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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,010 --> 00:00:07,777 SUB BY : DENI AUROR@ https://aurorarental.blogspot.com/ 2 00:00:02,902 --> 00:00:04,703 Everything we see, 3 00:00:04,705 --> 00:00:09,207 from people to cities to the millions of stars 4 00:00:09,209 --> 00:00:10,909 that fill the night sky, 5 00:00:10,911 --> 00:00:13,445 they're all made of the same stuff: 6 00:00:13,447 --> 00:00:15,847 Atoms of matter. 7 00:00:15,849 --> 00:00:17,916 But there's something else out there, 8 00:00:19,987 --> 00:00:22,321 invisible dark matter. 9 00:00:22,323 --> 00:00:24,323 It fills our universe, too. 10 00:00:24,325 --> 00:00:26,058 And it could be the key 11 00:00:26,060 --> 00:00:29,461 to the existence of everything, 12 00:00:29,463 --> 00:00:31,063 including us. 13 00:00:34,035 --> 00:00:37,102 Captions paid for by discovery communications 14 00:00:46,379 --> 00:00:47,813 There's something about our universe 15 00:00:47,815 --> 00:00:49,247 that might surprise you. 16 00:00:51,252 --> 00:00:54,786 We exist side by side with cosmic ghosts. 17 00:00:57,023 --> 00:00:59,891 Normal matter, the stuff that makes stars, planets 18 00:00:59,893 --> 00:01:02,561 and people, accounts for just a fraction 19 00:01:02,563 --> 00:01:04,129 of what's really out there. 20 00:01:06,732 --> 00:01:09,467 An invisible web of strange material 21 00:01:09,469 --> 00:01:10,569 connects the galaxies 22 00:01:10,571 --> 00:01:12,938 that make up our universe. 23 00:01:12,940 --> 00:01:16,507 We can't see or feel this mysterious stuff. 24 00:01:16,509 --> 00:01:17,943 But we're pretty sure it's there 25 00:01:17,945 --> 00:01:21,480 because we can measure its gravity. 26 00:01:21,482 --> 00:01:23,615 It's a little weird, uh, to ... 27 00:01:23,617 --> 00:01:26,384 to discover that what you see, 28 00:01:26,386 --> 00:01:29,221 what you know, everything in your experience 29 00:01:29,223 --> 00:01:32,123 is actually the tiniest, teeniest fraction 30 00:01:32,125 --> 00:01:35,760 of what's actually out there in the universe. 31 00:01:35,762 --> 00:01:37,362 Most of the matter in the universe 32 00:01:37,364 --> 00:01:38,931 is made of a substance 33 00:01:38,933 --> 00:01:41,733 that we have not even discovered yet. 34 00:01:45,738 --> 00:01:48,373 This strange ghostly stuff 35 00:01:48,375 --> 00:01:52,310 is called dark matter. 36 00:01:52,312 --> 00:01:54,445 Most scientists believe dark matter 37 00:01:54,447 --> 00:01:56,982 is a kind of elementary particle, 38 00:01:56,984 --> 00:01:59,217 hanging in vast networks 39 00:01:59,219 --> 00:02:01,019 of clouds or halos 40 00:02:01,021 --> 00:02:03,522 that link the 2 trillion galaxies 41 00:02:03,524 --> 00:02:05,457 that make up our universe. 42 00:02:07,393 --> 00:02:08,994 If ... if you could put on some sort of ... 43 00:02:08,996 --> 00:02:11,830 some sort of mask or goggles that could detect dark matter, 44 00:02:11,832 --> 00:02:14,399 you would see millions of them passing through you 45 00:02:14,401 --> 00:02:16,968 every second, millions of them, billions, 46 00:02:16,970 --> 00:02:18,770 all around you all the time. 47 00:02:18,772 --> 00:02:22,307 You can't see them, but their effect is very real. 48 00:02:24,377 --> 00:02:27,279 Crucially, we are now beginning to understand 49 00:02:27,281 --> 00:02:30,182 the ghostly tendrils of dark matter 50 00:02:30,184 --> 00:02:35,721 have shaped everything we see in our universe today. 51 00:02:35,723 --> 00:02:38,123 They may have even played a key role 52 00:02:38,125 --> 00:02:41,593 in the evolution of us. 53 00:02:41,595 --> 00:02:43,328 Dark matter is kind of like a ... 54 00:02:43,330 --> 00:02:45,730 an invisible puppet master with invisible strings 55 00:02:45,732 --> 00:02:49,468 controlling the movement of everything we can see. 56 00:02:49,470 --> 00:02:52,837 It is the central reason for our existence. 57 00:02:52,839 --> 00:02:54,972 The fact that our galaxy exists 58 00:02:54,974 --> 00:02:57,643 for us to exist in is due to the fact 59 00:02:57,645 --> 00:02:59,278 that dark matter exists. 60 00:02:59,280 --> 00:03:00,478 If you were to think about it, 61 00:03:00,480 --> 00:03:03,381 dark matter is the matter that matters. 62 00:03:04,484 --> 00:03:08,653 So how did dark matter shape the universe we see today? 63 00:03:08,655 --> 00:03:10,188 Best way to find out: 64 00:03:10,190 --> 00:03:12,424 Take a trip back to the beginning 65 00:03:12,426 --> 00:03:14,960 of everything, the big bang. 66 00:03:17,430 --> 00:03:20,198 13.8 billion years ago, 67 00:03:20,200 --> 00:03:24,203 an infinitely hot and infinitely dense speck 68 00:03:24,205 --> 00:03:27,305 bursts into existence. 69 00:03:27,307 --> 00:03:30,509 This speck is the infant universe. 70 00:03:30,511 --> 00:03:35,747 It's hot and filled with nothing but pure energy. 71 00:03:35,749 --> 00:03:38,050 As it expands, it cools. 72 00:03:38,052 --> 00:03:40,185 And some of the energy condenses 73 00:03:40,187 --> 00:03:43,922 to form tiny subatomic particles. 74 00:03:43,924 --> 00:03:46,892 But these aren't the protons or electrons 75 00:03:46,894 --> 00:03:48,293 that make up you and me. 76 00:03:48,295 --> 00:03:50,963 They're particles of dark matter. 77 00:03:52,765 --> 00:03:56,534 If dark matter is made up of strange subatomic particles, 78 00:03:56,536 --> 00:03:58,737 these were probably created in the very, 79 00:03:58,739 --> 00:04:00,472 very early universe, 80 00:04:00,474 --> 00:04:03,008 moments after the big bang itself. 81 00:04:03,010 --> 00:04:05,010 Even normal matter may not have existed yet 82 00:04:05,012 --> 00:04:06,745 when dark matter did. 83 00:04:09,148 --> 00:04:13,285 The universe is still less than a second old. 84 00:04:13,287 --> 00:04:16,788 It's incredibly dense and hot. 85 00:04:16,790 --> 00:04:18,689 In this confined space, 86 00:04:18,691 --> 00:04:22,828 the dark-matter particles are crammed tightly together. 87 00:04:22,830 --> 00:04:25,130 Collisions are inevitable. 88 00:04:25,132 --> 00:04:27,932 The particles annihilate each other 89 00:04:27,934 --> 00:04:30,135 as they smash together, 90 00:04:30,137 --> 00:04:33,605 releasing a burst of energy 91 00:04:33,607 --> 00:04:35,641 plus, something new: 92 00:04:35,643 --> 00:04:39,544 Subatomic particles of ordinary matter, 93 00:04:39,546 --> 00:04:43,015 the stuff that makes up the universe we can see. 94 00:04:45,084 --> 00:04:47,319 It's very plausible that two dark-matter particles 95 00:04:47,321 --> 00:04:49,187 that collided and annihilated 96 00:04:49,189 --> 00:04:51,857 in the very early universe produced an electron 97 00:04:51,859 --> 00:04:53,792 that's now a part of my body. 98 00:04:53,794 --> 00:04:56,060 So I might actually be a child of dark matter, 99 00:04:56,062 --> 00:04:58,797 you know, even in a very direct and literal sense. 100 00:05:01,000 --> 00:05:02,901 Did colliding dark matter particles 101 00:05:02,903 --> 00:05:05,203 really make all the ordinary matter 102 00:05:05,205 --> 00:05:08,306 we see in the universe today? 103 00:05:08,308 --> 00:05:13,312 It depends on what dark matter particles are made of. 104 00:05:13,314 --> 00:05:15,379 The best best is that dark matter 105 00:05:15,381 --> 00:05:20,252 is a particle 100 times the mass of a proton. 