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Black holes ...
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long considered the bullies of the cosmos,
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but are they really so bad?
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Black holes aren't violent. They are elegant.
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They're incredibly powerful objects,
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but they're beautifully simple.
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Simple but unpredictable.
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Black holes rip planets to shreds,
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but they also give birth to stars.
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Black holes are like the ultimate
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recycling-trash-bin combination.
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They build galaxies
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and may have lit up the dark infant universe.
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It's one of the biggest changes that happened.
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Someone switched the lights on and transforms our universe.
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They come in all sizes,
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from microscopic to ultramassive,
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controlling the fate of everything around them.
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The story of the universe and how it's arranged
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is the story of black holes.
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Black holes are the master architects of the universe,
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and without them, we would not exist.
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captions paid for by discovery communications
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Black holes ...
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we're riveted by their destructive power.
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Black holes are dangerous.
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Black holes are hazards.
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Black holes are not friendly for their environments.
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There's just no good end to anything
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that falls into a black hole.
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Perhaps one of the most frightening objects
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in the universe.
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But what exactly are these scary objects?
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Black holes are created when you get enough matter
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in a small region of space.
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This happens when a massive star dies
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and collapses in on itself...
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...a supernova.
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A black hole is the ultimate consequence of gravity.
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It's an object that has so much mass
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crushed into such a small space that its escape velocity
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becomes greater than the speed of light.
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Sutter: They are a one-way street.
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You go in.
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Nothing escapes, not even light.
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But do black holes really deserve their bad rap?
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In some ways, I think we set up black holes
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to be more villains than they actually are.
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Black holes suffer a bit of a p.R. Problem.
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I think they're a lot more menacing in science fiction
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and popular media than they really are.
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There are trillions of galaxies in the known universe.
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And most of them have a supermassive black hole
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at their center.
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These monsters are millions of times the mass of our sun.
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Their immense gravity can send stars flying.
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They're instrumental in choreographing
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the dance of stars in their vicinity.
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Supermassive black holes shoot out torrents
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of lethal radiation and violent cosmic winds
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and gobble up anything that comes close.
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Now scientists are beginning to realize these cosmic giants
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may also have a creative side.
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Most people think of black holes
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as being like giant vacuum cleaners in space,
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and basically everything falls into them,
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but that's not actually the case.
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They're better thought of as the engines of cosmic change.
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Natarajan: Although black holes are the end states of stars,
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they can actually influence the formation of stars,
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as well, in a bunch of different ways.
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A galaxy's job is to make stars,
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but uncontrolled star growth isn't healthy.
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Too many stars can drain a galaxy's gas supply.
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Black holes are very important.
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It appears that galaxy evolution is tied to black-hole evolution.
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We don't know exactly how yet,
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but the marriage appears certain.
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One idea is that supermassive black holes
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act as cosmic control mechanisms.
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Black holes can act like a thermostat in your house.
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If your house gets too hot,
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the thermostat will kick on the air conditioner,
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and if it gets too cold, it'll kick on the heater.
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Black holes do the same things for galaxies.
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Supermassive black holes regulate star formation
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by pulling gas in and shooting it back out into the galaxy.
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When these black holes are consuming matter,
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they're drawing matter into themselves,
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but they're also spewing stuff out.
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Basically, black holes eat like little babies ...
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very sloppily,
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so a lot of what they eat comes flying back out again.
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They eat stars. They eat planets.
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But most often, they eat giant clouds of gas.
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The black hole drags gas and dust
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into an accretion disk around it.
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This disk spins faster and faster.
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Magnetic energy builds up.
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With the accretion disk swirling around the black hole,
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there are also magnetic fields that are going on.
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The material is moving so rapidly
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that the magnetic field sort of winds up, coils up,
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and forms a vortex like a tornado.
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Astronomers call them jets.
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these jets propagate outward like freight trains
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plowing through the galaxy
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over hundreds and thousands of light-years.
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These are like death rays.
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The jets disrupt the star-forming gas clouds,
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limiting excess star formation in the main body of the galaxy,
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but in the very outer reaches of the galaxy,
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they can spark star birth.
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Things are more gentle out there.
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You're not as close to the energetic heart,
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so stars, planets, and life can form out there
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partially because of the material
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that the black hole has moved out there.
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Natarajan: So black holes can have outsize influence
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on the regions that they inhabit.
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Right around them, they can prevent the formation of stars
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whereas, on very, very large scales,
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they can actually instigate the formation of stars.
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2018 ... black holes hit the front page.
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scientists discovered black holes gobbling up gas
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so fast that they seem to be outgrowing their host galaxies.
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It naturally makes the question come up ...
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how big can a black hole get?
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Now we have the answer.
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They can reach size triple-xl,
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becoming ultramassive black holes.
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stricker: Ultramassive black holes are so cool
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because it's just mind-boggling
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that black holes so large can exist.
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Ultramassive black holes are very rare
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and typically have masses of more than 10 billion times
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the mass of the sun.
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10 billion solar masses ...
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that's a 10 followed by nine zeros.
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Ultramassive black holes are real beasts.
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The black hole at the center of our galaxy
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is 4 million solar masses.
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Imagine black holes that are 2,500 times bigger.
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That's what we're talking about here.
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An ultramassive black hole this big
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would be as wide as the solar system...
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...and weigh as much as all the stars in the milky way.
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They're inside galaxies that aren't a whole lot bigger.
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That really surprised the hell out of everybody.
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And in 2018, scientists discover
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a 20-billion-solar-mass ultramassive black hole
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growing faster than any other black hole.
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This ravenous behemoth devours the mass of our sun
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every two days.
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Bullock: These big black holes are really good
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at gobbling up other things.
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They'll literally eat anything.
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They're monsters of the universe.
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This kind of voracious eating
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can have devastating consequences.
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It blasts so much energy and turbulence into the galaxy
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that stars no longer form,
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and the bigger the black hole, the faster the galaxy dies.
