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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,579 --> 00:00:02,213 Freeman: Our Universe. 2 00:00:02,747 --> 00:00:06,716 It's awe-inspiring and baffling. 3 00:00:06,718 --> 00:00:09,752 From colossal explosions of stars 4 00:00:09,754 --> 00:00:13,322 to the strange movements of tiny particles... 5 00:00:14,324 --> 00:00:15,658 ...Each new discovery 6 00:00:15,660 --> 00:00:18,361 seems to reveal another layer of mystery. 7 00:00:18,363 --> 00:00:22,331 Our understanding of the world around us 8 00:00:22,333 --> 00:00:26,569 has taken us from the Stone Age to the Silicon Age. 9 00:00:28,238 --> 00:00:32,642 Now ironclad laws of physics are breaking apart. 10 00:00:32,644 --> 00:00:39,315 What we believe is reality may not be real at all. 11 00:00:39,317 --> 00:00:42,451 The future of humanity depends on our discovering... 12 00:00:44,288 --> 00:00:47,223 ...How the Universe really works. 13 00:00:54,197 --> 00:00:59,135 Space, time, life itself. 14 00:01:01,104 --> 00:01:05,708 The secrets of the cosmos lie through the wormhole. 15 00:01:05,710 --> 00:01:09,710 ? Through the Wormhole 2x06 ? How Does the Universe Work? Original Air Date on July 13, 2011 16 00:01:09,713 --> 00:01:13,713 == sync, corrected by elderman == 17 00:01:17,588 --> 00:01:19,522 Think of existence 18 00:01:19,524 --> 00:01:24,093 as an enormous web that we're all woven into, 19 00:01:24,095 --> 00:01:27,430 but we can't see the whole thing. 20 00:01:27,432 --> 00:01:30,499 We just see the patch where we are standing. 21 00:01:30,501 --> 00:01:32,868 We can't see the whole of reality. 22 00:01:32,870 --> 00:01:37,073 But what if we could see it all? 23 00:01:37,075 --> 00:01:39,075 What if we could understand 24 00:01:39,077 --> 00:01:43,212 how the whole of creation joins together? 25 00:01:43,214 --> 00:01:49,552 The rewards of finding this equation would be enormous, 26 00:01:49,554 --> 00:01:51,821 a revolution in science 27 00:01:51,823 --> 00:01:55,091 far beyond anything that has come before -- 28 00:01:55,093 --> 00:01:56,892 a great leap forward 29 00:01:56,894 --> 00:01:59,762 that will transform life on Earth 30 00:01:59,764 --> 00:02:04,200 and ensure our survival as a species. 31 00:02:04,202 --> 00:02:07,403 But what hope do we mere mortals have 32 00:02:07,405 --> 00:02:11,741 of uncovering the hidden secrets of the Universe, 33 00:02:11,743 --> 00:02:14,710 of knowing the mind of God? 34 00:02:18,215 --> 00:02:21,283 I remember my first day of school, 35 00:02:21,285 --> 00:02:25,021 the day I was supposed to start learning about the world 36 00:02:25,023 --> 00:02:27,423 and how it works. 37 00:02:27,425 --> 00:02:30,826 I made it about 20 yards to the schoolhouse, 38 00:02:30,828 --> 00:02:32,695 then I froze. 39 00:02:34,297 --> 00:02:36,365 What hope did I have 40 00:02:36,367 --> 00:02:40,036 of understanding everything or anything? 41 00:02:40,038 --> 00:02:44,173 My mind reeled. 42 00:02:44,175 --> 00:02:46,509 I ran back home. 43 00:02:48,912 --> 00:02:53,683 I wonder if scientists feel much the same way. 44 00:02:53,685 --> 00:02:56,052 There is so much we don't know 45 00:02:56,054 --> 00:03:00,189 about why the Universe functions the way it does. 46 00:03:00,191 --> 00:03:02,925 Imagine trying to play a game of chess 47 00:03:02,927 --> 00:03:05,561 if you don't know the rules. 48 00:03:05,563 --> 00:03:07,596 You might figure out some moves, 49 00:03:07,598 --> 00:03:10,599 but a lot of it would make no sense. 50 00:03:10,601 --> 00:03:13,202 Once you know the rules, though, 51 00:03:13,204 --> 00:03:17,173 you can begin to move the pieces with purpose. 52 00:03:17,175 --> 00:03:21,744 Science is our means to discover those rules, 53 00:03:21,746 --> 00:03:25,347 and so far we've revealed quite a few of them. 54 00:03:25,349 --> 00:03:28,951 But what if we've got them wrong? 55 00:03:30,654 --> 00:03:34,990 Deep in the basement tunnels of Purdue University, 56 00:03:34,992 --> 00:03:39,395 scientists Jere Jenkins and Ephraim Fischbach 57 00:03:39,397 --> 00:03:40,930 have discovered 58 00:03:40,932 --> 00:03:44,467 that one of the supposedly unbreakable laws of physics 59 00:03:44,469 --> 00:03:45,835 is broken. 60 00:03:45,837 --> 00:03:48,904 It began with a mystery. 61 00:03:48,906 --> 00:03:51,040 Man: I'll come out and set up a few tethers 62 00:03:51,042 --> 00:03:52,441 and receive some tools, 63 00:03:52,443 --> 00:03:55,244 then he'll come out right after me. 64 00:03:55,246 --> 00:03:57,279 Jenkins: The second week of December of 2006, 65 00:03:57,281 --> 00:03:59,014 astronauts from the space shuttle 66 00:03:59,016 --> 00:04:01,183 were up in the International Space Station, 67 00:04:01,185 --> 00:04:03,652 and everybody was out on an E.V.A., 68 00:04:03,654 --> 00:04:05,121 and there was a solar storm. 69 00:04:08,091 --> 00:04:10,326 [ Indistinct radio chatter ] 70 00:04:14,431 --> 00:04:17,099 Because the astronauts were all out there, 71 00:04:17,101 --> 00:04:19,201 the solar storm was big news. 72 00:04:19,203 --> 00:04:21,504 Sitting there and watching that news story, I thought, 73 00:04:21,506 --> 00:04:23,005 "Wow, wouldn't that be funny 74 00:04:23,007 --> 00:04:25,107 if I saw that appear in the data?" 75 00:04:25,109 --> 00:04:27,009 Freeman: Jenkins studies 76 00:04:27,011 --> 00:04:29,345 a powerful source of energy we can't see 77 00:04:29,347 --> 00:04:31,347 but is all around us -- 78 00:04:31,349 --> 00:04:33,783 radioactivity. 79 00:04:33,785 --> 00:04:36,452 Every second of every day, 80 00:04:36,454 --> 00:04:40,122 the sun sprays out showers of radioactive atoms. 81 00:04:40,124 --> 00:04:42,792 These atoms are unstable. 82 00:04:42,794 --> 00:04:45,227 They spit out energy until they burn away 83 00:04:45,229 --> 00:04:49,899 in a process known as radioactive decay. 84 00:04:49,901 --> 00:04:54,303 Radioactive decay is supposed to be a random process 85 00:04:54,305 --> 00:04:57,239 that cannot be affected by anything. 86 00:04:57,241 --> 00:04:59,542 Jenkins: In early December of 2006, 87 00:04:59,544 --> 00:05:01,310 we're plotting this. 88 00:05:01,312 --> 00:05:02,845 It's a nice, straight line. 89 00:05:02,847 --> 00:05:04,814 It's following exactly like it should, 90 00:05:04,816 --> 00:05:07,016 but then on December 13th, a flare happened. 91 00:05:07,018 --> 00:05:10,019 And we see that the decay has actually departed 92 00:05:10,021 --> 00:05:11,921 what the standard decay line should have been, 93 00:05:11,923 --> 00:05:14,256 and it departed it for quite some time. 94 00:05:14,258 --> 00:05:16,926 This is actually the space of about four days. 95 00:05:16,928 --> 00:05:19,662 It appeared, or so it seemed, 96 00:05:19,664 --> 00:05:21,864 that something may have been changing 97 00:05:21,866 --> 00:05:23,465 this radioactive-decay process, 98 00:05:23,467 --> 00:05:25,501 which nothing is supposed to change. 99 00:05:25,503 --> 00:05:29,071 Freeman: Fischbach, a theoretical physicist, 100 00:05:29,073 --> 00:05:32,341 struggled with the huge implications of this finding. 