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[announcer] Support from viewers like you
makes this program possible.
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Please give to your PBS station.
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[Janna Levin]
Of all the objects in the cosmos...
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Planets...
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Stars...
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Galaxies...
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None are as strange,
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mysterious,
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or powerful...
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as black holes.
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Black holes are the most
mind-blowing things in the universe.
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They could swallow a star
completely intact.
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Black holes have these powerful jets
that just spew matter out.
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[Levin] First discovered on paper...
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[Peter Galison]
On the back of an envelope,
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some squiggles of the pen.
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[Levin] ...the bizarre solution
to a seemingly unsolvable equation...
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A mathematical enigma...
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...Einstein himself could not accept
black holes as real.
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People didn't even believe
for many years that they existed.
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Nature doesn't work that way.
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[Levin] Yet slowly, as scientists
investigate black holes
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by observing the effect they have
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on their surroundings,
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evidence begins to mount...
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That is the proof of a black hole.
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Millions of times the mass of the sun.
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[Levin] Cutting-edge discoveries show...
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We did it!
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[Levin] ...black holes are very real.
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I thought it was crazy.
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I said, "Holy [bleep]."
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[Levin] But what exactly are they?
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If we could visit one, what might we see?
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With their immense power,
do black holes somehow shape
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the very structure of the universe?
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Is it possible we might
not exist without them?
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It's quite a journey.
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[Levin] "Black Hole Apocalypse."
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Right now, on NOVA.
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[Levin] There are apocalyptic objects
in the universe:
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engines of destruction,
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menacing and mysterious.
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Black holes.
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Even scientists who study them
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find them astonishing.
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Black holes can sort of blow your mind.
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I'm amazed that
these objects actually exist.
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[Levin] Black holes defy
our understanding of nature.
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Black holes are
the greatest mystery in the universe.
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[Levin] They're completely invisible,
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yet powerful beyond imagining.
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They can tear a star to shreds.
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Black holes actually will eat anything
that comes in their path.
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You really want to avoid them at all cost.
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[Levin] Black holes even slow time.
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Once thought too strange to be real...
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black holes shatter
our very understanding of physics.
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But we're learning they may
somehow be necessary
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for the universe we know to exist.
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They might well be the key
players in the universe.
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[Levin] What are these strange,
powerful objects...
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outrageous and surprising?
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Where are they, and how do
they control the universe?
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The search for black holes is on.
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And it will be a wild ride
across the cosmos
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to places where everything
you think you know is challenged...
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where space and time, even reality,
are stranger than fiction.
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And we're starting that journey
at a very unlikely place:
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here, at a remote location
in Washington state,
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where, for the first time,
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a radical new experiment
has detected black holes.
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It originated over 50 years ago,
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when a few visionary scientists
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imagine a technology
that hasn't yet been invented...
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Searching for something
no one is certain can be found.
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The experiment is daring and risky.
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Failure could mark their lives forever.
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But they don't fail.
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Right here, in these facilities,
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they make a remarkable discovery.
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In the early hours of September 14, 2015,
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they record a message.
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It looks and sounds like this.
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- [electronic chirp]
- Just a little chirp.
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But that chirp is epic, monumental.
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The signal traveled over
a billion light years to reach us.
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It started far, far away.
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And what it tells us is this:
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somewhere in the cosmos,
over a billion years ago,
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two massive black holes circle
each other in a fatal encounter.
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Closer and closer they come,
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swirling faster and faster,
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until finally, they slam together.
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The black holes create waves
that spread outward.
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Just like vibrations on a drum...
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a ringing in the fabric of space itself.
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The collision creates a massive blast,
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putting out 50 times as much power
as the entire visible universe.
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It sends out a wave not of heat,
or light, or sound,
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but of gravity.
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This gravity wave is moving
its way through the universe
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at the speed of light.
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[Levin] The wave races by stars.
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On the young Earth,
supercontinents are forming.
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Microscopic organisms have just appeared.
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Washing over one galaxy
after another, after another.
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[Levin] Dinosaurs roam the Earth.
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The wave is still moving.
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[Levin] It zooms through clouds of dust.
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And then it nears the Milky Way Galaxy.
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- [Levin] The Ice Age is just beginning.
- [trumpeting]
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We're troglodytes, drawing in caves.
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[Levin] The wave reaches nearby stars.
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Albert Einstein is in the sixth grade.
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The wave approaches as close
as Alpha Centauri.
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At midnight on September 13, 2015,
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it is as close as Saturn.
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Finally, over a billion years
after the black holes collide,
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the wave reaches us.
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It strikes a pair
of revolutionary new observatories,
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the sites of the daring experiment.
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This is LIGO,
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the Laser Interferometer
Gravitational-Wave Observatory.
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The experiment 50 years in the making
has finally hit the jackpot
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and opened an entirely new way
of exploring the universe.
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For 400 years, almost everything
we've observed in space
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has come to us in some form
of electromagnetic energy.
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- [electronic chirping]
- That little chirp is different.
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What hits the Earth in September 2015
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is a gravitational wave...
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a squeezing and stretching
of the very fabric of space.
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It produced no light,
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no telescope could ever see the collision.
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We needed an entirely
new kind of observatory to detect it.
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That wave is new and direct evidence
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of one of the strangest mysteries
in our universe:
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black holes.
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Most of us have heard of black holes.
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They're invisible, powerful.
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We are talking about things that are
a billion times the mass of the sun.
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[Levin] Bizarre.
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[Eilat Glikman] A physical entity
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with infinite density.
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No beginning, no end.
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[Levin] They pull things in.
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[warbling]
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And warp light.
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Approach one,
and time itself begins to change.
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[Priyamvada Natarajan] The gravity
is so intense that a moving clock
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will tick slower.
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[Tyson]
Time will become so slow for you...
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that you will watch the entire
future of the universe
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unfold before your very eyes.
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[indistinct chatter on radio]
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[Levin] Fall in, and you'd be
squeezed as thin as a noodle.
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[Tyson] You'll be extruded through
the fabric of space and time
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like toothpaste through a tube.
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[Levin] Today, we know more about
black holes than ever before.
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But the more we learn,
the more mysterious they become.
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[Andrea Ghez] They're the most exotic
objects in the universe.
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We don't have the physics
to describe them.
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[Natarajan]
No matter how well you understand them,
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they remain unreachable in some sense.
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[beeping]
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[announcer] Now man is about to enter
the black hole!
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So black holes have
a pretty fierce reputation.
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And if you want a villain for
a sci-fi movie, cast a black hole.
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But in reality,
what exactly is a black hole?
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And where do they come from?
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You might think
a black hole is like this...
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an object.
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But it's not.
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It's a hole in the fabric of space.
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A place where there is nothing,
nothing except gravity,
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gravity at its most intense
and overwhelming.
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So if black holes are all about gravity,
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gravity at its most extreme,
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what exactly is gravity?
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[bell rings]
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We're all familiar with gravity.
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- [dishes crash]
- Yep, it's Friday.
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[Levin] It rules our lives.
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But even so, for a very long time,
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how gravity actually works
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was one of the greatest mysteries.
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Over 300 years ago,
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Isaac Newton was fascinated
with the behavior of moving objects.
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Eventually he figured out
his laws of motion.
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They work so well,
we still use them today.
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[man]
Lift-off, we have lift-off at 9:34 a.m.
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But Newton's laws
can only describe gravity's effects,
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not explain what it is.
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[scoffs]
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And here's where Albert Einstein comes in.
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[camera clicking]
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Like Newton,
he thinks about objects in motion.
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And he wonders what gravity actually is.
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Is it a force?
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Or could it be something else?
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Here's what concerns Einstein.
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Take this apple.
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I can't move it without touching it.
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But if I drop the apple...
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it moves toward the Earth.
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But what if I take my hand away,
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and the floor, and the basement,
and the floor below that?
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Then what happens?
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The apple just keeps falling.
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Einstein realized that gravity
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had something to do with falling.
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Now, if I throw the apple...
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it falls along a curved path.
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But imagine I could get
the apple moving much faster.
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Eventually, if I get the apple
moving really, really fast,
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say, 17,000 miles an hour...
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its curved path matches
the curve of the Earth.
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The apple is in orbit, falling freely,
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00:13:21,717 --> 00:13:25,054
just like the International Space Station
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and the astronauts inside it.
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According to Einstein,
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the apple and the space station,
and the astronauts...
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are all falling freely
along a curved path in space.
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And what makes that path curved?
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The mass of the Earth.
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[Galison] Einstein came up with
a supremely simple concept,
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and that is that space and time
is bent by the Earth,
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and by the sun, and by
all the objects in the world.
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So according to Einstein,
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the mass of every object...
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causes the space around it to curve.
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[Galison]
And that was Einstein's conception.
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There are no forces anymore.
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There's just objects bending space-time
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and other objects following
the straightest line through it.
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[Levin] All objects in motion
follow the curves in space.
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So how does the Earth
move the apple without touching it?
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The Earth curves space,
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and the apple falls freely
along those curves.
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That, according to Einstein's
general theory of relativity,
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is gravity: curved space.
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And that understanding of gravity,
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that an object causes
the space around it to curve
244
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leads directly to black holes.
245
00:14:51,223 --> 00:14:54,393
But it's not Albert Einstein
who first makes the connection
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00:14:54,476 --> 00:14:56,437
between gravity and black holes.
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It's another scientist.
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[Marcia Bartusiak] Karl Schwarzschild
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00:15:02,067 --> 00:15:03,861
was a German astronomer,
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00:15:03,944 --> 00:15:06,780
head of the Potsdam Observatory
in Germany.
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00:15:06,864 --> 00:15:10,075
Ever since he was a teenager,
he had been calculating
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00:15:10,159 --> 00:15:12,828
complicated features of planetary orbits.
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00:15:14,538 --> 00:15:19,001
[Levin] As Einstein unveils
his theory of gravity in 1915,
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00:15:19,084 --> 00:15:22,338
Karl Schwarzschild is in the German army,
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00:15:22,421 --> 00:15:26,675
calculating artillery
trajectories in World War I.
256
00:15:27,468 --> 00:15:32,097
[Bartusiak] And just weeks after
Einstein presented his papers,
257
00:15:32,181 --> 00:15:35,434
Schwarzschild,
then on the Russian front...
258
00:15:36,101 --> 00:15:37,478
quickly got a copy
259
00:15:37,561 --> 00:15:42,399
and was mapping
the gravitational field around a star.
260
00:15:43,776 --> 00:15:47,363
[Galison] Einstein had gotten at it
through a series of approximations.
261
00:15:47,446 --> 00:15:49,657
- But Schwarzschild...
- [explosion]
262
00:15:49,740 --> 00:15:52,952
...sitting on the front
with bullets and bombs flying,
263
00:15:53,035 --> 00:15:57,039
calculated an exact solution
to Einstein's theory
264
00:15:57,122 --> 00:16:00,376
and sent it to Einstein.
265
00:16:01,961 --> 00:16:03,712
Einstein was astonished.
266
00:16:04,171 --> 00:16:07,675
He hadn't even imagined that
you could solve these equations exactly.
267
00:16:08,926 --> 00:16:11,512
[Levin]
But Schwarzschild isn't done.
268
00:16:11,595 --> 00:16:14,306
In his solution to Einstein's equations,
269
00:16:14,390 --> 00:16:19,103
he discovers something
Einstein himself had not anticipated.
270
00:16:20,646 --> 00:16:25,818
[Galison] Schwarzschild said,
"I can calculate this strange distance
271
00:16:25,901 --> 00:16:27,444
from a gravitating object
272
00:16:27,528 --> 00:16:31,448
that represents a kind of boundary."
273
00:16:32,157 --> 00:16:35,452
[Levin] Schwarzschild mathematically,
concentrates a mass,
274
00:16:35,536 --> 00:16:37,121
for example, a star,
275
00:16:37,204 --> 00:16:39,373
into a single point.
276
00:16:41,500 --> 00:16:45,379
Then he calculates how that mass
would bend space
277
00:16:45,462 --> 00:16:48,924
and curve rays of light passing nearby.
278
00:16:49,925 --> 00:16:52,136
[Bartusiak]
As he, through his mathematics,
279
00:16:52,219 --> 00:16:56,724
aimed particles of light
or matter towards this point,
280
00:16:57,349 --> 00:17:00,728
there was this boundary
surrounding the point
281
00:17:00,811 --> 00:17:03,313
at which the particles would just stop.
282
00:17:06,150 --> 00:17:08,068
The particles disappeared.
283
00:17:08,152 --> 00:17:09,570
Time stopped.
284
00:17:10,362 --> 00:17:12,281
[Levin] Schwarzschild has discovered
285
00:17:12,406 --> 00:17:15,743
that a concentration of mass
will warp space
286
00:17:15,826 --> 00:17:20,497
to such an extreme
that it creates a region of no return.
287
00:17:20,581 --> 00:17:23,625
Anything that enters that region
will be trapped,
288
00:17:23,709 --> 00:17:27,171
unable to escape... even light.
289
00:17:27,254 --> 00:17:29,381
[Galison] It's like those roach motels.
290
00:17:29,465 --> 00:17:31,425
You can check in, but you can't check out.
291
00:17:31,508 --> 00:17:33,260
Once you go across that boundary,
292
00:17:33,343 --> 00:17:35,137
even if you can sail through,
293
00:17:35,220 --> 00:17:37,431
there's nothing you can do to get out,
294
00:17:37,514 --> 00:17:39,391
there's nothing you can do to signal out.
295
00:17:39,475 --> 00:17:44,188
It becomes this strange,
cut-off portion of space-time.
296
00:17:45,564 --> 00:17:47,858
[Levin]
What Karl Schwarzschild has discovered
297
00:17:47,941 --> 00:17:51,987
is that any mass,
compressed into a small enough space,
298
00:17:52,071 --> 00:17:55,449
creates what we today call a black hole.
299
00:17:57,701 --> 00:17:59,411
But Albert Einstein
300
00:17:59,495 --> 00:18:02,581
whose own theory of gravity
predicts such a thing
301
00:18:02,664 --> 00:18:05,793
cannot believe it can happen
in the real world.
302
00:18:06,376 --> 00:18:08,128
[Bartusiak] Einstein didn't think that
303
00:18:08,212 --> 00:18:10,172
nature would act like this.
304
00:18:10,255 --> 00:18:12,091
He didn't like this idea.
305
00:18:13,801 --> 00:18:16,512
[Levin] Karl Schwarzschild becomes ill
306
00:18:16,595 --> 00:18:21,391
and dies before he has a chance
to further investigate his own discovery.
307
00:18:24,895 --> 00:18:28,899
Two-and-a-half years later,
in November 1918,
308
00:18:28,982 --> 00:18:31,068
- World War I ends.
- [crowd cheering]
309
00:18:31,151 --> 00:18:35,614
The strange theoretical sphere
discovered by Karl Schwarzschild
310
00:18:35,697 --> 00:18:38,200
seems destined to be forgotten,
311
00:18:38,283 --> 00:18:41,453
nothing but a curious historical footnote.
312
00:18:44,540 --> 00:18:45,499
[explosion]
313
00:18:45,582 --> 00:18:47,209
But in the coming decades,
314
00:18:47,292 --> 00:18:49,795
physicists learn more about the atom...
315
00:18:51,505 --> 00:18:55,551
and about how fusing atoms powers stars,
316
00:18:55,634 --> 00:18:58,095
a process called nuclear fusion.
317
00:18:59,680 --> 00:19:02,933
Some begin to wonder
if something like a black hole
318
00:19:03,016 --> 00:19:05,644
could actually come from a star.
319
00:19:08,397 --> 00:19:13,277
But not just any star,
it would have to be big.
320
00:19:13,986 --> 00:19:15,612
[Glikman] Stars are born in litters,
321
00:19:15,696 --> 00:19:18,448
and you get a distribution
of sizes and masses...
322
00:19:19,783 --> 00:19:22,494
thousands of little stars
323
00:19:22,578 --> 00:19:25,372
and a few big stars, very big stars,
324
00:19:25,455 --> 00:19:26,665
incredibly massive.
325
00:19:27,958 --> 00:19:32,504
[Nia Imara] Stars are in
many ways similar to living creatures.
326
00:19:33,505 --> 00:19:36,133
Like humans, they have life cycles.
327
00:19:37,092 --> 00:19:42,472
[Levin] Investigating stars' life cycles
in the 1930s, two visionaries
328
00:19:42,556 --> 00:19:46,268
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
and Robert Oppenheimer
329
00:19:46,351 --> 00:19:49,062
discover that the most massive stars
330
00:19:49,146 --> 00:19:52,399
end their lives very differently
from smaller ones.
331
00:19:53,609 --> 00:19:56,653
The life cycle of a star
really depends on its mass.
332
00:19:57,946 --> 00:20:00,908
The mass of a star determines
what's going to happen
333
00:20:00,991 --> 00:20:04,286
after it finishes burning
its hydrogen fuel.
334
00:20:05,746 --> 00:20:10,751
[Levin] All stars start out
burning hydrogen, the lightest atom,
335
00:20:10,876 --> 00:20:13,712
fusing hydrogen atoms into helium,
336
00:20:13,795 --> 00:20:16,673
working their way up to heavier elements.
337
00:20:18,383 --> 00:20:21,929
Gravity wants to crush
the entire mass of the star,
338
00:20:22,012 --> 00:20:26,892
but the enormous energy
released by fusion pushes outward,
339
00:20:26,975 --> 00:20:29,353
preventing the star from collapsing.
340
00:20:30,270 --> 00:20:33,857
[Imara] Stars are stable because
you have an outward-moving pressure
341
00:20:33,941 --> 00:20:35,359
due to nuclear fusion,
342
00:20:35,442 --> 00:20:37,861
and that's balancing with
the inward force of gravity.
343
00:20:40,572 --> 00:20:45,160
[Levin] Smaller stars can't fuse elements
heavier than helium.
344
00:20:46,411 --> 00:20:49,081
But in the most massive stars,
345
00:20:49,164 --> 00:20:52,834
fusion crushes heavier and heavier atoms
346
00:20:52,918 --> 00:20:54,795
all the way up to iron.
347
00:20:56,296 --> 00:20:59,675
Iron is such a massive element,
it has so many protons in it,
348
00:20:59,800 --> 00:21:03,637
that by the time you fuse iron,
349
00:21:03,720 --> 00:21:05,597
you don't get any energy back out.
350
00:21:06,223 --> 00:21:08,850
[Levin] Iron is a dead end for stars.
351
00:21:08,976 --> 00:21:11,770
Fusing atoms larger than iron
352
00:21:11,853 --> 00:21:15,691
doesn't release enough energy
to support the star.
353
00:21:15,774 --> 00:21:17,859
And without enough energy from fusion
354
00:21:17,943 --> 00:21:19,903
keeping the star inflated,
355
00:21:19,987 --> 00:21:22,614
there's nothing to fight gravity.
356
00:21:23,573 --> 00:21:25,575
[Glikman] And gravity wins.
357
00:21:25,701 --> 00:21:28,161
And so the entire star collapses.
358
00:21:29,454 --> 00:21:34,126
[Levin] Very rapidly, trillions of tons
of material come crashing down,
359
00:21:34,209 --> 00:21:37,045
hit the dense core, and bounce back out,
360
00:21:37,129 --> 00:21:41,967
blowing off the outer layers of the star
in a massive explosion...
361
00:21:42,050 --> 00:21:43,176
[explosion]
362
00:21:43,510 --> 00:21:45,345
...a supernova.
363
00:21:46,888 --> 00:21:49,141
The more mass, the more gravity.
