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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:12,400 --> 00:00:14,039 PROFESSOR BRIAN COX: Why are we here? 2 00:00:14,120 --> 00:00:16,039 Where do we come from? 3 00:00:16,120 --> 00:00:18,879 These are the most enduring of questions. 4 00:00:19,240 --> 00:00:22,039 And it's an essential part of human nature 5 00:00:22,120 --> 00:00:24,279 to want to find the answers. 6 00:00:30,080 --> 00:00:33,679 Now, we can trace our ancestry back hundreds of thousands of years 7 00:00:33,760 --> 00:00:35,399 to the dawn of humankind. 8 00:00:35,720 --> 00:00:40,999 But in reality, our story extends far further back in time. 9 00:00:41,080 --> 00:00:44,559 Our story starts with the beginning of the universe. 10 00:00:49,040 --> 00:00:52,519 It began 13.7 billion years ago. 11 00:00:56,480 --> 00:01:00,279 And today it's filled with over a hundred billion galaxies, 12 00:01:00,360 --> 00:01:04,119 each containing hundreds of billions of stars. 13 00:01:10,680 --> 00:01:13,599 In this series, I want to tell that story. 14 00:01:13,680 --> 00:01:17,159 Because ultimately, we are part of the universe. 15 00:01:17,240 --> 00:01:20,439 So its story is our story. 16 00:01:25,520 --> 00:01:29,239 It's a story that you couldn't tell without something so fundamental 17 00:01:29,320 --> 00:01:32,959 that's it's impossible to imagine the universe without it. 18 00:01:33,040 --> 00:01:37,439 It's woven into the very fabric of the cosmos. Time. 19 00:01:41,880 --> 00:01:46,319 The relentless flow of time has driven the evolution of the universe 20 00:01:46,400 --> 00:01:49,959 and created many extraordinary wonders. 21 00:01:52,840 --> 00:01:56,039 These wonders take us from the very first moments 22 00:01:56,120 --> 00:02:00,079 in the life of the universe to its eventual end. 23 00:02:29,840 --> 00:02:33,039 This is Chankillo on the northwestern coast of Peru. 24 00:02:33,120 --> 00:02:37,839 And it's one of South America's lesser known archaeological sites, 25 00:02:37,920 --> 00:02:41,399 but for me, it is surely one of the most fascinating. 26 00:02:50,520 --> 00:02:52,839 Around two and a half thousand years ago, 27 00:02:52,920 --> 00:02:56,079 a civilisation we know almost nothing about 28 00:02:56,160 --> 00:02:58,959 built this fortified temple in the desert. 29 00:03:03,760 --> 00:03:08,199 Its walls were once brilliant white and covered with painted figures. 30 00:03:12,480 --> 00:03:16,959 Today, all but the smallest fragments of the decorations are gone. 31 00:03:17,040 --> 00:03:22,279 The details of this culture and all traces of its language are lost. 32 00:03:26,760 --> 00:03:29,519 And yet, if you stand in the right place, 33 00:03:29,600 --> 00:03:33,279 you can still experience the true purpose of Chankillo 34 00:03:33,360 --> 00:03:36,399 in just the same way as you could the day it was built. 35 00:03:41,480 --> 00:03:45,359 But to do that, you have to be here before the sun rises. 36 00:04:00,160 --> 00:04:03,039 These towers form an ancient solar calendar. 37 00:04:04,200 --> 00:04:07,319 Now, at different times of year, the sunrise point 38 00:04:07,400 --> 00:04:09,719 is at a different place on the horizon. 39 00:04:09,800 --> 00:04:11,279 Actually, December 21st, 40 00:04:11,360 --> 00:04:15,999 which here in the Southern Hemisphere is the summer solstice, the longest day, 41 00:04:16,080 --> 00:04:20,679 and the sun rises just to the right of the rightmost tower. 42 00:04:20,760 --> 00:04:25,439 Then as the year passes, the sun moves through the towers, 43 00:04:25,520 --> 00:04:28,759 until, on June 21st, which is the winter solstice, 44 00:04:28,840 --> 00:04:32,479 the shortest day, it rises just to the left 45 00:04:32,560 --> 00:04:33,719 of the leftmost tower. 46 00:04:33,800 --> 00:04:37,239 Actually, just in between that mountain you can see in the distance 47 00:04:37,320 --> 00:04:38,839 and the leftmost tower. 48 00:04:38,920 --> 00:04:43,039 So at any time of year, if you watch the sun rise, 49 00:04:43,120 --> 00:04:45,839 you can measure its position and you can tell, 50 00:04:45,920 --> 00:04:50,639 within an accuracy of two or three days, the date. 51 00:04:50,720 --> 00:04:53,599 Today's date is September the 15th, 52 00:04:53,680 --> 00:04:59,479 and so that means that the sun will rise between the fifth and the sixth towers. 53 00:05:11,040 --> 00:05:13,439 Chankillo still works as a calendar, 54 00:05:13,520 --> 00:05:17,039 because the sun still rises in the same place today 55 00:05:17,120 --> 00:05:20,279 as it did when these stones were first laid down. 56 00:05:25,440 --> 00:05:30,039 Now, that is a magnificent sight, as the sun burns through the towers. 57 00:05:37,880 --> 00:05:40,399 You can almost feel the presence of the past here. 58 00:05:40,480 --> 00:05:42,239 I mean, imagine what it must have been like. 59 00:05:42,320 --> 00:05:46,239 Thousands of citizens stood here to greet the sun, 60 00:05:46,320 --> 00:05:49,599 which was almost certainly a deity, almost certainly their god. 61 00:05:50,520 --> 00:05:51,919 What a magnificent achievement. 62 00:05:52,000 --> 00:05:53,999 I mean, it's probably one of our earliest attempts 63 00:05:54,080 --> 00:05:57,439 to begin to measure the heavens. 64 00:06:11,560 --> 00:06:13,519 Over the millennia, 65 00:06:13,600 --> 00:06:17,439 that desire to measure what's going on in the sky 66 00:06:17,520 --> 00:06:19,999 has led to modern astronomy 67 00:06:20,080 --> 00:06:23,119 and the foundations of our modern civilisation. 68 00:06:32,680 --> 00:06:34,959 I might build one in my garden. 69 00:06:37,640 --> 00:06:40,079 (LAUGHS) I want one. 70 00:06:49,400 --> 00:06:53,119 The 13 towers that line this ridge stand testament 71 00:06:53,200 --> 00:06:56,999 to our enduring fascination with the clockwork of the heavens 72 00:06:58,640 --> 00:07:02,879 and to the direct connection between our lives and the cosmos. 73 00:07:05,280 --> 00:07:09,199 The rising and setting of the sun provides an epic heartbeat 74 00:07:09,280 --> 00:07:12,399 that allows us to mark the passage of time. 75 00:07:20,640 --> 00:07:24,159 A day on Earth is the 24 hours it takes our planet 76 00:07:24,240 --> 00:07:26,559 to rotate once on its axis. 77 00:07:34,800 --> 00:07:38,319 Our months are based on the 29 and a half days 78 00:07:38,400 --> 00:07:42,079 it takes the moon to wax and wane in the night sky. 79 00:07:45,800 --> 00:07:49,839 And a year is the 365 and a quarter days 80 00:07:49,920 --> 00:07:52,759 it takes us to orbit once around the sun. 81 00:07:56,040 --> 00:07:59,399 These familiar time scales mark the passing of our lives, 82 00:08:00,920 --> 00:08:04,879 but the life of the universe plays out on a much grander scale. 