101 00:05:32,343 --> 00:05:35,644 Knowing how fast radioactive particles break down 102 00:05:35,646 --> 00:05:37,646 is critical for nuclear power, 103 00:05:37,648 --> 00:05:41,317 weapons, electronics, and medicine. 104 00:05:41,319 --> 00:05:45,487 Could it be that a concept so uniformly accepted 105 00:05:45,489 --> 00:05:50,359 and central to modern life was wrong? 106 00:05:50,361 --> 00:05:51,927 The idea that nuclear decays 107 00:05:51,929 --> 00:05:54,463 cannot be influenced by an external influence 108 00:05:54,465 --> 00:05:57,733 is so fundamental to so many aspects of quantum physics, 109 00:05:57,735 --> 00:05:59,835 nuclear physics, elementary-particle physics, 110 00:05:59,837 --> 00:06:02,371 that changing that would likely have a significant change 111 00:06:02,373 --> 00:06:04,740 on our understanding of the Universe, 112 00:06:04,742 --> 00:06:07,109 as well as on practical applications. 113 00:06:07,111 --> 00:06:10,012 Freeman: Still reeling from this shock, 114 00:06:10,014 --> 00:06:13,415 Jenkins and Fischbach uncovered another mystery. 115 00:06:13,417 --> 00:06:16,418 Radioactive decay was not just being affected 116 00:06:16,420 --> 00:06:18,420 by the solar flare. 117 00:06:18,422 --> 00:06:22,658 The discharge of radioactive particles appears to change 118 00:06:22,660 --> 00:06:26,362 depending on how close the Earth is to the Sun. 119 00:06:31,268 --> 00:06:32,935 Fischbach: When the Earth is closer to the Sun, 120 00:06:32,937 --> 00:06:34,436 around January 4th, 121 00:06:34,438 --> 00:06:36,739 the rate of radioactive decay seems to be faster. 122 00:06:36,741 --> 00:06:40,309 And when farther away, the rate seems to be slower. 123 00:06:40,311 --> 00:06:42,778 Now, we can illustrate this in the following way. 124 00:06:42,780 --> 00:06:44,146 I represent the Sun, 125 00:06:44,148 --> 00:06:45,981 and Jere is gonna represent the Earth, 126 00:06:45,983 --> 00:06:47,483 and the bucket represents 127 00:06:47,485 --> 00:06:49,518 a sample of radioactive radium atoms. 128 00:06:51,521 --> 00:06:54,423 And you'll see that as Jere moves in an ellipse, 129 00:06:54,425 --> 00:06:57,359 where he's closer to the Earth around January 4th, 130 00:06:57,361 --> 00:06:58,861 more tennis balls are thrown out, 131 00:06:58,863 --> 00:07:02,197 meaning more particles come out than happen around July 4th. 132 00:07:06,703 --> 00:07:08,604 Freeman: This small change in numbers 133 00:07:08,606 --> 00:07:11,874 could have big consequences. 134 00:07:11,876 --> 00:07:15,778 Cancer patients receive very tiny doses of radiation 135 00:07:15,780 --> 00:07:18,013 to kill their rebel cells. 136 00:07:18,015 --> 00:07:21,784 If the strength of that radiation changes seasonally, 137 00:07:21,786 --> 00:07:26,021 they might get too little or too much of a dose. 138 00:07:26,023 --> 00:07:29,959 Knowing the difference could save lives. 139 00:07:29,961 --> 00:07:33,295 But the duo's most important discovery 140 00:07:33,297 --> 00:07:36,465 could secure the future of the human race. 141 00:07:36,467 --> 00:07:40,736 40 hours prior to the actual time of the flare, 142 00:07:40,738 --> 00:07:44,039 we saw the decay rate change and actually leave the line. 143 00:07:44,041 --> 00:07:46,642 After the flare, 144 00:07:46,644 --> 00:07:50,012 it started to recover and move back toward the line. 145 00:07:50,014 --> 00:07:52,681 So, this possibly gives us the opportunity, then, 146 00:07:52,683 --> 00:07:55,417 to predict when these solar flares are happening. 147 00:07:55,419 --> 00:07:59,088 Freeman: A large solar flare could wipe out 148 00:07:59,090 --> 00:08:03,459 every one of the nearly 3,000 satellites orbiting the Earth. 149 00:08:03,461 --> 00:08:06,595 In a flash, we would lose the Internet, 150 00:08:06,597 --> 00:08:10,332 GPS, television, radio, telephones, 151 00:08:10,334 --> 00:08:14,770 and the systems that control our power grids. 152 00:08:14,772 --> 00:08:20,476 Knowing a flare is coming could avert a global apocalypse. 153 00:08:20,478 --> 00:08:23,679 If this phenomenon is real, as we believe it is, 154 00:08:23,681 --> 00:08:26,181 then it's essential to understand how this is happening 155 00:08:26,183 --> 00:08:27,683 because this will certainly be 156 00:08:27,685 --> 00:08:30,185 a part of a bigger puzzle that we must understand 157 00:08:30,187 --> 00:08:32,021 to put all this physics together. 158 00:08:34,290 --> 00:08:37,593 Freeman: We're groping in the dark of the vast Universe, 159 00:08:37,595 --> 00:08:41,163 thinking we have uncovered its deepest truths, 160 00:08:41,165 --> 00:08:44,133 then finding we still have much to learn 161 00:08:44,135 --> 00:08:46,535 about the rules of nature. 162 00:08:47,704 --> 00:08:51,807 And nature does not make things easy for us. 163 00:08:51,809 --> 00:08:54,777 Down at the smallest scale of existence, 164 00:08:54,779 --> 00:08:57,980 deep in the weird world of quantum mechanics, 165 00:08:57,982 --> 00:09:01,116 it seems to play by two different rules 166 00:09:01,118 --> 00:09:02,317 at the same time. 167 00:09:04,888 --> 00:09:07,389 And the deeper we probe into its mysteries, 168 00:09:07,391 --> 00:09:13,362 the more we are forced to ask not just how the Universe works, 169 00:09:13,364 --> 00:09:16,965 but whether anything is real. 170 00:09:21,864 --> 00:09:25,434 Quantum mechanics has transformed the world. 171 00:09:25,436 --> 00:09:28,370 We owe most of our amazing technology 172 00:09:28,372 --> 00:09:33,408 to its explanations of how extremely small particles... 173 00:09:33,410 --> 00:09:35,544 behave. 174 00:09:35,546 --> 00:09:38,380 But we don't really understand it. 175 00:09:38,382 --> 00:09:42,451 In the quantum world, nothing seems to make sense. 176 00:09:42,453 --> 00:09:46,755 Reality stops being...real. 177 00:09:46,757 --> 00:09:49,991 This mystery is our greatest obstacle 178 00:09:49,993 --> 00:09:52,561 to unlocking the secrets of the Universe. 179 00:09:52,563 --> 00:09:55,097 If we can solve it, 180 00:09:55,099 --> 00:09:58,166 we may hold the keys to creation itself. 181 00:10:06,809 --> 00:10:08,643 Vienna, Austria, 182 00:10:08,645 --> 00:10:12,047 is arguably the birthplace of quantum mechanics. 183 00:10:12,049 --> 00:10:13,949 This is where you will find 184 00:10:13,951 --> 00:10:17,052 the leading quantum experimentalist in the world, 185 00:10:17,054 --> 00:10:20,055 Professor Anton Zeilinger. 186 00:10:22,191 --> 00:10:25,060 Zeilinger: When I first heard of quantum mechanics 187 00:10:25,062 --> 00:10:26,428 when I was a student, 188 00:10:26,430 --> 00:10:32,567 I was immediately struck by three things -- 189 00:10:32,569 --> 00:10:36,471 first, its unbelievable mathematical beauty. 190 00:10:36,473 --> 00:10:40,976 Secondly, by the incredible precision 191 00:10:40,978 --> 00:10:42,944 to which the predictions work. 192 00:10:42,946 --> 00:10:44,813 And thirdly, 193 00:10:44,815 --> 00:10:50,118 by the fact that... it doesn't make sense. 