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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:01:24,877 --> 00:01:26,378 This is home. 2 00:01:27,796 --> 00:01:30,340 Our very own corner of the universe. 3 00:01:32,885 --> 00:01:36,805 But stand here on the surface of Earth and look up. 4 00:01:40,100 --> 00:01:44,188 Hidden out here, in the limitless reaches of space, 5 00:01:44,229 --> 00:01:49,401 is the story of our past, present, and future. 6 00:01:51,236 --> 00:01:55,032 For centuries, astronomers from every corner of the world 7 00:01:55,073 --> 00:01:59,203 have striven to unlock secrets of the universe. 8 00:02:36,156 --> 00:02:38,575 This is Dr. Jonathan Whitmore, 9 00:02:38,659 --> 00:02:40,285 and I suppose you could say 10 00:02:40,369 --> 00:02:43,247 that he's always had stars in his eyes. 11 00:02:50,921 --> 00:02:52,923 I have two great loves in life. 12 00:02:53,006 --> 00:02:55,092 Music and astronomy. 13 00:02:56,969 --> 00:03:00,264 As a kid I dreamt of playing piano at Carnegie Hall one day, 14 00:03:00,347 --> 00:03:03,892 then flying to some distant mountaintop to stargaze the next. 15 00:03:07,729 --> 00:03:10,190 But Carnegie Hall will have to wait, 16 00:03:10,274 --> 00:03:13,485 because I got hooked on astronomy in a big way. 17 00:03:16,947 --> 00:03:18,991 My very first glimpse through a telescope 18 00:03:19,074 --> 00:03:22,619 showed that even our closest neighbors are stunning. 19 00:03:24,788 --> 00:03:26,456 When I saw the moon, 20 00:03:26,540 --> 00:03:29,626 I felt that I could almost reach out and touch it. 21 00:03:34,882 --> 00:03:38,135 Saturn has her amazing rings that circle the planet. 22 00:03:38,510 --> 00:03:41,763 The rings alone are 20 times wider than the Earth, 23 00:03:42,139 --> 00:03:44,975 but in some places, are only 10 meters thick. 24 00:03:47,102 --> 00:03:48,478 And there's Jupiter. 25 00:03:48,979 --> 00:03:51,064 The stormy gas giant. 26 00:03:51,773 --> 00:03:53,233 We have one moon. 27 00:03:53,901 --> 00:03:57,279 At last count, she had more than 67. 28 00:03:58,822 --> 00:04:02,326 But for me, the most beautiful object in the sky 29 00:04:02,409 --> 00:04:04,494 is the thing we're all bound to. 30 00:04:06,079 --> 00:04:09,333 The thing that gives us warmth and life itself. 31 00:04:13,420 --> 00:04:14,713 The sun. 32 00:04:49,623 --> 00:04:51,375 Our sun is a star, 33 00:04:52,334 --> 00:04:55,963 just like all the other stars we see in the night sky. 34 00:04:57,548 --> 00:05:01,260 When I found that out, my mind was made up. 35 00:05:10,602 --> 00:05:13,313 Jonathan's decision to become an astronomer 36 00:05:13,397 --> 00:05:15,899 led him halfway around the world, 37 00:05:15,941 --> 00:05:18,694 to one of the highest and driest places on the planet. 38 00:05:29,788 --> 00:05:33,458 Chile's Atacama Desert is his launch pad 39 00:05:33,542 --> 00:05:35,878 for a trip to the edge of the universe. 40 00:05:48,348 --> 00:05:50,976 When people find out that I'm an astronomer, 41 00:05:51,059 --> 00:05:54,313 they always ask me to point out what I observe in the night sky. 42 00:05:55,314 --> 00:05:57,191 And the truth is, I can't, 43 00:05:57,357 --> 00:06:00,611 because the things I study are so far away, 44 00:06:00,652 --> 00:06:02,446 you can't see them with human eyes. 45 00:06:07,951 --> 00:06:09,661 That's what I love about science. 