...to measure the motion of anything
that moves as fast as light.
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00:08:13,743 --> 00:08:16,041
When we look at the Crab Nebula
from Earth...
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...we're seeing much farther back in time.
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00:08:19,249 --> 00:08:23,880
The Crab Nebula was once a giant star,
1O times the mass of the sun.
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Until it exploded in a supernova.
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00:08:26,798 --> 00:08:28,926
At its heart is a pulsar:
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A collapsed star the size of a city
spinning 30 times a second.
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00:08:42,063 --> 00:08:44,157
This pulsar's whirling magnetic field...
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00:08:44,315 --> 00:08:46,659
...whips nearby electrons into a frenzy.
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Accelerating them
to almost the speed of light.
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They shine with a blue glow that lights up
the tendrils of gas...
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...still unraveling from the supernova.
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The Crab Nebula is about 6500 light-years
from Earth.
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According to some beliefs...
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00:09:04,461 --> 00:09:07,385
...that's the age of the whole universe.
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00:09:07,547 --> 00:09:11,393
But if the universe
were only 6500 years old...
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...how could we see the light from anything
more distant than the Crab Nebula?
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We couldn't.
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There wouldn't have been enough time...
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...for the light to get to Earth
from anywhere farther away...
133
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...than 6500 light-years in any direction.
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00:09:26,441 --> 00:09:28,034
That's just enough time...
135
00:09:28,193 --> 00:09:32,664
...for light to travel through a tiny
portion of our Milky Way galaxy.
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00:09:32,822 --> 00:09:36,702
To believe in a universe as young
as 6 or 7000 years old...
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00:09:36,868 --> 00:09:40,168
...is to extinguish the light
from most of the galaxy.
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00:09:40,330 --> 00:09:44,426
Not to mention, the light from all the
hundred billion other galaxies...
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...in the observable universe.
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00:10:16,699 --> 00:10:21,876
The center of our own galaxy
is about 30,000 light-years from Earth.
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00:10:22,038 --> 00:10:23,381
The light we see today...
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00:10:23,540 --> 00:10:25,668
...coming from the core of the Milky Way...
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...left there when our ancestors
were perfecting a way to vanquish death...
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...by making art...
145
00:10:36,302 --> 00:10:40,557
...with the power to inspire those
who would come long after they were gone.
146
00:10:49,232 --> 00:10:52,076
The light we see
coming from the Sombrero Galaxy...
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00:10:52,235 --> 00:10:55,739
...is 3O million years old.
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00:10:55,905 --> 00:10:59,125
Our ancestors were living in trees
when that light started out.
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00:10:59,284 --> 00:11:03,289
They weighed about 5 kilos
and had long tails.
150
00:11:03,454 --> 00:11:05,923
But even 3O million light-years away...
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00:11:06,082 --> 00:11:09,928
...is still in our own cosmic backyard.
152
00:11:13,631 --> 00:11:16,350
That galaxy is part of the Coma Cluster...
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00:11:16,509 --> 00:11:19,854
...320 million light-years away.
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00:11:20,013 --> 00:11:25,645
What was going on back home when the light
you were seeing began its trip to Earth?
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No familiar continents, oceans or rivers.
156
00:11:29,647 --> 00:11:33,993
Our distant ancestors
were just leaving the water for the land.
157
00:11:34,152 --> 00:11:39,124
It's pretty old light.
But not nearly the oldest light we can see.
158
00:11:40,825 --> 00:11:43,749
The oldest light is very faint.
159
00:11:43,912 --> 00:11:46,256
A pale ghost in the night.
160
00:11:46,414 --> 00:11:49,338
See that red blob inside the circle?
161
00:11:49,500 --> 00:11:53,004
That's one of the oldest galaxies
we've ever seen.
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00:11:53,171 --> 00:11:57,642
You're looking
at 13.4 billion-year-old starlight...
163
00:11:57,800 --> 00:12:01,475
...as captured
by the Hubble Space Telescope.
164
00:12:08,311 --> 00:12:12,532
It's coming from the very first
generation of stars.
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00:12:12,941 --> 00:12:15,160
What was happening on Earth back then?
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Absolutely nothing.
167
00:12:17,153 --> 00:12:20,828
There was no Earth. No sun. No Milky Way.
168
00:12:20,990 --> 00:12:25,166
They would not come to be
for billions of years.
169
00:12:26,829 --> 00:12:29,503
When we try to look even farther
into the universe...
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00:12:29,666 --> 00:12:33,170
...we come to what appears to be
the end of space.
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00:12:33,336 --> 00:12:35,213
But actually...
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...it's the beginning of time.
173
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TYSON".
Earth pulls on us.
174
00:12:48,601 --> 00:12:52,822
Our lives are a relentless struggle
with gravity.
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00:13:04,867 --> 00:13:10,374
That little girl is trying her best
to climb out of a gravitational well.
176
00:13:10,540 --> 00:13:14,716
From our first efforts to stand
to our final surrender...
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00:13:14,877 --> 00:13:18,256
...we are struggling to overcome
the Earth's pull.
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00:13:19,048 --> 00:13:23,144
We are born, live and die in a force field.
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00:13:23,303 --> 00:13:27,399
One that is almost as old
as the universe itself.
180
00:13:28,474 --> 00:13:29,976
And how old is that?