83 00:08:09,600 --> 00:08:14,079 When you look up into the night sky, you don't just see stars, 84 00:08:14,160 --> 00:08:18,479 those tiny points of light are a million different clocks, 85 00:08:18,560 --> 00:08:20,919 whose life spans mark out the passage of time 86 00:08:21,000 --> 00:08:24,279 over billions or even trillions of years. 87 00:08:33,440 --> 00:08:37,359 This film is about the greatest expanses of time. 88 00:08:37,960 --> 00:08:41,159 The deep time that shapes the universe. 89 00:08:43,240 --> 00:08:45,119 From its fiery beginnings 90 00:08:45,200 --> 00:08:49,839 through countless generations of stars, planets and galaxies 91 00:08:49,920 --> 00:08:51,919 to its eventual demise, 92 00:08:52,000 --> 00:08:56,559 the fate of the universe is determined by the passage of time. 93 00:09:05,280 --> 00:09:09,679 Time scales in the cosmos seem so unimaginably vast 94 00:09:09,760 --> 00:09:11,919 it's almost impossible to relate to them. 95 00:09:13,680 --> 00:09:17,839 Yet there are places on Earth where we can begin to encounter time 96 00:09:17,920 --> 00:09:19,959 on these universal scales. 97 00:09:28,000 --> 00:09:32,559 This is Ostional on the northern Pacific coast of Costa Rica, 98 00:09:32,640 --> 00:09:36,919 and I've come here to witness a natural event 99 00:09:37,000 --> 00:09:40,999 that's been happening long before there were any humans here to see it. 100 00:09:41,080 --> 00:09:43,799 And I suppose it really is a window 101 00:09:43,880 --> 00:09:47,359 into the distant past of life on our planet. 102 00:09:53,760 --> 00:09:55,159 (INDISTINCT) 103 00:10:10,600 --> 00:10:13,439 Once the sun has dipped below the horizon 104 00:10:13,520 --> 00:10:17,319 and the moon conspired to make the tides just right, 105 00:10:17,400 --> 00:10:20,839 this beach is visited by prehistoric creatures. 106 00:10:31,880 --> 00:10:35,239 Under the cover of darkness, they emerge from the ocean. 107 00:10:44,120 --> 00:10:47,359 Playa Ostional is one of the few beaches in the world 108 00:10:47,440 --> 00:10:50,519 where large numbers of sea turtles make their nests. 109 00:11:00,880 --> 00:11:03,279 But what makes this truly remarkable 110 00:11:03,360 --> 00:11:07,479 is the sheer length of time scenes like this have been playing out. 111 00:11:13,520 --> 00:11:18,239 This is part of one of the oldest life cycles on Earth. 112 00:11:18,320 --> 00:11:23,439 On nights like these for the last hundred million years, 113 00:11:23,520 --> 00:11:27,119 turtles like this have been hauling themselves out of the ocean 114 00:11:27,200 --> 00:11:28,479 to lay their eggs. 115 00:11:30,720 --> 00:11:33,319 It's an almost incomprehensible time span. 116 00:11:33,400 --> 00:11:37,039 I mean, a hundred million years ago there were dinosaurs roaming the Earth 117 00:11:37,120 --> 00:11:40,199 but the Earth itself looked very different. 118 00:11:40,280 --> 00:11:44,959 I mean, South America was not connected to North America. 119 00:11:45,040 --> 00:11:48,079 North America was somewhere over close to Europe. 120 00:11:48,160 --> 00:11:51,039 Australia was connected to Antarctica. 121 00:11:57,880 --> 00:12:01,919 It really is quite wonderful to be so close 122 00:12:02,000 --> 00:12:05,439 to such an ancient cycle of life. 123 00:12:07,280 --> 00:12:09,519 I can hear her breathing, actually. 124 00:12:11,720 --> 00:12:13,479 (BREATHING HEAVILY) 125 00:12:21,000 --> 00:12:23,599 It's a remarkable experience. 126 00:12:23,680 --> 00:12:26,919 I mean, it really is beautiful to see that 127 00:12:27,760 --> 00:12:32,119 on one night of many hundreds of millions of nights 128 00:12:32,200 --> 00:12:34,439 stretching back into the past. 129 00:12:42,680 --> 00:12:44,239 And she's gone. 130 00:12:55,560 --> 00:12:57,399 To witness a moment like this 131 00:12:57,480 --> 00:13:00,639 is to open up a connection to the deep past, 132 00:13:03,240 --> 00:13:08,239 to experience time spans far longer than the history of our own species. 133 00:13:10,560 --> 00:13:14,519 Yet even the hundred million years story of the turtles 134 00:13:14,600 --> 00:13:19,599 only begins to connect us with the vast sweep of cosmic time. 135 00:13:26,080 --> 00:13:31,679 Our entire solar system is travelling on an unimaginably vast orbit, 136 00:13:31,760 --> 00:13:34,519 spinning around the centre of our galaxy. 137 00:13:41,240 --> 00:13:44,439 It takes 250 million years 138 00:13:44,520 --> 00:13:47,239 to make just one circuit of the Milky Way. 139 00:13:54,720 --> 00:13:57,679 In the entire history of the human race, 140 00:13:57,760 --> 00:14:01,799 we've travelled less than a tenth of one percent of that orbit. 141 00:14:07,120 --> 00:14:11,319 These cycles seem eternal and unchanging, 142 00:14:11,400 --> 00:14:13,759 but as the story of time unfolds, 143 00:14:13,840 --> 00:14:16,159 a fundamental truth is revealed. 144 00:14:21,440 --> 00:14:23,519 Nothing lasts forever. 145 00:14:30,760 --> 00:14:33,599 This is the most profound property of time. 146 00:14:38,080 --> 00:14:41,159 And it plays out just as vividly here on Earth 147 00:14:41,240 --> 00:14:43,959 as it does in the depths of space. 148 00:15:02,800 --> 00:15:07,559 This is the Perito Moreno Glacier in Patagonia in Southern Argentina, 149 00:15:07,640 --> 00:15:10,759 and it's one of the hundreds of glaciers 150 00:15:10,840 --> 00:15:15,999 that sweep down the continent from the southern Patagonian ice fields. 151 00:15:16,080 --> 00:15:19,559 And you know, if you carry on that way, 152 00:15:19,640 --> 00:15:22,759 so south, about... I don't know about 1000 kilometres 153 00:15:22,840 --> 00:15:25,239 you get to the end of South America 154 00:15:25,320 --> 00:15:28,719 and from then on there's nothing till the Antarctic. 155 00:15:29,360 --> 00:15:31,959 (LAUGHS) And it feels like that today. 156 00:15:41,920 --> 00:15:45,359 The glacier is such a massive expanse of ice, 157 00:15:45,440 --> 00:15:48,959 but at first sight, just like the cycles of the heavens, 158 00:15:49,040 --> 00:15:51,799 it appears fixed and unchanging. 159 00:15:56,360 --> 00:15:58,119 (CRACKING) 160 00:16:00,880 --> 00:16:04,959 Yet seen close-up, it's continually on the move, 161 00:16:05,040 --> 00:16:08,479 as it has been for tens of thousands of years. 162 00:16:24,720 --> 00:16:29,679 The whole face of the glacier is moving into the lake, 163 00:16:29,760 --> 00:16:32,439 about something like that much every day. 164 00:16:32,520 --> 00:16:37,199 And that means that well over a quarter of a billion tons of ice 165 00:16:37,280 --> 00:16:40,559 drop off the face of the glacier into the lake every year. 166 00:16:40,640 --> 00:16:42,399 It's about a million tons a day. 167 00:16:42,480 --> 00:16:43,799 And you can hear it happening. 