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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,507 --> 00:00:06,526 The Universe is full of breathtaking sights. 2 00:00:07,424 --> 00:00:10,258 Glimpsed through powerful telescopes. 3 00:00:12,819 --> 00:00:15,868 But will we ever travel to these places of wonder, 4 00:00:15,893 --> 00:00:17,972 and see them with our own eyes? 5 00:00:28,113 --> 00:00:31,849 Now scientists are designing warp drives, 6 00:00:31,851 --> 00:00:34,518 learning how to pry open wormholes, 7 00:00:34,520 --> 00:00:39,256 and looking for cracks in the fabric of the cosmos. 8 00:00:41,226 --> 00:00:44,895 To bring the entire Universe within our grasp, 9 00:00:44,897 --> 00:00:49,032 they must break a fundamental law of physics. 10 00:00:49,034 --> 00:00:51,435 Can we travel faster than light? 11 00:00:58,409 --> 00:01:02,846 Space, time, life itself. 12 00:01:05,350 --> 00:01:09,586 The secrets of the cosmos lie through the wormhole. 13 00:01:09,588 --> 00:01:13,588 ♪ Through the Wormhole 2x07 ♪ Can We Travel Faster Than Light? Original Air Date on July 20, 2011 14 00:01:13,591 --> 00:01:17,591 == sync, corrected by elderman == 15 00:01:21,397 --> 00:01:25,062 Humans have always gazed up at the stars. 16 00:01:25,128 --> 00:01:27,262 For thousands of years, 17 00:01:27,264 --> 00:01:30,832 we thought they were as close as the Sun and the Moon -- 18 00:01:30,834 --> 00:01:35,337 almost close enough to reach out and touch. 19 00:01:35,339 --> 00:01:40,175 But now we know just how vast the Universe is. 20 00:01:40,177 --> 00:01:46,281 The closest star is about 25 trillion miles away. 21 00:01:46,283 --> 00:01:48,717 The fastest spacecraft we have today 22 00:01:48,719 --> 00:01:52,420 would take more than 10,000 years to get there. 23 00:01:52,422 --> 00:01:55,690 To become true citizens of the cosmos, 24 00:01:55,692 --> 00:02:00,195 we have to do something that physics says is impossible. 25 00:02:00,197 --> 00:02:04,566 We have to travel faster than a beam of light. 26 00:02:07,703 --> 00:02:12,340 As a child, I loved to be out under the Mississippi night sky, 27 00:02:12,342 --> 00:02:14,743 warming myself by a campfire. 28 00:02:16,779 --> 00:02:21,016 I'd spend hours staring at the dancing flames. 29 00:02:21,018 --> 00:02:23,485 What was this light made of? 30 00:02:23,487 --> 00:02:27,722 I wondered how it could seem solid 31 00:02:27,724 --> 00:02:31,259 but then vanish into nothingness. 32 00:02:35,064 --> 00:02:37,899 [ Engine revs ] 33 00:02:49,045 --> 00:02:52,013 Sean Carroll is a theoretical physicist 34 00:02:52,015 --> 00:02:55,216 from the California Institute of Technology. 35 00:02:55,218 --> 00:02:59,554 The mysterious nature of light gets his mind racing. 36 00:03:02,291 --> 00:03:05,627 The speed of light is 186,000 miles per second, 37 00:03:05,629 --> 00:03:09,431 or 670 million miles per hour. 38 00:03:09,433 --> 00:03:11,199 Nothing goes faster than the speed of light. 39 00:03:11,201 --> 00:03:12,967 It really is the maximum speed limit 40 00:03:12,969 --> 00:03:14,402 for everything in the Universe. 41 00:03:14,404 --> 00:03:18,406 Freeman: Light travels a million times faster than sound. 42 00:03:18,408 --> 00:03:22,911 It's fast enough to circle the Earth seven times... 43 00:03:24,146 --> 00:03:26,581 ...in just one second. 44 00:03:26,583 --> 00:03:29,918 But the mystery of light 45 00:03:29,920 --> 00:03:32,554 goes much deeper than its breathtaking speed. 46 00:03:32,556 --> 00:03:35,390 The way it moves is different 47 00:03:35,392 --> 00:03:39,127 from everything else in the Universe. 48 00:03:39,129 --> 00:03:40,662 Carroll: We're gonna pretend for the moment 49 00:03:40,664 --> 00:03:42,964 that I am not a respectable citizen 50 00:03:42,966 --> 00:03:44,799 and would do a little bit of littering. 51 00:03:44,801 --> 00:03:47,235 We're gonna add the velocity of my car, 52 00:03:47,237 --> 00:03:48,937 which is 30 miles an hour, 53 00:03:48,939 --> 00:03:50,605 and if I throw this Slurpee 54 00:03:50,607 --> 00:03:53,241 in the same direction at 20 miles an hour, 55 00:03:53,243 --> 00:03:55,777 since this is an ordinary, everyday event, 56 00:03:55,779 --> 00:03:57,545 the total velocity of the Slurpee 57 00:03:57,547 --> 00:04:00,181 is actually going to be 50 miles per hour. 58 00:04:06,589 --> 00:04:09,357 If I'm going backwards at 30 miles an hour 59 00:04:09,359 --> 00:04:12,327 and I throw the Slurpee forward at 20, 60 00:04:12,329 --> 00:04:14,462 someone on the road will see the Slurpee 61 00:04:14,464 --> 00:04:18,333 move backwards at 10 miles an hour. 62 00:04:18,335 --> 00:04:21,503 Freeman: The speed of Sean's car 63 00:04:21,505 --> 00:04:24,506 changes the velocity of his beverage. 64 00:04:26,642 --> 00:04:29,477 But light doesn't abide by the same laws 65 00:04:29,479 --> 00:04:32,113 that govern cold drinks. 66 00:04:34,350 --> 00:04:36,584 When I push a beam of light out of the car, 67 00:04:36,586 --> 00:04:39,420 the total velocity is always the speed of light. 68 00:04:39,422 --> 00:04:43,124 Light would be seen to be moving at the same speed 69 00:04:43,126 --> 00:04:44,859 no matter what my car was doing. 70 00:04:44,861 --> 00:04:47,562 You don't add the speed of light to the speed of the car. 71 00:04:47,564 --> 00:04:50,431 The speed of light is always the speed of light. 72 00:04:54,904 --> 00:04:57,906 Freeman: These strange rules for how light moves 73 00:04:57,908 --> 00:04:59,407 inspired Albert Einstein 74 00:04:59,409 --> 00:05:02,277 to rewrite the basic laws of the Universe. 75 00:05:02,279 --> 00:05:06,848 He realized that space and time were not fixed and absolute 76 00:05:06,850 --> 00:05:09,117 but connected and relevant. 77 00:05:09,119 --> 00:05:10,418 It was an idea 78 00:05:10,420 --> 00:05:13,688 that led to the most famous equation in history -- 79 00:05:13,690 --> 00:05:16,958 "E" equals "MC" squared. 80 00:05:18,694 --> 00:05:20,195 Carroll: Time and space 81 00:05:20,197 --> 00:05:22,130 are really part of one underlying thing 82 00:05:22,132 --> 00:05:23,665 called space-time, 83 00:05:23,667 --> 00:05:26,434 and how you divide up space-time into time and space 84 00:05:26,436 --> 00:05:28,236 depends on how you're moving. 85 00:05:28,238 --> 00:05:30,104 So there's various corollaries of that. 86 00:05:30,106 --> 00:05:32,941 Once Einstein realized that time and space were the same thing, 87 00:05:32,943 --> 00:05:35,743 he realized that energy and mass are the same thing. 88 00:05:35,745 --> 00:05:38,580 Freeman: "E" equals "MC" squared 89 00:05:38,582 --> 00:05:41,983 implies that the more energy you inject into a rocket, 90 00:05:41,985 --> 00:05:43,685 the more mass it gains, 91 00:05:43,687 --> 00:05:47,555 and the more massive it is, the harder it is to accelerate. 92 00:05:47,557 --> 00:05:50,558 Boosting it to the speed of light is impossible 93 00:05:50,560 --> 00:05:52,193 because, in the process, 94 00:05:52,195 --> 00:05:56,331 the rocket would become infinitely massive. 95 00:05:56,333 --> 00:05:58,199 The energy it takes to accelerate 96 00:05:58,201 --> 00:05:59,867 increases and increases 97 00:05:59,869 --> 00:06:02,403 as you come closer to the speed of light. 