46 00:06:10,120 --> 00:06:13,582 It challenges our boundaries and constantly pushes us forward. 47 00:06:29,139 --> 00:06:30,974 Take Mars, for example. 48 00:06:31,850 --> 00:06:36,146 Not long ago, we thought of it as just a pale, red dot in the night sky. 49 00:06:42,653 --> 00:06:45,322 Now we can see it in extraordinary detail. 50 00:06:46,657 --> 00:06:48,659 Starting in 1997, 51 00:06:48,742 --> 00:06:51,203 the Mars Global Surveyor mapped 52 00:06:51,328 --> 00:06:53,831 the entire surface of Mars so precisely, 53 00:06:53,872 --> 00:06:56,834 that we could see detail down to a mile in size. 54 00:06:58,126 --> 00:07:00,295 It revealed huge canyons, 55 00:07:00,379 --> 00:07:02,589 10 times longer than the Grand Canyon, 56 00:07:03,006 --> 00:07:06,343 and volcanoes three times taller than Mount Everest. 57 00:07:17,980 --> 00:07:21,859 More recently, NASA sent the Mars rover, Curiosity. 58 00:07:23,110 --> 00:07:25,529 It's a mobile lab that is scouring the landscape 59 00:07:25,571 --> 00:07:27,698 for water and interesting samples. 60 00:07:28,699 --> 00:07:32,369 And from orbit, we are mapping Mars with incredible precision. 61 00:07:32,911 --> 00:07:36,748 We can now see rocks on the Martian surface that are barely a foot wide. 62 00:07:45,048 --> 00:07:47,676 These images of the surface of Mars 63 00:07:47,718 --> 00:07:49,761 aren't some special effect 64 00:07:49,845 --> 00:07:52,890 created for the next Hollywood sci-fi epic. 65 00:07:53,599 --> 00:07:55,184 This is the real thing. 66 00:07:56,685 --> 00:07:59,855 These images were taken using HiRISE, 67 00:07:59,897 --> 00:08:03,734 the largest telescope ever carried on a deep-space mission, 68 00:08:04,151 --> 00:08:06,737 aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. 69 00:08:27,174 --> 00:08:29,593 If you've ever dreamt of living on Mars, 70 00:08:30,093 --> 00:08:31,678 just come to the Atacama Desert, 71 00:08:31,762 --> 00:08:35,390 and you'll be amazed by how similar it is to the Martian landscape. 72 00:08:42,773 --> 00:08:45,567 In the middle of one of the world's most arid deserts, 73 00:08:46,151 --> 00:08:49,530 the team at ESO have constructed a place that's full of life. 74 00:08:57,079 --> 00:08:58,789 This is where we live. 75 00:09:00,290 --> 00:09:03,627 In fact, if we ever colonize another planet, 76 00:09:03,710 --> 00:09:06,797 this might be the kind of biosphere that we build there. 77 00:09:07,965 --> 00:09:10,467 Sheltered from the extreme conditions outside, 78 00:09:10,592 --> 00:09:13,971 you'll find an oasis, with all the comforts of home. 79 00:09:15,514 --> 00:09:18,976 A swimming pool, a library, a restaurant, 80 00:09:19,476 --> 00:09:22,145 and even a music room where I can practice piano. 81 00:09:25,941 --> 00:09:28,861 Astronomers from all over the world are drawn to this place 82 00:09:28,944 --> 00:09:30,863 by their passion for the stars. 83 00:09:32,865 --> 00:09:36,368 And up the mountain is the telescope we have all come to use. 84 00:09:37,244 --> 00:09:39,288 It's called the "VLT". 85 00:09:39,329 --> 00:09:40,998 The Very Large Telescope. 86 00:09:42,583 --> 00:09:45,460 So we're not exactly that great at coming up with names, 87 00:09:45,919 --> 00:09:47,629 but that's exactly what it is. 88 00:09:48,505 --> 00:09:50,174 A very large telescope. 