181
00:13:30,143 --> 00:13:33,898
To visualize the 13.8 billion-year-age
of the universe...
182
00:13:34,063 --> 00:13:38,694
...we've compressed all of cosmic time
into a single year-at-a-glance calendar.
183
00:13:38,860 --> 00:13:40,737
Midnight on December 31st...
184
00:13:40,903 --> 00:13:43,201
...is this very moment, right now.
185
00:13:43,364 --> 00:13:46,914
And January 1st is the beginning of time.
186
00:13:47,076 --> 00:13:49,750
See that glowing fog out there?
187
00:13:49,912 --> 00:13:52,290
It's radiation left over
from the Big Bang...
188
00:13:52,457 --> 00:13:54,710
...the explosion that made the universe...
189
00:13:54,876 --> 00:13:58,301
...13.8 billion years ago.
190
00:13:58,463 --> 00:13:59,510
Right now...
191
00:13:59,672 --> 00:14:04,348
...we're at the very edge
of known space and time.
192
00:14:05,595 --> 00:14:07,893
So, what happened before the Big Bang?
193
00:14:08,056 --> 00:14:09,308
Nobody knows.
194
00:14:09,474 --> 00:14:12,444
No evidence survives
from before that moment.
195
00:14:12,602 --> 00:14:15,697
We've got some pretty crazy ideas
about where the universe came from.
196
00:14:15,855 --> 00:14:18,449
Which we'll get to, in time.
197
00:14:19,692 --> 00:14:22,445
Where are we in the universe?
198
00:14:22,779 --> 00:14:24,577
At the very center.
199
00:14:25,114 --> 00:14:28,618
In the observed universe,
everyone gets to feel special.
200
00:14:28,785 --> 00:14:31,413
No matter which galaxy
you happen to live in...
201
00:14:31,579 --> 00:14:33,502
...when you look out to the universe...
202
00:14:33,664 --> 00:14:37,794
...you'll find yourself at the center
of the cosmic horizon.
203
00:14:37,960 --> 00:14:39,803
But this is just an illusion.
204
00:14:39,962 --> 00:14:41,760
In reality, there is no center.
205
00:14:41,923 --> 00:14:47,305
And the cosmic horizon is no more real
than the horizon at sea.
206
00:14:48,221 --> 00:14:50,815
It's what you get
when you have finite speed of light...
207
00:14:50,973 --> 00:14:54,773
...in a universe that had
a beginning in time.
208
00:14:57,647 --> 00:15:00,617
A few hundred million years
after the Big Bang...
209
00:15:00,775 --> 00:15:03,625
...vast clouds of
hydrogen and helium
210
00:15:03,637 --> 00:15:06,498
condensed into the first
stars and galaxies.
211
00:15:06,656 --> 00:15:08,283
With these new sources of light...
212
00:15:08,449 --> 00:15:11,293
...the long dark ages
of the universe ended.
213
00:15:11,828 --> 00:15:13,922
As space continued to expand...
214
00:15:14,080 --> 00:15:17,175
...cosmic evolution unfolded
on grander scales.
215
00:15:17,333 --> 00:15:20,007
As the first generation of stars died...
216
00:15:20,169 --> 00:15:23,048
...they seeded space
with heavier elements...
217
00:15:23,214 --> 00:15:25,763
...making possible the
formation of planets...
218
00:15:25,925 --> 00:15:29,020
...and ultimately life.
219
00:15:33,683 --> 00:15:36,778
Matter and energy were formed
in the Big Bang.
220
00:15:36,936 --> 00:15:38,153
But that's not all.
221
00:15:38,312 --> 00:15:40,360
Space and time were created too.
222
00:15:40,523 --> 00:15:42,867
And all the forces that
bind matter together.
223
00:15:43,025 --> 00:15:44,493
Including gravity.
224
00:15:44,652 --> 00:15:49,078
Isaac Newton discovered a mathematical law
that describes how gravity works.
225
00:15:49,240 --> 00:15:52,915
With that law, he could explain
the motions of the planets.
226
00:15:53,077 --> 00:15:54,829
More than 100 years later...
227
00:15:54,996 --> 00:15:59,593
...William Herschel realized
gravity could do much more.
228
00:16:06,591 --> 00:16:08,764
John, can you keep a secret?
229
00:16:08,926 --> 00:16:10,018
Yes, father.
230
00:16:10,178 --> 00:16:12,146
I've made a discovery...
231
00:16:12,305 --> 00:16:14,433
...and have yet to tell another soul.
232
00:16:15,892 --> 00:16:18,896
That gravity that holds us to the Earth...
233
00:16:19,061 --> 00:16:23,316
...the same gravity that Newton showed
keeps the planets in their orbits...
234
00:16:23,483 --> 00:16:28,535
...I've discovered that it also rules
the distant stars.
235
00:16:29,280 --> 00:16:32,784
Father, but how can you know this?
236
00:16:32,950 --> 00:16:36,250
Can you find the constellation of the lion?
237
00:16:37,205 --> 00:16:38,752
JOHN:
There.
238
00:16:40,041 --> 00:16:41,088
WILLIAM:
Well done.
239
00:16:41,250 --> 00:16:46,677
Can you now find star that joins
the lion's head to his body?
240
00:16:46,839 --> 00:16:47,931
That one.
241
00:16:48,090 --> 00:16:51,435
WILLIAM:
That star is really two stars.