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The primary thing these ultramassive black holes
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do to galaxies is they shut down all star formation,
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and so in that sense, they kind of kill galaxies.
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And so these things
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could even wipe out their host galaxies.
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Ultramassive black holes are a problem for scientists, too.
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They might be the fastest eaters,
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but that doesn't explain how they got so large.
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With these ultramassive black holes,
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these black holes that are 10s of billions of times
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more massive than our sun, you can't just grow them
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from the slow accretion of gas over time.
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There's just not enough gas,
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and there's just not enough time.
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Bullock: It gives us a new mystery to solve.
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How do you make black holes that are just that big?
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There's not a clear answer so far
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as to how these ultramassive black holes were formed.
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People wonder if there's some other mechanism
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by which you could make black holes.
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A mechanism so violent it also throws
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supermassive black holes clean out of galaxies.
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We now know that ultramassive black holes
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billions of times the mass of the sun exist,
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but we have no idea how they got so big.
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We've detected lightweight stellar-mass
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black holes colliding.
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They merged into a new larger black hole
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and generated huge amounts of energy.
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But what about supermassive black holes?
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When galaxies merge,
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their central supermassive black holes
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will fall to the center of the newly formed galaxy.
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Could these supermassive black holes
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caught up in galactic mergers
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combine to form an ultramassive black hole?
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in 2017, the hubble space telescope spotted
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something strange in a distant galaxy called 3c186.
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It detected an incredibly bright spot
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thousands of light-years from the galaxy center.
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Scientists suspect it's a quasar.
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A quasar is an incredibly bright, active galactic nucleus
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that's powered by a supermassive black hole.
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We regularly spot black-hole-powered quasars,
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but always at the centers of galaxies,
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until now.
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When we actually got this data from hubble,
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we were absolutely stunned to discover
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that the quasar that we've long known to exist
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in the center of this galaxy wasn't actually at the center.
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This black hole is offset from the center of the galaxy
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by about 35,000 light-years.
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That's really weird.
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What is an incredibly rare and bizarre event
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to find a quasar, a supermassive black hole,
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that is not at the center of the galaxy.
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When scientists looked closer,
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they discovered that the quasar is hurtling through space
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away from the center of the galaxy.
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Now, mind you, this is a black hole
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with the mass of about a billion times the sun,
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and it's screaming away at 4 million miles an hour.
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This black hole,
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which was probably originally in the galaxy center,
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has somehow been shot out at high velocity
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by some incredibly violent event.
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It's hard to imagine what kind of event
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would pump that much energy into such a huge object
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to shoot it away from the center of a galaxy.
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Who kicked it out, how, and why?
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Scientists have an idea.
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3c186 may be the remnant of a galaxy merger.
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The merged galaxies' supermassive black holes
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circle each other,
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sending out blasts of energy in the form of gravitational waves.
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Gravitational waves are all around us.
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They're ripples in the fabric of space-time.
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Every time mass moves,
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gravitational waves are produced,
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so if I wave my hand, I am making gravitational waves.
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A hand produces imperceptible waves.
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When objects as huge
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as supermassive black holes collide,
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the energy released as gravitational waves
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is phenomenal.
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Scientists think these black holes
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might have been different sizes.
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It's possible that if one of the black holes
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is really massive
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and the other one isn't quite as massive,
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that when they spiral around and merge,
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they send out gravitational waves in an asymmetric way.
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This asymmetry has a catastrophic effect.
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As the two black holes collide and merge,
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they shoot out a huge blast of gravitational waves,
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but only in one direction.
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This blast of energy kicks the newly combined black hole
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out of the galactic center.
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Think of a shotgun recoil, but supersized.
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And there's so much energy in that emission
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00:16:08,033 --> 00:16:09,433
that it acts like a rocket,
265
00:16:09,435 --> 00:16:12,636
and it actually pushes the merged black hole away.
266
00:16:12,638 --> 00:16:14,705
It would have been one of the most energetic events
267
00:16:14,707 --> 00:16:16,574
ever witnessed.
268
00:16:16,576 --> 00:16:18,242
They're so energetic,
269
00:16:18,244 --> 00:16:21,479
they are literally shaking the fabric of space.
270
00:16:25,184 --> 00:16:28,452
We didn't witness the actual collision,
271
00:16:28,454 --> 00:16:31,855
but 3c186 could be evidence
272
00:16:31,857 --> 00:16:37,061
that supermassive black holes can collide and merge,
273
00:16:37,063 --> 00:16:41,198
building even larger black holes.
274
00:16:41,200 --> 00:16:43,734
This would be a mechanism by which you would create,
275
00:16:43,736 --> 00:16:47,004
ultimately, an ultramassive black hole.
276
00:16:47,006 --> 00:16:49,206
As for the ejected black hole,
277
00:16:49,208 --> 00:16:52,209
the gravitational recoil sent it
278
00:16:52,211 --> 00:16:56,013
on a one-way ride to oblivion.
279
00:16:56,015 --> 00:17:00,350
So gravitational waves kicked this supermassive black hole
280
00:17:00,352 --> 00:17:02,219
and sent it flying through space.
281
00:17:02,221 --> 00:17:07,024
In 20 million years, it's expected to exit its galaxy.
282
00:17:07,026 --> 00:17:09,760
The ejected supermassive black hole
283
00:17:09,762 --> 00:17:12,363
may eventually hit another galaxy
284
00:17:12,365 --> 00:17:16,100
and merge with its supermassive black hole.
285
00:17:22,107 --> 00:17:23,974
these largest of black holes
286
00:17:23,976 --> 00:17:26,844
seem to throw their weight around,
287
00:17:26,846 --> 00:17:31,649
bullying galaxies and other black holes.
288
00:17:31,651 --> 00:17:35,919
Now researchers have discovered a vampire black hole
289
00:17:35,921 --> 00:17:39,389
that's draining the lifeblood of its neighbor.