194 00:10:52,321 --> 00:10:54,790 Freeman: Quantum mechanics describes the behavior 195 00:10:54,792 --> 00:10:59,027 of all the tiny particles that everything is made of. 196 00:10:59,029 --> 00:11:01,329 This knowledge has given us computers, 197 00:11:01,331 --> 00:11:06,168 nuclear power, satellites, advanced medicine -- 198 00:11:06,170 --> 00:11:07,502 most of the great leaps forward 199 00:11:07,504 --> 00:11:10,906 humanity has taken in the past 100 years. 200 00:11:10,908 --> 00:11:13,742 But the quantum world seems to run contrary 201 00:11:13,744 --> 00:11:17,479 to everything we know about the laws of nature. 202 00:11:17,481 --> 00:11:21,983 Simply put, down where things are very, very small, 203 00:11:21,985 --> 00:11:25,587 the Universe follows a different set of rules. 204 00:11:27,990 --> 00:11:30,959 Consider the phenomenon of quantum nonlocality, 205 00:11:30,961 --> 00:11:35,063 when two tiny particles instantly share information 206 00:11:35,065 --> 00:11:38,133 across vast distances. 207 00:11:38,135 --> 00:11:41,803 If there were quantum dice, 208 00:11:41,805 --> 00:11:45,474 it would mean that if I throw one die here, 209 00:11:45,476 --> 00:11:47,943 it shows a certain number. 210 00:11:47,945 --> 00:11:51,046 The other dice thrown at some distant location 211 00:11:51,048 --> 00:11:54,349 would show the same number. 212 00:11:54,351 --> 00:11:55,450 How can that be? 213 00:11:55,452 --> 00:11:57,953 Quantum mechanics describes it very well. 214 00:11:59,155 --> 00:12:02,157 Freeman: Time and again Zeilinger has proven 215 00:12:02,159 --> 00:12:05,494 that no matter how extreme its predictions, 216 00:12:05,496 --> 00:12:09,664 quantum theory works even though it shouldn't. 217 00:12:09,666 --> 00:12:12,534 And perhaps the ultimate proof 218 00:12:12,536 --> 00:12:15,370 of just how unsettling quantum mechanics can be 219 00:12:15,372 --> 00:12:19,441 is something called the double-slit experiment. 220 00:12:19,443 --> 00:12:25,280 It will make you question whether reality exists at all. 221 00:12:25,282 --> 00:12:28,183 This simple configuration 222 00:12:28,185 --> 00:12:30,819 shoots particles of light called photons 223 00:12:30,821 --> 00:12:36,057 one at a time through two tiny slits in a screen. 224 00:12:36,059 --> 00:12:38,960 Zeilinger: There's a laser which produces light. 225 00:12:38,962 --> 00:12:40,562 This light is attenuated 226 00:12:40,564 --> 00:12:45,433 such that only one photon at a time emerges. 227 00:12:45,435 --> 00:12:49,671 These photons pass through a two-slit assembly, 228 00:12:49,673 --> 00:12:52,908 and then we have a camera which registers the pattern 229 00:12:52,910 --> 00:12:56,044 behind the two-slit assembly. 230 00:12:56,046 --> 00:12:59,147 So, what we see is that the photons arrive 231 00:12:59,149 --> 00:13:03,084 one by one on the screen -- some here, some there -- 232 00:13:03,086 --> 00:13:07,255 and it looks pretty random. 233 00:13:07,257 --> 00:13:09,624 Freeman: Since the photons travel one by one -- 234 00:13:09,626 --> 00:13:12,827 some through this slit, some through that slit -- 235 00:13:12,829 --> 00:13:14,930 you would expect them to leave 236 00:13:14,932 --> 00:13:17,265 a pattern of two stripes on the wall, 237 00:13:17,267 --> 00:13:20,068 and you would be wrong. 238 00:13:20,070 --> 00:13:24,005 They mysteriously create a band of stripes. 239 00:13:24,007 --> 00:13:26,241 This is what you would expect to see 240 00:13:26,243 --> 00:13:30,645 if a constant beam of light shined through the two slits. 241 00:13:30,647 --> 00:13:34,282 It would spread across the wall like a wave. 242 00:13:34,284 --> 00:13:37,686 So, how can single bullet-like particles of light 243 00:13:37,688 --> 00:13:39,454 create a wave pattern? 244 00:13:39,456 --> 00:13:41,222 This could only happen 245 00:13:41,224 --> 00:13:45,493 if the particles go through both slits at the same time. 246 00:13:45,495 --> 00:13:46,761 In other words, 247 00:13:46,763 --> 00:13:50,065 the particle is in two places at once. 248 00:13:50,067 --> 00:13:52,968 But strangest of all is what happens 249 00:13:52,970 --> 00:13:56,805 when you put detectors next to the slits. 250 00:13:56,807 --> 00:13:59,507 When the photons are being watched, 251 00:13:59,509 --> 00:14:03,178 the wave pattern disappears. 252 00:14:03,180 --> 00:14:07,382 Take away the detectors, and the wave pattern comes back. 253 00:14:07,384 --> 00:14:13,855 This suggests that we can change the way reality behaves 254 00:14:13,857 --> 00:14:16,324 just by looking at it. 255 00:14:16,326 --> 00:14:19,661 Does this mean that reality itself 256 00:14:19,663 --> 00:14:22,764 is not real? 257 00:14:22,766 --> 00:14:26,635 The modern answer is that the path taken by the photon 258 00:14:26,637 --> 00:14:29,104 is not an element of reality. 259 00:14:29,106 --> 00:14:33,842 We are not allowed to talk about 260 00:14:33,844 --> 00:14:36,778 the photon passing through this or this slit. 261 00:14:36,780 --> 00:14:38,813 Neither are we allowed to say 262 00:14:38,815 --> 00:14:41,216 that the photons pass through both slits. 263 00:14:41,218 --> 00:14:46,655 All this kind of language is not applicable. 264 00:14:46,657 --> 00:14:51,026 Freeman: So, do we just keep reaping the benefits 265 00:14:51,028 --> 00:14:52,627 from quantum mechanics 266 00:14:52,629 --> 00:14:56,297 and accept that, deep down, nature plays by a set of rules 267 00:14:56,299 --> 00:14:59,100 that will forever remain a mystery? 268 00:14:59,102 --> 00:15:01,903 Zeilinger: The interesting message here is 269 00:15:01,905 --> 00:15:06,041 that we have quantum physics now around for nearly 100 years, 270 00:15:06,043 --> 00:15:08,777 and we are still working at the foundations. 271 00:15:08,779 --> 00:15:11,846 And that tells me that when we find it, 272 00:15:11,848 --> 00:15:14,983 it will be an absolute revelation. 273 00:15:14,985 --> 00:15:18,787 It will be something different from what we have been thinking. 274 00:15:23,192 --> 00:15:26,761 If the quantum theorists are correct, 275 00:15:26,763 --> 00:15:28,596 we will never understand 276 00:15:28,598 --> 00:15:31,299 the fundamental level of the Universe. 277 00:15:31,301 --> 00:15:34,936 Our hopes of finding an ultimate theory will fail, 278 00:15:34,938 --> 00:15:36,337 and the human race 279 00:15:36,339 --> 00:15:40,475 will hit a roadblock it can't break through. 280 00:15:40,477 --> 00:15:43,411 But what if they're wrong? 281 00:15:43,413 --> 00:15:45,947 What if the truth about what happens 282 00:15:45,949 --> 00:15:48,650 deep inside you, me, 283 00:15:48,652 --> 00:15:50,952 and everything else in the Universe 284 00:15:50,954 --> 00:15:54,789 is there if we're willing to look for it? 285 00:15:58,326 --> 00:16:00,561 For most of the 20th century, 286 00:16:00,939 --> 00:16:04,941 scientists believed quantum physics could not be explained, 287 00:16:04,943 --> 00:16:07,043 that we would just have to accept 288 00:16:07,045 --> 00:16:10,013 that we'll never know why things behave as they do 289 00:16:10,015 --> 00:16:13,216 down at the deepest levels of existence. 290 00:16:13,218 --> 00:16:17,153 But now a growing band of rebel scientists thinks 291 00:16:17,155 --> 00:16:20,056 there may be a logical explanation 292 00:16:20,058 --> 00:16:22,625 for quantum weirdness after all 293 00:16:22,627 --> 00:16:25,094 and new hope for revealing 294 00:16:25,096 --> 00:16:29,599 the ultimate truth of our Universe. 