364
00:21:49,266 --> 00:21:52,311
So if the remaining core
is massive enough,
365
00:21:52,394 --> 00:21:54,980
gravity becomes unstoppable.
366
00:21:55,605 --> 00:21:56,982
[Tyson] There's no known force
367
00:21:57,065 --> 00:22:01,695
to prevent the collapse
to an infinitesimally small dot.
368
00:22:03,572 --> 00:22:05,907
[Levin]
Gravity crushes the stellar core down,
369
00:22:05,991 --> 00:22:07,993
smaller and smaller and smaller,
370
00:22:08,702 --> 00:22:13,415
until all its mass is compressed
in an infinitely small point...
371
00:22:15,334 --> 00:22:17,336
a black hole.
372
00:22:21,381 --> 00:22:23,008
The theory makes sense,
373
00:22:23,091 --> 00:22:27,512
but most physicists
remain skeptical about black holes.
374
00:22:27,596 --> 00:22:31,099
[Natarajan] Einstein and Eddington,
all the sort of, you know,
375
00:22:31,183 --> 00:22:34,478
pre-eminent astrophysicists
in the 1930s through 1950s,
376
00:22:34,561 --> 00:22:37,314
did not believe
that they were actually real.
377
00:22:37,397 --> 00:22:41,068
It remained a solution,
a mathematical enigma,
378
00:22:41,151 --> 00:22:42,694
for a very long time.
379
00:22:42,778 --> 00:22:46,531
So it took a long time for people
to even start looking for them.
380
00:22:47,657 --> 00:22:49,618
[Levin] It's not until the 1960s
381
00:22:49,701 --> 00:22:54,664
that the idea of a supernova
creating a black hole is taken seriously.
382
00:22:56,374 --> 00:23:00,462
Princeton physicist John Wheeler,
who had originally been a skeptic,
383
00:23:00,545 --> 00:23:05,467
begins to use a name from history
for these invisible objects...
384
00:23:05,550 --> 00:23:07,094
black hole.
385
00:23:07,803 --> 00:23:11,223
The term "black hole"
actually originates in India.
386
00:23:12,557 --> 00:23:17,604
The Black Hole was the name
of an infamous prison in Calcutta.
387
00:23:20,857 --> 00:23:25,237
[Levin] Still, no one has ever detected
any sign of a black hole.
388
00:23:27,781 --> 00:23:31,743
Then, in 1967, graduate student
Jocelyn Bell
389
00:23:31,827 --> 00:23:36,164
discovers a strange,
extremely tiny dead star
390
00:23:36,248 --> 00:23:38,834
that gives off very little light...
391
00:23:38,917 --> 00:23:40,418
a neutron star.
392
00:23:41,878 --> 00:23:44,422
The cold remains of a stellar collapse,
393
00:23:44,506 --> 00:23:47,425
the neutron star gives
astronomers more confidence
394
00:23:47,509 --> 00:23:50,595
that black holes, much heavier dead stars,
395
00:23:50,679 --> 00:23:52,681
might also exist.
396
00:23:56,059 --> 00:23:58,645
A half-century after Karl Schwarzschild
397
00:23:58,728 --> 00:24:03,567
mathematically showed that black holes
were theoretically possible...
398
00:24:03,650 --> 00:24:06,862
scientists have identified
a natural process
399
00:24:06,945 --> 00:24:10,615
that might create them:
the death of large stars.
400
00:24:11,658 --> 00:24:15,996
So these giant supernova explosions
of extremely massive stars
401
00:24:16,079 --> 00:24:17,455
make black holes.
402
00:24:18,206 --> 00:24:20,417
[Natarajan]
Any star that is born with a mass
403
00:24:20,500 --> 00:24:23,503
that's about ten times
the mass of the sun or higher,
404
00:24:23,587 --> 00:24:26,506
will end in a black hole.
405
00:24:26,590 --> 00:24:29,843
So our galaxy is replete
with little black holes,
406
00:24:29,926 --> 00:24:32,888
which are the stellar corpses
of generations of stars
407
00:24:32,971 --> 00:24:34,556
that have come and gone.
408
00:24:37,392 --> 00:24:41,188
[Levin] So what are these invisible,
stellar corpses like?
409
00:24:44,024 --> 00:24:46,568
Imagine I'm exploring space
410
00:24:46,693 --> 00:24:50,447
with some advanced technology
for interstellar travel,
411
00:24:50,530 --> 00:24:53,116
so that we could visit a black hole...
412
00:24:53,200 --> 00:24:56,119
maybe one in
our own galactic neighborhood.
413
00:25:00,957 --> 00:25:03,460
This particular black hole isn't very big,
414
00:25:03,543 --> 00:25:05,587
only about ten solar masses,
415
00:25:05,670 --> 00:25:08,131
meaning ten times the mass of the sun.
416
00:25:08,215 --> 00:25:11,509
And like all black holes,
it has an event horizon...
417
00:25:12,761 --> 00:25:15,180
a distinct edge to the darkness.
418
00:25:15,305 --> 00:25:18,099
That's the boundary
Karl Schwarzschild first discovered,
419
00:25:18,183 --> 00:25:21,937
where gravity is so strong
that nothing can escape,
420
00:25:22,020 --> 00:25:23,605
not even light.
421
00:25:23,688 --> 00:25:25,732
And that's where we're going.
422
00:25:25,857 --> 00:25:27,484
- [engine runs]
- [machine chirps]
423
00:25:42,165 --> 00:25:46,336
As we get closer, some very
strange things begin to happen.
424
00:25:48,713 --> 00:25:51,091
Look at the edge of the black hole,
425
00:25:51,174 --> 00:25:56,680
see how the image of distant stars
is distorted and smeared into a circle?
426
00:25:56,763 --> 00:25:59,391
That's gravitational lensing.
427
00:25:59,474 --> 00:26:04,062
The black hole's extreme gravity
bends the path of light passing by,
428
00:26:04,145 --> 00:26:07,607
so that a single point of light,
like a star,
429
00:26:07,691 --> 00:26:12,028
briefly appears as a ring
around the event horizon.
430
00:26:15,365 --> 00:26:18,660
I'm now deep in
the black hole's gravity well,
431
00:26:18,743 --> 00:26:21,204
and we're going to start
experiencing the effects.
432
00:26:21,288 --> 00:26:25,417
The extreme gravity
actually slows down time
433
00:26:25,500 --> 00:26:26,876
relative to the Earth.
434
00:26:26,960 --> 00:26:28,753
From their point of view,
435
00:26:28,878 --> 00:26:32,090
[distorted voice]
I appear to be slowing down.
436
00:26:33,883 --> 00:26:37,345
But from my point of view,
time on Earth is speeding up.
437
00:26:41,558 --> 00:26:44,602
Now, let's say I want to get even closer,
438
00:26:44,686 --> 00:26:46,271
by taking a spacewalk.
439
00:26:57,657 --> 00:26:59,326
[machines beeping and hissing]
440
00:27:01,786 --> 00:27:04,331
The way the black hole slows down time
441
00:27:04,414 --> 00:27:06,791
is about to get even more pronounced.
442
00:27:08,043 --> 00:27:11,087
To keep track of the changes
I'm about to experience,
443
00:27:11,171 --> 00:27:13,548
I'm turning on this strobe light.
444
00:27:13,631 --> 00:27:15,759
- It'll blink once a second.
- [beeping]
445
00:27:15,842 --> 00:27:20,472
From here, I can see the shadow
of the event horizon approaching
446
00:27:20,555 --> 00:27:23,350
and my light blinking normally.
447
00:27:23,433 --> 00:27:25,518
But watching from the ship,
448
00:27:25,602 --> 00:27:28,438
the closer I move toward the black hole,
449
00:27:28,521 --> 00:27:30,607
the more slowly I appear to move.
450
00:27:30,732 --> 00:27:34,486
The pulses are nearly infinitely spaced...
451
00:27:35,779 --> 00:27:38,448
so it looks as though I'm frozen in time.
452
00:27:40,784 --> 00:27:44,120
For me, everything is completely normal.
453
00:27:44,204 --> 00:27:46,289
Even when I reach the event horizon.
454
00:27:49,292 --> 00:27:50,835
If you waited long enough...
455
00:27:51,878 --> 00:27:54,381
maybe millions or billions of years,
456
00:27:54,464 --> 00:27:57,467
the ship would finally see me disappear.
457
00:27:57,550 --> 00:28:00,387
And that's the last you'd see of me.
458
00:28:04,808 --> 00:28:06,893
What's inside a black hole?
459
00:28:06,976 --> 00:28:08,770
That's still a mystery.
460
00:28:08,853 --> 00:28:12,899
And even if I find out,
I can never go back and tell you.
461
00:28:12,982 --> 00:28:17,404
But I can say this:
black holes may be dark from the outside,
462
00:28:17,487 --> 00:28:20,115
but inside, they can be bright.
463
00:28:20,198 --> 00:28:24,744
I can watch the light from the galaxy
that's fallen in behind me.
464
00:28:24,828 --> 00:28:26,955
And that's the last thing I'll ever see.
465
00:28:28,289 --> 00:28:31,042
Unfortunately, the fun is about to end.
466
00:28:35,380 --> 00:28:37,590
Now that I've crossed the event horizon,
467
00:28:37,674 --> 00:28:39,634
I'm falling toward the center,
468
00:28:39,718 --> 00:28:43,513
where all of the mass
of the black hole is concentrated.
469
00:28:43,596 --> 00:28:46,516
And I'm beginning to get stretched.
470
00:28:48,393 --> 00:28:51,771
As I fall in,
the gravitational pull at my feet
471
00:28:51,855 --> 00:28:53,481
is stronger than at my head,
472
00:28:53,565 --> 00:28:56,818
and my body is starting
to get pulled apart.
473
00:28:56,901 --> 00:29:01,364
I'll be stretched as long and thin
as a noodle... spaghettified.
474
00:29:01,448 --> 00:29:03,158
And ultimately, I'll end up
475
00:29:03,241 --> 00:29:06,828
completely disintegrating
into my fundamental particles,
476
00:29:06,911 --> 00:29:09,789
which are then crushed
to an infinitely small point.
477
00:29:14,419 --> 00:29:15,920
A singularity,
478
00:29:16,004 --> 00:29:19,966
where everything we understand
about space and time breaks down.
479
00:29:20,925 --> 00:29:22,969
Or maybe the black hole,
480
00:29:23,052 --> 00:29:26,806
less than 40 miles across
on the outside,
481
00:29:26,890 --> 00:29:30,560
is as big as a universe on the inside.
482
00:29:31,603 --> 00:29:33,188
And as I pass through,
483
00:29:33,271 --> 00:29:37,442
my particles will join the primordial soup
of a new beginning.
484
00:29:43,406 --> 00:29:46,701
So that's what theory tells us
we might experience
485
00:29:46,785 --> 00:29:48,787
if we could travel to a black hole.
486
00:30:02,258 --> 00:30:03,927
But how can we know for sure?
487
00:30:04,511 --> 00:30:07,847
How do you investigate something
you can't even see?
488
00:30:10,099 --> 00:30:11,726
There are ways to investigate
489
00:30:11,810 --> 00:30:14,229
if something is happening somewhere,
490
00:30:14,312 --> 00:30:17,899
even if I can't see that thing directly.
491
00:30:17,982 --> 00:30:19,359
Take Yankee Stadium...
492
00:30:20,193 --> 00:30:21,986
What's happening inside there?
493
00:30:22,070 --> 00:30:23,446
Is there a game going on?
494
00:30:23,530 --> 00:30:25,073
I can't see the field.
495
00:30:25,156 --> 00:30:28,243
I can't see any players,
or baseballs, or bats.
496
00:30:28,326 --> 00:30:32,205
But I can definitely tell
if there's activity around the park.
497
00:30:35,208 --> 00:30:36,960
It's pretty clear something is going on.
498
00:30:40,129 --> 00:30:42,757
It might seem obvious, but whatever it is,
499
00:30:42,841 --> 00:30:46,845
I can learn a lot just by observing
the happenings around the stadium.
500
00:30:50,431 --> 00:30:52,934
And these do look
a lot like baseball fans.
501
00:30:57,230 --> 00:30:58,439
[bat hits ball]
502
00:30:58,565 --> 00:30:59,649
[crowd cheering]
503
00:31:00,233 --> 00:31:03,361
And that's the way
we investigate black holes:
504
00:31:03,444 --> 00:31:07,198
by observing the effect
they have on their surroundings.
505
00:31:09,576 --> 00:31:11,911
But what sort of effects?
506
00:31:11,995 --> 00:31:15,039
How might a black hole reveal itself?
507
00:31:16,875 --> 00:31:19,252
Starting just before World War II,
508
00:31:19,335 --> 00:31:24,090
two monumental discoveries
are about to radically change astronomy.
509
00:31:25,633 --> 00:31:29,721
In 1931, Bell Labs engineer Karl Jansky
510
00:31:29,804 --> 00:31:34,809
picks up mysterious radio waves
emanating from deep space.
511
00:31:35,852 --> 00:31:38,271
Then the sky gets even stranger...
512
00:31:39,147 --> 00:31:43,151
when scientists mount Geiger counters
on captured German rockets
513
00:31:43,234 --> 00:31:46,988
and discover the cosmos
is also full of X-rays.
514
00:31:50,700 --> 00:31:54,787
These discoveries give
astronomers important new tools
515
00:31:54,871 --> 00:31:57,665
that will revolutionize
the hunt for black holes
516
00:31:57,749 --> 00:31:59,959
and dramatically expand our vision.
517
00:32:02,003 --> 00:32:03,880
[Bartusiak] What our eyes can perceive
518
00:32:03,963 --> 00:32:08,760
is a very narrow part
of the electromagnetic spectrum.
519
00:32:10,637 --> 00:32:14,724
[Levin] If the electromagnetic spectrum
were laid out along the Brooklyn Bridge,
520
00:32:14,807 --> 00:32:19,354
the portion we can see with our eyes
would be just a few feet wide.
521
00:32:20,063 --> 00:32:21,773
Electromagnetic radiation
522
00:32:21,856 --> 00:32:25,026
includes waves of
many different frequencies:
523
00:32:25,109 --> 00:32:30,990
radio waves, microwaves,
infrared and ultraviolet light,
524
00:32:31,074 --> 00:32:33,743
X-rays, and gamma rays.
525
00:32:36,788 --> 00:32:39,874
Radio and X-ray astronomy open up the sky,
526
00:32:39,958 --> 00:32:42,710
revealing dim or even invisible objects
527
00:32:42,794 --> 00:32:47,382
blasting out powerful energy
no one knew was there.
528
00:32:47,465 --> 00:32:51,135
They began to realize that this
very placid thing that we see out there,
529
00:32:51,219 --> 00:32:54,806
all this very quiet thing that
looks like nothing is happening
530
00:32:54,889 --> 00:32:57,642
and the only thing
that's moving is the planets,
531
00:32:57,725 --> 00:32:59,060
found out that there
was madness going out there.
532
00:32:59,143 --> 00:33:00,603
It was chaos out there!
533
00:33:01,437 --> 00:33:05,191
[Levin] X-rays come from
the high-energy end of the spectrum.
534
00:33:08,486 --> 00:33:11,447
What is creating all this energy?
535
00:33:12,115 --> 00:33:14,951
This much is certain:
whatever the source,
536
00:33:15,034 --> 00:33:17,662
it is invisible to ordinary telescopes.
537
00:33:17,745 --> 00:33:19,372
And it is hot.
538
00:33:20,373 --> 00:33:21,457
[Paul Murdin] X-rays come from things
539
00:33:21,541 --> 00:33:24,794
which are at temperatures
of millions of degrees.
540
00:33:24,877 --> 00:33:26,212
Even tens of millions.
541
00:33:27,046 --> 00:33:29,173
[Levin] One of the first
of these X-ray sources
542
00:33:29,257 --> 00:33:30,758
to catch the attention of astronomers
543
00:33:30,842 --> 00:33:33,469
is named Cygnus X-1.
544
00:33:33,553 --> 00:33:35,805
Cygnus,
it was in the constellation Cygnus,
545
00:33:35,888 --> 00:33:39,517
X, it was an x-ray source,
one, it was the first one you found.
546
00:33:40,727 --> 00:33:44,939
[Levin] In 1970, Paul Murdin
is a young English astronomer
547
00:33:45,023 --> 00:33:47,191
trying to secure his next job.
548
00:33:47,275 --> 00:33:48,484
[Murdin] I was a research fellow,
549
00:33:48,568 --> 00:33:51,404
I was coming to the end
of my three-year contract,
550
00:33:51,487 --> 00:33:55,867
and I thought, "What can I contribute
to finding out what these things are?"
551
00:33:58,953 --> 00:34:02,123
[Levin]
Murdin works in a 15th-century castle
552
00:34:02,206 --> 00:34:04,417
surrounded by telescopes...
553
00:34:05,668 --> 00:34:07,628
the Royal Observatory.
554
00:34:08,963 --> 00:34:11,466
Using the largest telescope in England,
555
00:34:11,549 --> 00:34:16,304
he begins searching the area
of the constellation Cygnus, the swan.
556
00:34:17,722 --> 00:34:20,975
He decides to hunt for pairs of stars.
557
00:34:22,727 --> 00:34:25,438
Pairs of stars are called binaries.
558
00:34:25,521 --> 00:34:29,025
They may sound exotic,
but they're not at all uncommon.
559
00:34:29,817 --> 00:34:32,987
Many of the stars we see, perhaps half,
560
00:34:33,071 --> 00:34:34,822
are actually binaries,
561
00:34:34,906 --> 00:34:38,743
pairs of orbiting stars
locked together by gravity.
562
00:34:38,826 --> 00:34:43,915
But Murdin wonders:
Is it possible there are binaries
563
00:34:43,998 --> 00:34:46,959
where only one of the stars is visible?
564
00:34:47,585 --> 00:34:50,922
[Murdin] I thought that maybe there was
a kind of a star system
565
00:34:51,005 --> 00:34:55,301
in which there was a star,
one ordinary star that made light,
566
00:34:55,384 --> 00:34:58,054
and then there was another star
nearby that made X-rays.
567
00:34:59,680 --> 00:35:01,599
[Levin] The telltale sign of a binary
568
00:35:01,682 --> 00:35:04,185
is that the stars are
moving around each other.
569
00:35:05,394 --> 00:35:08,606
So Murdin begins searching
for a visible star
570
00:35:08,689 --> 00:35:10,608
that shows signs of motion.
571
00:35:10,691 --> 00:35:13,778
Sometimes it's coming towards you,
sometimes it's coming away.
572
00:35:13,861 --> 00:35:15,988
Sometimes it's coming towards you,
sometimes it's coming away.
573
00:35:16,989 --> 00:35:21,327
[Levin] When the star is moving toward us,
it appears more blue,
574
00:35:21,410 --> 00:35:24,372
as the wavelength of its light
gets shorter.
575
00:35:25,623 --> 00:35:27,917
Moving away, it appears more red,
576
00:35:28,084 --> 00:35:31,003
as the wavelength of its light
gets longer.
577
00:35:32,338 --> 00:35:34,549
This is known as Doppler shift.
578
00:35:36,551 --> 00:35:38,469
After looking for color changes
579
00:35:38,553 --> 00:35:41,472
in hundreds of stars
in the area of Cygnus,
580
00:35:41,556 --> 00:35:44,267
Murdin spots a possible suspect,
581
00:35:44,350 --> 00:35:49,188
a visible star whose light is shifting,
as though moving around.
582
00:35:50,398 --> 00:35:54,110
[Murdin] It very clearly was
a binary star, a double star.