98 00:06:02,405 --> 00:06:05,640 If, in principle, you wanted to go the speed of light, 99 00:06:05,642 --> 00:06:07,709 you need an infinite amount of energy 100 00:06:07,711 --> 00:06:09,143 to accelerate you that fast. 101 00:06:09,145 --> 00:06:10,878 Or you're gonna get more and more energy, 102 00:06:10,880 --> 00:06:13,248 but you're not going to get that much more speed. 103 00:06:13,250 --> 00:06:19,254 Freeman: Relativity makes light both our friend and foe. 104 00:06:21,090 --> 00:06:23,691 Its tremendous speed lets us communicate 105 00:06:23,693 --> 00:06:28,029 between any two points on Earth almost instantaneously. 106 00:06:28,031 --> 00:06:30,498 On the other hand, 107 00:06:30,500 --> 00:06:33,334 because we can never move faster than light, 108 00:06:33,336 --> 00:06:35,570 we're stranded in the Solar System, 109 00:06:35,572 --> 00:06:38,539 with the stars impossibly far away. 110 00:06:42,611 --> 00:06:48,116 This man believes he can help us escape our cosmic prison. 111 00:06:48,118 --> 00:06:52,353 He think he's found a way to bend Einstein's rules 112 00:06:52,355 --> 00:06:55,523 and allow us to reach the stars. 113 00:06:55,525 --> 00:06:59,327 Miguel Alcubierre, a physicist in Mexico City, 114 00:06:59,329 --> 00:07:02,297 has invented the warp drive. 115 00:07:02,299 --> 00:07:04,299 The warp drive is a way to get from one place to another 116 00:07:04,301 --> 00:07:06,234 that's very different from the way we normally do it. 117 00:07:06,236 --> 00:07:08,469 So, normally we just move through space 118 00:07:08,471 --> 00:07:10,338 like we walk, or we fly, or whatever, 119 00:07:10,340 --> 00:07:12,573 but the warp drive, the idea is to use space, 120 00:07:12,575 --> 00:07:14,575 to let space do the motion. 121 00:07:14,577 --> 00:07:19,080 Freeman: Miguel's idea stems from another aspect 122 00:07:19,082 --> 00:07:21,616 of Einstein's theory of relativity -- 123 00:07:21,618 --> 00:07:26,087 that the shape of space can be distorted by mass or energy. 124 00:07:27,956 --> 00:07:31,059 So, the basic idea is you expand space behind you, 125 00:07:31,061 --> 00:07:32,827 which actually makes you even further away 126 00:07:32,829 --> 00:07:34,028 from those objects behind you, 127 00:07:34,030 --> 00:07:35,563 and you contract space in front of you, 128 00:07:35,565 --> 00:07:37,699 getting closer to the objects in front of you. 129 00:07:37,701 --> 00:07:38,900 But you don't move at all. 130 00:07:38,902 --> 00:07:41,302 Assume that this is a spaceship. 131 00:07:41,304 --> 00:07:44,138 Normally, you would have to fly through space like that, 132 00:07:44,140 --> 00:07:46,541 and you cannot do this faster than the speed of light. 133 00:07:46,543 --> 00:07:48,743 But instead of that, let us contract space here 134 00:07:48,745 --> 00:07:51,612 and expand it here, like this. 135 00:07:55,651 --> 00:07:57,185 So, you see, now the spaceship 136 00:07:57,187 --> 00:08:00,621 is getting closer to this side and further away from that side. 137 00:08:00,623 --> 00:08:01,856 Bur it's actually not moving at all 138 00:08:01,858 --> 00:08:03,591 with respect to the objects around it. 139 00:08:03,593 --> 00:08:07,161 Freeman: The beauty of Miguel's idea 140 00:08:07,163 --> 00:08:10,331 is that the spaceship actually stands still 141 00:08:10,333 --> 00:08:13,201 inside the bubble of space-time. 142 00:08:13,203 --> 00:08:17,071 Since it's not moving, it doesn't gain any mass. 143 00:08:17,073 --> 00:08:19,173 You can actually go at any speed, 144 00:08:19,175 --> 00:08:21,042 because there's no limit in the laws of physics 145 00:08:21,044 --> 00:08:23,511 that tells you how fast you can warp space, 146 00:08:23,513 --> 00:08:26,714 how fast you can expand or contract space. 147 00:08:26,716 --> 00:08:29,884 You can do it at any speed you want. 148 00:08:29,886 --> 00:08:33,921 Freeman: Miguel's warp drive is an ingenious way 149 00:08:33,923 --> 00:08:37,225 around Einstein's cosmic speed limit. 150 00:08:37,227 --> 00:08:39,861 But it's still theoretical, 151 00:08:39,863 --> 00:08:43,431 and lacks one crucial ingredient -- 152 00:08:43,433 --> 00:08:46,701 an exotic substance called negative energy, 153 00:08:46,703 --> 00:08:53,107 something that many scientists aren't even sure exists. 154 00:08:53,109 --> 00:08:56,778 But one man does believe in negative energy. 155 00:08:56,780 --> 00:09:00,748 He even claims he's created it in his lab. 156 00:09:04,076 --> 00:09:06,344 The warp drive. 157 00:09:06,346 --> 00:09:09,180 It sounds like science fiction, 158 00:09:09,182 --> 00:09:12,651 but the idea of surfing across the Universe 159 00:09:12,653 --> 00:09:15,120 in a warping bubble of space 160 00:09:15,122 --> 00:09:19,391 would make perfect sense to Einstein. 161 00:09:19,393 --> 00:09:21,926 There is one snag. 162 00:09:21,928 --> 00:09:24,129 A warp drive can only function 163 00:09:24,131 --> 00:09:26,598 with a mysterious power source -- 164 00:09:26,600 --> 00:09:28,400 negative energy. 165 00:09:28,402 --> 00:09:32,270 And today, most scientists believe negative energy 166 00:09:32,272 --> 00:09:35,307 is just an unproven theoretical concept. 167 00:09:39,578 --> 00:09:43,948 But Steve Lamoreaux, an atomic physicist at Yale University, 168 00:09:43,950 --> 00:09:48,920 has made it his mission to track down this exotic form of energy, 169 00:09:48,922 --> 00:09:52,057 and he believes the answer is all around us 170 00:09:52,059 --> 00:09:54,359 in the fabric of space itself. 171 00:09:56,696 --> 00:09:58,196 We normally think of the vacuum of space 172 00:09:58,198 --> 00:09:59,531 as being completely empty, 173 00:09:59,533 --> 00:10:04,402 but, in fact, there is energy density in empty space, 174 00:10:04,404 --> 00:10:06,838 and we call that the zero-point energy of space. 175 00:10:08,741 --> 00:10:11,309 Freeman: The theory of quantum mechanics 176 00:10:11,311 --> 00:10:14,546 predicts that empty space is actually constantly shimmering 177 00:10:14,548 --> 00:10:17,082 with microscopic pulses of energy 178 00:10:17,084 --> 00:10:20,251 as particles pop in and out of existence. 179 00:10:20,253 --> 00:10:21,953 To make negative energy, 180 00:10:21,955 --> 00:10:25,890 you have to find a way to suppress this constant chatter. 181 00:10:25,892 --> 00:10:29,094 Steve realized the way to do this 182 00:10:29,096 --> 00:10:31,963 was to change the shape of space. 183 00:10:35,034 --> 00:10:36,701 Lamoreaux: There's a nice analogy. 184 00:10:36,703 --> 00:10:40,572 If you have two ships on a rough ocean, 185 00:10:40,574 --> 00:10:44,142 one ship will kind of reflect waves from it. 186 00:10:44,144 --> 00:10:46,244 The other one does the same thing. 187 00:10:46,246 --> 00:10:49,214 So the wave density between the two ships is a little bit less 188 00:10:49,216 --> 00:10:52,150 compared to one by itself which is surrounded by a rough sea. 189 00:10:52,152 --> 00:10:55,120 So, you put two ships on a rough sea, 190 00:10:55,122 --> 00:10:58,323 they'll be mutually attracted, and they'll come together. 191 00:10:58,325 --> 00:11:00,425 Freeman: Steve reasoned that if he created 192 00:11:00,427 --> 00:11:02,460 a narrow-enough region of empty space 193 00:11:02,462 --> 00:11:04,596 like the area between the two ships, 194 00:11:04,598 --> 00:11:07,499 then some of the shimmering zero-point energy 195 00:11:07,501 --> 00:11:09,367 would not fit inside it. 196 00:11:09,369 --> 00:11:12,971 The energy of empty space outside the narrow region 197 00:11:12,973 --> 00:11:16,241 would be stronger and force it to shrink. 