295 00:16:29,601 --> 00:16:33,870 The trail begins here... 296 00:16:33,872 --> 00:16:37,373 with a drop of silicon. 297 00:16:37,375 --> 00:16:38,908 In his Paris laboratory, 298 00:16:38,910 --> 00:16:42,412 physicist Yves Couder and his team 299 00:16:42,414 --> 00:16:45,581 conduct an amazing series of experiments. 300 00:16:45,583 --> 00:16:49,285 They are observing the behavior of silicon droplets 301 00:16:49,287 --> 00:16:54,157 bouncing in lockstep on a vibrating plate. 302 00:16:54,159 --> 00:16:55,858 Couder: The liquid of the drop 303 00:16:55,860 --> 00:16:58,261 never touches the liquid of the substrate. 304 00:16:58,263 --> 00:17:00,430 So, they're always separated by a film. 305 00:17:00,432 --> 00:17:01,831 And, in fact, it is stable. 306 00:17:01,833 --> 00:17:04,834 You can keep the drop bouncing on the liquid surface 307 00:17:04,836 --> 00:17:06,836 for several days if you wish. 308 00:17:10,407 --> 00:17:14,811 Freeman: Using a camera that shoots 1,000 frames per second, 309 00:17:14,813 --> 00:17:17,680 Couder has discovered that these droplets 310 00:17:17,682 --> 00:17:21,584 mimic behavior seen in the quantum world. 311 00:17:21,586 --> 00:17:24,854 And that shouldn't be possible, 312 00:17:24,856 --> 00:17:28,358 because the quantum world and the large-scale world 313 00:17:28,360 --> 00:17:30,727 play by two different sets of rules. 314 00:17:38,569 --> 00:17:41,637 Yet here we see a single droplet moving randomly 315 00:17:41,639 --> 00:17:43,639 like a quantum particle, 316 00:17:43,641 --> 00:17:47,543 but behaving like a quantum wave. 317 00:17:47,545 --> 00:17:50,246 If you watch this carefully, you'll notice that the wave 318 00:17:50,248 --> 00:17:52,782 appears to be guiding the droplet. 319 00:17:57,121 --> 00:17:59,589 In fact, the wave fields around the droplets 320 00:17:59,591 --> 00:18:02,892 develop a memory of the trails they have followed. 321 00:18:02,894 --> 00:18:04,894 Despite their random behavior, 322 00:18:04,896 --> 00:18:07,397 they follow a small number of paths. 323 00:18:07,399 --> 00:18:10,867 Again, this is eerily similar 324 00:18:10,869 --> 00:18:13,970 to the behavior of quantum objects. 325 00:18:13,972 --> 00:18:17,173 This runs so contrary to popular belief 326 00:18:17,175 --> 00:18:22,111 that, at first, Couder refused to believe what he was seeing. 327 00:18:22,113 --> 00:18:24,313 Couder: In any physics experiment, 328 00:18:24,315 --> 00:18:27,984 you only see what you are prepared to see. 329 00:18:27,986 --> 00:18:30,219 Of course, it was very obvious that there was a memory, 330 00:18:30,221 --> 00:18:32,121 but it took us some time to realize 331 00:18:32,123 --> 00:18:34,223 that it was that that we were observing, 332 00:18:34,225 --> 00:18:38,294 because you have to adapt to this new idea. 333 00:18:38,296 --> 00:18:40,329 Freeman: Perhaps most revealing of all, 334 00:18:40,331 --> 00:18:44,967 Couder has reproduced the double-slit experiment 335 00:18:44,969 --> 00:18:48,371 using his bouncing silicon droplets. 336 00:18:48,373 --> 00:18:51,240 The mystery of quantum mechanics is, 337 00:18:51,242 --> 00:18:53,309 how can things like electrons 338 00:18:53,311 --> 00:18:59,115 sometimes behave like particles and sometimes behave like waves? 339 00:18:59,117 --> 00:19:02,418 Perhaps this is the answer. 340 00:19:02,420 --> 00:19:06,589 They are particles and waves. 341 00:19:06,591 --> 00:19:11,961 Of course, this system, though small, is not quantum. 342 00:19:11,963 --> 00:19:14,597 Couder: Our system is not a model of quantum mechanics, 343 00:19:14,599 --> 00:19:17,834 but is an association of a particle and a wave. 344 00:19:17,836 --> 00:19:21,237 And some of its properties are similar 345 00:19:21,239 --> 00:19:23,439 to the properties that are observed in quantum mechanics. 346 00:19:23,441 --> 00:19:27,376 Freeman: Couder won't claim that his experiments show us 347 00:19:27,378 --> 00:19:29,212 what is really happening 348 00:19:29,214 --> 00:19:32,615 down at the deepest layers of existence. 349 00:19:32,617 --> 00:19:34,650 But this man will. 350 00:19:34,652 --> 00:19:38,087 To him, those droplets are more proof 351 00:19:38,089 --> 00:19:40,723 that the quantum world makes sense after all 352 00:19:40,725 --> 00:19:44,727 and that reality really exists. 353 00:19:47,564 --> 00:19:51,801 Antony Valentini of Clemson University 354 00:19:51,803 --> 00:19:54,070 is a quantum heretic. 355 00:19:54,072 --> 00:19:55,872 He loudly proclaims 356 00:19:55,874 --> 00:19:59,242 that physics went off the rails in the 1920s 357 00:19:59,244 --> 00:20:02,445 when it embraced the doctrine of quantum uncertainty, 358 00:20:02,447 --> 00:20:05,948 which says that nothing is real until we look at it. 359 00:20:05,950 --> 00:20:09,719 Valentini champions the theory that got left behind. 360 00:20:09,721 --> 00:20:12,221 It was created by one of the pillars 361 00:20:12,223 --> 00:20:14,724 of early 20th-century physics, 362 00:20:14,726 --> 00:20:17,093 Louis de Broglie. 363 00:20:17,095 --> 00:20:18,828 Valentini: Louis de Broglie's original idea is 364 00:20:18,830 --> 00:20:24,433 an electron is both a wave and a particle all the time. 365 00:20:24,435 --> 00:20:27,436 It's not the case that, well, sometimes it's a particle, 366 00:20:27,438 --> 00:20:28,971 sometimes it's a wave. 367 00:20:28,973 --> 00:20:33,676 There is a wave guiding a particle at all times. 368 00:20:33,678 --> 00:20:36,846 And de Broglie called this a pilot wave. 369 00:20:36,848 --> 00:20:39,182 Freeman: In quantum theory, 370 00:20:39,184 --> 00:20:43,252 there's something called the probability wave, 371 00:20:43,254 --> 00:20:47,023 a purely mathematical object that tells you the chance 372 00:20:47,025 --> 00:20:50,326 of finding an electron at any point in space. 373 00:20:50,328 --> 00:20:51,727 Pilot wave theory 374 00:20:51,729 --> 00:20:56,165 treats this wave as a real physical object. 375 00:21:00,137 --> 00:21:03,406 Valentini: So, a simple analog is a bottle. 376 00:21:03,408 --> 00:21:06,642 Someone is on an island, and they want to send a message. 377 00:21:06,644 --> 00:21:09,145 So they write something on a piece of paper, 378 00:21:09,147 --> 00:21:12,949 put it in a bottle, close it, and throw it in the ocean. 379 00:21:15,786 --> 00:21:22,024 And water waves simply push the bottle along. 380 00:21:22,026 --> 00:21:24,493 Freeman: There is a crucial difference 381 00:21:24,495 --> 00:21:28,564 between the waves we know and the pilot wave. 382 00:21:28,566 --> 00:21:30,766 According to the theory, 383 00:21:30,768 --> 00:21:34,237 pilot waves exist in hidden dimensions of space 384 00:21:34,239 --> 00:21:37,440 beyond the three we know. 385 00:21:37,442 --> 00:21:40,409 If true, this means that, 386 00:21:40,411 --> 00:21:43,512 contrary to the accepted theory in physics, 387 00:21:43,514 --> 00:21:47,483 quantum objects obey the same rules as large objects. 388 00:21:47,485 --> 00:21:50,486 They do not exist in two places at once. 389 00:21:50,488 --> 00:21:53,422 They're part of the real world. 