583
00:35:54,819 --> 00:35:58,281
The star was moving
around and around with a period,
584
00:35:58,364 --> 00:36:01,617
going around once, every 5.6 days.
585
00:36:04,495 --> 00:36:07,790
[Levin] But whatever it's going around
can't be seen.
586
00:36:07,874 --> 00:36:11,669
[Murdin] There was no trace
in the spectrum of the second star.
587
00:36:11,752 --> 00:36:14,547
There was one star there.
There wasn't the second star there.
588
00:36:15,631 --> 00:36:21,053
[Levin] Murdin has a binary pair
in which only one star is visible.
589
00:36:21,137 --> 00:36:23,389
The second object emits X-rays,
590
00:36:23,472 --> 00:36:27,101
has enough mass and gravity
to dramatically move a star,
591
00:36:27,185 --> 00:36:29,312
but gives off no light.
592
00:36:30,354 --> 00:36:35,735
Could it be the corpse of a star
massive enough to become a black hole?
593
00:36:36,235 --> 00:36:40,531
[Kip Thorne] The crucial issue in deciding
whether Cygnus X-1 was a black hole
594
00:36:40,615 --> 00:36:45,077
was to measure the mass
of the X-ray-emitting object.
595
00:36:45,745 --> 00:36:48,080
[Levin] It would have to be very massive,
596
00:36:48,164 --> 00:36:51,209
at least three times the mass of our sun.
597
00:36:51,292 --> 00:36:54,587
If not, it's probably
just a neutron star...
598
00:36:55,755 --> 00:37:00,968
a collapsed star that's dense,
but not heavy enough to be a black hole.
599
00:37:01,844 --> 00:37:05,473
[Thorne] So the observers needed
to come up with a conclusion
600
00:37:05,556 --> 00:37:10,394
that the dark object,
the X-ray-emitting object in Cygnus X-1,
601
00:37:10,478 --> 00:37:13,147
was heavier,
hopefully substantially heavier,
602
00:37:13,231 --> 00:37:14,982
than three solar masses.
603
00:37:15,691 --> 00:37:19,195
[Levin] From his observations,
Murdin is able to make an estimate
604
00:37:19,278 --> 00:37:21,656
of the mass of the invisible partner.
605
00:37:22,365 --> 00:37:25,368
And the answer came out to be...
606
00:37:25,451 --> 00:37:27,662
six times the mass of the sun.
607
00:37:29,288 --> 00:37:33,834
So there was a story, then,
that Cygnus X-1 was a black hole.
608
00:37:33,918 --> 00:37:36,462
And the key to the argument was
609
00:37:36,545 --> 00:37:39,131
that the mass of the star you couldn't see
610
00:37:39,215 --> 00:37:41,050
was more than three solar masses.
611
00:37:41,926 --> 00:37:45,054
When I'd finished writing it all out,
I sat back and thought,
612
00:37:45,137 --> 00:37:46,931
"It's a black hole."
613
00:37:50,935 --> 00:37:55,106
[Levin] This would be the first
actual detection of a black hole.
614
00:37:55,773 --> 00:38:00,611
It's a huge claim,
and Murdin will have to convince skeptics,
615
00:38:00,695 --> 00:38:02,822
starting with his boss.
616
00:38:02,905 --> 00:38:05,866
[Murdin]
The Astronomer Royal, Sir Richard Woolley.
617
00:38:05,950 --> 00:38:07,952
He didn't really go for black holes.
618
00:38:08,995 --> 00:38:11,080
"It's all fanciful..."
619
00:38:11,163 --> 00:38:14,208
It's kind of... a lot of people
in California were talking about this.
620
00:38:14,292 --> 00:38:16,711
There are a lot of
funny people in California.
621
00:38:16,794 --> 00:38:19,505
[chuckles] You know,
a lot of hippie-type people.
622
00:38:20,381 --> 00:38:23,718
[Levin] People like theorist Kip Thorne.
623
00:38:25,011 --> 00:38:26,387
So I was nervous about it.
624
00:38:26,470 --> 00:38:29,181
I was nervous about
the scale of the discovery.
625
00:38:29,265 --> 00:38:31,559
And actually so were
other people all around me.
626
00:38:32,810 --> 00:38:37,189
I was working with
a fellow scientist, Louise Webster.
627
00:38:37,273 --> 00:38:40,318
And we were modest about
the claim that we were making
628
00:38:40,401 --> 00:38:44,071
because we knew
what people would think of it.
629
00:38:44,155 --> 00:38:46,490
And if you look at the paper we published,
630
00:38:46,574 --> 00:38:50,411
it just mentions the word
"black hole" once, right at the end.
631
00:38:51,495 --> 00:38:53,456
"We think this might be a black hole."
632
00:38:54,707 --> 00:39:00,338
[Levin] The Paul Murdin-Louise Webster
paper appears in September 1971.
633
00:39:00,421 --> 00:39:03,924
Other astronomers agree:
It could be a black hole.
634
00:39:05,509 --> 00:39:07,386
But no one knows for sure.
635
00:39:10,348 --> 00:39:11,599
Three years later,
636
00:39:11,682 --> 00:39:14,977
Kip Thorne and the noted
British physicist Stephen Hawking
637
00:39:15,061 --> 00:39:18,147
make a now-famous wager about Cygnus X-1.
638
00:39:19,106 --> 00:39:23,152
We made a bet as to whether Cygnus X-1
really was a black hole or not.
639
00:39:24,862 --> 00:39:27,031
[Levin] The bet is partly in jest.
640
00:39:27,114 --> 00:39:29,992
Both men hope it is a black hole.
641
00:39:30,076 --> 00:39:34,121
But Hawking, not wanting to jinx it,
bets against his own wishes.
642
00:39:35,498 --> 00:39:38,334
[Thorne] Stephen claims that Cygnus X-1
is not a black hole.
643
00:39:38,793 --> 00:39:41,003
And I claim it is a black hole.
644
00:39:41,462 --> 00:39:46,384
And so we signed that bet
in December 1974.
645
00:39:47,093 --> 00:39:50,096
And gradually, the case
that it really was a black hole
646
00:39:50,179 --> 00:39:52,223
became stronger and stronger and stronger.
647
00:39:52,807 --> 00:39:58,104
So in June of 1990,
Stephen broke into my office
648
00:39:58,187 --> 00:40:01,649
and he thumb-printed off on this bet,
649
00:40:01,732 --> 00:40:03,275
conceded the bet in my absence.
650
00:40:03,359 --> 00:40:08,447
I came back from Russia
and discovered that he had conceded.
651
00:40:10,408 --> 00:40:14,412
[Levin] Now, by 1990, the evidence of
Cygnus X-1's mass
652
00:40:14,495 --> 00:40:17,915
may be strong enough
to settle a bet between two friends.
653
00:40:18,707 --> 00:40:23,254
But the original estimate wasn't
precise enough to be definitive.
654
00:40:23,379 --> 00:40:26,006
In order to calculate mass,
655
00:40:26,090 --> 00:40:28,968
Paul Murdin had to rely on rough estimates
656
00:40:29,051 --> 00:40:31,554
of the distance to Cygnus X-1,
657
00:40:31,637 --> 00:40:33,931
which varied by a factor of ten.
658
00:40:34,014 --> 00:40:37,685
And the question wouldn't be
answered for another 20 years,
659
00:40:37,768 --> 00:40:42,022
until astronomer Mark Reid
became intrigued by the puzzle.
660
00:40:43,524 --> 00:40:44,984
Reid is an astronomer
661
00:40:45,067 --> 00:40:47,862
at the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics
662
00:40:47,945 --> 00:40:50,489
when he sets out to conclusively prove
663
00:40:50,573 --> 00:40:53,033
that Cygnus X-1 is a black hole
664
00:40:53,117 --> 00:40:55,453
by measuring its precise mass.
665
00:40:57,663 --> 00:41:01,625
But how can you measure the mass
of an invisible object?
666
00:41:01,709 --> 00:41:07,506
Using laws developed by German astronomer
Johannes Kepler in the 1600s,
667
00:41:07,590 --> 00:41:11,427
it's possible to calculate
the mass of a celestial object,
668
00:41:11,510 --> 00:41:14,597
but only if you know its distance.
669
00:41:16,974 --> 00:41:19,602
[Mark Reid] Distance in astronomy
is absolutely fundamental.
670
00:41:19,685 --> 00:41:22,688
If you don't know distance,
you don't know what the object is.
671
00:41:23,564 --> 00:41:26,609
It could be a very nearby
firefly-like thing.
672
00:41:26,692 --> 00:41:31,030
It could be a very distant, huge star,
much, much bigger than the sun.
673
00:41:32,490 --> 00:41:36,327
[Levin] So to get the true,
precise mass of Cygnus X-1
674
00:41:36,410 --> 00:41:38,787
and confirm that it is a black hole,
675
00:41:38,871 --> 00:41:41,540
Reid needs to know how far away it is.
676
00:41:42,291 --> 00:41:45,503
But how can he measure
the distance to a star?
677
00:41:48,422 --> 00:41:52,593
The secret lies in a familiar phenomenon,
parallax.
678
00:41:53,219 --> 00:41:57,473
It's what our eyes and brains
use to see in three dimensions.
679
00:41:58,933 --> 00:42:01,519
You can put your finger up
at arm's length,
680
00:42:01,602 --> 00:42:03,729
look at it, and close one eye.
681
00:42:03,812 --> 00:42:05,397
I'm closing my left eye.
682
00:42:05,481 --> 00:42:06,982
And I'm looking at my finger
683
00:42:07,066 --> 00:42:09,860
relative to the wall
in the background there.
684
00:42:09,944 --> 00:42:12,947
And now if I open my eye,
close my right eye,
685
00:42:13,030 --> 00:42:15,783
I see my finger has appeared to move
686
00:42:15,866 --> 00:42:18,160
with respect to the original position.
687
00:42:18,244 --> 00:42:20,120
And that's because our eyes are separated,
688
00:42:20,204 --> 00:42:22,414
and we view from different vantage points.
689
00:42:23,457 --> 00:42:27,378
[Levin] To use parallax to measure
distance to an object in the sky,
690
00:42:27,461 --> 00:42:29,463
astronomers let the motion of the Earth
691
00:42:29,547 --> 00:42:32,132
provide the two different vantage points.
692
00:42:34,218 --> 00:42:36,845
Imagine Cygnus X-1 is right here.
693
00:42:36,929 --> 00:42:39,807
And the Earth and the sun are over there.
694
00:42:39,890 --> 00:42:43,394
Now, the Earth goes
around the sun once a year.
695
00:42:43,477 --> 00:42:48,148
And in the springtime,
the Earth ends up on one side of the sun,
696
00:42:48,232 --> 00:42:52,319
and we observe Cygnus X-1
along a ray path like this.
697
00:42:53,696 --> 00:42:58,200
Then six months later,
the Earth goes around the sun
698
00:42:58,284 --> 00:42:59,660
to the other side.
699
00:42:59,743 --> 00:43:02,538
We get a different vantage point
from Cygnus X-1.
700
00:43:04,790 --> 00:43:10,170
[Levin] Now he has a triangle that goes
between the Earth at its two positions
701
00:43:10,254 --> 00:43:12,256
and Cygnus X-1.
702
00:43:13,549 --> 00:43:15,384
We know the base of the triangle,
703
00:43:15,467 --> 00:43:18,512
the diameter of Earth's orbit.
704
00:43:18,596 --> 00:43:20,723
And the principles of geometry tell us
705
00:43:20,806 --> 00:43:23,601
that all we need to calculate the distance
706
00:43:23,684 --> 00:43:26,228
is the size of the angle at the top.
707
00:43:26,312 --> 00:43:28,772
And we measure this very small angle here,
708
00:43:28,856 --> 00:43:30,566
at the point at Cygnus X-1.
709
00:43:30,649 --> 00:43:32,359
And then from direct geometry,
710
00:43:32,443 --> 00:43:35,362
we can calculate the distance
to Cygnus X-1,
711
00:43:35,446 --> 00:43:37,573
and from that infer a very accurate mass.
712
00:43:38,741 --> 00:43:40,618
[Levin] The concept is simple.
713
00:43:40,701 --> 00:43:43,495
But Cygnus X-1 is so far away
714
00:43:43,579 --> 00:43:46,624
that the angle to be measured
is minuscule,
715
00:43:46,707 --> 00:43:49,627
a tiny fraction of one degree.
716
00:43:50,919 --> 00:43:54,590
It's smaller than the angle spanned
by Abraham Lincoln's nose
717
00:43:54,673 --> 00:43:59,178
on a penny in San Francisco
viewed from New York.
718
00:44:01,847 --> 00:44:04,433
Because the angle is so very tiny,
719
00:44:04,516 --> 00:44:07,561
it can't be measured by any one telescope.
720
00:44:08,354 --> 00:44:11,315
But Reid's team has a solution.
721
00:44:12,149 --> 00:44:13,984
We take ten radio telescopes
722
00:44:14,068 --> 00:44:16,737
that are spread
across the continental U.S.
723
00:44:16,820 --> 00:44:21,241
and to Hawaii and to St. Croix
in the Virgin Islands.
724
00:44:21,325 --> 00:44:23,786
We use these telescopes simultaneously,
725
00:44:23,869 --> 00:44:27,039
and we synthesize in a computer
726
00:44:27,122 --> 00:44:30,918
a telescope that has a diameter
of the size of the Earth.
727
00:44:31,001 --> 00:44:33,587
That gives you incredible
angular resolution.
728
00:44:34,088 --> 00:44:36,840
[Levin] Using this technique,
Reid's team determines
729
00:44:36,924 --> 00:44:40,761
that Cygnus X-1 is 6,000 light years away.
730
00:44:41,387 --> 00:44:45,140
[Reid] With the new distance we got,
the 6,000-light-year distance,
731
00:44:45,224 --> 00:44:49,895
we're able to determine that the mass
is about 15 solar masses,
732
00:44:49,978 --> 00:44:51,688
easily a black hole.
733
00:44:55,526 --> 00:44:59,113
[Levin] Forty years after it was
identified as a possibility,
734
00:44:59,196 --> 00:45:01,949
Cygnus X-1 is now widely accepted
735
00:45:02,032 --> 00:45:05,285
as the first confirmed black hole.
736
00:45:05,369 --> 00:45:06,995
[Murdin] It's an understated paper,
737
00:45:07,079 --> 00:45:10,541
and the fact that my name was on it
and Louise Webster's was on it,
738
00:45:10,624 --> 00:45:12,960
did us a lot of good in our careers.
739
00:45:13,669 --> 00:45:17,464
I think as a result of this discovery,
I got offered a permanent job.
740
00:45:17,548 --> 00:45:20,008
And it was a great celebration
for the family.
741
00:45:20,092 --> 00:45:22,678
So it worked out very well for me...
742
00:45:22,761 --> 00:45:26,140
as well as getting
the intellectual satisfaction
743
00:45:26,223 --> 00:45:27,975
of solving a problem.
744
00:45:30,394 --> 00:45:33,480
[Levin] So finally,
after years of speculation,
745
00:45:33,564 --> 00:45:36,066
we have a real black hole.
746
00:45:37,025 --> 00:45:40,737
Not only that, but a black hole
that's blasting out X-rays
747
00:45:40,821 --> 00:45:42,573
and has a companion star.
748
00:45:43,907 --> 00:45:46,618
If we could visit
in my imaginary spaceship,
749
00:45:46,702 --> 00:45:49,037
what would we see?
750
00:45:53,834 --> 00:45:55,836
The distance to Cygnus X-1
751
00:45:55,919 --> 00:46:00,299
has been established
at 6,000 light years from Earth.
752
00:46:00,382 --> 00:46:06,597
And its mass is 15 solar masses,
or 15 times the mass of the sun.
753
00:46:08,140 --> 00:46:13,145
And Cygnus X-1 is surrounded
by an accretion disk...
754
00:46:13,228 --> 00:46:18,233
a disk-shaped cloud of gas
and dust outside its event horizon,
755
00:46:18,317 --> 00:46:20,068
the point of no return.
756
00:46:20,152 --> 00:46:23,238
As gravity pulls matter
toward the black hole,
757
00:46:23,322 --> 00:46:25,574
the cloud starts rotating,
758
00:46:25,657 --> 00:46:28,994
just like water being pulled down a drain.
759
00:46:30,245 --> 00:46:32,080
Within that accretion disk,
760
00:46:32,164 --> 00:46:35,667
particles closest
to the black hole whip around
761
00:46:35,751 --> 00:46:37,836
at half the speed of light.
762
00:46:37,920 --> 00:46:42,007
It's like a giant
particle accelerator in space.
763
00:46:42,883 --> 00:46:45,844
But why does it emit X-rays?
764
00:46:46,803 --> 00:46:50,432
As those particles race around,
they collide,
765
00:46:50,516 --> 00:46:53,268
which heats them up
to millions of degrees.
766
00:46:53,352 --> 00:46:58,357
When they get that hot,
particles blast out X-rays.
767
00:46:58,440 --> 00:47:02,319
And it's those X-rays that
first led astronomer Paul Murdin
768
00:47:02,402 --> 00:47:06,448
to investigate this black hole
nearly five decades ago.
769
00:47:10,577 --> 00:47:14,581
And there's something else
about Cygnus that's different:
770
00:47:15,958 --> 00:47:18,502
It has a companion star.
771
00:47:19,878 --> 00:47:22,130
This blue super-giant star
772
00:47:22,214 --> 00:47:27,427
orbits the black hole once every 5.6 days.
773
00:47:28,220 --> 00:47:31,390
It orbits so close to Cygnus X-1
774
00:47:31,473 --> 00:47:34,476
that the black hole
strips material off the star
775
00:47:34,560 --> 00:47:36,603
and pulls it into the accretion disk.
776
00:47:37,437 --> 00:47:39,773
Some of that material
will cross the event horizon
777
00:47:39,856 --> 00:47:43,694
and get swallowed up, but not all of it.
778
00:47:44,403 --> 00:47:46,863
[Feryal Özel]
Some of the stuff actually comes back out
779
00:47:46,947 --> 00:47:49,533
before ever entering the black hole.
780
00:47:50,117 --> 00:47:53,620
Kind of like a toddler eating:
Half the pasta ends up on the floor,
781
00:47:53,704 --> 00:47:56,707
half of it may be on the ceiling,
and some of it in the mouth.
782
00:47:57,958 --> 00:48:02,546
One of the most striking
and enigmatic features of Cygnus X-1
783
00:48:02,629 --> 00:48:04,631
is its enormous jets.
784
00:48:04,715 --> 00:48:08,927
These beams of particles
and radiation stream outward
785
00:48:09,011 --> 00:48:11,388
from Cygnus's north and south poles,
786
00:48:11,471 --> 00:48:13,640
perpendicular to the accretion disk.
787
00:48:16,810 --> 00:48:20,355
There's still a lot
we don't know about these jets,
788
00:48:20,439 --> 00:48:24,443
but they are tightly focused
and extremely powerful,
789
00:48:24,526 --> 00:48:27,696
blasting out at nearly the speed of light
790
00:48:27,779 --> 00:48:30,657
and extending well beyond Cygnus.
791
00:48:32,075 --> 00:48:36,330
[Özel] When gas gets to these
high temperatures and produces the light,
792
00:48:36,413 --> 00:48:38,999
there's also a little bit
of a magnetic field
793
00:48:39,082 --> 00:48:40,667
that forms around them.
794
00:48:40,751 --> 00:48:43,503
And we don't understand exactly how,
795
00:48:43,587 --> 00:48:45,213
but these magnetic fields
796
00:48:45,297 --> 00:48:49,635
help collimate these massive outflows
from black holes,
797
00:48:49,718 --> 00:48:54,222
powerful hoses if you will,
that just spew matter out.