198 00:11:16,243 --> 00:11:20,845 That force would be the signature of negative energy, 199 00:11:20,847 --> 00:11:25,450 and Steve set out to create it in his lab. 200 00:11:25,452 --> 00:11:28,753 It was an idea that would consume him 201 00:11:28,755 --> 00:11:31,923 for more than a decade. 202 00:11:31,925 --> 00:11:33,491 We call the experiment "The Time Machine." 203 00:11:33,493 --> 00:11:34,692 Actually, the "Time Machine 2." 204 00:11:34,694 --> 00:11:36,528 This is the second version of the experiment. 205 00:11:36,530 --> 00:11:40,064 We call it that because I invested 15 years of my life 206 00:11:40,066 --> 00:11:41,065 in this measurement. 207 00:11:41,067 --> 00:11:42,467 That's a lot of time. 208 00:11:42,469 --> 00:11:45,703 So, it's a time-wasting machine, more accurately defined. 209 00:11:45,705 --> 00:11:49,974 Freeman: Inside this vacuum chamber 210 00:11:49,976 --> 00:11:51,609 are two small metal plates 211 00:11:51,611 --> 00:11:53,912 sitting less than the width of a human hair 212 00:11:53,914 --> 00:11:56,548 apart from one another. 213 00:11:56,550 --> 00:11:58,917 To get them that close and not touch, 214 00:11:58,919 --> 00:12:00,952 the metal has to be perfectly flat, 215 00:12:00,954 --> 00:12:03,721 down almost to the atomic level. 216 00:12:06,425 --> 00:12:09,227 The zero-point fluctuations of free space 217 00:12:09,229 --> 00:12:11,296 won't fit between those plates, as well, 218 00:12:11,298 --> 00:12:13,398 so when you bring these two plates together, 219 00:12:13,400 --> 00:12:15,467 there are fewer fluctuations between the plates 220 00:12:15,469 --> 00:12:16,701 than there are outside the plates. 221 00:12:16,703 --> 00:12:18,136 The force builds up, 222 00:12:18,138 --> 00:12:20,104 and it actually gets stronger and stronger 223 00:12:20,106 --> 00:12:22,006 as the plates get closer together, 224 00:12:22,008 --> 00:12:25,910 and that force we refer to as arising from negative energy. 225 00:12:25,912 --> 00:12:30,348 Freeman: The zero-point energy fluctuations outside the plates 226 00:12:30,350 --> 00:12:32,417 are stronger than those between, 227 00:12:32,419 --> 00:12:36,354 so pressure from the outside pushes them together. 228 00:12:36,356 --> 00:12:38,923 Or think of it another way. 229 00:12:38,925 --> 00:12:43,962 The negative energy between the plates expands space around it. 230 00:12:47,633 --> 00:12:51,169 Steve's years of meticulous labor 231 00:12:51,171 --> 00:12:53,471 have made him the first person on Earth 232 00:12:53,473 --> 00:12:56,541 to have measured a force produced by negative energy. 233 00:12:56,543 --> 00:13:00,144 But the amount he has detected is miniscule. 234 00:13:02,715 --> 00:13:05,283 The force is equal to the weight of a red blood cell 235 00:13:05,285 --> 00:13:08,386 in the Earth's gravitational field, so it's tiny. 236 00:13:08,388 --> 00:13:11,456 But if you add up thousands of these plates 237 00:13:11,458 --> 00:13:12,724 like we have in our experiment, 238 00:13:12,726 --> 00:13:16,261 you can actually achieve a palpable and useful force. 239 00:13:16,263 --> 00:13:18,429 Freeman: Steve's discovery 240 00:13:18,431 --> 00:13:22,033 may only be a baby step towards warp drive, 241 00:13:22,035 --> 00:13:23,735 but he's confirmed 242 00:13:23,737 --> 00:13:27,138 that Miguel Alcubierre's warp drive theory 243 00:13:27,140 --> 00:13:29,774 does not violate the laws of physics. 244 00:13:35,047 --> 00:13:40,151 The energy needed to warp space and propel a warp drive forward 245 00:13:40,153 --> 00:13:42,687 actually exists. 246 00:13:42,689 --> 00:13:46,824 But he's also opened the door to something else -- 247 00:13:46,826 --> 00:13:52,297 the wormhole, a rip in the fabric of space itself. 248 00:13:53,966 --> 00:13:57,368 If this theoretical object exists, 249 00:13:57,370 --> 00:13:59,771 you could enter it in one place 250 00:13:59,773 --> 00:14:03,975 and emerge moments later clear across the galaxy. 251 00:14:03,977 --> 00:14:09,013 But are wormholes more than a science-fiction fantasy? 252 00:14:09,015 --> 00:14:13,718 And, if so, how would we know where they would take us? 253 00:14:13,720 --> 00:14:19,557 Now one physicist is daring to enter these strange portals 254 00:14:19,559 --> 00:14:23,227 and plot a course through the wormhole. 255 00:14:25,791 --> 00:14:27,959 We've all heard of wormholes. 256 00:14:27,961 --> 00:14:29,794 They're cosmic shortcuts 257 00:14:29,796 --> 00:14:34,198 that put alien worlds practically on our doorstep. 258 00:14:34,200 --> 00:14:37,401 But how would we actually build one? 259 00:14:37,403 --> 00:14:40,138 And how would we use one? 260 00:14:40,140 --> 00:14:45,109 Travel by wormhole requires exotic technology 261 00:14:45,111 --> 00:14:50,248 and the courage to jump into the unknown. 262 00:14:56,855 --> 00:15:00,591 Our planet is riddled with passageways. 263 00:15:00,593 --> 00:15:05,363 We regularly travel through strong, stable tunnels 264 00:15:05,365 --> 00:15:07,799 cut through massive mountains. 265 00:15:10,335 --> 00:15:13,871 Well, here we're entering a nice, solid tunnel. 266 00:15:13,873 --> 00:15:17,175 It's made of -- looks like concrete and reinforced steel. 267 00:15:17,177 --> 00:15:19,110 Very solid. 268 00:15:19,112 --> 00:15:21,312 A reliable means of transportation. 269 00:15:21,314 --> 00:15:23,815 I drive my car in. I'm gonna come out. 270 00:15:23,817 --> 00:15:26,918 I know what's happening at all times. 271 00:15:26,920 --> 00:15:30,788 Freeman: Physicist Steven Shu is fascinated by the concepts 272 00:15:30,790 --> 00:15:33,191 of stability and instability, 273 00:15:33,193 --> 00:15:34,892 be they in the stock market... 274 00:15:34,894 --> 00:15:35,893 Sell. 275 00:15:35,895 --> 00:15:37,328 ...In real-estate values... 276 00:15:37,330 --> 00:15:38,496 Long. 277 00:15:38,498 --> 00:15:41,933 ...Or in space-time wormholes. 278 00:15:41,935 --> 00:15:43,467 Shu: One of the fundamental properties 279 00:15:43,469 --> 00:15:46,170 that we look at in physics when we look at a particular system 280 00:15:46,172 --> 00:15:48,673 is whether that system is stable or unstable. 281 00:15:48,675 --> 00:15:52,176 An example would be a pen which is balanced like this. 282 00:15:52,178 --> 00:15:54,712 It might be okay when it's exactly balanced, 283 00:15:54,714 --> 00:15:56,781 but even a slight bump will send it 284 00:15:56,783 --> 00:15:59,750 into a drastically different state. 285 00:15:59,752 --> 00:16:02,687 We decided to look at whether one could build a wormhole 286 00:16:02,689 --> 00:16:04,555 that had nice properties 287 00:16:04,557 --> 00:16:08,492 such as its behavior is predictable and it's stable. 288 00:16:08,494 --> 00:16:09,594 Those are two criteria 289 00:16:09,596 --> 00:16:11,395 you'd like to have for a real wormhole. 290 00:16:11,397 --> 00:16:13,865 Freeman: The rules of building wormholes 291 00:16:13,867 --> 00:16:16,701 start with Einstein's theory of relativity, 292 00:16:16,703 --> 00:16:20,171 which tells you how to bend and shape space 293 00:16:20,173 --> 00:16:23,574 as if it were a flexible sheet. 294 00:16:23,576 --> 00:16:25,343 Imagine this sheet of paper, 295 00:16:25,345 --> 00:16:28,546 and imagine that you're an ant living on this sheet of paper. 