242
00:16:51,594 --> 00:16:55,474
So close together
that they appear to be one.
243
00:16:55,640 --> 00:16:57,938
I've been watching them
through my telescope...
244
00:16:58,100 --> 00:17:01,354
...since long before you were born.
245
00:17:01,771 --> 00:17:05,150
They dance around each other
very slowly.
246
00:17:05,316 --> 00:17:09,321
More slowly than any planet
moves around the sun.
247
00:17:12,281 --> 00:17:14,283
Many of the stars we see tonight--
248
00:17:14,450 --> 00:17:19,627
Perhaps, most of them.
--dance with invisible partners.
249
00:17:19,956 --> 00:17:25,133
Gravity's empire governs all the heavens.
250
00:17:34,053 --> 00:17:35,305
TYSON".
A century earlier...
251
00:17:35,471 --> 00:17:40,147
...Isaac Newton had been haunted by the
same absence of a mechanism for gravity.
252
00:17:40,309 --> 00:17:43,984
How could distant bodies affect each other
across empty space...
253
00:17:44,146 --> 00:17:46,649
...without actually touching?
254
00:17:46,816 --> 00:17:49,569
This "action at a distance"
as he called it...
255
00:17:49,735 --> 00:17:51,578
“baffled him.
256
00:17:52,280 --> 00:17:55,250
In the 19th century,
Michael Faraday discovered...
257
00:17:55,408 --> 00:17:58,662
...that we were surrounded
by invisible fields of force...
258
00:17:58,828 --> 00:18:01,422
...that explained how gravity works.
259
00:18:01,581 --> 00:18:04,050
The apple and the Earth
don't touch each other...
260
00:18:04,208 --> 00:18:06,802
...but the fields between them do.
261
00:18:07,336 --> 00:18:09,930
He imagined
those lines of gravitational force...
262
00:18:10,089 --> 00:18:13,684
...radiating out into space
from every massive body.
263
00:18:13,843 --> 00:18:18,974
The Earth. The moon. The sun. Everything.
264
00:18:19,682 --> 00:18:23,858
Here was the answer to that question
that had stumped Newton.
265
00:18:24,186 --> 00:18:25,859
In 1865...
266
00:18:26,022 --> 00:18:28,764
...James Clerk Maxwell
translated Faraday's idea
267
00:18:28,776 --> 00:18:31,529
about fields of electricity
and magnetism...
268
00:18:31,694 --> 00:18:34,368
...into mathematical laws.
269
00:18:34,530 --> 00:18:38,455
He discovered that these fields
moved through space in waves.
270
00:18:38,618 --> 00:18:41,087
When he calculated how fast they move...
271
00:18:41,245 --> 00:18:44,044
...it turned out to be the speed of light.
272
00:18:44,206 --> 00:18:47,836
We were beginning to discover
the threads of the cosmic tapestry.
273
00:18:48,002 --> 00:18:49,845
But we were not yet able to discern...
274
00:18:50,004 --> 00:18:54,931
...the rich pattern
that time, light, space and gravity weave.
275
00:18:55,092 --> 00:18:58,471
As Albert Einstein worked in Berlin
on his theory of gravity...
276
00:18:58,638 --> 00:19:02,233
...he kept the portraits of these three men
before him.
277
00:19:02,391 --> 00:19:05,770
He knew
he was standing on their shoulders.
278
00:19:05,936 --> 00:19:07,984
Years before, as a teenager...
279
00:19:08,147 --> 00:19:12,368
...he had an insight that was as
earthshaking as any idea of theirs.
280
00:19:12,526 --> 00:19:17,407
And it happened one summer
while he was daydreaming in Italy.
281
00:19:24,705 --> 00:19:26,753
TYSON:
In the summer of 1895...
282
00:19:26,916 --> 00:19:29,419
...Einstein's father's business in Germany
had failed...
283
00:19:29,585 --> 00:19:32,509
...and the family had moved here
to northern Italy.
284
00:19:32,672 --> 00:19:38,395
Young Einstein loved wandering these roads
and giving his mind free reign to explore.
285
00:19:38,552 --> 00:19:41,431
There's something timeless
about this place.
286
00:19:43,599 --> 00:19:48,446
Nothing here has really changed since
the time of Einstein's early daydreams.
287
00:19:53,442 --> 00:19:55,740
One day, he began to think about light.
288
00:19:55,903 --> 00:19:57,780
And how fast it travels.
289
00:19:57,947 --> 00:20:01,167
In everyday life we've always measured
the speed of a moving object...
290
00:20:01,325 --> 00:20:02,952
...with respect to something else.
291
00:20:03,119 --> 00:20:06,339
Something that's presumably not moving.
292
00:20:06,497 --> 00:20:08,966
Something in the cosmos
that's not in motion.
293
00:20:09,834 --> 00:20:13,088
For example,
I'm moving about 10 kilometers per hour...
294
00:20:13,254 --> 00:20:15,348
...relative to the ground.
295
00:20:15,631 --> 00:20:18,510
But as I mentioned earlier,
the ground is moving.
296
00:20:18,676 --> 00:20:23,182
Earth is turning at more than
1600 kilometers per hour...
297
00:20:23,556 --> 00:20:27,561
...while it orbits the sun at more than
100,000 kilometers per hour.