798
00:48:57,601 --> 00:49:01,521
[Levin] So that's Cygnus X-1,
if we could see it up close,
799
00:49:01,605 --> 00:49:05,275
a growing, feeding black hole
with huge jets...
800
00:49:06,026 --> 00:49:09,446
blasting particles way out
into the universe.
801
00:49:11,156 --> 00:49:13,909
[Natarajan]
They're almost these breathing,
802
00:49:13,992 --> 00:49:17,120
fire-eating demons, if you will.
803
00:49:17,746 --> 00:49:20,499
They flicker, they have bursts,
804
00:49:20,582 --> 00:49:24,836
it's a very violent fireball, very active.
805
00:49:30,175 --> 00:49:33,845
[Levin] What was once
a bizarre mathematical curiosity
806
00:49:33,929 --> 00:49:35,806
has now become quite real.
807
00:49:37,265 --> 00:49:39,643
After decades of skepticism,
808
00:49:39,726 --> 00:49:42,646
scientists now accept
that burned-out corpses
809
00:49:42,729 --> 00:49:46,316
of large stars can trap light inside them,
810
00:49:46,400 --> 00:49:48,819
warp space and time around them,
811
00:49:48,902 --> 00:49:52,864
attract matter, and accelerate it
to mind-boggling speeds.
812
00:49:53,782 --> 00:49:56,201
[Galison] Black holes seemed like
such a radical idea
813
00:49:56,284 --> 00:49:58,787
that we shouldn't accept it.
814
00:49:58,870 --> 00:50:00,497
But bit by bit,
the evidence for black holes
815
00:50:00,580 --> 00:50:02,249
has gotten stronger and stronger.
816
00:50:02,332 --> 00:50:05,335
And we've seen these amazing things.
817
00:50:09,464 --> 00:50:12,718
[Levin] At least 20 black holes
have been found in our galaxy,
818
00:50:12,801 --> 00:50:15,679
X-ray binaries, like Cygnus X-1.
819
00:50:17,723 --> 00:50:22,310
And there are probably millions more
of these massive stellar corpses
820
00:50:22,394 --> 00:50:24,438
in our galaxy alone.
821
00:50:26,815 --> 00:50:30,235
Still, a stunning surprise awaits.
822
00:50:30,986 --> 00:50:34,906
Everything astronomers
think they know about black holes,
823
00:50:34,990 --> 00:50:38,785
and much of what they believe
about the universe itself
824
00:50:38,869 --> 00:50:42,372
will be upended
by a shocking discovery.
825
00:50:45,459 --> 00:50:49,755
The revelations begin when radio
telescope surveys of the sky
826
00:50:49,838 --> 00:50:54,009
detect mysterious hot spots
emitting radio energy.
827
00:50:56,470 --> 00:50:59,806
They were coming from
what looked like stars.
828
00:51:00,807 --> 00:51:03,643
[Levin]
Because these objects resemble stars,
829
00:51:03,727 --> 00:51:06,730
but were discovered through radio signals,
830
00:51:06,813 --> 00:51:11,109
astronomers name them
quasi-stellar radio sources...
831
00:51:11,193 --> 00:51:12,652
quasars.
832
00:51:13,403 --> 00:51:15,906
But are they stars or not?
833
00:51:15,989 --> 00:51:18,617
The first step in investigating them
834
00:51:18,700 --> 00:51:21,453
is to figure out what they're made of.
835
00:51:22,662 --> 00:51:28,126
To do that, astronomers analyze
the electromagnetic energy they emit.
836
00:51:28,210 --> 00:51:32,130
Every element has
a unique spectral fingerprint.
837
00:51:32,214 --> 00:51:33,965
For example, carbon.
838
00:51:34,841 --> 00:51:36,384
Helium.
839
00:51:36,468 --> 00:51:38,261
Hydrogen.
840
00:51:38,345 --> 00:51:41,890
These lines reveal
the chemical make-up of a star.
841
00:51:43,767 --> 00:51:48,188
But the spectrum of a quasar
turns out to be incomprehensible.
842
00:51:49,189 --> 00:51:52,442
[Bartusiak]
They looked at it and it was gibberish.
843
00:51:53,735 --> 00:51:57,572
It didn't look like
there were any emissions
844
00:51:57,656 --> 00:51:59,115
from elements that they knew.
845
00:52:00,867 --> 00:52:02,953
[Levin] What are they missing?
846
00:52:03,036 --> 00:52:05,539
There has to be a clue somewhere.
847
00:52:07,165 --> 00:52:11,962
Finally, in 1963,
Caltech astronomer Maarten Schmidt
848
00:52:12,045 --> 00:52:15,298
finds it hiding in plain sight.
849
00:52:15,382 --> 00:52:19,386
Buried in the quasar's spectrum
is the fingerprint of hydrogen.
850
00:52:20,804 --> 00:52:23,849
He noticed something familiar,
but it was in the wrong place.
851
00:52:25,308 --> 00:52:31,314
The fingerprints of hydrogen
had been shifted way off to the red.
852
00:52:31,398 --> 00:52:35,443
[Levin] It was hard to spot
because the spectral lines of hydrogen
853
00:52:35,527 --> 00:52:38,738
were radically shifted toward
the lower-frequency end
854
00:52:38,822 --> 00:52:40,156
of the spectrum.
855
00:52:40,240 --> 00:52:42,868
And that could only mean one thing.
856
00:52:46,788 --> 00:52:50,750
The quasar is moving away
from us at fantastic speed.
857
00:52:52,252 --> 00:52:55,547
But astronomers have never
before seen light shifted
858
00:52:55,630 --> 00:52:57,507
to such an extreme.
859
00:52:57,632 --> 00:52:58,675
[barking]
860
00:52:59,509 --> 00:53:03,388
Like a familiar sound shifting
too low to understand...
861
00:53:03,471 --> 00:53:04,431
[distorted barking]
862
00:53:04,514 --> 00:53:07,809
...the light from quasars
has shifted to such a degree...
863
00:53:08,810 --> 00:53:11,813
that hydrogen is unrecognizable.
864
00:53:12,439 --> 00:53:14,441
This extreme amount of shift
865
00:53:14,524 --> 00:53:19,279
means quasars are racing away
from us at blinding speeds.
866
00:53:19,362 --> 00:53:20,906
The reason?
867
00:53:20,989 --> 00:53:22,824
It's the legacy of an event
868
00:53:22,908 --> 00:53:27,495
that occurred almost
14 billion years ago: the Big Bang.
869
00:53:31,124 --> 00:53:34,044
The beginning of our universe.
870
00:53:34,920 --> 00:53:38,006
And ever since, the universe
has been expanding,
871
00:53:38,089 --> 00:53:43,303
carrying with it all the objects
it contains, including quasars.
872
00:53:43,887 --> 00:53:46,640
[Glikman] No one had ever seen anything
moving away at that high speed.
873
00:53:46,723 --> 00:53:49,059
This made this object
the furthest-away thing
874
00:53:49,142 --> 00:53:50,852
that had ever been seen,
875
00:53:50,936 --> 00:53:53,772
which meant the thing itself
had to be so luminous,
876
00:53:53,855 --> 00:53:55,148
and you had to account for that.
877
00:53:56,775 --> 00:53:59,527
[Bartusiak] Two billion light years away,
putting out the energy
878
00:53:59,611 --> 00:54:02,447
of a trillion suns each second.
879
00:54:04,449 --> 00:54:07,619
What could possibly create that?
880
00:54:07,702 --> 00:54:10,705
No one had any idea
what could be powering these things.
881
00:54:10,789 --> 00:54:13,541
Where could all of this energy come from?
882
00:54:13,625 --> 00:54:15,710
If you work out through calculations,
883
00:54:15,794 --> 00:54:18,129
it can't be chemical energy.
884
00:54:18,964 --> 00:54:21,967
They knew it couldn't be nuclear energy.
885
00:54:24,219 --> 00:54:27,472
[Levin]
There's no way a quasar could be a star.
886
00:54:27,555 --> 00:54:32,602
No amount of nuclear fusion
could produce that much star power.
887
00:54:32,686 --> 00:54:38,024
The only engine that could possibly
put out that much energy is gravity.
888
00:54:40,610 --> 00:54:41,695
[Levin] Gravity.
889
00:54:43,113 --> 00:54:46,282
In everyday life,
we can overcome gravity easily.
890
00:54:47,158 --> 00:54:50,912
But when concentrated
to an extreme by a black hole,
891
00:54:50,996 --> 00:54:54,040
gravity is overwhelmingly powerful.
892
00:54:54,541 --> 00:54:57,711
A handful of scientists start wondering:
893
00:54:57,794 --> 00:55:02,132
Could quasars perhaps
be powered by gravity engines?
894
00:55:02,549 --> 00:55:05,343
What if the energy
blasting out from quasars
895
00:55:05,427 --> 00:55:09,889
is coming from bright
accretion disks around black holes?
896
00:55:12,058 --> 00:55:14,853
[Natarajan]
To produce that kind of energy,
897
00:55:14,936 --> 00:55:16,896
that kind of brightness,
898
00:55:16,980 --> 00:55:18,523
it has to involve a black hole.
899
00:55:19,774 --> 00:55:22,485
[Levin] But not just any black hole.
900
00:55:22,569 --> 00:55:26,031
[Thorne] Whatever was the source
of the emission from a quasar...
901
00:55:26,114 --> 00:55:27,449
had to be massive.
902
00:55:28,533 --> 00:55:29,659
How massive?
903
00:55:29,743 --> 00:55:33,788
Well, millions or billions
of times heavier than the sun.
904
00:55:34,706 --> 00:55:39,294
[Levin] Millions or billions of times
heavier than the sun.
905
00:55:40,045 --> 00:55:43,214
Cygnus X-1 is only 15 times
the mass of the sun.
906
00:55:44,340 --> 00:55:46,509
The black holes powering quasars
907
00:55:46,593 --> 00:55:50,221
are an entirely different
category of black hole:
908
00:55:52,015 --> 00:55:53,725
supermassives.
909
00:55:58,104 --> 00:56:01,983
And they seem to be located
in the centers of galaxies.
910
00:56:05,904 --> 00:56:08,656
But what about our own galaxy?
911
00:56:08,740 --> 00:56:12,535
Could there be any supermassive
black holes closer to home?
912
00:56:14,079 --> 00:56:17,040
The center, where any
supermassive would be found,
913
00:56:17,123 --> 00:56:21,211
lies in the direction
of the constellation Sagittarius,
914
00:56:21,294 --> 00:56:22,921
the Archer.
915
00:56:24,089 --> 00:56:28,093
Now, Sagittarius
isn't just any constellation.
916
00:56:28,176 --> 00:56:32,931
It's in the direction of the center
of our own Milky Way Galaxy.
917
00:56:33,014 --> 00:56:35,642
But since we live inside the Milky Way,
918
00:56:35,725 --> 00:56:39,104
we can't see the galaxy
the way a space traveler would.
919
00:56:42,357 --> 00:56:45,610
But I can use my trusted
imaginary star machine
920
00:56:45,693 --> 00:56:48,446
to show us the galaxy from the outside.
921
00:56:48,530 --> 00:56:53,201
Our home is a spiral galaxy,
hundreds of billions of stars,
922
00:56:53,284 --> 00:56:56,246
drawn together into a gigantic disk.
923
00:56:57,122 --> 00:57:00,625
It's wide,
about 100,000 light years across.
924
00:57:00,708 --> 00:57:02,585
But it's relatively thin,
925
00:57:02,669 --> 00:57:05,338
only about 1,000 light years thick.
926
00:57:05,421 --> 00:57:08,758
And the whole spiral slowly rotates.
927
00:57:09,926 --> 00:57:11,970
Our solar system is here.
928
00:57:12,637 --> 00:57:17,225
And here, 26,000 light years
from the Earth, is the center,
929
00:57:17,308 --> 00:57:20,311
which we see
in the direction of Sagittarius.
930
00:57:20,395 --> 00:57:23,314
In this dense center,
there are millions of stars,
931
00:57:23,398 --> 00:57:26,025
and lots and lots of dust and gas.
932
00:57:28,027 --> 00:57:30,196
So that's the view of our galaxy
from the outside,
933
00:57:30,280 --> 00:57:32,740
thanks to my imaginary technology.
934
00:57:32,824 --> 00:57:35,702
But since we live inside the Milky Way,
935
00:57:35,785 --> 00:57:37,787
when we look towards the center,
936
00:57:37,871 --> 00:57:41,082
we're looking through much
of our own galaxy,
937
00:57:41,166 --> 00:57:43,209
which means it appears to us
938
00:57:43,293 --> 00:57:48,465
as a band of stars and dust
across the sky... a milky way.
939
00:57:52,343 --> 00:57:55,555
Deep inside this band of stars and dust,
940
00:57:55,638 --> 00:57:58,808
could a supermassive
black hole be lurking?
941
00:57:59,893 --> 00:58:02,770
[Ghez]
The data that we're getting now...
942
00:58:02,854 --> 00:58:08,067
[Levin] In the 1990s, astronomers
grow determined to solve the mystery,
943
00:58:08,151 --> 00:58:10,904
to peer through the murky Milky Way,
944
00:58:10,987 --> 00:58:13,990
and learn what, if anything,
is at its center.
945
00:58:15,492 --> 00:58:18,077
One of them is Andrea Ghez.
946
00:58:18,161 --> 00:58:19,496
[Ghez] One in 20...
947
00:58:19,579 --> 00:58:22,207
[Levin] Ghez takes on
a daunting challenge.
948
00:58:22,290 --> 00:58:24,792
She will try to track individual stars
949
00:58:24,876 --> 00:58:27,420
orbiting the center of the galaxy.
950
00:58:27,504 --> 00:58:30,340
[Ghez] The essence of this experiment
comes from watching
951
00:58:30,423 --> 00:58:33,092
stars orbit the center of the galaxy.
952
00:58:33,885 --> 00:58:35,386
So you want to find the stars
953
00:58:35,470 --> 00:58:38,723
that are as close to
the center of the galaxy as possible.
954
00:58:39,474 --> 00:58:42,143
Which means that I want to get access
955
00:58:42,227 --> 00:58:46,356
to the largest telescope
I can possibly get my hands on.
956
00:58:47,649 --> 00:58:50,652
[Levin] And that means coming here.
957
00:58:54,155 --> 00:58:57,367
The summit of Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano
958
00:58:57,450 --> 00:59:00,745
almost 14,000 feet
above the beaches of Hawaii.
959
00:59:02,121 --> 00:59:07,752
High altitude and low humidity
make this the ideal place for astronomy.
960
00:59:10,880 --> 00:59:14,842
The instrument Ghez uses
is Mauna Kea's Keck Observatory,
961
00:59:15,218 --> 00:59:16,719
one of the largest in the world.
962
00:59:18,388 --> 00:59:21,849
But despite its size,
Keck has the same problem
963
00:59:21,975 --> 00:59:23,726
as all telescopes on Earth:
964
00:59:25,019 --> 00:59:26,813
atmospheric distortion.
965
00:59:28,565 --> 00:59:29,983
[Ghez] Think about looking at a pebble
966
00:59:30,108 --> 00:59:31,609
at the bottom of a river.
967
00:59:32,277 --> 00:59:34,028
The river is moving very quickly
968
00:59:34,153 --> 00:59:36,573
and your view of that pebble is distorted.
969
00:59:38,408 --> 00:59:39,701
[Levin] Like a river,
970
00:59:39,826 --> 00:59:42,036
the Earth's atmosphere
is constantly changing,
971
00:59:42,161 --> 00:59:44,706
bending light like a funhouse mirror.
972
00:59:46,124 --> 00:59:50,086
To compensate for this,
Keck pioneers the scientific use
973
00:59:50,211 --> 00:59:52,630
of a declassified military technology
974
00:59:52,755 --> 00:59:54,674
called adaptive optics.
975
00:59:56,593 --> 00:59:59,304
First, they shine a laser into the sky,
976
00:59:59,596 --> 01:00:02,348
creating an artificial guide star.
977
01:00:03,474 --> 01:00:07,061
The turbulent atmosphere
distorts the guide star,
978
01:00:07,770 --> 01:00:10,398
but the computer knows
what it should look like,
979
01:00:10,523 --> 01:00:13,276
and adjusts the telescope mirror
accordingly.
980
01:00:14,861 --> 01:00:16,821
[Ghez] So if you look at yourself
in a circus funhouse mirror,
981
01:00:16,946 --> 01:00:18,406
you look completely distorted.
982
01:00:18,531 --> 01:00:20,199
And the goal of the adaptive optics system
983
01:00:20,325 --> 01:00:24,037
is to introduce a second mirror
that's the exact opposite shape
984
01:00:24,162 --> 01:00:25,413
and make you look flat again.
985
01:00:27,206 --> 01:00:29,292
[Levin] Buried deep inside the telescope,
986
01:00:29,417 --> 01:00:33,421
the deformable mirror changes shape
up to 2,000 times a second
987
01:00:33,713 --> 01:00:35,840
to reverse the atmosphere's distortion.
988
01:00:37,508 --> 01:00:40,553
[Ghez] And it has allowed us
to take the sharpest images
989
01:00:40,762 --> 01:00:44,015
ever obtained of the center of the galaxy.
990
01:00:45,933 --> 01:00:48,978
[Levin] The sharpness
of those images allows Ghez
991
01:00:49,103 --> 01:00:51,689
to make out individual stars
near the center,
992
01:00:51,898 --> 01:00:53,941
a huge advance in astronomy.
993
01:00:54,484 --> 01:00:57,862
She begins recording
their positions in 1995.
994
01:00:58,571 --> 01:01:00,490
[Ghez] And every year since then,
995
01:01:00,615 --> 01:01:02,742
we've taken an image...
just take a picture.
996
01:01:03,826 --> 01:01:05,745
[Levin]
Putting those annual snapshots together
997
01:01:05,870 --> 01:01:08,581
creates a time-lapse movie
of stellar orbits.
998
01:01:10,249 --> 01:01:12,669
And what those movies reveal
is astounding.
999
01:01:12,835 --> 01:01:13,878
[indistinct chatter]
1000
01:01:15,922 --> 01:01:18,841
The stars are whipping around
the center of the Milky Way
1001
01:01:18,966 --> 01:01:20,635
at phenomenal speeds.
1002
01:01:21,969 --> 01:01:25,223
These things are moving
at several thousand,
1003
01:01:25,348 --> 01:01:27,266
up to 10,000 kilometers per second,
1004
01:01:27,475 --> 01:01:29,977
or ten million miles per hour.
1005
01:01:30,186 --> 01:01:31,938
They're, they're really hauling.
1006
01:01:32,897 --> 01:01:36,526
[Levin] To go that fast,
the stars must be orbiting
1007
01:01:36,651 --> 01:01:38,695
something extremely massive.
1008
01:01:39,696 --> 01:01:40,947
[Ghez] The mass that we infer
1009
01:01:41,072 --> 01:01:43,741
is four million times the mass of the Sun.
1010
01:01:44,492 --> 01:01:48,246
[Levin] What could be four million times
the mass of the Sun
1011
01:01:48,621 --> 01:01:50,998
yet be completely invisible?
1012
01:01:51,290 --> 01:01:52,959
[Ghez] That is the proof of a black hole.
1013
01:01:54,335 --> 01:01:56,129
[Levin] And not just any black hole,
1014
01:01:56,254 --> 01:01:59,382
a supermassive, silent and sleeping,
1015
01:01:59,716 --> 01:02:02,260
right in the center of our own galaxy.