296 00:16:28,548 --> 00:16:30,948 If you want to travel from this point to this point, 297 00:16:30,950 --> 00:16:34,085 you might have to walk all the way from here to here. 298 00:16:34,087 --> 00:16:38,856 But if the paper were curved, the long way around 299 00:16:38,858 --> 00:16:42,660 would involve walking all the way around the paper like this. 300 00:16:42,662 --> 00:16:45,062 But you can imagine that there would be a little tube 301 00:16:45,064 --> 00:16:47,431 connecting this point directly to this point, 302 00:16:47,433 --> 00:16:50,201 and the ant could just slip through. 303 00:16:50,203 --> 00:16:53,537 Narrator: Wormholes in science fiction 304 00:16:53,539 --> 00:16:57,241 have gaping entrances that a starship can dive into. 305 00:16:59,878 --> 00:17:02,380 But those two-dimensional renderings 306 00:17:02,382 --> 00:17:06,250 gloss over the true architecture of wormholes. 307 00:17:08,186 --> 00:17:10,187 In this two-dimensional analogy, 308 00:17:10,189 --> 00:17:14,025 the opening of the straw is just a circle. 309 00:17:14,027 --> 00:17:16,260 But, because we live in three dimensions, 310 00:17:16,262 --> 00:17:17,561 the opening of the wormhole 311 00:17:17,563 --> 00:17:20,631 would actually be like the interior of a bubble. 312 00:17:25,938 --> 00:17:27,838 Freeman: This is what the mouth 313 00:17:27,840 --> 00:17:29,907 of a real wormhole might look like 314 00:17:29,909 --> 00:17:34,145 if they are lurking somewhere out there in space. 315 00:17:34,147 --> 00:17:35,446 But Steven wondered 316 00:17:35,448 --> 00:17:38,849 if we might be able to build our own from scratch. 317 00:17:42,888 --> 00:17:46,724 A cosmic engineer would first create two mouths 318 00:17:46,726 --> 00:17:49,260 and connect them. 319 00:17:49,262 --> 00:17:52,997 Then, he would drag one of the mouths light-years away -- 320 00:17:52,999 --> 00:17:57,635 but the tunnel between the two mouths is not part of our space 321 00:17:57,637 --> 00:18:00,071 and could remain very short. 322 00:18:00,073 --> 00:18:01,672 It's a simple idea, 323 00:18:01,674 --> 00:18:04,241 but the vast amount of negative energy 324 00:18:04,243 --> 00:18:08,145 needed to keep the wormhole's mouth and tunnel from collapsing 325 00:18:08,147 --> 00:18:11,382 is tricky stuff to control. 326 00:18:11,384 --> 00:18:13,951 It's very challenging to stabilize a wormhole. 327 00:18:13,953 --> 00:18:18,723 All wormholes, as far as we know from general relativity, 328 00:18:18,725 --> 00:18:22,293 require this kind of special negative energy exotic matter. 329 00:18:22,295 --> 00:18:26,831 The question is whether that matter itself can be stable. 330 00:18:26,833 --> 00:18:31,302 Freeman: Steven crunched the numbers on how negative energy 331 00:18:31,304 --> 00:18:35,072 would react with normal matter on the fringes of the wormhole 332 00:18:35,074 --> 00:18:38,843 to discover whether they could coexist in a stable way. 333 00:18:38,845 --> 00:18:42,713 Shu: And we've proven mathematically they're unstable. 334 00:18:45,784 --> 00:18:48,352 That would be a very dangerous device to use, 335 00:18:48,354 --> 00:18:50,154 because once you bump it a little bit, 336 00:18:50,156 --> 00:18:53,290 the entire device could just fall apart. 337 00:18:53,292 --> 00:18:55,926 If I try to get into an unstable wormhole, 338 00:18:55,928 --> 00:18:58,095 it's like trying to put my finger into this bubble. 339 00:18:58,097 --> 00:19:00,131 It'll just pop. 340 00:19:00,133 --> 00:19:03,134 Freeman: The negative energy needed to keep a wormhole open 341 00:19:03,136 --> 00:19:05,569 is inherently too unstable. 342 00:19:05,571 --> 00:19:07,972 A man-made wormhole would collapse 343 00:19:07,974 --> 00:19:11,642 the instant someone tries to step inside. 344 00:19:11,644 --> 00:19:13,844 But there might be another way. 345 00:19:13,846 --> 00:19:18,449 Not by using cosmic shortcuts that we have built ourselves, 346 00:19:18,451 --> 00:19:20,518 but by searching for microscopic ones 347 00:19:20,520 --> 00:19:23,287 that could be hiding all around us. 348 00:19:23,289 --> 00:19:24,588 Just as empty space 349 00:19:24,590 --> 00:19:27,525 is fizzing with microscopic pulses of energy, 350 00:19:27,527 --> 00:19:28,993 some theorists believe 351 00:19:28,995 --> 00:19:32,596 it could also be riddled with microscopic holes. 352 00:19:32,598 --> 00:19:34,098 There could be quantum wormholes 353 00:19:34,100 --> 00:19:36,133 that are just left over from the Big Bang, 354 00:19:36,135 --> 00:19:38,002 or at very, very short distances, 355 00:19:38,004 --> 00:19:39,904 you could have little fluctuations 356 00:19:39,906 --> 00:19:42,973 where space-time just connects to itself in a funny way, 357 00:19:42,975 --> 00:19:45,009 and that would be a quantum wormhole. 358 00:19:45,011 --> 00:19:46,777 If they just happened as a little fluctuation, 359 00:19:46,779 --> 00:19:50,848 they would be incredibly tiny, like 10 to the minus-35 meters. 360 00:19:50,850 --> 00:19:54,418 Freeman: Microscopic quantum wormholes 361 00:19:54,420 --> 00:19:56,520 are quantum fluctuations in space 362 00:19:56,522 --> 00:20:01,725 that perpetually appear, disappear, and reappear again. 363 00:20:01,727 --> 00:20:04,462 Since we don't have to construct their portals, 364 00:20:04,464 --> 00:20:08,899 Steven suspects they might be safe to enter. 365 00:20:08,901 --> 00:20:14,972 But before you try jumping into one, be aware there's a catch. 366 00:20:14,974 --> 00:20:17,975 Shu: Quantum mechanical things are fuzzy. 367 00:20:17,977 --> 00:20:20,344 They're intrinsically random and unpredictable. 368 00:20:20,346 --> 00:20:21,979 So if we were in a quantum wormhole, 369 00:20:21,981 --> 00:20:23,514 we might be shaken around, 370 00:20:23,516 --> 00:20:26,383 and we wouldn't quite know where we're gonna come out. 371 00:20:26,385 --> 00:20:28,185 You wouldn't want to get into a tunnel 372 00:20:28,187 --> 00:20:30,387 that might end in the bottom of the Pacific Ocean 373 00:20:30,389 --> 00:20:32,790 or on a mountaintop that you didn't want to be on. 374 00:20:32,792 --> 00:20:37,161 Freeman: Quantum wormholes have no estimated times of arrival, 375 00:20:37,163 --> 00:20:40,598 and your destination is unknown. 376 00:20:43,768 --> 00:20:48,105 You could end up anywhere 377 00:20:48,107 --> 00:20:49,907 or anywhen. 378 00:20:59,451 --> 00:21:02,253 Traveling faster than light through a wormhole 379 00:21:02,255 --> 00:21:04,255 would be a risky ride. 380 00:21:04,257 --> 00:21:07,591 You've got to be willing to roll the dice. 381 00:21:07,593 --> 00:21:13,030 But there may be a safer way for the cautious traveler. 382 00:21:13,032 --> 00:21:17,368 Imagine being able to move from here to there 383 00:21:17,370 --> 00:21:20,638 without ever moving at all. 384 00:21:23,687 --> 00:21:29,224 Well, mankind's first journey to the stars looks a long way off. 385 00:21:29,226 --> 00:21:33,128 We won't master the technology of wormholes and warp drives 386 00:21:33,130 --> 00:21:35,497 for centuries at least. 387 00:21:35,499 --> 00:21:39,234 But there's another way to zip around the cosmos. 388 00:21:39,236 --> 00:21:42,771 We could turn our bodies into information 389 00:21:42,773 --> 00:21:47,476 and send that information from place to place 390 00:21:47,478 --> 00:21:50,045 at the speed of light. 391 00:21:53,016 --> 00:21:55,184 Chris Monroe and Steve Olmschenk 392 00:21:55,186 --> 00:21:59,088 are quantum physicists at the University of Maryland. 