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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:33,861 --> 00:00:35,759 All Texas.What? 2 00:00:35,828 --> 00:00:38,969 All Texas.All Texas, yes, I know. 3 00:00:45,321 --> 00:00:47,219 Might care to look at that, Peter. 4 00:00:47,254 --> 00:00:49,221 What is it? Oh... 5 00:01:11,899 --> 00:01:15,799 "The essence of a man like me lies just in 6 00:01:15,868 --> 00:01:19,458 "what he thinks and how he thinks, 7 00:01:19,458 --> 00:01:22,599 "not in what he does or suffers." 8 00:01:24,877 --> 00:01:27,466 The time had come for the rank amateur 9 00:01:27,466 --> 00:01:31,021 to try to grasp the way Einstein thought. 10 00:01:31,056 --> 00:01:33,817 Yes, said Nigel Calder, the writer, 11 00:01:33,886 --> 00:01:37,476 my journey was really necessary. 12 00:01:37,476 --> 00:01:39,823 There's the observatory now. 13 00:01:39,892 --> 00:01:43,413 What, those two little white whatever they are? 14 00:01:43,448 --> 00:01:45,070 That's right. 15 00:01:45,105 --> 00:01:46,830 Well, the third one I can see now. 16 00:01:46,830 --> 00:01:48,453 Yes, they're the domes. 17 00:01:54,217 --> 00:01:56,461 They, keep a look out for aircraft 18 00:01:56,495 --> 00:01:59,188 so as not to zap us with their laser beam. 19 00:02:00,430 --> 00:02:03,675 Are you serious?Quite serious. 20 00:02:03,744 --> 00:02:07,506 They wanted me to speak Einstein's words and 21 00:02:07,506 --> 00:02:11,476 make the odd space flight, but mostly just to attend to 22 00:02:11,510 --> 00:02:13,581 the theory of relativity. 23 00:02:13,616 --> 00:02:16,964 I was promised a tale of how our perceptions of space 24 00:02:16,998 --> 00:02:20,312 and time and color are distorted 25 00:02:20,347 --> 00:02:23,143 according to where we are and how we're traveling. 26 00:02:25,179 --> 00:02:28,527 Amid such relativity, Einstein found 27 00:02:28,527 --> 00:02:32,669 reliable laws governing atoms, planets, stars 28 00:02:32,738 --> 00:02:34,671 and all creation. 29 00:02:39,159 --> 00:02:43,128 Yes, an escort. Perhaps to make quite sure I didn't 30 00:02:43,163 --> 00:02:48,409 Funk the cerebral adventure they had in store for me. 31 00:02:50,791 --> 00:02:53,552 Very nice flying. Thank you very much indeed.Thanks. 32 00:02:53,552 --> 00:02:56,624 On my arrival, I knew only that Albert Einstein was 33 00:02:56,659 --> 00:02:59,972 a gentle genius whose reasoning anticipated 34 00:03:00,007 --> 00:03:03,010 our world of nuclear energy and space flight. 35 00:03:03,044 --> 00:03:06,669 The Big Bang. The black hole. 36 00:03:06,703 --> 00:03:08,774 Things I'd only heard about. 37 00:03:20,476 --> 00:03:23,030 My tutors were to be leading experts, 38 00:03:23,064 --> 00:03:27,379 assembled in this remote corner of Texas, for my benefit, 39 00:03:27,414 --> 00:03:28,932 and of yours. 40 00:03:29,001 --> 00:03:32,557 Our guides through Einstein's Universe. 41 00:03:34,835 --> 00:03:37,182 Dennis Sciama, here, is a theorist 42 00:03:37,217 --> 00:03:40,599 concerned with the overall nature of the universe. 43 00:03:40,599 --> 00:03:43,568 Roger Penrose, he pioneered the modern theory 44 00:03:43,602 --> 00:03:45,397 of black holes. You've heard of them. 45 00:03:45,432 --> 00:03:46,605 Yes, yes, I have, 46 00:03:46,605 --> 00:03:48,780 without understanding what they are. 47 00:03:48,849 --> 00:03:51,127 Well John Wheeler, here, said they had to exist 48 00:03:51,196 --> 00:03:53,750 and named them black holes as a matter of fact. 49 00:03:53,785 --> 00:03:56,960 He's very much a grand old man of theoretical physics. 50 00:03:57,029 --> 00:03:59,963 I see. Oh, there's some more... Oh, yes. 51 00:04:00,032 --> 00:04:03,622 And Wallace Sargent, here, thinks he's discovered a huge black hole. 52 00:04:03,622 --> 00:04:04,968 Well he looks as if he's photographed 53 00:04:04,968 --> 00:04:06,936 just at the moment of discovery, doesn't he? 54 00:04:06,970 --> 00:04:09,628 Quite pleased with himself.Yeah, with everything. 55 00:04:09,628 --> 00:04:12,459 Irwin Shapiro, you'll hear how he's been 56 00:04:12,459 --> 00:04:15,634 getting radar echoes from the planets.USTINOV: Yes. 57 00:04:15,634 --> 00:04:18,292 And Sidney Drell's a theorist from the 58 00:04:18,361 --> 00:04:21,433 high speed world of subatomic particles. 59 00:04:21,468 --> 00:04:24,471 Gracious!And Ken Brecher, here, he's checked 60 00:04:24,471 --> 00:04:26,196 some of Einstein's basic assumptions 61 00:04:26,231 --> 00:04:29,855 with very precise astronomical tests. 62 00:04:29,924 --> 00:04:35,275 A formidable range of expertise but they, they look friendly enough. 63 00:04:38,312 --> 00:04:40,107 I then became aware that there might be 64 00:04:40,141 --> 00:04:43,628 more to those motorcycles than met the eye. 65 00:05:11,932 --> 00:05:13,692 As we journeyed into the mountains, 66 00:05:13,692 --> 00:05:17,524 Calder told me that the Theory of Relativity burst upon the world 67 00:05:17,593 --> 00:05:20,112 more than 70 years ago 68 00:05:20,147 --> 00:05:22,770 when Special Relativity proclaimed 69 00:05:22,805 --> 00:05:26,049 the curious effects of high-speed motion. 70 00:05:26,118 --> 00:05:29,052 General Relativity, he said, followed later 71 00:05:29,121 --> 00:05:31,676 as Einstein's Theory of Gravity. 