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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,448 --> 00:00:08,034 WILLIAM SHATNER: A shining wonder that brightens our nights, 2 00:00:08,103 --> 00:00:10,103 measures our days, 3 00:00:10,172 --> 00:00:14,206 and may possess incredible powers. 4 00:00:16,827 --> 00:00:19,862 The Moon. Look at it. 5 00:00:19,965 --> 00:00:22,689 Is there anything more marvelous, 6 00:00:22,793 --> 00:00:25,448 more inspiring, 7 00:00:25,517 --> 00:00:29,931 than this glowing orb that hangs in the night sky? 8 00:00:30,034 --> 00:00:33,724 But is the Moon just a giant rock in space, 9 00:00:33,827 --> 00:00:37,137 or does it hold profound secrets? 10 00:00:37,241 --> 00:00:39,586 Could it harbor signs of life, 11 00:00:39,689 --> 00:00:42,137 or perhaps evidence 12 00:00:42,241 --> 00:00:44,862 of an ancient civilization? 13 00:00:44,931 --> 00:00:47,827 That is what we'll try and find out. 14 00:00:47,896 --> 00:00:51,068 ♪ ♪ 15 00:01:07,000 --> 00:01:09,241 Each fall, the people of this city gather along 16 00:01:09,344 --> 00:01:11,172 the banks of the Qiantang River 17 00:01:11,241 --> 00:01:14,137 to see something extraordinary: 18 00:01:15,068 --> 00:01:18,275 A massive wave that barrels upstream 19 00:01:18,344 --> 00:01:22,344 and keeps surging for miles and miles up the river. 20 00:01:23,275 --> 00:01:26,517 The wave's rapid speed, loud roaring sound, 21 00:01:26,586 --> 00:01:30,413 and white crests have earned it a fitting nickname: 22 00:01:31,482 --> 00:01:33,620 The Silver Dragon. 23 00:01:36,000 --> 00:01:38,448 A hundred miles southwest of Shanghai, 24 00:01:38,551 --> 00:01:42,137 every year there is this really interesting tidal phenomena 25 00:01:42,241 --> 00:01:45,137 that happens that's very much related to the Moon. 26 00:01:46,068 --> 00:01:49,000 The Silver Dragon is a 30-foot-tall, 27 00:01:49,103 --> 00:01:51,586 25-mile-an-hour wave, 28 00:01:51,655 --> 00:01:54,206 so it draws a massive crowd. 29 00:01:54,310 --> 00:01:57,724 Over a 100,000 people annually come out to watch this wave, 30 00:01:57,793 --> 00:01:59,551 and people even surf on it. 31 00:01:59,655 --> 00:02:02,517 MICHAEL DENNIN: It's huge, it comes down and it can 32 00:02:02,620 --> 00:02:04,413 flood to the side, and it's actually quite dangerous, 33 00:02:04,517 --> 00:02:06,551 and people often get way too close. 34 00:02:06,655 --> 00:02:09,862 TEITEL: We're used to seeing tides at beaches on the ocean, 35 00:02:09,931 --> 00:02:12,620 they go in and out, but it's never this dramatic. 36 00:02:12,724 --> 00:02:17,034 This is an extremely tangible thing you can point to and say, 37 00:02:17,137 --> 00:02:20,000 "This is the Moon's effect on the Earth, 38 00:02:20,103 --> 00:02:21,827 happening now as we see it." 39 00:02:22,862 --> 00:02:26,137 MICHIO KAKU: The gravity of the Moon lifts the water up 40 00:02:26,241 --> 00:02:28,275 to give you high tide, 41 00:02:28,379 --> 00:02:32,206 and when the Moon passes, it drops, giving you low tide. 42 00:02:32,310 --> 00:02:34,965 Think of that: the entire planet Earth's water 43 00:02:35,034 --> 00:02:37,034 being lifted several feet. 44 00:02:37,137 --> 00:02:39,586 And that tremendous cosmic energy 45 00:02:39,655 --> 00:02:42,413 comes from the gravitational pull of the Moon. 46 00:02:44,482 --> 00:02:46,793 SHATNER: Today, the process by which the Moon 47 00:02:46,896 --> 00:02:50,862 generates Earth's ocean tides is widely understood. 48 00:02:51,793 --> 00:02:54,620 But what is less commonly known 49 00:02:54,724 --> 00:02:56,931 is how the Moon causes a phenomenon 50 00:02:57,000 --> 00:02:58,758 like the Silver Dragon. 51 00:02:59,965 --> 00:03:02,000 Well, scientists have a name 52 00:03:02,103 --> 00:03:03,896 for this kind of strange occurrence. 53 00:03:04,000 --> 00:03:07,103 It's called a tidal bore. 54 00:03:07,172 --> 00:03:09,413 One of the most amazing things the Moon does, 55 00:03:09,517 --> 00:03:12,172 from my perspective, is create tidal bores. 56 00:03:12,241 --> 00:03:14,241 And the way to think about it is 57 00:03:14,344 --> 00:03:17,068 the tide rises the oceans a certain height, 58 00:03:17,172 --> 00:03:19,965 and if you have the right combination 59 00:03:20,034 --> 00:03:24,551 of the shape of the connection of the ocean into a river, 60 00:03:24,655 --> 00:03:27,275 you can actually funnel all of that height 61 00:03:27,379 --> 00:03:31,206 into a narrow, extra high, massive wave. 62 00:03:31,275 --> 00:03:34,241 And then that will run up a gorge or a river. 63 00:03:34,310 --> 00:03:37,310 It's kind of a fascinating interaction between Moon, water, 64 00:03:37,413 --> 00:03:40,517 nature and then people and what we do in response to it. 65 00:03:41,448 --> 00:03:44,862 SHATNER: Tidal bores are a striking example 66 00:03:44,965 --> 00:03:47,517 of the power that the Moon exerts on the Earth. 67 00:03:47,620 --> 00:03:49,448 But, according to scientists, 68 00:03:49,517 --> 00:03:53,379 creating tides is just one of many effects 69 00:03:53,482 --> 00:03:56,275 that the Moon has on our planet. 70 00:03:56,379 --> 00:03:59,448 For instance, as the Moon circles the Earth, 71 00:03:59,551 --> 00:04:03,137 its gravitational force causes molten liquids 72 00:04:03,241 --> 00:04:06,241 deep within the Earth's core to swirl, 73 00:04:06,344 --> 00:04:10,689 a process which some experts refer to as "churning." 74 00:04:11,551 --> 00:04:14,310 We now realize that the orbit of the Moon 75 00:04:14,379 --> 00:04:16,827 creates churning inside the Earth. 76 00:04:16,896 --> 00:04:20,689 The Moon churns the inside of the Earth 77 00:04:20,758 --> 00:04:22,827 by tidal forces, 78 00:04:22,896 --> 00:04:27,206 causing currents in the form of electricity, 79 00:04:27,310 --> 00:04:30,586 which creates the Earth's magnetic field. 80 00:04:31,379 --> 00:04:33,931 We depend upon a magnetic shield 81 00:04:34,034 --> 00:04:38,310 to protect us against solar flares from the Sun. 82 00:04:38,413 --> 00:04:40,620 And we think that's where the Moon comes in. 83 00:04:40,724 --> 00:04:43,275 If it wasn't for the presence of the Moon, 84 00:04:43,379 --> 00:04:45,206 you go outside, you get a sunburn 85 00:04:45,310 --> 00:04:47,413 within just a matter of a few minutes. 86 00:04:48,310 --> 00:04:51,413 SHATNER: A sunburn within a few minutes? 87 00:04:51,482 --> 00:04:54,793 It's enough to make you wonder what else could happen 88 00:04:54,862 --> 00:04:57,551 if the unimaginable occurred 89 00:04:57,655 --> 00:04:59,551 and the Moon... 90 00:04:59,655 --> 00:05:01,689 just disappeared? 91 00:05:01,793 --> 00:05:03,517 One of the questions I get asked a lot is, you know, 92 00:05:03,620 --> 00:05:05,275 can we survive without the Moon? 93 00:05:06,206 --> 00:05:08,275 If the Moon suddenly disappeared, 94 00:05:08,379 --> 00:05:10,862 I think not. 95 00:05:10,931 --> 00:05:12,724 The result on Earth would be 96 00:05:12,793 --> 00:05:15,206 catastrophic and very, very rapid. 97 00:05:15,310 --> 00:05:17,379 The tides would stop working. 98 00:05:17,482 --> 00:05:19,793 The Earth would start slowing down. 99 00:05:19,896 --> 00:05:21,758 As the Earth slows down, 100 00:05:21,862 --> 00:05:24,275 it can start wobbling on its axis. 101 00:05:24,344 --> 00:05:26,344 If it wobbles very far, 102 00:05:26,413 --> 00:05:28,379 this would melt the polar ice caps, 103 00:05:28,482 --> 00:05:30,413 and sea levels would rise radically. 