290
00:18:00,413 --> 00:18:02,346
Ultramassive black holes
291
00:18:02,348 --> 00:18:05,148
seem to destroy their galaxies,
292
00:18:05,150 --> 00:18:10,888
while supermassive black holes seem to regulate star formation.
293
00:18:10,890 --> 00:18:15,559
But are all supermassive black holes forces for good?
294
00:18:20,866 --> 00:18:25,370
hundreds of galaxies surround the milky way,
295
00:18:25,372 --> 00:18:28,571
large and small,
296
00:18:28,573 --> 00:18:33,844
but most of the largest galaxies are red.
297
00:18:33,846 --> 00:18:35,979
This is not a good omen.
298
00:18:35,981 --> 00:18:39,350
In space, red means danger.
299
00:18:41,520 --> 00:18:43,721
If you have active ongoing star birth,
300
00:18:43,723 --> 00:18:45,055
then you have massive stars,
301
00:18:45,057 --> 00:18:46,856
and massive stars tend to be blue,
302
00:18:46,858 --> 00:18:49,226
but they don't live very long, and they blow up.
303
00:18:53,132 --> 00:18:55,665
Once you stop star formation, after some amount of time,
304
00:18:55,667 --> 00:18:59,336
the galaxy turns red.
305
00:18:59,338 --> 00:19:01,137
The only stars left alive
306
00:19:01,139 --> 00:19:06,944
are small, long-lived red stars called red dwarfs.
307
00:19:06,946 --> 00:19:10,414
A red galaxy with only red dwarfs
308
00:19:10,416 --> 00:19:13,750
is a dying galaxy.
309
00:19:13,752 --> 00:19:17,420
The Sloan digital sky survey found an entire population
310
00:19:17,422 --> 00:19:20,557
of these luminous red galaxies
311
00:19:20,559 --> 00:19:22,961
that were no longer forming stars
312
00:19:22,963 --> 00:19:23,994
that were dead.
313
00:19:26,899 --> 00:19:31,602
One galaxy around 340 million light-years away stood out.
314
00:19:35,440 --> 00:19:40,444
It was named after a Japanese anime character, Akira.
315
00:19:40,446 --> 00:19:42,046
It's very red.
316
00:19:42,048 --> 00:19:44,514
All the stars in it are red, and that means they're old,
317
00:19:44,516 --> 00:19:45,983
so we know that Akira has not had
318
00:19:45,985 --> 00:19:48,452
any active star formation in a long time.
319
00:19:51,390 --> 00:19:53,323
The Akira galaxy doesn't form stars
320
00:19:53,325 --> 00:19:55,793
because it doesn't have the cool, calm gas
321
00:19:55,795 --> 00:19:57,061
needed to build them.
322
00:19:59,264 --> 00:20:02,933
Something is heating the gas, making it turbulent.
323
00:20:05,004 --> 00:20:07,337
One of the ways in which a black hole can drive
324
00:20:07,339 --> 00:20:09,806
the evolution of the galaxy in which it resides
325
00:20:09,808 --> 00:20:13,410
is by simply powering a wind.
326
00:20:13,412 --> 00:20:16,714
These are winds that are literally driven by light.
327
00:20:19,551 --> 00:20:21,151
When a black hole feeds,
328
00:20:21,153 --> 00:20:25,889
it drags gas into an accretion disk.
329
00:20:25,891 --> 00:20:29,326
The disk heats up and gives off light radiation.
330
00:20:31,763 --> 00:20:35,432
The radiation pressure from the accretion disk around this black hole
331
00:20:35,434 --> 00:20:37,767
couples to the ambient gas and dust
332
00:20:37,769 --> 00:20:42,040
and pushes it outwards at very high velocity.
333
00:20:42,042 --> 00:20:45,976
These winds that are driven out by the black hole
334
00:20:45,978 --> 00:20:49,779
essentially warm up the gas in the galaxy,
335
00:20:49,781 --> 00:20:52,349
preventing further star formation.
336
00:20:54,453 --> 00:20:58,121
However, whatever's fueling the black hole in Akira
337
00:20:58,123 --> 00:20:59,990
is a mystery.
338
00:20:59,992 --> 00:21:02,793
Here's a weird thing ... there is an outflow,
339
00:21:02,795 --> 00:21:04,928
a wind coming out of this galaxy,
340
00:21:04,930 --> 00:21:06,864
and that means there's gas feeding
341
00:21:06,866 --> 00:21:10,000
that black hole in the center, and it's blowing it out.
342
00:21:10,002 --> 00:21:13,604
Where is this gas coming from?
343
00:21:13,606 --> 00:21:16,606
Ah, it's stealing it.
344
00:21:16,608 --> 00:21:20,344
It has a small companion galaxy, which is nicknamed tetsuo,
345
00:21:20,346 --> 00:21:22,080
and that has gas in it.
346
00:21:24,950 --> 00:21:29,219
Akira's supermassive black hole pulls gas from tetsuo
347
00:21:29,221 --> 00:21:31,923
and drags it into the center of the galaxy.
348
00:21:34,827 --> 00:21:38,094
The black hole is taking the gas from this companion galaxy,
349
00:21:38,096 --> 00:21:39,897
and that's what's falling around the black hole
350
00:21:39,899 --> 00:21:41,632
and creating this wind,
351
00:21:41,634 --> 00:21:44,234
so Akira is actually sort of a dead galaxy,
352
00:21:44,236 --> 00:21:47,404
but it's being rejuvenated by its companion, tetsuo.
353
00:21:50,976 --> 00:21:52,844
Like a cosmic vampire,
354
00:21:52,846 --> 00:21:57,514
Akira's supermassive black hole feeds off tetsuo.
355
00:22:00,053 --> 00:22:04,521
The black hole drags gas and dust into its accretion disk,
356
00:22:04,523 --> 00:22:08,525
which spins faster and faster.