89 00:09:52,176 --> 00:09:55,846 Make that four very large telescopes. 90 00:10:01,810 --> 00:10:05,397 VLT operator and mountaineer, Lisa Tura, 91 00:10:05,480 --> 00:10:07,524 is here to prepare the telescope. 92 00:10:08,609 --> 00:10:09,943 On her days off, 93 00:10:10,027 --> 00:10:13,530 you'll find Lisa scaling the highest peaks of the Andes. 94 00:10:14,865 --> 00:10:19,244 So she is unfazed by the task of calibrating these gigantic, 95 00:10:19,411 --> 00:10:22,206 and sometimes temperamental, machines. 96 00:10:26,502 --> 00:10:28,754 When you operate the VLT, 97 00:10:28,837 --> 00:10:31,673 you have to treat it with the utmost care. 98 00:10:32,424 --> 00:10:34,801 One miscalculation can throw out 99 00:10:34,927 --> 00:10:37,304 an entire night's observations. 100 00:10:38,055 --> 00:10:40,557 Its instruments are so sensitive 101 00:10:40,599 --> 00:10:43,894 that even your body's temperature can affect the readings. 102 00:10:44,895 --> 00:10:47,147 So we need to be extremely thorough 103 00:10:47,231 --> 00:10:49,358 every time we start it up. 104 00:11:02,663 --> 00:11:07,543 The VLT is one of the biggest optical telescopes in the world. 105 00:11:07,751 --> 00:11:12,422 It has a 27-foot mirror that acts like a giant light bucket, 106 00:11:12,506 --> 00:11:15,092 capturing as much light as possible. 107 00:11:22,432 --> 00:11:23,559 This main mirror 108 00:11:23,600 --> 00:11:27,437 reflects and focuses the light up to a second mirror, 109 00:11:27,479 --> 00:11:31,733 then down to a third mirror in the middle of a telescope. 110 00:11:33,986 --> 00:11:35,070 And finally, 111 00:11:35,112 --> 00:11:38,365 into instruments on the side of the VLT. 112 00:12:01,138 --> 00:12:03,974 Once Lisa has finished her calibrations, 113 00:12:04,057 --> 00:12:08,812 the VLT can see objects four billion times fainter 114 00:12:08,896 --> 00:12:11,565 than those detectable by the human eye. 115 00:12:25,496 --> 00:12:29,333 For me, music will always play a big part in my life. 116 00:12:30,792 --> 00:12:32,211 But when I'm about to look up 117 00:12:32,294 --> 00:12:35,797 and see distant objects that no one else has ever seen, 118 00:12:36,882 --> 00:12:38,842 I know I've made the right choice. 119 00:12:42,638 --> 00:12:44,681 Before the night's viewing begins, 120 00:12:44,806 --> 00:12:46,683 everyone must leave the building. 121 00:12:48,644 --> 00:12:51,688 The VLT demands total darkness. 122 00:12:52,105 --> 00:12:54,691 As I said, temperamental. 123 00:12:56,527 --> 00:12:59,863 Every speck of man-made light has to be shut out. 124 00:13:01,365 --> 00:13:05,369 Even the tiniest bit could ruin the observation for that night. 125 00:13:48,162 --> 00:13:50,455 As the Earth spins, 126 00:13:50,539 --> 00:13:53,458 the Milky Way appears to pass over us, 127 00:13:57,921 --> 00:14:01,133 while the telescopes twist and turn, 128 00:14:01,216 --> 00:14:03,719 tracking distant objects in the sky. 129 00:14:18,734 --> 00:14:23,071 Nowhere else in the world can you see the stars shine as brightly. 130 00:14:24,323 --> 00:14:25,949 On the clearest of nights, 131 00:14:26,033 --> 00:14:27,868 you can see your own shadow, 132 00:14:28,619 --> 00:14:31,955 cast from the light of millions of distant stars. 133 00:14:41,340 --> 00:14:43,425 And as we explore the heavens, 134 00:14:44,426 --> 00:14:47,054 we have found the birthplace of stars. 