72 00:05:34,817 --> 00:05:37,026 But we were to take them in the reverse order and 73 00:05:37,060 --> 00:05:40,236 approach the bewildering distortions of time 74 00:05:40,236 --> 00:05:43,998 by way of a gravitational black hole. 75 00:05:49,072 --> 00:05:53,663 I'm just nosing in towards the black hole... now. 76 00:06:02,845 --> 00:06:06,538 For our celebration of Einstein's Relativity 77 00:06:06,573 --> 00:06:10,093 and the famous formula that powers the universe, 78 00:06:10,162 --> 00:06:14,512 the venue was the McDonald Observatory of the University of Texas 79 00:06:14,546 --> 00:06:19,724 and the observatory's main telescope was our window on Einstein's universe. 80 00:06:24,522 --> 00:06:27,904 With a light gathering mirror a 107 inches wide, 81 00:06:27,939 --> 00:06:30,942 it's not the largest in the world but 82 00:06:31,011 --> 00:06:34,255 a very impressive instrument all the same. 83 00:06:35,947 --> 00:06:37,673 Oh, it's charming.Isn't it though? 84 00:06:37,707 --> 00:06:38,915 Yes.Quite a telescope. 85 00:06:40,952 --> 00:06:46,302 Already I found a posse of relativists at my shoulder 86 00:06:46,371 --> 00:06:49,443 and affording us the use of the telescope to embellish 87 00:06:49,478 --> 00:06:53,413 our little seminar was the director of the observatory, Harlan Smith. 88 00:06:56,416 --> 00:06:58,072 See the gigantic counterweight here. 89 00:06:58,107 --> 00:06:59,660 That's merely a counterweight? 90 00:06:59,729 --> 00:07:02,732 Yes, many people ask what that's for but it's just dead weight. 91 00:07:02,767 --> 00:07:06,391 The air was decidedly thin on the mountain top. 92 00:07:06,426 --> 00:07:11,638 They bring you up here, getting you in some sense closer to the stars I suppose, 93 00:07:11,707 --> 00:07:15,469 and then present you with stairways at every turn. 94 00:07:15,538 --> 00:07:17,609 More steps?More steps. 95 00:07:21,475 --> 00:07:24,409 You're standing very close to one of the portholes which the light can emerge. 96 00:07:24,444 --> 00:07:27,619 We can put an instrument on there to analyze the light. 97 00:07:27,654 --> 00:07:30,173 Becomes a main collecting mirror. 98 00:07:30,242 --> 00:07:33,349 But it's also interesting to see the control console down there. 99 00:07:33,418 --> 00:07:35,558 It's really remarkably small for all the functions it does. 100 00:07:35,593 --> 00:07:36,835 You mean that's the dashboard for this? 101 00:07:36,904 --> 00:07:38,319 That's all it takes. 102 00:07:41,461 --> 00:07:44,015 Well this is McDonald and this kit peak. This one... 103 00:07:44,084 --> 00:07:47,363 They did everything to help a greenhorn understand 104 00:07:47,432 --> 00:07:50,953 modern astronomy in it's Einsteinian modes. 105 00:07:50,987 --> 00:07:54,715 And that's a tracking station in Madrid, the Bond telescope... 106 00:07:54,784 --> 00:07:58,374 So basic are Einstein's ideas to modern knowledge 107 00:07:58,443 --> 00:08:01,653 that confirming them is now a global industry. 108 00:08:04,553 --> 00:08:07,521 When I prowled through the observatory it seemed like a set 109 00:08:07,590 --> 00:08:12,112 for some drama in space, and in a sense it was. 110 00:08:14,183 --> 00:08:18,394 About science, Einstein and I had only this in common, 111 00:08:18,463 --> 00:08:22,398 we both hated the way it was taught to us at school. 112 00:08:22,467 --> 00:08:24,987 He transcended that... I drowned in it. 113 00:08:26,885 --> 00:08:30,855 John Wheeler began my rather belated rescue. 114 00:08:30,889 --> 00:08:33,202 Thanks to you not being a scientist, 115 00:08:33,236 --> 00:08:35,653 we're all going to have to give this account 116 00:08:35,687 --> 00:08:39,208 the simplicity that Einstein would have loved. 117 00:08:40,347 --> 00:08:42,383 Where do you think we should the account, John? 118 00:08:42,452 --> 00:08:43,557 With gravity? 119 00:08:43,557 --> 00:08:45,076 Nothing could be better. 120 00:08:45,076 --> 00:08:48,182 Everyone has to deal with it every day. 121 00:08:48,217 --> 00:08:49,425 Gravity. 122 00:08:49,494 --> 00:08:52,566 Well let's see what the astronauts made of gravity 123 00:08:52,635 --> 00:08:53,774 on the moon. 124 00:08:56,950 --> 00:09:01,851 I'm very proud to have the opportunity here to play postman. 125 00:09:01,886 --> 00:09:06,649 What could be a better place to cancel a stamp than right here at Hadley Rille. 126 00:09:06,684 --> 00:09:08,789 I, I remember this from the time... 127 00:09:10,515 --> 00:09:13,691 Now in my left hand I have a feather... 128 00:09:13,725 --> 00:09:15,762 In my right hand a hammer. 129 00:09:15,831 --> 00:09:17,557 I guess one of the reasons, 130 00:09:17,591 --> 00:09:19,282 we got got here today was because of a 131 00:09:19,282 --> 00:09:21,940 gentleman named Galileo, a long time ago, 132 00:09:22,009 --> 00:09:24,425 who made a rather significant discovery 133 00:09:24,460 --> 00:09:27,187 about falling objects in gravity fields. 134 00:09:27,221 --> 00:09:31,122 And we thought that where would be a better place to confirm his 135 00:09:31,191 --> 00:09:34,366 findings than on the moon. 136 00:09:34,401 --> 00:09:37,231 And, so, we thought we'd try it here for you. 137 00:09:37,266 --> 00:09:40,441 And the feather happens to be, appropriately, a falcon feather 138 00:09:41,442 --> 00:09:43,134 for our falcon. 139 00:09:43,134 --> 00:09:46,137 And I'll drop the two of them here and hopefully 140 00:09:46,137 --> 00:09:48,553 they'll hit the ground at the same time. 141 00:09:50,106 --> 00:09:51,418 How about that? 142 00:09:52,971 --> 00:09:56,941 I have here a hammer and a bird's feather. 