390 00:21:53,424 --> 00:21:56,525 Valentini: I think that quantum mechanics itself 391 00:21:56,527 --> 00:21:58,427 is not even a candidate 392 00:21:58,429 --> 00:22:01,897 for the truth about the microscopic world, 393 00:22:01,899 --> 00:22:04,600 because it simply doesn't attempt to describe 394 00:22:04,602 --> 00:22:06,802 precisely what the microscopic world is. 395 00:22:06,804 --> 00:22:10,106 The mere fact that there are different theories 396 00:22:10,108 --> 00:22:12,308 about what the answer might be 397 00:22:12,310 --> 00:22:15,211 doesn't mean that there's no answer. 398 00:22:15,213 --> 00:22:17,947 And eventually one of them is found to be the correct one. 399 00:22:17,949 --> 00:22:21,851 Freeman: To understand how the Universe works, 400 00:22:21,853 --> 00:22:24,086 we need to unlock 401 00:22:24,088 --> 00:22:26,956 why the quantum world is so different 402 00:22:26,958 --> 00:22:29,825 from the world we know. 403 00:22:29,827 --> 00:22:31,794 It is an unsolved mystery 404 00:22:31,796 --> 00:22:34,797 that affects every single person on Earth, 405 00:22:34,799 --> 00:22:39,135 and this man thinks he can solve it. 406 00:22:44,425 --> 00:22:48,094 The more we understand the inner workings of the Universe, 407 00:22:48,096 --> 00:22:51,431 the more we humans are rewarded with new medicines, 408 00:22:51,433 --> 00:22:52,665 new technologies, 409 00:22:52,667 --> 00:22:56,236 and undreamed of improvements in our lives. 410 00:22:56,238 --> 00:22:58,738 But some say we're a long way off 411 00:22:58,740 --> 00:23:02,041 from unlocking the Universe's deepest secrets. 412 00:23:02,043 --> 00:23:04,911 We want definitive answers. 413 00:23:04,913 --> 00:23:10,049 What we have are mysteries upon mysteries. 414 00:23:11,919 --> 00:23:14,587 And one of the greatest mysteries 415 00:23:14,589 --> 00:23:16,389 is how the big stuff 416 00:23:16,391 --> 00:23:19,359 and the small stuff in the Universe fit together. 417 00:23:22,096 --> 00:23:26,900 Two well-tested theories describe how matter behaves -- 418 00:23:26,902 --> 00:23:28,201 relativity theory, 419 00:23:28,203 --> 00:23:30,870 which governs the physics of the large, 420 00:23:30,872 --> 00:23:35,041 and quantum theory, which describes the very small. 421 00:23:35,043 --> 00:23:39,512 If they were a couple, relativity would be a logical, 422 00:23:39,514 --> 00:23:41,681 pocket-protector-wearing engineer 423 00:23:41,683 --> 00:23:45,518 who strictly follows the speed limit of light. 424 00:23:45,520 --> 00:23:48,254 Quantum theory would be his volatile artist wife 425 00:23:48,256 --> 00:23:50,390 who seems to be everywhere at once. 426 00:23:50,392 --> 00:23:53,026 On paper, they don't get along. 427 00:23:53,028 --> 00:23:57,297 But in the real world, they are a happy pair. 428 00:23:57,299 --> 00:23:59,599 And like some real-life odd couples, 429 00:23:59,601 --> 00:24:02,669 no one understands why. 430 00:24:02,671 --> 00:24:06,973 The mystery boils down to gravity. 431 00:24:06,975 --> 00:24:09,676 Gravity dominates the world we know, 432 00:24:09,678 --> 00:24:12,278 and thanks to Newton and Einstein, 433 00:24:12,280 --> 00:24:15,315 we understand it pretty well. 434 00:24:15,317 --> 00:24:18,718 But physicists have no idea what role gravity plays 435 00:24:18,720 --> 00:24:20,486 in the quantum realm 436 00:24:20,488 --> 00:24:23,756 or its effect on space and time. 437 00:24:23,758 --> 00:24:25,892 If we crack this mystery, 438 00:24:25,894 --> 00:24:29,262 we will finally know if it is possible 439 00:24:29,264 --> 00:24:36,002 to travel back in time or through a wormhole. 440 00:24:36,004 --> 00:24:40,440 Petr Horava has a history of exploring 441 00:24:40,442 --> 00:24:43,643 the wild frontier of physics. 442 00:24:43,645 --> 00:24:48,248 Now he's tackling quantum gravity. 443 00:24:48,250 --> 00:24:51,584 Horava: So, how do you reconcile quantum mechanics and gravity? 444 00:24:51,586 --> 00:24:54,254 There are several different ways it can happen. 445 00:24:54,256 --> 00:24:56,889 Either quantum mechanics is stronger and wins 446 00:24:56,891 --> 00:24:58,658 and gravity has to be modified, 447 00:24:58,660 --> 00:25:01,561 or quantum mechanics has to be modified 448 00:25:01,563 --> 00:25:04,897 and gravity stays the same as in Einstein's general relativity. 449 00:25:07,034 --> 00:25:09,636 Freeman: Petr feels the key is 450 00:25:09,638 --> 00:25:11,604 to watch how things change in scale 451 00:25:11,606 --> 00:25:13,573 between the upper layers of nature, 452 00:25:13,575 --> 00:25:15,842 where gravity holds sway, 453 00:25:15,844 --> 00:25:19,646 and the quantum layers down below. 454 00:25:19,648 --> 00:25:23,349 Nature organizes itself in layers of structure, 455 00:25:23,351 --> 00:25:27,520 and you see more and more layers as you zoom in 456 00:25:27,522 --> 00:25:32,425 and gain a better resolution of how you view the system. 457 00:25:32,427 --> 00:25:34,627 It's one of the most important theoretical concepts 458 00:25:34,629 --> 00:25:35,895 in modern physics. 459 00:25:38,165 --> 00:25:40,900 Freeman: To Petr, nature is an archaeological dig 460 00:25:40,902 --> 00:25:44,837 that we're slowly excavating layer by layer. 461 00:25:44,839 --> 00:25:48,508 Right now, we're only capable of uncovering a small part 462 00:25:48,510 --> 00:25:51,244 of the vast and complex ultimate truth. 463 00:25:51,246 --> 00:25:53,546 But we can learn a lot 464 00:25:53,548 --> 00:25:55,948 by comparing the layers we can see. 465 00:26:01,188 --> 00:26:03,723 In this picture, the two images of Mona Lisa 466 00:26:03,725 --> 00:26:06,092 represent the two faces of space-time -- 467 00:26:06,094 --> 00:26:07,927 space and time. 468 00:26:07,929 --> 00:26:09,028 They look the same 469 00:26:09,030 --> 00:26:11,130 when we look at it at large scales, 470 00:26:11,132 --> 00:26:13,599 but perhaps when we zoom in 471 00:26:13,601 --> 00:26:16,969 and look at the system at much smaller scales, 472 00:26:16,971 --> 00:26:19,339 it could be that space and time scale 473 00:26:19,341 --> 00:26:21,174 in a very different way. 474 00:26:21,176 --> 00:26:24,077 This could be the missing piece of the puzzle 475 00:26:24,079 --> 00:26:25,345 of quantum gravity. 476 00:26:25,347 --> 00:26:28,281 Freeman: Petr suspects that as you shrink down 477 00:26:28,283 --> 00:26:31,584 to the smallest and deepest level of existence, 478 00:26:31,586 --> 00:26:35,221 space begins to stretch at a different rate from time 479 00:26:35,223 --> 00:26:39,058 until they tear apart. 480 00:26:39,060 --> 00:26:41,894 Think of space-time as analogous to this sheet of paper. 481 00:26:41,896 --> 00:26:43,963 At microscopic scales, 482 00:26:43,965 --> 00:26:46,733 it's smooth and geometric, two-dimensional. 483 00:26:46,735 --> 00:26:51,938 But if you tear the piece of paper into two halves 484 00:26:51,940 --> 00:26:54,073 and look at the edge of the paper -- 485 00:26:54,075 --> 00:26:57,677 zoom in, zoom out -- 486 00:26:57,679 --> 00:26:59,746 the structure is similar to itself, 487 00:26:59,748 --> 00:27:01,647 but only if you stretch in the horizontal direction 488 00:27:01,649 --> 00:27:02,915 with a different rate 489 00:27:02,917 --> 00:27:05,651 than when you stretch with a vertical direction. 