104 00:05:31,448 --> 00:05:34,068 Also, a place like Las Vegas 105 00:05:34,172 --> 00:05:36,172 could be freezing in winter 106 00:05:36,241 --> 00:05:38,206 and yet boiling in summer. 107 00:05:38,310 --> 00:05:40,448 There's all sorts of things that could 108 00:05:40,517 --> 00:05:42,689 cause trouble for life on Earth. 109 00:05:43,689 --> 00:05:46,517 BRIAN KEATING: The Moon is sort of the Earth's bodyguard 110 00:05:46,620 --> 00:05:48,413 because the Moon has protected us 111 00:05:48,482 --> 00:05:50,413 from asteroid impacts. 112 00:05:50,517 --> 00:05:52,344 All the craters that we see on the Moon 113 00:05:52,413 --> 00:05:54,448 are the result of impacts of asteroid fragments. 114 00:05:54,551 --> 00:05:56,551 And all those craters, 115 00:05:56,655 --> 00:05:59,413 they could have been impacts on Earth. 116 00:06:01,448 --> 00:06:03,965 KAKU: So we have this cosmic coincidence. 117 00:06:04,068 --> 00:06:07,103 All the characteristics to the Moon are just so 118 00:06:07,172 --> 00:06:10,206 that we have life on the planet Earth. 119 00:06:10,275 --> 00:06:12,517 So, in other words, we hit the jackpot. 120 00:06:12,620 --> 00:06:15,862 We have this cosmic lottery, and we hit the jackpot. 121 00:06:15,965 --> 00:06:17,724 We got a moon that makes 122 00:06:17,793 --> 00:06:21,931 possible conditions on the Earth compatible with life. 123 00:06:22,896 --> 00:06:25,586 SHATNER: The fact that the Moon is so vital 124 00:06:25,655 --> 00:06:29,241 to life on Earth raises some intriguing questions. 125 00:06:29,310 --> 00:06:32,689 Such as, is there something special 126 00:06:32,793 --> 00:06:36,344 about our Moon that enables it to make life on Earth possible? 127 00:06:36,413 --> 00:06:40,000 And, if our Moon is unique, 128 00:06:40,068 --> 00:06:41,931 what makes it different 129 00:06:42,034 --> 00:06:46,896 from the more than 200 other moons in our solar system? 130 00:06:46,965 --> 00:06:49,827 KEATING: A moon is just what we call a natural satellite, 131 00:06:49,931 --> 00:06:52,068 a satellite that's not human-made 132 00:06:52,137 --> 00:06:53,758 that orbits around a planet. 133 00:06:53,862 --> 00:06:56,275 Other planets, such as the massive gas planets 134 00:06:56,379 --> 00:06:58,310 like Jupiter and Saturn, 135 00:06:58,413 --> 00:07:00,206 have many, many dozens of moons. 136 00:07:00,310 --> 00:07:02,172 We're the only planet in the solar system 137 00:07:02,275 --> 00:07:03,965 that has only one moon. 138 00:07:04,034 --> 00:07:06,931 And our Moon is actually the fifth largest moon 139 00:07:07,034 --> 00:07:09,172 in the solar system, it's quite large. 140 00:07:10,206 --> 00:07:13,206 TEITEL: It's really big compared to the planet. 141 00:07:13,275 --> 00:07:14,655 It's a very unique setup. 142 00:07:14,758 --> 00:07:16,896 Usually moons are significantly smaller, 143 00:07:17,000 --> 00:07:19,551 but our Moon is relatively large compared to our planet. 144 00:07:20,413 --> 00:07:22,275 MIKE BARA: It's very bizarre. 145 00:07:22,379 --> 00:07:24,241 It's basically a double planet system. 146 00:07:24,344 --> 00:07:26,620 The Moon is so big and so close. 147 00:07:26,724 --> 00:07:28,586 And there is no other example 148 00:07:28,689 --> 00:07:31,827 anywhere in the observable universe like this. 149 00:07:32,758 --> 00:07:34,896 LYNN PICKNETT: Because it's so big 150 00:07:35,000 --> 00:07:39,103 and it has so many effects on the Earth, 151 00:07:39,206 --> 00:07:43,137 the Moon is always fascinating. 152 00:07:43,206 --> 00:07:47,689 There's something inherently amazing and mesmerizing 153 00:07:47,793 --> 00:07:51,862 about how big and how powerful it is. 154 00:07:51,931 --> 00:07:54,310 I mean, there it is, hanging in our skies, 155 00:07:54,379 --> 00:07:56,827 this extraordinary spherical object, 156 00:07:56,896 --> 00:08:00,137 just this amazing orb in the sky. 157 00:08:01,793 --> 00:08:04,275 SHATNER: Scientists have observed 158 00:08:04,344 --> 00:08:07,344 that there is another strange aspect 159 00:08:07,413 --> 00:08:10,103 of the Moon's dimensions. 160 00:08:10,172 --> 00:08:13,275 It is precisely the right size 161 00:08:13,344 --> 00:08:15,620 and distance from the Sun 162 00:08:15,724 --> 00:08:18,344 to occasionally create... 163 00:08:18,448 --> 00:08:21,448 a total solar eclipse. 164 00:08:21,517 --> 00:08:24,620 If you look at the Moon and you look at the Sun, 165 00:08:24,689 --> 00:08:28,103 the Sun is actually 400 times the diameter of the Moon, 166 00:08:28,206 --> 00:08:31,448 but the Moon happens to be 400 times closer to the Earth. 167 00:08:31,551 --> 00:08:34,310 This means that the Sun and the Moon look as if 168 00:08:34,413 --> 00:08:36,034 they're the same size in the sky. 169 00:08:36,103 --> 00:08:39,241 That means that when the Moon goes in front of the Sun, 170 00:08:39,310 --> 00:08:41,137 it totally blocks off the Sun. 171 00:08:43,310 --> 00:08:44,931 I've been very lucky, 172 00:08:45,000 --> 00:08:47,344 and I've seen two total eclipses of the Sun, 173 00:08:47,448 --> 00:08:48,931 and they are magical. 174 00:08:49,000 --> 00:08:51,517 They literally blew my socks off. 175 00:08:51,620 --> 00:08:54,517 BARA: The fact is, the Moon is exactly the right size 176 00:08:54,620 --> 00:08:56,586 and exactly the right distance from the Earth 177 00:08:56,655 --> 00:08:59,000 to create perfect solar eclipses. 178 00:08:59,068 --> 00:09:01,310 Some people think that's a coincidence. 179 00:09:01,379 --> 00:09:02,689 I don't think it's a coincidence. 180 00:09:02,793 --> 00:09:04,551 There has to be something very special 181 00:09:04,655 --> 00:09:06,620 and very mysterious about the Moon itself. 182 00:09:07,517 --> 00:09:09,586 SHATNER: The unique size relationship 183 00:09:09,655 --> 00:09:12,241 between the Moon and Earth may help explain 184 00:09:12,344 --> 00:09:16,000 why the Moon has such a strong impact on our planet. 185 00:09:16,068 --> 00:09:19,517 But does the Moon's gravity only affect the Earth? 186 00:09:19,620 --> 00:09:22,620 Or could it also have a direct influence 187 00:09:22,689 --> 00:09:24,896 on human beings? 188 00:09:25,000 --> 00:09:26,965 Perhaps the answers can be found 189 00:09:27,068 --> 00:09:30,551 by examining how the Moon alters not just our planet 190 00:09:30,655 --> 00:09:33,103 but also... 191 00:09:33,172 --> 00:09:34,758 our minds. 192 00:09:42,068 --> 00:09:43,931 How does a full moon make you feel? 193 00:09:44,000 --> 00:09:45,965 A little nervous? 194 00:09:46,034 --> 00:09:48,413 Afraid, perhaps? 195 00:09:48,517 --> 00:09:50,517 Well, maybe you should be. 196 00:09:50,620 --> 00:09:53,172 After all, the word "lunatic" comes from the notion 197 00:09:53,275 --> 00:09:55,586 that when the full Moon rises, 198 00:09:55,655 --> 00:09:58,896 it causes insanity, mayhem, 199 00:09:58,965 --> 00:10:00,758 and even murder. 200 00:10:00,827 --> 00:10:03,482 But are-are these just stories? 201 00:10:05,413 --> 00:10:07,586 Or does the Moon actually have the power 202 00:10:07,655 --> 00:10:11,827 to make people crazy, and drive them to kill? 203 00:10:14,344 --> 00:10:16,620 [thunder rumbles] 204 00:10:24,413 --> 00:10:26,379 PICKNETT: The word "lunatic" 205 00:10:26,448 --> 00:10:28,655 means "the Moon has made you mad." 206 00:10:28,758 --> 00:10:32,000 The word "luna" is Latin-- 207 00:10:32,103 --> 00:10:34,586 is Roman, essentially-- for "Moon." 208 00:10:35,413 --> 00:10:39,206 So, clearly, over the millennia, 209 00:10:39,275 --> 00:10:41,413 the Moon has been associated 210 00:10:41,482 --> 00:10:43,586 with a rise in madness, 211 00:10:43,689 --> 00:10:47,206 or manifestations of mental disturbance, 212 00:10:47,310 --> 00:10:49,137 emotional disturbance. 