143 00:10:00,392 --> 00:10:02,118 How about that? 144 00:10:05,466 --> 00:10:07,572 If you were Galileo, 145 00:10:07,607 --> 00:10:10,817 how would you in the light of that, try to persuade 146 00:10:10,817 --> 00:10:13,129 people that everything falls at the same rate? 147 00:10:13,129 --> 00:10:14,475 Difficult. 148 00:10:14,510 --> 00:10:18,997 Difficult. Air resistance is a whole problem isn't it? 149 00:10:18,997 --> 00:10:22,000 So it's such a wonderful thing that air resistance 150 00:10:22,069 --> 00:10:25,486 for objects like this doesn't count so much. 151 00:10:29,076 --> 00:10:30,457 Fantastic. 152 00:10:30,491 --> 00:10:33,494 What a feat for Galileo to realize 153 00:10:33,529 --> 00:10:36,981 that everything falls at the same rate. 154 00:10:37,015 --> 00:10:40,018 But for Einstein it was a still greater 155 00:10:40,087 --> 00:10:43,504 act of imagination to realize 156 00:10:43,539 --> 00:10:45,541 that the reason those things all move the same, 157 00:10:45,610 --> 00:10:49,200 they get their moving orders from the same piece of space, 158 00:10:49,200 --> 00:10:50,580 it's not the distant Earth, 159 00:10:50,615 --> 00:10:52,168 it's the space right where they are. 160 00:10:53,825 --> 00:10:58,554 "There came to me the happiest thought of my life. 161 00:10:58,554 --> 00:11:01,971 "Consider someone in free fall, for example, 162 00:11:03,145 --> 00:11:05,147 "from the roof of a house. 163 00:11:05,181 --> 00:11:08,702 "There exists for him during his fall 164 00:11:08,702 --> 00:11:12,085 "no gravitational field." 165 00:11:14,225 --> 00:11:20,576 And Einstein really tells us that gravity is an illusion. 166 00:11:20,576 --> 00:11:24,442 I can toss, across to Dennis, a ball 167 00:11:26,582 --> 00:11:30,620 and that arc looks as real as anything could be. 168 00:11:30,655 --> 00:11:33,727 And I can toss a ball across to Sid 169 00:11:33,727 --> 00:11:37,248 and the arc looks as real as anything could be. 170 00:11:37,317 --> 00:11:41,183 But Einstein tells us that the arc is a pure illusion. 171 00:11:41,217 --> 00:11:44,324 If we could only cut away 172 00:11:44,358 --> 00:11:48,466 this grid with a welder's torch from underneath us 173 00:11:48,500 --> 00:11:50,157 and all fall freely, 174 00:11:50,192 --> 00:11:52,677 then, as I toss that ball, it would 175 00:11:52,712 --> 00:11:55,542 move in a beautiful straight line. 176 00:11:55,576 --> 00:11:58,441 Einstein tells us that in a local, 177 00:11:58,510 --> 00:12:02,031 freely falling frame, there is no gravity. 178 00:12:08,244 --> 00:12:13,940 Einstein would have loved to see those astronauts in Skylab. 179 00:12:13,940 --> 00:12:17,322 They were weightless. They were in free fall. 180 00:12:21,292 --> 00:12:24,191 Einstein's great idea, 181 00:12:24,226 --> 00:12:26,262 all objects fall 182 00:12:26,297 --> 00:12:29,749 because they get their moving orders right from space. 183 00:12:32,959 --> 00:12:38,378 Skylab had no power in orbit and no force acted on it. 184 00:12:38,412 --> 00:12:42,071 It went just as straight as possible through space. 185 00:12:43,245 --> 00:12:47,594 But space is warped around the earth. 186 00:12:47,628 --> 00:12:51,771 So Skylab could end up and did end up going in a circle. 187 00:12:53,876 --> 00:12:58,605 Warped space was Einstein's style of thinking. 188 00:13:01,470 --> 00:13:03,713 Moving about in warped space 189 00:13:03,748 --> 00:13:06,647 is no more mysterious than traveling 190 00:13:06,647 --> 00:13:09,443 about in these mountains. 191 00:13:09,478 --> 00:13:12,861 You just can't go in a straight line. 192 00:13:12,930 --> 00:13:16,485 To go in a straight line you must go down on the plain. 193 00:13:18,245 --> 00:13:20,489 Well, like everything else, light, it seems, 194 00:13:20,558 --> 00:13:22,180 responds to gravity. 195 00:13:22,180 --> 00:13:24,769 And so space is warped. 196 00:13:24,804 --> 00:13:29,394 Coaxing me over that fence was Irwin Shapiro. 197 00:13:29,394 --> 00:13:33,019 One of the important questions we have to decide is whether something 198 00:13:33,088 --> 00:13:35,504 is straight or warped. How can we do that? 199 00:13:35,538 --> 00:13:37,437 We need some frame of reference. 200 00:13:37,471 --> 00:13:39,370 For example, if you were to look at 201 00:13:39,439 --> 00:13:42,545 this line of posts and trying to decide 202 00:13:42,614 --> 00:13:44,858 whether they were straight or not, how would you do it? 203 00:13:44,858 --> 00:13:47,516 Well, you'd presumably, look along it. 204 00:13:47,550 --> 00:13:50,519 I think I could have told from there but it's almost straight. 205 00:13:50,553 --> 00:13:53,039 Right. You squinted along it and really, 206 00:13:53,039 --> 00:13:56,214 your frame of reference was the light rays 207 00:13:56,214 --> 00:14:00,391 and that's a very good technique, however you can get fooled 208 00:14:00,391 --> 00:14:03,049 if the light itself gets bent. 209 00:14:03,118 --> 00:14:05,534 For example, water bends light 210 00:14:05,568 --> 00:14:10,470 and we can illustrate that here with these two rulers. I put these two rulers 211 00:14:10,504 --> 00:14:12,852 in the water and ask you to decide whether 212 00:14:12,886 --> 00:14:15,716 the bottom one or the top one is actually straight. 