168 00:16:43,880 --> 00:16:48,439 Just every now and again, you hear this tremendous cracking sound. 169 00:16:48,520 --> 00:16:51,679 It really is like the place is alive. 170 00:16:54,520 --> 00:16:55,999 (RUMBLING) 171 00:17:04,600 --> 00:17:05,999 You know, it's quite disturbing 172 00:17:06,080 --> 00:17:09,239 when these enormous chunks of ice fall into the lake. 173 00:17:09,320 --> 00:17:14,399 Although this thing seems stable and the movement seems glacially slow, 174 00:17:14,480 --> 00:17:18,399 actually, there can be really violent collapses. 175 00:17:18,480 --> 00:17:22,599 It's an incredibly dynamic place to be. 176 00:17:33,920 --> 00:17:39,399 This movement of the glacier provides an insight into the nature of time. 177 00:17:39,480 --> 00:17:44,799 It is simply the ordering of events into sequences, one step after another. 178 00:17:49,640 --> 00:17:54,039 As time passes, snow falls, ice forms, 179 00:17:54,120 --> 00:17:57,079 the glacier gradually inches down the valley 180 00:17:57,160 --> 00:18:00,719 and huge chunks of ice fall into the lake below. 181 00:18:03,040 --> 00:18:07,279 But even this simple sequence contains a profound idea. 182 00:18:10,040 --> 00:18:12,959 Events always happen in the same order. 183 00:18:13,680 --> 00:18:16,839 They're never jumbled up and they never go backwards. 184 00:18:33,240 --> 00:18:37,239 Now, that is something that you would never see in reverse. 185 00:18:37,320 --> 00:18:40,999 But interestingly, there's nothing about the laws of physics 186 00:18:41,080 --> 00:18:45,079 that describe how all those water molecules are moving around 187 00:18:45,160 --> 00:18:49,399 that prevent them from all getting together on the surface of the lake, 188 00:18:49,480 --> 00:18:53,359 jumping out of the water, sticking together into a block of ice 189 00:18:53,440 --> 00:18:57,519 and then gluing themselves back onto the surface of the glacier again. 190 00:18:57,600 --> 00:19:02,039 But interestingly, we do understand 191 00:19:02,120 --> 00:19:05,119 why the world doesn't run in reverse. 192 00:19:05,200 --> 00:19:08,559 There is a reason, we have a scientific explanation, 193 00:19:08,640 --> 00:19:11,359 and it's called the arrow of time. 194 00:19:22,080 --> 00:19:24,959 We never see waves travelling across lakes, 195 00:19:25,040 --> 00:19:29,359 coming together and bouncing chunks of ice back onto glaciers. 196 00:19:32,520 --> 00:19:35,719 We are compelled to travel into the future. 197 00:19:36,920 --> 00:19:39,839 And that's because the arrow of time dictates 198 00:19:39,920 --> 00:19:43,479 that as each moment passes, things change. 199 00:19:43,560 --> 00:19:47,359 And once these changes have happened, they are never undone. 200 00:19:52,120 --> 00:19:57,999 Permanent change is a fundamental part of what it means to be human. 201 00:19:58,080 --> 00:20:01,319 You know, we all age as the years pass by. 202 00:20:01,400 --> 00:20:04,839 People are born, they live and they die. 203 00:20:05,480 --> 00:20:09,799 I suppose it's part of the joy and tragedy of our lives. 204 00:20:09,880 --> 00:20:14,519 But out there in the universe, those grand and epic cycles 205 00:20:14,600 --> 00:20:19,279 appear eternal and unchanging, but that's an illusion. 206 00:20:19,360 --> 00:20:22,759 See, in the life of the universe, just as in our lives, 207 00:20:22,840 --> 00:20:26,519 everything is irreversibly changing. 208 00:20:36,000 --> 00:20:38,679 By building change upon change, 209 00:20:38,760 --> 00:20:43,439 the arrow of time drives the evolution of the entire universe. 210 00:20:45,160 --> 00:20:47,919 And as we look out deep in to the cosmos, 211 00:20:48,000 --> 00:20:50,319 we can see that story unfold. 212 00:20:54,120 --> 00:20:58,519 This is an image of a tiny piece of night sky 213 00:20:58,600 --> 00:21:00,439 in the constellation of Leo. 214 00:21:00,520 --> 00:21:03,519 It's actually where the mouth of the lion would be. 215 00:21:04,000 --> 00:21:05,959 And despite appearances, 216 00:21:06,040 --> 00:21:11,319 it is one of the most interesting images taken in recent astronomical history. 217 00:21:12,360 --> 00:21:15,279 The interesting thing is this little red blob here, 218 00:21:15,360 --> 00:21:18,679 which looks very unremarkable. 219 00:21:18,760 --> 00:21:20,559 But what that red blob is 220 00:21:20,640 --> 00:21:25,639 is the afterglow of an enormous cosmic explosion. 221 00:21:25,880 --> 00:21:29,159 It's the death of a star that was about, what, 222 00:21:29,240 --> 00:21:34,039 40 or even 50 times the mass of our sun. 223 00:21:39,200 --> 00:21:43,679 Poetically named GRB 090423, 224 00:21:43,760 --> 00:21:46,759 it was once a Wolf-Rayet star. 225 00:21:51,680 --> 00:21:54,839 Shrouded by rapidly swirling clouds of gas, 226 00:21:54,920 --> 00:21:59,039 it burned 10,000 times more brightly than our sun. 227 00:22:01,720 --> 00:22:05,959 But because it burned so brightly, it was extremely short-lived. 228 00:22:08,600 --> 00:22:12,399 As it died, the giant star collapsed in on itself. 229 00:22:13,080 --> 00:22:16,519 That caused massive jets of light and stellar material 230 00:22:16,600 --> 00:22:18,599 to be ejected from its poles, 231 00:22:18,680 --> 00:22:23,559 in an explosion that shone with the light of ten million billion suns. 232 00:22:30,880 --> 00:22:34,719 And it's the afterglow of this catastrophic explosion 233 00:22:34,800 --> 00:22:39,519 that is just visible from our planet as a faint red dot. 234 00:22:45,480 --> 00:22:50,319 But that's not what's so interesting about GRB 090423. 235 00:22:50,400 --> 00:22:55,039 You see, when we look up into the sky at distant stars and galaxies, 236 00:22:55,120 --> 00:22:56,959 then we're looking back in time, 237 00:22:57,040 --> 00:23:01,479 because the light takes time to journey from them to us. 238 00:23:01,560 --> 00:23:05,999 And the light from that red dot has been travelling to us 239 00:23:06,080 --> 00:23:10,039 for almost the entire history of the universe. 240 00:23:10,560 --> 00:23:12,399 You see, what we're looking at here 241 00:23:12,480 --> 00:23:17,079 is an event that happened 13 billion years ago. 242 00:23:17,160 --> 00:23:19,599 I mean, that's only about 600 million years 243 00:23:19,680 --> 00:23:22,639 after the Big Bang, after the universe began. 244 00:23:22,720 --> 00:23:27,799 So this is something incredibly early in the universe's history. 245 00:23:27,880 --> 00:23:32,039 In fact, this is the oldest single object 246 00:23:32,120 --> 00:23:34,319 that we've ever seen. 247 00:23:34,840 --> 00:23:37,919 What we're looking at here is the explosive death 248 00:23:38,000 --> 00:23:41,519 of one of the first stars in the universe. 