213 00:10:49,241 --> 00:10:52,379 YOUNG: The dancing in the moonlight, the witchcraft, 214 00:10:52,448 --> 00:10:55,241 the ceremonies of the occult, 215 00:10:55,310 --> 00:10:58,310 somehow are related to the Moon. 216 00:10:58,413 --> 00:11:01,310 You take something like the werewolf. 217 00:11:01,413 --> 00:11:02,724 The Moon comes up, 218 00:11:02,793 --> 00:11:04,655 out comes the werewolf. 219 00:11:04,758 --> 00:11:07,206 Some powerful alter ego. 220 00:11:10,655 --> 00:11:12,896 ERIC HICKEY: Way back in Victorian England 221 00:11:13,000 --> 00:11:15,068 people would claim, "It wasn't my fault. 222 00:11:15,172 --> 00:11:17,896 "The Moon made me do it, it was a moon madness, 223 00:11:18,000 --> 00:11:19,517 it was lunacy." 224 00:11:19,620 --> 00:11:21,793 And so people could actually be institutionalized 225 00:11:21,862 --> 00:11:24,655 rather than be hung because 226 00:11:24,758 --> 00:11:26,172 they were crazy, it was not their fault. 227 00:11:26,275 --> 00:11:27,517 That's how strong 228 00:11:27,620 --> 00:11:30,068 the belief was in-in the Moon. 229 00:11:31,034 --> 00:11:33,448 SHATNER: The connection between the full Moon, 230 00:11:33,551 --> 00:11:35,758 insanity and violence 231 00:11:35,827 --> 00:11:38,137 is not merely an antiquated fantasy. 232 00:11:38,206 --> 00:11:41,482 In fact, similar stories about the Moon 233 00:11:41,586 --> 00:11:43,965 persist into modern times. 234 00:11:45,724 --> 00:11:47,586 PICKNETT: It's well known people who work 235 00:11:47,689 --> 00:11:49,482 for emergency services-- 236 00:11:49,586 --> 00:11:52,137 paramedics, or the police, for example, 237 00:11:52,206 --> 00:11:53,758 and they all report 238 00:11:53,862 --> 00:11:57,793 the numbers go up at full Moon, 239 00:11:57,862 --> 00:12:01,655 of people in accidents or suffering from violence. 240 00:12:01,724 --> 00:12:05,862 But science has challenged these stories. 241 00:12:06,862 --> 00:12:09,896 YOUNG: That's myth, that is legendary talk. 242 00:12:09,965 --> 00:12:12,758 We don't have science to back that up and yet, 243 00:12:12,862 --> 00:12:16,758 when we look at the night sky, the big object is the Moon. 244 00:12:16,862 --> 00:12:20,827 It is the dominant sighting in the heavens. 245 00:12:21,689 --> 00:12:23,620 When the Moon is full, 246 00:12:23,724 --> 00:12:26,103 poetically, there are lots of effects. 247 00:12:28,206 --> 00:12:30,655 SHATNER: Humanity has long expressed a belief that the Moon 248 00:12:30,758 --> 00:12:33,862 can influence our minds. 249 00:12:35,103 --> 00:12:38,931 But is that all just a figment of our collective imagination? 250 00:12:39,862 --> 00:12:43,034 Or is it possible to scientifically prove 251 00:12:43,103 --> 00:12:45,862 that the Moon can affect the mind? 252 00:12:53,551 --> 00:12:56,241 Psychiatrist Dr. David Avery 253 00:12:56,344 --> 00:12:59,103 is counseling a 35-year-old man 254 00:12:59,206 --> 00:13:01,931 who suffers from bipolar disorder 255 00:13:02,000 --> 00:13:03,862 and has experienced a number 256 00:13:03,965 --> 00:13:06,517 of sleepless nights. 257 00:13:06,620 --> 00:13:08,931 He had bipolar disorder, 258 00:13:09,000 --> 00:13:11,413 sometimes known as manic-depressive illness. 259 00:13:11,517 --> 00:13:13,551 He was typical in that 260 00:13:13,655 --> 00:13:15,931 he had a history of these episodes... 261 00:13:16,793 --> 00:13:19,551 ...of having short sleep, 262 00:13:19,655 --> 00:13:21,793 manic symptoms, 263 00:13:21,896 --> 00:13:24,620 hyperactivity, thoughts going very fast, 264 00:13:24,689 --> 00:13:27,275 and might get only one or two hours of sleep 265 00:13:27,344 --> 00:13:28,862 during the manic phase. 266 00:13:29,827 --> 00:13:32,827 SHATNER: The patient, an engineer by trade, 267 00:13:32,931 --> 00:13:35,241 kept detailed records of his sleep habits, 268 00:13:35,310 --> 00:13:38,965 noting the dates and times when he had trouble falling asleep. 269 00:13:39,034 --> 00:13:41,758 When Dr. Avery studied the log, 270 00:13:41,862 --> 00:13:44,103 he made a startling connection 271 00:13:44,172 --> 00:13:47,275 between the patient's sleeplessness and the Moon. 272 00:13:49,275 --> 00:13:52,310 It was very clear these short sleep periods 273 00:13:52,379 --> 00:13:56,206 were correlated both with the full Moon and the new Moon. 274 00:13:57,827 --> 00:14:00,068 And so my jaw kind of dropped 275 00:14:00,172 --> 00:14:03,206 when I saw the regularity of the pattern 276 00:14:03,310 --> 00:14:05,482 and the fact that this was associated 277 00:14:05,586 --> 00:14:07,586 with changes of the Moon. 278 00:14:08,620 --> 00:14:11,689 SHATNER: The evidence showed a pattern that suggested 279 00:14:11,793 --> 00:14:14,827 that the lunar cycle may be responsible 280 00:14:14,896 --> 00:14:17,793 for causing some people to become restless, 281 00:14:17,862 --> 00:14:20,620 to the point where they can't sleep. 282 00:14:20,689 --> 00:14:23,827 I saw this, um, pattern in 2004, 283 00:14:23,931 --> 00:14:26,068 but it was a sample size of one, 284 00:14:26,137 --> 00:14:29,413 which scientifically is not all that strong. 285 00:14:29,517 --> 00:14:33,689 But in 2017, Dr. Thomas Wehr 286 00:14:33,758 --> 00:14:35,517 from the National Institute of Mental Health 287 00:14:35,586 --> 00:14:37,689 published a paper in which he had 288 00:14:37,793 --> 00:14:41,310 17 rapid-cycling bipolar patients 289 00:14:41,413 --> 00:14:45,206 who had synchrony with the lunar tidal cycles. 290 00:14:45,275 --> 00:14:48,241 I realized at that point that my patient 291 00:14:48,344 --> 00:14:50,862 um, was not the only one. 292 00:14:50,965 --> 00:14:54,482 SHATNER: In 2018, Dr. Avery and Dr. Wehr 293 00:14:54,586 --> 00:14:58,344 joined forces and published their findings on the connection 294 00:14:58,413 --> 00:15:01,758 between Moon cycles and sleeplessness. 295 00:15:02,827 --> 00:15:05,931 They theorized that the Moon has this effect on some people 296 00:15:06,034 --> 00:15:07,862 because they are particularly sensitive 297 00:15:07,965 --> 00:15:10,068 to its gravitational pull. 298 00:15:10,137 --> 00:15:13,655 We have a vestibular system in the ears 299 00:15:13,724 --> 00:15:16,103 that helps us with balance. 300 00:15:16,172 --> 00:15:18,517 And in the vestibular system, 301 00:15:18,620 --> 00:15:22,862 there are tiny stones that are on the end of small filaments 302 00:15:22,965 --> 00:15:26,000 that move around with gravity. 303 00:15:26,068 --> 00:15:30,862 These filaments send signals to parts of the brain 304 00:15:30,965 --> 00:15:34,827 that are involved with our body clocks and sleep. 305 00:15:34,896 --> 00:15:37,931 So it's conceivable that, in some way, 306 00:15:38,000 --> 00:15:41,862 changes in gravity generated by the Moon 307 00:15:41,965 --> 00:15:44,206 are affecting these filaments, 308 00:15:44,310 --> 00:15:46,965 perhaps influencing the body clock, 309 00:15:47,034 --> 00:15:49,758 then influencing sleep and mood. 310 00:15:49,827 --> 00:15:52,413 When I think of the Moon, I think 311 00:15:52,482 --> 00:15:55,137 of the gravitational changes that it creates. 312 00:15:55,206 --> 00:15:58,137 It may be that these gravitational forces 313 00:15:58,206 --> 00:16:03,517 have a greater impact on our sleep than you might expect. 