135 00:14:58,482 --> 00:15:03,403 This monstrous cloud of gas and dust is the Carina Nebula. 136 00:15:05,155 --> 00:15:07,366 It's a star factory, 137 00:15:07,449 --> 00:15:09,826 churning out thousands of stars, 138 00:15:10,536 --> 00:15:13,664 some of which are the brightest in our Milky Way. 139 00:15:29,012 --> 00:15:31,473 You could call it a stellar nursery. 140 00:15:32,516 --> 00:15:34,518 Because in a nebula like this one, 141 00:15:34,560 --> 00:15:36,311 stars are being formed. 142 00:15:37,312 --> 00:15:39,690 And even though these stars are relatively young, 143 00:15:40,357 --> 00:15:42,693 they're not exactly small. 144 00:15:42,776 --> 00:15:45,696 And there are a huge range of star types. 145 00:15:56,456 --> 00:16:01,712 In fact, our own sun would have been formed in a cloud of gas and dust just like this. 146 00:16:12,556 --> 00:16:16,393 Sometimes, these nebula are named by the shapes that they seem to make. 147 00:16:17,269 --> 00:16:19,062 Here's one with a great nickname. 148 00:16:19,730 --> 00:16:21,607 The Snow Angel Nebula. 149 00:16:24,568 --> 00:16:27,988 The blue wings of the snow angel are actually hot gas, 150 00:16:28,071 --> 00:16:32,367 being illuminated by a huge star forming in the middle of this hourglass. 151 00:16:38,665 --> 00:16:41,710 The astronomers who named the War and Peace Nebula 152 00:16:41,752 --> 00:16:44,087 could see a dove dancing in the gas. 153 00:16:46,131 --> 00:16:47,966 I don't see it myself, 154 00:16:48,050 --> 00:16:50,928 and I'm more interested in the gigantic stars here. 155 00:16:51,720 --> 00:16:54,056 They're shining hundreds of thousands of times 156 00:16:54,097 --> 00:16:55,766 brighter than our sun. 157 00:17:06,860 --> 00:17:10,072 But not every nebula is a stellar nursery. 158 00:17:12,824 --> 00:17:14,451 A thousand years ago, 159 00:17:14,493 --> 00:17:17,830 Arabian, Japanese and Chinese astronomers 160 00:17:17,913 --> 00:17:21,625 all recorded a strange, lingering light in the sky, 161 00:17:21,667 --> 00:17:23,961 as bright as the full moon. 162 00:17:24,002 --> 00:17:26,797 They were witnesses to the death of a star. 163 00:17:27,756 --> 00:17:31,927 A supernova explosion that scattered gas and dust particles 164 00:17:31,969 --> 00:17:34,888 60 billion miles into the cosmos, 165 00:17:34,972 --> 00:17:36,473 forming this. 166 00:17:36,557 --> 00:17:38,100 The Crab Nebula. 167 00:17:42,604 --> 00:17:46,108 Sometimes, astronomers look deep into the sky 168 00:17:46,358 --> 00:17:49,778 and see the cosmos looking right back at them. 169 00:17:51,780 --> 00:17:54,658 This magnificent eye in the sky 170 00:17:54,741 --> 00:17:57,327 is just the remnants of a burned-out star 171 00:17:57,411 --> 00:18:00,873 that has shed its outer layers back into the universe. 172 00:18:04,293 --> 00:18:06,962 By studying formations like this, 173 00:18:07,504 --> 00:18:11,300 we now know that stars come and go from the universe. 174 00:18:12,176 --> 00:18:15,345 Just like life begins and ends here on Earth. 175 00:18:25,272 --> 00:18:26,899 Beyond our Milky Way, 176 00:18:26,982 --> 00:18:29,693 you'll find stars, gas and dust 177 00:18:29,776 --> 00:18:33,071 clumped together in huge structures called galaxies. 