249 00:23:53,720 --> 00:23:58,199 As it evolves, the universe passes through distinct eras. 250 00:24:00,320 --> 00:24:03,839 Vast ages, whose beginnings and endings 251 00:24:03,920 --> 00:24:06,879 are marked by unique milestones. 252 00:24:08,960 --> 00:24:12,239 The births and deaths of its wonders. 253 00:24:18,600 --> 00:24:23,479 The moment the first stars were born is one of the most important changes 254 00:24:23,560 --> 00:24:25,839 in the evolution of the cosmos. 255 00:24:28,320 --> 00:24:31,159 It signals the end of the Primordial Era 256 00:24:31,880 --> 00:24:36,519 and marks the beginning of the second great age of the universe. 257 00:24:38,040 --> 00:24:40,919 The time in which we live, 258 00:24:41,000 --> 00:24:43,119 the Stelliferous Era, 259 00:24:43,200 --> 00:24:45,959 the age of the stars. 260 00:24:50,680 --> 00:24:53,679 Starlight illuminates the night sky 261 00:24:53,760 --> 00:24:57,119 and starlight illuminates our days. 262 00:24:57,200 --> 00:25:02,199 Our sun is just one of 200 billion stars in our galaxy. 263 00:25:02,280 --> 00:25:07,159 And our galaxy is one of 100 billion in the observable universe. 264 00:25:07,720 --> 00:25:11,799 Countless islands of countless stars. 265 00:25:24,640 --> 00:25:28,079 Although the universe is over 13 billion years old, 266 00:25:28,160 --> 00:25:32,399 we still live close to the start of the Stelliferous Era. 267 00:25:32,480 --> 00:25:37,719 And it's an age of astonishing beauty and complexity in the universe. 268 00:25:41,280 --> 00:25:45,359 The cosmos is absolutely awash with stars, 269 00:25:45,440 --> 00:25:48,559 surrounded by nebulae and systems of planets. 270 00:25:49,120 --> 00:25:54,319 There are countless billions of worlds that we've yet to explore. 271 00:26:00,920 --> 00:26:05,439 But the cosmos isn't static and unchanging 272 00:26:05,520 --> 00:26:08,559 and it won't always be this way. 273 00:26:08,640 --> 00:26:12,119 Because as the arrow of time plays out, 274 00:26:12,200 --> 00:26:16,839 it produces a universe that is as dynamic as it's beautiful. 275 00:26:24,440 --> 00:26:28,439 We've seen stars born and we've seen stars die. 276 00:26:29,080 --> 00:26:33,239 And we know that tomorrow won't be the same as today. 277 00:26:33,440 --> 00:26:35,759 Because the arrow of time says the future 278 00:26:35,840 --> 00:26:38,679 will always be different from the past. 279 00:26:41,040 --> 00:26:43,279 But what drives this evolution? 280 00:26:44,080 --> 00:26:48,199 Why is there a difference between the past and the future? 281 00:26:49,080 --> 00:26:52,079 Why is there an arrow of time at all? 282 00:27:13,760 --> 00:27:17,279 We all have an intuitive understanding of the arrow of time. 283 00:27:22,400 --> 00:27:25,119 It seems obvious to us that things change 284 00:27:25,200 --> 00:27:27,999 and the future will be different to the past. 285 00:27:33,840 --> 00:27:36,519 We know that because we see the effects 286 00:27:36,600 --> 00:27:39,439 of the passing years all around us. 287 00:27:49,440 --> 00:27:54,119 This is Kolmanskop, an abandoned diamond-mining town in southern Namibia. 288 00:28:03,160 --> 00:28:06,359 Now, this entire town was founded in 1908, 289 00:28:06,440 --> 00:28:08,719 when a worker, who was building the railway 290 00:28:08,800 --> 00:28:12,679 from the Port of Lüderitz inland, into the centre of Namibia, 291 00:28:12,760 --> 00:28:17,119 found a single diamond here in this desert. 292 00:28:33,160 --> 00:28:37,839 For 40 years, this was a thriving community of up to 1000 people, 293 00:28:37,920 --> 00:28:40,479 a place where you could become a millionaire 294 00:28:40,600 --> 00:28:42,919 picking diamonds out of the sand. 295 00:28:47,160 --> 00:28:50,439 While the money rolled in, they built grand houses 296 00:28:50,520 --> 00:28:53,519 and lived a champagne lifestyle in the desert. 297 00:28:56,880 --> 00:29:00,519 But when the diamonds dried up the town was abandoned 298 00:29:00,600 --> 00:29:04,079 and for half a century, it's fallen into disrepair 299 00:29:04,160 --> 00:29:07,039 as it's slowly reclaimed by the sands. 300 00:29:23,560 --> 00:29:26,199 The processes at play here at Kolmanskop 301 00:29:26,280 --> 00:29:29,039 are happening everywhere in the universe. 302 00:29:29,920 --> 00:29:32,239 Because it isn't simply permanent change 303 00:29:32,320 --> 00:29:34,479 that's central to the arrow of time, 304 00:29:34,920 --> 00:29:36,279 it's decay. 305 00:29:39,560 --> 00:29:42,679 But the scientific explanation for why that is 306 00:29:43,520 --> 00:29:45,559 didn't come from attempting to understand 307 00:29:45,640 --> 00:29:48,159 the effects of time in the universe. 308 00:29:49,800 --> 00:29:52,679 It came from trying to build a faster train. 309 00:29:55,600 --> 00:29:57,359 Back in the 19th century, 310 00:29:57,440 --> 00:30:01,759 engineers were concerned with the efficiency of steam engines. 311 00:30:01,880 --> 00:30:04,879 You know, how hot should the fire be? 312 00:30:04,960 --> 00:30:07,159 What substance should you boil in the steam engine? 313 00:30:07,240 --> 00:30:09,599 Should it be water or should it be something else? 314 00:30:09,680 --> 00:30:12,039 These were profound questions. 315 00:30:12,120 --> 00:30:16,079 And out of those questions arose the science of thermodynamics. 316 00:30:16,200 --> 00:30:19,759 It's when concepts like heat and temperature and energy 317 00:30:19,880 --> 00:30:22,879 entered the scientific vocabulary for the first time. 318 00:30:23,440 --> 00:30:27,079 Now, along with that deeper understanding 319 00:30:27,160 --> 00:30:31,319 emerged what is probably the most important law of physics 320 00:30:31,400 --> 00:30:34,479 for understanding the evolution of the universe 321 00:30:34,560 --> 00:30:36,679 and the passage of time. 322 00:30:36,760 --> 00:30:39,799 It's called the second law of thermodynamics. 323 00:30:45,080 --> 00:30:48,759 The reason the second law of thermodynamics was so profound 324 00:30:48,840 --> 00:30:53,399 was because at its heart it contained a radically new concept, 325 00:30:54,560 --> 00:30:57,079 something physicists call "entropy". 326 00:31:00,600 --> 00:31:04,519 Entropy explains why, left to the mercy of the elements, 327 00:31:04,600 --> 00:31:09,199 mortar crumbles, glass shatters and buildings collapse. 