357
00:22:08,527 --> 00:22:10,793
When these particles are rubbing against each other,
358
00:22:10,795 --> 00:22:13,131
well, that generates friction.
359
00:22:13,133 --> 00:22:15,532
Friction may not seem like that big of a deal.
360
00:22:15,534 --> 00:22:16,800
I mean, you can rub your hands together
361
00:22:16,802 --> 00:22:18,535
on a cold day to get warm,
362
00:22:18,537 --> 00:22:20,070
but imagine rubbing your hands together
363
00:22:20,072 --> 00:22:22,472
at very nearly the speed of light.
364
00:22:22,474 --> 00:22:24,074
How much friction is that gonna generate?
365
00:22:24,076 --> 00:22:27,076
It's gonna make a lot of heat.
366
00:22:27,078 --> 00:22:31,415
Over a million degrees fahrenheit ...
367
00:22:31,417 --> 00:22:35,185
so hot the accretion disk lights up.
368
00:22:38,024 --> 00:22:41,558
Its temperature goes up, and he starts emitting light.
369
00:22:41,560 --> 00:22:44,494
It becomes incredibly bright.
370
00:22:44,496 --> 00:22:46,563
Even though there's a black hole in the core,
371
00:22:46,565 --> 00:22:51,902
its surroundings are intensely bright.
372
00:22:51,904 --> 00:22:54,338
This heats up the surrounding gas,
373
00:22:54,340 --> 00:22:56,239
generating a hot wind,
374
00:22:56,241 --> 00:23:01,444
which extends thousands of light-years from the black hole.
375
00:23:01,446 --> 00:23:04,515
And those winds carry with them a lot of energy,
376
00:23:04,517 --> 00:23:08,051
and that energy, if it couples to the gas in the galaxy,
377
00:23:08,053 --> 00:23:10,053
can blow that gas out.
378
00:23:10,055 --> 00:23:12,455
They inject energy into nearby gas clouds
379
00:23:12,457 --> 00:23:17,127
and heat them up and prevent them from forming stars.
380
00:23:17,129 --> 00:23:20,731
Stars don't form ... the galaxy dies.
381
00:23:23,335 --> 00:23:26,870
These dying galaxies are called red geysers.
382
00:23:30,476 --> 00:23:33,810
Scientists think around 10% of the red galaxies
383
00:23:33,812 --> 00:23:37,014
we see around us died this way...
384
00:23:39,352 --> 00:23:42,386
...heated up by this galactic warming.
385
00:23:45,156 --> 00:23:48,158
We think that the source of some of this galactic warming
386
00:23:48,160 --> 00:23:50,961
is in the growth of supermassive black holes themselves
387
00:23:50,963 --> 00:23:53,297
because when you grow a supermassive black hole,
388
00:23:53,299 --> 00:23:56,833
you must liberate an enormous amount of energy.
389
00:23:56,835 --> 00:23:59,503
You can't grow a black hole for free,
390
00:23:59,505 --> 00:24:03,240
and that energy gets dumped back into the ambient surroundings
391
00:24:03,242 --> 00:24:05,175
and keeps this halo of gas hot.
392
00:24:05,177 --> 00:24:08,012
It prevents it from cooling and forming stars.
393
00:24:11,450 --> 00:24:13,317
Sagittarius a-star,
394
00:24:13,319 --> 00:24:16,919
the supermassive black hole at the heart of our galaxy,
395
00:24:16,921 --> 00:24:21,525
the milky way, could turn into a red geyser.
396
00:24:21,527 --> 00:24:24,528
If you were suddenly to dump an enormous amount of gas
397
00:24:24,530 --> 00:24:26,463
onto sagittarius a-star,
398
00:24:26,465 --> 00:24:29,199
you could have what is effectively a red-geyser effect,
399
00:24:29,201 --> 00:24:33,203
a very powerful wind driven by all of this energy.
400
00:24:37,475 --> 00:24:40,010
Star formation would stop,
401
00:24:40,012 --> 00:24:44,782
and our milky way would become another dying red galaxy.
402
00:24:49,754 --> 00:24:53,690
Now new research suggests that sagittarius a-star
403
00:24:53,692 --> 00:24:57,761
has already affected the inner region of our galaxy,
404
00:24:57,763 --> 00:24:59,762
not by killing stars,
405
00:24:59,764 --> 00:25:05,269
but by transforming planets from gas giants into super-earths.
406
00:25:25,657 --> 00:25:27,390
At the center of our galaxy
407
00:25:27,392 --> 00:25:32,295
lies a supermassive black hole, sagittarius a-star.
408
00:25:35,467 --> 00:25:40,337
We think it's calm, dormant, safe.
409
00:25:40,339 --> 00:25:42,405
Relative to other supermassive black holes
410
00:25:42,407 --> 00:25:45,875
in the universe, ours is relatively quiet.
411
00:25:45,877 --> 00:25:48,678
It's been active in the past,
412
00:25:48,680 --> 00:25:52,081
and it could flare up in the future.
413
00:25:52,083 --> 00:25:54,350
It could be active tomorrow, for all we know.
414
00:25:54,352 --> 00:25:55,952
All you need to do to light it up
415
00:25:55,954 --> 00:25:58,088
is start dumping some gas on it,
416
00:25:58,090 --> 00:26:00,824
and there is almost certainly a giant cloud of gas
417
00:26:00,826 --> 00:26:02,225
that we don't currently know of
418
00:26:02,227 --> 00:26:04,427
on its way to the center of our galaxy,
419
00:26:04,429 --> 00:26:06,362
and it will find itself one day in the vicinity
420
00:26:06,364 --> 00:26:07,965
of our supermassive black hole,
421
00:26:07,967 --> 00:26:11,701
and it will start to light up like a Christmas tree.