106 00:05:20,254 --> 00:05:22,687 But unlike ordinary matter, 107 00:05:22,689 --> 00:05:27,459 it doesn't interact with light or anything else. 108 00:05:27,461 --> 00:05:29,260 One of the top contenders for dark matter 109 00:05:29,262 --> 00:05:30,429 is something called a wimp, 110 00:05:30,431 --> 00:05:32,964 a weakly interacting massive particle. 111 00:05:32,966 --> 00:05:35,266 This was a particle that was made in the big bang 112 00:05:35,268 --> 00:05:36,401 that's left over today. 113 00:05:38,337 --> 00:05:40,238 Wimps are the leading contender 114 00:05:40,240 --> 00:05:42,240 because if you plug their properties 115 00:05:42,242 --> 00:05:45,643 into computer simulations of the big bang, 116 00:05:45,645 --> 00:05:47,178 you end up with a universe 117 00:05:47,180 --> 00:05:50,548 that looks just like the universe we see today 118 00:05:50,550 --> 00:05:53,017 with 84 percent dark matter 119 00:05:53,019 --> 00:05:55,787 and just 16 percent ordinary matter. 120 00:06:00,393 --> 00:06:02,728 We get numbers that correspond roughly to the amount 121 00:06:02,730 --> 00:06:04,463 of dark matter we infer in the universe. 122 00:06:04,465 --> 00:06:06,765 So there's good evidence, 123 00:06:06,767 --> 00:06:10,001 indirectly, that these particles may be the dark matter. 124 00:06:12,071 --> 00:06:13,538 If current thinking is right, 125 00:06:13,540 --> 00:06:15,206 the subatomic building blocks 126 00:06:15,208 --> 00:06:18,610 of the universe were forged from colliding wimps. 127 00:06:18,612 --> 00:06:22,046 But dark matter's role in building the cosmos 128 00:06:22,048 --> 00:06:23,948 was just getting started. 129 00:06:23,950 --> 00:06:25,883 In fact, dark matter may answer 130 00:06:25,885 --> 00:06:28,953 one of the great mysteries of cosmology, 131 00:06:28,955 --> 00:06:30,422 how the primordial gas 132 00:06:30,424 --> 00:06:33,592 that filled the early universe clump together 133 00:06:33,594 --> 00:06:36,328 to form the first stars. 134 00:06:36,330 --> 00:06:38,362 The mystery begins when the universe 135 00:06:38,364 --> 00:06:40,265 is less than a second old. 136 00:06:42,301 --> 00:06:45,637 It suddenly expands. 137 00:06:45,639 --> 00:06:47,705 In a period of about a millionth of a billionth 138 00:06:47,707 --> 00:06:49,941 of a billionth of a billionth of a second, 139 00:06:49,943 --> 00:06:52,744 our universe puffed up 140 00:06:52,746 --> 00:06:55,213 by over 90 orders of magnitude in volume 141 00:06:55,215 --> 00:06:57,782 and went from the size of a single atom 142 00:06:57,784 --> 00:06:59,784 to the size of a basketball 143 00:06:59,786 --> 00:07:02,153 in a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a second. 144 00:07:04,757 --> 00:07:06,825 This rapid expansion creates 145 00:07:06,827 --> 00:07:10,428 a vast sea of evenly spread particles, 146 00:07:10,430 --> 00:07:15,267 which cool to form atoms of hydrogen and helium, 147 00:07:15,269 --> 00:07:17,535 the gases that will one day collapse 148 00:07:17,537 --> 00:07:19,170 under the force of gravity 149 00:07:19,172 --> 00:07:22,874 to become the first stars. 150 00:07:22,876 --> 00:07:25,143 But there's a problem. 151 00:07:25,145 --> 00:07:26,878 The gas of the early universe 152 00:07:26,880 --> 00:07:28,747 is too evenly spread, 153 00:07:28,749 --> 00:07:30,482 too smooth for gravity 154 00:07:30,484 --> 00:07:33,418 to pull on some parts more than others 155 00:07:33,420 --> 00:07:37,222 and trigger regions of the gas to collapse and clump. 156 00:07:37,224 --> 00:07:40,592 If the universe was completely smooth, 157 00:07:40,594 --> 00:07:43,595 it would be beautiful but boring because no ... 158 00:07:43,597 --> 00:07:45,730 nothing would exist that we could see. 159 00:07:48,034 --> 00:07:49,300 Something must have made 160 00:07:49,302 --> 00:07:51,770 the smooth sea of gas collapse 161 00:07:51,772 --> 00:07:55,206 and build the first stars, 162 00:07:55,208 --> 00:08:00,812 something weird operating on the tiniest of scales. 163 00:08:00,814 --> 00:08:03,481 One thing that really is interesting about that 164 00:08:03,483 --> 00:08:05,417 is that on very small scales, 165 00:08:05,419 --> 00:08:07,686 due to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, 166 00:08:07,688 --> 00:08:09,054 strange things can happen. 167 00:08:11,023 --> 00:08:14,826 When we see a car, a runner or even a spacecraft, 168 00:08:14,828 --> 00:08:17,295 we can calculate their motions. 169 00:08:19,432 --> 00:08:22,934 In the tiny quantum world of the infant universe, 170 00:08:22,936 --> 00:08:25,703 that certainty is missing. 171 00:08:25,705 --> 00:08:28,373 Nothing has a definite momentum or position. 172 00:08:28,375 --> 00:08:30,909 And because nothing was locked in place, 173 00:08:30,911 --> 00:08:32,744 fluctuations or grooves 174 00:08:32,746 --> 00:08:35,813 could develop in the expanding universe. 175 00:08:35,815 --> 00:08:38,083 And when the universe inflated rapidly, 176 00:08:38,085 --> 00:08:41,820 these fluctuations because frozen in place, 177 00:08:41,822 --> 00:08:43,622 creating dense points around 178 00:08:43,624 --> 00:08:46,290 which the gas clouds could collapse, 179 00:08:46,292 --> 00:08:51,896 acting like gravitational seeds for star formation. 180 00:08:51,898 --> 00:08:56,067 Fortunately, there were these tiny seed fluctuations, 181 00:08:56,069 --> 00:08:58,770 which acted like a kind of cosmic DNA, 182 00:08:58,772 --> 00:09:00,572 determining where and when 183 00:09:00,574 --> 00:09:03,174 and how the structural layer grew into the stars, 184 00:09:03,176 --> 00:09:05,944 the planets and all the other awesome structure 185 00:09:05,946 --> 00:09:08,179 we see around us in today's world. 186 00:09:08,181 --> 00:09:09,814 I think it's one of the most beautiful ideas 187 00:09:09,816 --> 00:09:11,750 of all of science, that something 188 00:09:11,752 --> 00:09:13,952 like the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, 189 00:09:13,954 --> 00:09:15,987 which we thought applied only to tiny things 190 00:09:15,989 --> 00:09:18,723 in quantum mechanics, ultimately is responsible 191 00:09:18,725 --> 00:09:20,525 for the biggest structures 192 00:09:20,527 --> 00:09:22,794 that we know of in the cosmos. 193 00:09:22,796 --> 00:09:24,863 So thank you, Heisenberg. 194 00:09:30,269 --> 00:09:32,236 The development of the fluctuations 195 00:09:32,238 --> 00:09:34,105 seems to solve the mystery of 196 00:09:34,107 --> 00:09:37,475 how the universe evolved its structure. 197 00:09:37,477 --> 00:09:39,910 But there's another problem. 198 00:09:39,912 --> 00:09:40,978 If you do the math, 199 00:09:40,980 --> 00:09:43,014 the mass of gas alone 200 00:09:43,016 --> 00:09:44,882 doesn't pack enough gravity 201 00:09:44,884 --> 00:09:46,551 to create all the stars 202 00:09:46,553 --> 00:09:50,120 we see in the universe today. 203 00:09:50,122 --> 00:09:52,156 Something else must have added mass 204 00:09:52,158 --> 00:09:55,192 to the collapsing gas clouds. 205 00:09:55,194 --> 00:09:58,263 Could that something have been dark matter? 