328 00:31:12,600 --> 00:31:15,919 And a good way to understand how is to think of objects 329 00:31:16,000 --> 00:31:20,639 not as single things, but as being made up of many constituent parts, 330 00:31:21,280 --> 00:31:25,239 like the individual grains that make up this pile of sand. 331 00:31:28,320 --> 00:31:30,159 Now, entropy is a measure 332 00:31:30,240 --> 00:31:32,679 of how many ways I can rearrange those grains 333 00:31:32,760 --> 00:31:35,439 and still keep the sand pile the same. 334 00:31:35,520 --> 00:31:40,439 And there are trillions and trillions and trillions of ways of doing that. 335 00:31:40,560 --> 00:31:43,199 I mean, pretty much anything I do to this sand pile, 336 00:31:43,280 --> 00:31:46,039 if I mess the sand around and move it around, 337 00:31:46,120 --> 00:31:48,839 then it doesn't change the shape or the structure at all. 338 00:31:49,320 --> 00:31:51,959 So, in the language of entropy, 339 00:31:52,040 --> 00:31:54,199 this sand pile has high entropy, 340 00:31:54,320 --> 00:31:57,079 because there are many, many ways that I can rearrange 341 00:31:57,160 --> 00:31:59,759 its constituents and not change it. 342 00:32:00,800 --> 00:32:04,519 But now let me create some order in the universe. 343 00:32:12,040 --> 00:32:14,959 Now, there are approximately as many sand grains 344 00:32:15,040 --> 00:32:18,759 in this sandcastle as there are in the sand pile. 345 00:32:18,840 --> 00:32:22,959 But now, virtually anything I do to it will mess it up, 346 00:32:23,040 --> 00:32:26,799 will remove the beautiful order from this structure. 347 00:32:26,880 --> 00:32:30,679 And because of that, the sandcastle has a low entropy. 348 00:32:30,800 --> 00:32:33,119 It's a much more ordered state. 349 00:32:33,360 --> 00:32:36,839 So many ways of rearranging the sand grains 350 00:32:36,920 --> 00:32:40,479 without changing the structure, high entropy. 351 00:32:40,560 --> 00:32:43,439 Very few ways of rearranging the sand grains 352 00:32:43,520 --> 00:32:48,719 without changing the structure, without disordering it, low entropy. 353 00:32:57,880 --> 00:33:01,159 Now, imagine I was to leave this castle in the desert all day, 354 00:33:01,240 --> 00:33:03,639 then it's obvious what's going to happen. 355 00:33:03,720 --> 00:33:06,479 The desert winds are going to blow the sand around 356 00:33:06,560 --> 00:33:10,119 and this castle is going to disintegrate. 357 00:33:10,240 --> 00:33:12,199 It's going to become less ordered, 358 00:33:12,600 --> 00:33:14,359 it's going to fall to bits. 359 00:33:17,920 --> 00:33:21,239 But think about what's happening on a fundamental level. 360 00:33:21,320 --> 00:33:24,919 I mean, the wind is taking the sand off the castle 361 00:33:25,040 --> 00:33:28,879 and blowing it over there somewhere, and making a sand pile. 362 00:33:29,000 --> 00:33:32,359 There's nothing fundamental in the laws of physics 363 00:33:32,440 --> 00:33:36,799 that says that the wind couldn't pick up some sand from over here, 364 00:33:36,880 --> 00:33:42,439 deposit it here and deposit it in precisely the shape of a sandcastle. 365 00:33:43,160 --> 00:33:46,919 You know, in principle, the wind could spontaneously build 366 00:33:47,000 --> 00:33:49,839 a sandcastle out of a pile of sand. 367 00:34:00,680 --> 00:34:02,559 There's no reason why that couldn't happen. 368 00:34:02,640 --> 00:34:05,759 It's just extremely, extremely unlikely, 369 00:34:05,840 --> 00:34:09,319 because there are very few ways of organising this sand 370 00:34:09,400 --> 00:34:11,359 so that it looks like a castle. 371 00:34:18,000 --> 00:34:20,279 It's overwhelmingly more likely 372 00:34:20,360 --> 00:34:22,599 that when the wind blows the sand around, 373 00:34:22,680 --> 00:34:26,159 it will take the low entropy structure, the castle, 374 00:34:26,280 --> 00:34:30,279 and turn it into a high entropy structure, the sand pile. 375 00:34:37,680 --> 00:34:41,159 So entropy always increases. 376 00:34:41,560 --> 00:34:46,959 Why is that? Because it's overwhelmingly more likely that it will. 377 00:34:56,400 --> 00:34:59,919 It seems incredible that a law that says that sandcastles 378 00:35:00,000 --> 00:35:02,279 don't spontaneously form on the wind 379 00:35:03,240 --> 00:35:06,359 could solve one of the deepest mysteries in physics. 380 00:35:09,240 --> 00:35:12,479 But by saying entropy always increases, 381 00:35:12,560 --> 00:35:16,599 the second law of thermodynamics is able to explain 382 00:35:16,680 --> 00:35:19,519 why time only runs in one direction. 383 00:35:35,160 --> 00:35:38,599 The second law of thermodynamics, for me, demonstrates everything 384 00:35:38,680 --> 00:35:43,599 that is powerful and beautiful and profound about physics. 385 00:35:43,680 --> 00:35:46,719 You see, here's a law that entered science as a way of talking 386 00:35:46,800 --> 00:35:50,359 about how heat moves around and the efficiency of steam engines, 387 00:35:50,880 --> 00:35:54,519 but it ended up being able to explain 388 00:35:54,600 --> 00:35:57,999 one of the great mysteries in the history of science. 389 00:35:58,120 --> 00:36:01,679 Why is there a difference between the past and the future? 390 00:36:02,280 --> 00:36:04,199 You see, the second law says 391 00:36:04,280 --> 00:36:08,039 that everything tends from order to disorder. 392 00:36:08,600 --> 00:36:12,879 That means that there is a difference between the past and the future. 393 00:36:12,960 --> 00:36:15,479 In the past, the universe was more ordered, 394 00:36:15,560 --> 00:36:19,039 and in the future, the universe will be less ordered. 395 00:36:19,480 --> 00:36:22,799 And that means that there's a direction to the passage of time. 396 00:36:22,880 --> 00:36:25,559 So the second law of thermodynamics 397 00:36:25,640 --> 00:36:27,719 has introduced the concept 398 00:36:27,800 --> 00:36:31,039 of an arrow of time into science. 399 00:36:39,000 --> 00:36:42,639 The arrow of time has been playing out in Kolmanskop 400 00:36:42,720 --> 00:36:45,919 since the mining facility was abandoned in 1954. 401 00:36:48,720 --> 00:36:51,439 But in the universe, it's been playing out 402 00:36:51,520 --> 00:36:53,759 for almost 14 billion years, 403 00:36:55,000 --> 00:36:57,639 and it will have profound consequences. 404 00:37:05,040 --> 00:37:08,719 Because it means stars cannot shine forever, 405 00:37:09,680 --> 00:37:13,519 including the star at the centre of our solar system. 406 00:37:16,400 --> 00:37:20,999 At the end of its life, the sun won't simply fade away to nothing. 407 00:37:23,960 --> 00:37:27,879 As it begins to run out of fuel, its core will collapse, 408 00:37:28,320 --> 00:37:32,759 and the extra heat this generates will cause its outer layers to expand. 409 00:37:39,680 --> 00:37:41,839 In around a billion years' time, 410 00:37:41,920 --> 00:37:46,399 this will have a catastrophic effect on our fragile world. 411 00:37:53,080 --> 00:37:56,319 Gradually, the Earth will become hotter and hotter. 