213 00:14:15,785 --> 00:14:18,547 Well, since water bends light, 214 00:14:18,581 --> 00:14:21,136 the bottom one looks straight and obviously isn't. 215 00:14:21,170 --> 00:14:23,310 That's right. See, when we pull it out, 216 00:14:23,345 --> 00:14:25,347 when they're out of the water, you can see clearly that the 217 00:14:25,381 --> 00:14:29,523 bottom one is the one that's bent and the top one is the straight one. 218 00:14:34,874 --> 00:14:40,258 In fact, if you look from the earth at light from a star beyond the sun, 219 00:14:40,293 --> 00:14:44,642 the sun's gravity bends the light of the star as it grazes it's limb. 220 00:14:47,783 --> 00:14:52,408 And so, the position of the star appears to change. 221 00:14:54,686 --> 00:14:57,379 Einstein calculated the bending of light 222 00:14:57,413 --> 00:14:59,899 using this idea of curved space. 223 00:15:01,590 --> 00:15:04,213 As seen from the earth, 224 00:15:04,248 --> 00:15:09,563 certain fixed stars appear to be in the neighborhood of the sun 225 00:15:09,598 --> 00:15:14,327 and can be observed during a total eclipse of the sun. 226 00:15:14,327 --> 00:15:18,641 At such times these stars ought to appear to be displaced outwards 227 00:15:18,641 --> 00:15:23,301 from the sun as compared with their apparent position in the sky when 228 00:15:23,301 --> 00:15:27,202 the sun is situated at another part of the heavens. 229 00:15:27,236 --> 00:15:32,069 A ray of light going past the sun undergoes a deflection of 230 00:15:32,103 --> 00:15:35,348 1.7 seconds of arc. 231 00:15:36,211 --> 00:15:39,214 That prediction, in 1915, 232 00:15:39,248 --> 00:15:41,975 led to world fame for Einstein. 233 00:15:42,010 --> 00:15:47,670 In fact, there was a total eclipse of the sun in 1919 234 00:15:47,739 --> 00:15:49,845 and a team of British astronomers 235 00:15:49,845 --> 00:15:53,297 went to observe this total eclipse in the tropics. 236 00:15:53,331 --> 00:15:57,508 And here's a plate taken from that expedition, 237 00:15:57,508 --> 00:16:01,167 of the sun during the total eclipse. This is a negative 238 00:16:01,236 --> 00:16:03,065 so you don't see the sun at all, 239 00:16:03,100 --> 00:16:04,446 it's a blank field... 240 00:16:04,480 --> 00:16:07,587 ...and these black striations are the solar corona. 241 00:16:08,726 --> 00:16:10,900 And very tiny black dots 242 00:16:10,935 --> 00:16:13,800 are the stars in the field of view. 243 00:16:13,834 --> 00:16:16,768 And the relative positions of these stars were 244 00:16:16,803 --> 00:16:20,910 measured very accurately and compared with corresponding measurements 245 00:16:20,945 --> 00:16:23,534 of a photograph taken of the same stars 246 00:16:23,534 --> 00:16:26,157 when the sun wasn't in the field of view 247 00:16:26,192 --> 00:16:29,160 and the results showed the star positions shifted 248 00:16:29,195 --> 00:16:31,507 during the total eclipse 249 00:16:31,542 --> 00:16:34,441 in approximate agreement with Einstein's predictions 250 00:16:34,476 --> 00:16:36,340 and certainly quite different 251 00:16:36,374 --> 00:16:39,515 from what Newton would have predicted.Oh. 252 00:16:41,310 --> 00:16:43,519 Newton, forgive me. 253 00:16:43,554 --> 00:16:47,385 You found the only path barely open in your time 254 00:16:47,385 --> 00:16:51,907 for a man of the highest powers of thought and ordering. 255 00:16:51,907 --> 00:16:56,187 The concepts which you created still guide our thinking in 256 00:16:56,222 --> 00:17:00,467 physics even today although we now know 257 00:17:00,502 --> 00:17:03,677 that they will have to be replaced by others, 258 00:17:03,712 --> 00:17:07,336 farther removed from the realm of direct experience, 259 00:17:07,371 --> 00:17:12,824 if we aim at a deeper understanding of relationships. 260 00:17:18,175 --> 00:17:22,351 Nowadays, we needn't await a total eclipse of the sun 261 00:17:22,386 --> 00:17:25,699 to attempt to make measurements of the deflection of light, 262 00:17:25,734 --> 00:17:27,839 we can use radio waves. 263 00:17:27,874 --> 00:17:29,876 According to Einstein's theory, 264 00:17:29,910 --> 00:17:32,361 radio waves, just like light and 265 00:17:32,396 --> 00:17:35,226 x-rays or any other light-like radiation, 266 00:17:35,261 --> 00:17:40,128 is predicted to behave the same way under the influence of gravity. 267 00:17:40,128 --> 00:17:42,785 Instead of ordinary stars in our galaxy, 268 00:17:42,854 --> 00:17:47,928 with radio waves we observe the much more distant objects called quasars. 269 00:17:48,860 --> 00:17:50,931 Just like the visible stars, 270 00:17:50,931 --> 00:17:52,968 quasars seem to change position 271 00:17:52,968 --> 00:17:56,040 in the sky when the sun comes into line with them. 272 00:17:59,526 --> 00:18:01,459 With the radio technique, 273 00:18:01,459 --> 00:18:05,118 we can also achieve far better accuracy. 274 00:18:05,187 --> 00:18:07,086 The most accurate measurements were done 275 00:18:07,120 --> 00:18:11,987 at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Greenbank, West Virginia. 276 00:18:11,987 --> 00:18:15,922 This experiment confirmed Einstein's prediction for the bending 277 00:18:15,956 --> 00:18:17,855 to within about one percent. 278 00:18:22,998 --> 00:18:26,415 Powerless, then, to question that gravity bends light, 279 00:18:26,450 --> 00:18:30,281 we tried our skills with an impressionistic model of warped space. 