206 00:10:10,000 --> 00:10:12,135 Today, cosmologists are grappling 207 00:10:12,137 --> 00:10:14,303 with a puzzling paradox, 208 00:10:14,305 --> 00:10:18,374 how did the gas that once filled the universe collapse so quickly 209 00:10:18,376 --> 00:10:20,677 to form the stars we see today 210 00:10:20,679 --> 00:10:23,480 when there wasn't enough gas to begin with? 211 00:10:23,482 --> 00:10:26,950 The only answer: Something other than normal matter 212 00:10:26,952 --> 00:10:28,151 must have been out there, 213 00:10:28,153 --> 00:10:30,253 adding mass to the gas clouds, 214 00:10:30,255 --> 00:10:33,823 helping them collapse into stars. 215 00:10:33,825 --> 00:10:35,392 If you only have the normal matter, 216 00:10:35,394 --> 00:10:38,227 it turns out things just don't grow fast enough. 217 00:10:38,229 --> 00:10:40,797 You don't have enough structure in the universe. 218 00:10:40,799 --> 00:10:43,933 We can calculate that there wouldn't have been enough time 219 00:10:43,935 --> 00:10:45,569 since the beginning of the universe 220 00:10:45,571 --> 00:10:48,137 for normal matter to collapse to form galaxies, 221 00:10:48,139 --> 00:10:49,772 stars, planets and people. 222 00:10:52,043 --> 00:10:53,710 Many scientists now believe 223 00:10:53,712 --> 00:10:57,380 the extra push speeding up the formation of stars 224 00:10:57,382 --> 00:11:01,117 was the gravity of invisible dark matter. 225 00:11:01,119 --> 00:11:03,453 Even though dark matter and normal matter 226 00:11:03,455 --> 00:11:05,322 can't really interact directly, 227 00:11:05,324 --> 00:11:07,857 they do interact via gravity. 228 00:11:07,859 --> 00:11:09,059 And it turns out that is 229 00:11:09,061 --> 00:11:12,429 critically important to our existence. 230 00:11:12,431 --> 00:11:14,997 If you put that dark matter in, everything works out. 231 00:11:14,999 --> 00:11:17,834 And it's really kind of amazing how well, uh, 232 00:11:17,836 --> 00:11:19,535 we can make the universe work. 233 00:11:22,506 --> 00:11:27,544 As the early universe expands, it also cools. 234 00:11:27,546 --> 00:11:31,014 It's now a sea of hydrogen and helium gas. 235 00:11:34,084 --> 00:11:36,853 There's also lots of dark matter around, 236 00:11:36,855 --> 00:11:39,923 which is built up in the fluctuations or grooves 237 00:11:39,925 --> 00:11:42,325 in the expanding universe, 238 00:11:42,327 --> 00:11:46,563 creating regions of high gravity. 239 00:11:46,565 --> 00:11:48,698 Tegmark: The dark matter was free to actually start doing 240 00:11:48,700 --> 00:11:51,801 its own thing and started growing its patterns 241 00:11:51,803 --> 00:11:54,537 and its clustering before the ordinary matter did. 242 00:11:54,539 --> 00:11:55,839 And that's why dark matter 243 00:11:55,841 --> 00:11:57,307 actually played such a key role in ... 244 00:11:57,309 --> 00:12:00,076 in creating this much more interesting universe 245 00:12:00,078 --> 00:12:01,477 that we live in today. 246 00:12:03,547 --> 00:12:05,948 The gravitational pull of these clumps 247 00:12:05,950 --> 00:12:08,518 of dark matter drags in huge clouds 248 00:12:08,520 --> 00:12:10,820 of hydrogen and helium. 249 00:12:12,356 --> 00:12:15,525 The clouds get denser and denser 250 00:12:15,527 --> 00:12:18,928 until they trigger nuclear fusion. 251 00:12:18,930 --> 00:12:22,465 And the first stars in our universe are born 252 00:12:22,467 --> 00:12:24,868 thanks to dark matter. 253 00:12:27,504 --> 00:12:29,606 It clumped and collapsed. 254 00:12:29,608 --> 00:12:33,442 And that would later allow all the normal matter to fall in. 255 00:12:35,312 --> 00:12:38,548 Dark matter is what gave the initial kick to form stars, 256 00:12:38,550 --> 00:12:39,916 black holes, planets, 257 00:12:39,918 --> 00:12:43,252 aliens, people and everything else. 258 00:12:48,625 --> 00:12:51,026 You really have to understand that dark matter 259 00:12:51,028 --> 00:12:53,630 is the dominant form of matter in the universe. 260 00:12:53,632 --> 00:12:55,031 At the very beginning of the universe, 261 00:12:55,033 --> 00:12:57,033 that's what got everything started. 262 00:12:57,035 --> 00:12:59,836 And regular matter was just along for the ride. 263 00:13:03,074 --> 00:13:05,341 Dark matter explains how the first stars 264 00:13:05,343 --> 00:13:07,676 in the universe burst into life. 265 00:13:10,414 --> 00:13:14,551 But when astronomers gaze back to the early universe, 266 00:13:14,553 --> 00:13:17,753 they see these stars weren't alone. 267 00:13:17,755 --> 00:13:19,856 They lived alongside monsters, 268 00:13:19,858 --> 00:13:23,626 supermassive black holes. 269 00:13:23,628 --> 00:13:25,895 A real puzzle is that we see some of these 270 00:13:25,897 --> 00:13:28,998 supermassive black holes in the very early universe. 271 00:13:29,000 --> 00:13:32,068 So there really wasn't enough time between the big bang 272 00:13:32,070 --> 00:13:33,536 and when we're studying these things for them 273 00:13:33,538 --> 00:13:35,772 to grow to such large sizes. 274 00:13:38,242 --> 00:13:40,943 Supermassive black holes are the heavyweights 275 00:13:40,945 --> 00:13:43,480 of the early universe. 276 00:13:43,482 --> 00:13:46,282 Some weigh in at 12 billion times 277 00:13:46,284 --> 00:13:47,617 the mass of our sun. 278 00:13:49,419 --> 00:13:53,022 How they grew so gigantic so quickly has been one 279 00:13:53,024 --> 00:13:55,859 of the biggest mysteries in cosmology 280 00:13:55,861 --> 00:13:58,360 until perhaps now. 281 00:14:00,864 --> 00:14:03,700 Some scientists believe the beginnings of these early 282 00:14:03,702 --> 00:14:05,935 black holes could have been formed 283 00:14:05,937 --> 00:14:11,541 by a strange superstar called a dark star. 284 00:14:11,543 --> 00:14:14,911 Dark stars would be the very first stars 285 00:14:14,913 --> 00:14:16,980 to form in the universe. 286 00:14:16,982 --> 00:14:18,314 So they form when the universe 287 00:14:18,316 --> 00:14:20,983 is about 200 million years old. 288 00:14:20,985 --> 00:14:23,186 And these are very early objects. 289 00:14:23,188 --> 00:14:24,854 So they are made of ordinary matter. 290 00:14:24,856 --> 00:14:27,290 They're made of hydrogen and helium. 291 00:14:27,292 --> 00:14:29,526 But they're powered by dark matter. 292 00:14:32,463 --> 00:14:33,663 Katherine freese believes 293 00:14:33,665 --> 00:14:35,999 that as these giant early stars 294 00:14:36,001 --> 00:14:38,735 formed in the early universe, 295 00:14:38,737 --> 00:14:40,303 their enormous gravity 296 00:14:40,305 --> 00:14:44,207 dragged dark matter particles into their cores. 297 00:14:46,710 --> 00:14:49,445 These particles smashed into each other, 298 00:14:49,447 --> 00:14:52,882 releasing bursts of energy. 299 00:14:52,884 --> 00:14:55,317 Whenever they encounter each other, 300 00:14:55,319 --> 00:14:58,921 they annihilate and turn into something else. 301 00:14:58,923 --> 00:15:01,691 That means a lot of heat is released, a lot of energy. 302 00:15:01,693 --> 00:15:05,127 And it's that energy that could power stars. 303 00:15:08,065 --> 00:15:10,300 Bullock: So it's possible that in some stars, 304 00:15:10,302 --> 00:15:12,202 their internal reactions 305 00:15:12,204 --> 00:15:15,337 are actually being powered by dark matter. 306 00:15:15,339 --> 00:15:17,340 Effectively, dark matter annihilation 307 00:15:17,342 --> 00:15:20,109 is providing energy to keep these stars lit up. 308 00:15:25,082 --> 00:15:26,548 It's quite remarkable because 309 00:15:26,550 --> 00:15:27,684 you only need one part 310 00:15:27,686 --> 00:15:29,986 in 10,000 of dark matter 311 00:15:29,988 --> 00:15:33,156 to power an entire giant star. 312 00:15:36,093 --> 00:15:39,128 The energy from dark matter annihilations 313 00:15:39,130 --> 00:15:40,730 allowed the dark stars 314 00:15:40,732 --> 00:15:43,633 to become super large. 