314 00:16:03,586 --> 00:16:06,586 These are all questions that I think, uh, 315 00:16:06,655 --> 00:16:08,517 should be answered. 316 00:16:08,586 --> 00:16:11,965 SHATNER: It seems that the more we study the Moon, 317 00:16:12,068 --> 00:16:14,896 the more we realize that there is much about it 318 00:16:15,000 --> 00:16:17,000 that remains a mystery. 319 00:16:17,068 --> 00:16:20,000 For instance, it wasn't that long ago that we believed 320 00:16:20,103 --> 00:16:23,310 the Moon was just a huge rock floating in space... 321 00:16:23,379 --> 00:16:26,413 until scientists were surprised to discover 322 00:16:26,517 --> 00:16:29,137 that part of our attraction to the Moon 323 00:16:29,241 --> 00:16:33,551 may be due to the fact that it's actually magnetic. 324 00:16:45,517 --> 00:16:47,965 SHATNER: A group of scientists publish the results 325 00:16:48,034 --> 00:16:50,103 of a remarkable study on the Moon. 326 00:16:51,137 --> 00:16:55,827 By analyzing information collected by NASA space probes, 327 00:16:55,931 --> 00:16:59,000 the team discovered that an enormous mass of metal 328 00:16:59,103 --> 00:17:02,379 is buried beneath the surface of the Moon. 329 00:17:02,482 --> 00:17:06,758 This mysterious mass is 1,200 miles in diameter, 330 00:17:06,862 --> 00:17:09,586 and, because it's hidden deep underground, 331 00:17:09,689 --> 00:17:12,862 before this paper was published, 332 00:17:12,965 --> 00:17:17,000 scientists had no idea the metal was there. 333 00:17:18,931 --> 00:17:21,517 KAKU: What happened is we have satellites 334 00:17:21,620 --> 00:17:23,344 that go around the Moon, 335 00:17:23,448 --> 00:17:27,551 and it turns out that the gravitational pull increased, 336 00:17:27,655 --> 00:17:31,793 indicating the presence of a massive, dense object 337 00:17:31,896 --> 00:17:34,689 underneath the surface of the Moon. 338 00:17:34,758 --> 00:17:36,448 KEATING: According to the scientists 339 00:17:36,551 --> 00:17:38,137 who made this discovery, 340 00:17:38,241 --> 00:17:41,068 it's made of metals, very dense, very heavy metals 341 00:17:41,172 --> 00:17:43,586 like iron, cobalt, nickel, 342 00:17:43,689 --> 00:17:45,448 which are also highly magnetic. 343 00:17:45,551 --> 00:17:48,931 ADERIN-POCOCK: Now, the question is how did it get there? 344 00:17:49,000 --> 00:17:52,931 How did this blob of iron get to the Moon? 345 00:17:53,034 --> 00:17:56,206 There were sort of a few theories afoot, but I think 346 00:17:56,310 --> 00:17:59,827 the one that makes most sense is that it was an asteroid strike. 347 00:17:59,896 --> 00:18:03,344 And it seems quite likely that a metal asteroid 348 00:18:03,448 --> 00:18:06,758 came and hit the Moon's surface with huge impact. 349 00:18:06,862 --> 00:18:09,068 It sort of melted into the Moon's surface, 350 00:18:09,172 --> 00:18:11,931 and then magma from the Moon covered it over, 351 00:18:12,034 --> 00:18:14,137 so that's why we hadn't discovered it before. 352 00:18:14,241 --> 00:18:17,689 SHATNER: One reason why the discovery of metal on the Moon 353 00:18:17,793 --> 00:18:19,724 came as such a surprise 354 00:18:19,793 --> 00:18:23,172 is because it's easy to assume that we already know 355 00:18:23,241 --> 00:18:26,068 most of what there is to know about the Moon. 356 00:18:27,000 --> 00:18:29,517 After all, we've photographed it, 357 00:18:29,620 --> 00:18:34,068 studied it, and sent astronauts to walk on its surface. 358 00:18:34,172 --> 00:18:37,379 But despite everything we've learned, 359 00:18:37,448 --> 00:18:41,137 the Moon still holds many secrets. 360 00:18:42,586 --> 00:18:45,517 The Moon is so fascinating because it's mysterious. 361 00:18:45,620 --> 00:18:48,344 It's close to us, and yet, it's very inscrutable. 362 00:18:48,448 --> 00:18:50,724 There are places and parts of the Moon 363 00:18:50,827 --> 00:18:52,586 we know almost nothing about, 364 00:18:52,655 --> 00:18:56,241 that are completely unexplored and unexplained. 365 00:18:56,310 --> 00:18:59,758 There's so many mysteries about our nearest celestial neighbor. 366 00:18:59,827 --> 00:19:02,896 For example, what's inside the Moon? 367 00:19:02,965 --> 00:19:05,034 What's on the far side of the Moon? 368 00:19:05,137 --> 00:19:07,793 It's amazing that we've sent space probes to Saturn, 369 00:19:07,896 --> 00:19:11,172 Jupiter, Uranus, Neptune, even past Pluto, 370 00:19:11,275 --> 00:19:15,137 and yet there's so many things we don't know about the Moon. 371 00:19:15,241 --> 00:19:18,172 SHATNER: The detection of metal on the Moon 372 00:19:18,275 --> 00:19:22,793 was followed by an even more extraordinary discovery. 373 00:19:23,896 --> 00:19:26,241 In October of 2020, 374 00:19:26,310 --> 00:19:30,137 NASA's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy 375 00:19:30,241 --> 00:19:34,448 announced that they had detected water 376 00:19:34,517 --> 00:19:36,586 on the sunlit surface of the Moon. 377 00:19:36,689 --> 00:19:40,379 And in other studies, scientists have found evidence 378 00:19:40,482 --> 00:19:43,724 of ice on the north pole of the Moon. 379 00:19:43,827 --> 00:19:46,620 ADERIN-POCOCK: Many people assumed that the Moon was dry. 380 00:19:46,689 --> 00:19:49,172 And, looking at the environment, it wasn't so surprising 381 00:19:49,241 --> 00:19:51,137 that they sort of concluded this. 382 00:19:51,241 --> 00:19:53,379 But one thing we have got confirmation of 383 00:19:53,482 --> 00:19:56,793 is large volumes of frozen water 384 00:19:56,896 --> 00:19:59,862 in these craters which never see sunlight. 385 00:20:00,793 --> 00:20:03,000 These craters are some of the coldest places 386 00:20:03,068 --> 00:20:04,413 in the solar system. 387 00:20:04,517 --> 00:20:07,241 And so substances like water can condense. 388 00:20:07,310 --> 00:20:09,896 DENNIN: When you look at the water on the Moon, 389 00:20:09,965 --> 00:20:12,379 there's a shockingly large amount of water 390 00:20:12,482 --> 00:20:14,344 compared to what we think of it. 391 00:20:14,413 --> 00:20:16,482 Now it's water in frozen form, it's ice. 392 00:20:16,586 --> 00:20:19,241 But it still was fascinating just to know that there was 393 00:20:19,344 --> 00:20:21,689 something we were wrong about the Moon. 394 00:20:21,758 --> 00:20:25,103 SHATNER: As a result of these findings, scientists have been compelled 395 00:20:25,172 --> 00:20:29,068 to reexamine the belief that the Moon is inert, 396 00:20:29,137 --> 00:20:33,344 and to ask whether it can harbor life. 397 00:20:35,275 --> 00:20:38,000 Whether or not we can have life on the Moon, 398 00:20:38,103 --> 00:20:40,172 that's, of course, a big question mark. 399 00:20:40,241 --> 00:20:42,931 Today, when you think of the Moon, 400 00:20:43,000 --> 00:20:45,068 you think of a lifeless environment. 401 00:20:45,172 --> 00:20:47,620 But that's not always true. 402 00:20:47,689 --> 00:20:51,310 We think that in the early days of the Moon, 403 00:20:51,413 --> 00:20:55,241 perhaps there was a thicker atmosphere to the Moon, 404 00:20:55,310 --> 00:20:59,206 and that's what's required to create life on a planet. 