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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 3 00:00:11,370 --> 00:00:14,100 - [Narrator] This film takes us on an expedition 4 00:00:14,100 --> 00:00:16,713 across the southern starry skies. 5 00:00:18,000 --> 00:00:19,200 The cosmic journey 6 00:00:19,200 --> 00:00:22,303 takes us to powerful supernova explosions, 7 00:00:25,270 --> 00:00:27,463 mysterious planetary nebulas, 8 00:00:30,248 --> 00:00:31,683 veracious black holes, 9 00:00:34,290 --> 00:00:37,983 as well as to the most modern telescopes in the world. 10 00:00:44,990 --> 00:00:48,050 And we will follow the path of the planet hunters 11 00:00:48,050 --> 00:00:51,899 as they discover exotic new worlds. 12 00:00:51,899 --> 00:00:54,649 (dramatic music) 13 00:01:03,110 --> 00:01:05,680 The starting point for our travels to the outer edge 14 00:01:05,680 --> 00:01:09,450 of our universe is one of the driest places on earth, 15 00:01:09,450 --> 00:01:11,103 the Atacama Desert. 16 00:01:16,890 --> 00:01:20,740 The European Southern Observatory, or ESO for short, 17 00:01:20,740 --> 00:01:23,833 is what makes this journey to the stars even possible. 18 00:01:25,660 --> 00:01:27,520 ESO is the motor that drives 19 00:01:27,520 --> 00:01:29,493 international astronomy research. 20 00:01:30,370 --> 00:01:33,723 Currently, it is supported by 16 member states. 21 00:01:36,610 --> 00:01:40,612 In Northern Chile, ESO has four locations, 22 00:01:40,612 --> 00:01:45,480 Chajnantor, Paranal, La Silla, and soon, Cerro Armazones. 23 00:01:45,480 --> 00:01:49,640 There, in 2024, ESO will commence operation 24 00:01:49,640 --> 00:01:51,563 of the world's largest telescope. 25 00:01:58,430 --> 00:02:00,910 At the peak of the Cerro Paranal 26 00:02:00,910 --> 00:02:03,660 stand four mighty telescopes. 27 00:02:03,660 --> 00:02:07,090 This telescope array is the Very Large Telescope, 28 00:02:07,090 --> 00:02:09,053 or VLT for short. 29 00:02:15,290 --> 00:02:17,930 There the many reasons why the astronomers have chosen 30 00:02:17,930 --> 00:02:22,120 Northern Chile to install their best celestial scouts. 31 00:02:22,120 --> 00:02:26,010 - This is one of the best places in the world 32 00:02:26,010 --> 00:02:28,720 for ground-based optical astronomy 33 00:02:28,720 --> 00:02:30,680 because of the very special 34 00:02:30,680 --> 00:02:34,020 geographical and atmospheric conditions we have here. 35 00:02:34,020 --> 00:02:37,010 When you look at the sky from the ground, 36 00:02:37,010 --> 00:02:41,000 you have to think like you're diving inside a bubble, 37 00:02:41,000 --> 00:02:43,790 which is our atmosphere, which is the air we breath, 38 00:02:43,790 --> 00:02:47,210 oxygen, which is what allows life on earth, 39 00:02:47,210 --> 00:02:49,660 but at the same time, it is an obstacle 40 00:02:49,660 --> 00:02:51,200 when we wanna look at the sky, 41 00:02:51,200 --> 00:02:54,660 so, we need places with very specific conditions, 42 00:02:54,660 --> 00:02:56,830 and the more sophisticated the machines, 43 00:02:56,830 --> 00:02:59,060 the more strict are those conditions 44 00:02:59,060 --> 00:03:01,880 to build giant telescopes. 45 00:03:01,880 --> 00:03:05,870 Basically, what we look for, is a place with very low 46 00:03:05,870 --> 00:03:10,840 turbulence and a very clear atmosphere and very dry. 47 00:03:10,840 --> 00:03:11,673 Why dry? 48 00:03:11,673 --> 00:03:14,410 Because, water vapors absorbs a lot, 49 00:03:14,410 --> 00:03:17,383 especially infrared radiation, and the turbulence, 50 00:03:17,383 --> 00:03:19,750 because the turbulence distorts the light 51 00:03:19,750 --> 00:03:22,620 and therefore we have poor image quality 52 00:03:22,620 --> 00:03:24,920 if the atmosphere is turbulent. 53 00:03:24,920 --> 00:03:27,880 We have a very special configuration because we are 54 00:03:27,880 --> 00:03:31,210 just 12 kilometers away from the shore of the Pacific Ocean, 55 00:03:31,210 --> 00:03:32,230 but at the same time, 56 00:03:32,230 --> 00:03:35,530 we are here at 2,600 meters of altitude, 57 00:03:35,530 --> 00:03:37,660 and we are above what we call 58 00:03:37,660 --> 00:03:40,450 the thermal inversion layer of the atmosphere, 59 00:03:40,450 --> 00:03:43,930 which determines the average altitude of the cloud's cover. 60 00:03:43,930 --> 00:03:48,490 So, this thing is like, keeps all the moisture 61 00:03:48,490 --> 00:03:51,230 100 meters above sea-level, 62 00:03:51,230 --> 00:03:54,110 and above this layer, the atmosphere is very clear 63 00:03:54,110 --> 00:03:55,470 and is very calm. 64 00:03:55,470 --> 00:03:57,340 And also we have these conditions 65 00:03:57,340 --> 00:03:59,140 very stable all over the year. 66 00:03:59,140 --> 00:04:02,320 This place is not very strongly affected 67 00:04:02,320 --> 00:04:04,290 by seasonal phenomenon, so we have 68 00:04:04,290 --> 00:04:06,500 more or less the same conditions 69 00:04:06,500 --> 00:04:08,653 in the winter and in the summer time. 70 00:04:09,543 --> 00:04:11,870 - [Narrator] The ideal climactic conditions 71 00:04:11,870 --> 00:04:13,340 are an important factor 72 00:04:13,340 --> 00:04:15,923 for obtaining sharp images of the cosmos. 73 00:04:17,060 --> 00:04:20,280 In order to further enhance the telescope's vision, 74 00:04:20,280 --> 00:04:23,253 ESO engineers make use of some optical tricks. 75 00:04:25,500 --> 00:04:28,600 The foremost motto in telescope construction is, 76 00:04:28,600 --> 00:04:30,700 the bigger, the better. 77 00:04:30,700 --> 00:04:34,660 The VLT's mirrors, with a diameter of 8.2 meters, 78 00:04:34,660 --> 00:04:35,923 are a good example. 79 00:04:40,300 --> 00:04:44,470 The 430 ton telescope platform moves with precision 80 00:04:44,470 --> 00:04:47,003 to set its sights on its celestial target. 81 00:04:58,220 --> 00:05:01,500 Four smaller, mobile, auxiliary telescopes 82 00:05:01,500 --> 00:05:04,100 boost the VLT's optical power. 83 00:05:04,100 --> 00:05:06,640 This would make it possible to distinguish between 84 00:05:06,640 --> 00:05:08,160 the two headlights of a car 85 00:05:08,160 --> 00:05:10,090 standing on the surface of the moon, 86 00:05:10,090 --> 00:05:13,963 at a distance of 380,000 kilometers from Earth. 87 00:05:16,380 --> 00:05:19,600 In order to achieve this tremendous imaging quality, 88 00:05:19,600 --> 00:05:23,030 the light of the four large telescopes is combined. 89 00:05:23,030 --> 00:05:27,720 A virtual mirror with a diameter of 140 meters is created. 90 00:05:27,720 --> 00:05:31,250 If one adds the light of the four auxiliary telescopes, 91 00:05:31,250 --> 00:05:34,423 the size of the mirror grows to over 200 meters. 92 00:05:38,030 --> 00:05:40,650 The light is combined in underground tunnels 93 00:05:40,650 --> 00:05:42,173 to create a single focus. 94 00:05:44,830 --> 00:05:47,290 Due to the differing distances of the telescope 95 00:05:47,290 --> 00:05:49,070 to the common focal point, 96 00:05:49,070 --> 00:05:52,610 there is a minimal time delay between the beams of light. 97 00:05:52,610 --> 00:05:54,810 Mirror carriages compensate this delay 98 00:05:54,810 --> 00:05:57,933 with an accuracy of 1000th of a millimeter. 99 00:05:59,250 --> 00:06:02,450 Astronomers call the combination of telescopic light 100 00:06:02,450 --> 00:06:03,743 interferometry. 