280 00:18:32,973 --> 00:18:35,010 They urged me to believe that the 281 00:18:35,010 --> 00:18:39,083 distortions of space due to a massive body like the sun 282 00:18:39,118 --> 00:18:42,604 could shape the course of lesser objects like the planets. 283 00:18:43,915 --> 00:18:45,952 The table maker gratuitously added 284 00:18:45,986 --> 00:18:48,092 bottomless pits of gravity, 285 00:18:48,127 --> 00:18:52,786 black holes that would swallow an unskillful ball. 286 00:19:03,590 --> 00:19:06,835 Black holes aren't getting much to eat today. 287 00:19:08,526 --> 00:19:11,633 Einstein wouldn't be happy if we didn't tell you his story 288 00:19:11,667 --> 00:19:14,187 in the simplest words. 289 00:19:14,222 --> 00:19:20,331 Space tells matter how to move and matter tells space how to curve. 290 00:19:20,952 --> 00:19:22,989 That's it. 291 00:19:23,023 --> 00:19:26,958 Throw this ball past the sun. 292 00:19:30,376 --> 00:19:31,687 That's light 293 00:19:31,756 --> 00:19:34,242 changing its direction, 294 00:19:34,311 --> 00:19:38,315 but not through some mysterious force acting through space 295 00:19:38,349 --> 00:19:41,663 but through the warping of space itself. 296 00:19:42,836 --> 00:19:45,839 Or put a planet 297 00:19:45,874 --> 00:19:51,190 into orbit around the sun and watch it go. 298 00:19:51,224 --> 00:19:54,331 And where does it get it's moving orders from? 299 00:19:54,365 --> 00:19:57,023 Not from that sun 300 00:19:57,057 --> 00:19:59,784 but from the space right where it is. 301 00:20:03,892 --> 00:20:06,135 Or put Skylab 302 00:20:06,170 --> 00:20:09,242 into orbit around the earth 303 00:20:09,277 --> 00:20:13,315 and ask those people on Skylab what do they see. 304 00:20:15,766 --> 00:20:18,217 They get their moving orders 305 00:20:18,251 --> 00:20:22,221 from space itself, right there, where it is. 306 00:20:27,122 --> 00:20:31,230 Einstein's wonderfully simple picture of it all. 307 00:20:32,576 --> 00:20:35,544 Or the moon going around the earth. 308 00:20:38,375 --> 00:20:40,446 Pull the earth away, 309 00:20:40,446 --> 00:20:45,416 unwarp space and the moon will fly off. 310 00:20:45,451 --> 00:20:49,869 Happy to go in a beautiful straight line. 311 00:20:49,903 --> 00:20:54,253 But cosmic space isn't, after all, a distorted tabletop. 312 00:20:54,287 --> 00:20:58,326 I bared my misgivings to Dennis Sciama. 313 00:20:58,326 --> 00:21:03,503 How on earth, or rather, how in the universe can nothingness have shape? 314 00:21:04,470 --> 00:21:06,575 That is indeed a difficult question 315 00:21:06,610 --> 00:21:09,475 and the Greeks struggled with it very much. 316 00:21:09,475 --> 00:21:11,994 They had a geometry of their own 317 00:21:12,063 --> 00:21:14,100 and light, responding to that geometry, 318 00:21:14,134 --> 00:21:16,309 would move in straight lines. 319 00:21:16,378 --> 00:21:19,554 That's not at all the case in Einstein's theory. 320 00:21:19,588 --> 00:21:22,315 He uses a different geometry from the Greeks. 321 00:21:22,350 --> 00:21:27,182 A geometry in which space is warped and light responding to that geometry 322 00:21:27,251 --> 00:21:30,185 doesn't move in straight lines but is bent. 323 00:21:30,185 --> 00:21:33,015 And a planet responding to that geometry would move, 324 00:21:33,015 --> 00:21:35,639 let's say, in a circle around the sun. 325 00:21:35,673 --> 00:21:38,642 Einstein himself was very concerned to stress 326 00:21:38,676 --> 00:21:43,405 this difference from the old geometry and he tried to make it plain to all of us. 327 00:21:45,200 --> 00:21:48,962 On the basis of the general theory of relativity, 328 00:21:48,997 --> 00:21:52,656 space, as opposed to what fills space, 329 00:21:52,690 --> 00:21:54,796 has no separate existence. 330 00:21:54,830 --> 00:21:57,661 There is no such thing as empty space, 331 00:21:57,695 --> 00:22:02,562 that is space without a gravitational field. 332 00:22:02,562 --> 00:22:08,499 The geometrical properties of space are not independent but they are determined by matter. 333 00:22:12,503 --> 00:22:18,302 It seemed that either Newton's force of gravity or Einstein's warped geometry, 334 00:22:18,337 --> 00:22:21,857 would keep the planet circling in the same stately fashion. 335 00:22:22,548 --> 00:22:24,481 But who was right? 336 00:22:26,034 --> 00:22:27,898 In Einstein's theory, 337 00:22:27,898 --> 00:22:30,866 the orbits are predicted to be slightly different 338 00:22:30,901 --> 00:22:33,766 than they are in Newton's theory. 339 00:22:33,766 --> 00:22:38,736 For example, let us consider a single planet in orbit about the sun. 340 00:22:38,771 --> 00:22:43,672 In Newton's theory, this planet would be predicted to follow an elliptical path, 341 00:22:43,707 --> 00:22:47,711 that is a path sort of like a stretched out circle. 342 00:22:47,745 --> 00:22:51,266 And in Newton's theory this path would be followed continually, 343 00:22:51,335 --> 00:22:56,305 ad nauseum, following the same elliptical path all the time. 344 00:22:59,481 --> 00:23:01,656 Whereas in Einstein's theory, 345 00:23:01,690 --> 00:23:03,761 this path actually swivels around. 346 00:23:03,761 --> 00:23:09,146 That is the ellipse rotates very slowly in space. 