315 00:15:43,635 --> 00:15:46,202 These early objects are really strange. 316 00:15:46,204 --> 00:15:48,538 They're very cool. 317 00:15:48,540 --> 00:15:50,406 And they're really, really big. 318 00:15:50,408 --> 00:15:52,074 They're ... the size of these things 319 00:15:52,076 --> 00:15:54,844 is 10 times the size 320 00:15:54,846 --> 00:15:57,413 the distance between the sun and the earth. 321 00:15:57,415 --> 00:15:59,015 So they're really, really big puffy, 322 00:15:59,017 --> 00:16:02,418 cool and powered by dark matter annihilation. 323 00:16:05,289 --> 00:16:07,890 But when their dark matter fuel ran out, 324 00:16:07,892 --> 00:16:12,194 these huge stars had nothing left to hold them up. 325 00:16:12,196 --> 00:16:14,797 There's nothing to sustain this big, puffy object. 326 00:16:14,799 --> 00:16:16,866 It's gonna collapse. 327 00:16:16,868 --> 00:16:20,169 If it's big enough, you collapse directly to a black hole. 328 00:16:22,372 --> 00:16:25,207 Because the collapsing star was so huge, 329 00:16:25,209 --> 00:16:30,880 the new black hole it formed was also super massive. 330 00:16:30,882 --> 00:16:32,548 Freese: If dark stars exist, 331 00:16:32,550 --> 00:16:36,386 then black holes could be born big. 332 00:16:36,388 --> 00:16:39,155 So because of dark matter, you could start with very, 333 00:16:39,157 --> 00:16:41,957 very massive black holes early in the universe. 334 00:16:41,959 --> 00:16:44,026 But that's only because you have the dark matter 335 00:16:44,028 --> 00:16:45,428 to power these early stars. 336 00:16:47,264 --> 00:16:49,264 Dark matter may have helped form 337 00:16:49,266 --> 00:16:52,101 the basic units of our universe, 338 00:16:52,103 --> 00:16:54,537 stars and black holes. 339 00:16:56,539 --> 00:17:00,476 But did the reach of this mysterious puppet master 340 00:17:00,478 --> 00:17:02,445 stretch even further? 341 00:17:02,447 --> 00:17:04,280 There are patterns in the distribution 342 00:17:04,282 --> 00:17:07,116 of galaxies and galaxy clusters 343 00:17:07,118 --> 00:17:11,187 that normal matter alone can't explain. 344 00:17:20,900 --> 00:17:22,301 Our home star, the sun, 345 00:17:22,303 --> 00:17:25,170 is just one of 200 billion stars 346 00:17:25,172 --> 00:17:28,407 that make up our galaxy. 347 00:17:28,409 --> 00:17:32,077 But how did this vast collection of stars first form? 348 00:17:34,414 --> 00:17:38,517 View the milky way with imaginary dark matter goggles. 349 00:17:38,519 --> 00:17:41,920 And you'll find a clue: 350 00:17:41,922 --> 00:17:47,126 A halo of dark matter surrounding the galaxy. 351 00:17:47,128 --> 00:17:51,563 A dark matter halo helps the galaxy form 352 00:17:51,565 --> 00:17:53,799 simply by providing gravity 353 00:17:53,801 --> 00:17:55,801 to pull things together, catalyzing it. 354 00:17:55,803 --> 00:17:57,936 And that may have allowed our galaxy to form. 355 00:17:57,938 --> 00:18:00,806 The gravity from this huge construct 356 00:18:00,808 --> 00:18:02,341 brought regular matter in to form 357 00:18:02,343 --> 00:18:03,809 the milky way in the middle. 358 00:18:06,613 --> 00:18:08,347 Astronomers used to think 359 00:18:08,349 --> 00:18:10,015 the distribution of galaxies 360 00:18:10,017 --> 00:18:13,085 throughout the universe was random. 361 00:18:13,087 --> 00:18:14,352 But recent observations 362 00:18:14,354 --> 00:18:17,456 have discovered something extraordinary: 363 00:18:17,458 --> 00:18:20,425 Walls of interlinked galaxies 364 00:18:20,427 --> 00:18:23,295 that stretch through space for millions 365 00:18:23,297 --> 00:18:26,298 and millions of light-years. 366 00:18:26,300 --> 00:18:27,833 One of the most amazing discoveries 367 00:18:27,835 --> 00:18:29,301 of the last few decades 368 00:18:29,303 --> 00:18:32,237 is that galaxies form these vast superstructures 369 00:18:32,239 --> 00:18:34,373 that actually span the known universe. 370 00:18:34,375 --> 00:18:36,708 The great wall is a filament of galaxies 371 00:18:36,710 --> 00:18:39,611 that stretches hundreds of millions of light-years. 372 00:18:41,715 --> 00:18:43,649 To understand how these vast 373 00:18:43,651 --> 00:18:45,584 galactic structures formed, 374 00:18:45,586 --> 00:18:48,253 astronomers use telescopes like the 375 00:18:48,255 --> 00:18:51,089 atacama large millimeter array, 376 00:18:51,091 --> 00:18:53,259 or Alma for short. 377 00:18:54,660 --> 00:18:57,963 It's an array of 66 radio telescopes 378 00:18:57,965 --> 00:19:02,601 and so powerful it can peer back billions of years 379 00:19:02,603 --> 00:19:04,169 to the formation 380 00:19:04,171 --> 00:19:07,206 of the earliest galactic structures. 381 00:19:07,208 --> 00:19:09,208 Now, Alma can actually look back 382 00:19:09,210 --> 00:19:10,742 into the history of the universe 383 00:19:10,744 --> 00:19:12,877 and see similar structures being formed 384 00:19:12,879 --> 00:19:14,946 by these giant baby galaxies, 385 00:19:14,948 --> 00:19:16,515 sort of a proto great wall. 386 00:19:20,386 --> 00:19:22,254 Alma gives us a snapshot 387 00:19:22,256 --> 00:19:24,857 of how the adolescent universe evolved. 388 00:19:26,826 --> 00:19:29,494 It shows us that as the universe expanded, 389 00:19:29,496 --> 00:19:34,499 the newborn galaxies aligned with their neighbors. 390 00:19:34,501 --> 00:19:37,169 It was as if the expanding universe 391 00:19:37,171 --> 00:19:39,905 was producing sticky filaments. 392 00:19:39,907 --> 00:19:43,174 And the materials building new galaxies 393 00:19:43,176 --> 00:19:48,113 were sticking to these threads like flies to a spider's silk. 394 00:19:48,115 --> 00:19:53,285 It turns out these invisible filaments are dark matter. 395 00:19:53,287 --> 00:19:55,754 It's like a scaffolding of dark matter 396 00:19:55,756 --> 00:19:58,324 that was pulling normal matter into it. 397 00:20:01,427 --> 00:20:03,028 As the universe expanded, 398 00:20:03,030 --> 00:20:05,330 the original clumps of dark matter 399 00:20:05,332 --> 00:20:09,101 didn't expand as quickly as the rest. 400 00:20:09,103 --> 00:20:11,503 They stuck together like sticky Taffy 401 00:20:11,505 --> 00:20:13,038 with their powerful gravity 402 00:20:13,040 --> 00:20:16,442 shaping them into filaments. 403 00:20:16,444 --> 00:20:18,810 The filaments formed a sprawling web 404 00:20:18,812 --> 00:20:20,679 of dark-matter strands, 405 00:20:20,681 --> 00:20:24,884 stretching throughout the universe. 406 00:20:24,886 --> 00:20:26,986 The gravity of this dark matter web 407 00:20:26,988 --> 00:20:29,488 then dragged in normal matter, 408 00:20:29,490 --> 00:20:33,158 which built up where the filaments meet 409 00:20:33,160 --> 00:20:38,263 and eventually collapsed to form galaxies. 410 00:20:38,265 --> 00:20:41,066 The thicker filaments pulled in the most gas, 411 00:20:41,068 --> 00:20:46,471 providing the building blocks for galaxy clusters. 412 00:20:46,473 --> 00:20:49,275 They actually fall along these tremendous filaments 413 00:20:49,277 --> 00:20:50,576 across the universe, 414 00:20:50,578 --> 00:20:52,912 hundreds of millions of light-years across. 415 00:20:52,914 --> 00:20:55,881 We're talking about tremendously large structures. 