422
00:26:11,703 --> 00:26:16,040
In February of 2018, scientists at Harvard
423
00:26:16,042 --> 00:26:20,910
simulated sagittarius a-star during a feeding frenzy
424
00:26:20,912 --> 00:26:25,381
to understand the impact of an active supermassive black hole
425
00:26:25,383 --> 00:26:26,917
on its local environment.
426
00:26:30,722 --> 00:26:31,854
They found that,
427
00:26:31,856 --> 00:26:35,058
as sagittarius a-star gobbled up gas and dust,
428
00:26:35,060 --> 00:26:40,930
it belched out bright flares of high-energy radiation,
429
00:26:40,932 --> 00:26:45,936
which radically affected the region around the black hole.
430
00:26:45,938 --> 00:26:48,605
The environment near the center of a galaxy
431
00:26:48,607 --> 00:26:51,007
that has an actively feeding black hole
432
00:26:51,009 --> 00:26:53,943
is the worst place in the universe.
433
00:26:53,945 --> 00:26:55,946
You've got this tremendous object
434
00:26:55,948 --> 00:26:59,483
which is heating up this gas to millions of degrees.
435
00:26:59,485 --> 00:27:01,818
This is no place that you want to be.
436
00:27:04,822 --> 00:27:06,857
The model revealed what would happen
437
00:27:06,859 --> 00:27:10,360
to any planets in the line of fire.
438
00:27:10,362 --> 00:27:11,427
Think about being in the way
439
00:27:11,429 --> 00:27:13,896
of one of these black-hole burps.
440
00:27:13,898 --> 00:27:16,499
All of a sudden, there's a tremendous wind of radiation
441
00:27:16,501 --> 00:27:18,167
that comes through your solar system.
442
00:27:18,169 --> 00:27:21,103
That could actually strip away the outer layers of gas
443
00:27:21,105 --> 00:27:22,572
of a planet like Neptune.
444
00:27:25,310 --> 00:27:26,709
The high-energy radiation
445
00:27:26,711 --> 00:27:28,845
from the supermassive black holes
446
00:27:28,847 --> 00:27:33,317
would hit the gas planets and heat up their atmospheres.
447
00:27:33,319 --> 00:27:35,919
Maybe this would actually strip away the outer layers,
448
00:27:35,921 --> 00:27:38,054
leaving the solid material in the middle.
449
00:27:38,056 --> 00:27:40,256
You could actually turn a gas-giant planet
450
00:27:40,258 --> 00:27:42,325
into a terrestrial solid planet
451
00:27:42,327 --> 00:27:46,062
all because you're close to a black hole.
452
00:27:46,064 --> 00:27:50,734
This radiation strips away the gas, leaving the core,
453
00:27:50,736 --> 00:27:54,137
now a new rocky planet
454
00:27:54,139 --> 00:27:58,074
but a giant one ... a super-earth.
455
00:27:58,076 --> 00:27:59,977
Normally, you think of rocky planets
456
00:27:59,979 --> 00:28:01,745
being about the size of the earth,
457
00:28:01,747 --> 00:28:05,882
but this would be a way of making so called super-earths.
458
00:28:05,884 --> 00:28:07,884
Super-earths are one of the most common
459
00:28:07,886 --> 00:28:11,888
type of planets discovered in our galaxy.
460
00:28:11,890 --> 00:28:14,291
It's possible that any super-earths
461
00:28:14,293 --> 00:28:16,626
close to sagittarius a-star
462
00:28:16,628 --> 00:28:19,729
were created by these blasts of energy.
463
00:28:23,969 --> 00:28:26,235
Away from our galactic center,
464
00:28:26,237 --> 00:28:29,706
a much smaller stellar-mass black hole
465
00:28:29,708 --> 00:28:33,143
is also radically transforming its environment.
466
00:28:36,114 --> 00:28:38,715
January 2017 ...
467
00:28:38,717 --> 00:28:41,851
researchers discover something strange
468
00:28:41,853 --> 00:28:46,589
in a cloud of gas called w44.
469
00:28:46,591 --> 00:28:48,526
W44 is a supernova remnant.
470
00:28:48,528 --> 00:28:53,797
It's the debris ... the expanding cloud from a star that blew up.
471
00:28:53,799 --> 00:28:57,934
The explosive shock wave from a supernova
472
00:28:57,936 --> 00:29:01,671
pushes gas and dust out from the dead star,
473
00:29:01,673 --> 00:29:05,275
forming a huge nebula.
474
00:29:05,277 --> 00:29:06,743
We see a lot of these.
475
00:29:06,745 --> 00:29:09,280
I mean, they're catastrophic, amazing, incredible events,
476
00:29:09,282 --> 00:29:10,480
but as far as they go,
477
00:29:10,482 --> 00:29:13,483
this one appears to be pretty standard,
478
00:29:13,485 --> 00:29:15,752
except for one weird thing.
479
00:29:15,754 --> 00:29:16,952
In the heart of it,
480
00:29:16,954 --> 00:29:18,822
there's something very mysterious going on.
481
00:29:18,824 --> 00:29:20,957
There seems to be something shooting out
482
00:29:20,959 --> 00:29:23,493
of the very center of this explosion.
483
00:29:29,568 --> 00:29:32,435
A thin protrusion trillions of miles long
484
00:29:32,437 --> 00:29:36,573
streams out from the cloud.
485
00:29:36,575 --> 00:29:39,241
It's moving at over 60 miles a second
486
00:29:39,243 --> 00:29:42,779
against the flow of the galaxy.
487
00:29:42,781 --> 00:29:45,114
It's very strange that it's moving backwards
488
00:29:45,116 --> 00:29:47,517
against the rotation of the milky way.
489
00:29:47,519 --> 00:29:51,321
When you see a giant, giant, very massive cloud of gas
490
00:29:51,323 --> 00:29:53,856
that is moving counter to the rotation of the milky way,
491
00:29:53,858 --> 00:29:55,792
it needed to be like a bullet from a gun
492
00:29:55,794 --> 00:29:59,395
fired against a headwind in the opposite direction.