405 00:20:59,275 --> 00:21:02,413 So if we drill deep into the lunar soil, 406 00:21:02,517 --> 00:21:04,827 perhaps we'll pick up evidence 407 00:21:04,896 --> 00:21:07,862 of ancient microbial life that existed 408 00:21:07,965 --> 00:21:09,655 billions of years ago 409 00:21:09,758 --> 00:21:12,586 when the atmosphere was quite different on the Moon. 410 00:21:13,586 --> 00:21:16,517 SHATNER: Was the Moon a place in which life 411 00:21:16,586 --> 00:21:20,068 could actually thrive in the distant past? 412 00:21:21,000 --> 00:21:22,965 Well, according to some researchers, 413 00:21:23,068 --> 00:21:27,172 there is photographic evidence not only of life on the Moon 414 00:21:27,275 --> 00:21:32,482 but of something much more profound. 415 00:21:38,068 --> 00:21:40,965 NASA launches Ranger 7, 416 00:21:41,034 --> 00:21:43,655 a lunar probe designed to take 417 00:21:43,758 --> 00:21:46,931 the first close-up photographs of the lunar surface. 418 00:21:47,034 --> 00:21:51,275 The landmark images fascinated the world, 419 00:21:51,344 --> 00:21:53,620 and since that time, other nations have sent 420 00:21:53,724 --> 00:21:56,689 probes to capture more images of the Moon. 421 00:21:56,758 --> 00:21:59,586 Over the years, researchers have identified 422 00:21:59,689 --> 00:22:02,896 strange anomalies in these photographs. 423 00:22:02,965 --> 00:22:06,413 Anomalies that look an awful lot 424 00:22:06,482 --> 00:22:09,689 like artificial structures. 425 00:22:09,758 --> 00:22:12,965 BARA: In one picture you see a rectangular structure 426 00:22:13,068 --> 00:22:15,482 with some structure on top of it 427 00:22:15,551 --> 00:22:17,689 that looks almost like the spires of a roof, 428 00:22:17,793 --> 00:22:20,448 as if there was a glass dome over this at one time 429 00:22:20,551 --> 00:22:23,689 that has a few girders left that used to hold it up. 430 00:22:23,793 --> 00:22:27,310 Now, there is nothing in natural lunar geology 431 00:22:27,413 --> 00:22:31,206 that can account for that as a real extant possibility 432 00:22:31,310 --> 00:22:33,310 on the surface of the Moon. 433 00:22:33,413 --> 00:22:37,551 And in another image taken is a gigantic spire or tower. 434 00:22:38,862 --> 00:22:42,310 It almost looks exactly like a gigantic Egyptian obelisk. 435 00:22:42,379 --> 00:22:44,172 The way this thing is sticking up, 436 00:22:44,241 --> 00:22:46,689 it simply defies explanation. 437 00:22:46,793 --> 00:22:49,689 The fact that it even exists in the image 438 00:22:49,758 --> 00:22:52,413 is absolute de facto proof 439 00:22:52,517 --> 00:22:55,931 that there is ancient extraterrestrial technology 440 00:22:56,034 --> 00:22:57,793 on the lunar surface. 441 00:22:58,758 --> 00:23:02,344 SHATNER: Giant structures left behind 442 00:23:02,448 --> 00:23:05,517 by an extraterrestrial civilization? 443 00:23:05,586 --> 00:23:07,517 It's certainly a provocative theory 444 00:23:07,586 --> 00:23:09,620 and one that is hard to prove. 445 00:23:10,758 --> 00:23:13,206 But if these anomalies 446 00:23:13,310 --> 00:23:15,965 are the ruins of an advanced civilization, 447 00:23:16,068 --> 00:23:18,517 is it possible... 448 00:23:18,586 --> 00:23:23,000 they were intentionally left there for us to find? 449 00:23:24,034 --> 00:23:26,620 KEATING: The Moon has properties that make it ideal 450 00:23:26,724 --> 00:23:29,344 for conducting research into the deep past 451 00:23:29,448 --> 00:23:32,551 and even, potentially, very speculatively, 452 00:23:32,620 --> 00:23:35,655 for the presence of-of potentially finding 453 00:23:35,758 --> 00:23:38,965 alien artifacts, which is a very fascinating prospect, 454 00:23:39,068 --> 00:23:42,379 that an alien civilization might want to leave a marker, 455 00:23:42,482 --> 00:23:46,448 a time capsule attesting to their existence, for us to find, 456 00:23:46,517 --> 00:23:49,310 and it would be perfectly preserved for billions of years. 457 00:23:50,344 --> 00:23:53,827 SHATNER: Are there "time capsules" on the Moon? 458 00:23:54,758 --> 00:23:57,344 Tangible pieces of evidence which suggest 459 00:23:57,448 --> 00:24:00,655 that we might not be alone in the universe? 460 00:24:02,413 --> 00:24:05,172 Perhaps the answers can be found by taking a closer look 461 00:24:05,275 --> 00:24:06,965 at the Apollo missions... 462 00:24:07,862 --> 00:24:11,206 ...and what the astronauts discovered 463 00:24:11,310 --> 00:24:14,379 while walking on the Moon. 464 00:24:21,827 --> 00:24:24,793 On July 20th, 1969 history was made 465 00:24:24,862 --> 00:24:26,172 when American Neil Armstrong 466 00:24:26,275 --> 00:24:28,655 became the first man to walk on the Moon. 467 00:24:28,758 --> 00:24:31,620 For the United States, it was a moment of immense 468 00:24:31,724 --> 00:24:34,896 national pride, a triumph over the Soviets 469 00:24:34,965 --> 00:24:36,724 in the Space Race. 470 00:24:36,827 --> 00:24:40,793 But is that what going to the Moon was all about? 471 00:24:40,896 --> 00:24:42,931 Bragging rights? 472 00:24:43,862 --> 00:24:47,103 Or did the Apollo program have a hidden agenda? 473 00:24:47,206 --> 00:24:49,206 And, if so, 474 00:24:49,310 --> 00:24:53,034 what was the mission's real objective? 475 00:24:53,655 --> 00:24:57,827 MISSION CONTROL: Ten, nine. Ignition sequence starts. 476 00:25:15,000 --> 00:25:17,103 SHATNER: Four days after taking off from Earth, 477 00:25:17,206 --> 00:25:20,896 the Apollo 11 astronauts landed on the surface of the Moon. 478 00:25:26,896 --> 00:25:30,172 And over a billion people around the world 479 00:25:30,275 --> 00:25:32,551 tuned in to watch. 480 00:25:41,137 --> 00:25:44,862 TEITEL: This was such a pivotal moment in human history. 481 00:25:44,931 --> 00:25:46,413 It was just the culmination 482 00:25:46,517 --> 00:25:48,344 of incredible technological ingenuity 483 00:25:48,413 --> 00:25:50,551 and engineering prowess 484 00:25:50,620 --> 00:25:53,413 that we actually managed to send three people to the Moon 485 00:25:53,517 --> 00:25:56,034 and two of them were going to walk on its surface. 486 00:25:58,655 --> 00:26:01,586 KEATING: If you look at the plaque that was on the Apollo 11 487 00:26:01,655 --> 00:26:05,172 Eagle lander, it said, "We came in peace for all mankind." 488 00:26:05,275 --> 00:26:08,172 Nowadays, we use that as the calibration 489 00:26:08,275 --> 00:26:10,068 for the greatness that mankind can achieve. 490 00:26:11,103 --> 00:26:14,275 KAKU: I still remember when the Apollo spacecraft 491 00:26:14,344 --> 00:26:17,275 was approaching a landing site on the Moon. 492 00:26:17,344 --> 00:26:21,241 Scientists were asked, "What do we expect to find on the Moon?" 493 00:26:21,310 --> 00:26:23,000 And the answer is: we're clueless. 494 00:26:23,931 --> 00:26:26,482 We didn't know how solid the surface was. 495 00:26:26,586 --> 00:26:28,517 Perhaps the lunar module, 496 00:26:28,586 --> 00:26:30,586 as it lands on the Moon, will sink. 497 00:26:30,689 --> 00:26:32,793 So we simply kept our fingers crossed 498 00:26:32,896 --> 00:26:37,034 and hoped that the surface of the Moon was solid 499 00:26:37,137 --> 00:26:40,758 and not basically made out of dust. 500 00:26:40,862 --> 00:26:44,689 So, back then in 1969, it was a crapshoot. 501 00:26:44,793 --> 00:26:48,000 We really didn't know what we were going to find on the Moon. 502 00:26:49,068 --> 00:26:51,068 SHATNER: The gamble paid off, 503 00:26:51,172 --> 00:26:53,862 and, for the first time, 504 00:26:53,931 --> 00:26:58,172 humanity was able to explore Earth's closest neighbor. 505 00:26:58,275 --> 00:27:01,586 There were many questions that NASA was hoping to answer 506 00:27:01,655 --> 00:27:03,655 on the Apollo missions, 507 00:27:03,758 --> 00:27:05,931 but perhaps none were more important 508 00:27:06,000 --> 00:27:09,758 than solving the Moon's most enduring mystery: 509 00:27:09,827 --> 00:27:12,931 How did it get there in the first place? 