416 00:20:55,883 --> 00:20:59,151 But they would not exist if it weren't for dark matter. 417 00:20:59,153 --> 00:21:01,386 And the galaxies themselves were able to form 418 00:21:01,388 --> 00:21:03,622 because of this structure. 419 00:21:03,624 --> 00:21:06,058 There are galaxies and stars and planets 420 00:21:06,060 --> 00:21:08,060 and you here today. 421 00:21:08,062 --> 00:21:09,795 That's because of the dark matter 422 00:21:09,797 --> 00:21:11,664 providing the framework. 423 00:21:14,368 --> 00:21:16,568 Bullock: Just like a grid system in a city defines 424 00:21:16,570 --> 00:21:18,570 where buildings are going to be, 425 00:21:18,572 --> 00:21:23,008 galaxies assemble themselves around the cosmic grid. 426 00:21:23,010 --> 00:21:25,377 It seems like city planners here on earth 427 00:21:25,379 --> 00:21:28,113 have been following the lead of the universe, 428 00:21:28,115 --> 00:21:31,016 except those planners used roads 429 00:21:31,018 --> 00:21:32,985 in place of dark matter. 430 00:21:32,987 --> 00:21:36,088 New York is the perfect example. 431 00:21:36,090 --> 00:21:38,324 Freese: Let's imagine New York City without roads. 432 00:21:39,593 --> 00:21:42,161 There would be no structure, no foundation. 433 00:21:42,163 --> 00:21:44,896 Then the whole thing would fall apart. 434 00:21:45,732 --> 00:21:48,700 When people first designed the city, 435 00:21:48,702 --> 00:21:50,235 they laid down the grid. 436 00:21:50,237 --> 00:21:51,737 They built the roads. 437 00:21:51,739 --> 00:21:54,206 And that was really the foundation. 438 00:21:54,208 --> 00:21:57,476 And then later on, they built the buildings. 439 00:21:57,478 --> 00:21:59,211 Just like the dark matter web 440 00:21:59,213 --> 00:22:01,613 transported the building materials 441 00:22:01,615 --> 00:22:02,981 for galaxies, 442 00:22:02,983 --> 00:22:05,818 New York's grid of roads brought the steel 443 00:22:05,820 --> 00:22:09,521 and concrete to build its city blocks. 444 00:22:09,523 --> 00:22:11,924 It's the dark matter that gives you the foundation. 445 00:22:11,926 --> 00:22:14,526 And it gives you the cosmic structure. 446 00:22:14,528 --> 00:22:15,927 And then later on, 447 00:22:15,929 --> 00:22:18,997 the normal matter fell into the galaxies 448 00:22:18,999 --> 00:22:22,067 and the clusters that we see today. 449 00:22:22,069 --> 00:22:24,036 The elegance of this newly discovered structure 450 00:22:24,038 --> 00:22:26,038 of the universe really astounds me. 451 00:22:26,040 --> 00:22:28,007 You have this web of dark matter, 452 00:22:28,009 --> 00:22:30,575 and it almost creates highways for regular matter 453 00:22:30,577 --> 00:22:33,111 to fall into these nexuses. 454 00:22:33,113 --> 00:22:36,081 And that's where you form the biggest, brightest galaxies. 455 00:22:39,585 --> 00:22:42,254 The more cosmologists study dark matter, 456 00:22:42,256 --> 00:22:44,556 the more they see the crucial role 457 00:22:44,558 --> 00:22:49,260 it's played in shaping the universe we see today. 458 00:22:49,262 --> 00:22:52,765 But despite these insights into our origins, 459 00:22:52,767 --> 00:22:54,999 scientists still don't know 460 00:22:55,001 --> 00:22:59,238 what dark matter actually is. 461 00:22:59,240 --> 00:23:03,442 How do you measure something that you can't see or feel? 462 00:23:15,594 --> 00:23:17,028 In the last 50 years, 463 00:23:17,030 --> 00:23:19,162 astronomers have discovered something 464 00:23:19,164 --> 00:23:22,766 incredible about our universe. 465 00:23:22,768 --> 00:23:26,070 It's controlled by an invisible puppet master 466 00:23:26,072 --> 00:23:27,605 called dark matter. 467 00:23:30,041 --> 00:23:32,242 Dark matter created and organized 468 00:23:32,244 --> 00:23:35,146 the large-scale structure of our universe. 469 00:23:37,215 --> 00:23:39,216 It may have even created the atoms 470 00:23:39,218 --> 00:23:41,352 that make up your body. 471 00:23:43,121 --> 00:23:46,557 But it remains a mystery because we can't see it, 472 00:23:46,559 --> 00:23:49,159 feel it or measure it directly. 473 00:23:52,363 --> 00:23:53,864 One of the properties of dark matter 474 00:23:53,866 --> 00:23:57,167 that we know for sure is that it doesn't interact with light. 475 00:23:57,169 --> 00:23:59,403 It doesn't shine. It doesn't reflect light. 476 00:23:59,405 --> 00:24:02,973 And so if you shine, uh, a laser beam on dark matter, 477 00:24:02,975 --> 00:24:04,407 the laser beam goes right through. 478 00:24:04,409 --> 00:24:07,278 It doesn't do anything. 479 00:24:07,280 --> 00:24:08,879 The term dark matter might actually be 480 00:24:08,881 --> 00:24:10,046 a little bit misleading. 481 00:24:10,048 --> 00:24:11,715 Maybe the real term for this stuff 482 00:24:11,717 --> 00:24:13,450 is transparent matter. 483 00:24:13,452 --> 00:24:16,386 But somehow that doesn't sound quite as cool as dark matter. 484 00:24:17,722 --> 00:24:20,724 So if we can't see dark matter, 485 00:24:20,726 --> 00:24:24,394 why are scientists so sure it's there? 486 00:24:24,396 --> 00:24:25,929 We know dark matter's there the same way 487 00:24:25,931 --> 00:24:28,265 we know many things are there that we can't see. 488 00:24:28,267 --> 00:24:29,433 We use gravity. 489 00:24:29,435 --> 00:24:31,368 Dark matter may not interact with light, 490 00:24:31,370 --> 00:24:33,370 but it interacts with gravity. 491 00:24:34,740 --> 00:24:37,441 Bullock: It's only by studying the motions of stars, 492 00:24:37,443 --> 00:24:40,010 even the motions of galaxies and the clustering of galaxies 493 00:24:40,012 --> 00:24:42,546 do we know that there's a lot of extra stuff 494 00:24:42,548 --> 00:24:44,247 out there that has mass 495 00:24:44,249 --> 00:24:46,050 that's directing these stars 496 00:24:46,052 --> 00:24:49,820 and galaxies to move in ways that are somewhat unexpected. 497 00:24:51,422 --> 00:24:55,759 The first person to detect this unusual movement in galaxies 498 00:24:55,761 --> 00:25:00,331 was astronomer Fritz zwicky in the 1930s. 499 00:25:00,333 --> 00:25:03,267 Using a custom-built 18-inch telescope, 500 00:25:03,269 --> 00:25:07,571 he studied how multiple galaxies interact inside a tight 501 00:25:07,573 --> 00:25:12,376 grouping of galaxies known as a cluster. 502 00:25:12,378 --> 00:25:14,077 Fritz zwicky, studying the motions 503 00:25:14,079 --> 00:25:15,613 of galaxies and clusters. 504 00:25:15,615 --> 00:25:17,915 And what he saw is that these galaxies 505 00:25:17,917 --> 00:25:19,717 were moving too fast. 506 00:25:21,786 --> 00:25:23,120 Every concentration of matter 507 00:25:23,122 --> 00:25:26,023 has associated with it an escape velocity. 508 00:25:26,025 --> 00:25:28,425 And if you're moving faster than the escape velocity, 509 00:25:28,427 --> 00:25:30,794 you should no longer be a part of that system. 510 00:25:33,264 --> 00:25:35,866 Just as a rocket can escape earth's gravity 511 00:25:35,868 --> 00:25:38,869 if it's traveling fast enough, 512 00:25:38,871 --> 00:25:42,572 a galaxy should break away from a galaxy cluster 513 00:25:42,574 --> 00:25:45,409 if it's moving with enough speed. 514 00:25:45,411 --> 00:25:48,546 Zwicky noticed that the galaxies in the coma cluster 515 00:25:48,548 --> 00:25:50,247 should be moving fast enough 516 00:25:50,249 --> 00:25:54,018 to escape the gravitational pull of their neighbors. 