101 00:06:04,870 --> 00:06:07,800 Constant measurements made by ESO engineers 102 00:06:07,800 --> 00:06:10,563 guarantee a consistently high quality image. 103 00:06:16,570 --> 00:06:19,750 The interferometer of the VLT has captured 104 00:06:19,750 --> 00:06:22,533 the world's sharpest image of a star to date. 105 00:06:23,540 --> 00:06:25,220 The disk in the middle of the picture 106 00:06:25,220 --> 00:06:27,460 is the surface of the star itself. 107 00:06:27,460 --> 00:06:30,530 T Leporis is surrounded by a shell of gas 108 00:06:30,530 --> 00:06:33,913 that is constantly being emitted bu the giant star. 109 00:06:35,210 --> 00:06:37,820 A further trick called adaptive optics 110 00:06:37,820 --> 00:06:40,373 ensures even greater image sharpness. 111 00:06:41,640 --> 00:06:43,640 Thanks to a discharged laser beam 112 00:06:43,640 --> 00:06:45,830 that causes the existing sodium to glow 113 00:06:45,830 --> 00:06:48,350 at an altitude of 90-kilometers, 114 00:06:48,350 --> 00:06:50,663 an artificial lodestar is created. 115 00:06:53,590 --> 00:06:56,200 Wavefront sensors, aimed at the lodestar, 116 00:06:56,200 --> 00:06:57,920 measure the thermal distortions 117 00:06:57,920 --> 00:06:59,743 caused by the Earth's atmosphere. 118 00:07:03,540 --> 00:07:06,670 With the help of the measured data, a small mirror, 119 00:07:06,670 --> 00:07:09,200 positioned in the light path of the main mirror, 120 00:07:09,200 --> 00:07:11,490 is continuously distorted. 121 00:07:11,490 --> 00:07:14,893 This enables the correction of the atmospheric turbulences. 122 00:07:24,340 --> 00:07:27,760 The 23-ton-heavy VLT primary mirror 123 00:07:27,760 --> 00:07:30,040 distorts itself under its own weight, 124 00:07:30,040 --> 00:07:31,653 causing the image to blur. 125 00:07:32,600 --> 00:07:34,460 This is where another trick called 126 00:07:34,460 --> 00:07:36,593 active optics comes into play. 127 00:07:38,040 --> 00:07:41,723 Plungers under the mirror push it back into its ideal shape. 128 00:07:43,540 --> 00:07:45,530 An image analyser 129 00:07:45,530 --> 00:07:48,800 that continuously measures the surface of the mirror, 130 00:07:48,800 --> 00:07:53,220 provides the data used to control the 150 actuators 131 00:07:53,220 --> 00:07:55,383 with nanometer precision. 132 00:08:02,720 --> 00:08:05,970 In recent decades, great progress has been made 133 00:08:05,970 --> 00:08:08,013 in researching our solar system. 134 00:08:11,990 --> 00:08:15,700 Space probes from Earth have visited planet after planet, 135 00:08:15,700 --> 00:08:20,483 until in 2015, the dwarf planet, Pluto, was finally reached. 136 00:08:24,290 --> 00:08:27,250 But astronomers have even grander plans. 137 00:08:27,250 --> 00:08:30,700 Since the mid-'90s, they have been tracking down planets 138 00:08:30,700 --> 00:08:34,373 in distance star systems, so-called exoplanets. 139 00:08:39,850 --> 00:08:42,490 The hunt for planets is the primary task 140 00:08:42,490 --> 00:08:46,003 of the SPHERE instrument that is mounted on a VLT mirror. 141 00:08:46,920 --> 00:08:49,320 Although only a small number of exoplanets 142 00:08:49,320 --> 00:08:51,140 have been detected so far, 143 00:08:51,140 --> 00:08:54,020 SPHERE has mastered this challenge well, 144 00:08:54,020 --> 00:08:57,773 allowing us a valuable look at the faint solar companions. 145 00:09:00,200 --> 00:09:02,020 The powerful planet-finder 146 00:09:02,020 --> 00:09:04,030 blocks the light of the central star 147 00:09:04,030 --> 00:09:05,780 with the help of a disk, 148 00:09:05,780 --> 00:09:08,930 otherwise the star would simply outshine the planet, 149 00:09:08,930 --> 00:09:10,963 and it would remain invisible to us. 150 00:09:14,890 --> 00:09:16,880 The SPHERE instrument captures 151 00:09:16,880 --> 00:09:19,200 the polarized light of a star. 152 00:09:19,200 --> 00:09:22,700 The light of a star is always in a disordered state. 153 00:09:22,700 --> 00:09:26,050 When solar rays pass the surface of a planet, however, 154 00:09:26,050 --> 00:09:28,943 they are minimally directed, and thus polarized. 155 00:09:30,670 --> 00:09:32,670 SPHERE captures this light, 156 00:09:32,670 --> 00:09:35,340 allowing a picture to be made of an exoplanet 157 00:09:35,340 --> 00:09:37,343 that is 300 light years away. 158 00:09:46,454 --> 00:09:51,320 AU Microscopii is a young star surrounded by a dust disk, 159 00:09:51,320 --> 00:09:54,900 an important indicator for the creation of new planets. 160 00:09:54,900 --> 00:09:57,570 SPHERE is deployed in 2014 161 00:09:57,570 --> 00:10:00,800 in the search for possible planets in this star system. 162 00:10:00,800 --> 00:10:04,860 In the process, the astronomers experience a real surprise. 163 00:10:04,860 --> 00:10:06,550 Five wavelike arches 164 00:10:06,550 --> 00:10:09,513 can be seen moving away from the central star. 165 00:10:13,720 --> 00:10:17,030 The astronomers compare the images made by SPHERE 166 00:10:17,030 --> 00:10:19,570 with images from the Hubble Space Telescope 167 00:10:19,570 --> 00:10:21,123 made in previous years. 168 00:10:28,280 --> 00:10:31,080 The result of the long-term observation, 169 00:10:31,080 --> 00:10:34,090 the wavelike arches move extremely quickly, 170 00:10:34,090 --> 00:10:35,270 and can even overcome 171 00:10:35,270 --> 00:10:37,943 the gravitational pull of the central star. 172 00:10:41,120 --> 00:10:43,730 Solar eruptions could be one explanation 173 00:10:43,730 --> 00:10:45,673 for this unusual phenomenon. 174 00:10:47,790 --> 00:10:50,890 Material from an orbiting planet is torn loose 175 00:10:50,890 --> 00:10:54,503 by the force of a solar eruption, and ejected into space. 176 00:10:58,570 --> 00:11:01,360 In the immediate vicinity of the VLT, 177 00:11:01,360 --> 00:11:04,740 the VISTA Survey Telescope sets its focus 178 00:11:04,740 --> 00:11:07,960 on very large sections of the heavens. 179 00:11:07,960 --> 00:11:10,800 - VISTA's the first survey telescope at Paranal, 180 00:11:10,800 --> 00:11:12,610 and it nicely complements the existing, 181 00:11:12,610 --> 00:11:15,460 Very Large Telescopes, the eight-meter telescopes, 182 00:11:15,460 --> 00:11:17,390 because, essentially, doing surveys, 183 00:11:17,390 --> 00:11:19,070 it finds objects that they can study. 184 00:11:19,070 --> 00:11:21,830 So if you like, it finds the needles in a haystack, 185 00:11:21,830 --> 00:11:24,230 and then the VLTs will study in great details 186 00:11:24,230 --> 00:11:26,550 the needles that have been found by VISTA, 187 00:11:26,550 --> 00:11:28,530 and understand what they are and what's going on in, 188 00:11:28,530 --> 00:11:30,880 for example, the early universe. 189 00:11:30,880 --> 00:11:32,800 The thing that is special about VISTA is that 190 00:11:32,800 --> 00:11:35,540 its got a large area, it's a four-meter-diameter mirror, 191 00:11:35,540 --> 00:11:37,300 it's got a very large field of view, 192 00:11:37,300 --> 00:11:38,788 about one and a half degrees, 193 00:11:38,788 --> 00:11:40,330 and it'll also work in infrared, 194 00:11:40,330 --> 00:11:42,760 and that combination of those three properties 195 00:11:42,760 --> 00:11:45,200 make it the most powerful telescope in the world 196 00:11:45,200 --> 00:11:46,720 for doing infrared surveys. 