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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,938 --> 00:00:06,875 Narrator: Billions and billions of galaxies -- 2 00:00:06,938 --> 00:00:10,675 the universe is so vast, we can't even imagine 3 00:00:10,738 --> 00:00:12,339 what those numbers mean. 4 00:00:12,404 --> 00:00:20,044 But 14 billion years ago, none of it existed... 5 00:00:20,104 --> 00:00:23,440 until the Big Bang. 6 00:00:23,504 --> 00:00:27,507 The Big Bang is the origin of space 7 00:00:27,571 --> 00:00:30,206 and the origin of time itself. 8 00:00:30,271 --> 00:00:34,108 Narrator: We take a journey through space and time, 9 00:00:34,171 --> 00:00:37,807 from the beginning to the end of the universe itself. 10 00:00:38,035 --> 00:00:42,035 ♪ How the Universe Works 1x01 ♪ Big Bang Original Air Date on April 25, 2010 11 00:00:42,060 --> 00:00:46,060 == sync, corrected by elderman == 12 00:00:53,537 --> 00:00:55,961 This is our world. 13 00:01:01,138 --> 00:01:06,610 Cities... forests... 14 00:01:06,671 --> 00:01:10,374 oceans... people -- 15 00:01:10,437 --> 00:01:13,973 everything in the universe is made from matter 16 00:01:14,038 --> 00:01:18,242 created in the first seconds of the Big Bang... 17 00:01:26,604 --> 00:01:34,244 ...every star, every planet, every atom, every blade of 18 00:01:34,304 --> 00:01:38,708 grass, every drop of water. 19 00:01:38,771 --> 00:01:40,139 Water is ancient. 20 00:01:40,205 --> 00:01:44,275 The hydrogen atoms in here were born moments after the Big Bang. 21 00:01:44,337 --> 00:01:48,140 Then came everything else. 22 00:01:48,205 --> 00:01:52,275 Narrator: The Big Bang is the defining event 23 00:01:52,337 --> 00:01:55,873 of our universe... and everything in it. 24 00:02:01,304 --> 00:02:07,309 The secrets of our past, our present, and our future are 25 00:02:07,371 --> 00:02:12,843 locked inside this one moment in time. 26 00:02:12,904 --> 00:02:17,408 To unlock the secrets of the Big Bang, we have to travel outside 27 00:02:17,471 --> 00:02:20,106 of our own solar system... 28 00:02:20,171 --> 00:02:23,965 And journey beyond even our own galaxy. 29 00:02:28,938 --> 00:02:34,009 As we travel into deep space, we're actually seeing into 30 00:02:34,071 --> 00:02:40,343 the past... and getting closer to being able to witness 31 00:02:40,404 --> 00:02:43,507 the dawn of time itself. 32 00:02:43,571 --> 00:02:50,678 Passing the first infant galaxies and the first stars... 33 00:02:50,738 --> 00:02:55,242 We arrive back at the moment the universe began and face 34 00:02:55,304 --> 00:03:03,045 the biggest questions in all of science. 35 00:03:03,171 --> 00:03:06,240 This is the Holy Grail of physics. 36 00:03:06,304 --> 00:03:08,606 We want to know why it banged. 37 00:03:08,671 --> 00:03:09,872 We want to know what banged. 38 00:03:09,938 --> 00:03:14,008 We want to know what was there before the bang. 39 00:03:14,138 --> 00:03:17,541 Narrator: To get the answers, we've built machines the size of 40 00:03:17,604 --> 00:03:20,340 cities to simulate conditions 41 00:03:20,404 --> 00:03:23,874 when the universe was created... 44 00:03:38,938 --> 00:03:40,205 ''Why are we here? 45 00:03:40,272 --> 00:03:43,274 Where did we come from?'' 46 00:03:43,404 --> 00:03:47,674 Does the universe in fact have a beginning or an end? 47 00:03:47,738 --> 00:03:51,575 And, if so, what are they like? 48 00:03:51,638 --> 00:03:56,142 If we find the answer to that, it would be the ultimate triumph 49 00:03:56,205 --> 00:03:57,973 of human reason. 50 00:03:58,038 --> 00:04:00,974 We would know the Mind of God. 51 00:04:09,272 --> 00:04:12,875 Narrator: The origin of the Big Bang is the greatest mystery 52 00:04:12,938 --> 00:04:15,674 of all time. 53 00:04:15,738 --> 00:04:19,908 And the more we learn, the deeper the mystery becomes. 54 00:04:19,971 --> 00:04:23,040 Dr. Kaku: We like to think that our universe is unique. 55 00:04:23,105 --> 00:04:24,840 However, now we're not so sure. 56 00:04:24,904 --> 00:04:30,075 Perhaps there is a multiverse of universes. 57 00:04:30,205 --> 00:04:34,709 Dr. Krauss: Another possibility is that our Big Bang is just one of many 58 00:04:34,771 --> 00:04:37,707 Big Bangs, but it may be one of just an infinite number 59 00:04:37,771 --> 00:04:38,371 of universes. 60 00:04:38,437 --> 00:04:41,106 And there may be other regions in that infinite number of 61 00:04:41,171 --> 00:04:46,876 universes where a Big Bang is just happening today. 62 00:04:47,005 --> 00:04:50,108 Narrator: But there's only one universe we're sure of, and 63 00:04:50,171 --> 00:04:58,045 understanding this one is hard enough. 64 00:04:58,105 --> 00:05:02,742 Since the late 1920s, everything we know about how our universe 65 00:05:02,804 --> 00:05:05,740 works has been turned upside down. 66 00:05:05,804 --> 00:05:08,940 Dr. Krauss: It's important to realize how much our picture of the universe 67 00:05:09,005 --> 00:05:11,207 has changed in the last century. 68 00:05:11,272 --> 00:05:13,707 At the beginning of the 20th century, the conventional 69 00:05:13,771 --> 00:05:17,908 wisdom in science was that the universe was static and eternal. 70 00:05:17,971 --> 00:05:21,841 Narrator: In 1929, that all changed. 71 00:05:21,904 --> 00:05:25,574 At the Mount Wilson observatory above Los Angeles, astronomer 72 00:05:25,638 --> 00:05:30,809 Edwin Hubble discovered galaxies aren't stuck in one place. 73 00:05:30,871 --> 00:05:34,741 Not only are they moving, but they're flying away from Earth 74 00:05:34,804 --> 00:05:39,508 at incredible speeds. 75 00:05:39,571 --> 00:05:46,744 This was the first real evidence of the Big Bang. 76 00:05:46,804 --> 00:05:49,806 All galaxies on average are moving away from us, and, 77 00:05:49,871 --> 00:05:53,140 stranger still, those that were twice as far away were moving 78 00:05:53,205 --> 00:05:54,139 twice as fast. 79 00:05:54,205 --> 00:05:57,808 And those that were three times as far away were moving 80 00:05:57,871 --> 00:05:59,505 three times as fast, and so on. 81 00:05:59,571 --> 00:06:02,006 Everything was moving away from us. 82 00:06:02,071 --> 00:06:05,240 Narrator: It became known as Hubble's Law. 83 00:06:05,304 --> 00:06:09,641 His discovery is still the starting point for exploration 84 00:06:09,704 --> 00:06:11,539 of the Big Bang. 85 00:06:11,604 --> 00:06:15,040 What Hubble convincingly demonstrated, by seeing the 86 00:06:15,105 --> 00:06:21,277 motion of those galaxies, is that the universe is expanding. 