517 00:25:54,020 --> 00:25:55,686 But instead of speeding off 518 00:25:55,688 --> 00:25:57,921 into different parts of the universe, 519 00:25:57,923 --> 00:26:01,791 the galaxies remained bound together. 520 00:26:04,963 --> 00:26:09,166 Zwicky thought some unknown material was adding mass 521 00:26:09,168 --> 00:26:12,869 and, therefore, extra gravity to the system, 522 00:26:12,871 --> 00:26:15,105 holding the galaxies in place. 523 00:26:19,878 --> 00:26:22,346 Maybe there's something extra there 524 00:26:22,348 --> 00:26:24,314 that's providing more gravity 525 00:26:24,316 --> 00:26:27,885 than we can account for based on what we see. 526 00:26:27,887 --> 00:26:30,087 At the time, zwicky's ideas 527 00:26:30,089 --> 00:26:31,855 for this unexplained source 528 00:26:31,857 --> 00:26:35,993 of extra gravity fell on deaf ears. 529 00:26:35,995 --> 00:26:39,429 Zwicky was a very unlikable fellow and, 530 00:26:39,431 --> 00:26:41,965 I think, uh, infuriated many of his colleagues. 531 00:26:41,967 --> 00:26:44,001 And that perhaps was one another reason 532 00:26:44,003 --> 00:26:47,137 why they were less willing to accept his suggestion. 533 00:26:47,139 --> 00:26:49,139 The other is that I think he was so far ahead 534 00:26:49,141 --> 00:26:51,675 of his time as a scientists 535 00:26:51,677 --> 00:26:52,943 that it just took time 536 00:26:52,945 --> 00:26:54,945 for the rest of the community to catch up. 537 00:26:58,250 --> 00:27:00,383 It took another 30 years 538 00:27:00,385 --> 00:27:04,187 and a crucial discovery by astronomer Vera rubin 539 00:27:04,189 --> 00:27:07,491 before dark matter made it into the text books. 540 00:27:08,993 --> 00:27:12,062 Vera rubin was looking at galaxies themselves. 541 00:27:12,064 --> 00:27:15,165 Now, galaxies are collections of gas and stars and dust. 542 00:27:15,167 --> 00:27:17,367 And they have an overall motion. 543 00:27:17,369 --> 00:27:19,102 Our milky way galaxy's a disc. 544 00:27:19,104 --> 00:27:23,140 And that disc is moving around the center of the galaxy. 545 00:27:23,142 --> 00:27:25,275 Bullock: The stars in the middle of the galaxy you expect 546 00:27:25,277 --> 00:27:26,577 to go around very fast. 547 00:27:26,579 --> 00:27:28,279 And the stars at the outskirts of the galaxy, 548 00:27:28,281 --> 00:27:30,114 you expect to go around very slowly, 549 00:27:30,116 --> 00:27:32,650 just like the inner planets go around the sun very quickly 550 00:27:32,652 --> 00:27:36,420 and the outer planets go around the sun much more slowly. 551 00:27:36,422 --> 00:27:38,755 What she found is that the outskirts of the galaxy 552 00:27:38,757 --> 00:27:40,156 were spinning around the galaxy 553 00:27:40,158 --> 00:27:43,160 at the same speed as parts that were closer in. 554 00:27:43,162 --> 00:27:46,196 And that didn't make any sense. 555 00:27:46,198 --> 00:27:49,333 The stars of the galaxy appeared to be fixed, 556 00:27:49,335 --> 00:27:53,370 almost as if they were glued to a giant spinning wheel. 557 00:27:56,173 --> 00:27:57,508 Bullock: And the only way that can be is 558 00:27:57,510 --> 00:27:59,509 if there's some additional gravity there, 559 00:27:59,511 --> 00:28:02,245 some additional stuff there that's adding mass, 560 00:28:02,247 --> 00:28:03,914 that's adding gravity, that's making those 561 00:28:03,916 --> 00:28:05,749 outer stars go faster. 562 00:28:08,019 --> 00:28:11,054 The only conclusion was that the spinning wheel 563 00:28:11,056 --> 00:28:14,958 was being affected by something very massive 564 00:28:14,960 --> 00:28:17,494 and completely invisible. 565 00:28:17,496 --> 00:28:19,496 When astronomers turn their telescopes 566 00:28:19,498 --> 00:28:21,131 to see for themselves 567 00:28:21,133 --> 00:28:24,168 if this invisible mass was real, 568 00:28:24,170 --> 00:28:29,373 they found evidence for it almost everywhere they looked. 569 00:28:31,943 --> 00:28:34,511 As more and more other people were able to replicate 570 00:28:34,513 --> 00:28:36,814 what they had done, people started to realize, 571 00:28:36,816 --> 00:28:40,150 "whoa. You know, Fritz and Vera were right. 572 00:28:40,152 --> 00:28:42,919 This weird stuff is really out there." 573 00:28:44,856 --> 00:28:47,491 But there's not only just a little bit. 574 00:28:47,493 --> 00:28:49,760 Every galaxy we can see, essentially, 575 00:28:49,762 --> 00:28:51,929 is dominated by dark matter. 576 00:28:54,232 --> 00:28:57,334 Now, we know that dark matter is out there. 577 00:28:57,336 --> 00:29:03,007 But we're still no closer to working out what it actually is. 578 00:29:03,009 --> 00:29:07,244 We think it may be a particle called a wimp. 579 00:29:07,246 --> 00:29:10,480 But it could be a whole family of particles 580 00:29:10,482 --> 00:29:14,118 that forms dark atoms and dark molecules. 581 00:29:14,120 --> 00:29:18,389 Perhaps an entire dark universe is out there, 582 00:29:18,391 --> 00:29:21,558 filled with invisible dark planets 583 00:29:21,560 --> 00:29:24,794 and illuminated by the dark light 584 00:29:24,796 --> 00:29:26,596 of their dark stars. 585 00:29:39,080 --> 00:29:41,315 Scientists are struggling to uncover 586 00:29:41,317 --> 00:29:44,317 the true identity of dark matter. 587 00:29:46,854 --> 00:29:48,755 To date, the best candidate 588 00:29:48,757 --> 00:29:52,426 is a theoretical particle known as a wimp. 589 00:29:52,428 --> 00:29:54,161 But because wimps can pass through 590 00:29:54,163 --> 00:29:56,330 ordinary matter like a ghost, 591 00:29:56,332 --> 00:29:59,233 the researchers have been left empty-handed. 592 00:30:03,938 --> 00:30:07,307 Not only could dark matter be going through me right now, 593 00:30:07,309 --> 00:30:10,376 but it almost certainly is 594 00:30:10,378 --> 00:30:11,545 and I'm just not noticing it. 595 00:30:14,815 --> 00:30:16,850 And this is why we're building 596 00:30:16,852 --> 00:30:19,620 these very fancy detectors here on earth, 597 00:30:19,622 --> 00:30:21,488 to try to catch them. 598 00:30:23,924 --> 00:30:25,725 Until scientists can capture 599 00:30:25,727 --> 00:30:29,063 and analyze a wimp, all bets are off. 600 00:30:31,733 --> 00:30:34,434 Tegmark: The main challenge for the wimp theory is 601 00:30:34,436 --> 00:30:36,703 that we simply haven't found any wimps yet. 602 00:30:36,705 --> 00:30:38,505 And we've been looking pretty hard for ... 603 00:30:38,507 --> 00:30:41,074 for a lot of years. And pretty soon, 604 00:30:41,076 --> 00:30:42,543 it's gonna start to get embarrassing. 605 00:30:44,278 --> 00:30:47,748 Perhaps dark matter isn't made of wimps. 606 00:30:47,750 --> 00:30:50,350 Perhaps the stuff that makes up dark matter 607 00:30:50,352 --> 00:30:52,653 is stranger and more complex 608 00:30:52,655 --> 00:30:54,988 than we ever thought possible. 609 00:30:54,990 --> 00:30:57,557 We know that regular matter comes in many different forms. 610 00:30:57,559 --> 00:30:59,392 There are electrons and protons, 611 00:30:59,394 --> 00:31:02,496 neutrons, quarks, all of those. 612 00:31:02,498 --> 00:31:06,300 Why should we assume there's only one kind of dark matter? 613 00:31:06,302 --> 00:31:07,934 Our approach could be all wrong. 614 00:31:07,936 --> 00:31:10,137 Instead of looking for a single type of particle, 615 00:31:10,139 --> 00:31:13,173 there could be an entire zoo of dark matter particles. 