197 00:11:47,940 --> 00:11:50,960 - [Narrator] With their telescopes, the astronomers observe, 198 00:11:50,960 --> 00:11:54,720 not only the spectrum of light that is visible for our eyes, 199 00:11:54,720 --> 00:11:58,270 they also scan outer space from the gamma ray range 200 00:11:58,270 --> 00:11:59,923 to the radio wave range. 201 00:12:02,360 --> 00:12:04,910 - VISTA's a telescope with infrared camera, 202 00:12:04,910 --> 00:12:08,040 and this allows us to look at the sky 203 00:12:08,040 --> 00:12:10,210 in a way that we can't see with an optical camera. 204 00:12:10,210 --> 00:12:12,950 So, specifically, infrared cameras see 205 00:12:12,950 --> 00:12:16,220 preferentially cool objects, objects at a high red shift, 206 00:12:16,220 --> 00:12:18,713 or indeed objects that are hidden behind dust clouds. 207 00:12:19,970 --> 00:12:22,710 - [Narrator] The comparison between optical images, 208 00:12:22,710 --> 00:12:27,520 such as those made by the VLT and the VISTA infrared images 209 00:12:27,520 --> 00:12:30,370 clearly shows that astronomers are now able to gain 210 00:12:30,370 --> 00:12:32,540 a much more comprehensive insight 211 00:12:32,540 --> 00:12:34,533 when it comes to celestial bodies. 212 00:13:09,951 --> 00:13:12,710 A very different method of astronomical observation 213 00:13:12,710 --> 00:13:15,363 is the use of many very small telescopes. 214 00:13:17,050 --> 00:13:21,820 The next generation transit survey consists of 12 telescopes 215 00:13:21,820 --> 00:13:25,920 with a mirror of only 20 centimeters in diameter. 216 00:13:25,920 --> 00:13:29,290 The facility is designed to operate fully automatically, 217 00:13:29,290 --> 00:13:32,360 and is able to continuously monitor the brightness 218 00:13:32,360 --> 00:13:35,653 of hundreds of thousands of stars in the southern sky. 219 00:13:37,780 --> 00:13:41,560 The mini telescopes look for planets that, seen from earth, 220 00:13:41,560 --> 00:13:44,093 pass directly in front of their mother star. 221 00:13:46,070 --> 00:13:49,710 In the process, they block some of the star's light. 222 00:13:49,710 --> 00:13:52,140 This minimal fluctuation in brightness 223 00:13:52,140 --> 00:13:55,010 reveals the existence of a planet. 224 00:13:55,010 --> 00:13:57,220 With the help of the data gathered, 225 00:13:57,220 --> 00:13:58,960 the large ESO telescopes 226 00:13:58,960 --> 00:14:01,850 are then able to focus on the exoplanets 227 00:14:01,850 --> 00:14:04,443 that have been located by the mini telescopes. 228 00:14:09,460 --> 00:14:12,900 Are we able to ponder a thing that we can neither see, 229 00:14:12,900 --> 00:14:16,033 hear, smell, taste, nor feel? 230 00:14:19,590 --> 00:14:22,110 Astronomers have been facing this challenge 231 00:14:22,110 --> 00:14:23,873 for over 100 years. 232 00:14:26,380 --> 00:14:28,800 The center of our Milky Way. 233 00:14:28,800 --> 00:14:31,620 Here, an invisible secret lies hidden, 234 00:14:31,620 --> 00:14:34,860 and science fiction becomes reality. 235 00:14:34,860 --> 00:14:36,710 A super massive black hole 236 00:14:36,710 --> 00:14:39,890 is sucking up everything that comes close to it. 237 00:14:39,890 --> 00:14:41,330 The mass of the black hole 238 00:14:41,330 --> 00:14:44,163 is four million times that of our sun. 239 00:14:53,890 --> 00:14:56,880 Since the black hole allows no light to escape 240 00:14:56,880 --> 00:14:58,870 and is therefore invisible, 241 00:14:58,870 --> 00:15:01,760 it can only be detected indirectly. 242 00:15:01,760 --> 00:15:05,100 For more than 20 years now, the ESO telescopes 243 00:15:05,100 --> 00:15:07,960 have therefore been measuring the paths of objects 244 00:15:07,960 --> 00:15:09,743 orbiting around the black hole. 245 00:15:15,330 --> 00:15:17,190 - We've obtained the evidence for the black hole, 246 00:15:17,190 --> 00:15:20,520 by looking at the motions of individual stars, 247 00:15:20,520 --> 00:15:24,500 and we have obtained orbits for around 30 stars, 248 00:15:24,500 --> 00:15:26,490 and these stars go around the black hole 249 00:15:26,490 --> 00:15:28,763 just like the planets go around the sun. 250 00:15:30,300 --> 00:15:32,880 It was possible to follow the orbits of the stars 251 00:15:32,880 --> 00:15:35,980 by using adaptive optics on the Very Large Telescope, 252 00:15:35,980 --> 00:15:39,200 which allows us to look at the center of the Milky Way 253 00:15:39,200 --> 00:15:42,770 with the precision which is equivalent to seeing a coin 254 00:15:42,770 --> 00:15:44,833 at about 100 kilometer distance. 255 00:15:50,260 --> 00:15:52,550 - [Narrator] The center of the Milky Way contains 256 00:15:52,550 --> 00:15:56,150 yet another object, a cloud of gas. 257 00:15:56,150 --> 00:15:59,330 With a speed of eight million kilometers per hour, 258 00:15:59,330 --> 00:16:02,750 it will soon be swallowed up by the black hole. 259 00:16:02,750 --> 00:16:05,630 - The clouds consists mainly of hydrogen gas, 260 00:16:05,630 --> 00:16:07,970 gas which we see anyhow in the galactic center 261 00:16:07,970 --> 00:16:09,560 all over the place. 262 00:16:09,560 --> 00:16:11,250 This particular cloud weights, more or less, 263 00:16:11,250 --> 00:16:12,960 three times the mass of Earth, 264 00:16:12,960 --> 00:16:15,880 so it's a rather small and tiny blob only, 265 00:16:15,880 --> 00:16:18,700 but it glows very brightly in the light of the stars 266 00:16:18,700 --> 00:16:20,300 which are surrounding the cloud. 267 00:16:23,810 --> 00:16:25,850 The black hole, imagine it sitting here, 268 00:16:25,850 --> 00:16:27,510 has a tremendous gravitational force, 269 00:16:27,510 --> 00:16:29,620 and the cloud, as it comes in, 270 00:16:29,620 --> 00:16:31,700 it will be elongated and stretched. 271 00:16:31,700 --> 00:16:33,920 It will become, essentially like spaghetti. 272 00:16:33,920 --> 00:16:36,803 It will be elongated and falling into the black hole. 273 00:16:54,450 --> 00:16:56,730 - [Narrator] It borders on a paradox that here, 274 00:16:56,730 --> 00:16:58,210 of all places, 275 00:16:58,210 --> 00:17:01,340 in one of the least hospitable corners of the Earth, 276 00:17:01,340 --> 00:17:05,203 astronomers are searching for life on distant planets. 277 00:17:06,870 --> 00:17:10,780 But, does not the Atacama Desert, provide compelling proof 278 00:17:10,780 --> 00:17:13,190 that advanced life forms can flourish, 279 00:17:13,190 --> 00:17:15,143 even under extreme conditions? 280 00:17:16,660 --> 00:17:19,560 In the barren mountainous regions of the Andes, 281 00:17:19,560 --> 00:17:21,883 wild animals struggle to survive. 282 00:17:23,500 --> 00:17:25,580 A condor has been tracking its prey 283 00:17:25,580 --> 00:17:27,363 since the early morning hours, 284 00:17:32,660 --> 00:17:35,493 the desert fox gets wind of a potential meal, 285 00:17:38,460 --> 00:17:40,200 and the vicugnas, finally, 286 00:17:40,200 --> 00:17:42,730 are waiting to be shorn for their valuable wool. 287 00:18:00,410 --> 00:18:03,190 A lizard emerges from a rare pool of water 288 00:18:03,190 --> 00:18:05,353 to warm itself in the desert sun. 289 00:18:06,810 --> 00:18:09,913 The reptile is always on its guard against predators. 290 00:18:11,970 --> 00:18:14,540 Pink flamingos add a touch of color. 