87 00:06:21,337 --> 00:06:24,606 Narrator: Theoretically, an expanding universe must have 88 00:06:24,671 --> 00:06:29,809 started from a single point. 89 00:06:29,871 --> 00:06:33,241 By measuring how fast the universe is expanding, 90 00:06:33,304 --> 00:06:37,007 astronomers calculated backwards and figured out when 91 00:06:37,071 --> 00:06:39,072 it burst into life. 92 00:06:39,138 --> 00:06:42,441 People ask the question, ''How do you know that 93 00:06:42,504 --> 00:06:45,840 the universe is 13.7 billion years old? 94 00:06:45,904 --> 00:06:48,706 I mean, smarty-pants, you weren't there 95 00:06:48,771 --> 00:06:50,639 13.7 billion years ago.'' 96 00:06:50,704 --> 00:06:53,807 Well, when you watch television on videotape, you hit the stop 97 00:06:53,871 --> 00:06:56,773 button when you see an explosion, and you can run it 98 00:06:56,838 --> 00:07:00,241 backwards and see when it actually took place. 99 00:07:00,304 --> 00:07:02,572 The same thing takes place with cosmology. 100 00:07:02,638 --> 00:07:05,807 We can run the videotape backwards and then calculate 101 00:07:05,871 --> 00:07:09,474 when it all came from a cosmic explosion. 102 00:07:13,838 --> 00:07:17,541 Narrator: You don't have to be an astronomer 103 00:07:17,604 --> 00:07:19,872 to look back in time. 104 00:07:19,938 --> 00:07:24,042 If you gaze up at the night sky, you're seeing stars that are 105 00:07:24,105 --> 00:07:28,375 millions of light-years away, meaning it took the light from 106 00:07:28,437 --> 00:07:31,740 those stars millions of years to get here. 107 00:07:31,804 --> 00:07:36,775 So if you look far enough, you should be able to see 108 00:07:36,838 --> 00:07:42,143 the beginning of the universe. 109 00:07:42,205 --> 00:07:45,274 Named for the groundbreaking astronomer, the Hubble Space 110 00:07:45,337 --> 00:07:50,709 Telescope allows us to look deep into the universe, back in time, 111 00:07:50,771 --> 00:07:55,675 and closer to the moment of the Big Bang. 112 00:07:55,738 --> 00:07:59,975 But for scientists, winding back the clock to the Big Bang 113 00:08:00,038 --> 00:08:06,477 was only the first step. 114 00:08:06,537 --> 00:08:08,939 Dr. Kaku: When people first hear about the Big Bang theory, they say, 115 00:08:09,005 --> 00:08:10,172 well, where did it take place? 116 00:08:10,238 --> 00:08:11,238 lt took place over there. 117 00:08:11,304 --> 00:08:12,271 lt took place over there. 118 00:08:12,337 --> 00:08:14,005 Where did it take place? 119 00:08:14,071 --> 00:08:17,941 Actually, it took place everywhere, because the universe 120 00:08:18,005 --> 00:08:21,742 itself was extremely small at that time. 121 00:08:25,704 --> 00:08:28,073 Narrator: These are only some of the most abstract and 122 00:08:28,138 --> 00:08:30,406 difficult concepts there are. 123 00:08:30,471 --> 00:08:31,872 So here's a mind-bender. 124 00:08:31,938 --> 00:08:34,440 What came before the Big Bang? 125 00:08:34,504 --> 00:08:37,707 The philosophers in ancient times used to say how could 126 00:08:37,771 --> 00:08:39,372 something arise from nothing? 127 00:08:39,437 --> 00:08:43,207 And what's amazing to me is that the laws of physics 128 00:08:43,272 --> 00:08:44,606 allow that to happen. 129 00:08:44,671 --> 00:08:47,573 And it means that our whole universe, everything we see, 130 00:08:47,638 --> 00:08:50,807 everything that matters to us today, could have arisen out of 131 00:08:50,871 --> 00:08:53,607 precisely nothing. 132 00:08:53,671 --> 00:08:56,173 Narrator: It's one of the biggest hurdles to understanding 133 00:08:56,238 --> 00:08:57,238 the Big Bang. 134 00:08:57,304 --> 00:09:01,107 First you have to buy into the premise that something was 135 00:09:01,171 --> 00:09:03,740 created out of nothing. 136 00:09:03,804 --> 00:09:06,940 It's impossible to describe the moment of creation 137 00:09:07,005 --> 00:09:08,005 in human language. 138 00:09:08,071 --> 00:09:12,241 All we know is that from what may have been nothing, we go to 139 00:09:12,304 --> 00:09:18,677 a state of... almost infinite density and infinite temperature 140 00:09:18,738 --> 00:09:23,309 and infinite violence. 141 00:09:23,471 --> 00:09:26,373 Narrator: Understanding how nothing turned into something 142 00:09:26,437 --> 00:09:31,441 may be the greatest mystery of our universe. 143 00:09:31,504 --> 00:09:36,041 But if you understand that, you start to understand the 144 00:09:36,105 --> 00:09:39,675 Big Bang, when time and space began, 145 00:09:39,738 --> 00:09:43,308 and the great big explosion created everything. 146 00:09:56,771 --> 00:09:59,440 Narrator: At the dawn of time, the universe explodes into 147 00:09:59,504 --> 00:10:04,675 existence from absolutely nothing into everything. 148 00:10:04,738 --> 00:10:09,876 But everything is actually a single point, infinitely small, 149 00:10:09,938 --> 00:10:15,576 unimaginably hot, a super-dense speck of pure energy. 150 00:10:15,704 --> 00:10:22,610 The Big Bang was so immense that it brought into existence 151 00:10:22,671 --> 00:10:27,108 all of the mass and all of the energy contained in all of the 152 00:10:27,171 --> 00:10:31,542 400 billion galaxies we see in our universe in a region smaller 153 00:10:31,604 --> 00:10:34,540 than the size of a single atom. 154 00:10:34,671 --> 00:10:37,540 The entire observable universe was a millionth of a billionth 155 00:10:37,604 --> 00:10:39,472 of a centimeter across at that time. 156 00:10:39,537 --> 00:10:43,874 Everything was compressed into an incredibly hot, dense region. 157 00:10:43,938 --> 00:10:47,508 Narrator: It's not even matter yet, just a point of 158 00:10:47,571 --> 00:10:48,638 raging energy. 159 00:10:48,704 --> 00:10:53,442 lt was the beginning of the universe and everything in it. 160 00:10:53,571 --> 00:10:55,306 Everything was simple. 161 00:10:55,372 --> 00:10:58,742 All the forces that we know about today 162 00:10:58,804 --> 00:11:00,872 were one and the same. 163 00:11:01,004 --> 00:11:02,305 The universe was amorphous. 164 00:11:02,372 --> 00:11:08,211 lt had no structure. 165 00:11:08,671 --> 00:11:12,674 Narrator: In that instant of creation, all the laws of 166 00:11:12,738 --> 00:11:17,375 physics, the very forces that engineer our universe, 167 00:11:17,438 --> 00:11:21,241 began to take shape. 