490 00:27:05,653 --> 00:27:08,921 Freeman: From a distance, the tear looks smooth. 491 00:27:08,923 --> 00:27:11,224 But close up, 492 00:27:11,226 --> 00:27:14,127 you can see mountains and valleys along the edge. 493 00:27:14,129 --> 00:27:17,530 Similarly, space and time seem perfectly joined 494 00:27:17,532 --> 00:27:18,831 from a distance. 495 00:27:18,833 --> 00:27:22,502 But close up, you can see the separation. 496 00:27:22,504 --> 00:27:26,472 Petr thinks this tearing apart of time and space 497 00:27:26,474 --> 00:27:29,409 at the microscopic scale is precisely why 498 00:27:29,411 --> 00:27:34,380 the strange rules of quantum mechanics emerge. 499 00:27:34,382 --> 00:27:37,950 If space and time are unhinged, 500 00:27:37,952 --> 00:27:42,188 particles can't be in a specific place at a specific time. 501 00:27:42,190 --> 00:27:46,592 Hence, fuzziness and uncertainty. 502 00:27:46,594 --> 00:27:49,328 Unraveling the enigma of quantum gravity 503 00:27:49,330 --> 00:27:51,297 is a major hurdle in our quest 504 00:27:51,299 --> 00:27:54,634 to understand how the Universe works. 505 00:27:54,636 --> 00:27:57,336 But it shrinks against the magnitude 506 00:27:57,338 --> 00:28:01,307 of the biggest mystery facing humanity. 507 00:28:01,309 --> 00:28:06,412 95% of the Universe is missing. 508 00:28:06,414 --> 00:28:11,250 This woman may know where and what it is. 509 00:28:16,630 --> 00:28:19,867 The more we peel away the layers of nature, 510 00:28:19,868 --> 00:28:23,937 the more we realize that something is missing -- 511 00:28:23,939 --> 00:28:26,005 something big. 512 00:28:26,007 --> 00:28:28,241 An enormous chunk of the Universe 513 00:28:28,243 --> 00:28:30,376 seems to be invisible. 514 00:28:30,378 --> 00:28:34,948 We can't see it, hear it, or detect it in any way. 515 00:28:34,950 --> 00:28:38,952 But if we want to unlock the secrets of the Universe, 516 00:28:38,954 --> 00:28:41,821 if we want to advance as a species, 517 00:28:41,823 --> 00:28:45,325 we have to find out what and where it is. 518 00:28:49,363 --> 00:28:52,966 The Universe began with the Big Bang, 519 00:28:52,968 --> 00:28:57,270 a shattering explosion of raw energy. 520 00:28:57,272 --> 00:29:02,642 That energy burst outward in a mass of superheated plasma. 521 00:29:02,644 --> 00:29:05,445 As it cooled, it began to clump together 522 00:29:05,447 --> 00:29:08,248 into all the material in the Universe -- 523 00:29:08,250 --> 00:29:13,820 the solids, liquids, and gases that everything is made of. 524 00:29:13,822 --> 00:29:17,957 To crack the cosmic code that underlies our Universe, 525 00:29:17,959 --> 00:29:22,729 we have to understand energy in all its forms. 526 00:29:22,731 --> 00:29:26,065 But what if almost 95% of the Universe 527 00:29:26,067 --> 00:29:29,335 is made of a form of energy we can't see 528 00:29:29,337 --> 00:29:31,604 and don't understand? 529 00:29:31,606 --> 00:29:34,440 These are the kinds of questions 530 00:29:34,442 --> 00:29:37,577 confronted daily in Geneva, Switzerland, 531 00:29:37,579 --> 00:29:40,680 the home of the world's largest particle accelerator -- 532 00:29:40,682 --> 00:29:42,882 the Large Hadron Collider -- 533 00:29:42,884 --> 00:29:46,519 and also hundreds of physicists. 534 00:29:50,558 --> 00:29:54,227 Clare Burrage is one of them, but she's hardly typical. 535 00:29:56,597 --> 00:29:59,899 Young, female, and an accomplished figure skater, 536 00:29:59,901 --> 00:30:02,802 Clare is trying to solve the vast mystery 537 00:30:02,804 --> 00:30:04,671 of the missing Universe. 538 00:30:10,711 --> 00:30:12,812 Burrage: So, if we think about the Sun, 539 00:30:12,814 --> 00:30:16,115 the light from the Sun carries energy to us here on Earth, 540 00:30:16,117 --> 00:30:18,451 and we can feel the warmth of the Sun on our skin 541 00:30:18,453 --> 00:30:19,752 on a nice day. 542 00:30:19,754 --> 00:30:22,789 But Einstein tells us that what's happening is 543 00:30:22,791 --> 00:30:24,791 that energy and mass are the same thing. 544 00:30:24,793 --> 00:30:26,559 So, in the center of the Sun, 545 00:30:26,561 --> 00:30:28,294 mass is being turned into energy, 546 00:30:28,296 --> 00:30:30,730 and that's what's transmitted by the light 547 00:30:30,732 --> 00:30:33,166 here to us on Earth. 548 00:30:33,168 --> 00:30:34,567 So, the energy from the Sun 549 00:30:34,569 --> 00:30:36,536 we know and we understand very well, 550 00:30:36,538 --> 00:30:38,571 but it seems like there's another form of energy 551 00:30:38,573 --> 00:30:40,440 out there in the Universe called dark energy 552 00:30:40,442 --> 00:30:41,975 that we don't understand at all. 553 00:30:41,977 --> 00:30:45,445 Freeman: Accepted laws of physics dictate 554 00:30:45,447 --> 00:30:48,915 that the expansion of the Universe after the Big Bang 555 00:30:48,917 --> 00:30:51,050 should be slowing down. 556 00:30:51,052 --> 00:30:54,554 But recent astronomical observations have revealed 557 00:30:54,556 --> 00:30:59,592 that the expansion is rapidly speeding up. 558 00:30:59,594 --> 00:31:05,999 Some unexplained form of energy is pushing galaxies apart. 559 00:31:06,001 --> 00:31:07,367 Burrage: So, at the moment, 560 00:31:07,369 --> 00:31:09,435 I'm moving forward even though I'm not doing anything 561 00:31:09,437 --> 00:31:11,037 because of the force of gravity. 562 00:31:11,039 --> 00:31:12,205 But if I were in space, 563 00:31:12,207 --> 00:31:14,207 where there are no forces acting on me, 564 00:31:14,209 --> 00:31:15,875 I shouldn't be moving at all. 565 00:31:15,877 --> 00:31:17,276 If I'm moving forwards, 566 00:31:17,278 --> 00:31:20,246 then there has to be something very strange acting on me, 567 00:31:20,248 --> 00:31:22,015 and this is what we call dark energy. 568 00:31:22,017 --> 00:31:26,519 Freeman: How much of the Universe is dark energy? 569 00:31:26,521 --> 00:31:28,287 Put it this way. 570 00:31:28,289 --> 00:31:30,289 Here's the Universe. 571 00:31:30,291 --> 00:31:36,462 This sliver, 4.6%, is all the matter we can see. 572 00:31:36,464 --> 00:31:39,165 Near-massless particles called neutrinos 573 00:31:39,167 --> 00:31:42,602 take up another 0.4%. 574 00:31:42,604 --> 00:31:46,305 We think that something called dark matter 575 00:31:46,307 --> 00:31:49,742 accounts for another 23%. 576 00:31:49,744 --> 00:31:55,415 Dark energy is the remaining 72% 577 00:31:55,417 --> 00:32:00,887 of the mass and energy of the Universe. 578 00:32:00,889 --> 00:32:06,025 We cannot see it, touch it, taste it, or detect it, 579 00:32:06,027 --> 00:32:10,363 but cosmologists are certain it is there. 580 00:32:14,168 --> 00:32:16,769 Without dark energy, 581 00:32:16,771 --> 00:32:21,974 gravity would cause the Universe to collapse in on itself. 582 00:32:27,347 --> 00:32:30,950 Clare suspects that dark energy is a by-product 583 00:32:30,952 --> 00:32:33,252 of a radical new piece of physics, 584 00:32:33,254 --> 00:32:37,423 an undiscovered particle called the chameleon. 