291 00:18:14,540 --> 00:18:16,450 With their characteristic beaks, 292 00:18:16,450 --> 00:18:19,050 they filter plankton from the water. 293 00:18:19,050 --> 00:18:20,540 And, with a bit of luck, 294 00:18:20,540 --> 00:18:23,293 they might also catch some small hermit crabs. 295 00:18:25,030 --> 00:18:29,240 For all the creatures here, water is essential. 296 00:18:29,240 --> 00:18:32,423 But it might take years for it to rain again. 297 00:18:36,660 --> 00:18:41,300 The first ESO facility was built in Chile in the 1960s. 298 00:18:41,300 --> 00:18:44,760 Since then, over two dozen telescopes have been installed 299 00:18:44,760 --> 00:18:46,783 at the La Silla Observatory. 300 00:18:59,020 --> 00:19:02,790 For a long time, the Swedish-ESO Submillimetre Telescope 301 00:19:02,790 --> 00:19:05,520 was the only telescope in the southern hemisphere 302 00:19:05,520 --> 00:19:07,993 capable of observing molecular clouds. 303 00:19:12,980 --> 00:19:16,250 The New Technology Telescope is the first large telescope 304 00:19:16,250 --> 00:19:19,053 to incorporate active and adaptive optics. 305 00:19:20,020 --> 00:19:22,580 When it was inaugurated in 1989, 306 00:19:22,580 --> 00:19:24,540 these were groundbreaking technologies 307 00:19:24,540 --> 00:19:26,953 in the field of celestial observation. 308 00:19:34,680 --> 00:19:37,310 TRAPPIST is dedicated to the study of comets 309 00:19:37,310 --> 00:19:38,700 in our solar system, 310 00:19:38,700 --> 00:19:41,373 as well as to the detection of exoplanets. 311 00:19:44,070 --> 00:19:47,600 The telescope is operated from a control room in Belgium. 312 00:19:47,600 --> 00:19:51,110 The name, TRAPPIST was chosen because Trappist Beer 313 00:19:51,110 --> 00:19:53,683 was the preferred drink of the Belgium astronomers. 314 00:19:59,120 --> 00:20:01,820 The Trappist monks hold the exclusive brewing rights 315 00:20:01,820 --> 00:20:03,463 for this royal barley drink. 316 00:20:08,680 --> 00:20:11,810 In 2017, there was cause for a toast, 317 00:20:11,810 --> 00:20:15,900 as astronomers announced the discovery of a new solar system 318 00:20:15,900 --> 00:20:19,363 with a record number of seven Earth-sized planets. 319 00:20:20,810 --> 00:20:23,070 The TRAPPIST telescope laid the foundation 320 00:20:23,070 --> 00:20:24,273 for this discovery. 321 00:20:26,240 --> 00:20:28,430 At least three of the rocky planets 322 00:20:28,430 --> 00:20:30,913 could be covered by oceans of water. 323 00:20:36,660 --> 00:20:39,330 Sky watching is not just about capturing 324 00:20:39,330 --> 00:20:44,330 images of distant worlds, if one wants to go into detail, 325 00:20:45,260 --> 00:20:47,740 one has to analyze the light of a star 326 00:20:47,740 --> 00:20:49,473 and study its composition. 327 00:20:50,880 --> 00:20:53,190 This approach, called spectography, 328 00:20:53,190 --> 00:20:56,070 is one of the most powerful tools astronomers have 329 00:20:56,070 --> 00:20:57,203 at their disposal. 330 00:20:58,800 --> 00:21:01,150 In order to be able to read the light, 331 00:21:01,150 --> 00:21:03,483 it must be broken down into colors. 332 00:21:04,730 --> 00:21:07,930 Every chemical substance leaves an imprint of dark lines 333 00:21:07,930 --> 00:21:09,790 in the light of a star. 334 00:21:09,790 --> 00:21:13,090 These absorption lines are the fingerprints of the elements, 335 00:21:13,090 --> 00:21:16,430 and, as such, form a unique pattern. 336 00:21:16,430 --> 00:21:20,400 Spectography thus helps us to gain an in-depth understanding 337 00:21:20,400 --> 00:21:22,143 of matter in outer space. 338 00:21:26,110 --> 00:21:28,270 The HARPS spectrograph is attached 339 00:21:28,270 --> 00:21:30,840 to the 3.6-meter ESO telescope. 340 00:21:30,840 --> 00:21:32,390 The instrument holds the record 341 00:21:32,390 --> 00:21:35,140 for the detection of exoplanets. 342 00:21:35,140 --> 00:21:37,990 - HARPS is absolutely a fascinating spectrograph 343 00:21:37,990 --> 00:21:41,560 with an extreme stability, it's a vacuum spectrometer, 344 00:21:41,560 --> 00:21:44,670 with the extreme stability on the long-term. 345 00:21:44,670 --> 00:21:48,654 So, at the present time, most of the low mass planets 346 00:21:48,654 --> 00:21:51,320 have been discovered by this instrument 347 00:21:51,320 --> 00:21:52,633 at La Silla in Chile. 348 00:21:53,750 --> 00:21:55,750 - [Narrator] HARPS can measure velocities 349 00:21:55,750 --> 00:21:58,650 of 3.5 kilometers per hour. 350 00:21:58,650 --> 00:22:00,300 That is equivalent to the speed 351 00:22:00,300 --> 00:22:02,563 of a very leisurely walk on Earth. 352 00:22:09,050 --> 00:22:12,810 - Most of the planet discovered today have been discovered 353 00:22:12,810 --> 00:22:17,420 just by the wobble of the velocity of a star, 354 00:22:17,420 --> 00:22:19,440 because you have the gravitational 355 00:22:19,440 --> 00:22:21,390 influence of the planet turning around, 356 00:22:22,350 --> 00:22:26,420 and evidently, less massive is a planet, 357 00:22:26,420 --> 00:22:28,513 more it's difficult to detect it. 358 00:22:34,680 --> 00:22:37,600 If the mass of the planet is large enough, 359 00:22:37,600 --> 00:22:40,367 like the mass of Jupiter or more massive, 360 00:22:40,367 --> 00:22:42,710 you have almost no choice. 361 00:22:42,710 --> 00:22:47,710 It should be a big ball of gas, hydrogen of helium. 362 00:22:49,590 --> 00:22:54,010 When we have planet in the range of Earth's mass, 363 00:22:54,010 --> 00:22:56,030 it's much more difficult. 364 00:22:56,030 --> 00:22:58,490 The nature of this object could be quite different. 365 00:22:58,490 --> 00:23:00,210 It could be a hotkey planet, 366 00:23:00,210 --> 00:23:03,800 it could be a big piece of ice, 367 00:23:03,800 --> 00:23:08,550 but if this planet migrate close to the star, 368 00:23:08,550 --> 00:23:10,570 we can have a notion of the surface, 369 00:23:10,570 --> 00:23:14,330 or it could be some kind of evaporate gas. 370 00:23:14,330 --> 00:23:16,980 So, it's much more difficult to be sure 371 00:23:16,980 --> 00:23:19,373 of the nature of this kind of low mass object. 372 00:23:21,340 --> 00:23:24,740 - [Narrator] In 1995, Professor Mayor and his team 373 00:23:24,740 --> 00:23:26,470 discovered the first exoplanet 374 00:23:26,470 --> 00:23:28,683 revolving around a sun-like star. 375 00:23:31,040 --> 00:23:33,970 Since then, the search for life on other planets 376 00:23:33,970 --> 00:23:36,653 has been the Holy Grail of astronomy. 377 00:23:38,140 --> 00:23:41,210 Until now, however, it has never been possible 378 00:23:41,210 --> 00:23:44,483 to provide evidence for life forms on an exoplanet. 379 00:23:46,630 --> 00:23:49,900 The planet must be located within the habitable zone. 380 00:23:49,900 --> 00:23:52,660 This zone is the narrow range in which a planet 381 00:23:52,660 --> 00:23:55,450 must be located in relation to its central star, 382 00:23:55,450 --> 00:23:58,803 in order for water to exist permanently in liquid form. 383 00:24:00,520 --> 00:24:02,310 If it is too close to the sun, 384 00:24:02,310 --> 00:24:04,853 it will be bombarded by deadly x-rays. 385 00:24:06,600 --> 00:24:08,900 If it is too far from its mother star, 386 00:24:08,900 --> 00:24:11,353 it will become a frozen desert of ice. 387 00:24:14,960 --> 00:24:18,730 Optical telescopes can not depict the surface of a planet, 388 00:24:18,730 --> 00:24:21,000 but radio telescopes listen for signals 389 00:24:21,000 --> 00:24:23,140 from alien civilizations 390 00:24:23,140 --> 00:24:26,853 in the hopes that the aliens are just as curious as we are. 391 00:24:30,670 --> 00:24:32,820 We could get lucky and find signs 392 00:24:32,820 --> 00:24:35,210 of a highly developed civilization. 