412 00:37:56,400 --> 00:38:00,679 So there will be one last perfect day on Earth, 413 00:38:00,760 --> 00:38:05,799 but eventually the existence of all life on this planet will become impossible. 414 00:38:10,360 --> 00:38:12,639 Long after life has disappeared, 415 00:38:12,720 --> 00:38:16,959 the sun will have grown so much, it will fill the entire horizon. 416 00:38:23,840 --> 00:38:28,119 It will have become a red giant, the last phase of its life. 417 00:38:38,320 --> 00:38:40,759 Our planet might not survive to this point, 418 00:38:41,280 --> 00:38:45,559 but if it does, little more than a scorched and barren rock 419 00:38:45,800 --> 00:38:49,759 will remain to witness the final death throes of our star. 420 00:38:50,520 --> 00:38:52,119 (RUMBLING) 421 00:39:00,680 --> 00:39:05,479 In six billion years, our sun will explode, 422 00:39:05,560 --> 00:39:08,519 throwing vast amounts of gas and dust 423 00:39:08,600 --> 00:39:11,439 out into space to form a gigantic nebula. 424 00:39:19,000 --> 00:39:23,559 And at its heart will be a faintly glowing ember, 425 00:39:23,680 --> 00:39:27,159 all that remains of our once-magnificent sun. 426 00:39:27,240 --> 00:39:29,879 It will be smaller than the size of the Earth, 427 00:39:29,960 --> 00:39:34,559 less than a millionth of its current volume and a fraction of its brightness. 428 00:39:35,280 --> 00:39:37,999 Our sun will have become a white dwarf. 429 00:39:47,560 --> 00:39:51,999 With no fuel left to burn, a white dwarf's faint glow 430 00:39:52,080 --> 00:39:56,319 comes from the last residual heat from its extinguished furnace. 431 00:39:59,120 --> 00:40:01,079 The sun is now dead, 432 00:40:01,440 --> 00:40:03,599 its remains slowly cooling 433 00:40:03,680 --> 00:40:06,599 in the freezing temperatures of deep space. 434 00:40:10,680 --> 00:40:13,119 Looking at it from where the Earth is now, 435 00:40:13,200 --> 00:40:15,959 it would only generate the same amount of light 436 00:40:16,040 --> 00:40:18,719 as the full moon on a clear night. 437 00:40:24,000 --> 00:40:28,199 The fate of the sun is the same as for all stars. 438 00:40:28,280 --> 00:40:31,479 One day, they must all eventually die 439 00:40:31,560 --> 00:40:35,119 and the cosmos will be plunged into eternal night. 440 00:40:35,760 --> 00:40:38,519 And this is the most profound consequence 441 00:40:38,600 --> 00:40:40,199 of the arrow of time. 442 00:40:40,280 --> 00:40:43,399 Because this structured universe that we inhabit 443 00:40:43,480 --> 00:40:47,399 and all its wonders, the stars and the planets and the galaxies, 444 00:40:47,760 --> 00:40:50,119 cannot last forever. 445 00:40:50,200 --> 00:40:54,359 The cosmos will eventually fade and die. 446 00:40:58,840 --> 00:41:02,119 First will come the end of the Stelliferous Era, 447 00:41:02,200 --> 00:41:04,719 the end of the age of starlight. 448 00:41:08,800 --> 00:41:11,559 The largest stars are the first to disappear, 449 00:41:11,640 --> 00:41:14,559 violently collapsing into black holes, 450 00:41:14,640 --> 00:41:17,359 just a few million years after their formation. 451 00:41:20,240 --> 00:41:24,559 But long after they're gone, just one type of star will remain. 452 00:41:28,560 --> 00:41:33,919 This is a picture of the nearest star to our solar system, Proxima Centauri. 453 00:41:34,000 --> 00:41:37,839 Now, it's only 4.2 light years away, but the reason it doesn't stand out 454 00:41:37,920 --> 00:41:40,719 against the much more distant stars in this photograph 455 00:41:41,080 --> 00:41:44,239 is that Proxima Centauri is incredibly tiny. 456 00:41:44,720 --> 00:41:47,399 It's the kind of star known as a red dwarf star, 457 00:41:47,480 --> 00:41:51,159 and it's only about 11 to 12 percent the mass of our sun. 458 00:41:51,640 --> 00:41:57,199 But to our eyes, it would appear to shine 18,000 times less brightly. 459 00:41:59,800 --> 00:42:02,759 But red dwarves do have one advantage 460 00:42:02,840 --> 00:42:06,759 over their much more luminous and magnificent stellar brethren. 461 00:42:06,840 --> 00:42:09,559 And that's because they're so small, 462 00:42:09,720 --> 00:42:13,079 they burn their nuclear fuel incredibly slowly, 463 00:42:13,160 --> 00:42:16,759 so they have life spans of trillions of years. 464 00:42:17,160 --> 00:42:20,679 And that means that stars like Proxima Centauri 465 00:42:20,760 --> 00:42:24,359 will be the last living stars in the universe. 466 00:42:30,080 --> 00:42:34,079 If we survive into the far future of the universe, 467 00:42:34,160 --> 00:42:37,639 then it's possible to imagine our distant descendents 468 00:42:37,720 --> 00:42:41,319 building their civilisation around red dwarves, 469 00:42:41,400 --> 00:42:47,479 to capture the energy from those last fading embers of stars. 470 00:42:48,040 --> 00:42:52,039 Just as our ancestors crowded around campfires 471 00:42:52,120 --> 00:42:55,559 for warmth on cold winters' nights. 472 00:43:13,960 --> 00:43:17,719 The reason why Proxima Centauri burns so slowly 473 00:43:17,800 --> 00:43:20,879 is because its small size and low gravity 474 00:43:20,960 --> 00:43:24,759 mean its core is under much lower pressure than larger stars. 475 00:43:26,440 --> 00:43:30,239 This also means that its interior is constantly churning, 476 00:43:30,320 --> 00:43:33,359 whipping up the surface into a fiery turmoil. 477 00:43:36,480 --> 00:43:40,039 Explosive solar flares occur almost continually, 478 00:43:40,120 --> 00:43:42,719 even though it burns so dimly. 479 00:43:44,800 --> 00:43:48,559 But Proxima Centauri will eventually die. 480 00:43:49,200 --> 00:43:53,039 And like our sun, it too will become a white dwarf. 481 00:43:54,000 --> 00:43:56,279 As the age of starlight ends, 482 00:43:56,360 --> 00:44:00,759 all but the dimmest flicker of light in the universe will go out. 483 00:44:01,800 --> 00:44:06,279 The faint glow of white dwarves will provide the only illumination 484 00:44:07,040 --> 00:44:13,079 in a dark and empty void littered with dead stars and black holes. 485 00:44:15,400 --> 00:44:20,359 By this point, the universe will be 100 trillion years old. 486 00:44:24,280 --> 00:44:28,679 And yet, even now, the vast majority of its lifespan 487 00:44:28,760 --> 00:44:30,439 still lies ahead of it. 488 00:44:47,400 --> 00:44:49,479 There are few places on Earth 489 00:44:49,560 --> 00:44:53,599 where you can get an inkling of what the far future has in store. 490 00:45:06,920 --> 00:45:09,479 Well, this is Namibia's Skeleton Coast, 491 00:45:09,560 --> 00:45:13,679 where the cold waters of the South Atlantic meet the Namib Desert. 492 00:45:13,760 --> 00:45:16,999 And it is one of the most inhospitable places on Earth. 