510 00:27:13,793 --> 00:27:16,034 There had been a number of theories 511 00:27:16,103 --> 00:27:18,000 about how the Moon was formed. 512 00:27:18,103 --> 00:27:22,413 Uh, one idea was that the Moon was an asteroid drifting past 513 00:27:22,517 --> 00:27:24,758 and got caught up by the Earth's gravity. 514 00:27:24,862 --> 00:27:26,586 Now, looking at the size of the Moon, 515 00:27:26,655 --> 00:27:28,517 this seems an unlikely scenario. 516 00:27:28,586 --> 00:27:32,655 Another idea is when the solar system was being formed, 517 00:27:32,758 --> 00:27:35,275 the planets formed and maybe the Moon 518 00:27:35,379 --> 00:27:37,448 formed at the same time as the Earth. 519 00:27:37,551 --> 00:27:39,482 But, again, looking at the size of the Moon and sort of 520 00:27:39,551 --> 00:27:41,758 the dynamics of that, it doesn't really add up. 521 00:27:41,862 --> 00:27:44,793 SHATNER: At the time, each of the commonly proposed theories 522 00:27:44,896 --> 00:27:47,758 was ultimately rejected by scientists. 523 00:27:47,827 --> 00:27:51,965 So NASA sent six manned missions to the Moon 524 00:27:52,034 --> 00:27:56,068 to try and find the answer as to how the Moon came into being. 525 00:27:57,068 --> 00:28:00,827 Astronauts collected more than 800 pounds of lunar rocks... 526 00:28:01,793 --> 00:28:03,793 ...took atmospheric samples, 527 00:28:03,862 --> 00:28:07,689 and drilled into the Moon's surface. 528 00:28:08,586 --> 00:28:10,689 TEITEL: Right after the crew splashdown, 529 00:28:10,793 --> 00:28:12,517 the rocks were actually quarantined 530 00:28:12,586 --> 00:28:14,586 to keep all of their germs inside. 531 00:28:14,655 --> 00:28:16,862 They went right into a converted Airstream trailer 532 00:28:16,965 --> 00:28:19,344 that was their mobile quarantine facility. 533 00:28:19,413 --> 00:28:21,241 That was then airlifted 534 00:28:21,310 --> 00:28:22,931 to the mainland United States 535 00:28:23,034 --> 00:28:25,379 and transported to Houston where they were then 536 00:28:25,448 --> 00:28:27,758 deposited into the Lunar Receiving Lab, 537 00:28:27,827 --> 00:28:29,862 which was a custom-built facility 538 00:28:29,931 --> 00:28:33,758 to deal with everything coming back from the Moon. 539 00:28:34,793 --> 00:28:38,172 SHATNER: When scientists carefully examined the composition 540 00:28:38,275 --> 00:28:41,931 of the lunar rocks gathered on the Apollo missions, 541 00:28:42,000 --> 00:28:45,241 they proposed a dramatic new theory 542 00:28:45,344 --> 00:28:49,034 about the Moon's origins. 543 00:28:49,103 --> 00:28:51,620 The current leading theory about the Moon's creation 544 00:28:51,724 --> 00:28:53,655 is the so-called giant-impact theory. 545 00:28:54,620 --> 00:28:58,862 This theory posits that a large, Mars-sized body 546 00:28:58,931 --> 00:29:02,000 called Theia hit the Earth when it was young... 547 00:29:05,793 --> 00:29:09,103 ...and all of that debris from that impact 548 00:29:09,172 --> 00:29:12,965 coalesced around the planet and eventually formed the Moon. 549 00:29:15,344 --> 00:29:17,931 SHATNER: The theory that the Moon 550 00:29:18,034 --> 00:29:20,379 is the result of a massive collision 551 00:29:20,482 --> 00:29:23,724 is one that is widely supported. 552 00:29:23,827 --> 00:29:26,758 But there's just one problem. 553 00:29:26,827 --> 00:29:30,551 Some scientists are still not convinced. 554 00:29:31,724 --> 00:29:33,965 ADERIN-POCOCK: Now, if this theory is correct, 555 00:29:34,034 --> 00:29:36,793 then what we'd expect is for, um, the Moon 556 00:29:36,862 --> 00:29:39,724 should be made out of this sort of a Mars-like planet, 557 00:29:39,827 --> 00:29:43,379 which we called Theia, and to have some Earth in it. 558 00:29:43,482 --> 00:29:45,931 But one of the crazy things we found is that, 559 00:29:46,000 --> 00:29:49,137 when we went to the Moon, the composition of the Moon 560 00:29:49,206 --> 00:29:52,827 and the composition of Earth are very, very similar. 561 00:29:53,827 --> 00:29:56,517 KAKU: It turns out the composition of Moon rocks 562 00:29:56,620 --> 00:29:59,413 and the composition Earth rocks 563 00:29:59,517 --> 00:30:02,000 is uniformly the same, which shouldn't be. 564 00:30:02,931 --> 00:30:05,655 And so the collision theory has a problem. 565 00:30:07,068 --> 00:30:10,482 We should find remnants of the original asteroid 566 00:30:10,551 --> 00:30:12,931 which created the Moon. 567 00:30:13,000 --> 00:30:16,068 And we don't find that. And so that's still a mystery. 568 00:30:17,000 --> 00:30:19,068 TEITEL: It's fascinating to think that, 569 00:30:19,172 --> 00:30:22,724 even though we've been studying the Moon very closely, 570 00:30:22,827 --> 00:30:25,862 we still don't have this one basic key mystery solved. 571 00:30:25,965 --> 00:30:27,931 There's so much more to learn. 572 00:30:28,965 --> 00:30:31,413 SHATNER: The Apollo program brought us much closer 573 00:30:31,482 --> 00:30:33,827 to knowing how the Moon was created, 574 00:30:33,931 --> 00:30:37,103 even if we still don't have the final answer. 575 00:30:37,206 --> 00:30:40,689 But NASA had other goals in mind for the Apollo missions, 576 00:30:40,793 --> 00:30:43,827 some of which are not as well known by the public. 577 00:30:43,931 --> 00:30:46,413 They conducted experiments which were intended 578 00:30:46,517 --> 00:30:50,034 to learn more, not about the lunar surface, 579 00:30:50,137 --> 00:30:53,827 but about what's inside the Moon. 580 00:31:03,827 --> 00:31:07,517 SHATNER: Less than four months after the success of Apollo 11, 581 00:31:07,620 --> 00:31:10,586 NASA launches Apollo 12, 582 00:31:10,655 --> 00:31:13,965 its second manned mission to the Moon. 583 00:31:16,206 --> 00:31:18,758 On this mission, one of the key objectives was 584 00:31:18,862 --> 00:31:22,413 to learn more about what's below the surface of the Moon. 585 00:31:23,379 --> 00:31:25,931 One of the big lunar mysteries that the Apollo astronauts 586 00:31:26,034 --> 00:31:28,137 were hoping to at least answer in part 587 00:31:28,206 --> 00:31:29,482 was what is inside the Moon. 588 00:31:30,517 --> 00:31:33,931 We're limited in how much we can really look at the Moon 589 00:31:34,000 --> 00:31:36,310 and look into the Moon to understand its interior 590 00:31:36,413 --> 00:31:38,000 from the Earth. 591 00:31:38,068 --> 00:31:40,551 KEATING: The astronauts on Apollo 12 592 00:31:40,620 --> 00:31:42,482 left seismometers just like 593 00:31:42,551 --> 00:31:44,758 we use on Earth to detect earthquakes on Earth. 594 00:31:44,827 --> 00:31:46,862 They wanted to see if the Moon had these 595 00:31:46,931 --> 00:31:50,000 quaking type behaviors called moonquakes. 596 00:31:50,931 --> 00:31:53,931 And they wanted to see how did the Moon behave? 597 00:31:54,034 --> 00:31:56,517 What kind of resonances does it have? 598 00:31:56,620 --> 00:31:59,172 And those are related to its properties, 599 00:31:59,241 --> 00:32:00,862 its inner structure, its core. 600 00:32:00,965 --> 00:32:04,034 And these are things that you can learn about only 601 00:32:04,103 --> 00:32:07,172 from placing these seismometers on the Moon's surface. 