616 00:31:15,910 --> 00:31:18,078 Particles of ordinary matter interact 617 00:31:18,080 --> 00:31:21,181 with each other to form atoms and molecules, 618 00:31:21,183 --> 00:31:23,550 the stuff we touch and see. 619 00:31:25,019 --> 00:31:28,488 If dark matter is made from different particles, 620 00:31:28,490 --> 00:31:30,490 it could do the same, 621 00:31:30,492 --> 00:31:36,196 interacting and building dark atoms of dark stuff, 622 00:31:36,198 --> 00:31:40,768 perhaps even a universe of dark materials. 623 00:31:43,438 --> 00:31:46,873 If we can show that dark matter interacts with itself, 624 00:31:46,875 --> 00:31:49,543 that means their really could be dark matter galaxies, 625 00:31:49,545 --> 00:31:51,811 dark matter stars, dark matter planets 626 00:31:51,813 --> 00:31:54,181 and people all around us right now 627 00:31:54,183 --> 00:31:56,049 that we were not aware of. 628 00:31:58,385 --> 00:32:01,822 Could this shadowy dark universe really exist? 629 00:32:07,162 --> 00:32:10,597 In 2012, the chandra X-ray telescope 630 00:32:10,599 --> 00:32:12,799 gave astronomers the first clue 631 00:32:12,801 --> 00:32:15,068 to whether dark matter interacts. 632 00:32:18,306 --> 00:32:20,673 The telescope observed the collision 633 00:32:20,675 --> 00:32:22,609 of two galaxy clusters, 634 00:32:22,611 --> 00:32:25,378 each packed with hundreds of galaxies. 635 00:32:30,218 --> 00:32:33,153 Astronomers hope to see what would happen 636 00:32:33,155 --> 00:32:35,923 to the dark matter inside the clusters. 637 00:32:35,925 --> 00:32:39,860 Would it show any signs of interacting? 638 00:32:39,862 --> 00:32:43,196 What does the dark matter do when these clusters collide? 639 00:32:43,198 --> 00:32:45,632 Well, that's the big question. 640 00:32:45,634 --> 00:32:46,767 When the clusters come together, 641 00:32:46,769 --> 00:32:49,369 does the dark matter smack and drag 642 00:32:49,371 --> 00:32:51,438 or does it go right on through? 643 00:32:51,440 --> 00:32:53,240 If we can measure that difference, 644 00:32:53,242 --> 00:32:56,476 we can tell does the dark matter self-interact or not? 645 00:32:58,580 --> 00:33:03,450 The galaxies pass through each other. 646 00:33:03,452 --> 00:33:05,452 But something is left behind: 647 00:33:07,722 --> 00:33:12,059 A tangle of dark matter. 648 00:33:12,061 --> 00:33:14,261 It looks like there's some extra dark matter 649 00:33:14,263 --> 00:33:15,996 that's been left behind in the middle. 650 00:33:15,998 --> 00:33:18,631 So it looks like as these two dark matter balls 651 00:33:18,633 --> 00:33:21,434 have come together, there has been some extra drag. 652 00:33:21,436 --> 00:33:23,436 And that drag has deposited, 653 00:33:23,438 --> 00:33:26,340 has left a bit of dark matter kinda sitting in between. 654 00:33:28,609 --> 00:33:30,110 To produce the drag, 655 00:33:30,112 --> 00:33:33,213 the dark matter in the colliding galaxy clusters 656 00:33:33,215 --> 00:33:34,948 must have interacted. 657 00:33:37,385 --> 00:33:39,986 If this observation turns out to be correct, 658 00:33:39,988 --> 00:33:46,059 it means that some dark matter interacts with itself. 659 00:33:46,061 --> 00:33:47,961 If that signal holds up, 660 00:33:47,963 --> 00:33:49,963 then it could be a really smoking gun 661 00:33:49,965 --> 00:33:53,800 detection of self-interacting dark matter. 662 00:33:53,802 --> 00:33:57,637 And that would be a game changer. 663 00:33:57,639 --> 00:33:59,772 Perhaps there could be dark matter planets 664 00:33:59,774 --> 00:34:02,675 and dark matter living entities. 665 00:34:02,677 --> 00:34:05,145 There could be a hidden ... hidden dark matter universe, 666 00:34:05,147 --> 00:34:07,948 if you wish, of ... of hidden dark matter objects. 667 00:34:07,950 --> 00:34:10,450 It's ... it stretches the limit of plausibility, 668 00:34:10,452 --> 00:34:13,319 but it's ... it's, uh, it's not impossible. 669 00:34:16,123 --> 00:34:18,391 If this dark sector really exists, 670 00:34:18,393 --> 00:34:21,795 there could even be dark light. 671 00:34:21,797 --> 00:34:24,665 So imagine you have this dark matter universe 672 00:34:24,667 --> 00:34:27,267 and it has this dark radiation. 673 00:34:27,269 --> 00:34:29,636 And this dark radiation can travel in waves 674 00:34:29,638 --> 00:34:30,971 that we call dark light, 675 00:34:30,973 --> 00:34:33,440 then maybe you could put on your dark glasses 676 00:34:33,442 --> 00:34:36,443 and actually view this dark universe 677 00:34:36,445 --> 00:34:38,645 via the dark light. 678 00:34:40,481 --> 00:34:41,815 Interacting dark matter 679 00:34:41,817 --> 00:34:43,750 suggests invisible worlds 680 00:34:43,752 --> 00:34:47,220 next to our own. 681 00:34:47,222 --> 00:34:51,725 But are these visions real or just a Sci-Fi fantasy? 682 00:34:54,395 --> 00:34:58,031 I think dark matter stars, dark matter planets, 683 00:34:58,033 --> 00:35:00,467 dark matter people are more in the realm of science fiction 684 00:35:00,469 --> 00:35:03,103 at this point. 685 00:35:03,105 --> 00:35:06,372 It would require a plethora of tooth fairies 686 00:35:06,374 --> 00:35:07,975 to imagine that the dark sector 687 00:35:07,977 --> 00:35:09,609 is that complicated 688 00:35:09,611 --> 00:35:11,944 to actually reproduce something like our sector. 689 00:35:11,946 --> 00:35:13,513 So in order to have, uh, dark planets 690 00:35:13,515 --> 00:35:16,216 and dark people and dark TV shows, 691 00:35:16,218 --> 00:35:18,285 it's... people have imagined it. 692 00:35:18,287 --> 00:35:19,619 And I'm not saying they haven't. 693 00:35:19,621 --> 00:35:22,689 But it certainly stretches the realm of, 694 00:35:22,691 --> 00:35:24,691 uh, credibility. 695 00:35:24,693 --> 00:35:26,626 There is so much dark matter out there 696 00:35:26,628 --> 00:35:29,029 that it controls the very fate of our universe. 697 00:35:29,031 --> 00:35:31,597 If even a tiny fraction of it could interact 698 00:35:31,599 --> 00:35:33,466 with other forms of dark matter, 699 00:35:33,468 --> 00:35:34,901 then maybe all bets are off. 700 00:35:36,937 --> 00:35:39,205 Even a tiny percentage of dark matter 701 00:35:39,207 --> 00:35:42,575 interacting could have huge implications 702 00:35:42,577 --> 00:35:46,513 for the future of life on earth 703 00:35:46,515 --> 00:35:48,415 because a controversial new idea 704 00:35:48,417 --> 00:35:54,020 suggests that in the future self-interacting dark matter 705 00:35:54,022 --> 00:35:57,524 could send a hail of comets our way. 706 00:35:57,526 --> 00:35:58,658 How do we know? 707 00:35:58,660 --> 00:36:02,162 Because dark matter may have done it before. 708 00:36:16,000 --> 00:36:17,935 Dark matter is the dominant 709 00:36:17,937 --> 00:36:20,938 creative force in our universe. 710 00:36:20,940 --> 00:36:24,809 But could it have helped to create us, too? 711 00:36:26,846 --> 00:36:29,679 Some scientists believe that a key moment 712 00:36:29,681 --> 00:36:30,948 in human evolution 713 00:36:30,950 --> 00:36:34,384 may have been directly affected by dark matter 714 00:36:34,386 --> 00:36:36,253 in the milky way. 715 00:36:41,493 --> 00:36:44,228 This controversial theory is inspired 716 00:36:44,230 --> 00:36:47,664 by one of the most violent days in earth's history. 717 00:36:52,771 --> 00:36:55,139 65 million years ago, 718 00:36:55,141 --> 00:36:57,675 an object the size of mount Everest 719 00:36:57,677 --> 00:36:59,443 slammed into the earth. 