168 00:11:21,304 --> 00:11:26,275 The first force to emerge was gravity. 169 00:11:26,338 --> 00:11:30,809 The fate of the universe -- its size, structure, and everything 170 00:11:30,871 --> 00:11:37,811 in it -- was decided in that moment. 171 00:11:37,871 --> 00:11:42,408 Carlos Frenk studies how gravity shaped the universe by creating 172 00:11:42,471 --> 00:11:47,876 artificial universes in this supercomputer. 173 00:11:47,937 --> 00:11:53,575 He gives each one a different amount of gravity. 174 00:11:53,638 --> 00:11:58,042 The first one he tried had too little, resulting in, 175 00:11:58,104 --> 00:11:59,705 well, nothing. 176 00:11:59,772 --> 00:12:05,010 Dr. Frenk: Gravity has saved our universe, for if gravity was 177 00:12:05,071 --> 00:12:09,375 weaker than it is, we would have a very boring universe in which 178 00:12:09,438 --> 00:12:13,675 everything would be flying apart so fast that there would be 179 00:12:13,738 --> 00:12:16,107 no galaxies forming. 180 00:12:16,171 --> 00:12:19,173 Narrator: Next, he programmed a universe with 181 00:12:19,238 --> 00:12:23,575 too much gravity. 182 00:12:23,638 --> 00:12:26,841 Dr. Frenk: If gravity was stronger than we think it is, again, 183 00:12:26,904 --> 00:12:28,238 we'll end up with a failed universe. 184 00:12:28,304 --> 00:12:31,440 Everything will end up in black holes. 185 00:12:31,505 --> 00:12:33,573 lt has to be just so. 186 00:12:33,638 --> 00:12:36,140 lt has to be just right. 187 00:12:36,204 --> 00:12:39,907 Narrator: Lucky for us, the Big Bang got it just right -- 188 00:12:39,971 --> 00:12:42,440 the perfect amount of gravity. 189 00:12:42,505 --> 00:12:46,141 ln the turmoil of forces after gravity emerged, still a 190 00:12:46,204 --> 00:12:50,274 fraction of a second after the Big Bang, a shock wave of energy 191 00:12:50,338 --> 00:12:54,241 erupted and expanded the universe in all directions 192 00:12:54,304 --> 00:13:00,843 at incredible speed. 193 00:13:00,904 --> 00:13:05,575 Dr. Krauss: All of space expanded by an unbelievably large factor in 194 00:13:05,638 --> 00:13:06,672 a fraction of a second. 195 00:13:06,738 --> 00:13:10,341 We think that in less than a millionth of a millionth of 196 00:13:10,404 --> 00:13:15,408 a millionth of a millionth of a second, space expanded by 197 00:13:15,471 --> 00:13:21,777 a factor bigger than a million, million, million, million times. 198 00:13:29,338 --> 00:13:30,939 Narrator: And for the record, 199 00:13:31,004 --> 00:13:33,306 that's faster than the speed of light. 200 00:13:33,371 --> 00:13:40,344 But, wait, doesn't that break one of the laws of physics? 201 00:13:40,471 --> 00:13:44,174 Even schoolchildren know that, ''You can't go faster than 202 00:13:44,238 --> 00:13:45,339 the speed of light.'' 203 00:13:45,404 --> 00:13:47,405 But I say there's a loophole there. 204 00:13:47,471 --> 00:13:50,807 You see, nothing can go faster than light, 205 00:13:50,871 --> 00:13:52,505 nothing being empty space. 206 00:13:52,638 --> 00:13:53,705 Narrator: Don't worry. 207 00:13:53,772 --> 00:13:57,809 This idea gives even the best minds in science a headache. 208 00:13:57,871 --> 00:14:00,273 But it's critical to understanding 209 00:14:00,338 --> 00:14:01,972 the early universe. 210 00:14:02,037 --> 00:14:05,740 Scientists think it took less than a millionth of a millionth 211 00:14:05,804 --> 00:14:09,841 of a millionth of a millionth of a second for the universe to 212 00:14:09,904 --> 00:14:14,041 expand from the size of an atom to a baseball. 213 00:14:14,104 --> 00:14:17,173 That may not sound like much, but it's like a golf ball 214 00:14:17,238 --> 00:14:19,306 expanding to the size of the Earth 215 00:14:19,371 --> 00:14:21,106 in the same amount of time. 216 00:14:21,171 --> 00:14:25,742 That means it was expanding faster than the speed of light. 217 00:14:25,804 --> 00:14:27,672 That's fast. 218 00:14:27,738 --> 00:14:30,740 So many things were happening so fast in the early universe, 219 00:14:30,804 --> 00:14:33,373 because everything was so close together, 220 00:14:33,438 --> 00:14:36,240 that we needed a new unit of time to describe things. 221 00:14:36,304 --> 00:14:38,539 Narrator: It's called Planck time. 222 00:14:38,605 --> 00:14:43,309 To understand just how short a Planck time is, consider this. 223 00:14:43,371 --> 00:14:46,474 There are more units of Planck time in one second than all the 224 00:14:46,538 --> 00:14:48,406 seconds since the Big Bang. 225 00:14:48,471 --> 00:14:50,206 The math is mind-blowing. 226 00:14:50,271 --> 00:14:54,141 There are more than 31 million seconds in a year, and it's been 227 00:14:54,204 --> 00:14:57,040 14 billion years since the Big Bang. 228 00:14:57,104 --> 00:15:05,912 So multiply 31 ,556,926 by 14 billion, and what you get is 229 00:15:05,971 --> 00:15:07,038 a really big number. 230 00:15:07,104 --> 00:15:10,574 Dr. Krauss: It's a time scale that's so small that all human intuition 231 00:15:10,638 --> 00:15:12,206 goes out the window. 232 00:15:12,271 --> 00:15:15,474 If we look at our watches and measure one second, 233 00:15:15,538 --> 00:15:17,673 we can ask, how many Planck times is that? 234 00:15:17,738 --> 00:15:25,011 Well, it is a billion, billion, billion, billion, billion 235 00:15:25,071 --> 00:15:30,776 Planck times. 236 00:15:30,837 --> 00:15:34,540 Narrator: So, now the Big Bang is only a few Planck times 237 00:15:34,605 --> 00:15:40,711 old, an exploding mass of pure energy expanding faster than 238 00:15:40,772 --> 00:15:43,341 the speed of light. 239 00:15:43,404 --> 00:15:47,708 ln the next few Planck times, the universe as we know it 240 00:15:47,772 --> 00:15:49,573 will be born. 241 00:15:56,104 --> 00:15:58,840 Narrator: A fraction of a second after the Big Bang, 242 00:15:58,904 --> 00:16:03,008 the universe is so small it can fit in the palm of your hand. 243 00:16:03,071 --> 00:16:08,209 But in another tiny fraction of a second, it expands to 244 00:16:08,271 --> 00:16:09,839 the size of the Earth. 245 00:16:09,904 --> 00:16:14,308 Then, moving faster than the speed of light, it grows larger 246 00:16:14,371 --> 00:16:16,139 than our solar system. 247 00:16:16,204 --> 00:16:21,642 And it's still just a raging storm of superheated energy. 248 00:16:21,772 --> 00:16:26,943 lt would be hotter and denser and more violent than anything 249 00:16:27,004 --> 00:16:31,274 that we can experience in the universe today. 