393 00:24:35,210 --> 00:24:38,320 Perhaps a ring world, an artificial structure 394 00:24:38,320 --> 00:24:40,530 built around a star. 395 00:24:40,530 --> 00:24:43,573 But the chances for this are likely to be rather small. 396 00:24:48,610 --> 00:24:52,970 So far, there are more than 3,500 known exoplanets 397 00:24:52,970 --> 00:24:55,163 with new ones being added every day. 398 00:24:58,130 --> 00:25:01,030 It won't be long before we will be able to say 399 00:25:01,030 --> 00:25:03,653 we are not alone in the universe. 400 00:25:08,320 --> 00:25:10,530 Could it be that our cosmic neighbors 401 00:25:10,530 --> 00:25:12,333 are not even that far away from us? 402 00:25:20,410 --> 00:25:23,710 Measurement data indicates that the nearest star to Earth, 403 00:25:23,710 --> 00:25:28,120 Proxima Centauri, is orbited by a habitable planet. 404 00:25:28,120 --> 00:25:30,970 But since red dwarfs like Proxima Centauri 405 00:25:30,970 --> 00:25:32,670 are changeable stars, 406 00:25:32,670 --> 00:25:34,883 they can mimic the appearance of a planet. 407 00:25:39,020 --> 00:25:40,950 In order to find out more, 408 00:25:40,950 --> 00:25:44,610 a global observation campaign has been launched. 409 00:25:44,610 --> 00:25:46,523 - I, together with my colleges, 410 00:25:47,640 --> 00:25:50,713 are representing the Pale Red Dot Collaboration, 411 00:25:51,560 --> 00:25:55,570 a project that joins 31 scientists 412 00:25:55,570 --> 00:25:57,540 of eight countries around the world, 413 00:25:57,540 --> 00:26:00,730 to study and search for exoplanets 414 00:26:00,730 --> 00:26:03,610 around our closest neighbor, Proxima Centauri. 415 00:26:03,610 --> 00:26:07,480 The star revealed a signal which was significant 416 00:26:07,480 --> 00:26:11,100 but was not unique, and we were not sure, 417 00:26:11,100 --> 00:26:16,100 then, if that signal was due to magnetic activity. 418 00:26:16,530 --> 00:26:19,440 That's why we started the Pale Red Dot Campaigns. 419 00:26:19,440 --> 00:26:22,653 It has finished, and it finished successfully. 420 00:26:29,140 --> 00:26:32,080 - What we are doing here is basically measuring 421 00:26:32,080 --> 00:26:36,080 the motion of this star over a few orbital periods, 422 00:26:36,080 --> 00:26:39,210 or a few periods of the signal that we thought 423 00:26:39,210 --> 00:26:40,170 was in the data. 424 00:26:40,170 --> 00:26:42,170 For this we are using the HARPS spectrograph, 425 00:26:42,170 --> 00:26:43,720 and also we are looking at the star 426 00:26:43,720 --> 00:26:45,870 with photomatic telescopes that basically tells us 427 00:26:45,870 --> 00:26:48,580 if the star is flaring, if there is activity, 428 00:26:48,580 --> 00:26:49,580 if the star is rotating, 429 00:26:49,580 --> 00:26:52,680 or is something that could be causing this signal that 430 00:26:52,680 --> 00:26:54,960 we saw in the previous data 431 00:26:54,960 --> 00:26:56,330 and we are trying to confirm now. 432 00:26:56,330 --> 00:27:00,580 We conclude that Proxima Centuri is orbited by a planet 433 00:27:00,580 --> 00:27:02,783 at an 11.2 days period. 434 00:27:04,920 --> 00:27:06,660 We can estimate that the mass of the planet 435 00:27:06,660 --> 00:27:09,360 is around 1.3 Earth masses, 436 00:27:09,360 --> 00:27:11,440 and that's basically the information that we have. 437 00:27:11,440 --> 00:27:14,320 From that we can use Kepler's Law to infer the distance 438 00:27:14,320 --> 00:27:16,770 between the planet and the star, and for example, 439 00:27:16,770 --> 00:27:19,860 its temperature, and this is what my colleague, Ansgar, 440 00:27:19,860 --> 00:27:21,143 will tell you about. 441 00:27:28,930 --> 00:27:30,560 - Knowing the temperature of the star, 442 00:27:30,560 --> 00:27:33,420 this means that the temperature on the planet 443 00:27:33,420 --> 00:27:35,440 is very similar to the one on Earth, 444 00:27:35,440 --> 00:27:37,870 assuming the planet also has an atmosphere. 445 00:27:37,870 --> 00:27:39,610 We also know that the mass of the planet 446 00:27:39,610 --> 00:27:41,690 is 1.3 Earth masses. 447 00:27:41,690 --> 00:27:42,700 That's the minimum mass, 448 00:27:42,700 --> 00:27:45,730 but it's quite unlikely that it's a lot higher than this. 449 00:27:45,730 --> 00:27:47,880 From this, and simulations, 450 00:27:47,880 --> 00:27:50,030 and other observations from other missions, 451 00:27:50,030 --> 00:27:54,850 we can infer that this planet actually has a surface. 452 00:27:54,850 --> 00:27:57,000 And if it has a surface, if it has an atmosphere, 453 00:27:57,000 --> 00:27:59,260 and if it has water, it is quite likely 454 00:27:59,260 --> 00:28:01,450 that it is very similar to Earth. 455 00:28:01,450 --> 00:28:03,530 Now, does this planet have an atmosphere? 456 00:28:03,530 --> 00:28:04,470 Does it have water? 457 00:28:04,470 --> 00:28:05,850 We don't know. 458 00:28:05,850 --> 00:28:08,030 But it is not excluded. 459 00:28:08,030 --> 00:28:10,780 Different models of planet formation and planet evolution 460 00:28:10,780 --> 00:28:14,220 tell us that there are scenarios that can end up 461 00:28:14,220 --> 00:28:17,490 with a planet with an atmosphere and with water. 462 00:28:17,490 --> 00:28:19,720 So, it is not unlikely that this planet 463 00:28:19,720 --> 00:28:21,900 is quite similar to Earth. 464 00:28:21,900 --> 00:28:24,627 The spectacular finding about this of course is that 465 00:28:24,627 --> 00:28:28,690 the system is so close to our Earth and solar system, 466 00:28:28,690 --> 00:28:30,450 and in the next generations we will learn a lot 467 00:28:30,450 --> 00:28:33,453 about this system because Proxima B is our neighbor. 468 00:28:37,530 --> 00:28:39,120 - [Narrator] The Breakthrough Initiatives 469 00:28:39,120 --> 00:28:42,860 have established a research program called Starshot. 470 00:28:42,860 --> 00:28:45,560 The goal of the program is to send a space probe 471 00:28:45,560 --> 00:28:47,750 to our neighboring star. 472 00:28:47,750 --> 00:28:50,360 On the board of directors are the astrophysicist 473 00:28:50,360 --> 00:28:53,820 Stephen Hawking, the founder of the Breakthrough Initiatives 474 00:28:53,820 --> 00:28:56,770 and internet billionaire, Yuri Milner, 475 00:28:56,770 --> 00:28:59,673 as well as Facebook founder, Mark Zuckerberg. 476 00:29:03,110 --> 00:29:05,100 With the Breakthrough Initiatives, 477 00:29:05,100 --> 00:29:08,300 ESO has signed an agreement to finance the modification 478 00:29:08,300 --> 00:29:10,540 of the VLT instruments. 479 00:29:10,540 --> 00:29:14,570 This will enable a more precise search of Proxima Centuri 480 00:29:14,570 --> 00:29:17,930 for habitable planets, and a more exact calculation 481 00:29:17,930 --> 00:29:20,123 of the flight paths for space probes. 482 00:29:23,270 --> 00:29:26,120 The Starshot concept revolves around the installation 483 00:29:26,120 --> 00:29:27,810 of laser cannons on Earth, 484 00:29:27,810 --> 00:29:30,470 which are used to power a light sail spacecraft 485 00:29:30,470 --> 00:29:32,453 that is deployed in outer space. 