393 00:21:59,090 --> 00:22:02,324 They are pioneers of teleportation. 394 00:22:02,326 --> 00:22:05,060 Their work is all about making connections 395 00:22:05,062 --> 00:22:08,230 between events taking place in two separate locations -- 396 00:22:08,232 --> 00:22:13,001 events which normally have no connection whatsoever. 397 00:22:15,371 --> 00:22:19,041 We're gonna demonstrate a simple experiment using standard coins 398 00:22:19,043 --> 00:22:21,310 just to show the randomness of the individual coins 399 00:22:21,312 --> 00:22:24,079 and the randomness between the two coins. 400 00:22:24,081 --> 00:22:25,147 All right. 401 00:22:25,149 --> 00:22:27,583 Flip. 402 00:22:27,585 --> 00:22:29,418 Heads. Tails. 403 00:22:31,988 --> 00:22:33,655 Tails. Tails. 404 00:22:33,657 --> 00:22:36,024 So, as you can see, with two regular coins, 405 00:22:36,026 --> 00:22:39,528 we get completely random results between each other. 406 00:22:39,530 --> 00:22:41,063 Freeman: If Chris and Steve 407 00:22:41,065 --> 00:22:44,133 could make the two coins always land the same way, 408 00:22:44,135 --> 00:22:46,034 then they would have succeeded 409 00:22:46,036 --> 00:22:50,339 in teleporting the information on the coin -- heads or tails -- 410 00:22:50,341 --> 00:22:52,508 from one place to the other. 411 00:22:52,510 --> 00:22:56,545 And they had an idea of just how to do this. 412 00:22:56,547 --> 00:22:59,782 They would use quantum entanglement, 413 00:22:59,784 --> 00:23:02,317 a strange effect that can create a link 414 00:23:02,319 --> 00:23:04,787 between microscopic objects. 415 00:23:09,159 --> 00:23:11,160 When a bomb explodes 416 00:23:11,162 --> 00:23:13,962 and two pieces of shrapnel come flying out, 417 00:23:13,964 --> 00:23:18,400 each one moves independently and is unaffected by the other. 418 00:23:18,402 --> 00:23:22,070 Now imagine a bomb in a subatomic world. 419 00:23:22,072 --> 00:23:24,640 Two particles of shrapnel fly out, 420 00:23:24,642 --> 00:23:27,142 but this time, quantum entanglement 421 00:23:27,144 --> 00:23:28,977 means the way one moves 422 00:23:28,979 --> 00:23:31,814 entirely dependent on the other. 423 00:23:31,816 --> 00:23:34,082 If one piece is spinning clockwise, 424 00:23:34,084 --> 00:23:36,218 you can deduce that the other piece 425 00:23:36,220 --> 00:23:39,087 is moving counterclockwise. 426 00:23:39,089 --> 00:23:42,291 If Steve and Chris' coins were entangled, 427 00:23:42,293 --> 00:23:46,728 whenever Steve tosses heads, Chris will toss tails. 428 00:23:46,730 --> 00:23:51,366 If Steve tosses tails, Chris will toss heads. 429 00:23:51,368 --> 00:23:53,101 Tails. Heads. 430 00:23:53,103 --> 00:23:56,939 So, even though the coin flip on one side is completely random, 431 00:23:56,941 --> 00:23:59,274 there are correlations between the two coins, 432 00:23:59,276 --> 00:24:02,144 and this is the defining feature of entanglement. 433 00:24:03,546 --> 00:24:06,915 Freeman: Physicists have been struggling to use entanglement 434 00:24:06,917 --> 00:24:10,786 to teleport matter from place to place for more than two decades. 435 00:24:10,788 --> 00:24:14,857 Steve and Chris are the first to succeed. 436 00:24:14,859 --> 00:24:20,462 They begin with two atoms of an element called ytterbium. 437 00:24:20,464 --> 00:24:22,965 The experiment is, we start with two trapped atoms 438 00:24:22,967 --> 00:24:24,633 that are across the table from each other. 439 00:24:24,635 --> 00:24:27,135 Monroe: These atoms are sort of levitated with fields, 440 00:24:27,137 --> 00:24:28,503 like a levitated train. 441 00:24:28,505 --> 00:24:30,672 They're in a vacuum chamber, so nothing touches them. 442 00:24:30,674 --> 00:24:32,541 They're almost complete-- 443 00:24:32,543 --> 00:24:35,744 they're as close as you can get to perfect isolation. 444 00:24:35,746 --> 00:24:38,580 Freeman: Steve and Chris 445 00:24:38,582 --> 00:24:41,984 write quantum information called qubits 446 00:24:41,986 --> 00:24:45,387 into the first atom using microwave radiation. 447 00:24:45,389 --> 00:24:49,324 The qubits become the atoms' heads or tails. 448 00:24:49,326 --> 00:24:50,993 Then, we excite both atoms 449 00:24:50,995 --> 00:24:52,594 with this fast pulse of light, 450 00:24:52,596 --> 00:24:53,795 and if we do it right, 451 00:24:53,797 --> 00:24:55,464 we can make sure that the photon 452 00:24:55,466 --> 00:24:57,232 is then entangled with the internal state 453 00:24:57,234 --> 00:24:58,267 of the atom. 454 00:24:58,269 --> 00:25:01,169 The photons become the messengers, 455 00:25:01,171 --> 00:25:04,273 carrying the atoms' information across the lab. 456 00:25:04,275 --> 00:25:06,675 Chris and Steve aim the photon 457 00:25:06,677 --> 00:25:09,845 from each atom at the same target. 458 00:25:09,847 --> 00:25:12,414 When they meet, they become entangled, 459 00:25:12,416 --> 00:25:17,052 which, in turn, entangles the two atoms they came from. 460 00:25:17,054 --> 00:25:18,253 They've been nowhere near each other, 461 00:25:18,255 --> 00:25:19,521 they've never seen each other, 462 00:25:19,523 --> 00:25:20,689 but now these two atoms 463 00:25:20,691 --> 00:25:22,424 which are across the table from each other 464 00:25:22,426 --> 00:25:23,725 are now entangled, 465 00:25:23,727 --> 00:25:25,794 and they somehow share the information 466 00:25:25,796 --> 00:25:27,529 that we first wrote into the first atom. 467 00:25:27,531 --> 00:25:29,331 That's called quantum teleportation, 468 00:25:29,333 --> 00:25:31,600 because the information, in a sense, 469 00:25:31,602 --> 00:25:32,868 never really made the trip. 470 00:25:32,870 --> 00:25:34,937 There was never really any physical interaction. 471 00:25:34,939 --> 00:25:37,306 It's all because of this magic of entanglement 472 00:25:37,308 --> 00:25:39,007 that allows us to do that. 473 00:25:39,009 --> 00:25:42,544 And I think Einstein had the best words to describe it. 474 00:25:42,546 --> 00:25:45,347 He called entanglement "Spooky action at a distance." 475 00:25:47,517 --> 00:25:50,585 Freeman: Steve and Chris have successfully transferred 476 00:25:50,587 --> 00:25:53,522 the information from one atom to the other. 477 00:25:53,524 --> 00:25:57,659 In other words, they teleported the atom. 478 00:25:57,661 --> 00:26:01,930 It's the first time anyone has ever beamed matter across space 479 00:26:01,932 --> 00:26:04,166 at the speed of light. 480 00:26:04,168 --> 00:26:05,867 And they're already working 481 00:26:05,869 --> 00:26:09,204 on more ambitious teleportation experiments. 482 00:26:09,206 --> 00:26:10,906 Monroe: But the good news is, 483 00:26:10,908 --> 00:26:15,277 this idea works with matter more complex than a single atom -- 484 00:26:15,279 --> 00:26:17,245 say, a few hundred atoms. 485 00:26:17,247 --> 00:26:20,382 Freeman: A few hundred atoms would be progress, 486 00:26:20,384 --> 00:26:22,050 but the real question 487 00:26:22,052 --> 00:26:25,087 is whether we will ever be able to teleport the state 488 00:26:25,089 --> 00:26:28,357 of all the 7,000 trillion trillion atoms 489 00:26:28,359 --> 00:26:31,827 in an entire person from one place to another 490 00:26:31,829 --> 00:26:37,599 to turn a pile of organic matter into a copy of you or me. 491 00:26:37,601 --> 00:26:39,267 It's a tall order. 