250 00:16:31,338 --> 00:16:35,809 Even the interior of a star is calm and serene by comparison 251 00:16:35,871 --> 00:16:40,308 to the violence of the earliest moments of the Big Bang. 252 00:16:40,371 --> 00:16:43,340 Temperatures were so hot that even the atoms of your body 253 00:16:43,404 --> 00:16:46,440 would disintegrate -- so hot, in fact, that the atoms would be 254 00:16:46,505 --> 00:16:47,505 ripped apart. 255 00:16:47,571 --> 00:16:48,672 Narrator: How hot? 256 00:16:48,738 --> 00:16:50,773 Trillions of degrees hot. 257 00:16:50,837 --> 00:16:56,275 But as the universe continues to expand, it also begins to cool. 258 00:16:56,338 --> 00:17:00,375 Dropping temperatures trigger the next stage in 259 00:17:00,438 --> 00:17:02,106 the universe's evolution. 260 00:17:02,171 --> 00:17:05,908 The raw energy of the explosion transforms into 261 00:17:05,971 --> 00:17:12,043 tiny subatomic particles. 262 00:17:12,104 --> 00:17:18,844 It's the first matter in the universe. 263 00:17:18,904 --> 00:17:22,307 This conversion of energy into matter was predicted by 264 00:17:22,371 --> 00:17:26,174 Albert Einstein years before anyone started talking about 265 00:17:26,238 --> 00:17:30,342 the Big Bang. 266 00:17:30,404 --> 00:17:34,841 It's the one scientific equation every schoolkid knows. 267 00:17:34,904 --> 00:17:37,940 There is one very familiar formula. 268 00:17:38,004 --> 00:17:40,106 And that is e equals mc squared. 269 00:17:40,238 --> 00:17:42,907 lt says something about the creation of the universe. 270 00:17:42,971 --> 00:17:46,107 lt says even if the universe is created just out of pure energy, 271 00:17:46,171 --> 00:17:49,007 that because energy can be converted to matter and matter 272 00:17:49,071 --> 00:17:52,574 to energy, that you can get all of the stuff that we see in the 273 00:17:52,638 --> 00:17:55,874 universe from this pure energetic event. 274 00:17:56,004 --> 00:18:00,608 Narrator: Einstein's little equation had a big impact. 275 00:18:09,705 --> 00:18:16,311 lt led to the first nuclear bombs. 276 00:18:16,371 --> 00:18:20,508 ln a nuclear explosion, a small amount of matter is converted 277 00:18:20,571 --> 00:18:24,641 into an enormous amount of energy. 278 00:18:24,705 --> 00:18:31,445 As the universe was forming, the exact opposite happened. 279 00:18:31,505 --> 00:18:36,176 Pure energy transformed into particles of matter. 280 00:18:36,238 --> 00:18:38,907 You don't need to create matter in the beginning. 281 00:18:38,971 --> 00:18:40,072 You just need energy. 282 00:18:40,138 --> 00:18:46,110 And energy alone can lead to the creation of an entire universe. 283 00:18:46,171 --> 00:18:49,440 Narrator: In just a fraction of a second after the Big Bang, 284 00:18:49,505 --> 00:18:55,110 the building blocks of our universe begin to take shape. 285 00:18:55,171 --> 00:19:01,176 But this first matter is like nothing we see today. 286 00:19:01,238 --> 00:19:04,407 The stuff of matter has been very different over the age 287 00:19:04,471 --> 00:19:05,071 of the universe. 288 00:19:05,138 --> 00:19:07,573 What we now think is normal matter was not at all normal in 289 00:19:07,638 --> 00:19:11,341 the earliest moments of the Big Bang. 290 00:19:11,404 --> 00:19:14,440 Narrator: That's because condition were so extreme. 291 00:19:14,505 --> 00:19:17,574 There were no atoms yet. 292 00:19:17,638 --> 00:19:23,877 But there were tiny subatomic particles. 293 00:19:23,937 --> 00:19:27,140 ln the earliest moments of the Big Bang, the universe was 294 00:19:27,204 --> 00:19:30,073 so hot and dense, there were great amounts of energy. 295 00:19:30,138 --> 00:19:33,407 And so particles were being created all the time, and energy 296 00:19:33,471 --> 00:19:37,007 and matter were transferring back and forth in this hot, 297 00:19:37,071 --> 00:19:39,440 dense soup. 298 00:19:39,505 --> 00:19:42,507 Narrator: That earliest matter was too unstable to start 299 00:19:42,571 --> 00:19:49,611 forming the universe as we know it. 300 00:19:49,671 --> 00:19:51,039 Think of it like this. 301 00:19:51,104 --> 00:19:54,273 imagine rush hour at Grand Central in New York City 302 00:19:54,338 --> 00:19:57,841 as that superheated early universe. 303 00:19:57,904 --> 00:20:01,641 The commuters racing through the main concourse are 304 00:20:01,705 --> 00:20:05,108 subatomic particles. 305 00:20:05,171 --> 00:20:08,274 If you look at a crowd of people -- a large crowd of 306 00:20:08,338 --> 00:20:11,441 people -- they may appear random. 307 00:20:11,505 --> 00:20:14,641 That random, quirky motion is very similar than what was 308 00:20:14,705 --> 00:20:17,941 happening in the particles in the universe in the earliest 309 00:20:18,004 --> 00:20:21,440 moments of the Big Bang. 310 00:20:21,505 --> 00:20:24,241 Narrator: The extreme temperature of the early 311 00:20:24,304 --> 00:20:27,173 universe energizes the subatomic particles. 312 00:20:27,238 --> 00:20:28,439 They appear. 313 00:20:28,505 --> 00:20:32,876 They disappear. 314 00:20:32,937 --> 00:20:35,372 They race around at incredible speeds. 315 00:20:35,438 --> 00:20:37,540 It's pure chaos. 316 00:20:42,971 --> 00:20:44,739 It's like people. 317 00:20:44,804 --> 00:20:47,873 If they're excited and running around fast to catch trains at 318 00:20:47,937 --> 00:20:51,073 a train station, they'll be moving around quickly. 319 00:20:51,138 --> 00:20:55,642 But eventually, they calm down and get slower. 320 00:20:55,705 --> 00:20:58,374 That's what's been happening to our universe, in a sense. 321 00:20:58,438 --> 00:21:00,506 The particles are moving around very fast. 322 00:21:00,571 --> 00:21:03,440 And as the universe cools down, the particles move more slowly 323 00:21:03,505 --> 00:21:07,275 and, in some sense, less random. 324 00:21:07,338 --> 00:21:10,474 Narrator: As the universe cools, the particles stop 325 00:21:10,538 --> 00:21:13,207 changing back into energy. 326 00:21:21,471 --> 00:21:25,508 Now there are more and more subatomic particles, but it's 327 00:21:25,571 --> 00:21:29,374 still a hot, violent place. 328 00:21:29,438 --> 00:21:32,674 All this is happening in fractions of a second 329 00:21:32,738 --> 00:21:34,139 too small to detect. 