486 00:29:36,320 --> 00:29:38,540 The laser cannons combine their light output 487 00:29:38,540 --> 00:29:40,863 into a 100 gigawatt laser beam. 488 00:29:44,110 --> 00:29:47,170 The highly reflected sail is irradiated over a distance 489 00:29:47,170 --> 00:29:50,370 of two million kilometers for a period of 10 minutes, 490 00:29:50,370 --> 00:29:53,433 until a speed of 1/5 the speed of light is reached. 491 00:29:55,180 --> 00:29:58,660 Once the spacecraft reaches Proxima Centuri, 492 00:29:58,660 --> 00:30:02,020 after a 20-year journey, it slows down 493 00:30:02,020 --> 00:30:05,103 with the help of the star's gravitational force. 494 00:30:09,130 --> 00:30:12,363 This allows a flyby of the planet Proxima B, 495 00:30:13,490 --> 00:30:15,750 while the probe collects atmospheric data 496 00:30:15,750 --> 00:30:17,393 and images of the planet. 497 00:30:18,560 --> 00:30:21,410 The spacecraft then sends the entire data package 498 00:30:21,410 --> 00:30:22,323 back to Earth. 499 00:30:26,540 --> 00:30:29,080 As the laser signal is transmitted through space 500 00:30:29,080 --> 00:30:31,750 at the speed of light, the data package arrives 501 00:30:31,750 --> 00:30:35,113 at the receiving station after only 4.3 years. 502 00:30:38,025 --> 00:30:40,867 And the mysteries of Proxima B can be solved. 503 00:30:46,880 --> 00:30:50,123 Another night of observation begins in La Silla. 504 00:30:53,280 --> 00:30:55,490 For the astronomers in the control room, 505 00:30:55,490 --> 00:30:57,660 the work routine begins. 506 00:30:57,660 --> 00:31:00,300 Soon, however, an event in outer space 507 00:31:00,300 --> 00:31:03,233 will capture the attention of the observation team. 508 00:31:05,180 --> 00:31:08,733 At the end of its lifespan, a massive star collapses. 509 00:31:11,540 --> 00:31:14,340 This triggers an enormous gamma ray burst. 510 00:31:14,340 --> 00:31:16,640 Particles and hard gamma radiation 511 00:31:16,640 --> 00:31:18,513 are emitted from the dying star. 512 00:31:32,400 --> 00:31:34,590 Such bright bursts of gamma rays 513 00:31:34,590 --> 00:31:37,950 are also caused by neutron stars, or supernovae, 514 00:31:37,950 --> 00:31:39,823 colliding with a black hole. 515 00:31:47,100 --> 00:31:51,430 NASA's Swift satellite detects a gamma ray burst in space, 516 00:31:51,430 --> 00:31:52,790 and transmits the position 517 00:31:52,790 --> 00:31:55,053 to the ground-based telescopes on Earth. 518 00:31:59,760 --> 00:32:03,033 The time of peace and quiet at La Silla is over. 519 00:32:04,840 --> 00:32:08,210 Without human intervention, three robotic telescopes 520 00:32:08,210 --> 00:32:11,063 begin their observation programs within minutes. 521 00:32:14,600 --> 00:32:16,670 Gamma ray bursts are so bright 522 00:32:16,670 --> 00:32:19,700 that they can outshine an entire galaxy, 523 00:32:19,700 --> 00:32:23,110 and yet, the observation must take place immediately, 524 00:32:23,110 --> 00:32:26,223 as the afterglow lasts only a few hours. 525 00:32:29,370 --> 00:32:31,680 In the parallel observatory as well, 526 00:32:31,680 --> 00:32:34,493 the gamma ray bursts are being monitored closely. 527 00:32:37,400 --> 00:32:41,203 The core of a planetary nebula consists of two white dwarfs. 528 00:32:42,900 --> 00:32:45,330 The spiral orbits gets closer and closer 529 00:32:45,330 --> 00:32:49,573 until the stars merge, and a supernova comes into being. 530 00:32:51,660 --> 00:32:55,793 The gamma ray burst puts the VLT into rapid response mode. 531 00:32:59,170 --> 00:33:01,670 On the control panel the telescope operators 532 00:33:01,670 --> 00:33:04,503 ensure that the VLT can be safely moved. 533 00:33:07,090 --> 00:33:09,540 The telescope then carries out the observation 534 00:33:09,540 --> 00:33:10,853 fully automatically. 535 00:33:18,870 --> 00:33:21,950 This allows the astronomers to observe the gamma ray bursts 536 00:33:21,950 --> 00:33:23,833 within minutes of their discovery. 537 00:33:24,860 --> 00:33:28,320 With such short-lived events, the length of time that passes 538 00:33:28,320 --> 00:33:31,410 determines whether one can gather high-quality data 539 00:33:31,410 --> 00:33:32,857 or no data at all. 540 00:33:43,758 --> 00:33:45,620 The Chajnantor high plateau, 541 00:33:45,620 --> 00:33:49,180 with an elevation of 5,000 meters above sea level, 542 00:33:49,180 --> 00:33:51,543 is the highest ESO telescope site. 543 00:33:53,070 --> 00:33:57,170 ALMA, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, 544 00:33:57,170 --> 00:33:59,260 allows the observation of wavelengths 545 00:33:59,260 --> 00:34:00,880 of around one millimeter, 546 00:34:00,880 --> 00:34:05,150 which lie between then infrared and radio wave ranges. 547 00:34:05,150 --> 00:34:09,010 The extreme elevation opens a window onto the universe that, 548 00:34:09,010 --> 00:34:12,410 until now, had not been visible from lower regions, 549 00:34:12,410 --> 00:34:14,760 where water vapor literally swallows up 550 00:34:14,760 --> 00:34:16,293 the millimeter wave lengths. 551 00:34:18,810 --> 00:34:22,740 The Operations Support Facility, or OSF for short, 552 00:34:22,740 --> 00:34:25,773 is where the antenna components are assembled and serviced. 553 00:34:32,760 --> 00:34:35,550 ALMA is the result of international cooperation 554 00:34:35,550 --> 00:34:37,760 between the European ESO partners, 555 00:34:37,760 --> 00:34:39,690 the United States and Canada, 556 00:34:39,690 --> 00:34:43,123 as well as Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. 557 00:34:46,150 --> 00:34:48,830 The radio telescopes must be solidly built 558 00:34:48,830 --> 00:34:50,690 to withstand temperatures of between 559 00:34:50,690 --> 00:34:53,880 - 20 and +20 degrees Celsius, 560 00:34:53,880 --> 00:34:57,573 fierce altitude winds and intense solar radiation. 561 00:34:59,460 --> 00:35:01,990 The large, metallic, reflective dishes 562 00:35:01,990 --> 00:35:06,170 are up to 12 meters in size, and are adjusted so precisely, 563 00:35:06,170 --> 00:35:11,170 that their maximum in precision is less than 25 micrometers. 564 00:35:11,190 --> 00:35:14,083 That is thinner than a sheet of paper. 565 00:35:21,750 --> 00:35:25,810 It took over 10 years for the ALMA project to be realized. 566 00:35:25,810 --> 00:35:28,220 The official commissioning of the ALMA facility 567 00:35:28,220 --> 00:35:32,740 in March, 2013, gets an enthusiastic welcome from space. 568 00:35:32,740 --> 00:35:35,140 - Greetings from the International Space Station. 569 00:35:35,140 --> 00:35:38,050 I'm Expedition 34 Flight Engineer Tom Marshburn 570 00:35:38,050 --> 00:35:40,050 with my crewmate Chris Hadfield 571 00:35:40,050 --> 00:35:41,633 of the Canadian Space Agency. 572 00:35:42,480 --> 00:35:45,220 As we look down upon a magnificent Atacama Desert, 573 00:35:45,220 --> 00:35:46,980 high in the Chilean Andes, 574 00:35:46,980 --> 00:35:49,100 we can see the result of an immense effort 575 00:35:49,100 --> 00:35:50,220 by the nations of the world 576 00:35:50,220 --> 00:35:52,800 to study the universe in new ways. 577 00:35:52,800 --> 00:35:55,700 Today, a giant telescope called ALMA, 578 00:35:55,700 --> 00:35:58,660 the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, 579 00:35:58,660 --> 00:36:00,270 is being inaugurated. 