585 00:32:37,425 --> 00:32:40,259 These mysterious particles 586 00:32:40,261 --> 00:32:43,362 actually carry an entirely different basic force 587 00:32:43,364 --> 00:32:46,065 than the four that physicists know about, 588 00:32:46,067 --> 00:32:48,901 a fifth fundamental force. 589 00:32:52,072 --> 00:32:53,773 Burrage: In physics as we understand it, 590 00:32:53,775 --> 00:32:55,308 there are four forces. 591 00:32:55,310 --> 00:32:58,978 So, they are gravity, which holds us here on Earth. 592 00:32:58,980 --> 00:33:02,415 There are the electric interactions between atoms 593 00:33:02,417 --> 00:33:04,417 and the strong and weak forces 594 00:33:04,419 --> 00:33:06,953 that control what happens in atoms. 595 00:33:06,955 --> 00:33:09,722 And so if there is something new, 596 00:33:09,724 --> 00:33:11,758 a new particle like the chameleon, 597 00:33:11,760 --> 00:33:13,192 like dark energy, 598 00:33:13,194 --> 00:33:16,596 it's going to look to us like there's a fifth force out there. 599 00:33:18,632 --> 00:33:22,235 This force carrier is called a chameleon 600 00:33:22,237 --> 00:33:25,471 because it can change its appearance. 601 00:33:25,473 --> 00:33:27,073 When it is heavy, 602 00:33:27,075 --> 00:33:29,909 it becomes sluggish and ineffective. 603 00:33:29,911 --> 00:33:31,410 When it is light, 604 00:33:31,412 --> 00:33:35,348 it can zip around much faster and become stronger. 605 00:33:35,350 --> 00:33:39,485 How heavy it is depends on its environment -- 606 00:33:39,487 --> 00:33:42,455 how much stuff is around it. 607 00:33:42,457 --> 00:33:45,424 Burrage: So, here on Earth, there's a lot of stuff around, 608 00:33:45,426 --> 00:33:46,626 a lot of matter, 609 00:33:46,628 --> 00:33:49,328 and the chameleon becomes very heavy, very massive. 610 00:33:49,330 --> 00:33:52,165 It doesn't interact with the things around it very much, 611 00:33:52,167 --> 00:33:54,801 and that's why we don't see it in our everyday lives 612 00:33:54,803 --> 00:33:56,569 and in experiments here on Earth. 613 00:33:56,571 --> 00:34:00,439 But in intergalactic space, where there's almost nothing, 614 00:34:00,441 --> 00:34:02,809 the chameleon becomes very, very light, 615 00:34:02,811 --> 00:34:06,045 and it can interact with things over huge distances. 616 00:34:06,047 --> 00:34:08,881 And that's why it can drive the acceleration 617 00:34:08,883 --> 00:34:10,817 of the expansion of the Universe. 618 00:34:10,819 --> 00:34:13,085 Freeman: This shape-shifting property 619 00:34:13,087 --> 00:34:15,655 explains why the chameleon has yet to be spotted 620 00:34:15,657 --> 00:34:17,924 in our particle accelerators. 621 00:34:17,926 --> 00:34:19,792 It should be everywhere -- 622 00:34:19,794 --> 00:34:24,730 inside you and me and far out in the cosmos. 623 00:34:24,732 --> 00:34:30,169 But how do we detect a master of disguise? 624 00:34:30,171 --> 00:34:33,773 Burrage: The chameleon shows up in experiments 625 00:34:33,775 --> 00:34:36,175 on really tiny scales and on really huge scales. 626 00:34:36,177 --> 00:34:38,644 So you can look for it 627 00:34:38,646 --> 00:34:40,379 in the ways that particles behave in colliders 628 00:34:40,381 --> 00:34:41,380 on really tiny scales. 629 00:34:41,382 --> 00:34:42,615 But also, 630 00:34:42,617 --> 00:34:44,917 it affects the way that light travels, 631 00:34:44,919 --> 00:34:47,286 and so we can look on very large scales 632 00:34:47,288 --> 00:34:48,921 at how light from stars comes to us 633 00:34:48,923 --> 00:34:49,989 and whether we can see 634 00:34:49,991 --> 00:34:51,591 the effects of the chameleon there. 635 00:34:51,593 --> 00:34:56,028 Freeman: Our slow and steady understanding 636 00:34:56,030 --> 00:34:59,065 of electromagnetism and the nuclear forces 637 00:34:59,067 --> 00:35:01,467 has transformed our lives, 638 00:35:01,469 --> 00:35:04,537 from electricity to telecommunications, 639 00:35:04,539 --> 00:35:07,540 transportation to warfare. 640 00:35:07,542 --> 00:35:11,277 What benefits could dark energy bring us? 641 00:35:13,347 --> 00:35:14,747 It's very hard to say now 642 00:35:14,749 --> 00:35:17,016 how a better understanding of dark energy 643 00:35:17,018 --> 00:35:19,051 is going to make people's lives better. 644 00:35:19,053 --> 00:35:21,554 But in the past, understanding things better 645 00:35:21,556 --> 00:35:23,823 has always led to benefits for mankind. 646 00:35:23,825 --> 00:35:26,859 So, in some ways, understanding dark energy, 647 00:35:26,861 --> 00:35:29,128 for understanding the Universe, it's more important 648 00:35:29,130 --> 00:35:31,397 than understanding the physics that we know here on Earth. 649 00:35:31,399 --> 00:35:33,599 The particles that we understand 650 00:35:33,601 --> 00:35:37,236 make up about a percent of the Universe as we know it. 651 00:35:37,238 --> 00:35:41,540 Dark energy is a massively more important contribution. 652 00:35:41,542 --> 00:35:44,977 Freeman: Dark energy is the unknown variable 653 00:35:44,979 --> 00:35:48,648 in our quest to crack the cosmic code... 654 00:35:48,650 --> 00:35:51,017 To find a set of equations 655 00:35:51,019 --> 00:35:55,021 that describe how the Universe really works. 656 00:35:55,023 --> 00:35:59,392 But this man says that doesn't go far enough. 657 00:35:59,394 --> 00:36:04,096 He believes equations don't just describe the Universe. 658 00:36:04,098 --> 00:36:07,566 Equations are the Universe, 659 00:36:07,568 --> 00:36:10,736 and we are all living inside them. 660 00:36:13,478 --> 00:36:17,047 We are hunting for an ultimate equation, 661 00:36:17,509 --> 00:36:19,375 the theory of everything 662 00:36:19,377 --> 00:36:23,012 that will explain the mechanisms of the Universe 663 00:36:23,014 --> 00:36:26,215 and revolutionize life on Earth. 664 00:36:26,217 --> 00:36:29,719 One man believes that equation exists 665 00:36:29,721 --> 00:36:32,889 and the solution is the Universe. 666 00:36:32,891 --> 00:36:34,824 According to him, 667 00:36:34,826 --> 00:36:40,263 the equation of everything is everywhere you look, 668 00:36:40,265 --> 00:36:43,633 and we are all part of it. 669 00:36:46,970 --> 00:36:50,606 Max Tegmark lives in Winchester, Massachusetts, 670 00:36:50,608 --> 00:36:52,942 a northern suburb of Boston. 671 00:36:52,944 --> 00:36:55,545 He's an outdoorsy sort 672 00:36:55,547 --> 00:36:59,115 who likes to go on long walks and think. 673 00:36:59,117 --> 00:37:02,051 But Tegmark's thoughts are a bit more exotic 674 00:37:02,053 --> 00:37:04,987 than your average power walker's ponderings. 675 00:37:04,989 --> 00:37:06,355 Tegmark: I think the reason 676 00:37:06,357 --> 00:37:09,559 our Universe is so well-described by math 677 00:37:09,561 --> 00:37:12,862 is that it is math, in the sense that we are living 678 00:37:12,864 --> 00:37:14,897 in a giant mathematical structure. 679 00:37:14,899 --> 00:37:18,968 So, the reason we physicists have discovered 680 00:37:18,970 --> 00:37:22,872 all of these equations which describe our world so well 681 00:37:22,874 --> 00:37:24,874 is simply because these equations 682 00:37:24,876 --> 00:37:26,576 can approximately describe 683 00:37:26,578 --> 00:37:29,478 the true math which is our reality. 