1016
01:02:03,928 --> 01:02:05,471
In fact, this is the best evidence to date
1017
01:02:05,596 --> 01:02:08,474
that we have for the existence
of supermassive black holes,
1018
01:02:08,599 --> 01:02:10,852
not only in the center of our own galaxy,
1019
01:02:10,977 --> 01:02:12,311
but anywhere in the universe.
1020
01:02:16,691 --> 01:02:18,818
A supermassive black hole
1021
01:02:18,985 --> 01:02:21,112
four million times the mass of the Sun,
1022
01:02:21,404 --> 01:02:24,657
in the very center
of our own Milky Way galaxy.
1023
01:02:25,700 --> 01:02:28,745
From a cosmic perspective,
it's right next door.
1024
01:02:30,121 --> 01:02:32,540
And it raises a profound question.
1025
01:02:33,082 --> 01:02:35,418
There are billions of galaxies out there.
1026
01:02:35,793 --> 01:02:38,629
If ours has a supermassive
black hole at its center,
1027
01:02:38,963 --> 01:02:42,592
and if quasars are found
at the centers of their galaxies,
1028
01:02:43,009 --> 01:02:44,719
what about the others?
1029
01:02:47,597 --> 01:02:50,975
Are there black holes
at the centers of galaxies?
1030
01:02:51,601 --> 01:02:53,519
If they are, how common are they?
1031
01:02:53,811 --> 01:02:55,188
We simply didn't know.
1032
01:02:56,564 --> 01:02:59,525
[Levin] Could astronomers ever hope
to find what lurks
1033
01:02:59,650 --> 01:03:01,694
at the centers of other galaxies,
1034
01:03:01,819 --> 01:03:06,032
millions of light years away,
as Ghez did in our Milky Way?
1035
01:03:06,199 --> 01:03:07,158
[engine ignites loudly]
1036
01:03:07,241 --> 01:03:08,534
[man] Five, four...
1037
01:03:08,659 --> 01:03:12,330
[Levin] It would take another innovation
in astronomy to make that possible.
1038
01:03:12,789 --> 01:03:15,082
[man] And lift-off
of the space shuttle Discovery,
1039
01:03:15,208 --> 01:03:19,003
with the Hubble Space Telescope,
our window on the universe.
1040
01:03:19,420 --> 01:03:22,924
[Levin] When the Hubble Space Telescope
starts delivering clear images
1041
01:03:23,049 --> 01:03:24,592
of distant galaxies,
1042
01:03:24,675 --> 01:03:27,261
a team of astronomers gets to work.
1043
01:03:28,679 --> 01:03:30,681
They become known as "the Nukers"
1044
01:03:30,807 --> 01:03:33,559
because their focus is galactic nuclei,
1045
01:03:33,851 --> 01:03:35,269
the centers of galaxies.
1046
01:03:36,187 --> 01:03:38,022
One of them is Tod Lauer.
1047
01:03:38,940 --> 01:03:42,318
Step one, we take a picture of the galaxy
1048
01:03:42,443 --> 01:03:43,903
with the Hubble Space Telescope.
1049
01:03:44,570 --> 01:03:47,156
It shows us where the stars
in the galaxy are.
1050
01:03:47,281 --> 01:03:50,451
It tells us its structure
in exquisite resolution.
1051
01:03:52,995 --> 01:03:55,623
[Levin] The key to finding
supermassive black holes
1052
01:03:55,748 --> 01:03:59,085
is to learn how fast the stars
in the galaxy are moving.
1053
01:04:00,586 --> 01:04:04,215
Galaxies outside our own
are much too far away
1054
01:04:04,340 --> 01:04:06,801
to measure the speed of individual stars.
1055
01:04:07,051 --> 01:04:10,680
But by analyzing the way light
is shifted from blue to red
1056
01:04:11,097 --> 01:04:12,807
at different points in the galaxy,
1057
01:04:13,266 --> 01:04:16,853
astronomers can put together
an average speed of stars
1058
01:04:16,978 --> 01:04:18,145
orbiting the center.
1059
01:04:19,689 --> 01:04:23,234
It's accurate enough
to create a replica in a computer.
1060
01:04:24,610 --> 01:04:27,321
The second step,
where the real work begins,
1061
01:04:27,446 --> 01:04:30,491
is to try to model the observations.
1062
01:04:31,117 --> 01:04:34,704
And we actually do that
by building models of galaxies
1063
01:04:34,829 --> 01:04:35,746
in the computer.
1064
01:04:36,622 --> 01:04:38,916
[Levin]
It's known as Schwarzschild's method,
1065
01:04:39,625 --> 01:04:42,753
developed by Princeton
astronomer Martin Schwarzschild,
1066
01:04:42,879 --> 01:04:44,630
son of Karl Schwarzschild,
1067
01:04:45,006 --> 01:04:47,008
whose mathematics first described
1068
01:04:47,133 --> 01:04:48,885
the possibility of black holes.
1069
01:04:50,386 --> 01:04:52,597
[Lauer]
Martin Schwarzschild's trick was,
1070
01:04:52,763 --> 01:04:56,642
he would actually build up
a model of the galaxy
1071
01:04:56,767 --> 01:04:59,312
that not only had where the mass was,
1072
01:05:00,104 --> 01:05:02,315
but it also had how the stars were moving.
1073
01:05:03,733 --> 01:05:05,818
[Levin] For each galaxy they investigate,
1074
01:05:05,943 --> 01:05:08,988
the Nukers painstakingly build
a computer model,
1075
01:05:09,405 --> 01:05:11,032
and then using trial and error,
1076
01:05:11,157 --> 01:05:14,076
adjust the parameters
of mass and velocity,
1077
01:05:14,827 --> 01:05:18,247
trying to make the model
match the original observations
1078
01:05:18,372 --> 01:05:19,832
they got from the Hubble.
1079
01:05:20,791 --> 01:05:22,710
[Lauer]
And we say, "Let's try a star here,
1080
01:05:22,835 --> 01:05:23,920
let's try one over here.
1081
01:05:24,045 --> 01:05:25,755
Let's have it go around this way.
1082
01:05:25,880 --> 01:05:27,423
Let's have this one go around that way."
1083
01:05:27,965 --> 01:05:30,801
And we do this thousands
and thousands of times
1084
01:05:31,135 --> 01:05:32,929
until we build up a library
1085
01:05:33,054 --> 01:05:35,932
of how stars can orbit in this galaxy.
1086
01:05:38,309 --> 01:05:41,604
Success is when observations of the model
1087
01:05:42,438 --> 01:05:45,816
match the observations taken
with the Hubble Space Telescope.
1088
01:05:47,693 --> 01:05:49,153
[Levin] But that doesn't happen.
1089
01:05:49,946 --> 01:05:51,906
The models are missing something.
1090
01:05:52,990 --> 01:05:55,242
We try it again and again and again,
1091
01:05:55,409 --> 01:05:57,745
all with no black hole yet, and we say,
1092
01:05:58,204 --> 01:06:01,624
"Gee, we really can't get
the observations explained
1093
01:06:01,749 --> 01:06:03,167
by the model."
1094
01:06:04,627 --> 01:06:07,755
[Levin] Only when they add
an enormous invisible mass
1095
01:06:07,880 --> 01:06:09,256
at the galaxy's center
1096
01:06:09,382 --> 01:06:12,259
does the model match
the Hubble observations.
1097
01:06:13,302 --> 01:06:16,263
[Lauer] Almost always we have to put in
1098
01:06:16,389 --> 01:06:17,723
a black hole at the center.
1099
01:06:18,015 --> 01:06:20,351
We can't match the observations
1100
01:06:20,643 --> 01:06:22,561
without a black hole in the model.
1101
01:06:25,773 --> 01:06:29,235
[Levin] Of roughly three dozen galaxies
that the Nukers investigate,
1102
01:06:29,360 --> 01:06:33,155
virtually all of them require
a supermassive black hole.
1103
01:06:34,615 --> 01:06:37,243
And since then,
other observations have made us
1104
01:06:37,368 --> 01:06:38,619
even more certain
1105
01:06:38,744 --> 01:06:41,747
that supermassives and galaxies
go together.
1106
01:06:43,290 --> 01:06:44,875
Every galaxy we've looked for one,
1107
01:06:45,001 --> 01:06:47,294
we have found a supermassive
black hole in its center.
1108
01:06:49,338 --> 01:06:51,132
[Levin] It's a stunning revelation.
1109
01:06:52,091 --> 01:06:53,384
Supermassives,
1110
01:06:53,509 --> 01:06:57,179
once an entirely unexpected
category of black holes,
1111
01:06:57,304 --> 01:06:58,639
may be common,
1112
01:06:59,515 --> 01:07:01,809
not only at the center of our galaxy,
1113
01:07:01,934 --> 01:07:03,686
but of all galaxies.
1114
01:07:04,520 --> 01:07:06,522
Take galaxy M31,
1115
01:07:06,897 --> 01:07:09,984
also known as the Great Andromeda Galaxy.
1116
01:07:10,860 --> 01:07:13,446
It's two-and-a-half million
light years away.
1117
01:07:14,363 --> 01:07:17,074
On a clear night,
you can see it from Earth.
1118
01:07:17,950 --> 01:07:20,411
But even with the Hubble Space Telescope,
1119
01:07:20,911 --> 01:07:24,457
we can't make out
precise details of its center.
1120
01:07:24,582 --> 01:07:26,083
Still, we're pretty sure
1121
01:07:26,208 --> 01:07:29,712
there's something extremely
massive hiding there.
1122
01:07:33,382 --> 01:07:35,718
What if we could take a closer look?
1123
01:07:36,052 --> 01:07:39,430
What if we could visit
a galaxy far, far away?
1124
01:07:49,023 --> 01:07:51,317
As we enter the outer part of Andromeda,
1125
01:07:51,442 --> 01:07:55,404
we're still too far away to see
what's lurking at the center.
1126
01:07:55,780 --> 01:07:59,700
But we can make out
a dense cluster of stars in the core,
1127
01:07:59,950 --> 01:08:01,368
and that could be a sign
1128
01:08:01,494 --> 01:08:04,288
that there's a giant black hole nearby.
1129
01:08:06,707 --> 01:08:09,835
Billions of years ago,
it would have been surrounded
1130
01:08:09,960 --> 01:08:12,922
by gas and stars
and other small black holes.
1131
01:08:14,256 --> 01:08:16,467
The black hole may have powered a quasar,
1132
01:08:17,510 --> 01:08:21,055
feeding mad, and blasting out
blinding radiation.
1133
01:08:21,639 --> 01:08:23,224
Over hundreds of millions of years,
1134
01:08:23,349 --> 01:08:24,558
it would have consumed
1135
01:08:24,975 --> 01:08:27,978
all the available gas
and the closest stars.
1136
01:08:41,033 --> 01:08:43,410
These days it's relatively quiet.
1137
01:08:44,036 --> 01:08:46,247
But it has some distinctive features
1138
01:08:46,372 --> 01:08:47,873
we've never seen before.
1139
01:08:49,208 --> 01:08:51,293
First, it's colossal.
1140
01:08:52,670 --> 01:08:54,755
If it were dropped in our solar system,
1141
01:08:55,089 --> 01:08:57,508
Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars
1142
01:08:57,633 --> 01:09:00,386
would all be trapped inside
the event horizon.
1143
01:09:01,637 --> 01:09:05,432
That's big, but it's nothing
compared to the sheer mass:
1144
01:09:05,933 --> 01:09:08,769
100 million times the mass of the Sun.
1145
01:09:09,937 --> 01:09:11,605
And the destruction won't end there.
1146
01:09:11,897 --> 01:09:13,732
Jupiter won't last long.
1147
01:09:14,066 --> 01:09:16,152
The gravitational field
of the supermassive
1148
01:09:16,527 --> 01:09:19,363
will grab hold and swallow it whole.
1149
01:09:19,780 --> 01:09:22,950
Eventually, Saturn will suffer
the same fate.
1150
01:09:23,868 --> 01:09:29,165
The outer planets might survive,
but in cold and dark orbits.
1151
01:09:32,126 --> 01:09:34,461
This black hole rotates rapidly,
1152
01:09:35,004 --> 01:09:37,756
distorting and dragging
the fabric of space-time.
1153
01:09:38,924 --> 01:09:40,301
Like all black holes,
1154
01:09:40,426 --> 01:09:43,596
the event horizon
is completely featureless.
1155
01:09:44,263 --> 01:09:46,473
Remember, there's nothing there.
1156
01:09:47,057 --> 01:09:49,935
It's just a boundary
that conceals the interior.
1157
01:09:50,644 --> 01:09:54,648
But the accretion disk can tell us a lot
about what's going on.
1158
01:09:56,650 --> 01:10:00,863
That's the fiery ring of gas
and dust around the black hole.
1159
01:10:04,200 --> 01:10:08,245
Imagine if we could release
a swarm of autonomous robots
1160
01:10:08,370 --> 01:10:10,247
to explore the accretion disk.
1161
01:10:11,999 --> 01:10:14,543
The disk is spinning
at an incredible speed,
1162
01:10:15,044 --> 01:10:16,795
as much as half the speed of light.
1163
01:10:17,504 --> 01:10:19,465
If Jupiter moved that fast,
1164
01:10:19,590 --> 01:10:22,760
it would complete
its entire orbit in a few hours.
1165
01:10:23,928 --> 01:10:27,181
The region around the black hole
is a cosmic tornado.
1166
01:10:30,017 --> 01:10:32,144
Now our swarm is caught
in the whirlwind, too.
1167
01:10:33,103 --> 01:10:35,856
They're like tracers
dropped into the storm
1168
01:10:35,981 --> 01:10:37,524
to map the movement.
1169
01:10:38,609 --> 01:10:40,861
The middle robot can send us images.
1170
01:10:40,986 --> 01:10:43,656
It's following the leader like a race car
1171
01:10:43,906 --> 01:10:45,241
speeding around the track.
1172
01:10:46,325 --> 01:10:50,329
From here, the extreme warping
of space-time around the black hole
1173
01:10:50,579 --> 01:10:52,539
plays crazy tricks on our eyes.
1174
01:10:53,916 --> 01:10:56,168
It looks like there's one accretion disk
1175
01:10:56,293 --> 01:10:57,711
whipping around the equator,
1176
01:10:58,087 --> 01:11:01,215
and another arcing
over and under the poles.
1177
01:11:04,093 --> 01:11:05,678
But that's an illusion.
1178
01:11:06,470 --> 01:11:09,598
The black hole's extreme gravity
bends the path of light
1179
01:11:09,723 --> 01:11:12,017
emitted behind the black hole,
1180
01:11:12,601 --> 01:11:14,728
and makes it look like the accretion disk
1181
01:11:14,853 --> 01:11:16,772
is both above and below.
1182
01:11:17,606 --> 01:11:20,150
There's actually nothing around the poles.
1183
01:11:20,276 --> 01:11:22,236
It's just the passing light rays.
1184
01:11:22,945 --> 01:11:25,155
That's gravitational lensing again.
1185
01:11:26,282 --> 01:11:28,534
Drawing much closer to the event horizon,
1186
01:11:28,659 --> 01:11:31,912
the gravitational lensing
would become so extreme
1187
01:11:32,371 --> 01:11:35,040
that one of my robots could look
straight ahead
1188
01:11:35,416 --> 01:11:37,751
and eventually see its own back,
1189
01:11:38,085 --> 01:11:41,463
the light forever trapped
in an eternal circle.
1190
01:11:43,549 --> 01:11:46,760
So that's our tour
of the supermassive black hole
1191
01:11:46,885 --> 01:11:48,762
at the center of the Andromeda Galaxy.
1192
01:11:49,013 --> 01:11:50,097
Pretty amazing.
1193
01:11:50,806 --> 01:11:54,101
Also amazing: nothing in the mathematics
1194
01:11:54,226 --> 01:11:59,356
led scientists to imagine that
black holes could get that big.
1195
01:12:06,572 --> 01:12:08,115
As strange as they are,
1196
01:12:08,240 --> 01:12:10,242
ordinary stellar-mass black holes
1197
01:12:10,367 --> 01:12:12,745
were at least predicted by theory.
1198
01:12:13,287 --> 01:12:16,206
Supermassives are a complete surprise.
1199
01:12:20,044 --> 01:12:21,587
For the stellar-mass black holes,
1200
01:12:21,754 --> 01:12:24,673
people thought about them
from a theoretical perspective.
1201
01:12:25,549 --> 01:12:27,217
And then we found them observationally.
1202
01:12:27,676 --> 01:12:30,929
The supermassive black holes,
the story has been inverted.
1203
01:12:31,347 --> 01:12:35,059
We actually found evidence
of them observationally first.
1204
01:12:35,392 --> 01:12:37,061
And now we're working on the theory
1205
01:12:37,186 --> 01:12:39,063
of, how did these things come into being?
1206
01:12:40,731 --> 01:12:43,150
[Levin]
We already know that stars can collapse
1207
01:12:43,233 --> 01:12:44,985
to create ordinary black holes.
1208
01:12:45,486 --> 01:12:49,323
But supermassives are bigger
by many orders of magnitude.
1209
01:12:50,741 --> 01:12:54,119
Cygnus X-1 is 15 times as big as our Sun.
1210
01:12:54,787 --> 01:12:57,206
The supermassive
at the center of our Milky Way
1211
01:12:57,331 --> 01:13:00,209
is four million times as big as our Sun.
1212
01:13:00,876 --> 01:13:02,586
The one in the Andromeda galaxy
1213
01:13:02,753 --> 01:13:05,464
is 100 million times as big as our Sun.
1214
01:13:05,964 --> 01:13:08,425
And it's not the biggest, not even close.
1215
01:13:09,718 --> 01:13:13,639
There are supermassives
ten, even 20 billion times
1216
01:13:13,764 --> 01:13:15,015
the mass of our Sun.
1217
01:13:19,061 --> 01:13:22,731
How is it possible to make
such gigantic black holes?
1218
01:13:23,690 --> 01:13:26,819
Could supermassives
have come from collapsed stars?
1219
01:13:27,986 --> 01:13:30,155
That seems very unlikely.
1220
01:13:30,781 --> 01:13:34,076
We don't know any stars
billions of times bigger than the Sun.
1221
01:13:35,411 --> 01:13:38,539
[Tyson] We know about black holes
you might get from a dying star.
1222
01:13:38,831 --> 01:13:41,625
They have several times
the mass of the Sun
1223
01:13:41,750 --> 01:13:42,918
contained within them.
1224
01:13:43,043 --> 01:13:45,963
But millions of times the mass of the Sun.
1225
01:13:47,464 --> 01:13:50,801
If that's the case, a dying star
cannot have possibly made it.
1226
01:13:52,719 --> 01:13:54,763
[Levin] So do these supermassives,
1227
01:13:56,140 --> 01:13:58,976
millions or even billions
of times heavier than the Sun,
1228
01:13:59,476 --> 01:14:03,564
somehow just grow,
packing it on like voracious giants?
1229
01:14:04,815 --> 01:14:07,526
The wild thing about black holes
is that they feed.
1230
01:14:08,610 --> 01:14:12,281
They're constantly devouring
anything that comes
1231
01:14:12,406 --> 01:14:13,991
within their sphere of influence,
1232
01:14:14,324 --> 01:14:15,451
so they grow.
1233
01:14:16,785 --> 01:14:19,288
[Levin]
But how exactly do they grow?
1234
01:14:20,080 --> 01:14:22,374
What do they eat,
and where do they find it?
1235
01:14:24,460 --> 01:14:26,295
[Natarajan]
We believe that black holes grow
1236
01:14:26,503 --> 01:14:27,838
by accretion of gas.