492 00:26:41,204 --> 00:26:42,671 Well, we have a cherry pie, 493 00:26:42,673 --> 00:26:46,641 and the pie is in a particular state. 494 00:26:46,643 --> 00:26:50,345 All the atoms, mostly carbon and organic molecules, 495 00:26:50,347 --> 00:26:51,613 make up this pie, 496 00:26:51,615 --> 00:26:53,382 but they're obviously in a state 497 00:26:53,384 --> 00:26:55,517 that we all recognize as a cherry pie. 498 00:26:55,519 --> 00:26:56,718 Looks pretty good. 499 00:26:56,720 --> 00:26:59,054 Freeman: In order for Chris 500 00:26:59,056 --> 00:27:01,490 to teleport the atoms inside the cherry pie, 501 00:27:01,492 --> 00:27:05,093 he needs to gather information about every single one of them, 502 00:27:05,095 --> 00:27:08,096 which gets a little messy. 503 00:27:15,405 --> 00:27:18,473 All the atoms in here are representative of a cherry pie, 504 00:27:18,475 --> 00:27:20,575 but it certainly doesn't look like a cherry pie, 505 00:27:20,577 --> 00:27:22,077 and the reason is the atoms aren't arranged 506 00:27:22,079 --> 00:27:23,311 in the right way. 507 00:27:23,313 --> 00:27:26,348 They are about 10 to the 27 atoms in this tin. 508 00:27:26,350 --> 00:27:28,750 That's a billion billion billion atoms. 509 00:27:28,752 --> 00:27:30,752 Consider the number of possibilities 510 00:27:30,754 --> 00:27:33,889 that a billion billion billion atoms can be arranged. 511 00:27:33,891 --> 00:27:36,792 It's a number that's so ungodly huge 512 00:27:36,794 --> 00:27:38,693 we don't have enough space in the Universe 513 00:27:38,695 --> 00:27:39,761 even to write it down. 514 00:27:39,763 --> 00:27:42,330 Freeman: Teleporting a human being 515 00:27:42,332 --> 00:27:45,434 is far beyond our capabilities...for now. 516 00:27:45,436 --> 00:27:48,670 But Steve and Chris believe if it is possible, 517 00:27:48,672 --> 00:27:52,107 quantum entanglement will be how it's done. 518 00:27:52,109 --> 00:27:55,177 Quantum mechanics has been verified repeatedly in the lab, 519 00:27:55,179 --> 00:27:57,746 our labs and many around the world, 520 00:27:57,748 --> 00:27:59,147 over and over again for decades. 521 00:27:59,149 --> 00:28:01,650 We've continually verified quantum mechanics 522 00:28:01,652 --> 00:28:03,485 as an accurate description of nature. 523 00:28:03,487 --> 00:28:05,387 Monroe: If I am fundamentally quantum mechanical, 524 00:28:05,389 --> 00:28:08,123 teleportation better involve quantum mechanics. 525 00:28:08,125 --> 00:28:09,691 I would say if there is a different way 526 00:28:09,693 --> 00:28:10,826 to teleport objects, 527 00:28:10,828 --> 00:28:12,794 then, somehow, there's a different theory 528 00:28:12,796 --> 00:28:14,463 than quantum mechanics out there, 529 00:28:14,465 --> 00:28:15,997 and we just don't know it yet. 530 00:28:15,999 --> 00:28:22,104 Freeman: We are still a long way from traveling from star to star 531 00:28:22,106 --> 00:28:24,639 as fast as a beam of light. 532 00:28:24,641 --> 00:28:26,975 But what if everything we thought we understood 533 00:28:26,977 --> 00:28:29,744 about light is actually wrong? 534 00:28:31,814 --> 00:28:36,218 This scientist is turning the laws of physics upside down. 535 00:28:37,286 --> 00:28:38,987 And if he's right, 536 00:28:38,989 --> 00:28:41,490 the speed limit Einstein slapped on the Universe 537 00:28:41,492 --> 00:28:43,992 might have to be changed. 538 00:28:47,381 --> 00:28:49,916 We live in a Universe with a speed limit -- 539 00:28:49,918 --> 00:28:55,221 670 million miles per hour. 540 00:28:55,223 --> 00:29:00,893 Well, that's what Albert Einstein said. 541 00:29:00,895 --> 00:29:04,297 But what if Einstein was wrong? 542 00:29:17,111 --> 00:29:21,314 John Webb has big plans. 543 00:29:24,518 --> 00:29:28,221 He wants to rewrite the laws of the Universe. 544 00:29:28,223 --> 00:29:32,992 And it all begins with bar codes. 545 00:29:36,430 --> 00:29:38,231 Right. So, we're in the supermarket. 546 00:29:38,233 --> 00:29:39,499 I'm buying a few things. 547 00:29:39,501 --> 00:29:42,201 This lettuce, for example -- we know what it is. 548 00:29:42,203 --> 00:29:44,237 Has a lot of information on the lettuce. 549 00:29:44,239 --> 00:29:45,738 Tell us on the packet. We can see what it is. 550 00:29:45,740 --> 00:29:48,941 But encoded in this pattern here 551 00:29:48,943 --> 00:29:51,210 and picked up by the laser that's gonna scan it 552 00:29:51,212 --> 00:29:53,146 is a set of information, 553 00:29:53,148 --> 00:29:56,649 and when the cashier scans it, the laser beam 554 00:29:56,651 --> 00:29:59,719 will look at the white gaps between the black lines, 555 00:29:59,721 --> 00:30:01,621 and we get the price. 556 00:30:01,623 --> 00:30:04,691 So there's a lot of information stored in the bar code. 557 00:30:07,761 --> 00:30:09,395 Freeman: John is an astrophysicist 558 00:30:09,397 --> 00:30:12,165 at the University of New South Wales. 559 00:30:12,167 --> 00:30:15,501 The bar codes he studies are not on packages of lettuce, 560 00:30:15,503 --> 00:30:20,807 but on light coming from distant galaxies. 561 00:30:20,809 --> 00:30:23,109 If you split the light 562 00:30:23,111 --> 00:30:25,712 coming from these galaxies into a rainbow, 563 00:30:25,714 --> 00:30:28,614 you'll discover that certain colors are missing. 564 00:30:30,718 --> 00:30:35,388 Those dark bands, called spectral lines, 565 00:30:35,390 --> 00:30:37,323 are caused by the chemical elements 566 00:30:37,325 --> 00:30:39,492 in clouds of interstellar gas 567 00:30:39,494 --> 00:30:43,663 absorbing certain frequencies of starlight. 568 00:30:46,533 --> 00:30:49,802 Webb: You can learn a great deal from spectral lines. 569 00:30:49,804 --> 00:30:52,405 From their positions, you can identify elements 570 00:30:52,407 --> 00:30:54,974 that have particular frequencies, 571 00:30:54,976 --> 00:30:57,910 so you can see where things like hydrogen or helium 572 00:30:57,912 --> 00:30:59,445 or other elements are present. 573 00:30:59,447 --> 00:31:03,750 Freeman: But John realized his starlight bar codes 574 00:31:03,752 --> 00:31:06,853 could tell him about something much more important 575 00:31:06,855 --> 00:31:08,421 than what stars were made of. 576 00:31:08,423 --> 00:31:11,257 It could give him a glimpse 577 00:31:11,259 --> 00:31:15,027 into one of the most fundamental constants of the Universe -- 578 00:31:15,029 --> 00:31:19,832 the strength of the electromagnetic force. 579 00:31:19,834 --> 00:31:23,469 In physics, every force 580 00:31:23,471 --> 00:31:26,172 has a particle that carries it. 581 00:31:26,174 --> 00:31:31,344 Electromagnetic force is carried by light, or photons. 582 00:31:31,346 --> 00:31:35,782 The electromagnetic force keeps atoms glued together 583 00:31:35,784 --> 00:31:38,117 with a constant exchange of photons 584 00:31:38,119 --> 00:31:43,022 that bounce from the nucleus to its orbiting electrons. 585 00:31:43,024 --> 00:31:45,925 When light passes through atoms of interstellar gas, 586 00:31:45,927 --> 00:31:48,995 it can interfere with this exchange of photons 587 00:31:48,997 --> 00:31:52,698 and knock an electron out of its orbit, 588 00:31:52,700 --> 00:31:54,000 but only if the light 589 00:31:54,002 --> 00:31:57,403 has exactly the right amount of energy. 590 00:31:57,405 --> 00:31:59,505 The bar code of missing light 591 00:31:59,507 --> 00:32:04,410 tells you precisely how strong the electromagnetic force is. 592 00:32:04,412 --> 00:32:06,813 Webb: Over the last decade or so, 593 00:32:06,815 --> 00:32:09,715 there's been an amazing change in technology. 