298
00:20:27,727 --> 00:20:33,029
And the sun is moving through the galaxy
at a half a million miles per hour.
299
00:20:33,190 --> 00:20:35,318
The Milky Way is moving
through the universe...
300
00:20:35,484 --> 00:20:38,488
...at nearly
one-and-a-hah' million miles an hour.
301
00:20:38,654 --> 00:20:41,498
There is no fixed place in the cosmos.
302
00:20:41,657 --> 00:20:44,331
All of nature is in motion.
303
00:20:45,578 --> 00:20:47,546
It was hard,
even for the young Einstein...
304
00:20:47,705 --> 00:20:52,927
...to imagine some absolute standard to
measure all those relative motions against.
305
00:21:07,266 --> 00:21:11,521
This is the very book
that inspired Einstein as a young boy.
306
00:21:12,855 --> 00:21:15,483
Give a kid a book
and you change the world.
307
00:21:15,649 --> 00:21:18,243
And in a way, even the universe.
308
00:21:18,736 --> 00:21:21,831
Look at this. The very first page.
309
00:21:21,989 --> 00:21:25,493
It describes the astonishing speed
of electricity through wires...
310
00:21:25,659 --> 00:21:28,538
...and light through space.
311
00:21:28,704 --> 00:21:31,674
Einstein remembered what he'd learned
as a child from this book.
312
00:21:31,832 --> 00:21:35,006
And perhaps, for the first time,
right here...
313
00:21:35,169 --> 00:21:39,675
...wondered what the world would look like
if you could travel at the speed of light.
314
00:21:44,762 --> 00:21:48,016
TYSON". The more Einstein thought about it,
the more troubled he became.
315
00:21:48,766 --> 00:21:51,235
If you imagine traveling
at the speed of light...
316
00:21:51,393 --> 00:21:54,772
...paradoxes seem to pop up everywhere.
317
00:21:55,397 --> 00:22:00,244
Einstein was shocked to realize that so
much of what had been accepted as truth...
318
00:22:00,402 --> 00:22:04,248
...by even the authorities on the subject
was just plain wrong.
319
00:22:06,408 --> 00:22:10,788
When traveling at high speeds, there are
certain rules which must be obeyed.
320
00:22:10,955 --> 00:22:13,959
Einstein called these rules
the Principles of Relativity.
321
00:22:14,917 --> 00:22:18,091
Imagine that young woman
who just blew past us on a motorbike.
322
00:22:18,254 --> 00:22:22,009
Imagine she was riding her bike
through the cosmos.
323
00:22:23,551 --> 00:22:26,100
Light from a moving object travels
at the same speed...
324
00:22:26,262 --> 00:22:29,232
...no matter whether the object is at rest
or in motion.
325
00:22:30,724 --> 00:22:33,568
Her speed is not added
to the speed of light.
326
00:22:33,727 --> 00:22:38,324
The light from her motorbike still travels
at the speed of light.
327
00:22:39,733 --> 00:22:44,785
Nature commands, "Thou shalt not
add my speed to the speed of light."
328
00:22:44,947 --> 00:22:49,999
Also, no material object can travel at
or faster than the speed of light.
329
00:22:50,536 --> 00:22:52,635
Nothing in physics prevents
you from traveling
330
00:22:52,647 --> 00:22:54,757
as close to the speed
of light as you like.
331
00:22:54,915 --> 00:22:58,795
Ninety-nine-point-nine percent
of the speed of light is just fine.
332
00:22:58,961 --> 00:23:03,717
But no matter how hard you try,
you'd never gain that last decimal point.
333
00:23:03,883 --> 00:23:08,810
For reality to be logically consistent,
there must be a cosmic speed limit.
334
00:23:12,641 --> 00:23:13,813
[HORSE NEIGHS]
335
00:23:13,976 --> 00:23:15,774
[WHIP CRACK]
336
00:23:16,145 --> 00:23:20,651
The crack of that whip is due to its tip
moving faster than the speed of sound.
337
00:23:20,816 --> 00:23:24,821
It makes a shockwave, a mini sonic boom
in the Italian countryside.
338
00:23:25,821 --> 00:23:27,539
[WHIP CRACK]
339
00:23:27,698 --> 00:23:29,666
A thunderclap works the same way.
340
00:23:29,825 --> 00:23:32,954
So does the sound
of a passing supersonic jet.
341
00:23:33,913 --> 00:23:38,009
So why is the speed of light
any more a barrier than the speed of sound?
342
00:23:38,167 --> 00:23:42,673
The answer is not just that light travels
about a million times faster than sound.
343
00:23:42,838 --> 00:23:47,014
And it's not merely an engineering problem,
like building the first supersonic jet.
344
00:23:47,176 --> 00:23:50,897
Instead, the light barrier
is a fundamental law of nature.
345
00:23:51,055 --> 00:23:52,648
As basic as gravity.
346
00:23:52,806 --> 00:23:55,855
Einstein found his absolute framework
for the world.
347
00:23:56,018 --> 00:23:59,022
This sturdy pillar
among all the relative motions...
348
00:23:59,188 --> 00:24:01,282
...within the motions of the cosmos.
349
00:24:01,440 --> 00:24:03,408
Light travels just as fast...
350
00:24:03,567 --> 00:24:06,946
...no matter how fast or slow
its source is moving.