493
00:29:59,397 --> 00:30:00,797
So what is that gun?
494
00:30:00,799 --> 00:30:04,934
You know, what fired that bullet of gas?
495
00:30:04,936 --> 00:30:07,404
The tip of the bullet cloud is expanding
496
00:30:07,406 --> 00:30:09,806
at 75 miles a second.
497
00:30:09,808 --> 00:30:12,809
That's 270,000 miles an hour,
498
00:30:12,811 --> 00:30:17,080
over 150 times faster than a bullet.
499
00:30:17,082 --> 00:30:20,884
What in the cosmos has the power to accelerate gas
500
00:30:20,886 --> 00:30:23,553
to such high speed?
501
00:30:23,555 --> 00:30:25,488
Could that actually be a black hole
502
00:30:25,490 --> 00:30:28,491
moving very, very quickly?
503
00:30:28,493 --> 00:30:31,628
Researchers think a stellar-mass black hole
504
00:30:31,630 --> 00:30:33,296
hidden in the bullet cloud
505
00:30:33,298 --> 00:30:36,165
is powering the movement of the gas.
506
00:30:36,167 --> 00:30:38,568
Gravity from this black hole is incredibly strong,
507
00:30:38,570 --> 00:30:40,570
and so it will latch onto this gas cloud
508
00:30:40,572 --> 00:30:42,038
as it passes through it,
509
00:30:42,040 --> 00:30:45,308
and it can completely disrupt the motions of this cloud.
510
00:30:45,310 --> 00:30:47,711
Bullock: This is a very interesting stream of gas
511
00:30:47,713 --> 00:30:50,246
that's somehow connected to a black hole,
512
00:30:50,248 --> 00:30:51,581
and we don't know whether it's there
513
00:30:51,583 --> 00:30:53,717
because the black hole is moving through the gas,
514
00:30:53,719 --> 00:30:55,317
and it's creating a wake,
515
00:30:55,319 --> 00:30:57,520
or whether somehow this black hole
516
00:30:57,522 --> 00:31:01,924
is spitting out a stream of material in some way.
517
00:31:01,926 --> 00:31:03,927
The black hole could be dragging gas
518
00:31:03,929 --> 00:31:06,930
into an accretion disk around it.
519
00:31:06,932 --> 00:31:09,199
The gas heats up and expands,
520
00:31:09,201 --> 00:31:15,538
giving the initial supernova explosion, w44, an extra kick,
521
00:31:15,540 --> 00:31:19,942
driving this bullet-like cloud out in front of it.
522
00:31:19,944 --> 00:31:23,613
Or the black hole could be racing away from the nebula,
523
00:31:23,615 --> 00:31:27,082
dragging the gas behind it like a wake.
524
00:31:33,291 --> 00:31:37,827
ultramassive, supermassive, and stellar-mass black holes
525
00:31:37,829 --> 00:31:41,564
all play a role in shaping the cosmos,
526
00:31:41,566 --> 00:31:44,767
but there may be another type of black hole
527
00:31:44,769 --> 00:31:49,105
even more dangerous than the rest ...
528
00:31:49,107 --> 00:31:51,841
a microscopic black hole.
529
00:32:15,734 --> 00:32:18,735
We have so far detected triple-xl
530
00:32:18,737 --> 00:32:24,206
ultramassive black holes, large supermassive black holes,
531
00:32:24,208 --> 00:32:28,545
medium-sized intermediate black holes,
532
00:32:28,547 --> 00:32:32,215
and small stellar-mass black holes.
533
00:32:32,217 --> 00:32:36,419
Now scientists have another to add to the roster ...
534
00:32:36,421 --> 00:32:39,222
microscopic black holes.
535
00:32:39,224 --> 00:32:40,757
Carroll: We know there are supermassive black holes
536
00:32:40,759 --> 00:32:42,626
at the centers of galaxies.
537
00:32:42,628 --> 00:32:45,228
We know there are star-sized black holes
538
00:32:45,230 --> 00:32:46,562
from the deaths of stars.
539
00:32:46,564 --> 00:32:48,331
That's what we know for sure.
540
00:32:48,333 --> 00:32:50,900
It's possible there are much smaller black holes,
541
00:32:50,902 --> 00:32:53,970
microscopically small black holes.
542
00:32:53,972 --> 00:32:57,306
Microscopic black holes are virtually invisible
543
00:32:57,308 --> 00:32:58,775
to the naked eye,
544
00:32:58,777 --> 00:33:04,648
but magnified, they look like regular stellar-mass black holes
545
00:33:04,650 --> 00:33:06,983
the definition of a black hole
546
00:33:06,985 --> 00:33:09,385
is an object that has so much mass
547
00:33:09,387 --> 00:33:12,756
crushed into such a small space that its escape velocity
548
00:33:12,758 --> 00:33:14,924
becomes greater than the speed of light,
549
00:33:14,926 --> 00:33:17,327
so it could be something the size of a star,
550
00:33:17,329 --> 00:33:18,928
the size of a galaxy.
551
00:33:18,930 --> 00:33:21,998
It could also be the mass of a planet.
552
00:33:22,000 --> 00:33:25,135
If you could crush the earth down far enough,
553
00:33:25,137 --> 00:33:27,670
it could become a black hole.
554
00:33:27,672 --> 00:33:28,938
The density of a black hole
555
00:33:28,940 --> 00:33:30,406
is something that the human brain
556
00:33:30,408 --> 00:33:32,408
really doesn't wrap itself around very easily.
557
00:33:32,410 --> 00:33:34,877
When you think about something the size of the earth,
558
00:33:34,879 --> 00:33:37,547
how small would the earth have to be to be a black hole?
559
00:33:37,549 --> 00:33:40,016
And the answer is something on the order of a marble.
560
00:33:40,018 --> 00:33:41,884
So think about taking the entire earth
561
00:33:41,886 --> 00:33:44,521
and compressing it down to the size of just a marble.