347 00:23:11,597 --> 00:23:13,944 Near the sun, gravity's a little stronger in 348 00:23:13,944 --> 00:23:16,187 Einstein's theory than in Newton's. 349 00:23:16,222 --> 00:23:21,261 So close in, the planet teeters for a moment before climbing away. 350 00:23:21,296 --> 00:23:24,713 This different prediction of Einstein's theory 351 00:23:24,748 --> 00:23:27,923 actually cleared up a nineteenth century mystery 352 00:23:27,958 --> 00:23:30,167 about the orbit of the planet Mercury, 353 00:23:30,201 --> 00:23:32,825 the closest one to the sun. 354 00:23:32,825 --> 00:23:38,037 The ellipse corresponding to the orbit of Mercury is not stationary 355 00:23:38,071 --> 00:23:42,800 with respect to the fixed stars, but rotates 356 00:23:42,869 --> 00:23:45,424 exceedingly slowly. 357 00:23:45,458 --> 00:23:47,495 The value obtained for this 358 00:23:47,495 --> 00:23:53,224 rotary movement is 43 seconds of arc per century. 359 00:23:53,259 --> 00:23:56,262 This effect can be explained 360 00:23:56,296 --> 00:24:00,266 by classical mechanics only on the assumption of hypotheses which have 361 00:24:01,129 --> 00:24:03,062 little probability. 362 00:24:03,096 --> 00:24:07,653 On the basis of the general theory of relativity, 363 00:24:07,653 --> 00:24:11,380 it is found that the ellipse of every planet 364 00:24:11,415 --> 00:24:15,523 must necessarily rotate in this manner. 365 00:24:24,152 --> 00:24:26,361 In the late 1960s 366 00:24:26,430 --> 00:24:29,951 we used the Haystack radio telescope in Massachusetts 367 00:24:29,985 --> 00:24:33,057 to measure the swivel of Mercury's orbit. 368 00:24:33,057 --> 00:24:37,924 This telescope is enclosed in a ray dome to protect it from the wind and the sun. 369 00:24:42,377 --> 00:24:45,449 What we did was use this radio telescope 370 00:24:45,484 --> 00:24:49,798 with an attached radar system to send pulses of radio energy 371 00:24:49,833 --> 00:24:52,974 towards Mercury and to detect the echoes. 372 00:24:57,323 --> 00:25:01,465 In fact, although the power in the transmitted radar signals 373 00:25:01,500 --> 00:25:04,054 is about 500,000 watts, 374 00:25:04,123 --> 00:25:07,851 enough to supply the electrical needs of a small town, 375 00:25:07,885 --> 00:25:10,129 the echo we detect is so weak 376 00:25:10,163 --> 00:25:14,547 that its power is even less than that expended by an average housefly 377 00:25:14,582 --> 00:25:19,725 crawling up a wall at the rate of only a millimeter per millennium. 378 00:25:19,794 --> 00:25:23,176 By measuring these echoes from Mercury, periodically 379 00:25:23,211 --> 00:25:28,216 over several years, we were able to detect the swivel of Mercury's orbit 380 00:25:28,250 --> 00:25:33,532 because the echo delay is different for a swiveling than for a non-swiveling orbit. 381 00:25:35,257 --> 00:25:39,676 Our results confirmed Einstein's prediction to within one percent. 382 00:25:44,612 --> 00:25:47,062 There's an amazing object that's been discovered in 383 00:25:47,097 --> 00:25:51,204 the sky that swivels in its orbit far more than Mercury does. 384 00:25:51,239 --> 00:25:56,451 This object illustrates beautifully Einstein's relativistic effect. 385 00:25:56,451 --> 00:25:59,143 The object is called a binary pulsar. 386 00:26:01,352 --> 00:26:05,598 An object lying far off among the stars, the binary pulsar, 387 00:26:05,667 --> 00:26:07,945 was evidently quite invisible. 388 00:26:07,945 --> 00:26:12,122 By what new ingenuity could they track its orbit? 389 00:26:12,191 --> 00:26:15,643 Kenneth Brecher patiently explained. 390 00:26:15,712 --> 00:26:20,717 Imagine a rapidly moving vehicle coming down the road... A motorbike say. 391 00:26:20,751 --> 00:26:24,341 As it comes towards you, you hear a high pitched roar. 392 00:26:29,518 --> 00:26:32,452 When it passes you, the pitch drops 393 00:26:32,487 --> 00:26:34,765 with a change in frequency according to whether 394 00:26:34,800 --> 00:26:38,148 the source of sound is coming towards you or going away. 395 00:26:38,148 --> 00:26:40,599 That's the Doppler Effect. 396 00:26:40,633 --> 00:26:43,671 The same thing happens with light or with radio waves. 397 00:26:45,051 --> 00:26:47,709 Police speed traps use Doppler radar. 398 00:26:47,744 --> 00:26:49,159 It sends out radio waves that 399 00:26:49,228 --> 00:26:52,611 bounce off the vehicle and come back with a higher frequency. 400 00:26:52,645 --> 00:26:56,028 The faster you're going the more the frequency is changed. 401 00:27:02,172 --> 00:27:06,625 The Doppler Effect is an unbeatable way of measuring relative speed. 402 00:27:10,283 --> 00:27:13,424 Now imagine an object, circling, giving out its own radio pulses. 403 00:27:15,530 --> 00:27:19,016 You'd find the frequency rising and falling repeatedly. 404 00:27:19,016 --> 00:27:21,743 You could tell it was circling even if you couldn't see it. 405 00:27:23,503 --> 00:27:27,128 Completely out of sight among the stars there's an orbiting pulsar. 406 00:27:27,162 --> 00:27:29,095 It's nature's gift to the relativist. 407 00:27:31,339 --> 00:27:34,756 A pulsar is a collapsed star, a neutron star we call it, 408 00:27:34,791 --> 00:27:37,207 which ticks like a very accurate clock 409 00:27:37,276 --> 00:27:40,072 emitting regular beeps of radio energy. 410 00:27:41,694 --> 00:27:44,145 This particular pulsar changes its beep rate 411 00:27:44,179 --> 00:27:47,458 in an eight hour cycle as it sweeps forwards and backwards. 412 00:27:49,219 --> 00:27:52,049 But did you discover this binary pulsar? 