493 00:45:17,080 --> 00:45:18,799 I mean, back in the 17th century, 494 00:45:18,880 --> 00:45:20,799 Portuguese sailors used to call this place 495 00:45:20,880 --> 00:45:25,119 "the gates to hell", because this dense fog that you see 496 00:45:25,200 --> 00:45:28,119 pretty much every morning along this coast, 497 00:45:28,200 --> 00:45:32,879 coupled with the constantly shifting shape of the sandbanks 498 00:45:32,960 --> 00:45:34,959 meant that over the years, 499 00:45:35,040 --> 00:45:38,839 literally thousands of ships were wrecked along this coastline. 500 00:45:43,960 --> 00:45:47,279 And even if you made it to shore, that wasn't the end of your problems, 501 00:45:47,360 --> 00:45:49,599 because the currents are so strong here 502 00:45:49,680 --> 00:45:53,119 that there is no way of rowing back out to sea. 503 00:45:53,200 --> 00:45:56,639 And if you look that way, there's just hundreds of miles 504 00:45:56,720 --> 00:45:58,519 of inhospitable desert. 505 00:46:01,160 --> 00:46:05,319 So, it genuinely was a place of no return. 506 00:46:05,400 --> 00:46:09,879 If you were shipwrecked here, this was the end of your universe. 507 00:46:21,120 --> 00:46:23,199 This is the Eduard Bohlen. 508 00:46:23,640 --> 00:46:25,719 She was once an ocean-going steamer, 509 00:46:25,800 --> 00:46:29,079 ferrying passengers and cargo between here and Europe. 510 00:46:33,920 --> 00:46:38,199 On the 5th of September, 1909, she ran aground in thick fog. 511 00:46:44,360 --> 00:46:47,839 Yet, like all the vessels wrecked along this shoreline, 512 00:46:47,920 --> 00:46:50,679 the time it takes her to decay to nothing 513 00:46:50,760 --> 00:46:53,639 will be far longer than her time at sea. 514 00:46:58,960 --> 00:47:01,239 And in the far future of the cosmos, 515 00:47:01,360 --> 00:47:04,479 a similar destiny awaits the remaining white dwarves. 516 00:47:11,160 --> 00:47:15,279 A black dwarf will be the final fate of those last stars, 517 00:47:15,360 --> 00:47:17,879 white dwarves that have become so cold 518 00:47:17,960 --> 00:47:20,999 that they barely emit any more heat or light. 519 00:47:25,160 --> 00:47:29,199 Black dwarves are dark, dense, decaying balls 520 00:47:29,280 --> 00:47:30,999 of degenerate matter, 521 00:47:31,720 --> 00:47:34,279 little more than the ashes of stars. 522 00:47:36,120 --> 00:47:39,719 Their constituent atoms are so severely crushed 523 00:47:39,800 --> 00:47:43,879 that black dwarves are a million times denser than our sun. 524 00:47:45,400 --> 00:47:50,839 Stars take so long to reach this point that after nearly 14 billion years, 525 00:47:50,920 --> 00:47:55,239 we believe there are currently no black dwarves in the universe. 526 00:47:56,080 --> 00:47:57,999 But despite never seeing one, 527 00:47:58,080 --> 00:48:00,719 we can still predict how they will end their days. 528 00:48:02,200 --> 00:48:06,039 Just as the iron that makes up this ship will eventually rust 529 00:48:06,120 --> 00:48:09,359 and be carried away by the desert winds, 530 00:48:09,520 --> 00:48:12,719 so we think that the matter inside black dwarves, 531 00:48:12,840 --> 00:48:15,559 the last matter in the universe, 532 00:48:15,760 --> 00:48:19,879 will eventually evaporate away and be carried off 533 00:48:20,000 --> 00:48:25,839 into the void as radiation, leaving absolutely nothing behind. 534 00:48:35,320 --> 00:48:37,559 With the black dwarves gone, 535 00:48:37,640 --> 00:48:40,559 there won't be a single atom of matter left. 536 00:48:43,000 --> 00:48:46,239 All that will remain of our once-rich cosmos 537 00:48:46,360 --> 00:48:49,599 will be particles of light and black holes. 538 00:48:56,600 --> 00:48:59,839 After an unimaginable length of time, 539 00:48:59,920 --> 00:49:02,919 even the black holes will have evaporated 540 00:49:03,000 --> 00:49:06,639 and the universe will be nothing but a sea 541 00:49:06,720 --> 00:49:10,759 of photons gradually tending towards the same temperature, 542 00:49:10,920 --> 00:49:15,359 as the expansion of the universe cools them towards absolute zero. 543 00:49:23,920 --> 00:49:26,359 And when I say unimaginable period of time, 544 00:49:26,440 --> 00:49:27,519 I really mean it. 545 00:49:27,600 --> 00:49:30,799 It's 10,000 trillion trillion trillion trillion 546 00:49:30,880 --> 00:49:34,279 trillion trillion trillion trillion years. 547 00:49:34,840 --> 00:49:36,439 Now, how big is that number? 548 00:49:36,520 --> 00:49:40,239 Well, if I were to start counting with a single atom 549 00:49:40,320 --> 00:49:44,039 representing one year, then there wouldn't be enough atoms 550 00:49:44,120 --> 00:49:48,799 in the entire universe to get anywhere near that number. 551 00:49:55,480 --> 00:49:59,199 Once the very last remnants of the very last stars 552 00:49:59,280 --> 00:50:01,679 have finally decayed away to nothing 553 00:50:01,760 --> 00:50:05,039 and everything reaches the same temperature, 554 00:50:05,120 --> 00:50:09,199 the story of the universe finally comes to an end. 555 00:50:12,920 --> 00:50:15,039 For the first time in its life, 556 00:50:15,120 --> 00:50:18,399 the universe will be permanent and unchanging. 557 00:50:19,440 --> 00:50:22,279 Entropy finally stops increasing, 558 00:50:22,360 --> 00:50:25,719 because the cosmos cannot get any more disordered. 559 00:50:26,520 --> 00:50:30,079 Nothing happens and it keeps not happening, 560 00:50:30,960 --> 00:50:32,279 forever. 561 00:50:36,680 --> 00:50:39,919 It's what's known as the heat death of the universe, 562 00:50:40,000 --> 00:50:42,319 an era when the cosmos will remain 563 00:50:42,400 --> 00:50:46,599 vast and cold and desolate for the rest of time. 564 00:50:47,400 --> 00:50:49,679 And that's because there is no difference 565 00:50:49,760 --> 00:50:52,479 between the past, the present and the future. 566 00:50:52,560 --> 00:50:55,279 There's no way of measuring the passage of time, 567 00:50:55,360 --> 00:50:58,639 because nothing in the cosmos changes. 568 00:50:59,400 --> 00:51:03,319 The arrow of time has simply ceased to exist. 569 00:51:14,040 --> 00:51:17,359 It's an inescapable fact of the universe, 570 00:51:17,440 --> 00:51:20,999 written into the fundamental laws of physics. 571 00:51:21,080 --> 00:51:23,879 The entire cosmos will die. 572 00:51:28,280 --> 00:51:33,479 Every single one of the 200 billion stars in our galaxy 573 00:51:33,560 --> 00:51:34,999 will go out. 574 00:51:37,040 --> 00:51:39,119 And just as the death of the sun 575 00:51:39,200 --> 00:51:41,639 means the end of life on our planet, 576 00:51:41,720 --> 00:51:44,079 so the death of every star 577 00:51:44,160 --> 00:51:48,319 will extinguish any possibility of life in the universe. 