562
00:33:46,958 --> 00:33:51,561
So where do these strange little black holes come from?
563
00:33:51,563 --> 00:33:54,897
These very small black holes can only be formed
564
00:33:54,899 --> 00:34:01,237
in the exotic conditions of the incredibly early universe.
565
00:34:01,239 --> 00:34:04,173
Our universe might get flooded with these small black holes
566
00:34:04,175 --> 00:34:09,112
that simply persist to the present day.
567
00:34:09,114 --> 00:34:10,580
It's the only time in the history of the universe
568
00:34:10,582 --> 00:34:12,448
where you could take a small amount of matter
569
00:34:12,450 --> 00:34:13,983
and crush it down so tightly
570
00:34:13,985 --> 00:34:15,652
that it could become a black hole.
571
00:34:15,654 --> 00:34:17,855
Those conditions don't exist anymore,
572
00:34:17,857 --> 00:34:21,457
so if these things exist, they would be primordial.
573
00:34:21,459 --> 00:34:24,060
They would be as old as the universe itself.
574
00:34:30,201 --> 00:34:33,603
These primordial black holes may be ancient,
575
00:34:33,605 --> 00:34:36,806
but they still pack a punch.
576
00:34:36,808 --> 00:34:38,408
When it comes to black holes,
577
00:34:38,410 --> 00:34:42,344
the smaller black holes are actually more dangerous
578
00:34:42,346 --> 00:34:44,480
because their mass is concentrated
579
00:34:44,482 --> 00:34:47,149
into such a small volume.
580
00:34:47,151 --> 00:34:51,621
In fact, a tiny black hole would be lethal.
581
00:34:51,623 --> 00:34:55,091
If it were to pass in front of me, very quickly,
582
00:34:55,093 --> 00:34:58,761
almost instantly, I would be ripped apart head to toe,
583
00:34:58,763 --> 00:35:03,533
stretched into a long, thin stream of fundamental particles
584
00:35:03,535 --> 00:35:06,302
that would then wind their way into the black hole.
585
00:35:06,304 --> 00:35:12,041
It would actively feast on me in a matter of seconds.
586
00:35:12,043 --> 00:35:15,445
But if Paul or an interstellar robotic probe
587
00:35:15,447 --> 00:35:17,780
visited a supermassive black hole
588
00:35:17,782 --> 00:35:20,316
or even an ultramassive black hole,
589
00:35:20,318 --> 00:35:25,121
they wouldn't be immediately ripped to shreds.
590
00:35:25,123 --> 00:35:27,190
One of the most fun questions about black holes is,
591
00:35:27,192 --> 00:35:29,125
how close could you get to a black hole
592
00:35:29,127 --> 00:35:31,327
before the gravity would rip you apart?
593
00:35:31,329 --> 00:35:34,597
And that actually depends on the volume of the black hole.
594
00:35:34,599 --> 00:35:38,936
If the black hole is very large, you could get very, very close.
595
00:35:38,938 --> 00:35:40,536
Bullock: The more massive they are,
596
00:35:40,538 --> 00:35:43,806
the slightly softer they are in how they tear things apart,
597
00:35:43,808 --> 00:35:45,876
so a supermassive black hole, actually ...
598
00:35:45,878 --> 00:35:48,077
you can cross within the event horizon
599
00:35:48,079 --> 00:35:50,546
and not really notice it.
600
00:35:50,548 --> 00:35:52,015
You're never gonna get back out,
601
00:35:52,017 --> 00:35:54,149
but you won't necessarily be stretched to your death
602
00:35:54,151 --> 00:35:55,818
while you cross inside.
603
00:35:58,556 --> 00:36:01,691
So a probe could visit a supermassive black hole
604
00:36:01,693 --> 00:36:03,426
and not be destroyed...
605
00:36:05,830 --> 00:36:08,230
...until it crossed the event horizon
606
00:36:08,232 --> 00:36:10,533
and traveled deep inside.
607
00:36:12,637 --> 00:36:15,238
Then it would be torn to pieces.
608
00:36:17,642 --> 00:36:23,512
But microscopic black holes are currently just a theory.
609
00:36:23,514 --> 00:36:26,782
Microscopic black holes have been the focus
610
00:36:26,784 --> 00:36:29,051
for some researchers for many years,
611
00:36:29,053 --> 00:36:30,653
but currently there's no evidence
612
00:36:30,655 --> 00:36:32,689
to support their existence.
613
00:36:35,527 --> 00:36:38,794
Microscopic primordial black holes may or may not
614
00:36:38,796 --> 00:36:41,364
have been around since the big bang.
615
00:36:43,668 --> 00:36:48,137
Now scientists have discovered supermassive black holes
616
00:36:48,139 --> 00:36:51,340
from the very early universe.
617
00:36:51,342 --> 00:36:56,412
They're shedding light on one of the most mysterious eras,
618
00:36:56,414 --> 00:36:59,081
the cosmic dark ages.
619
00:37:16,702 --> 00:37:20,302
Black holes don't just shape the universe now.
620
00:37:20,304 --> 00:37:24,273
They've been shaping it from almost the dawn of time.
621
00:37:26,310 --> 00:37:29,044
Scientists think black holes may have triggered
622
00:37:29,046 --> 00:37:32,115
one of the universe's greatest transformations ...
623
00:37:32,117 --> 00:37:37,186
turning from dark and foggy to transparent and light.
624
00:37:44,729 --> 00:37:46,329
at the beginning of time,
625
00:37:46,331 --> 00:37:50,500
the universe was a tiny ball of super-hot energy ...
626
00:37:50,502 --> 00:37:53,536
the big bang.
627
00:37:53,538 --> 00:37:57,406
Shortly after our big bang, our universe was shining bright
628
00:37:57,408 --> 00:38:01,410
because it was full of hot, glowing gas.