351
00:24:07,112 --> 00:24:10,707
The speed of light is constant,
relative to everything else.
352
00:24:10,866 --> 00:24:12,994
Nothing can ever catch up with it.
353
00:24:15,829 --> 00:24:19,379
The thing about the laws of nature
is that they're unbreakable.
354
00:24:19,541 --> 00:24:22,294
The job of physicists
is to discover these commandments...
355
00:24:22,461 --> 00:24:26,682
...the ones that do not vary
from culture to culture and time to time...
356
00:24:26,840 --> 00:24:28,888
...and hold true throughout the cosmos.
357
00:24:30,052 --> 00:24:32,521
That's why, as Einstein showed...
358
00:24:32,680 --> 00:24:36,310
...funny things happen
close to the speed of light.
359
00:24:40,062 --> 00:24:42,406
Traveling close to the speed of light...
360
00:24:42,564 --> 00:24:44,862
...is kind of an elixir of life...
361
00:24:45,025 --> 00:24:49,531
...because your biological clock slows
down, relative to those you leave behind.
362
00:24:49,697 --> 00:24:54,328
This phenomena may provide us humans,
who only live for a century or so...
363
00:24:54,493 --> 00:24:57,042
...a practical means to
travel to the stars...
364
00:24:57,204 --> 00:25:01,584
...where the magic show of space-time
really gets crazy.
365
00:25:12,594 --> 00:25:15,143
TYSON: The 19th century astronomer
William Herschel...
366
00:25:15,305 --> 00:25:20,106
...loved to share the wonders of
the universe with his son, John.
367
00:25:30,487 --> 00:25:34,708
I once had a friend, a very clever fellow,
an astronomer...
368
00:25:34,867 --> 00:25:38,667
...and a parson at Leeds,
by the name of John Michell.
369
00:25:39,163 --> 00:25:43,168
Poor man died when you were a babe,
God rest his soul.
370
00:25:43,625 --> 00:25:47,300
He held that some stars are invisible.
371
00:25:47,463 --> 00:25:50,637
They really exist,
but we shall never see them.
372
00:25:51,133 --> 00:25:54,012
Dark stars, Michell called them.
373
00:25:55,679 --> 00:25:58,148
With all due respect, Father...
374
00:25:58,307 --> 00:26:00,526
...surely your friend was mistaken.
375
00:26:00,684 --> 00:26:05,110
If no one can see them,
then how can we possibly know they exist?
376
00:26:06,231 --> 00:26:09,826
Did you see the man
who left those footprints, John?
377
00:26:11,153 --> 00:26:13,497
Why, no, Father, I did not.
378
00:26:13,655 --> 00:26:16,374
But do you know that he exists?
379
00:26:34,093 --> 00:26:36,357
TYSON". John Michell was
one of the greatest
380
00:26:36,369 --> 00:26:38,644
scientists you've
probably never heard of.
381
00:26:38,806 --> 00:26:41,525
He lived and worked in England
in the 18th century.
382
00:26:41,683 --> 00:26:44,983
If he ever sat for a portrait,
it no longer exists.
383
00:26:45,646 --> 00:26:48,991
He was once described by an acquaintance
as a short little man...
384
00:26:49,149 --> 00:26:52,198
...of black complexion, and fat.
385
00:26:53,237 --> 00:26:57,333
Michell imagined a star
so big, so massive...
386
00:26:57,491 --> 00:27:01,462
...that nothing, not even light,
could escape its gravitational grip.
387
00:27:01,620 --> 00:27:03,998
Can you find the dark star?
388
00:27:04,164 --> 00:27:06,883
You can't see it with
your eyes, not directly.
389
00:27:07,042 --> 00:27:10,922
But it may leave a kind of footprint
on the cosmic shore.
390
00:27:11,088 --> 00:27:14,558
Michell realized that
we might detect some of these dark stars...
391
00:27:14,716 --> 00:27:16,718
...because of their extreme gravity.
392
00:27:16,885 --> 00:27:20,560
If one happened to be near a smaller,
luminous companion star...
393
00:27:20,722 --> 00:27:25,819
...that star would appear to travel
in a tight orbit, around nothing.
394
00:27:26,520 --> 00:27:27,942
Even though we can't see it...
395
00:27:28,105 --> 00:27:31,234
...we know something with a lot of mass
has to be right there.
396
00:27:31,400 --> 00:27:32,743
A dark star.
397
00:27:32,901 --> 00:27:36,531
Or what today we call a black hole.
398
00:27:37,573 --> 00:27:39,416
What does a black hole look like?
399
00:27:39,575 --> 00:27:41,873
And what would it be like inside?
400
00:27:42,035 --> 00:27:43,161
We'll get there.
401
00:27:43,328 --> 00:27:47,253
But first, let's make a pit stop
in my hometown:
402
00:27:47,875 --> 00:27:49,627
New York City...
403
00:27:49,793 --> 00:27:53,923
...where it's always seemed to me
that everything is in constant motion.
404
00:27:54,882 --> 00:27:56,634
I've lived here most of my life.
405
00:27:56,800 --> 00:27:58,768
There's always something new to see.
406
00:27:58,927 --> 00:28:01,726
But one thing never changes: gravity.
407
00:28:01,889 --> 00:28:06,440
Gravity on Earth has been the same
for the past four and a half billion years.