178 00:18:34,698 --> 00:18:37,367 Galaxies come in all shapes and sizes, 179 00:18:37,451 --> 00:18:39,703 but what I love most about them 180 00:18:39,786 --> 00:18:42,915 is that the light that I'm seeing was created way back in time. 181 00:18:49,213 --> 00:18:51,882 Light from even the closest large galaxy 182 00:18:51,924 --> 00:18:54,801 takes two and a half million years to reach us. 183 00:18:56,386 --> 00:18:58,430 And the deeper I look into space, 184 00:18:58,764 --> 00:19:00,474 the older the light I see. 185 00:19:02,226 --> 00:19:04,770 This means that galaxies are like fossil records 186 00:19:04,853 --> 00:19:07,314 of how the universe used to look and act. 187 00:19:20,911 --> 00:19:22,412 So in a way, 188 00:19:22,538 --> 00:19:24,665 my work is a little bit time travel 189 00:19:24,748 --> 00:19:26,875 and a little bit cosmic archeology. 190 00:19:28,252 --> 00:19:30,796 I'm trying to help decipher these distant records 191 00:19:31,255 --> 00:19:32,923 so that we may one day 192 00:19:33,006 --> 00:19:35,926 better understand the story of our universe. 193 00:19:43,475 --> 00:19:45,894 Since these objects are so far away, 194 00:19:45,936 --> 00:19:48,897 a new challenge faces optical astronomers. 195 00:19:53,277 --> 00:19:56,029 Like the heat distortion you see on a road, 196 00:19:56,113 --> 00:20:00,617 the atmosphere distorts and blurs light coming in from the universe. 197 00:20:02,619 --> 00:20:05,747 It's what makes the stars appear to twinkle at night. 198 00:20:09,459 --> 00:20:10,878 To counter this problem, 199 00:20:10,961 --> 00:20:14,131 the VLT has a trick up its sleeve. 200 00:20:26,435 --> 00:20:30,439 It fires a laser beam 60 miles up in to the night sky 201 00:20:30,480 --> 00:20:32,316 to create a fixed point. 202 00:20:32,357 --> 00:20:35,861 Almost like a fake star for the telescope to focus on. 203 00:20:38,280 --> 00:20:40,657 On the ground, the VLT compensates 204 00:20:40,741 --> 00:20:45,329 by warping the telescope's mirror hundreds of times per second, 205 00:20:46,622 --> 00:20:50,000 allowing us to capture the sharpest of images. 206 00:21:00,344 --> 00:21:03,013 If you want to see what I'm looking for, 207 00:21:03,055 --> 00:21:05,599 don't look at the main part of these pictures. 208 00:21:05,682 --> 00:21:07,684 Look further, deeper, 209 00:21:07,726 --> 00:21:09,478 into the details of the image. 210 00:21:11,021 --> 00:21:14,358 My work takes me beyond all these close celestial objects 211 00:21:14,691 --> 00:21:17,402 and out into the vast universe that lies beyond. 212 00:21:35,420 --> 00:21:38,590 Highlighted here are distant galaxies. 213 00:21:40,217 --> 00:21:43,595 They're similar in size and structure to the closer ones, 214 00:21:45,889 --> 00:21:48,725 but they are so far away that even with the VLT, 215 00:21:48,809 --> 00:21:50,352 you can barely make them out. 216 00:21:54,690 --> 00:21:56,733 These are the galaxies that I study. 217 00:22:05,659 --> 00:22:08,370 Out here are the frontiers of our knowledge. 218 00:22:17,296 --> 00:22:20,591 This image is as far back in time as we can see 219 00:22:20,632 --> 00:22:22,801 with an optical telescope. 220 00:22:23,719 --> 00:22:26,388 It is the edge of the visible universe. 