330 00:21:34,204 --> 00:21:38,608 But the Big Bang is moving into a critical stage now, a titanic 331 00:21:38,671 --> 00:21:42,908 battle between matter and the one thing that can destroy the 332 00:21:42,971 --> 00:21:47,642 universe before it even gets started... antimatter. 333 00:22:02,738 --> 00:22:08,343 Narrator: Everything in the universe is made from matter, 334 00:22:08,404 --> 00:22:12,074 from the smallest rock to the largest star. 335 00:22:12,138 --> 00:22:16,342 And all the matter there will ever be was created from the 336 00:22:16,404 --> 00:22:23,978 pure energy of the Big Bang. 337 00:22:24,037 --> 00:22:27,774 Einstein's equation, e equals mc squared, 338 00:22:27,837 --> 00:22:31,840 says that energy transforms into matter. 339 00:22:31,904 --> 00:22:34,373 But it was just a theory. 340 00:22:34,438 --> 00:22:41,978 Today science is able to test that theory. 341 00:22:42,037 --> 00:22:45,340 This is CERN in Switzerland, 342 00:22:45,404 --> 00:22:49,374 home to the world's largest machine. 343 00:22:49,438 --> 00:22:53,508 It's the size of a city and engineered to re-create the 344 00:22:53,571 --> 00:22:58,142 conditions millionths of a second after the Big Bang. 345 00:22:58,271 --> 00:23:01,340 If we want to probe ever-smaller scales, 346 00:23:01,404 --> 00:23:03,839 paradoxically we need an ever-bigger machine. 347 00:23:03,904 --> 00:23:07,240 There's just no other way of doing it, so big machines mean 348 00:23:07,304 --> 00:23:11,875 small physics, means early times and, therefore, getting closer 349 00:23:11,937 --> 00:23:15,774 and closer to the origin of the universe itself. 350 00:23:15,904 --> 00:23:19,173 Narrator: This monster machine is called a collider. 351 00:23:19,238 --> 00:23:22,708 It's designed to take us back to those first fractions of 352 00:23:22,772 --> 00:23:25,074 a second after the Big Bang. 353 00:23:25,138 --> 00:23:29,108 It's a 12-foot-wide concrete-line circular tunnel 354 00:23:29,171 --> 00:23:34,809 17 miles around. 355 00:23:34,871 --> 00:23:38,507 The collider makes tiny particles of matter smash into 356 00:23:38,571 --> 00:23:42,365 each other at almost the speed of light. 357 00:23:47,204 --> 00:23:48,872 For a split second, 358 00:23:48,937 --> 00:23:51,072 those collisions generate turbocharged energy 359 00:23:51,138 --> 00:23:56,109 similar to the explosive force of the Big Bang. 360 00:23:56,171 --> 00:24:01,576 And then that pure energy briefly transforms into matter, 361 00:24:01,638 --> 00:24:08,411 just like it did nearly 14 billion years ago. 362 00:24:08,471 --> 00:24:12,208 But a monster machine needs a monster detector 363 00:24:12,271 --> 00:24:14,106 to see these collisions. 364 00:24:14,238 --> 00:24:19,476 This detector is five stories tall and weighs over 7,000 tons. 365 00:24:19,538 --> 00:24:22,507 And 7,000 tons -- to give you a sense of perspective -- is the 366 00:24:22,571 --> 00:24:25,240 weight of the Eiffel Tower. 367 00:24:25,871 --> 00:24:28,640 Narrator: But as big as it is, it can't see the actual 368 00:24:28,704 --> 00:24:30,238 particles of new matter. 369 00:24:30,304 --> 00:24:34,041 They hang around for just a split second and move so fast it 370 00:24:34,105 --> 00:24:38,209 can only record their trails. 371 00:24:38,272 --> 00:24:40,507 There's a lot of energy in these particles. 372 00:24:40,571 --> 00:24:43,307 They move very, very quickly, and so you need a very large 373 00:24:43,371 --> 00:24:48,075 amount of detector in order to be able to map the path of these 374 00:24:48,138 --> 00:24:49,572 particles very precisely. 375 00:24:49,638 --> 00:24:52,474 So, the detector is so big because you need 376 00:24:52,537 --> 00:24:53,437 better resolution. 377 00:24:53,504 --> 00:24:55,405 lt works exactly the same at a camera. 378 00:24:55,471 --> 00:24:57,873 The more pixels you have, the better the picture. 379 00:24:57,938 --> 00:24:59,205 It's exactly the same here. 380 00:24:59,272 --> 00:25:02,908 We just have a five-story camera. 381 00:25:02,971 --> 00:25:06,007 Narrator: Scientists hope that it'll reveal just how 382 00:25:06,071 --> 00:25:10,041 energy transforms into matter... 383 00:25:10,105 --> 00:25:14,309 But not just any matter -- the kind of matter that emerged 384 00:25:14,371 --> 00:25:21,411 14 billion years ago at the dawn of time itself. 385 00:25:21,471 --> 00:25:24,707 But the dawn of time was a critical moment in the birth of 386 00:25:24,771 --> 00:25:27,974 the universe, because pure energy also produced one of the 387 00:25:28,038 --> 00:25:32,375 most dangerous things in the universe -- antimatter. 388 00:25:32,437 --> 00:25:39,844 That's right, antimatter -- it's real. 389 00:25:39,904 --> 00:25:43,340 Dr. Kaku: Antimatter is the mirror image of ordinary matter. 390 00:25:43,404 --> 00:25:45,839 However, matter has one charge, 391 00:25:45,904 --> 00:25:48,806 and antimatter has the opposite charge. 392 00:25:48,871 --> 00:25:52,641 If there was an anti-me made out of antimatter, that person, in 393 00:25:52,704 --> 00:25:56,174 principle, could look exactly like me -- same personality 394 00:25:56,238 --> 00:25:59,908 quirks, same everything, except, of course, when I decide to 395 00:25:59,971 --> 00:26:00,838 shake his hand. 396 00:26:00,904 --> 00:26:04,407 At that point, we both would blow ourselves to smithereens in 397 00:26:04,471 --> 00:26:08,842 a gigantic nuclear explosion. 398 00:26:08,904 --> 00:26:12,574 Narrator: Matter with a positive charge locks horns with 399 00:26:12,638 --> 00:26:16,541 its archenemy, antimatter, with a negative charge. 400 00:26:16,604 --> 00:26:20,074 The fate of the universe hangs in the balance 401 00:26:20,138 --> 00:26:21,639 of this epic battle. 402 00:26:21,704 --> 00:26:25,274 Equal amounts of matter and antimatter will cancel each 403 00:26:25,337 --> 00:26:28,173 other out -- not good. 404 00:26:28,238 --> 00:26:30,707 A universe with equal amounts of matter and antimatter is 405 00:26:30,771 --> 00:26:33,773 equivalent to a universe with no matter at all, because the 406 00:26:33,838 --> 00:26:37,074 matter and antimatter will annihilate back into 407 00:26:37,138 --> 00:26:37,771 pure radiation. 408 00:26:37,838 --> 00:26:40,540 And there'll be nothing interesting -- no stars and 409 00:26:40,604 --> 00:26:45,008 galaxies and people in between. 410 00:26:45,071 --> 00:26:48,474 Narrator: Like a cosmic game of Risk, the side with the most 411 00:26:48,537 --> 00:26:52,073 soldiers wins. 412 00:26:52,138 --> 00:26:58,511 The score was very close, but there was a winner. 