408
00:28:06,602 --> 00:28:09,276
But what if today, we could alter it?
409
00:28:09,730 --> 00:28:12,574
Gravity is a distortion
in the shape of space-time...
410
00:28:12,733 --> 00:28:15,111
...as Einstein has showed.
411
00:28:15,277 --> 00:28:18,451
Space can expand or contract and warp
without limit.
412
00:28:25,037 --> 00:28:27,961
If the Earth's size or density
were even a little different...
413
00:28:28,123 --> 00:28:29,716
...its gravity would be too.
414
00:28:29,875 --> 00:28:32,424
There's an infinite range of possibilities.
415
00:28:32,586 --> 00:28:36,181
New Yorkers feel right at home
with the gravitational pull of the Earth...
416
00:28:36,340 --> 00:28:37,842
...called 1g.
417
00:28:41,845 --> 00:28:46,146
Suppose we turn off the gravity
on one of its streets.
418
00:28:51,521 --> 00:28:56,527
People and objects that were already
in motion are launched into flight.
419
00:29:05,786 --> 00:29:10,542
Now, what if I turned the gravity up
to, say, eight or nine g's?
420
00:29:10,707 --> 00:29:14,632
Out of compassion, let's evacuate the area.
421
00:29:15,879 --> 00:29:17,472
This is about the same g-force...
422
00:29:17,631 --> 00:29:20,305
...that a fighter pilot
in a high-speed turn would feel.
423
00:29:20,467 --> 00:29:24,688
A few minutes of this wouldn't hurt you,
but it wouldn't be comfortable.
424
00:29:24,846 --> 00:29:27,190
At 100,0009's...
425
00:29:27,349 --> 00:29:31,900
...even fire hydrants become crushed
by their own enormous weight.
426
00:29:32,062 --> 00:29:33,939
But at millions of g's...
427
00:29:34,106 --> 00:29:36,859
...even light bows to gravity.
428
00:29:37,025 --> 00:29:41,826
The light still moves at its constant
speed, but it cannot escape.
429
00:29:41,989 --> 00:29:46,542
Michell's dark star...
...our black hole.
430
00:29:46,702 --> 00:29:50,457
And the nearest one
may be closer than you think.
431
00:29:59,881 --> 00:30:02,009
TYSON:
Not every star can become a black hole.
432
00:30:02,175 --> 00:30:04,724
Only about one in a thousand
is massive enough.
433
00:30:04,886 --> 00:30:07,890
The nearest one could be
within 100 light years of Earth.
434
00:30:08,432 --> 00:30:12,733
Black holes aren't the mythic,
cosmic vacuum cleaners of science fiction.
435
00:30:12,894 --> 00:30:16,068
They don't go around
gobbling up unsuspecting worlds.
436
00:30:16,231 --> 00:30:18,074
You've gotta come to them.
437
00:30:18,233 --> 00:30:21,703
But if you do,
it might be the last thing you ever see.
438
00:30:21,862 --> 00:30:23,990
[RUMBLING]
439
00:30:25,115 --> 00:30:28,961
That was us
resisting a few million g's of gravity.
440
00:30:29,119 --> 00:30:32,293
Don't forget. That thing swallows light.
441
00:30:32,456 --> 00:30:34,754
We'll keep our distance.
442
00:30:37,461 --> 00:30:40,055
When giant stars exhaust
their nuclear fuel...
443
00:30:40,213 --> 00:30:42,500
...they can no longer
stay hot enough to fend
444
00:30:42,512 --> 00:30:44,810
off the inward pull
of their own gravity.
445
00:30:44,968 --> 00:30:47,938
The most massive stars collapse
into darkness...
446
00:30:48,096 --> 00:30:50,770
...leaving only their gravity behind.
447
00:30:50,932 --> 00:30:55,608
This black hole enshrouds
the shrunken corpse of a supergiant star.
448
00:30:55,771 --> 00:31:00,117
The star itself has shriveled into
something even smaller than this darkness.
449
00:31:00,275 --> 00:31:03,529
Only 64 kilometers wide.
450
00:31:05,238 --> 00:31:08,208
This is the first black
hole ever discovered.
451
00:31:08,367 --> 00:31:10,790
Cygnus x-1.
452
00:31:10,952 --> 00:31:16,459
How did we on Earth ever find
something so small and dark and far away?
453
00:31:16,625 --> 00:31:19,424
We looked at it in another kind of light.
454
00:31:19,586 --> 00:31:21,213
X-rays.
455
00:31:21,380 --> 00:31:24,133
In X-ray light, we lost
sight of the blue star...
456
00:31:24,299 --> 00:31:28,054
...because its surface
is a tepid 30,000 degrees.
457
00:31:28,220 --> 00:31:32,851
But the disc of gas around the black hole
glowed brilliantly in X-rays...
458
00:31:33,016 --> 00:31:35,519
...at 100 million degrees.
459
00:31:35,685 --> 00:31:37,358
As William Herschel discovered...
460
00:31:37,521 --> 00:31:41,822
...many stars have close companions,
forming a binary star system.
461
00:31:41,983 --> 00:31:46,159
But if one member of such a pair is
enormous, and the other is compact...
462
00:31:46,321 --> 00:31:52,203
...the smaller star can drain and consume
the atmosphere of its larger sibling.
463
00:31:52,786 --> 00:31:56,586
This neurotic relationship
can last for millions of years.