594 00:32:09,717 --> 00:32:14,287 One can now measure the things in distant astronomical objects 595 00:32:14,289 --> 00:32:16,722 more precisely than ever been measured on Earth. 596 00:32:16,724 --> 00:32:18,724 That provides a very strong motivation 597 00:32:18,726 --> 00:32:21,461 for studying the early Universe, 598 00:32:21,463 --> 00:32:23,930 because we can measure what the conditions were like, 599 00:32:23,932 --> 00:32:25,698 we can measure what physics was like, 600 00:32:25,700 --> 00:32:27,433 whether the laws of physics 601 00:32:27,435 --> 00:32:30,136 there in very remote regions of the Universe 602 00:32:30,138 --> 00:32:32,505 are the same as they are on Earth. 603 00:32:32,507 --> 00:32:34,006 That's pretty amazing. 604 00:32:35,876 --> 00:32:38,110 Freeman: So John began searching the heavens 605 00:32:38,112 --> 00:32:42,882 for glowing clouds of gas billions of light-years away. 606 00:32:42,884 --> 00:32:46,219 He used the Keck Telescope in Hawaii 607 00:32:46,221 --> 00:32:48,421 to look at the northern sky, 608 00:32:48,423 --> 00:32:51,357 and a very large telescope in Chile 609 00:32:51,359 --> 00:32:55,127 which looks out on the southern sky. 610 00:32:59,299 --> 00:33:01,267 And when he looked at his bar codes, 611 00:33:01,269 --> 00:33:05,838 he discovered something totally unexpected. 612 00:33:05,840 --> 00:33:09,408 This is what a cloud of gas would look like 613 00:33:09,410 --> 00:33:12,445 if we were looking at it in the laboratory on Earth. 614 00:33:12,447 --> 00:33:17,416 When we look in the Southern hemisphere, 615 00:33:17,418 --> 00:33:19,685 something slightly different -- 616 00:33:19,687 --> 00:33:23,756 this line has moved towards the red end of the spectrum, 617 00:33:23,758 --> 00:33:24,991 and another line here 618 00:33:24,993 --> 00:33:27,593 has moved towards the blue end of the spectrum. 619 00:33:27,595 --> 00:33:30,196 So there's a change in the relative spacing 620 00:33:30,198 --> 00:33:31,864 of the spectral lines. 621 00:33:31,866 --> 00:33:34,600 It looks slightly different in the Southern hemisphere. 622 00:33:34,602 --> 00:33:37,837 If you now go to the Northern hemisphere, 623 00:33:37,839 --> 00:33:40,773 the exact opposite direction on the sky, 624 00:33:40,775 --> 00:33:42,241 this line has now shifted, 625 00:33:42,243 --> 00:33:45,578 instead of to the right, to the left, 626 00:33:45,580 --> 00:33:49,916 and this line has shifted to the right instead of to the left. 627 00:33:49,918 --> 00:33:52,885 So the patterns now look different. 628 00:33:56,790 --> 00:33:59,392 It's a little bit as if you're in a supermarket drunk, 629 00:33:59,394 --> 00:34:02,395 looking at the bar code, and the pattern has changed. 630 00:34:04,665 --> 00:34:06,732 Freeman: These shifting bar codes 631 00:34:06,734 --> 00:34:09,435 can only be caused by one thing -- 632 00:34:09,437 --> 00:34:12,672 something that seems impossible... 633 00:34:12,674 --> 00:34:17,443 A change in one of the fundamental laws of physics. 634 00:34:17,445 --> 00:34:18,678 When we first saw the results, 635 00:34:18,680 --> 00:34:21,714 it was hard to accept that they were correct. 636 00:34:21,716 --> 00:34:26,385 What we found is when you look in one direction on the sky, 637 00:34:26,387 --> 00:34:28,688 the strength of the electromagnetic force 638 00:34:28,690 --> 00:34:32,024 appears to decrease with increasing distance from us, 639 00:34:32,026 --> 00:34:35,127 and when you look in exactly the opposite direction on the sky, 640 00:34:35,129 --> 00:34:37,330 the converse is true. 641 00:34:37,332 --> 00:34:39,298 The strength of electromagnetism 642 00:34:39,300 --> 00:34:42,935 seems to increase as you move to greater distance. 643 00:34:42,937 --> 00:34:46,105 Freeman: Electromagnetism is the force 644 00:34:46,107 --> 00:34:48,240 that is transmitted by light. 645 00:34:48,242 --> 00:34:50,810 So if the strength of electromagnetism 646 00:34:50,812 --> 00:34:52,778 is not constant, 647 00:34:52,780 --> 00:34:58,618 it means that the properties of light itself are changing. 648 00:34:58,620 --> 00:35:00,252 If John Webb is right, 649 00:35:00,254 --> 00:35:05,224 he's overturned one of the basic laws of the Universe. 650 00:35:05,226 --> 00:35:06,892 Once the laws of physics 651 00:35:06,894 --> 00:35:09,495 are allowed to vary in those equations, 652 00:35:09,497 --> 00:35:11,631 things have to be rewritten. 653 00:35:11,633 --> 00:35:14,100 So it's back to the drawing board 654 00:35:14,102 --> 00:35:16,302 for certain fundamental principles in physics. 655 00:35:23,210 --> 00:35:25,745 Freeman: Could Einstein be wrong? 656 00:35:25,747 --> 00:35:27,346 Could the speed of light be different 657 00:35:27,348 --> 00:35:29,148 in different parts of the cosmos? 658 00:35:29,150 --> 00:35:31,550 On the other side of the world, 659 00:35:31,552 --> 00:35:34,720 one cosmologist is sure the answer is "yes." 660 00:35:34,722 --> 00:35:38,991 He believes that light can move much faster than we think, 661 00:35:38,993 --> 00:35:41,260 and that, out there in the Universe, 662 00:35:41,262 --> 00:35:44,397 there are superhighways to the stars. 663 00:35:51,150 --> 00:35:53,751 Back at the dawn of the space age, 664 00:35:53,753 --> 00:35:57,922 it was all about having the right stuff. 665 00:35:57,924 --> 00:36:02,327 The first people who journey to the stars will need it, too. 666 00:36:02,329 --> 00:36:06,731 They will be venturing into the absolute unknown, 667 00:36:06,733 --> 00:36:12,503 and, perhaps for the first time, traveling faster than light. 668 00:36:13,772 --> 00:36:18,276 Theoretical physicist Joao Magueijo 669 00:36:18,278 --> 00:36:20,712 thinks that there may be regions of outer space 670 00:36:20,714 --> 00:36:23,615 where faster-than-light travel is possible. 671 00:36:23,617 --> 00:36:26,618 He developed this radical theory because without it, 672 00:36:26,620 --> 00:36:30,021 he couldn't explain the way the Universe looks. 673 00:36:33,959 --> 00:36:35,693 Magueijo: When we look out into the Universe, 674 00:36:35,695 --> 00:36:38,196 everything looks the same in every direction. 675 00:36:38,198 --> 00:36:39,931 This is a problem, 676 00:36:39,933 --> 00:36:43,101 because during the time the Universe has lived, 677 00:36:43,103 --> 00:36:46,104 there really isn't enough time for light to travel around 678 00:36:46,106 --> 00:36:49,908 for features to be shared around the Universe, 679 00:36:49,910 --> 00:36:52,877 and this we call the homogeneity problem. 680 00:36:52,879 --> 00:36:56,147 Freeman: The homogeneity problem, 681 00:36:56,149 --> 00:36:58,950 the fact that all galaxies and all matter 682 00:36:58,952 --> 00:37:01,119 are evenly spread around the Universe 683 00:37:01,121 --> 00:37:02,887 no matter where we look, 684 00:37:02,889 --> 00:37:07,959 is one of the biggest puzzles in cosmology. 685 00:37:07,961 --> 00:37:12,597 The problem is, scientists don't think there has been enough time 686 00:37:12,599 --> 00:37:16,601 since the big bang for matter to spread out so evenly. 687 00:37:19,305 --> 00:37:23,207 Imagine the Big Bang was a big party. 