221 00:22:33,770 --> 00:22:35,606 I chose to become an astronomer 222 00:22:35,647 --> 00:22:38,066 when I learned that our sun is a star. 223 00:22:38,984 --> 00:22:42,779 You know, we have looked over 13 billion years into the cosmos, 224 00:22:42,863 --> 00:22:46,283 and everywhere we look, we find stars like our sun 225 00:22:46,742 --> 00:22:48,952 and galaxies like our Milky Way. 226 00:22:50,454 --> 00:22:52,372 When you see all of these galaxies, 227 00:22:52,581 --> 00:22:56,752 you can't help but feel a profound connection to the universe. 228 00:23:09,473 --> 00:23:10,807 Here in our cities, 229 00:23:10,849 --> 00:23:15,145 the digital world is producing a new breed of astronomer, 230 00:23:15,229 --> 00:23:20,275 using telescopes and supercomputers to create detailed simulations. 231 00:23:20,526 --> 00:23:22,986 They see the world differently. 232 00:23:24,238 --> 00:23:26,907 Dr. Greg Poole is one of those astronomers. 233 00:23:28,325 --> 00:23:30,202 He is a universe-builder. 234 00:23:33,330 --> 00:23:36,291 But the glow of bright city lights of technology 235 00:23:36,333 --> 00:23:38,502 drowns out our universe. 236 00:23:39,253 --> 00:23:42,673 When we look for the heavens, we can't see them anymore. 237 00:23:45,300 --> 00:23:49,596 That's why when Greg gathers his data for his cosmic simulations, 238 00:23:49,763 --> 00:23:52,099 he too has had to pack his bags 239 00:23:52,182 --> 00:23:54,309 and head for the Atacama Desert. 240 00:23:57,771 --> 00:24:01,567 Greg has come to use the most powerful telescope ever built, 241 00:24:03,318 --> 00:24:04,903 but his passion for photography 242 00:24:05,028 --> 00:24:06,697 won't let him pass up an opportunity 243 00:24:06,738 --> 00:24:09,449 to capture the Atacama's night sky. 244 00:24:15,038 --> 00:24:16,331 I love this place. 245 00:24:17,291 --> 00:24:19,793 It has a peacefulness that clears your mind. 246 00:24:22,462 --> 00:24:24,006 The ancient Incas who lived here 247 00:24:24,047 --> 00:24:26,133 organized their lives by the night sky. 248 00:24:27,551 --> 00:24:30,429 The movement and position of the stars told them when to 249 00:24:30,554 --> 00:24:32,264 plant and harvest their crops. 250 00:24:33,515 --> 00:24:36,351 They must have felt a kind of kinship with the stars. 251 00:24:38,228 --> 00:24:40,397 And when you see the night sky as they would have, 252 00:24:41,023 --> 00:24:42,566 it's not hard to see why. 253 00:25:07,424 --> 00:25:10,761 Greg isn't the only one that sees the world differently. 254 00:25:14,306 --> 00:25:17,935 This mosquito is on the prowl for its next meal. 255 00:25:19,061 --> 00:25:20,229 As it hunts, 256 00:25:20,270 --> 00:25:23,315 it sees the world in a very different way than we do. 257 00:25:25,275 --> 00:25:27,277 It doesn't just see visible light. 258 00:25:28,153 --> 00:25:30,072 It also has an array of sensors 259 00:25:30,113 --> 00:25:33,075 that detect infrared heat signatures. 260 00:25:34,368 --> 00:25:36,703 That's how it can find you in the dark. 261 00:25:37,412 --> 00:25:38,622 And it will. 262 00:25:43,752 --> 00:25:45,212 Like the mosquito, 263 00:25:45,295 --> 00:25:47,923 a new telescope called "ALMA" 264 00:25:47,965 --> 00:25:52,094 is being built to detect signals outside of visible light. 265 00:25:54,429 --> 00:25:57,474 ALMA is an extraordinary collaboration 266 00:25:57,641 --> 00:26:00,143 between the European Southern Observatory, 267 00:26:00,269 --> 00:26:02,813 North America and East Asia. 268 00:26:03,939 --> 00:26:06,942 A decade of work is almost complete. 