629
00:38:01,412 --> 00:38:05,082
Then it cooled off and entered the so-called dark ages
630
00:38:05,084 --> 00:38:09,485
until eventually something lit it up again.
631
00:38:09,487 --> 00:38:12,221
It's one of the biggest changes that happened in our universe.
632
00:38:12,223 --> 00:38:17,492
Someone switched the lights on and transformed the universe.
633
00:38:17,494 --> 00:38:18,895
During the dark ages,
634
00:38:18,897 --> 00:38:22,698
the universe was blanketed in a thick fog.
635
00:38:22,700 --> 00:38:24,900
Then something lit it up
636
00:38:24,902 --> 00:38:29,305
in a process called reionization.
637
00:38:29,307 --> 00:38:30,840
We still don't really know for sure
638
00:38:30,842 --> 00:38:35,377
whether reionization was mainly caused by young stars
639
00:38:35,379 --> 00:38:39,782
or whether it was mainly black holes that ate stuff
640
00:38:39,784 --> 00:38:42,219
and spewed out a bunch of radiation.
641
00:38:45,123 --> 00:38:48,458
Then in December of 2017,
642
00:38:48,460 --> 00:38:52,995
researchers in Chile scan a region of space so far away
643
00:38:52,997 --> 00:38:58,267
it takes light 13 billion years to reach us.
644
00:38:58,269 --> 00:39:03,005
They spot an object from just 690 million years
645
00:39:03,007 --> 00:39:04,606
after the big bang
646
00:39:04,608 --> 00:39:10,345
when the universe was only 5% of its current age.
647
00:39:10,347 --> 00:39:16,652
It's called quasar j1342+0928.
648
00:39:19,757 --> 00:39:22,357
The thing that's so amazing about this farthest quasar
649
00:39:22,359 --> 00:39:27,096
is we may actually have seen the boundary of these dark ages.
650
00:39:27,098 --> 00:39:31,033
This particular supermassive black hole/quasar tells us
651
00:39:31,035 --> 00:39:35,237
something about the formation of the early universe.
652
00:39:35,239 --> 00:39:38,241
It's thought that quasars helped drag the universe
653
00:39:38,243 --> 00:39:40,309
out of the dark ages.
654
00:39:40,311 --> 00:39:42,845
They gobbled up so much hydrogen gas
655
00:39:42,847 --> 00:39:46,650
and belched out jets of energy
656
00:39:46,652 --> 00:39:49,185
and cleared up the fog.
657
00:39:49,187 --> 00:39:51,988
Those jets could have actually put so much energy
658
00:39:51,990 --> 00:39:55,257
into the universe that it made it clear again.
659
00:39:55,259 --> 00:39:57,260
We may actually be seeing the moment
660
00:39:57,262 --> 00:40:00,830
where something punches through this boundary of the dark ages.
661
00:40:05,269 --> 00:40:07,670
Pockets of reionization opened up
662
00:40:07,672 --> 00:40:10,540
throughout the early universe.
663
00:40:10,542 --> 00:40:14,644
They came in different sizes, depending on what created them.
664
00:40:17,415 --> 00:40:19,348
While our universe was being reionized,
665
00:40:19,350 --> 00:40:21,417
there was kind of, like, all these holes
666
00:40:21,419 --> 00:40:23,485
that kept growing.
667
00:40:23,487 --> 00:40:27,823
If the reionization was made by a large number of little stars,
668
00:40:27,825 --> 00:40:29,759
you would have many, many small holes,
669
00:40:29,761 --> 00:40:32,762
much like a sponge,
670
00:40:32,764 --> 00:40:36,098
whereas if you had a small number
671
00:40:36,100 --> 00:40:37,501
of monster black holes doing it,
672
00:40:37,503 --> 00:40:41,805
you'd have a lot of big holes, like in Swiss cheese.
673
00:40:46,711 --> 00:40:49,979
At present, we can't measure the ionized pockets
674
00:40:49,981 --> 00:40:53,049
to determine if it was stars or black holes
675
00:40:53,051 --> 00:40:55,117
that lit up the early universe.
676
00:40:55,119 --> 00:40:58,187
Perhaps it was both ...
677
00:40:58,189 --> 00:41:02,058
black holes and stars working together.
678
00:41:07,732 --> 00:41:09,799
the more we investigate black holes,
679
00:41:09,801 --> 00:41:11,801
the more we learn about their role
680
00:41:11,803 --> 00:41:14,136
as architects of the universe.
681
00:41:23,147 --> 00:41:25,748
I think scientists of my generation are very lucky
682
00:41:25,750 --> 00:41:31,487
to be able to be at the beginning of this revolution.
683
00:41:31,489 --> 00:41:34,623
We used to portray black holes as monsters.
684
00:41:34,625 --> 00:41:37,159
Now we know that, without them,
685
00:41:37,161 --> 00:41:40,162
the universe would be a very different place.
686
00:41:40,164 --> 00:41:42,032
They made life possible.
687
00:41:42,034 --> 00:41:45,701
Without black holes, we probably wouldn't exist.
688
00:41:45,703 --> 00:41:46,970
We're discovering
689
00:41:46,972 --> 00:41:50,239
just how black holes shaped the universe,
690
00:41:50,241 --> 00:41:56,378
but the more we learn, the more questions they pose.
691
00:41:56,380 --> 00:41:58,513
I've spent my career studying black holes,
692
00:41:58,515 --> 00:42:01,917
and I want to spend the rest of my career studying black holes,
693
00:42:01,919 --> 00:42:05,255
and I guarantee you that, at the end of my career,
694
00:42:05,257 --> 00:42:07,857
on the day I retire, I will probably have
695
00:42:07,859 --> 00:42:11,360
more questions about black holes than I do today.
696
00:42:13,931 --> 00:42:15,664
This is an incredibly exciting time
697
00:42:15,666 --> 00:42:17,266
for black-hole science.
698
00:42:17,268 --> 00:42:19,135
Who knows what we're gonna discover?
55612
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