580 00:36:00,270 --> 00:36:02,400 Comprised of 66 large radio dishes, 581 00:36:02,400 --> 00:36:05,060 spread across miles of high-altitude desert, 582 00:36:05,060 --> 00:36:07,130 ALMA is opening a new frontier. 583 00:36:07,130 --> 00:36:09,700 Millimeter and submillimeter wave length light from space 584 00:36:09,700 --> 00:36:11,350 carries precious information 585 00:36:11,350 --> 00:36:13,210 about the formation and evolution of galaxies, 586 00:36:13,210 --> 00:36:15,050 stars, planetary systems, 587 00:36:15,050 --> 00:36:17,273 and even the molecularly precursors of life. 588 00:36:18,330 --> 00:36:20,360 - Together with the National Science Foundation, 589 00:36:20,360 --> 00:36:24,540 Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array, NASA's Hubble Telescope, 590 00:36:24,540 --> 00:36:26,480 the future James Webb Space Telescope, 591 00:36:26,480 --> 00:36:28,600 ALMA will enable the exploration of the universe 592 00:36:28,600 --> 00:36:30,610 with unprecedented power. 593 00:36:30,610 --> 00:36:33,580 We congratulate the scientific communities of North America 594 00:36:33,580 --> 00:36:36,690 and Europe, and East Asia, on today's achievement. 595 00:36:36,690 --> 00:36:39,773 All the very best to you, and enjoy your new discoveries. 596 00:36:44,390 --> 00:36:46,650 - [Narrator] The ALMA Array did not take long 597 00:36:46,650 --> 00:36:49,513 to produce the first spectacular discoveries. 598 00:36:50,950 --> 00:36:53,130 Using millimeter radiation, 599 00:36:53,130 --> 00:36:56,510 ALMA makes celestial bodies visible that have a temperature 600 00:36:56,510 --> 00:36:59,570 of only a few degrees above absolute zero, 601 00:36:59,570 --> 00:37:03,473 which is -273 degrees Celsius. 602 00:37:07,640 --> 00:37:10,710 Among the first images captured by ALMA 603 00:37:10,710 --> 00:37:15,203 are the gas clouds in the radio galaxy Centaurus A. 604 00:37:16,320 --> 00:37:18,880 For the first time, the cool gas clouds 605 00:37:18,880 --> 00:37:21,193 of the neighboring galaxy become visible. 606 00:37:25,760 --> 00:37:29,630 The 66 antennas are spread out across 16 kilometers 607 00:37:29,630 --> 00:37:31,730 on the Chajnantor Plateau. 608 00:37:31,730 --> 00:37:34,860 The result is an enormous radio telescope, 609 00:37:34,860 --> 00:37:37,360 with which a golf ball could be recognized 610 00:37:37,360 --> 00:37:39,913 at a distance of 15 kilometers. 611 00:37:44,550 --> 00:37:48,530 At a breathtaking altitude of 5,000 meters above sea-level, 612 00:37:48,530 --> 00:37:52,030 the ALMA Operations Site is the highest high-tech building 613 00:37:52,030 --> 00:37:53,063 on our planet. 614 00:37:55,710 --> 00:37:58,870 It houses the supercomputer called the Correlator, 615 00:37:58,870 --> 00:38:02,323 that processes the signals of all the individual antennas. 616 00:38:04,730 --> 00:38:07,600 At 5,000 meters, the air is so thin 617 00:38:07,600 --> 00:38:09,540 that twice the normal airflow is needed 618 00:38:09,540 --> 00:38:10,953 to cool the hard drives. 619 00:38:15,180 --> 00:38:18,380 The world's highest elevation supercomputer 620 00:38:18,380 --> 00:38:21,890 combines 134 million processors, 621 00:38:21,890 --> 00:38:26,323 and manages 17 quadrillion calculations per second. 622 00:38:29,130 --> 00:38:32,470 The low air pressure also makes it impossible 623 00:38:32,470 --> 00:38:35,280 to use conventional rotating hard drives. 624 00:38:35,280 --> 00:38:39,090 In addition, the Correlator must also be able to withstand 625 00:38:39,090 --> 00:38:42,253 the earthquakes that frequently occur in Chile. 626 00:39:13,020 --> 00:39:15,710 One focus of ALMA's observation activities 627 00:39:15,710 --> 00:39:18,400 is on protoplanetary disks. 628 00:39:18,400 --> 00:39:22,220 This is a region around a star where new planets are formed. 629 00:39:22,220 --> 00:39:24,310 The picture shows such a disk 630 00:39:24,310 --> 00:39:27,263 around the young star, HL Tauri. 631 00:39:28,960 --> 00:39:31,930 The newly-forming planets tear apart the gas disks 632 00:39:31,930 --> 00:39:33,593 surrounding the host star. 633 00:39:34,470 --> 00:39:37,460 ALMA makes this important evolutionary step 634 00:39:37,460 --> 00:39:39,433 in the creation of planets visible. 635 00:39:47,750 --> 00:39:50,100 Within the protoplanetary disks, 636 00:39:50,100 --> 00:39:52,840 lumps of rock form out of dust particles, 637 00:39:52,840 --> 00:39:57,393 building material for future asteroids, comets, and planets. 638 00:40:05,100 --> 00:40:06,960 Another of ALMA's capabilities 639 00:40:06,960 --> 00:40:09,600 is the detection of molecular structures. 640 00:40:09,600 --> 00:40:12,940 Sugar molecules have formed around the sun-like double star 641 00:40:12,940 --> 00:40:17,690 IRAS 16293-2422. 642 00:40:17,690 --> 00:40:19,940 Here, the building blocks of life are present 643 00:40:19,940 --> 00:40:22,640 in the right place and at the right time, 644 00:40:22,640 --> 00:40:24,890 allowing them to become part of the planets 645 00:40:24,890 --> 00:40:26,413 forming around the stars. 646 00:40:33,260 --> 00:40:36,900 In the disks surrounding the star TW Hydrae, 647 00:40:36,900 --> 00:40:40,240 ALMA detects methyl alcohol molecules, 648 00:40:40,240 --> 00:40:43,340 another basis for future lifeforms 649 00:40:43,340 --> 00:40:46,683 that has been discovered in a protoplanetary disk. 650 00:41:00,340 --> 00:41:04,450 How do you actually transport the 100-ton ALMA antennas 651 00:41:04,450 --> 00:41:08,230 from the OSF base camp at 2,900 meters 652 00:41:08,230 --> 00:41:10,590 up to the Chajnantor high plateau 653 00:41:10,590 --> 00:41:12,893 at an elevation of 5,000 meters? 654 00:41:15,670 --> 00:41:20,140 Two powerhouses named Otto and Lore go into action. 655 00:41:20,140 --> 00:41:22,120 The ALMA transport vehicles 656 00:41:22,120 --> 00:41:24,730 are burly wonders of engineering, 657 00:41:24,730 --> 00:41:29,103 20 meters long, 10 meters wide, and six meters high. 658 00:41:30,170 --> 00:41:33,350 The heavy-duty transporters have 28 wheels, 659 00:41:33,350 --> 00:41:36,390 each functioning as a pair which can rotate 660 00:41:36,390 --> 00:41:39,233 independently of one another in any direction. 661 00:41:41,630 --> 00:41:43,970 A 28-kilometer trip is required 662 00:41:43,970 --> 00:41:46,093 to reach the Chajnantor Plateau. 663 00:41:51,310 --> 00:41:54,450 At a maximum speed of 12 kilometers per hour, 664 00:41:54,450 --> 00:41:57,910 an elevation difference of around 2,100 meters 665 00:41:57,910 --> 00:41:59,323 has to be overcome. 666 00:42:02,490 --> 00:42:05,450 The monster truck is equipped with a suspension system 667 00:42:05,450 --> 00:42:07,340 that can compensate at any time 668 00:42:07,340 --> 00:42:09,800 for the unevenness of the dirt roads. 669 00:42:09,800 --> 00:42:11,740 With increasing altitude, 670 00:42:11,740 --> 00:42:16,320 the power of the 700 horsepower engine drops dramatically. 671 00:42:16,320 --> 00:42:19,993 The reason for this is the low oxygen content in the air. 672 00:42:23,310 --> 00:42:26,633 After nearly three hours, the plateau is reached. 