269 00:26:09,862 --> 00:26:12,155 If you're thinking this looks more like a construction site 270 00:26:12,239 --> 00:26:13,365 than a telescope, 271 00:26:13,532 --> 00:26:14,658 you'd be right. 272 00:26:14,950 --> 00:26:16,285 This is base camp. 273 00:26:17,077 --> 00:26:20,122 ALMA has a completely different design from optical telescopes, 274 00:26:20,164 --> 00:26:22,249 because it's looking for microwave signals. 275 00:26:22,791 --> 00:26:25,127 And the best place for a microwave telescope 276 00:26:25,252 --> 00:26:27,921 is high and dry at over 16,000 feet 277 00:26:28,005 --> 00:26:29,423 on the top of a mountain. 278 00:26:32,342 --> 00:26:37,014 But 16,000 feet is not a place you can work for very long. 279 00:26:38,182 --> 00:26:41,226 The thin air and dryness make it hard to breathe 280 00:26:41,643 --> 00:26:44,563 and altitude sickness can lead to unconsciousness 281 00:26:44,646 --> 00:26:45,898 or even death. 282 00:26:46,857 --> 00:26:50,694 So engineers here have come up with a creative solution. 283 00:26:55,032 --> 00:26:57,201 They're building each individual antenna 284 00:26:57,284 --> 00:26:59,745 at a low-altitude base camp. 285 00:27:01,705 --> 00:27:05,501 And then each hundred-ton dish is driven up the mountain, 286 00:27:05,667 --> 00:27:08,253 one giant piece at a time. 287 00:27:32,736 --> 00:27:35,864 Normal vehicles aren't up to the task, 288 00:27:36,323 --> 00:27:38,992 so engineers have built 289 00:27:39,076 --> 00:27:41,870 the world's biggest remote-control truck. 290 00:27:47,042 --> 00:27:51,588 An operator can guide each antenna into its place in the array 291 00:27:51,630 --> 00:27:55,425 by using laser-guided steering and collision detectors. 292 00:28:00,597 --> 00:28:03,976 These safely guide the dish onto a concrete pad, 293 00:28:04,768 --> 00:28:07,771 where it will be ready to power up and get to work. 294 00:28:45,475 --> 00:28:46,935 Every time I see ALMA, 295 00:28:46,977 --> 00:28:48,645 I think of how far we've come. 296 00:28:49,563 --> 00:28:52,191 This isn't just a big telescope. 297 00:28:52,274 --> 00:28:54,693 It's an array of 66 dishes 298 00:28:54,776 --> 00:28:57,571 that are connected by a giant supercomputer 299 00:28:57,654 --> 00:29:02,075 to make these separate dishes act as one huge "eye in the sky". 300 00:29:03,994 --> 00:29:07,289 It makes ALMA the most powerful telescope ever built. 301 00:29:21,887 --> 00:29:24,681 Bathed in its eerie, green light, 302 00:29:24,848 --> 00:29:29,019 ALMA lets us peer into the farthest corners of the universe. 303 00:29:38,695 --> 00:29:43,325 These are the Antennae galaxies when viewed by normal, optical light. 304 00:29:46,161 --> 00:29:48,455 But ALMA sees so much more. 305 00:29:50,916 --> 00:29:53,919 One of her first images was a revelation. 306 00:29:54,628 --> 00:29:58,006 A huge, dense cloud of hydrogen gas 307 00:29:58,048 --> 00:30:00,050 hidden within the galaxies. 308 00:30:00,926 --> 00:30:04,721 Enough gas to form more than a billion stars. 309 00:30:13,564 --> 00:30:17,109 Centaurus A was the first galaxy I ever studied. 310 00:30:18,277 --> 00:30:20,237 Using telescopes like ALMA, 311 00:30:20,320 --> 00:30:24,074 we can see a massive black hole at the center of this galaxy. 312 00:30:25,075 --> 00:30:28,787 It's spewing out plasma at almost half the speed of light. 