413 00:26:58,571 --> 00:27:01,273 Dr. Krauss: For every billion particles of antimatter, there were a 414 00:27:01,337 --> 00:27:04,807 billion and one particles of matter. 415 00:27:04,871 --> 00:27:07,173 That was the moment of creation. 416 00:27:07,238 --> 00:27:11,709 The one extra particle of matter in each little volume survives, 417 00:27:11,771 --> 00:27:15,975 survives enough to form all the matter we see in the stars and 418 00:27:16,038 --> 00:27:22,411 galaxies today. 419 00:27:22,471 --> 00:27:25,373 Narrator: One in a billion might not sound like much, but 420 00:27:25,437 --> 00:27:28,973 it's enough to build a universe. 421 00:27:29,038 --> 00:27:31,039 Dr. Kaku: We're the leftovers. 422 00:27:31,105 --> 00:27:34,341 So, believe it or not, everything you see around you, 423 00:27:34,404 --> 00:27:37,940 the atoms of your body, the atoms of the stars, are nothing 424 00:27:38,005 --> 00:27:42,042 but leftovers -- leftovers from this ancient collision between 425 00:27:42,105 --> 00:27:48,578 matter and antimatter. 426 00:27:48,638 --> 00:27:52,341 Narrator: Lucky for us, there was enough left over to make all 427 00:27:52,404 --> 00:27:56,441 the stars and planets. 428 00:27:56,504 --> 00:28:01,909 And the universe is still less than one second old. 429 00:28:01,971 --> 00:28:08,944 But now it's swarming with tiny, primitive particles. 430 00:28:09,005 --> 00:28:13,409 The next stage is assembling those tiny particles into 431 00:28:13,471 --> 00:28:16,006 the first atoms. 432 00:28:23,571 --> 00:28:25,873 Narrator: Give or take a couple of Planck times, the 433 00:28:25,938 --> 00:28:31,643 universe is nearly a second old and still a very strange place. 434 00:28:31,704 --> 00:28:37,042 But matter has won the battle with antimatter. 435 00:28:37,105 --> 00:28:42,276 And now it's time to build the universe. 436 00:28:42,337 --> 00:28:48,710 It's still extremely hot and expanding incredibly fast. 437 00:28:48,771 --> 00:28:51,807 When the universe was a second old, the particles in it 438 00:28:51,871 --> 00:28:54,306 were very different than the particles we see today. 439 00:28:54,371 --> 00:28:55,905 There were no atoms. 440 00:28:55,971 --> 00:28:58,807 Nothing that we recognize in the room around us today 441 00:28:58,871 --> 00:29:02,708 yet existed. 442 00:29:02,838 --> 00:29:07,242 Narrator: Now all that begins to change. 443 00:29:07,304 --> 00:29:10,907 Temperatures continue to cool. 444 00:29:10,971 --> 00:29:14,774 And as the primitive particles keep slowing down, they start 445 00:29:14,838 --> 00:29:20,710 bonding together to form the atoms of the first elements. 446 00:29:20,771 --> 00:29:26,243 The first one to form is hydrogen. 447 00:29:26,304 --> 00:29:30,141 Then over the next three minutes, the universe begins to 448 00:29:30,205 --> 00:29:34,740 create two more elements -- helium and lithium. 449 00:29:39,804 --> 00:29:43,274 We went from a universe that was infinitely small to a 450 00:29:43,337 --> 00:29:45,806 universe that was light-years in size. 451 00:29:45,871 --> 00:29:49,040 ln the first three minutes, essentially everything 452 00:29:49,105 --> 00:29:53,309 interesting that was going to happen in the universe happened. 453 00:29:53,371 --> 00:29:55,039 Narrator: Well, not quite. 454 00:29:55,105 --> 00:29:58,241 If you were there, you couldn't see it. 455 00:29:58,304 --> 00:30:00,372 Dr. Kaku: When we look at the night sky, we can see literally 456 00:30:00,437 --> 00:30:03,540 billions of years into the past, and we think it's always 457 00:30:03,604 --> 00:30:05,739 been that way. 458 00:30:05,871 --> 00:30:07,305 Nope, not true. 459 00:30:07,371 --> 00:30:11,575 380,000 years after the Big Bang -- that's when the universe 460 00:30:11,638 --> 00:30:13,473 began to become transparent. 461 00:30:13,604 --> 00:30:19,242 But before then, it was milky. 462 00:30:19,304 --> 00:30:23,948 Narrator: There is a milky soup of loose electrons. 463 00:30:28,571 --> 00:30:32,675 The young universe has to cool down enough for the electrons 464 00:30:32,738 --> 00:30:36,208 to slow down and stick to new atoms. 465 00:30:36,272 --> 00:30:39,908 lt took a long time for all of the hydrogen, helium, and 466 00:30:39,971 --> 00:30:43,674 lithium atoms in the universe to form. 467 00:30:43,738 --> 00:30:48,909 Scientists calculate it took 380,000 years for the electrons 468 00:30:48,971 --> 00:30:52,207 to slow down enough so that the universe could start 469 00:30:52,272 --> 00:30:54,040 mass-producing atoms. 470 00:30:54,105 --> 00:30:57,475 When that happens, the milky fog clears. 471 00:30:57,537 --> 00:31:02,475 The first light escapes and races across the universe. 472 00:31:02,537 --> 00:31:06,140 Nearly 14 billion years later, two young scientists in 473 00:31:06,205 --> 00:31:11,843 New Jersey pick it up by accident. 474 00:31:11,904 --> 00:31:17,075 ln 1964, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson were mapping 475 00:31:17,138 --> 00:31:19,340 radio signals across our galaxy. 476 00:31:19,404 --> 00:31:23,474 Everywhere they looked, they picked up a strange 477 00:31:23,537 --> 00:31:25,572 background hum. 478 00:31:25,638 --> 00:31:28,374 They first suspected their equipment. 479 00:31:28,437 --> 00:31:32,240 Maybe pigeon droppings on the antenna were causing 480 00:31:32,304 --> 00:31:33,705 the strange signal. 481 00:31:33,771 --> 00:31:38,242 But after cleaning the antenna, the mysterious hum remained. 482 00:31:38,304 --> 00:31:45,577 So much for pigeon droppings. 483 00:31:45,638 --> 00:31:49,274 Penzias delivered a talk at Princeton University. 484 00:31:49,337 --> 00:31:53,240 And according to lore, one person in the back said, ''Either 485 00:31:53,304 --> 00:31:56,907 you have discovered the effects of bird droppings or the 486 00:31:56,971 --> 00:32:01,342 creation of the universe.'' 487 00:32:01,404 --> 00:32:05,508 Narrator: It was in fact the moment of creation, nearly 488 00:32:05,571 --> 00:32:12,945 14 billion years ago, when those first atoms got their electrons. 