602 00:32:07,275 --> 00:32:09,724 TEITEL: To understand what's going on inside the Moon, 603 00:32:09,793 --> 00:32:11,896 the Apollo astronauts and the scientists at NASA 604 00:32:12,000 --> 00:32:13,827 came up with a really interesting experiment... 605 00:32:14,827 --> 00:32:17,551 ...which was to crash things into the Moon 606 00:32:17,655 --> 00:32:20,724 and measure their impact with seismometers. 607 00:32:21,689 --> 00:32:25,103 The idea being if you smash a known mass 608 00:32:25,172 --> 00:32:27,827 into the lunar surface, that allows you to understand 609 00:32:27,931 --> 00:32:30,172 exactly the seismic data that you're seeing. 610 00:32:31,206 --> 00:32:33,896 SHATNER: After the astronauts had safely left the Moon's surface, 611 00:32:34,000 --> 00:32:37,344 they intentionally sent their ascent stage module, 612 00:32:37,413 --> 00:32:39,586 which they no longer needed, 613 00:32:39,655 --> 00:32:42,000 crashing into the Moon. 614 00:32:42,103 --> 00:32:45,103 When Apollo 12 sent its lunar module ascent stage 615 00:32:45,206 --> 00:32:47,896 hurtling into the Moon, it hit... 616 00:32:52,034 --> 00:32:56,482 ...and the scientists on Earth saw the seismic data, 617 00:32:56,586 --> 00:32:58,689 but it didn't do what anyone was expecting. 618 00:33:03,620 --> 00:33:07,862 The signal seemed to be going back and forth inside the Moon 619 00:33:07,965 --> 00:33:11,000 almost like it was a bell that was ringing. 620 00:33:11,724 --> 00:33:13,931 And it went on for an hour. 621 00:33:14,034 --> 00:33:17,172 And no one has been able to understand why. 622 00:33:18,275 --> 00:33:21,482 SHATNER: The Moon rang... 623 00:33:21,551 --> 00:33:23,758 like a bell? 624 00:33:25,896 --> 00:33:29,068 The discovery came as a shock, and it opened 625 00:33:29,172 --> 00:33:33,896 the door to new, thought-provoking possibilities. 626 00:33:34,000 --> 00:33:36,000 DENNIN: The oscillations lasted for a very long time, 627 00:33:36,103 --> 00:33:38,241 much longer than we expected. 628 00:33:39,241 --> 00:33:41,689 And that's surprising fundamentally because we're just 629 00:33:41,793 --> 00:33:43,758 really used to the way the Earth vibrates. 630 00:33:43,862 --> 00:33:45,689 And the Moon just behaves differently, 631 00:33:45,793 --> 00:33:48,344 and it let us know that the structure of the Moon 632 00:33:48,448 --> 00:33:51,379 is very different than the structure of the Earth. 633 00:33:51,482 --> 00:33:53,827 Some people thought that might mean the Moon is hollow. 634 00:33:54,758 --> 00:33:57,896 BARA: The Moon basically resonated, 635 00:33:58,000 --> 00:34:00,310 and to put it the way NASA put it, 636 00:34:00,413 --> 00:34:03,310 it rang like a bell, 637 00:34:03,413 --> 00:34:06,310 which doesn't really make any sense if the Moon is solid. 638 00:34:06,413 --> 00:34:10,103 Now this can only happen if there were vast empty spaces 639 00:34:10,206 --> 00:34:11,482 inside the Moon 640 00:34:11,586 --> 00:34:13,413 where these sound waves 641 00:34:13,482 --> 00:34:16,034 would be bouncing around for hours and hours afterwards. 642 00:34:16,103 --> 00:34:17,931 It was not a result they expected. 643 00:34:18,000 --> 00:34:21,448 So, it's possible what we're looking at here 644 00:34:21,551 --> 00:34:24,482 is that there are interior portions of the Moon 645 00:34:24,586 --> 00:34:26,344 which are hollowed out. 646 00:34:27,310 --> 00:34:30,275 SHATNER: Did the Apollo 12 mission actually reveal 647 00:34:30,379 --> 00:34:33,172 that the Moon is hollow? 648 00:34:33,241 --> 00:34:36,310 While that may sound like a farfetched notion, 649 00:34:36,413 --> 00:34:40,275 many researchers believe that the answer is yes. 650 00:34:40,344 --> 00:34:42,137 And for further evidence, 651 00:34:42,206 --> 00:34:44,827 they point to a classified experiment that was conducted 652 00:34:44,931 --> 00:34:48,344 on the Apollo 17 mission in 1972. 653 00:34:49,551 --> 00:34:53,620 BARA: On Apollo 17, there was a NASA experiment 654 00:34:53,724 --> 00:34:55,827 called Chapel Bell, which was classified. 655 00:34:55,931 --> 00:34:58,000 If you think about the name Chapel Bell, 656 00:34:58,103 --> 00:35:00,413 it implies something to do with sound waves 657 00:35:00,517 --> 00:35:01,931 and the ringing of a bell. 658 00:35:02,034 --> 00:35:04,551 But nobody knows what Chapel Bell is. 659 00:35:04,655 --> 00:35:08,310 It's 50 years later, the test itself is still classified. 660 00:35:09,310 --> 00:35:12,034 There's a lot of secrecy that seems unnecessary, 661 00:35:12,103 --> 00:35:14,482 especially 50 years later. 662 00:35:15,827 --> 00:35:17,034 It doesn't make any sense. 663 00:35:17,137 --> 00:35:19,379 The only reason it makes sense 664 00:35:19,482 --> 00:35:22,482 for the Chapel Bell experiment, the separate experiment, 665 00:35:22,586 --> 00:35:26,034 to be classified is if the results 666 00:35:26,137 --> 00:35:28,034 were something extraordinary, 667 00:35:28,137 --> 00:35:30,758 something unexpected, and something that implied 668 00:35:30,827 --> 00:35:32,620 that the Moon was far, far different 669 00:35:32,724 --> 00:35:34,517 than NASA had been telling us. 670 00:35:35,482 --> 00:35:38,482 SHATNER: What was the Chapel Bell experiment? 671 00:35:38,586 --> 00:35:41,137 and what were its results? 672 00:35:41,206 --> 00:35:44,068 Could it have provided more evidence 673 00:35:44,172 --> 00:35:46,586 to suggest that the Moon is hollow? 674 00:35:47,793 --> 00:35:49,827 And, if so, has NASA deliberately withheld 675 00:35:49,896 --> 00:35:51,827 this information for 50 years? 676 00:35:54,758 --> 00:35:58,034 Perhaps the answers can be found by examining bold new plans, 677 00:35:58,103 --> 00:36:01,862 proposed by space agencies from around the world, 678 00:36:01,965 --> 00:36:04,758 for future missions that will send astronauts 679 00:36:04,862 --> 00:36:08,000 back to the Moon. 680 00:36:14,758 --> 00:36:17,862 SHATNER: The Moon is the most visible object in the night sky. 681 00:36:17,965 --> 00:36:20,000 For thousands of years, humanity has looked up 682 00:36:20,103 --> 00:36:23,758 at this shining celestial body with a sense of wonder. 683 00:36:23,862 --> 00:36:27,586 But when we look at the Moon, 684 00:36:27,655 --> 00:36:31,724 we only ever see one side of it, because, as it turns out, 685 00:36:31,827 --> 00:36:34,551 the far side of the Moon 686 00:36:34,655 --> 00:36:37,137 never faces Earth. 687 00:36:37,206 --> 00:36:39,172 ADERIN-POCOCK: Many people don't realize, 688 00:36:39,275 --> 00:36:41,827 but we only see one face of the Moon. 689 00:36:41,896 --> 00:36:43,689 As the Moon orbits around the Earth, 690 00:36:43,793 --> 00:36:47,517 what happens is that it spins, so the same face of the Moon 691 00:36:47,620 --> 00:36:49,413 is always facing towards the Earth. 692 00:36:49,517 --> 00:36:52,965 KAKU: Every night we can look at it, and it's the same Moon 693 00:36:53,068 --> 00:36:56,068 that you've seen ever since you were a child. 694 00:36:56,172 --> 00:36:58,517 You've never seen the backside of the Moon 695 00:36:58,620 --> 00:37:01,379 unless you've seen pictures from the space program. 696 00:37:02,310 --> 00:37:04,793 SHATNER: Why does the far side of the Moon 697 00:37:04,896 --> 00:37:07,034 never face towards the Earth? 698 00:37:07,137 --> 00:37:09,206 Well, the time that it takes for the Moon to do 699 00:37:09,310 --> 00:37:11,413 one complete spin on its axis, 700 00:37:11,517 --> 00:37:13,000 is the same length of time 701 00:37:13,103 --> 00:37:17,310 it takes to orbit the Earth: 27 days. 702 00:37:17,413 --> 00:37:20,758 This effect is known as "synchronous rotation." 