673 00:42:27,500 --> 00:42:30,190 A remote control is used to externally control 674 00:42:30,190 --> 00:42:31,960 the heavy duty transporter 675 00:42:31,960 --> 00:42:34,023 until the anchor place is reached. 676 00:42:44,370 --> 00:42:47,210 Carefully, with millimeter precision, 677 00:42:47,210 --> 00:42:50,427 the sensitive mirror is set down on the baseplate. 678 00:43:01,770 --> 00:43:04,440 The transport team is rewarded for their effort 679 00:43:04,440 --> 00:43:06,053 with a beautiful dusk. 680 00:43:54,270 --> 00:43:57,800 There is a striking similarity between the surface of Mars 681 00:43:57,800 --> 00:43:59,933 and the terrain of the Atacama Desert. 682 00:44:00,950 --> 00:44:03,910 This natural simulation terrain is ideal 683 00:44:03,910 --> 00:44:06,313 for the testing of Mars rover vehicles. 684 00:44:08,580 --> 00:44:12,763 The Atacama Desert is nearly as dry as the red planet. 685 00:44:13,710 --> 00:44:17,270 On average, less than two liters of rain per square meter 686 00:44:17,270 --> 00:44:19,343 fall in the high Andes per year. 687 00:44:21,060 --> 00:44:23,630 These are typical desert conditions. 688 00:44:23,630 --> 00:44:26,340 Ulta-violet radiation levels are twice as high 689 00:44:26,340 --> 00:44:27,963 as at normal elevation. 690 00:44:29,430 --> 00:44:32,830 During the day, the thermometer reaches 30 degrees Celsius 691 00:44:32,830 --> 00:44:36,393 while at night, it drops to a frigid -15 degrees. 692 00:44:39,180 --> 00:44:40,740 Due to the arid climate, 693 00:44:40,740 --> 00:44:43,110 only a few species can survive here, 694 00:44:43,110 --> 00:44:46,640 such as the fescue bush, which is able to cover the ground 695 00:44:46,640 --> 00:44:50,030 during the dry season as well. 696 00:44:50,030 --> 00:44:53,640 The giant cacti that can grow up to nine meters in height 697 00:44:53,640 --> 00:44:57,853 are also able to survive despite the scarcity of water. 698 00:45:03,090 --> 00:45:06,960 Desert grass is another extremely robust plant species 699 00:45:06,960 --> 00:45:09,223 that thrives in the high desert climate. 700 00:45:12,940 --> 00:45:17,213 But then, something completely extraordinary happens. 701 00:45:20,856 --> 00:45:23,856 (thunder crackling) 702 00:45:28,340 --> 00:45:32,673 Overnight, the desert explodes in a sea of color. 703 00:45:36,520 --> 00:45:40,030 For several weeks, the plants are in full bloom, 704 00:45:40,030 --> 00:45:42,120 conquering what had, until then, 705 00:45:42,120 --> 00:45:45,403 been an extremely inhospitable corner of the globe. 706 00:46:02,700 --> 00:46:06,330 If such magnificent flora can bloom with so little water 707 00:46:06,330 --> 00:46:09,250 in the barren wasteland of the Atacama Desert, 708 00:46:09,250 --> 00:46:13,070 couldn't this example encourage us humans to one day 709 00:46:13,070 --> 00:46:17,483 turn the desert planet of Mars into a habitable blue world? 710 00:46:35,900 --> 00:46:39,420 The 3,000 meter high summit of the Cerro Armazones 711 00:46:39,420 --> 00:46:41,320 is the future home of the European 712 00:46:41,320 --> 00:46:45,223 Extremely Large Telescope, or EELT for short. 713 00:46:46,960 --> 00:46:49,790 The leveling of the mountain is the first milestone 714 00:46:49,790 --> 00:46:51,860 for the world's largest telescope, 715 00:46:51,860 --> 00:46:53,790 which will be able to make observations 716 00:46:53,790 --> 00:46:56,773 in both optical and infrared ranges. 717 00:47:00,220 --> 00:47:05,220 The first construction phase of the EELT began in 2014. 718 00:47:05,470 --> 00:47:07,090 Construction costs alone 719 00:47:07,090 --> 00:47:10,113 amount to approximately one billion Euros. 720 00:47:12,830 --> 00:47:15,070 The countdown is running. 721 00:47:15,070 --> 00:47:18,380 Blast experts are laying the foundation for a new era 722 00:47:18,380 --> 00:47:20,363 in the history of astronomy. 723 00:47:30,447 --> 00:47:34,364 (speaking in foreign language) 724 00:47:40,464 --> 00:47:42,797 (exploding) 725 00:47:52,109 --> 00:47:56,109 Today's telescope domes are dwarfed by the EELT. 726 00:47:57,180 --> 00:48:01,823 The rotating 85-meter dome alone weights 5,000 tons, 727 00:48:03,530 --> 00:48:06,540 and the list of superlatives goes on. 728 00:48:06,540 --> 00:48:09,300 It collects 13 times more light 729 00:48:09,300 --> 00:48:12,410 than any other optical telescope in use today. 730 00:48:12,410 --> 00:48:14,720 This is made possible by the gigantic 731 00:48:14,720 --> 00:48:17,853 39-meter-diameter primary mirror. 732 00:48:18,760 --> 00:48:22,590 The light that is captured then passes across five mirrors, 733 00:48:22,590 --> 00:48:25,683 thus enabling a relatively compact design. 734 00:48:29,220 --> 00:48:31,840 The new telescope design includes a system 735 00:48:31,840 --> 00:48:34,610 of adaptive optics that allows for the tracking 736 00:48:34,610 --> 00:48:37,083 of four lodestars at the same time. 737 00:48:38,330 --> 00:48:41,430 The primary mirror is not made of one piece, 738 00:48:41,430 --> 00:48:46,240 but is constructed out of 798 hexagonal mirror segments. 739 00:48:46,240 --> 00:48:49,580 Each segment has a diameter of 1.4 meters, 740 00:48:49,580 --> 00:48:51,863 and is only 50 millimeters thick. 741 00:48:54,930 --> 00:48:58,720 In an assembly facility at ESO in Munich, Garching, 742 00:48:58,720 --> 00:49:01,610 engineers test the interplay of mirror segments 743 00:49:01,610 --> 00:49:02,833 on a prototype. 744 00:49:07,300 --> 00:49:11,100 After it goes into operation in the year 2024, 745 00:49:11,100 --> 00:49:14,540 the EELT will begin to tackle some of the greatest 746 00:49:14,540 --> 00:49:16,833 scientific challenges of our time. 747 00:49:19,360 --> 00:49:22,480 Perhaps it will air the secrets of dark matter 748 00:49:22,480 --> 00:49:23,973 and of dark energy. 749 00:49:27,790 --> 00:49:31,890 The EELT will capture images of comets and planets 750 00:49:31,890 --> 00:49:35,870 within young star systems and will analyze its atmospheres, 751 00:49:35,870 --> 00:49:38,753 always in search of traces of life. 752 00:49:46,010 --> 00:49:48,780 The big eye in the skies will live the veil 753 00:49:48,780 --> 00:49:51,410 left by remnants of supernovae, 754 00:49:51,410 --> 00:49:54,300 thereby contributing to a better understanding 755 00:49:54,300 --> 00:49:56,933 of the colossal star explosions. 756 00:50:04,130 --> 00:50:07,370 The telescope will also make fundamental contributions 757 00:50:07,370 --> 00:50:10,480 to cosmology by providing us with insights 758 00:50:10,480 --> 00:50:13,093 into the intricate structures of galaxies. 759 00:50:16,400 --> 00:50:18,520 It will gather important data 760 00:50:18,520 --> 00:50:21,060 about the expansion of the universe, 761 00:50:21,060 --> 00:50:23,140 its gravitational forces, 762 00:50:23,140 --> 00:50:27,483 as well as the formation of new stars and black holes. 763 00:50:32,400 --> 00:50:37,400 At the end of our cosmic journey, one thing is certain, 764 00:50:37,630 --> 00:50:40,793 we should always expect the unexpected. 765 00:50:42,170 --> 00:50:46,400 Out in the universe, surprising discoveries await us 766 00:50:46,400 --> 00:50:50,543 that cannot be foreseen from today's perspective. 767 00:50:52,169 --> 00:50:54,919 (dramatic music) 59059

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