413 00:27:52,084 --> 00:27:55,156 No, I didn't discover the pulsar but all of us who are working on 414 00:27:55,190 --> 00:27:58,573 relativity and astrophysics are incredibly excited about it. 415 00:27:58,642 --> 00:28:01,058 It's a unique object and a unique opportunity to 416 00:28:01,058 --> 00:28:07,099 test the laws of general relativity in a very precise way. 417 00:28:07,099 --> 00:28:11,482 It's being studied at the Arecibo radio observatory in Puerto Rico. 418 00:28:15,521 --> 00:28:19,767 Joe Taylor and Russell Hulse of the University of Massachusetts discovered it 419 00:28:19,767 --> 00:28:23,356 and Taylor has been checking up on it every few months ever since. 420 00:28:23,391 --> 00:28:25,393 We're right on source?Yeah. 421 00:28:25,462 --> 00:28:26,912 Following errors?No. 422 00:28:26,981 --> 00:28:28,396 Thank you. Good.Okay. 423 00:28:30,536 --> 00:28:32,089 Hello, everything still going all right? 424 00:28:32,158 --> 00:28:35,783 Yeah, fine. 425 00:28:35,783 --> 00:28:40,097 One of the marvelous things about it is the changes are so predictable 426 00:28:40,132 --> 00:28:43,963 that when they switch on the pulsar always clocks in right on cue. 427 00:28:50,349 --> 00:28:52,523 The pulsar is in a very tight, fast orbit 428 00:28:52,558 --> 00:28:55,734 around another collapsed star that's not directly detectable. 429 00:28:57,701 --> 00:29:01,153 And the pulsar's orbit changes in the Einsteinian manner. 430 00:29:01,222 --> 00:29:06,399 It swivels 30,000 times faster than Mercury's orbit does, four degrees a year. 431 00:29:09,471 --> 00:29:13,821 The binary pulsar's very nice evidence for Einstein's effect. 432 00:29:13,890 --> 00:29:17,928 But really, to milk it for all it's worth in confirming relativity, 433 00:29:17,963 --> 00:29:20,759 Taylor still has years of work to do. 434 00:29:20,793 --> 00:29:24,314 And in fact there's some things still more exciting in prospect, 435 00:29:24,383 --> 00:29:28,042 which is that as the binary pulsar goes round, 436 00:29:28,076 --> 00:29:33,392 according to Einstein, it radiates gravitational waves. 437 00:29:33,426 --> 00:29:38,397 The result of that would be that the orbital period would change slowly 438 00:29:38,431 --> 00:29:41,296 and Joe Taylor is trying to detect this change. 439 00:29:42,470 --> 00:29:44,127 In fact, just the other day, 440 00:29:44,161 --> 00:29:47,924 Joe Taylor sent me a new manuscript of his in which he claims to 441 00:29:47,958 --> 00:29:52,273 begin to measure this effect and it does seem to fit Einstein's theory very well. 442 00:29:54,033 --> 00:29:57,588 These gravitational waves that Einstein predicted 443 00:29:57,623 --> 00:30:00,695 are ripples of warped space. 444 00:30:00,695 --> 00:30:05,631 And with the help of a computer, theorists have made movies of gravitational waves 445 00:30:05,665 --> 00:30:08,841 that ought to pour out from violent events 446 00:30:08,910 --> 00:30:10,947 like the collapse of a star. 447 00:30:12,845 --> 00:30:16,366 And there's an interesting kinship, isn't there, between gravitational waves 448 00:30:16,366 --> 00:30:19,058 and the familiar tides of the sea 449 00:30:19,058 --> 00:30:23,235 that are raised on the earth by the warped space around the moon. 450 00:30:25,168 --> 00:30:29,172 We're a long way from the sea here so we can't actually see 451 00:30:29,206 --> 00:30:32,900 the ocean moving up and down the way it does in a spectacular 452 00:30:32,969 --> 00:30:37,318 fashion on the coast but, as a matter of fact, at this observatory 453 00:30:37,352 --> 00:30:42,806 they have measured how the rocks of the earth move under the moon's influence. 454 00:30:42,841 --> 00:30:48,847 They move up and down by as much as a foot twice a day. 455 00:30:48,881 --> 00:30:52,574 Unsettling to think of the earth heaving like that. 456 00:30:52,574 --> 00:30:58,857 But the force of the tides gave a certain palpability to warped space. 457 00:30:58,891 --> 00:31:05,311 Wheeler then offered me a warped miniature table and a jar of quicksilver. 458 00:31:05,346 --> 00:31:08,487 You'll notice that you have 459 00:31:08,521 --> 00:31:13,561 one of the blobs of mercury pulled right out, stretched out 460 00:31:13,595 --> 00:31:19,118 and nothing is a more beautiful illustration of a tide effect than that. 461 00:31:22,156 --> 00:31:24,503 What you can, if you'd like to, 462 00:31:24,537 --> 00:31:28,162 to illustrate that gravitational waves 463 00:31:28,196 --> 00:31:29,922 are also tides, 464 00:31:29,922 --> 00:31:32,787 is take that blob of mercury and jiggle it 465 00:31:32,856 --> 00:31:36,860 and you notice it changes its shape, first this way and then that way 466 00:31:36,895 --> 00:31:39,898 and there just isn't a more beautiful illustration 467 00:31:39,932 --> 00:31:42,245 of what a gravitational wave is 468 00:31:42,279 --> 00:31:46,939 than the tidal stretching of that little blob of mercury 469 00:31:46,974 --> 00:31:50,460 or the tidal stretching of a gravitational wave detector. 