703 00:37:20,862 --> 00:37:22,517 KEATING: The Moon is rotating 704 00:37:22,620 --> 00:37:25,000 and always presents the same face to the Earth. 705 00:37:25,103 --> 00:37:27,413 The question is: why does that occur? 706 00:37:27,517 --> 00:37:30,206 And it occurs because the Moon and the Earth share energy, 707 00:37:30,310 --> 00:37:32,413 we transfer energy between one another, 708 00:37:32,517 --> 00:37:35,241 and the Moon exerts force on the Earth, 709 00:37:35,310 --> 00:37:37,551 and the Earth exerts a force on the Moon, as well. 710 00:37:37,655 --> 00:37:39,758 That reaction on the Moon has caused it to become 711 00:37:39,862 --> 00:37:41,758 what's called "tidally locked." 712 00:37:41,862 --> 00:37:43,793 So, for that reason, you'll always see 713 00:37:43,896 --> 00:37:45,275 the same side of the Moon. 714 00:37:45,379 --> 00:37:48,068 SHATNER: Because the far side of the Moon 715 00:37:48,172 --> 00:37:50,034 is not visible from Earth, 716 00:37:50,137 --> 00:37:53,931 it is much harder to study than the Moon's near side. 717 00:37:54,000 --> 00:37:57,862 In fact, NASA has never landed a spacecraft 718 00:37:57,931 --> 00:38:00,413 on the far side of the Moon. 719 00:38:01,551 --> 00:38:04,551 But on January 2, 2019, 720 00:38:04,620 --> 00:38:07,344 the Chinese government did. 721 00:38:09,137 --> 00:38:11,241 The Change'e 4 lunar lander, 722 00:38:11,310 --> 00:38:14,310 part of the Chinese Lunar Exploration Program, 723 00:38:14,413 --> 00:38:16,758 became the first space vehicle 724 00:38:16,827 --> 00:38:19,482 to achieve this historic accomplishment. 725 00:38:21,241 --> 00:38:23,310 TEITEL: China recently landed 726 00:38:23,379 --> 00:38:25,862 a robotic mission on the far side of the Moon, 727 00:38:25,965 --> 00:38:27,724 which is a really incredible feat 728 00:38:27,793 --> 00:38:29,310 because you don't have communications 729 00:38:29,413 --> 00:38:31,206 with the Earth on the far side. 730 00:38:31,310 --> 00:38:34,137 You have to do it completely autonomously. 731 00:38:34,241 --> 00:38:36,206 DENNIN: The far side of the Moon, 732 00:38:36,310 --> 00:38:38,206 or what we call the dark side of the Moon, 733 00:38:38,310 --> 00:38:40,000 it's always been a mysterious place. 734 00:38:40,068 --> 00:38:42,689 We don't expect it to be radically different 735 00:38:42,758 --> 00:38:44,689 than the side that you can see, 736 00:38:44,793 --> 00:38:48,551 but it's still an interesting question of what's there. 737 00:38:48,655 --> 00:38:52,275 So it's an exciting and very important thing to explore. 738 00:38:52,344 --> 00:38:54,655 And what's more, China was doing this, 739 00:38:54,758 --> 00:38:57,310 in part, to prepare for a human mission to the Moon. 740 00:38:57,413 --> 00:38:59,931 It's bringing to light a renewed interest 741 00:39:00,034 --> 00:39:02,448 in sending humans to explore the Moon. 742 00:39:03,482 --> 00:39:05,517 SHATNER: China is not the only country interested 743 00:39:05,620 --> 00:39:08,482 in sending astronauts to the Moon. 744 00:39:08,586 --> 00:39:11,586 A growing list of nations are planning similar missions, 745 00:39:11,655 --> 00:39:14,931 including India, Israel, 746 00:39:15,034 --> 00:39:17,620 Japan, the European Union, 747 00:39:17,724 --> 00:39:20,413 - MISSION CONTROL: Ignition... - SHATNER: and the United States. 748 00:39:22,103 --> 00:39:25,379 ADERIN-POCOCK: We're excited by the Moon again. 749 00:39:25,448 --> 00:39:27,655 Taking samples and getting a better understanding 750 00:39:27,758 --> 00:39:29,655 of the Moon is a big driver. 751 00:39:29,758 --> 00:39:32,724 There's lots of science to be done on the Moon. 752 00:39:32,827 --> 00:39:36,448 There are so many mysteries that remain unresolved. 753 00:39:36,551 --> 00:39:39,551 The renewed interest in the Moon isn't just for science. 754 00:39:39,620 --> 00:39:41,689 There's a whole new industry popping up 755 00:39:41,758 --> 00:39:43,724 for space tourism. 756 00:39:43,827 --> 00:39:47,310 There's also companies who are looking to mine the Moon 757 00:39:47,413 --> 00:39:50,103 for resources like helium-3 and other rare elements 758 00:39:50,206 --> 00:39:52,413 that we don't have in abundance on Earth, 759 00:39:52,482 --> 00:39:55,034 but are in abundance on the Moon. 760 00:39:55,137 --> 00:39:58,034 There's a whole new wave of lunar exploration coming 761 00:39:58,103 --> 00:39:59,793 largely to make money off it. 762 00:40:01,000 --> 00:40:03,482 SHATNER: The prospect of more trips to the Moon 763 00:40:03,551 --> 00:40:06,275 raises the possibility that humanity 764 00:40:06,379 --> 00:40:09,724 will finally fulfill one of its long-held dreams: 765 00:40:10,655 --> 00:40:14,689 Establishing permanent colonies on the Moon. 766 00:40:15,689 --> 00:40:19,206 KAKU: If you want to create a city on the Moon, 767 00:40:19,310 --> 00:40:23,206 the quickest way is to exploit lava tubes. 768 00:40:23,310 --> 00:40:27,379 Ancient channels of molten lava that create a tube that can 769 00:40:27,482 --> 00:40:30,551 shelter our astronauts, readymade. 770 00:40:30,655 --> 00:40:33,655 It's a lunar base waiting to be inhabited. 771 00:40:33,724 --> 00:40:37,172 Another possibility is why not take Moon rock, melt it, 772 00:40:37,275 --> 00:40:41,551 reform it to create the building blocks for a lunar city. 773 00:40:42,482 --> 00:40:45,482 DENNIN: A permanent Moon base really is 774 00:40:45,586 --> 00:40:49,586 a key steppingstone to exploring the rest of the solar system 775 00:40:49,655 --> 00:40:52,379 and, eventually, the galaxy. 776 00:40:52,448 --> 00:40:55,413 I'm an optimist at heart, and I really think the Moon 777 00:40:55,517 --> 00:40:57,862 is going to be a positive next step. 778 00:40:57,931 --> 00:40:59,965 I'm really hopeful for that. 779 00:41:00,068 --> 00:41:03,172 I think that's something we can do. 780 00:41:03,241 --> 00:41:06,275 Right now, because of all the asteroids and comets 781 00:41:06,344 --> 00:41:08,931 and-and other threats that may be out there, 782 00:41:09,000 --> 00:41:12,586 our survival is in question. 783 00:41:12,655 --> 00:41:15,172 Imagine if we could go to the Moon back and forth 784 00:41:15,241 --> 00:41:18,034 in just a few minutes. We could start building Moon bases. 785 00:41:18,137 --> 00:41:19,827 We could turn it into a second Earth, 786 00:41:19,931 --> 00:41:23,862 and we could ensure humanity's survival into the future. 787 00:41:27,758 --> 00:41:30,482 SHATNER: It seems that, in the near future, 788 00:41:30,586 --> 00:41:32,586 some people will have the opportunity 789 00:41:32,689 --> 00:41:34,655 to live on the Moon. 790 00:41:34,758 --> 00:41:38,448 But if given the choice between staying here on Earth 791 00:41:38,551 --> 00:41:40,448 or living on a Moon colony... 792 00:41:41,379 --> 00:41:43,448 ...what would you do? 793 00:41:44,241 --> 00:41:46,758 Would you stick to what you know? 794 00:41:46,827 --> 00:41:48,724 Or are you drawn 795 00:41:48,827 --> 00:41:52,448 to that luminous sphere, 796 00:41:52,551 --> 00:41:55,172 compelled to learn its secrets, 797 00:41:55,275 --> 00:41:58,793 and inspired to explore the surface of the Moon 798 00:41:58,862 --> 00:42:01,000 in order to explain... 799 00:42:01,103 --> 00:42:03,172 the unexplained? 800 00:42:03,241 --> 00:42:05,827 CAPTIONING PROVIDED BY A+E NETWORKS 64065

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