464
00:31:56,748 --> 00:31:58,466
The atmosphere of the larger star...
465
00:31:58,625 --> 00:32:01,845
...was being siphoned on to
a glowing hot accretion disc...
466
00:32:02,003 --> 00:32:06,179
...that revolves around, and spirals into,
a black hole.
467
00:32:06,341 --> 00:32:11,598
The overwhelming gravity was accelerating
the blue star's gas into a death spiral...
468
00:32:11,763 --> 00:32:15,688
...crossing the space-time boundary,
never to be seen again.
469
00:32:16,268 --> 00:32:20,489
The fateful boundary that separates a black
hole from the rest of the universe...
470
00:32:20,647 --> 00:32:22,570
...is called an event horizon.
471
00:32:22,732 --> 00:32:24,154
From our point of view...
472
00:32:24,317 --> 00:32:27,867
...the substance in the disc slows down
as it approaches the event horizon...
473
00:32:28,029 --> 00:32:29,702
...never quite reaching it.
474
00:32:29,865 --> 00:32:33,961
But if you were riding on that spiraling
gas, and I don't advise it...
475
00:32:34,119 --> 00:32:37,464
...you would sail past the event horizon
in a matter of seconds...
476
00:32:37,622 --> 00:32:39,966
...into the undiscovered country...
477
00:32:40,125 --> 00:32:43,550
...from which no traveler returns.
478
00:32:52,053 --> 00:32:55,023
We have searched the hearts
of dozens of galaxies...
479
00:32:55,182 --> 00:32:59,062
...and in every case,
we have found a super massive black hole.
480
00:32:59,227 --> 00:33:02,606
Our own galaxy is no exception.
481
00:33:04,691 --> 00:33:07,365
The stars nearest
to the center of our galaxy...
482
00:33:07,527 --> 00:33:11,748
...whip around at more than
40 million kilometers an hour.
483
00:33:13,241 --> 00:33:15,414
What can make them move so fast?
484
00:33:15,577 --> 00:33:17,124
The only logical explanation...
485
00:33:17,996 --> 00:33:23,378
...is that something with a mass
of 4 million suns lies at the center.
486
00:33:24,211 --> 00:33:27,465
So where are the blazing light
of 4 million suns?
487
00:33:27,631 --> 00:33:31,886
Since we can't see it, it must be
imprisoned inside a black hole.
488
00:33:38,767 --> 00:33:41,737
Earth is far enough away
to be perfectly safe.
489
00:33:41,895 --> 00:33:44,614
Other worlds might not be so lucky.
490
00:33:47,108 --> 00:33:51,238
If you somehow survived the perilous
journey to cross the event horizons...
491
00:33:51,404 --> 00:33:54,123
...you'd be able to look
back out and see...
492
00:33:54,282 --> 00:33:58,583
...the entire future history of the
universe unfold before your eyes.
493
00:34:01,248 --> 00:34:02,545
How?
494
00:34:02,707 --> 00:34:06,632
Because when space-time is warped
by the extreme gravity of a black hole...
495
00:34:06,795 --> 00:34:10,299
...its time is stretched to the limit.
496
00:34:12,676 --> 00:34:14,974
But what would be in front of you?
497
00:34:15,136 --> 00:34:16,638
Before we go there...
498
00:34:16,805 --> 00:34:21,060
...I should warn you that we are entering
uncharted scientific territory.
499
00:34:21,226 --> 00:34:24,526
For all we know, there may be
undiscovered laws of physics...
500
00:34:24,688 --> 00:34:27,532
...that govern events
at the center of the black hole.
501
00:34:29,734 --> 00:34:32,112
But until the next Einstein comes along...
502
00:34:32,279 --> 00:34:34,702
...let's perform a thought experiment.
503
00:34:37,117 --> 00:34:41,497
That's how John Michell first imagined
dark stars in the 18th Century...
504
00:34:41,997 --> 00:34:45,877
...and how Einstein conceived
his theory of rela--
505
00:35:39,971 --> 00:35:43,145
JOHN:
Father, do you believe in ghosts?
506
00:35:43,308 --> 00:35:48,565
WILLIAM: Oh, no. Not in the human
kind of ghost. No, not at all.
507
00:35:48,730 --> 00:35:50,983
But look up, my boy...
508
00:35:51,149 --> 00:35:55,074
...and see a sky full of them.
509
00:35:56,446 --> 00:35:59,165
TYSON: If you could survive
the trip into a black hole...
510
00:35:59,324 --> 00:36:02,954
...you might emerge in another place
and time in our own universe...
511
00:36:03,119 --> 00:36:06,293
...circumventing the first commandment
of relativity:
512
00:36:06,456 --> 00:36:09,710
Thou shalt not travel faster than light.
513
00:36:11,586 --> 00:36:14,260
Nothing can move through space
faster than light.
514
00:36:14,422 --> 00:36:16,891
But space is not near emptiness.
515
00:36:17,050 --> 00:36:21,726
It has properties. It can stretch
and shrink. It can be deformed.
516
00:36:21,888 --> 00:36:25,893
And when that happens,
time is deformed too.
517
00:36:29,145 --> 00:36:34,618
Einstein discovered that space and time
are just two aspects of the same thing.
518
00:36:34,776 --> 00:36:36,323
Space-time.