684 00:37:29,480 --> 00:37:31,314 Freeman: To Tegmark, 685 00:37:31,316 --> 00:37:34,250 equations are windows on the Universe, 686 00:37:34,252 --> 00:37:37,620 and the Universe is pure math. 687 00:37:37,622 --> 00:37:39,555 Tegmark: At first glance, 688 00:37:39,557 --> 00:37:42,625 our Universe doesn't seem mathematical at all. 689 00:37:42,627 --> 00:37:45,595 We don't have big numbers written visibly in the sky. 690 00:37:45,597 --> 00:37:47,964 But if we look more closely, 691 00:37:47,966 --> 00:37:53,636 we find mathematical patterns and shapes all around us. 692 00:37:53,638 --> 00:37:57,406 Like, if I mess around with my garden hose here... 693 00:37:57,408 --> 00:38:01,277 The water makes this very simple shape called a parabola, 694 00:38:01,279 --> 00:38:04,947 which has this extremely simple mathematical equation, 695 00:38:04,949 --> 00:38:07,083 "y" equals "x" squared. 696 00:38:07,085 --> 00:38:09,819 This mathematical shape, the parabola, 697 00:38:09,821 --> 00:38:13,155 is really built into nature at quite a fundamental level 698 00:38:13,157 --> 00:38:15,424 because it describes the motion with gravity 699 00:38:15,426 --> 00:38:18,260 of any object, regardless of what it's made of. 700 00:38:26,069 --> 00:38:28,771 When we look around us in the Universe, 701 00:38:28,773 --> 00:38:30,539 we see shapes everywhere. 702 00:38:30,541 --> 00:38:33,442 We see that all the planets are going around the Sun 703 00:38:33,444 --> 00:38:35,077 in a shape called an ellipse. 704 00:38:35,079 --> 00:38:37,513 It just looks like the stretched circle. 705 00:38:37,515 --> 00:38:40,016 And anything orbiting anything out there in the Universe, 706 00:38:40,018 --> 00:38:41,317 why is it always that shape? 707 00:38:41,319 --> 00:38:43,919 You know, not a figure eight or a square? 708 00:38:43,921 --> 00:38:46,789 As soon as we scratch beneath the surface, 709 00:38:46,791 --> 00:38:50,359 we start to discover all these patterns and regularities 710 00:38:50,361 --> 00:38:51,794 and even numbers. 711 00:38:51,796 --> 00:38:54,163 Like, if I just pick up some sticks here, 712 00:38:54,165 --> 00:38:56,799 and I ask, like, how many sticks can I put here 713 00:38:56,801 --> 00:38:59,101 which are perpendicular to each other? 714 00:38:59,103 --> 00:39:01,337 I get a number. I get three. 715 00:39:01,339 --> 00:39:03,339 We have a fancy number for this in physics. 716 00:39:03,341 --> 00:39:05,875 We call it the dimensionality of space. 717 00:39:05,877 --> 00:39:09,311 And these numbers that are built into nature are very important, 718 00:39:09,313 --> 00:39:11,113 because if you tweak them a little bit, 719 00:39:11,115 --> 00:39:13,149 if you say the proton isn't 720 00:39:13,151 --> 00:39:15,751 1,836 timeheavier than an electron, 721 00:39:15,753 --> 00:39:20,523 but 5,000 times heavier, for instance, we would die. 722 00:39:20,525 --> 00:39:22,858 In fact, if you change many of the numbers 723 00:39:22,860 --> 00:39:24,460 by just a few percent, 724 00:39:24,462 --> 00:39:27,897 the Sun might blow up or suddenly atoms would collapse 725 00:39:27,899 --> 00:39:31,767 and life as we know it just wouldn't be possible. 726 00:39:31,769 --> 00:39:33,969 So, not only are these numbers there, 727 00:39:33,971 --> 00:39:36,138 but they're extremely important 728 00:39:36,140 --> 00:39:41,343 for understanding the very essence of our reality. 729 00:39:41,345 --> 00:39:45,881 Freeman: This brings us back to an uncomfortable notion 730 00:39:45,883 --> 00:39:48,784 suggested by the prevailing theory of quantum mechanics. 731 00:39:48,786 --> 00:39:52,421 At the deepest level of reality, 732 00:39:52,423 --> 00:39:54,557 nothing is solid. 733 00:39:54,559 --> 00:39:56,659 There is only information -- 734 00:39:56,661 --> 00:39:59,261 numbers adhering to a set of rules 735 00:39:59,263 --> 00:40:02,865 we don't yet understand. 736 00:40:02,867 --> 00:40:05,468 Tegmark: The only properties an electron has 737 00:40:05,470 --> 00:40:07,336 is a bunch of numbers. 738 00:40:07,338 --> 00:40:10,706 We physicists have names for them like spin and charge, 739 00:40:10,708 --> 00:40:12,808 but they're really just numbers. 740 00:40:12,810 --> 00:40:15,344 There's really nothing there at the bottom level 741 00:40:15,346 --> 00:40:18,848 except numbers, except math. 742 00:40:21,251 --> 00:40:24,153 Freeman: Math may be the ultimate truth, 743 00:40:24,155 --> 00:40:25,955 but given our limitations 744 00:40:25,957 --> 00:40:30,059 and how vast and strange so much of nature seems to be, 745 00:40:30,061 --> 00:40:33,829 is it even possible to solve this problem? 746 00:40:33,831 --> 00:40:38,801 Can we ever know how the Universe really works? 747 00:40:38,803 --> 00:40:40,402 There's certainly no guarantee 748 00:40:40,404 --> 00:40:42,571 that we'll find the ultimate equation, 749 00:40:42,573 --> 00:40:45,975 but I think we do have a shot at it. 750 00:40:45,977 --> 00:40:48,511 It's really remarkable how far we've come as a species 751 00:40:48,513 --> 00:40:50,146 in the last 100 years, 752 00:40:50,148 --> 00:40:53,783 beyond our wildest dreams in understanding stuff. 753 00:40:53,785 --> 00:40:57,219 And there's no better way to guarantee we're gonna fail 754 00:40:57,221 --> 00:40:59,255 than to not try. 755 00:40:59,257 --> 00:41:01,023 If I'm wrong 756 00:41:01,025 --> 00:41:03,592 and there is something inherently nonmathematical 757 00:41:03,594 --> 00:41:05,127 about the Universe, 758 00:41:05,129 --> 00:41:06,996 then physics is ultimately doomed. 759 00:41:06,998 --> 00:41:08,531 We're gonna reach a roadblock 760 00:41:08,533 --> 00:41:10,599 beyond which you just can't proceed. 761 00:41:10,601 --> 00:41:11,834 Whereas, if I'm right, 762 00:41:11,836 --> 00:41:14,503 that would actually be a very happy situation 763 00:41:14,505 --> 00:41:16,071 where there is no roadblock 764 00:41:16,073 --> 00:41:20,676 and our progress would only be limited by our own imagination. 765 00:41:24,514 --> 00:41:29,051 Will we ever see the entire web of reality? 766 00:41:29,053 --> 00:41:33,222 Can we find, and will we understand, 767 00:41:33,224 --> 00:41:35,457 the ultimate truth? 768 00:41:35,459 --> 00:41:38,360 Right now, we are like archaeologists 769 00:41:38,362 --> 00:41:42,231 who have uncovered a small triangle buried in the sand, 770 00:41:42,233 --> 00:41:46,836 the tip of an enormous pyramid that we can't yet see. 771 00:41:46,838 --> 00:41:48,604 Perhaps it's presumptuous 772 00:41:48,606 --> 00:41:51,440 for human beings to think we ever will. 773 00:41:51,442 --> 00:41:54,777 But we continue to uncover the truth, 774 00:41:54,779 --> 00:41:58,747 bit by bit, piece by piece. 775 00:41:58,749 --> 00:42:00,983 If we keep digging, 776 00:42:00,985 --> 00:42:05,421 we may finally reveal the full beauty of creation... 777 00:42:05,423 --> 00:42:10,793 And perhaps steal a glimpse into the mind of God. 778 00:42:13,563 --> 00:42:17,563 == sync, corrected by elderman ==61658

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