313 00:30:33,584 --> 00:30:36,920 Every galaxy, nebula and star in the sky 314 00:30:37,588 --> 00:30:39,256 has secrets hidden from us. 315 00:30:44,761 --> 00:30:45,929 Take the Crab Nebula. 316 00:30:47,181 --> 00:30:51,268 We know that it was once a star that blew up in a supernova explosion. 317 00:30:52,895 --> 00:30:56,106 We know this because when we look with X-ray vision, 318 00:30:56,398 --> 00:30:59,610 we can see the compact remains of that exploded star. 319 00:31:00,777 --> 00:31:01,987 A pulsar. 320 00:31:06,950 --> 00:31:08,911 But there is still more to the story. 321 00:31:10,078 --> 00:31:12,915 Because infrared observations penetrate deep 322 00:31:12,956 --> 00:31:15,167 into the dusty clouds of this nebula, 323 00:31:15,334 --> 00:31:19,880 revealing elements like hydrogen, carbon, silicon and iron. 324 00:31:23,300 --> 00:31:27,012 All of these observations reveal an incredible truth. 325 00:31:29,223 --> 00:31:32,309 That stars are the factories of the universe, 326 00:31:32,518 --> 00:31:35,062 continually creating the basic elements 327 00:31:35,145 --> 00:31:37,981 necessary for everything to exist. 328 00:31:40,484 --> 00:31:42,819 And as stars die, 329 00:31:42,903 --> 00:31:46,782 they disperse these elements back into the universe. 330 00:31:48,826 --> 00:31:51,912 We are made from the stars. 331 00:31:57,793 --> 00:32:00,712 The collective knowledge of years of observations 332 00:32:00,796 --> 00:32:03,590 has revealed our true connection to this cosmos 333 00:32:04,216 --> 00:32:06,009 and has allowed me to create 334 00:32:06,093 --> 00:32:10,347 one of the most detailed simulations of the universe ever constructed. 335 00:32:20,774 --> 00:32:24,570 Each one of these points of light is a galaxy, 336 00:32:25,487 --> 00:32:27,531 just like our own Milky Way. 337 00:32:30,159 --> 00:32:34,997 Our universe contains billions and billions of galaxies, 338 00:32:35,539 --> 00:32:39,251 and each galaxy has billions of stars. 339 00:32:41,962 --> 00:32:45,215 The universe is unbelievably vast. 340 00:32:45,924 --> 00:32:48,844 And even though we may be small in comparison, 341 00:32:49,636 --> 00:32:51,388 we are not insignificant. 342 00:32:54,391 --> 00:32:56,226 Everything we are, 343 00:32:56,268 --> 00:32:58,729 every single piece of us, 344 00:32:58,812 --> 00:33:02,566 everything that we see, feel, or taste, 345 00:33:02,608 --> 00:33:05,986 was made possible by the stars. 346 00:33:20,167 --> 00:33:23,462 It's no wonder we constantly set our sights higher 347 00:33:23,545 --> 00:33:26,507 and aspire to know ever more about the universe. 348 00:33:38,852 --> 00:33:41,939 NASA is building the successor to Hubble, 349 00:33:42,439 --> 00:33:45,067 the James Webb Space Telescope. 350 00:33:45,984 --> 00:33:49,655 It will help us see from our small perch in the Milky Way 351 00:33:49,738 --> 00:33:52,491 to the very edges of the universe 352 00:33:53,325 --> 00:33:55,661 and the beginning of time itself. 353 00:33:59,039 --> 00:34:01,083 We live in the universe, 354 00:34:02,376 --> 00:34:05,337 and the universe lives in us. 355 00:34:07,798 --> 00:34:10,384 So when we look up into the night sky, 356 00:34:12,052 --> 00:34:13,720 the story we see 357 00:34:15,055 --> 00:34:16,348 is our own. 28733

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