489 00:32:13,005 --> 00:32:17,409 That's the moment when the milky cloud clears and the new 490 00:32:17,471 --> 00:32:22,475 universe comes into view for the first time. 491 00:32:22,537 --> 00:32:26,440 To capture better images of this critical event, NASA launched 492 00:32:26,504 --> 00:32:30,841 the Cosmic Background Explorer Satellite, or COBE. 493 00:32:30,904 --> 00:32:35,108 They pointed it out into space, where it took the temperature 494 00:32:35,171 --> 00:32:36,238 of the universe. 495 00:32:36,304 --> 00:32:40,174 By measuring differences in temperature across space, 496 00:32:40,238 --> 00:32:43,941 they created the first map of our early universe. 497 00:32:44,005 --> 00:32:47,575 The images were called the Face of God. 498 00:32:47,638 --> 00:32:51,775 We got gorgeous pictures -- baby pictures of the infant 499 00:32:51,838 --> 00:32:55,141 universe when it was 380,000 years of age. 500 00:32:55,205 --> 00:32:56,906 But there were problems with it. 501 00:32:56,971 --> 00:32:58,472 The picture was very fuzzy. 502 00:32:58,537 --> 00:33:04,342 The COBE results were simply not good enough. 503 00:33:04,404 --> 00:33:06,405 Man: Mission looking good. Liftoff. 504 00:33:06,471 --> 00:33:09,807 Narrator: So NASA launched an even more advanced satellite, 505 00:33:09,871 --> 00:33:14,375 WMAP, the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe. 506 00:33:14,437 --> 00:33:18,507 ln 2001 , David Spergel was part of the team looking for a 507 00:33:18,571 --> 00:33:22,274 clearer image of the early universe. 508 00:33:22,404 --> 00:33:24,539 lt was exciting to go to the Cape. 509 00:33:24,604 --> 00:33:27,940 lt was one of these moments we were sitting there, watching 510 00:33:28,005 --> 00:33:30,507 this -- I was there with my family -- 511 00:33:30,571 --> 00:33:31,939 watching the rocket go off. 512 00:33:32,005 --> 00:33:35,007 lt was very exciting when, within about a day, we were able 513 00:33:35,071 --> 00:33:38,007 to get our first signal from the satellite and know it was 514 00:33:38,071 --> 00:33:40,940 working and working properly. 515 00:33:41,071 --> 00:33:43,740 Narrator: This is the most detailed picture of the early 516 00:33:43,804 --> 00:33:48,175 universe ever taken, just 380,000 years after 517 00:33:48,238 --> 00:33:52,041 the Big Bang. 518 00:33:52,105 --> 00:33:55,408 The red and yellow areas are warmer, the blue and 519 00:33:55,471 --> 00:33:56,471 green regions cooler. 520 00:33:56,537 --> 00:33:59,573 And those temperature differences are clues to the 521 00:33:59,638 --> 00:34:05,677 future structure of the universe. 522 00:34:05,738 --> 00:34:08,407 You see tiny variations in temperature. 523 00:34:08,471 --> 00:34:11,540 Those tiny variations in temperature reflect small 524 00:34:11,604 --> 00:34:12,805 variations in density. 525 00:34:12,871 --> 00:34:14,372 This region has more matter. 526 00:34:14,437 --> 00:34:16,038 This region has less matter. 527 00:34:16,105 --> 00:34:19,475 Narrator: Like a blueprint for the construction of our 528 00:34:19,537 --> 00:34:23,007 universe, this image shows us where there's more matter and 529 00:34:23,071 --> 00:34:25,706 where there's less. 530 00:34:25,771 --> 00:34:31,376 Regions with no matter will become empty space. 531 00:34:31,437 --> 00:34:35,440 Areas with denser matter will become the construction sites of 532 00:34:35,504 --> 00:34:42,277 galaxies, stars, and planets. 533 00:34:42,337 --> 00:34:45,540 These are the fluctuations that will grow to form galaxies. 534 00:34:45,604 --> 00:34:49,407 So if it wasn't for those little density fluctuations, you and I 535 00:34:49,471 --> 00:34:54,175 would not be here today. 536 00:34:54,238 --> 00:34:59,443 Narrator: Our universe is now 380,000 years old and trillions 537 00:34:59,504 --> 00:35:03,674 and trillions of miles across. 538 00:35:03,738 --> 00:35:08,843 Clouds of hydrogen and helium gas float through space. 539 00:35:08,904 --> 00:35:12,674 lt will take another 200 million years before those 540 00:35:12,738 --> 00:35:15,440 gases create the first stars. 541 00:35:15,571 --> 00:35:20,642 These first stars ignited the universe into what must have 542 00:35:20,704 --> 00:35:22,739 been the most amazing fireworks. 543 00:35:29,272 --> 00:35:33,909 The universe went from the dark ages to an age of splendor when 544 00:35:33,971 --> 00:35:38,141 the first stars illuminated the gas and the universe began to 545 00:35:38,205 --> 00:35:40,707 glow in majestic fashion. 546 00:35:40,771 --> 00:35:44,040 I wish I'd been there. 547 00:35:44,105 --> 00:35:47,274 Dr. Krauss: It was like Christmas tree lights turning on. 548 00:35:47,337 --> 00:35:51,107 The universe began to light up in all directions, until you 549 00:35:51,171 --> 00:35:55,141 form the beautiful mosaic we now see today. 550 00:36:02,205 --> 00:36:06,609 Narrator: More and more stars turn on. 551 00:36:06,671 --> 00:36:12,543 1 billion years after the Big Bang, the first galaxy forms. 552 00:36:12,604 --> 00:36:18,776 Over the next 8 billion years, countless more take shape. 553 00:36:19,038 --> 00:36:24,410 Then about 5 billion years ago, in a quiet corner of one of 554 00:36:24,472 --> 00:36:32,813 those galaxies, gravity begins to draw in dust and gas. 555 00:36:32,871 --> 00:36:39,844 Gradually they clump together and give birth to a star, 556 00:36:39,904 --> 00:36:44,808 our Sun. 557 00:36:44,871 --> 00:36:49,875 9 billion years after the Big Bang, our tiny solar system 558 00:36:49,938 --> 00:36:56,477 springs to life, and with it, planet Earth. 559 00:36:56,537 --> 00:37:01,208 Everything there is exists because of the Big Bang, 560 00:37:01,271 --> 00:37:02,772 and it's still going on. 561 00:37:02,838 --> 00:37:05,774 Our universe is still expanding. 562 00:37:05,838 --> 00:37:09,508 But it won't just keep going forever. 563 00:37:09,571 --> 00:37:14,909 Our universe had a beginning, and it will also have an end. 564 00:37:21,104 --> 00:37:24,073 Narrator: In the 14 billion years since the Big Bang, 565 00:37:24,138 --> 00:37:29,176 galaxies have been created... 566 00:37:29,238 --> 00:37:32,774 Filled with stars, planets, and moons. 567 00:37:32,838 --> 00:37:40,278 And the universe has been expanding the whole time. 568 00:37:40,338 --> 00:37:44,141 We've learned space is quite big -- at least 150 billion 569 00:37:44,205 --> 00:37:45,973 light-years across. 570 00:37:46,038 --> 00:37:48,840 Narrator: The universe may be infinite. 571 00:37:48,904 --> 00:37:52,741 lt might literally go on forever. 572 00:37:52,804 --> 00:37:54,939 The answer is there doesn't have to be anything, 573 00:37:55,004 --> 00:37:55,637 in principle. 