578 00:51:52,280 --> 00:51:54,959 The fact that the sun will die, 579 00:51:55,040 --> 00:51:58,879 and it will incinerate the Earth and obliterate all life 580 00:51:58,960 --> 00:52:03,439 on our planet in the process, might sound a bit depressing to you. 581 00:52:03,880 --> 00:52:05,319 You might legitimately ask, 582 00:52:05,400 --> 00:52:08,799 "Well, surely you could build a universe in a different way, 583 00:52:08,880 --> 00:52:12,359 "surely you could build it so it didn't have to descend 584 00:52:12,440 --> 00:52:14,159 "from order into chaos?" 585 00:52:14,920 --> 00:52:19,399 Well, the answer is, "No, you couldn't, if you wanted life to exist in it." 586 00:52:25,240 --> 00:52:28,279 The arrow of time, the sequence of changes 587 00:52:28,360 --> 00:52:31,359 that slowly leads the universe to its death, 588 00:52:31,440 --> 00:52:33,799 is the very same thing that creates 589 00:52:33,880 --> 00:52:36,719 the conditions for life in the first place. 590 00:52:41,040 --> 00:52:43,439 Because it takes time for matter to form 591 00:52:44,080 --> 00:52:46,199 and it takes time for gravity 592 00:52:46,280 --> 00:52:49,239 to pull it together into stars and planets. 593 00:52:54,240 --> 00:52:57,079 The arrow of time creates a bright window 594 00:52:57,160 --> 00:53:01,519 in the universe's adolescence, during which life is possible. 595 00:53:08,880 --> 00:53:12,039 But it's a window that doesn't stay open for long. 596 00:53:15,480 --> 00:53:18,999 As a fraction of the life span of the universe, 597 00:53:19,080 --> 00:53:21,119 as measured from its beginning 598 00:53:21,200 --> 00:53:24,079 to the evaporation of the last black hole, 599 00:53:24,160 --> 00:53:27,559 life as we know it is only possible 600 00:53:27,640 --> 00:53:31,079 for one thousandth of a billion billion billionth, 601 00:53:31,160 --> 00:53:35,799 billion billion billionth, billion billion billionth of a percent. 602 00:53:38,840 --> 00:53:40,799 And that's why, for me, 603 00:53:40,880 --> 00:53:43,879 the most astonishing wonder of the universe 604 00:53:43,960 --> 00:53:47,079 isn't a star or a planet or a galaxy. 605 00:53:48,480 --> 00:53:52,559 It isn't a thing at all. It's an instant in time. 606 00:53:53,800 --> 00:53:56,159 And that time is now. 607 00:54:04,200 --> 00:54:07,959 Humans have walked the Earth for just the smallest fraction 608 00:54:08,080 --> 00:54:11,399 of that briefest of moments in deep time. 609 00:54:14,320 --> 00:54:17,479 But in our 200000 years on this planet, 610 00:54:17,560 --> 00:54:19,839 we've made remarkable progress. 611 00:54:22,680 --> 00:54:25,679 It was only two and a half thousand years ago 612 00:54:25,760 --> 00:54:28,559 that we believed that the sun was a god 613 00:54:28,640 --> 00:54:31,359 and measured its orbit with stone towers 614 00:54:31,440 --> 00:54:33,959 built on the top of a hill. 615 00:54:35,720 --> 00:54:40,599 Today, the language of curiosity is not sun gods but science. 616 00:54:40,920 --> 00:54:44,039 And we have observatories that are almost infinitely 617 00:54:44,120 --> 00:54:46,439 more sophisticated than the 13 towers, 618 00:54:46,520 --> 00:54:49,479 that can gaze out deep into the universe. 619 00:54:53,240 --> 00:54:56,159 And perhaps even more remarkably, 620 00:54:56,240 --> 00:54:58,239 through theoretical physics and mathematics, 621 00:54:58,320 --> 00:55:03,599 we can calculate what the universe will look like in the distant future 622 00:55:03,920 --> 00:55:08,359 and we can even make concrete predictions about its end. 623 00:55:15,960 --> 00:55:20,959 And I believe it's only by continuing our exploration of the cosmos 624 00:55:21,040 --> 00:55:23,559 and the laws of nature that govern it 625 00:55:23,640 --> 00:55:26,439 that we can truly understand ourselves 626 00:55:26,520 --> 00:55:30,159 and our place in this universe of wonders. 627 00:55:34,360 --> 00:55:38,919 And that's what we've done in our brief moment on planet Earth. 628 00:55:42,760 --> 00:55:46,119 In 1977, a space probe called Voyager 1 629 00:55:46,200 --> 00:55:49,519 was launched on a grand tour of the solar system. 630 00:55:50,520 --> 00:55:55,199 And it visited the great gas-giant planets Jupiter and Saturn 631 00:55:55,280 --> 00:55:57,519 and made some wonderful discoveries 632 00:55:57,600 --> 00:56:01,039 before heading off towards interstellar space. 633 00:56:03,320 --> 00:56:07,679 13 years later, after its mission was almost over, 634 00:56:07,760 --> 00:56:11,879 it turned around and took one last picture 635 00:56:11,960 --> 00:56:13,759 of its home solar system. 636 00:56:14,160 --> 00:56:16,039 And this is that picture. 637 00:56:18,120 --> 00:56:20,799 And the beautiful thing about this picture 638 00:56:20,920 --> 00:56:24,599 is this single pixel of light 639 00:56:25,400 --> 00:56:27,759 suspended against the blackness of space. 640 00:56:27,840 --> 00:56:32,199 Because that pixel, that point, is planet Earth, 641 00:56:32,600 --> 00:56:35,279 the most distant picture of our planet ever taken 642 00:56:35,360 --> 00:56:38,239 at six billion kilometres away. 643 00:56:47,600 --> 00:56:52,079 And whilst I suppose it has very limited scientific value, 644 00:56:52,160 --> 00:56:54,799 for me, this tiny point of light 645 00:56:54,880 --> 00:56:58,239 is the most powerful and profound demonstration 646 00:56:58,360 --> 00:57:01,319 of perhaps the most human of qualities, 647 00:57:02,640 --> 00:57:04,959 our unique ability to reflect 648 00:57:05,040 --> 00:57:08,839 on the universe's existence and our place within it. 649 00:57:13,960 --> 00:57:16,959 Just as we, and all life on Earth, 650 00:57:17,040 --> 00:57:21,319 stand on this tiny speck adrift in infinite space, 651 00:57:22,000 --> 00:57:25,319 so life in the universe will only exist 652 00:57:25,400 --> 00:57:30,159 for a fleeting, bright instant in time. 653 00:57:30,680 --> 00:57:35,319 Because life, just like the stars and the planets and the galaxies, 654 00:57:35,400 --> 00:57:40,959 is just a temporary structure on the long road from order to disorder. 655 00:57:50,480 --> 00:57:52,239 But that doesn't make us insignificant, 656 00:57:52,320 --> 00:57:54,999 because we are the cosmos made conscious. 657 00:57:55,520 --> 00:58:00,359 Life is the means by which the universe understands itself. 658 00:58:02,880 --> 00:58:06,839 And for me, our true significance lies in our ability 659 00:58:07,640 --> 00:58:12,919 and our desire to understand and explore this beautiful universe. 660 00:58:17,280 --> 00:58:20,959 (WE HAVE ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD BY LOUIS ARMSTRONG PLAYING) 57314

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