1237
01:14:28,714 --> 01:14:32,134
And the way this works is that
you have a lot of gas around
1238
01:14:32,259 --> 01:14:33,719
in the center of a galaxy,
1239
01:14:33,844 --> 01:14:37,723
and this gas would then assemble
and form an accretion disk.
1240
01:14:39,099 --> 01:14:42,769
[Levin] The accretion disk
is made up of hydrogen, helium,
1241
01:14:42,895 --> 01:14:45,355
and other elements in a gaseous form.
1242
01:14:45,856 --> 01:14:47,941
The immense gravity of the black hole
1243
01:14:48,066 --> 01:14:50,110
pulls the gas in toward it.
1244
01:14:50,736 --> 01:14:52,112
As it swirls around,
1245
01:14:52,321 --> 01:14:55,365
it orbits closer and closer
to the black hole,
1246
01:14:55,741 --> 01:14:57,201
and the feeding begins.
1247
01:14:58,160 --> 01:15:01,455
[Natarajan] The stuff in the inner regions
would get slowly pulled in,
1248
01:15:01,830 --> 01:15:04,166
sped up, will reach the event horizon,
1249
01:15:04,291 --> 01:15:05,751
and then that's it.
1250
01:15:07,377 --> 01:15:11,715
[Levin] Whatever gas crosses the event
horizon disappears forever.
1251
01:15:12,090 --> 01:15:14,801
The black hole has absorbed that material.
1252
01:15:16,470 --> 01:15:20,140
So it actually adds
to the mass of the black hole.
1253
01:15:22,392 --> 01:15:24,770
[Levin] So this is one way
a black hole can grow:
1254
01:15:25,312 --> 01:15:27,898
gradually nibbling gas and dust.
1255
01:15:28,982 --> 01:15:30,859
But it's not the only way.
1256
01:15:32,236 --> 01:15:35,155
Cygnus X-1 has been
slowly stripping material
1257
01:15:35,280 --> 01:15:36,865
off a nearby star,
1258
01:15:37,866 --> 01:15:39,868
a process that will likely go on
1259
01:15:39,993 --> 01:15:42,329
for thousands or millions of years.
1260
01:15:43,539 --> 01:15:48,085
But what if a black hole
could rip an entire star apart
1261
01:15:48,210 --> 01:15:51,046
in just a matter of years, or even weeks?
1262
01:15:52,089 --> 01:15:54,216
That would be a very violent event.
1263
01:15:54,633 --> 01:15:58,095
And a team of space explorers
is on the lookout.
1264
01:16:00,305 --> 01:16:03,809
This is the Operations Control
Center for a space telescope...
1265
01:16:04,393 --> 01:16:05,310
I have you five-by-five, how may...
1266
01:16:05,644 --> 01:16:07,896
We show beginning of track at 0330.
1267
01:16:08,063 --> 01:16:10,482
[Levin] ...the Chandra X-Ray Observatory.
1268
01:16:10,774 --> 01:16:11,984
[indistinct chatter on radio]
1269
01:16:15,904 --> 01:16:19,366
Orbiting up to 86,000 miles
above the Earth,
1270
01:16:19,741 --> 01:16:22,160
Chandra takes high-resolution images
1271
01:16:22,452 --> 01:16:24,496
of objects that emit X-rays.
1272
01:16:27,124 --> 01:16:32,296
This is one: a short-lived,
extremely violent event
1273
01:16:32,421 --> 01:16:33,589
called a transient,
1274
01:16:34,548 --> 01:16:36,925
which fascinates James Guillochon.
1275
01:16:37,884 --> 01:16:39,177
[James Guillochon] Supernovae,
1276
01:16:39,261 --> 01:16:42,764
the destruction of planets
by their host stars.
1277
01:16:43,307 --> 01:16:46,852
Yeah, I'm just fascinated with
destroying things for science.
1278
01:16:48,353 --> 01:16:51,523
[Levin] James is investigating a mystery
discovered by a colleague,
1279
01:16:51,648 --> 01:16:52,733
Dacheng Lin.
1280
01:16:53,275 --> 01:16:55,360
This blur on James's screen
1281
01:16:55,485 --> 01:16:58,822
is actually a massive sudden
burst of X-ray energy,
1282
01:16:59,531 --> 01:17:00,907
caught by accident.
1283
01:17:01,742 --> 01:17:04,536
[Guillochon] This little smudge popped up
in the background of this image.
1284
01:17:04,870 --> 01:17:06,246
And given its great distance,
1285
01:17:06,371 --> 01:17:07,914
it's actually tremendously bright.
1286
01:17:10,542 --> 01:17:14,046
[Levin] Could it be a black hole
caught in the act of being born
1287
01:17:14,421 --> 01:17:19,718
in the violent collapse
of a huge star, a supernova?
1288
01:17:20,093 --> 01:17:21,261
[explosion]
1289
01:17:22,012 --> 01:17:23,055
Perhaps.
1290
01:17:23,930 --> 01:17:26,767
But the intense radiation
released by supernova
1291
01:17:27,017 --> 01:17:28,810
would only linger for a few months.
1292
01:17:31,730 --> 01:17:36,443
So how long has this mystery
object been blasting out X-rays?
1293
01:17:37,653 --> 01:17:41,448
To find out, they look at images
of that same part of the sky
1294
01:17:41,573 --> 01:17:42,824
taken at earlier dates.
1295
01:17:43,784 --> 01:17:44,993
2015.
1296
01:17:46,578 --> 01:17:47,704
2011.
1297
01:17:48,872 --> 01:17:50,165
2008.
1298
01:17:51,333 --> 01:17:52,876
2005, July.
1299
01:17:54,795 --> 01:17:56,254
2005, April.
1300
01:17:57,547 --> 01:17:59,049
No X-rays detected.
1301
01:18:01,134 --> 01:18:04,262
But the X-rays are there just
three months later, in July.
1302
01:18:05,847 --> 01:18:08,850
And the powerful, bright signal
has continued
1303
01:18:08,975 --> 01:18:10,477
for more than ten years,
1304
01:18:11,061 --> 01:18:13,605
from July 2005 to the present,
1305
01:18:14,231 --> 01:18:16,400
far too long to be a supernova.
1306
01:18:17,359 --> 01:18:18,985
So what could it be?
1307
01:18:23,031 --> 01:18:27,202
A black hole that's not feeding
is quiet and completely dark.
1308
01:18:27,327 --> 01:18:29,246
It won't show up on any telescope.
1309
01:18:30,914 --> 01:18:33,417
But a black hole that is feeding
is different.
1310
01:18:33,959 --> 01:18:37,045
When it feeds, it blasts out X-rays.
1311
01:18:38,338 --> 01:18:40,090
So could this be a black hole
1312
01:18:40,215 --> 01:18:43,051
that's suddenly begun devouring
something big?
1313
01:18:44,928 --> 01:18:48,682
[Tyson] What effect will this have
on anything that comes near?
1314
01:18:48,890 --> 01:18:52,060
What would it do to a star
that wanders too close?
1315
01:18:52,728 --> 01:18:57,107
Well, it will flay a star layer by layer,
1316
01:18:58,066 --> 01:18:59,818
ultimately devouring
1317
01:19:01,528 --> 01:19:02,863
the entire star.
1318
01:19:05,282 --> 01:19:08,368
[Levin] Unlike Cygnus X-1,
this is no mere nibbling.
1319
01:19:09,119 --> 01:19:11,705
This is a ten-year feeding frenzy,
1320
01:19:12,205 --> 01:19:15,208
a massive black hole devouring
an entire star
1321
01:19:15,625 --> 01:19:17,627
in a cosmic blink of an eye.
1322
01:19:20,881 --> 01:19:22,966
It's the result of a chance collision,
1323
01:19:23,341 --> 01:19:26,136
when an unlucky star wanders too close,
1324
01:19:26,470 --> 01:19:29,931
and the black hole's extreme
gravity actually rips it apart.
1325
01:19:31,183 --> 01:19:32,768
[Guillochon]
The gravity from the black hole
1326
01:19:32,893 --> 01:19:34,770
will progressively get stronger
and stronger
1327
01:19:34,895 --> 01:19:36,104
as the star gets near.
1328
01:19:36,438 --> 01:19:39,149
And at that point, the star
will begin to deform.
1329
01:19:41,151 --> 01:19:43,403
[Levin] It's called tidal disruption.
1330
01:19:45,572 --> 01:19:47,824
It's similar to the way our moon's gravity
1331
01:19:47,949 --> 01:19:50,535
easily moves all the world's oceans.
1332
01:19:51,953 --> 01:19:53,747
The tides caused by a black hole
1333
01:19:53,872 --> 01:19:56,041
would be billions of times stronger
1334
01:19:56,458 --> 01:19:57,876
and much more violent.
1335
01:19:59,669 --> 01:20:00,962
[Natarajan] You have these events
1336
01:20:01,171 --> 01:20:03,507
where a star could be
ripped apart by the black hole.
1337
01:20:03,799 --> 01:20:05,926
So you would see sort of a plume of light
1338
01:20:06,551 --> 01:20:09,763
from the last gasp
of the material in the star.
1339
01:20:12,098 --> 01:20:15,185
[Levin] But there is a chance
for some part of the star to escape,
1340
01:20:15,310 --> 01:20:16,853
as James illustrates.
1341
01:20:17,354 --> 01:20:21,691
As the star is elongated by
the black hole's tidal forces,
1342
01:20:22,025 --> 01:20:25,570
it will essentially be feeding
the black hole
1343
01:20:25,904 --> 01:20:28,448
at the same time as half of it
is trying to escape.
1344
01:20:30,575 --> 01:20:33,912
So everything above this point,
approximately,
1345
01:20:34,037 --> 01:20:36,915
will have the chance
of leaving the galaxy.
1346
01:20:37,374 --> 01:20:39,084
It's moving that rapidly.
1347
01:20:39,835 --> 01:20:42,128
And everything below this point
1348
01:20:42,546 --> 01:20:44,714
will fall back onto the black hole
1349
01:20:44,881 --> 01:20:46,800
and eventually be consumed by it.
1350
01:20:48,927 --> 01:20:52,389
[Levin] So this is another way
for a black hole to gain weight.
1351
01:20:53,056 --> 01:20:56,434
Unlike the slow steady nibbling
of Cygnus X-1,
1352
01:20:56,726 --> 01:21:00,564
this black hole is devouring
most of an entire star
1353
01:21:00,689 --> 01:21:01,731
in one gulp.
1354
01:21:03,859 --> 01:21:06,069
But whether a black hole feeds suddenly,
1355
01:21:06,194 --> 01:21:07,654
by swallowing half a star,
1356
01:21:08,071 --> 01:21:10,031
or steadily, through accretion,
1357
01:21:10,240 --> 01:21:14,452
astronomers still face a problem
when they try to understand
1358
01:21:14,578 --> 01:21:17,706
how supermassives got so big,
1359
01:21:17,831 --> 01:21:19,708
the timing problem.
1360
01:21:21,626 --> 01:21:25,088
[Levin] The trouble begins
with the very oldest supermassives:
1361
01:21:26,172 --> 01:21:29,384
quasars, those very bright, very distant,
1362
01:21:29,509 --> 01:21:30,969
and ancient objects
1363
01:21:31,094 --> 01:21:34,055
first discovered in the early 1960s.
1364
01:21:35,098 --> 01:21:38,268
The conundrum was
when we started finding these quasars,
1365
01:21:38,435 --> 01:21:41,479
very bright quasars,
very early on in the universe.
1366
01:21:44,858 --> 01:21:46,568
[Dale Kocevski]
They're giving off so much energy
1367
01:21:46,693 --> 01:21:49,863
that they have to have very massive
supermassive black holes at their center.
1368
01:21:51,281 --> 01:21:54,034
[Levin]
But quasars are extremely far away,
1369
01:21:54,367 --> 01:21:57,412
which means that they're part
of the very early universe,
1370
01:21:57,662 --> 01:22:00,957
which began nearly 14 billion years ago.
1371
01:22:02,292 --> 01:22:03,627
[Natarajan] Bright quasars,
1372
01:22:03,960 --> 01:22:07,505
600 million years after the Big Bang.
1373
01:22:08,173 --> 01:22:10,342
A fraction of today's age.
1374
01:22:11,426 --> 01:22:13,595
[Levin] And, they're enormous.
1375
01:22:13,970 --> 01:22:17,140
[Natarajan] So billion-solar-mass
black holes, these behemoths,
1376
01:22:17,265 --> 01:22:20,060
had to be in place when the universe
1377
01:22:20,185 --> 01:22:22,437
was about 550 million years old.
1378
01:22:22,854 --> 01:22:24,189
Now you have a problem.
1379
01:22:24,356 --> 01:22:27,651
Because you have to grow
something really big, really fast.
1380
01:22:28,151 --> 01:22:31,696
And you are bumping up against
sort of physical limits.
1381
01:22:33,323 --> 01:22:35,283
[Levin] Whether a black hole is nibbling
1382
01:22:35,408 --> 01:22:36,910
or gulping down its meal,
1383
01:22:37,035 --> 01:22:40,538
it turns out that accretion,
how black holes feed,
1384
01:22:40,664 --> 01:22:41,998
has a speed limit.
1385
01:22:43,041 --> 01:22:46,252
Named after English astronomer
Arthur Eddington,
1386
01:22:46,711 --> 01:22:50,215
the Eddington Limit
will not allow a black hole
1387
01:22:50,340 --> 01:22:51,967
to feed too fast
1388
01:22:52,217 --> 01:22:54,511
because of the light blasting out
1389
01:22:54,636 --> 01:22:56,471
from its own accretion disk.
1390
01:22:58,431 --> 01:23:00,308
[Glikman] Light has a pressure.
1391
01:23:00,976 --> 01:23:03,812
So photons can impart
a force on something.
1392
01:23:05,063 --> 01:23:09,109
We see this in winds from stars:
Light is pushing out gas.
1393
01:23:10,485 --> 01:23:14,531
So there's a limit to how fast
you can feed a black hole
1394
01:23:14,656 --> 01:23:19,661
before its own luminosity
quenches its own growth.
1395
01:23:22,247 --> 01:23:26,167
[Levin] So given this speed limit,
how did early supermassives,
1396
01:23:26,292 --> 01:23:29,087
quasars, get so big, so fast?
1397
01:23:30,714 --> 01:23:34,342
Could there be a way to bypass
the speed limit entirely?
1398
01:23:38,680 --> 01:23:42,100
[Natarajan]
The problem is still time itself.
1399
01:23:43,184 --> 01:23:44,519
How do you grow them
1400
01:23:44,644 --> 01:23:46,354
to a billion times the mass of the Sun?
1401
01:23:46,479 --> 01:23:49,899
What are the conditions that you
need for that kind of growth?
1402
01:23:51,776 --> 01:23:53,945
[Levin] Some scientists are now asking:
1403
01:23:54,279 --> 01:23:56,531
What if there's a way
to create a black hole
1404
01:23:56,656 --> 01:23:59,409
that's already much more massive
from birth,
1405
01:24:00,326 --> 01:24:01,786
giving it a head start?
1406
01:24:02,412 --> 01:24:04,497
[Natarajan]
If there was a physical mechanism
1407
01:24:04,622 --> 01:24:07,000
that would allow you to make
a black hole seed
1408
01:24:07,167 --> 01:24:09,335
which was much more massive
from the get-go,
1409
01:24:09,461 --> 01:24:11,713
then the timing crunch
is not as much of an issue,
1410
01:24:11,838 --> 01:24:13,965
and the growing problem is not as acute.
1411
01:24:16,468 --> 01:24:18,053
[Levin] The answer, some believe,
1412
01:24:18,261 --> 01:24:21,765
is to create a black hole
directly from a cloud of gas:
1413
01:24:22,724 --> 01:24:25,435
a scenario called direct collapse.
1414
01:24:28,188 --> 01:24:31,024
It starts with gas clouds
made of hydrogen, helium,
1415
01:24:31,149 --> 01:24:32,358
and other elements.
1416
01:24:32,484 --> 01:24:35,487
The same raw materials
from which stars are born.
1417
01:24:36,654 --> 01:24:39,991
The denser clouds will start to collapse
under their own gravity.
1418
01:24:40,533 --> 01:24:42,869
As they collapse,
parts that are more dense
1419
01:24:42,994 --> 01:24:44,454
will collapse more quickly.
1420
01:24:44,746 --> 01:24:47,373
And so what happens is,
the cloud fragments.
1421
01:24:48,583 --> 01:24:50,877
[Levin]
Those fragments continue collapsing
1422
01:24:51,002 --> 01:24:54,339
until the hydrogen atoms
within them begin to merge.
1423
01:24:55,465 --> 01:24:58,384
Nuclear fusion begins,
and stars are created.
1424
01:24:59,844 --> 01:25:05,141
But what if a giant gas cloud
collapsed without making stars?
1425
01:25:06,392 --> 01:25:09,104
We realized that there are
a set of physical conditions
1426
01:25:09,437 --> 01:25:12,857
that would allow you
to form a very large gas disk
1427
01:25:13,483 --> 01:25:15,360
prior to the formation of any stars.
1428
01:25:16,778 --> 01:25:19,489
So this gas disk starts getting unstable.
1429
01:25:19,614 --> 01:25:22,367
That would allow the mass
to sort of flow into the center
1430
01:25:22,700 --> 01:25:25,578
very, very rapidly
and make a very massive black hole.
1431
01:25:28,414 --> 01:25:30,917
[Levin]
It's something we've all seen in nature,
1432
01:25:32,794 --> 01:25:34,629
from tornadoes to bathtubs,
1433
01:25:35,839 --> 01:25:37,173
a vortex.
1434
01:25:37,549 --> 01:25:39,801
But on a supermassive scale.
1435
01:25:40,552 --> 01:25:42,887
If you're in a bathtub
and you pull the plug out
1436
01:25:43,012 --> 01:25:45,598
and you see the water flowing in a vortex,
1437
01:25:45,765 --> 01:25:47,475
very fast down to the center,
1438
01:25:47,600 --> 01:25:49,394
that's exactly what happens.
1439
01:25:51,479 --> 01:25:53,648
[Levin] Direct collapse might be a way
1440
01:25:53,773 --> 01:25:56,943
to create very large black holes
early in the universe
1441
01:25:57,068 --> 01:25:59,195
from enormous gas clouds,
1442
01:25:59,654 --> 01:26:01,781
completely skipping the star stage.
1443
01:26:03,575 --> 01:26:05,827
Because they would be
so large already at birth,
1444
01:26:06,578 --> 01:26:08,496
these direct-collapse black holes
1445
01:26:08,621 --> 01:26:12,167
would have a head start,
helping them to quickly grow
1446
01:26:12,292 --> 01:26:15,670
into the enormous young
supermassives we see
1447
01:26:15,795 --> 01:26:17,297
in the distant universe.
1448
01:26:18,256 --> 01:26:22,802
[Natarajan] You could potentially
have these direct-collapse black holes.
1449
01:26:23,052 --> 01:26:25,346
So black holes whose original masses,
1450
01:26:25,889 --> 01:26:27,682
seed masses, the initial masses,
1451
01:26:27,807 --> 01:26:30,435
are about 10,000 to maybe 100,000 times
1452
01:26:30,560 --> 01:26:31,978
the mass of the Sun,
1453
01:26:32,103 --> 01:26:35,857
and that they form
from the get-go with that mass.
1454
01:26:37,984 --> 01:26:42,363
[Levin] Direct collapse may explain
how enormous early supermassives
1455
01:26:42,488 --> 01:26:43,823
got their start.