574 00:37:55,704 --> 00:37:58,907 The universe could be infinite, and there's no outside, or it 575 00:37:58,971 --> 00:38:00,372 could be closed on itself. 576 00:38:00,438 --> 00:38:02,473 lt could be such that if I looked far enough in that 577 00:38:02,537 --> 00:38:05,039 direction I'd see the back of my head. 578 00:38:05,104 --> 00:38:07,973 Narrator: We may never know if the Big Bang produced a 579 00:38:08,038 --> 00:38:13,176 universe that goes on forever. 580 00:38:13,238 --> 00:38:18,276 But we do know that the Big Bang hasn't stopped yet. 581 00:38:18,338 --> 00:38:20,239 The Big Bang is really continuing now. 582 00:38:20,305 --> 00:38:22,974 We're continuing to bang, if you want, in the sense that the 583 00:38:23,038 --> 00:38:27,142 expansion of the universe is continuing. 584 00:38:27,205 --> 00:38:30,408 One of the most astounding discoveries in the last few 585 00:38:30,472 --> 00:38:33,975 years has been the realization that our universe is not slowing 586 00:38:34,038 --> 00:38:37,274 down, like we once thought, but it's actually speeding up. 587 00:38:37,338 --> 00:38:38,539 It's accelerating. 588 00:38:38,604 --> 00:38:41,039 It's in a runaway mode. 589 00:38:41,104 --> 00:38:44,740 We now believe there's something called dark energy, the energy 590 00:38:44,804 --> 00:38:49,175 of nothing, that is pushing the galaxies apart and is killing 591 00:38:49,238 --> 00:38:51,506 the universe. 592 00:38:51,571 --> 00:38:54,874 Narrator: We can't see this destructive force, and we have 593 00:38:54,938 --> 00:38:58,641 no idea why it exists. 594 00:38:58,704 --> 00:39:02,374 But it could mean the end of everything created in 595 00:39:02,438 --> 00:39:04,406 the Big Bang. 596 00:39:04,472 --> 00:39:09,210 If dark energy continues pushing the universe apart, our 597 00:39:09,271 --> 00:39:13,141 Milky Way galaxy could become a lonely outpost. 598 00:39:13,205 --> 00:39:17,776 100 billion years from now, most of our galactic neighbors will 599 00:39:17,838 --> 00:39:19,706 be out of sight. 600 00:39:19,771 --> 00:39:22,006 Stars will burn out. 601 00:39:22,071 --> 00:39:24,540 Galaxies will grow dark. 602 00:39:24,604 --> 00:39:27,306 Even atoms will tear apart. 603 00:39:27,371 --> 00:39:31,942 The birth of the universe, the Big Bang, was over in a flash. 604 00:39:32,004 --> 00:39:37,876 But the death of our universe will take almost forever. 605 00:39:37,938 --> 00:39:43,043 That great philosopher of the western world, Woody Allen, once said 606 00:39:43,104 --> 00:39:51,045 eternity is an awful long time, especially toward the end. 607 00:39:51,104 --> 00:39:54,807 Narrator: Figuring out how our universe will end is as dark 608 00:39:54,871 --> 00:39:59,108 a mystery as the Big Bang. 609 00:39:59,171 --> 00:40:03,608 lt could collapse back in on itself, like a balloon when 610 00:40:03,671 --> 00:40:09,309 the air is let out. 611 00:40:09,371 --> 00:40:12,941 So, would the universe end with a Big Crunch, a reverse of 612 00:40:13,004 --> 00:40:16,707 the Big Bang, or would it end by expanding out and becoming 613 00:40:16,771 --> 00:40:17,505 cold and dark? 614 00:40:17,571 --> 00:40:21,708 If you wished, would it end in fire or ice, or with a bang or 615 00:40:21,771 --> 00:40:24,340 a whimper? 616 00:40:24,405 --> 00:40:27,775 Narrator: If the universe collapses, it might trigger 617 00:40:27,838 --> 00:40:29,673 another Big Bang. 618 00:40:39,405 --> 00:40:45,277 Maybe that's already happened, and we're just one in a 619 00:40:45,338 --> 00:40:48,207 long line of universes. 620 00:40:48,271 --> 00:40:52,441 Personally, I believe in continual genesis -- that is, 621 00:40:52,504 --> 00:40:57,041 there's a never-ending process whereby universes collide, split 622 00:40:57,104 --> 00:41:00,707 apart, give birth to new universes, perhaps with 623 00:41:00,771 --> 00:41:06,977 different laws of physics within each universe. 624 00:41:07,038 --> 00:41:09,006 Maybe this isn't the first time it's happened. 625 00:41:09,071 --> 00:41:11,239 Maybe it's cyclic, and it goes around and around again, 626 00:41:11,305 --> 00:41:14,041 eventually will collapse, and the whole thing will 627 00:41:14,104 --> 00:41:15,071 start over again. 628 00:41:15,138 --> 00:41:24,146 Narrator: One universe or many, they all start with a Big Bang. 629 00:41:24,205 --> 00:41:27,641 Dr. Krauss: Everything that makes us human -- the atoms in our 630 00:41:27,704 --> 00:41:32,041 bodies, the jewelry we wear, all the things that lead to the 631 00:41:32,104 --> 00:41:36,007 tragedy of life and the beauty and the excitement, love, 632 00:41:36,071 --> 00:41:39,641 everything else -- arose because of processes that happened 633 00:41:39,704 --> 00:41:42,907 14 billion years ago. 634 00:41:42,971 --> 00:41:46,240 And if we really want to understand ourselves at some 635 00:41:46,305 --> 00:41:53,378 fundamental level, we really have to understand the Big Bang. 636 00:41:53,438 --> 00:41:57,408 Narrator: 14 billion years ago, the Big Bang created time 637 00:41:57,472 --> 00:42:02,343 and space, our whole vast universe, and everything in it, 638 00:42:02,405 --> 00:42:08,711 including us. 639 00:42:08,771 --> 00:42:10,506 Dr. Kaku: Some people ask the question, 640 00:42:10,571 --> 00:42:12,005 ''What's in it for me?'' 641 00:42:12,071 --> 00:42:16,375 The Big Bang gave us everything we see around us -- the 642 00:42:16,438 --> 00:42:19,374 distribution of galaxies and stars. 643 00:42:19,438 --> 00:42:22,707 lt set into motion the creation of elements that we see 644 00:42:22,771 --> 00:42:23,371 in the universe. 645 00:42:23,438 --> 00:42:28,276 And even the laws of physics themselves, we think, were born 646 00:42:28,338 --> 00:42:34,744 at the instant of creation. 647 00:42:34,871 --> 00:42:39,542 Narrator: Everything started with the Big Bang, one brief 648 00:42:39,604 --> 00:42:45,242 moment in time 14 billion years ago, that contains the answers 649 00:42:45,305 --> 00:42:50,677 to our greatest questions about our past, our present, 650 00:42:50,737 --> 00:42:51,704 and our future. 651 00:42:51,771 --> 00:42:57,643 Each discovery brings us one step closer to understanding 652 00:42:57,704 --> 00:42:59,972 how the universe works. 653 00:42:59,997 --> 00:43:03,997 == sync, corrected by elderman == 54781

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