720 00:37:02,848 --> 00:37:06,116 The impact turned the sky black 721 00:37:06,118 --> 00:37:10,053 and set the continents on fire. 722 00:37:10,055 --> 00:37:12,623 Rampino: The amount of energy released in that explosion 723 00:37:12,625 --> 00:37:16,459 is about a billion times the Hiroshima bomb ... 724 00:37:16,461 --> 00:37:18,129 atom bomb that was dropped 725 00:37:18,131 --> 00:37:21,131 in world war ii, a billion times. 726 00:37:27,272 --> 00:37:28,806 This catastrophic event 727 00:37:28,808 --> 00:37:33,443 ended the age of dinosaurs and paved the way 728 00:37:33,445 --> 00:37:36,479 for our mammalian ancestors to flourish. 729 00:37:36,481 --> 00:37:38,149 But was it a one-off? 730 00:37:38,151 --> 00:37:39,616 Mass extinctions have happened 731 00:37:39,618 --> 00:37:41,519 on earth multiple times. 732 00:37:41,521 --> 00:37:43,520 So an obvious question to ask, 733 00:37:43,522 --> 00:37:45,055 is there any pattern? 734 00:37:45,057 --> 00:37:47,390 Is there any time that we know is more dangerous, 735 00:37:47,392 --> 00:37:49,593 more likely to have a mass extinction event? 736 00:37:49,595 --> 00:37:51,695 And is there anything we can link it to 737 00:37:51,697 --> 00:37:52,929 in the larger universe? 738 00:37:55,233 --> 00:37:59,169 Geologist Mike rampino thinks there is a pattern. 739 00:37:59,171 --> 00:38:02,339 And it could be linked to dark matter. 740 00:38:02,341 --> 00:38:04,407 Rampino: We were looking at the possibility of cycles 741 00:38:04,409 --> 00:38:06,076 in the geological record. 742 00:38:06,078 --> 00:38:09,246 And we found what seemed to be a 30-million-year cycle 743 00:38:09,248 --> 00:38:11,315 in many kinds of geological phenomena. 744 00:38:11,317 --> 00:38:12,949 Now, what could be causing this kind of 745 00:38:12,951 --> 00:38:14,885 a cycle of 30 million years? 746 00:38:16,721 --> 00:38:18,722 A clue comes from the passage 747 00:38:18,724 --> 00:38:22,392 of the sun around the milky way. 748 00:38:22,394 --> 00:38:24,961 It takes the sun about a quarter billion years 749 00:38:24,963 --> 00:38:27,665 to move once around the milky way galaxy. 750 00:38:27,667 --> 00:38:30,400 But as we spin around the galaxy's center, 751 00:38:30,402 --> 00:38:32,203 we also kind of Bob up and down 752 00:38:32,205 --> 00:38:34,004 through the larger disk of the galaxy. 753 00:38:36,209 --> 00:38:38,742 Weaving like a carousel horse, 754 00:38:38,744 --> 00:38:41,678 our sun passes through the galactic plane 755 00:38:41,680 --> 00:38:45,049 around once every 30 million years. 756 00:38:45,051 --> 00:38:46,350 And as it does this, 757 00:38:46,352 --> 00:38:49,519 it may also be passing through a layer 758 00:38:49,521 --> 00:38:52,489 of self-interacting dark matter. 759 00:38:54,459 --> 00:38:56,526 Bullock: It's a little bit speculative, but the idea 760 00:38:56,528 --> 00:38:58,962 is that a very small fraction of the dark matter 761 00:38:58,964 --> 00:39:02,299 is able to form a disk along 762 00:39:02,301 --> 00:39:04,167 with the disk of our galaxy. 763 00:39:04,169 --> 00:39:06,036 So in between the stars, 764 00:39:06,038 --> 00:39:07,471 in the disk where the sun lives, 765 00:39:07,473 --> 00:39:10,074 there's a very, very thin disk of dark matter, 766 00:39:10,076 --> 00:39:12,142 and this could do very exciting things. 767 00:39:16,547 --> 00:39:19,783 This disk has a strong gravitational pull. 768 00:39:22,620 --> 00:39:24,688 When our solar system passes through it, 769 00:39:24,690 --> 00:39:28,893 the disk's gravity may disrupt the orbits of comets 770 00:39:28,895 --> 00:39:31,161 in the outer solar system 771 00:39:31,163 --> 00:39:33,964 and send them hurtling towards the earth. 772 00:39:38,470 --> 00:39:41,872 Perhaps the object that killed the dinosaurs 773 00:39:41,874 --> 00:39:44,341 and paved the way for human evolution 774 00:39:44,343 --> 00:39:48,078 was just one of a series of extinction-level events 775 00:39:48,080 --> 00:39:50,847 triggered by dark matter. 776 00:39:50,849 --> 00:39:53,050 We've called this the Shiva hypothesis 777 00:39:53,052 --> 00:39:55,919 because the god Shiva in the hindu religion 778 00:39:55,921 --> 00:39:58,322 is the god of destruction and renewal. 779 00:39:58,324 --> 00:40:00,357 So one world is destroyed. 780 00:40:00,359 --> 00:40:02,326 The dinosaur world is destroyed. 781 00:40:02,328 --> 00:40:05,762 And the world of mammals and birds, uh, begins. 782 00:40:05,764 --> 00:40:07,130 If that's true, 783 00:40:07,132 --> 00:40:10,634 then dark matter has played an important role in us 784 00:40:10,636 --> 00:40:13,170 being here from the very beginning, 785 00:40:13,172 --> 00:40:14,371 right after the big bang, 786 00:40:14,373 --> 00:40:16,707 all the way through the evolution 787 00:40:16,709 --> 00:40:18,175 of humans themselves. 788 00:40:21,312 --> 00:40:22,846 The idea that dark matter 789 00:40:22,848 --> 00:40:24,481 caused mass extinctions 790 00:40:24,483 --> 00:40:29,085 on earth is, frankly, terrifying. 791 00:40:29,087 --> 00:40:31,688 The solar system is still bobbing up and down 792 00:40:31,690 --> 00:40:33,890 through the galactic plane. 793 00:40:33,892 --> 00:40:36,660 Perhaps the next disruptive comet 794 00:40:36,662 --> 00:40:38,395 will have our name on it. 795 00:40:40,898 --> 00:40:42,066 Fortunately for us, 796 00:40:42,068 --> 00:40:43,833 the theory that dark matter 797 00:40:43,835 --> 00:40:46,603 helped wipe out the dinosaurs 798 00:40:46,605 --> 00:40:47,938 is just that. 799 00:40:49,907 --> 00:40:53,110 We are talking about speculation on top of speculation. 800 00:40:53,112 --> 00:40:55,845 If dark matter exists in this manner, 801 00:40:55,847 --> 00:40:57,448 if it's made of some sort of particle 802 00:40:57,450 --> 00:40:59,049 that interacts with itself 803 00:40:59,051 --> 00:41:01,352 just enough that it forms a disk 804 00:41:01,354 --> 00:41:04,588 and if this disk exists, if, if, if, if, 805 00:41:04,590 --> 00:41:05,955 this idea is interesting. 806 00:41:05,957 --> 00:41:08,092 If I were the book maker here in New York, 807 00:41:08,094 --> 00:41:11,428 I would bet against dark matter killing the dinosaurs. 808 00:41:11,430 --> 00:41:13,697 But I think it's great that people are doing the math 809 00:41:13,699 --> 00:41:15,165 more careful and ... 810 00:41:15,167 --> 00:41:18,668 and really testing these scenarios. 811 00:41:23,408 --> 00:41:25,609 The outlook is unclear. 812 00:41:25,611 --> 00:41:28,578 But one thing's for sure: 813 00:41:28,580 --> 00:41:33,917 Without dark matter, we wouldn't even be here. 814 00:41:33,919 --> 00:41:37,187 The fact that there's a universe full of matter and stars 815 00:41:37,189 --> 00:41:41,859 and galaxies is due to the fact that dark matter exists. 816 00:41:41,861 --> 00:41:44,695 So if some young person in some ways asks me, 817 00:41:44,697 --> 00:41:47,531 "where do I come from?" 818 00:41:47,533 --> 00:41:49,799 I'd have to say, "from dark matter." 819 00:41:52,170 --> 00:41:54,438 Dark matter dictates how the galaxies form 820 00:41:54,440 --> 00:41:57,207 and how they move and where we'll go in the future. 821 00:41:58,410 --> 00:42:01,512 We're actually in dark matter's universe, not ours. 62852

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