1456
01:26:44,866 --> 01:26:48,203
But there's another fundamental
question about supermassives.
1457
01:26:48,786 --> 01:26:50,705
What is their role in the universe?
1458
01:26:50,914 --> 01:26:54,167
Is their existence
just a matter of chance?
1459
01:26:54,584 --> 01:26:57,378
Or are they connected in some larger way
1460
01:26:57,503 --> 01:26:59,964
to the very structure of the cosmos?
1461
01:27:00,423 --> 01:27:03,343
Supermassive black holes
don't exist in isolation.
1462
01:27:03,718 --> 01:27:06,971
They seem to live in partnership
with galaxies.
1463
01:27:08,890 --> 01:27:11,476
Collections of millions, billions,
1464
01:27:11,601 --> 01:27:15,146
or even trillions of stars
bound together by gravity,
1465
01:27:15,521 --> 01:27:19,192
galaxies are the fundamental
building blocks of our universe.
1466
01:27:21,194 --> 01:27:24,113
So are the supermassive
black holes at their centers
1467
01:27:24,489 --> 01:27:27,784
somehow fundamental
to their very existence?
1468
01:27:28,701 --> 01:27:30,453
[Tyson]
We now just assume every galaxy,
1469
01:27:30,578 --> 01:27:32,413
even ones we have yet to confirm,
1470
01:27:32,622 --> 01:27:34,749
will have a supermassive
black hole in their center.
1471
01:27:36,042 --> 01:27:38,419
[Kocevski] It could be that instead
of simply being oddities,
1472
01:27:38,544 --> 01:27:40,546
that they are a key component to galaxies,
1473
01:27:40,672 --> 01:27:42,257
a key component to the universe.
1474
01:27:45,218 --> 01:27:47,095
We've come in a very short time to realize
1475
01:27:47,220 --> 01:27:49,889
that they likely inhabit
the centers of all the galaxies.
1476
01:27:51,057 --> 01:27:52,600
And that can really only happen
1477
01:27:52,725 --> 01:27:54,519
if there's some symbiotic relationship
1478
01:27:54,644 --> 01:27:56,312
between the evolution of a galaxy
1479
01:27:56,437 --> 01:27:58,731
and the supermassive black hole
in its core.
1480
01:28:00,817 --> 01:28:02,694
[Levin] What could that relationship be?
1481
01:28:03,778 --> 01:28:06,990
One intriguing clue relates to size.
1482
01:28:08,116 --> 01:28:09,617
[Chung-Pei Ma] The bigger the galaxy is,
1483
01:28:09,742 --> 01:28:12,245
the more massive the black hole
appears to be.
1484
01:28:12,370 --> 01:28:13,871
So these black holes at the center
1485
01:28:14,205 --> 01:28:16,708
seem to know about
their larger-scale environment.
1486
01:28:18,501 --> 01:28:20,295
[Levin] So which comes first,
1487
01:28:20,461 --> 01:28:23,298
the galaxy or the supermassive black hole?
1488
01:28:24,257 --> 01:28:25,717
It's not that simple.
1489
01:28:26,634 --> 01:28:29,429
It appears they somehow grow in tandem.
1490
01:28:30,263 --> 01:28:33,099
[Ghez] It's hard for one to form first
and affect the other.
1491
01:28:33,224 --> 01:28:36,352
So today we think that whatever formed one
1492
01:28:36,602 --> 01:28:39,981
had to form the other
as a by-product of that process.
1493
01:28:40,732 --> 01:28:43,568
And that there has to be
some feedback mechanism
1494
01:28:43,693 --> 01:28:45,320
between the black hole and the galaxy
1495
01:28:45,445 --> 01:28:48,906
that keeps the growth of the two
in lock sync.
1496
01:28:51,659 --> 01:28:54,746
[Levin] The way galaxies grow
is by forming new stars
1497
01:28:55,079 --> 01:28:56,789
from clouds of hydrogen gas.
1498
01:28:58,082 --> 01:29:01,002
Gas is essentially
the fuel for star formation,
1499
01:29:01,127 --> 01:29:02,962
just like gas is the fuel for our cars.
1500
01:29:03,463 --> 01:29:07,050
And so if you run out of gas,
you run out of new stars.
1501
01:29:09,218 --> 01:29:11,179
[Levin] So are supermassive black holes
1502
01:29:11,596 --> 01:29:13,973
somehow interfering with star formation?
1503
01:29:15,058 --> 01:29:16,601
[Glikman]
When a black hole is growing,
1504
01:29:16,768 --> 01:29:18,728
a tremendous amount of energy
is being liberated
1505
01:29:18,853 --> 01:29:20,605
and sent out into the galaxy.
1506
01:29:21,022 --> 01:29:24,400
And so we think that some of
that energy goes to warm up gas.
1507
01:29:24,734 --> 01:29:28,654
And gas that's too warm will not
form stars anymore.
1508
01:29:34,619 --> 01:29:37,163
[Levin] The heat produced
by a growing black hole
1509
01:29:37,288 --> 01:29:40,291
makes it impossible
for stars to form nearby.
1510
01:29:42,335 --> 01:29:44,837
[Glikman] And so,
one way that a growing black hole
1511
01:29:44,962 --> 01:29:48,883
can influence its host galaxy
is by quenching the star formation.
1512
01:29:50,843 --> 01:29:53,429
[Levin] In effect,
the growth of the supermassive
1513
01:29:53,554 --> 01:29:58,267
determines whether or not
its host galaxy grows or stagnates.
1514
01:29:59,227 --> 01:30:00,561
[Galison]
They have a kind of eating phase,
1515
01:30:00,895 --> 01:30:02,480
and then a quiescent phase.
1516
01:30:02,855 --> 01:30:05,149
So they seem to be involved
1517
01:30:05,274 --> 01:30:07,527
with the formation of the galaxy
in that way,
1518
01:30:07,652 --> 01:30:10,738
and then stabilizing
of the galaxy at the same time.
1519
01:30:12,406 --> 01:30:14,534
[Levin]
So these mysterious supermassives
1520
01:30:14,826 --> 01:30:18,079
may actually control
the building of the universe,
1521
01:30:19,247 --> 01:30:20,665
not so much by their size,
1522
01:30:21,082 --> 01:30:24,877
but by the way the energy
they generate shapes galaxies.
1523
01:30:25,503 --> 01:30:29,549
By mass, if you count up all
the black holes in the universe,
1524
01:30:29,674 --> 01:30:31,968
the tiny ones as well
as the supermassive ones,
1525
01:30:32,093 --> 01:30:33,177
the ultra-massive ones,
1526
01:30:33,719 --> 01:30:35,054
black holes are nothing.
1527
01:30:36,055 --> 01:30:40,852
However, energetically,
how much power the galaxy gets
1528
01:30:40,977 --> 01:30:43,312
and at what time as it assembles,
1529
01:30:43,521 --> 01:30:46,524
seems to be dictated
by the central black hole.
1530
01:30:47,525 --> 01:30:51,404
So they might well be
the key players in the universe.
1531
01:30:54,824 --> 01:30:58,244
[Levin] In the next two years,
NASA plans to launch
1532
01:30:58,369 --> 01:31:00,580
the James Webb Space Telescope.
1533
01:31:01,706 --> 01:31:04,584
Humanity's most powerful telescope ever,
1534
01:31:05,001 --> 01:31:07,879
the James Webb is designed
to look in the infrared,
1535
01:31:08,171 --> 01:31:11,007
allowing it to see farther
back in time than Hubble,
1536
01:31:11,132 --> 01:31:13,843
getting a look
at the first stars and galaxies
1537
01:31:13,968 --> 01:31:15,845
that formed after the Big Bang.
1538
01:31:17,430 --> 01:31:20,933
Hopes are high
that the James Webb Space Telescope
1539
01:31:21,058 --> 01:31:23,978
will help solve
many of the remaining mysteries
1540
01:31:24,103 --> 01:31:26,564
about the earliest
supermassive black holes.
1541
01:31:28,566 --> 01:31:33,154
[Tyson] The James Webb Space Telescope
is tuned specifically
1542
01:31:33,654 --> 01:31:36,991
to observe the early universe
when galaxies were being born.
1543
01:31:37,408 --> 01:31:39,410
That could give us deeper understanding
1544
01:31:39,785 --> 01:31:41,787
of how you end up
with a supermassive black hole
1545
01:31:41,913 --> 01:31:43,372
in your galaxy to begin with.
1546
01:31:45,750 --> 01:31:47,251
[Ghez] Technology is moving really fast,
1547
01:31:47,919 --> 01:31:51,214
and as a result, we have
really fundamental new views
1548
01:31:51,339 --> 01:31:52,673
of the universe.
1549
01:31:53,382 --> 01:31:57,094
I think we are really living
in a golden era of astronomy.
1550
01:32:00,765 --> 01:32:02,850
[Levin]
And the James Webb Space Telescope
1551
01:32:03,184 --> 01:32:06,187
isn't the only new development
that promises to solve
1552
01:32:06,312 --> 01:32:08,314
some of the mysteries around black holes.
1553
01:32:15,696 --> 01:32:17,198
[woman] I believe have
infrared components...
1554
01:32:17,323 --> 01:32:20,159
[Levin] A group of scientists
led by Shep Doeleman
1555
01:32:21,577 --> 01:32:23,746
is now attempting the impossible:
1556
01:32:24,497 --> 01:32:26,916
to take a picture of a black hole.
1557
01:32:28,709 --> 01:32:30,711
[Doeleman]
It's interesting that we can say something
1558
01:32:30,836 --> 01:32:33,506
about the accretion flow
near the black hole at all.
1559
01:32:33,923 --> 01:32:36,676
[Özel] And if some of this
linear behavior survives,
1560
01:32:36,801 --> 01:32:39,804
maybe we'll have a way of interpreting it.
1561
01:32:39,929 --> 01:32:43,474
[Levin] The project is called
the Event Horizon Telescope.
1562
01:32:44,433 --> 01:32:46,894
[Doeleman] The basic goal
of the Event Horizon Telescope
1563
01:32:46,978 --> 01:32:48,604
is really to see the unseeable.
1564
01:32:49,063 --> 01:32:50,314
It's to bring into focus
1565
01:32:50,439 --> 01:32:53,067
something that science
has told us for many, many years
1566
01:32:53,526 --> 01:32:55,695
is precisely something we can't observe,
1567
01:32:56,237 --> 01:32:57,571
the black hole.
1568
01:32:59,740 --> 01:33:02,827
[Levin]
Their primary target is Sagittarius A*,
1569
01:33:03,661 --> 01:33:07,081
the supermassive in the center
of our Milky Way Galaxy.
1570
01:33:08,541 --> 01:33:11,669
They're using a global network
of radio telescopes.
1571
01:33:12,003 --> 01:33:14,839
[Doeleman] We need good weather
at eight different telescopes
1572
01:33:14,964 --> 01:33:15,840
all around the world,
1573
01:33:15,965 --> 01:33:17,383
and that is a tall order.
1574
01:33:18,384 --> 01:33:20,303
[Levin] But if black holes are invisible,
1575
01:33:21,137 --> 01:33:23,556
what exactly do they hope to photograph?
1576
01:33:24,390 --> 01:33:26,851
What we are trying to photograph
really is the shadow.
1577
01:33:28,185 --> 01:33:30,938
So, as this gas around the black hole
1578
01:33:31,063 --> 01:33:34,734
swirls inwards and actually hits
the event horizon,
1579
01:33:35,109 --> 01:33:36,402
it leaves a silhouette,
1580
01:33:36,527 --> 01:33:40,031
a very well-defined shadow
on the surrounding light.
1581
01:33:40,990 --> 01:33:42,992
So really it should look like a donut,
1582
01:33:43,117 --> 01:33:45,328
with its very well-defined hole.
1583
01:33:45,453 --> 01:33:47,705
And that's the picture that we're after.
1584
01:33:48,164 --> 01:33:50,333
If I convert that into frequencies,
1585
01:33:50,458 --> 01:33:51,959
I get two-pi-square there.
1586
01:33:52,293 --> 01:33:55,296
[Levin] The team has conducted
their first observing run
1587
01:33:55,755 --> 01:33:57,840
and is processing the data now.
1588
01:33:58,341 --> 01:33:59,800
Okay, you're saying the velocity...
1589
01:33:59,925 --> 01:34:02,219
[Levin] It's hoped that
these new technologies
1590
01:34:02,345 --> 01:34:06,390
will give us an unprecedented
view of black holes in our universe.
1591
01:34:07,141 --> 01:34:11,395
But there is one new technology
that is already delivering results.
1592
01:34:11,812 --> 01:34:15,066
And that brings us back here, to LIGO,
1593
01:34:15,316 --> 01:34:17,943
a key player in the black hole drama,
1594
01:34:18,069 --> 01:34:22,865
to an idea that took root
way ahead of its time:
1595
01:34:23,074 --> 01:34:24,867
gravitational waves.
1596
01:34:26,660 --> 01:34:29,538
With general relativity,
his theory of gravity,
1597
01:34:30,206 --> 01:34:33,125
Einstein predicts
that when an object moves,
1598
01:34:34,001 --> 01:34:37,004
it can create ripples in space and time,
1599
01:34:37,380 --> 01:34:40,966
an actual squeezing
and stretching of space itself.
1600
01:34:41,842 --> 01:34:44,637
One of the holy grails
of 20th-century physics
1601
01:34:44,845 --> 01:34:47,890
was to detect these gravitational waves.
1602
01:34:49,016 --> 01:34:50,559
[Weiss] That was not easy to do
1603
01:34:50,684 --> 01:34:51,769
with general relativity,
1604
01:34:51,894 --> 01:34:54,397
because all the effects
that you could think of
1605
01:34:54,522 --> 01:34:56,565
were infinitesimally small.
1606
01:34:56,690 --> 01:34:58,109
Very, very difficult to measure.
1607
01:35:00,027 --> 01:35:01,028
[Levin] The thinking was,
1608
01:35:01,153 --> 01:35:03,531
if gravitational waves could be measured,
1609
01:35:04,031 --> 01:35:06,409
it would confirm Einstein's prediction.
1610
01:35:06,826 --> 01:35:08,494
And there could be an added benefit,
1611
01:35:09,078 --> 01:35:12,456
it might also prove
the existence of black holes
1612
01:35:13,999 --> 01:35:18,003
and help solve the mystery
of how supermassives grow.
1613
01:35:18,963 --> 01:35:21,632
But how to detect gravitational waves?
1614
01:35:23,384 --> 01:35:26,887
In 1970, the problem caught the attention
1615
01:35:27,012 --> 01:35:29,974
of a young experimental
physicist, Rai Weiss.
1616
01:35:32,643 --> 01:35:33,853
[classical music playing]
1617
01:35:34,687 --> 01:35:38,566
Rai had the perfect background
to hunt for gravitational waves.
1618
01:35:40,401 --> 01:35:43,863
For decades, he'd been working
with more familiar waves:
1619
01:35:44,738 --> 01:35:46,115
sound waves.
1620
01:35:46,407 --> 01:35:47,658
[Weiss] We were immigrants,
1621
01:35:47,783 --> 01:35:48,993
we were German Jews.
1622
01:35:49,118 --> 01:35:51,495
And a lot of our friends were
very, very interested in music.
1623
01:35:53,289 --> 01:35:54,457
[Levin] Rai devoted himself
1624
01:35:54,582 --> 01:35:57,334
to coaxing every subtle nuance he could
1625
01:35:57,668 --> 01:35:59,211
out of recorded music.
1626
01:35:59,837 --> 01:36:02,256
[Weiss]
Those records had a terrible problem.
1627
01:36:02,590 --> 01:36:05,134
When the music was loud,
it sounded wonderful.
1628
01:36:05,593 --> 01:36:07,511
When the music was real quiet and slow,
1629
01:36:07,636 --> 01:36:08,554
what you heard was this...
1630
01:36:08,679 --> 01:36:10,014
[imitates hissing] ...like that.
1631
01:36:10,306 --> 01:36:11,557
A hissing noise.
1632
01:36:13,559 --> 01:36:15,186
And that was so annoying.
1633
01:36:16,228 --> 01:36:20,065
[Levin] The lessons he learns
trying to eliminate noise in recordings
1634
01:36:20,191 --> 01:36:21,525
will pay off later,
1635
01:36:21,650 --> 01:36:23,402
when Rai turns his attention
1636
01:36:23,527 --> 01:36:25,863
to detecting gravitational waves.
1637
01:36:26,614 --> 01:36:27,781
You have to understand
1638
01:36:27,907 --> 01:36:30,242
how a gravitational wave
does its dirty work.
1639
01:36:31,118 --> 01:36:32,244
[Levin] As a physics problem,
1640
01:36:32,369 --> 01:36:35,664
gravitational waves
are not unlike sound waves.
1641
01:36:35,748 --> 01:36:36,749
[vibrating]
1642
01:36:36,832 --> 01:36:38,626
Let's suppose the wave
comes from something
1643
01:36:38,751 --> 01:36:41,337
that is in some way
moving and oscillating.
1644
01:36:43,088 --> 01:36:46,258
[Levin] A sound wave
compresses and expands air.
1645
01:36:47,092 --> 01:36:50,721
A gravitational wave
compresses and expands space
1646
01:36:51,263 --> 01:36:52,681
and everything in it.
1647
01:36:54,183 --> 01:36:55,893
[Weiss] If a wave came through the Earth,
1648
01:36:56,018 --> 01:36:57,353
it would cause space
1649
01:36:57,478 --> 01:37:00,397
to expand momentarily
and then contract again.
1650
01:37:03,484 --> 01:37:05,110
It keeps doing it, so it's this thing
1651
01:37:05,236 --> 01:37:07,029
that goes blip, blip, blip,
right along like that.
1652
01:37:08,697 --> 01:37:10,324
[Levin] So how to measure
1653
01:37:10,449 --> 01:37:13,827
the extremely tiny expansion
and contraction of space?
1654
01:37:15,996 --> 01:37:18,791
Rai's idea was to use light.
1655
01:37:19,708 --> 01:37:20,960
Send a beam of light
1656
01:37:21,085 --> 01:37:22,586
from one place to another,
1657
01:37:23,045 --> 01:37:25,047
and measure the time it takes
to get there.
1658
01:37:25,339 --> 01:37:26,257
[clicks]
1659
01:37:26,799 --> 01:37:29,843
That's how the exact distance
to the moon was calculated:
1660
01:37:30,469 --> 01:37:32,513
bouncing a laser beam from the Earth
1661
01:37:32,930 --> 01:37:36,308
off a mirror left behind
by Apollo 11 astronauts.
1662
01:37:41,981 --> 01:37:43,607
From the duration of the round trip,
1663
01:37:44,316 --> 01:37:46,610
scientists could determine the distance.
1664
01:37:50,281 --> 01:37:52,908
Rai came up with an ingenious design
1665
01:37:53,033 --> 01:37:56,036
for an instrument
that uses lasers and mirrors
1666
01:37:56,495 --> 01:37:59,456
to detect the faint expansions
and contractions of space
1667
01:37:59,748 --> 01:38:01,959
that would be caused
by a gravitational wave.
1668
01:38:03,085 --> 01:38:05,754
It's called a laser interferometer.
1669
01:38:07,089 --> 01:38:10,175
It works by firing a laser
into a splitter.
1670
01:38:11,260 --> 01:38:13,304
Half of the light continues straight ahead
1671
01:38:13,596 --> 01:38:14,888
towards one mirror,
1672
01:38:15,389 --> 01:38:17,725
while the other half
is sent towards another mirror.