688 00:37:23,209 --> 00:37:26,110 [ Cork pops, indistinct conversations ] 689 00:37:26,112 --> 00:37:27,712 As soon as the party starts, 690 00:37:27,714 --> 00:37:32,317 everyone instantly has a glass of the same kind of wine. 691 00:37:32,319 --> 00:37:34,252 How would a waitress have time 692 00:37:34,254 --> 00:37:37,655 to serve everyone a glass of wine so quickly? 693 00:37:39,658 --> 00:37:41,659 Magueijo: If she can only move at the speed of light, 694 00:37:41,661 --> 00:37:45,663 she won't have time to reach everyone before they disperse, 695 00:37:45,665 --> 00:37:47,899 like the Big-Bang Universe. 696 00:37:47,901 --> 00:37:51,302 Freeman: Most scientists solve this problem 697 00:37:51,304 --> 00:37:54,339 with a theory called cosmic inflation. 698 00:37:54,341 --> 00:37:58,109 The idea is that the room stayed small 699 00:37:58,111 --> 00:38:00,278 for longer at the beginning of time, 700 00:38:00,280 --> 00:38:03,881 giving the waitress enough time to serve everyone. 701 00:38:03,883 --> 00:38:06,551 Then, a mysterious magnifying force 702 00:38:06,553 --> 00:38:09,220 inflates the room very rapidly. 703 00:38:09,222 --> 00:38:13,424 Everyone gets a drink, and the waitress hardly breaks a sweat. 704 00:38:16,228 --> 00:38:18,663 Magueijo: Cosmic inflation says the Universe 705 00:38:18,665 --> 00:38:21,566 started as an unimaginably small pinpoint 706 00:38:21,568 --> 00:38:25,103 concentrating all the energy of the Universe, 707 00:38:25,105 --> 00:38:27,538 and that in the first trillions of trillions 708 00:38:27,540 --> 00:38:29,140 of trillions of a second, 709 00:38:29,142 --> 00:38:32,076 the Universe doubled, doubled, and doubled in size. 710 00:38:32,078 --> 00:38:35,913 The initial smoothness of that single point 711 00:38:35,915 --> 00:38:41,152 then spread to the vast distances we can see nowadays. 712 00:38:41,154 --> 00:38:43,988 Freeman: But inflation is not proven. 713 00:38:43,990 --> 00:38:46,691 It's just a theory. 714 00:38:46,693 --> 00:38:50,161 And Joao has an alternative to it -- 715 00:38:50,163 --> 00:38:51,596 a provocative theory 716 00:38:51,598 --> 00:38:55,466 that might bring the Universe within our reach. 717 00:38:58,537 --> 00:39:01,005 What if, instead of changing the rate of expansion, 718 00:39:01,007 --> 00:39:03,908 we change the speed limit -- the speed of light? 719 00:39:03,910 --> 00:39:07,045 That's what we call the varying speed of light theory. 720 00:39:07,047 --> 00:39:11,082 Under the varying speed of light theory, 721 00:39:11,084 --> 00:39:15,119 our waitress simply served everyone faster 722 00:39:15,121 --> 00:39:16,387 in the beginning of the Universe 723 00:39:16,389 --> 00:39:20,358 and then slowed down to the current speed, 724 00:39:20,360 --> 00:39:22,927 leaving us latecomers wondering how she managed 725 00:39:22,929 --> 00:39:26,931 to serve such a large Universe in such a short time. 726 00:39:26,933 --> 00:39:30,735 Freeman: Joao's theory solves the homogeneity problem 727 00:39:30,737 --> 00:39:34,372 just as effectively as cosmic inflation. 728 00:39:34,374 --> 00:39:39,644 But it also thumbs its nose at Einstein's golden rule. 729 00:39:39,646 --> 00:39:42,680 This does not exactly contradict Einstein's principle 730 00:39:42,682 --> 00:39:45,349 that the speed of light is the speed limit. 731 00:39:45,351 --> 00:39:47,452 We're only saying that the speed limit 732 00:39:47,454 --> 00:39:50,521 changed throughout the life of the Universe. 733 00:39:50,523 --> 00:39:54,192 Freeman: And Joao's theory means there might be a way 734 00:39:54,194 --> 00:39:57,195 to break today's cosmic speed limit, 735 00:39:57,197 --> 00:40:00,598 because there could be pathways through space 736 00:40:00,600 --> 00:40:03,734 where the speed of light remains faster. 737 00:40:03,736 --> 00:40:07,872 These pathways are called cosmic strings. 738 00:40:07,874 --> 00:40:10,408 Magueijo: Under the varying speed of light theory, 739 00:40:10,410 --> 00:40:13,411 light traveled faster in the beginning of the Universe, 740 00:40:13,413 --> 00:40:16,414 and cosmic strings could be regions 741 00:40:16,416 --> 00:40:19,517 where this higher speed limit is still in force. 742 00:40:19,519 --> 00:40:23,888 Freeman: The idea is that, in the first moments 743 00:40:23,890 --> 00:40:25,056 of the Universe, 744 00:40:25,058 --> 00:40:28,659 tiny fractures formed in space-time. 745 00:40:28,661 --> 00:40:31,262 Since then, these fractures 746 00:40:31,264 --> 00:40:34,432 expanded along with everything else in the cosmos 747 00:40:34,434 --> 00:40:38,002 and are now billions of light-years long. 748 00:40:38,004 --> 00:40:42,507 Cosmic strings might serve as high-speed lines 749 00:40:42,509 --> 00:40:43,774 cutting across regions 750 00:40:43,776 --> 00:40:46,410 where you would otherwise be moving at a crawl. 751 00:40:50,048 --> 00:40:51,782 You could think of cosmic strings 752 00:40:51,784 --> 00:40:53,317 like the tube in London... 753 00:40:57,456 --> 00:41:01,092 ...Where, on the surface, there is a speed limit, 754 00:41:01,094 --> 00:41:04,996 but obviously down there there isn't one. 755 00:41:04,998 --> 00:41:08,099 Freeman: On the surface, Einstein's limit is the law. 756 00:41:08,101 --> 00:41:11,636 The tube below is the cosmic string -- 757 00:41:11,638 --> 00:41:15,006 a faster way across town. 758 00:41:15,008 --> 00:41:17,275 If you could fit a spacecraft 759 00:41:17,277 --> 00:41:19,610 into the corridor of high speed limit 760 00:41:19,612 --> 00:41:21,479 created around the cosmic string, 761 00:41:21,481 --> 00:41:24,482 fast travel throughout the Universe would become possible. 762 00:41:27,719 --> 00:41:30,821 Freeman: Cosmic strings have yet to be found, 763 00:41:30,823 --> 00:41:35,159 and the variation in the speed of light is still just a theory. 764 00:41:37,663 --> 00:41:39,897 But slowly and steadily, 765 00:41:39,899 --> 00:41:44,068 scientists like Joao Magueijo and John Webb 766 00:41:44,070 --> 00:41:47,638 are chipping away at Einstein's cosmic speed limit. 767 00:41:47,640 --> 00:41:48,973 Carroll: You begin to wonder, 768 00:41:48,975 --> 00:41:51,309 what if it changes from place to place in the Universe, 769 00:41:51,311 --> 00:41:54,011 or maybe it was different early on in the Universe's history, 770 00:41:54,013 --> 00:41:55,913 and if the speed of light is changing, 771 00:41:55,915 --> 00:41:57,949 then a lot of what we think about physics 772 00:41:57,951 --> 00:42:00,851 could be different in the early Universe to today. 773 00:42:00,853 --> 00:42:01,886 Freeman: Around the world, 774 00:42:01,888 --> 00:42:04,622 scientists are testing new technologies 775 00:42:04,624 --> 00:42:07,291 and probing deep into the heart of physics 776 00:42:07,293 --> 00:42:10,228 to uncover new laws of the Universe, 777 00:42:10,230 --> 00:42:14,899 to find a way for us to escape our island Earth. 778 00:42:16,868 --> 00:42:22,073 We are still a long way from becoming citizens of the cosmos. 779 00:42:22,075 --> 00:42:26,877 The stars remain almost unimaginably far away. 780 00:42:26,879 --> 00:42:29,513 But wherever science goes next, 781 00:42:29,515 --> 00:42:34,986 our hopes to explore this final frontier will never be dimmed. 782 00:42:34,988 --> 00:42:38,756 And, one day, we will reach it, 783 00:42:38,758 --> 00:42:43,995 because what man can imagine, man can do. 784 00:42:50,936 --> 00:42:54,936 == sync, corrected by elderman ==63577

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