519
00:36:36,486 --> 00:36:41,868
Space-time itself can deform enough
to carry you anywhere at any speed.
520
00:36:42,033 --> 00:36:46,834
Black holes may very well be
tunnels through the universe.
521
00:37:01,094 --> 00:37:03,017
On this intergalactic subway system...
522
00:37:03,179 --> 00:37:06,524
...you could travel
to the farthest reaches of space-time.
523
00:37:06,683 --> 00:37:10,483
Or you might arrive in some place
even more amazing.
524
00:37:12,439 --> 00:37:16,034
We might find ourselves
in an altogether different universe.
525
00:37:16,192 --> 00:37:18,991
But how can a whole universe fit
inside of a black hole...
526
00:37:20,155 --> 00:37:23,204
...which is only a small
part of our universe?
527
00:37:24,200 --> 00:37:26,919
That's another magic trick of space-time.
528
00:37:27,078 --> 00:37:29,456
The phenomenal gravity of a black hole...
529
00:37:29,622 --> 00:37:33,877
...can warp the space
of an entire universe inside it.
530
00:37:42,302 --> 00:37:44,851
Our local gravity may be a drag to us...
531
00:37:45,013 --> 00:37:48,643
...but it's really feeble compared with
what goes on inside a collapsed star.
532
00:37:49,726 --> 00:37:51,023
As far as we know...
533
00:37:51,186 --> 00:37:54,190
...when a giant star collapses
to make a black hole...
534
00:37:54,355 --> 00:37:58,531
...the extreme density and pressure
at the center mimic the Big Bang...
535
00:37:58,693 --> 00:38:00,991
...which gave rise to our universe.
536
00:38:01,154 --> 00:38:04,954
And a universe inside a black hole
might give rise to its own black holes...
537
00:38:05,116 --> 00:38:07,869
...and those could lead to other universes.
538
00:38:12,040 --> 00:38:15,544
Maybe that's how our cosmos came to be.
539
00:38:28,431 --> 00:38:29,808
For all we know...
540
00:38:29,974 --> 00:38:33,820
...if you wanna see what it's like
inside a black hole...
541
00:38:34,771 --> 00:38:36,944
...just look around you.
542
00:38:40,735 --> 00:38:42,658
William Herschel went on to discover...
543
00:38:42,821 --> 00:38:46,792
...that the sun and its planets
are moving through the Milky Way.
544
00:38:46,950 --> 00:38:49,499
And whatever became of his son John?
545
00:38:49,661 --> 00:38:52,460
He grew up to become a great scientist.
546
00:38:52,622 --> 00:38:56,092
His deep space observations
built on those of his father...
547
00:38:56,251 --> 00:39:00,757
...to become the basis for the standard
catalog of galaxies we use today.
548
00:39:00,922 --> 00:39:02,799
When William was in failing health...
549
00:39:02,966 --> 00:39:05,355
...John stayed with him
through the long nights
550
00:39:05,367 --> 00:39:07,767
at his telescope, to help
him sweep the stars.
551
00:39:08,388 --> 00:39:12,768
And when his father died,
John wrote his epitaph:
552
00:39:13,268 --> 00:39:17,148
"He broke through the walls of heaven."
553
00:39:28,032 --> 00:39:31,252
John often reminisced
about those summer nights with his father.
554
00:39:31,953 --> 00:39:36,083
Maybe that's why
he sought a way to preserve the past.
555
00:39:37,000 --> 00:39:41,176
John Herschel was one of the founders
of a new form of time travel...
556
00:39:41,337 --> 00:39:45,092
...a means to capture light and memories.
557
00:39:45,258 --> 00:39:47,602
He actually coined a word for it:
558
00:39:47,760 --> 00:39:49,933
Photography-
559
00:39:55,143 --> 00:39:59,239
When you think about it,
photography is a form of time travel.
560
00:39:59,397 --> 00:40:02,651
This man is staring at us
from across the centuries...
561
00:40:02,817 --> 00:40:05,661
...a ghost preserved by light.
562
00:40:05,945 --> 00:40:08,323
It's not hard to imagine that
in the near future...
563
00:40:08,489 --> 00:40:12,164
...we'll be able to capture the past
in all three dimensions.
564
00:40:12,327 --> 00:40:15,581
We'll be able to step inside a memory.
565
00:40:20,335 --> 00:40:22,713
It may not be possible
to travel backward in time...
566
00:40:23,588 --> 00:40:27,809
...but perhaps one day,
we can bring the past to us.
567
00:40:28,635 --> 00:40:31,684
Here's a moment from my past.
568
00:40:31,846 --> 00:40:35,692
Like John Herschel, I'm remembering
a younger version of myself.
569
00:40:35,850 --> 00:40:38,649
December 20th, 1975.
570
00:40:39,270 --> 00:40:41,819
A snowy day in Ithaca, New York.
571
00:40:41,981 --> 00:40:47,238
A branchpoint on the road that brought me
to this moment with you.
572
00:40:47,403 --> 00:40:50,657
It was the day I met Carl Sagan.
573
00:40:51,783 --> 00:40:55,583
Reminds me of those ghost stars in the sky.
574
00:40:57,664 --> 00:41:01,714
You know, the ones that still
shine their light upon us...
575
00:41:01,876 --> 00:41:04,470
...long after they're gone.
50670
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