1673
01:38:19,268 --> 01:38:21,770
The distant mirrors bounce
the light beams back,
1674
01:38:22,146 --> 01:38:24,440
where they rejoin at a photo detector.
1675
01:38:26,567 --> 01:38:30,112
If the distances the two beams
travel are exactly the same,
1676
01:38:30,613 --> 01:38:34,658
the system is designed
so the two beams cancel each other out,
1677
01:38:36,201 --> 01:38:37,911
the detector sees nothing.
1678
01:38:39,747 --> 01:38:42,625
You've set the trap to measure
the gravitational wave.
1679
01:38:43,250 --> 01:38:45,169
Now comes the gravitational wave
that's coming,
1680
01:38:45,294 --> 01:38:46,337
let's say, at this structure.
1681
01:38:47,588 --> 01:38:49,882
[Levin]
If a gravitational wave passes through,
1682
01:38:50,299 --> 01:38:52,885
it briefly changes the length of the arms.
1683
01:38:53,260 --> 01:38:56,263
The light beams no longer
arrive back at the same time
1684
01:38:56,388 --> 01:38:58,015
to cancel each other out.
1685
01:38:58,932 --> 01:39:00,726
A gravitational wave hits.
1686
01:39:01,727 --> 01:39:03,562
Light appears at the detector.
1687
01:39:04,438 --> 01:39:06,231
The trap has sprung.
1688
01:39:06,940 --> 01:39:08,150
That's the basic idea.
1689
01:39:08,275 --> 01:39:09,943
It's a very straightforward measurement.
1690
01:39:11,779 --> 01:39:14,531
[Levin] A clever idea,
and simple in principle.
1691
01:39:16,283 --> 01:39:18,952
But the devil, and the Nobel Prize,
1692
01:39:19,078 --> 01:39:20,454
lie in the details.
1693
01:39:21,914 --> 01:39:24,541
The difference in length
between the two arms
1694
01:39:24,667 --> 01:39:27,378
would be tiny beyond imagining.
1695
01:39:28,003 --> 01:39:30,214
How tiny? Well, take the size of an atom.
1696
01:39:30,714 --> 01:39:32,174
It's less than that.
1697
01:39:32,549 --> 01:39:34,885
Go down by a factor of 100,000.
1698
01:39:35,010 --> 01:39:36,428
That's the nucleus of an atom.
1699
01:39:36,845 --> 01:39:38,138
It's less than that.
1700
01:39:39,181 --> 01:39:41,308
It was 100 times below that.
1701
01:39:42,226 --> 01:39:46,730
So we're talking about
really itsy-bitsy, teeny-weeny.
1702
01:39:47,690 --> 01:39:49,149
I thought it was crazy.
1703
01:39:49,775 --> 01:39:52,736
I think everybody's
initial reaction to the idea
1704
01:39:52,861 --> 01:39:55,155
was, this is going to be impossible.
1705
01:39:56,031 --> 01:40:00,786
[Levin] In 1973, Kip Thorne puts
his skepticism on the record
1706
01:40:00,911 --> 01:40:02,287
in a classic textbook,
1707
01:40:02,413 --> 01:40:04,039
doubting it will ever work.
1708
01:40:05,290 --> 01:40:07,334
But Kip has never heard Rai Weiss
1709
01:40:07,459 --> 01:40:09,253
explain his plan in detail.
1710
01:40:10,504 --> 01:40:11,964
And when he does...
1711
01:40:12,798 --> 01:40:14,383
We spent the whole night talking.
1712
01:40:14,550 --> 01:40:17,010
And, so I said, "No, no, no,
it's very possible."
1713
01:40:17,136 --> 01:40:20,764
And within no time at all,
20 minutes, maybe half an hour,
1714
01:40:21,265 --> 01:40:24,476
Kip was solidly understanding
this thing, and he says, "Yup!"
1715
01:40:25,060 --> 01:40:26,979
And I ate crow the rest of my career,
1716
01:40:27,104 --> 01:40:29,815
because once I had talked
with Rai about it in detail,
1717
01:40:30,315 --> 01:40:32,443
I decided I would spend a large fraction
1718
01:40:32,568 --> 01:40:35,070
of the rest of my career
helping the experimenters.
1719
01:40:38,782 --> 01:40:40,868
[Levin] But it will take 40 years,
1720
01:40:40,993 --> 01:40:42,995
and enormous sums of money,
1721
01:40:43,203 --> 01:40:46,331
to bring Rai and Kip's vision to reality.
1722
01:40:47,875 --> 01:40:49,501
Getting LIGO funded
1723
01:40:50,669 --> 01:40:53,005
was extremely controversial.
1724
01:40:53,630 --> 01:40:55,424
Hundreds of millions of dollars
1725
01:40:56,175 --> 01:40:59,094
to detect a signal
that had never been seen before.
1726
01:41:01,138 --> 01:41:03,849
There were many people who feared
1727
01:41:03,974 --> 01:41:06,769
that LIGO would suck the money
out of the room.
1728
01:41:08,562 --> 01:41:10,856
And so there was a lot of controversy.
1729
01:41:11,815 --> 01:41:13,776
What everybody could agree on was,
1730
01:41:13,901 --> 01:41:17,529
this was extremely difficult.
1731
01:41:18,947 --> 01:41:20,824
[Levin] With such a sensitive instrument,
1732
01:41:21,950 --> 01:41:23,535
one of the biggest challenges
1733
01:41:23,660 --> 01:41:27,706
is Rai Weiss's old hi-fi nemesis: noise.
1734
01:41:28,373 --> 01:41:29,374
Ground motion.
1735
01:41:30,751 --> 01:41:32,127
The seismic motion of the Earth.
1736
01:41:32,252 --> 01:41:34,004
Acoustics' noise,
1737
01:41:34,129 --> 01:41:35,547
- sounds...
- [thunder crashing]
1738
01:41:36,006 --> 01:41:37,925
Everything would tend to move that mirror.
1739
01:41:39,593 --> 01:41:42,971
[Levin] Turns out, even the emptiness
of a total vacuum
1740
01:41:43,096 --> 01:41:45,557
creates a potentially crippling problem.
1741
01:41:46,975 --> 01:41:48,811
At subatomic distances,
1742
01:41:48,936 --> 01:41:51,438
the weird randomness of the quantum world
1743
01:41:51,563 --> 01:41:53,774
causes a ruckus in the mirrors.
1744
01:41:54,566 --> 01:41:58,028
[Thorne] This quantum noise is due
to quantum fluctuations.
1745
01:41:58,529 --> 01:42:01,990
These mirrors are doing what
an electron does inside an atom,
1746
01:42:02,115 --> 01:42:03,325
they're jiggling around.
1747
01:42:06,411 --> 01:42:08,372
[Levin] Exquisite sensitivity,
1748
01:42:09,081 --> 01:42:10,082
extreme vacuum,
1749
01:42:10,207 --> 01:42:12,876
hundreds of thousands
of electronic circuits...
1750
01:42:14,670 --> 01:42:18,131
LIGO is one of
the most complex instruments
1751
01:42:18,257 --> 01:42:19,758
in the history of science.
1752
01:42:21,468 --> 01:42:24,638
And as a final means
of eliminating false signals,
1753
01:42:24,972 --> 01:42:26,348
they build not one,
1754
01:42:26,473 --> 01:42:28,934
but two complete installations:
1755
01:42:30,352 --> 01:42:34,273
one in Washington state
and another in Louisiana.
1756
01:42:35,232 --> 01:42:37,526
And so the LIGO designers did it right.
1757
01:42:37,985 --> 01:42:39,778
They designed more than one detector,
1758
01:42:39,903 --> 01:42:42,614
separated from one another
by great distances,
1759
01:42:42,739 --> 01:42:46,618
so that if you detect something
in one and not in the other,
1760
01:42:47,452 --> 01:42:50,455
then, you know, go back
and check your electronics.
1761
01:42:51,164 --> 01:42:53,083
Check to see if it was April Fools' Day
1762
01:42:53,375 --> 01:42:55,711
and somebody didn't just tweak the knobs.
1763
01:42:58,130 --> 01:43:00,591
[Levin] Early fall 2015.
1764
01:43:01,592 --> 01:43:03,302
Both locations are operating,
1765
01:43:03,510 --> 01:43:06,305
but the first official science run
has not yet begun.
1766
01:43:07,598 --> 01:43:09,141
They're still testing.
1767
01:43:11,643 --> 01:43:15,439
In the early hours
of Sunday, September 14, 2015,
1768
01:43:15,772 --> 01:43:19,109
a scientist in Louisiana
makes a fateful decision.
1769
01:43:24,865 --> 01:43:27,993
Robert Schofield
has been working all weekend
1770
01:43:28,869 --> 01:43:30,579
doing final calibrations.
1771
01:43:30,913 --> 01:43:33,081
All righty, let's take a spectrum.
1772
01:43:33,540 --> 01:43:35,834
[Levin] He has one last test.
1773
01:43:35,959 --> 01:43:39,338
So let's see where this
computer's getting its power.
1774
01:43:39,463 --> 01:43:42,841
[Levin] But it's late,
and the equipment is not cooperating.
1775
01:43:42,966 --> 01:43:47,596
[Robert Schofield]
It was about 4:00 or so in the morning,
1776
01:43:47,721 --> 01:43:51,308
and we still had about
another hour of work to do.
1777
01:43:51,892 --> 01:43:54,645
And we were, like, "Yeah,
things aren't working so well,
1778
01:43:54,770 --> 01:43:55,646
and I'm really tired.
1779
01:43:55,771 --> 01:43:58,941
Let's not do this last hour
or so of work."
1780
01:44:03,195 --> 01:44:04,446
[Levin] They call it a night.
1781
01:44:04,571 --> 01:44:06,073
And 40 minutes later,
1782
01:44:06,198 --> 01:44:08,325
in the silence of their inactivity,
1783
01:44:09,618 --> 01:44:11,453
they open the door to history.
1784
01:44:29,972 --> 01:44:33,892
A powerful gravitational wave
rumbles through both detectors,
1785
01:44:34,017 --> 01:44:36,061
Louisiana and Washington.
1786
01:44:37,646 --> 01:44:40,774
Had Robert Schofield worked
40 more minutes that night,
1787
01:44:41,066 --> 01:44:42,901
with the instruments in test mode,
1788
01:44:43,068 --> 01:44:46,530
a signal that had been
on its way for 1.3 billion years
1789
01:44:46,655 --> 01:44:48,949
would never have been recorded.
1790
01:44:50,701 --> 01:44:51,660
[Schofield] I like to say,
1791
01:44:51,785 --> 01:44:54,246
you know, one of my biggest
contributions to LIGO
1792
01:44:54,371 --> 01:44:57,082
has been my laziness that day. [laughs]
1793
01:44:57,791 --> 01:44:58,834
[indistinct chatter]
1794
01:45:00,919 --> 01:45:03,630
I got an email from somebody here saying,
1795
01:45:03,755 --> 01:45:06,174
"Hey, look, look at this place
on the web."
1796
01:45:08,593 --> 01:45:09,636
[chirp]
1797
01:45:10,012 --> 01:45:12,889
I looked at that and I said,
"Holy [bleep]."
1798
01:45:16,935 --> 01:45:18,353
[Thorne] It was so strong
1799
01:45:18,812 --> 01:45:21,189
that you could see it by eye in the data.
1800
01:45:21,773 --> 01:45:23,608
It was too good to be true.
1801
01:45:24,568 --> 01:45:25,944
- [Levin] But it was true.
- [chirping continues]
1802
01:45:26,278 --> 01:45:29,531
In fact, it was loud,
and surprisingly clear.
1803
01:45:30,282 --> 01:45:31,283
And it just sang at you.
1804
01:45:31,408 --> 01:45:32,576
There it was, standing out.
1805
01:45:35,078 --> 01:45:37,622
[Levin]
The signal lasted less than a second,
1806
01:45:38,373 --> 01:45:40,333
but in that briefest of moments
1807
01:45:41,001 --> 01:45:43,420
it delivered a cosmically profound message
1808
01:45:43,962 --> 01:45:46,048
more than a billion years in the making,
1809
01:45:46,840 --> 01:45:49,718
proving the existence of black holes.
1810
01:45:51,720 --> 01:45:53,138
[Thorne] So what we saw in the signal
1811
01:45:53,555 --> 01:45:56,933
involved oscillations of the
mirrors that were slow at first,
1812
01:45:57,059 --> 01:45:59,102
became faster and faster and faster.
1813
01:45:59,644 --> 01:46:02,314
And this was precisely
the kind of behavior
1814
01:46:02,439 --> 01:46:05,108
that you would expect
from gravitational waves
1815
01:46:05,233 --> 01:46:09,321
caused by two black holes
going around each other,
1816
01:46:09,446 --> 01:46:10,781
spiraling together.
1817
01:46:12,616 --> 01:46:14,618
[Levin] Two massive black holes,
1818
01:46:15,118 --> 01:46:17,704
one 29 times the mass of the Sun,
1819
01:46:18,413 --> 01:46:21,208
the other 36 times the mass of the Sun,
1820
01:46:21,666 --> 01:46:24,836
whipping around each other
hundreds of times a second,
1821
01:46:25,337 --> 01:46:29,424
finally completing their act of
mutual destruction by merging...
1822
01:46:33,261 --> 01:46:38,517
Creating a single, larger
black hole of 62 solar masses.
1823
01:46:40,435 --> 01:46:43,355
The violent merger
converts some of the mass
1824
01:46:43,605 --> 01:46:45,732
into an apocalyptic release of energy
1825
01:46:45,857 --> 01:46:48,944
beyond anything ever before witnessed.
1826
01:46:50,278 --> 01:46:52,239
[Thorne] The collision, in effect,
1827
01:46:52,364 --> 01:46:55,951
creates a very... a veritable
storm in the fabric or the shape
1828
01:46:56,076 --> 01:46:57,661
of space and time,
1829
01:46:58,286 --> 01:47:00,664
as though you had taken three suns,
1830
01:47:01,123 --> 01:47:03,333
you had annihilated them completely,
1831
01:47:04,584 --> 01:47:07,462
converted it into gravitational waves.
1832
01:47:08,046 --> 01:47:12,384
The power was 50 times higher
than the output power
1833
01:47:12,509 --> 01:47:14,594
of all the stars
in the universe put together
1834
01:47:14,928 --> 01:47:16,930
in a fraction of a second.
1835
01:47:17,639 --> 01:47:20,642
But the most powerful explosion
1836
01:47:21,434 --> 01:47:24,271
that humans have ever had any evidence for
1837
01:47:24,688 --> 01:47:26,439
with the exception of the Big Bang.
1838
01:47:29,192 --> 01:47:32,946
[Levin] Since that very first signal
in September 2015,
1839
01:47:33,572 --> 01:47:37,284
LIGO has detected several more
collisions of black holes.
1840
01:47:39,744 --> 01:47:44,082
In October 2017, Rai Weiss, Kip Thorne,
1841
01:47:44,207 --> 01:47:46,835
and LIGO's former director Barry Barisch
1842
01:47:46,960 --> 01:47:48,670
received the Nobel Prize.
1843
01:47:51,882 --> 01:47:55,552
The LIGO discoveries prove
that black holes can merge,
1844
01:47:55,760 --> 01:47:58,430
one way they can grow bigger quickly.
1845
01:48:01,308 --> 01:48:03,935
More and more evidence of these
merging black holes tells us
1846
01:48:04,060 --> 01:48:06,563
there are a lot of these
stellar black holes around,
1847
01:48:06,688 --> 01:48:08,523
that they can find each other
and, and merge.
1848
01:48:10,525 --> 01:48:14,029
[Levin] And the discovery opened
an entirely new way
1849
01:48:14,154 --> 01:48:15,989
of observing the universe.
1850
01:48:20,535 --> 01:48:24,497
We always thought of astronomy
as an observational field
1851
01:48:24,915 --> 01:48:27,918
where we are looking at radiation.
1852
01:48:28,043 --> 01:48:29,753
We are seeing things.
1853
01:48:30,962 --> 01:48:32,464
But this is not radiation.
1854
01:48:32,589 --> 01:48:34,174
This is something much more fundamental.
1855
01:48:34,299 --> 01:48:38,762
These are sort of fundamental
tremors in space-time itself.
1856
01:48:39,554 --> 01:48:41,431
We can now hear the universe.
1857
01:48:49,147 --> 01:48:50,482
For the first time,
1858
01:48:50,607 --> 01:48:55,654
astronomers have simultaneously
seen and heard a cosmic event.
1859
01:48:59,407 --> 01:49:04,621
In August 2017, LIGO detected
gravitational waves
1860
01:49:04,746 --> 01:49:07,165
from a collision of two neutron stars.
1861
01:49:08,792 --> 01:49:11,211
Black holes are empty space,
1862
01:49:11,544 --> 01:49:14,422
but neutron stars are dense dead stars
1863
01:49:14,547 --> 01:49:17,259
that can crash together
and light up the skies.
1864
01:49:21,680 --> 01:49:24,766
When telescopes and satellites
around the globe
1865
01:49:24,891 --> 01:49:27,018
pointed in the direction of the sound,
1866
01:49:28,186 --> 01:49:30,522
the world saw fireworks
1867
01:49:30,647 --> 01:49:33,525
in an explosive collision and afterglow.
1868
01:49:34,693 --> 01:49:37,779
Possibly, the collision resulted
in the creation
1869
01:49:37,904 --> 01:49:39,531
of a new black hole.
1870
01:49:44,035 --> 01:49:47,580
But unless we observe
the formation of a black hole,
1871
01:49:47,706 --> 01:49:49,791
there is much we will never know.
1872
01:49:50,208 --> 01:49:51,960
Because so much about black holes
1873
01:49:52,085 --> 01:49:53,795
is irretrievably out of our reach,
1874
01:49:54,170 --> 01:49:56,089
we can never know where they came from,
1875
01:49:56,214 --> 01:49:58,049
what's inside, or their history.
1876
01:50:01,344 --> 01:50:02,637
[explosion]
1877
01:50:03,555 --> 01:50:05,640
But we can imagine their future.
1878
01:50:06,474 --> 01:50:09,811
The number of black holes
in the universe is increasing.
1879
01:50:10,312 --> 01:50:11,813
And they're getting bigger.
1880
01:50:13,398 --> 01:50:14,941
Stars collapse,
1881
01:50:15,900 --> 01:50:17,902
black holes feed and merge,
1882
01:50:18,361 --> 01:50:19,696
new ones form.
1883
01:50:21,823 --> 01:50:23,742
Could it be that one day,
1884
01:50:23,867 --> 01:50:26,786
everything will end up inside them
1885
01:50:26,911 --> 01:50:28,663
and they will rule the universe?
1886
01:50:31,791 --> 01:50:36,004
Untold trillions upon trillions
of years after this happens,
1887
01:50:36,421 --> 01:50:39,507
and the last bits of matter
cross their event horizons,
1888
01:50:40,133 --> 01:50:42,802
black holes themselves may radiate away
1889
01:50:43,428 --> 01:50:45,764
and vanish from this reality.
1890
01:50:51,269 --> 01:50:54,397
Their mysteries are many,
and we're just starting
1891
01:50:54,522 --> 01:50:58,818
to unlock the secrets of these
strange, powerful places.
1892
01:51:00,320 --> 01:51:02,030
But one thing is certain.
1893
01:51:02,405 --> 01:51:05,450
Black holes will continue to intrigue us,
1894
01:51:07,243 --> 01:51:08,536
tantalize us,
1895
01:51:09,245 --> 01:51:13,500
and challenge both our science
and our imaginations.
1896
01:51:48,827 --> 01:51:51,037
[theme music playing]
154726
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