470 00:31:50,460 --> 00:31:53,946 One of the things that interests me most about the whole thing 471 00:31:54,015 --> 00:31:56,880 is the push it's going to give to technology, 472 00:31:56,915 --> 00:31:59,641 because looking for gravitational waves, 473 00:31:59,641 --> 00:32:04,405 we have to get down to what everybody calls the quantum limit of measurement, 474 00:32:04,439 --> 00:32:06,648 and that's a new thing in the world, 475 00:32:06,717 --> 00:32:09,237 and it's going to mean new kinds of equipment 476 00:32:09,272 --> 00:32:10,998 that show up all over the map. 477 00:32:11,067 --> 00:32:14,933 Engineering, biology, medicine... What have you. 478 00:32:19,661 --> 00:32:22,009 You can try to detect very slight ringing 479 00:32:22,078 --> 00:32:26,737 in great super cool metal cylinders like the one at Stanford in California. 480 00:32:28,153 --> 00:32:29,844 In Glasgow, they have a different method. 481 00:32:29,913 --> 00:32:33,227 Look at some of the details of the optical systems down in here. 482 00:32:33,261 --> 00:32:35,884 Ronald Greaver uses laser beams 483 00:32:35,919 --> 00:32:38,094 that shuttle to and fro many times. 484 00:32:42,201 --> 00:32:45,308 And that's to measure shifts in the position of different masses, 485 00:32:45,342 --> 00:32:49,484 shifts that might be caused by gravitational waves washing through the earth. 486 00:32:54,351 --> 00:32:56,560 But it's incredibly delicate. 487 00:32:56,629 --> 00:33:01,186 They're getting ready to look for movements far, far smaller than the width of an atom 488 00:33:01,255 --> 00:33:02,946 between masses mounted about 489 00:33:02,981 --> 00:33:06,018 30 feet apart. 490 00:33:06,053 --> 00:33:11,230 It's possible that stars going round one another very rapidly can be detected. 491 00:33:11,230 --> 00:33:16,546 It's possible that violently exploding star like supernovae will be detected 492 00:33:16,615 --> 00:33:20,515 and it's even possible that objects falling into massive black holes 493 00:33:20,550 --> 00:33:23,863 will produce gravitational waves we can pick up. 494 00:33:23,863 --> 00:33:26,038 And if any of those things happen, 495 00:33:26,038 --> 00:33:28,799 we'll be seeing the effects Einstein predicted 496 00:33:28,834 --> 00:33:31,112 of warped space propagating 497 00:33:31,147 --> 00:33:33,011 actually with the speed of light. 498 00:33:37,153 --> 00:33:40,397 The McDonald Observatory had its own laser 499 00:33:40,466 --> 00:33:43,987 and after hearing about clever experiments in other places 500 00:33:44,022 --> 00:33:46,334 I was to see one in progress myself. 501 00:33:51,029 --> 00:33:53,997 We've put those waves of gravity behind us, Peter, 502 00:33:54,032 --> 00:33:59,175 and come back to basic issues about gravity and orbits and warped space. 503 00:33:59,209 --> 00:34:02,005 What they do here is shoot their laser at the moon 504 00:34:02,040 --> 00:34:06,113 to check its distance and movements to within a matter of inches. 505 00:34:07,148 --> 00:34:08,908 The moon's a heavy object 506 00:34:08,908 --> 00:34:11,256 but the earth is heavier still 507 00:34:11,290 --> 00:34:15,191 and they might respond differently in the sun's gravity. 508 00:34:15,225 --> 00:34:19,333 Then, we might see the moon's orbit drifting a few feet closer to the sun 509 00:34:19,367 --> 00:34:20,920 and Einstein would be wrong. 510 00:34:22,439 --> 00:34:23,716 Fantastic sight of the moon. 511 00:34:27,203 --> 00:34:29,688 The moon looked splendid. 512 00:34:29,722 --> 00:34:34,348 No amount of scrutiny by science can efface its terrible beauty. 513 00:34:37,282 --> 00:34:39,422 You probably want it back now, don't you, Robert? 514 00:34:39,422 --> 00:34:41,389 Yes.Yes. 515 00:34:42,114 --> 00:34:43,426 Very wise. 516 00:34:45,600 --> 00:34:49,397 To reflect the laser pulses from the moon, 517 00:34:49,432 --> 00:34:51,296 the Apollo astronauts 518 00:34:51,330 --> 00:34:56,542 set down a series of corner cubes on the surface at various locations. 519 00:34:57,957 --> 00:35:02,652 Exactly like the cubed corner I have here in my hand. 520 00:35:02,652 --> 00:35:05,689 Take a look at it, you look in at this face, 521 00:35:05,689 --> 00:35:10,763 and you'll see that no matter what direction the light enters the corner cube, 522 00:35:10,798 --> 00:35:13,180 it has he remarkable property 523 00:35:13,180 --> 00:35:18,116 of coming out again in exactly the same path, but in the opposite direction. 524 00:35:19,462 --> 00:35:21,015 The Soviet Union 525 00:35:21,015 --> 00:35:23,949 landed two Lunar HUD vehicles on the surface 526 00:35:23,983 --> 00:35:27,918 of the moon and each of them carried an array of corner 527 00:35:27,953 --> 00:35:30,473 reflectors that were built by the French. 528 00:35:30,507 --> 00:35:33,683 And tonight we're going to try and get echoes back 529 00:35:33,752 --> 00:35:35,857 from one of these Lunar HUD vehicles. 530 00:35:35,926 --> 00:35:38,860 Lunar HUD 21, which you can see 531 00:35:38,929 --> 00:35:41,622 in the upper right hand corner of the moon, over there. 532 00:35:41,656 --> 00:35:42,726 Oh yes. 533 00:35:43,796 --> 00:35:46,937 Eric Silverberg took up the story. 534 00:35:46,972 --> 00:35:49,768 We fired the laser every three seconds 535 00:35:49,802 --> 00:35:52,805 which produces an extremely intense pulse of 536 00:35:52,840 --> 00:35:57,845 light that starts at the far end of the room and then expands 537 00:35:57,879 --> 00:36:01,297 up through this tube hitting two reflections 538 00:36:01,331 --> 00:36:05,232 and then more until it fills the entire mirror, 539 00:36:05,232 --> 00:36:08,787 107-inch mirror, which gives us a very parallel beam of light 540 00:36:08,821 --> 00:36:10,996 to send up to the moon. 541 00:36:11,030 --> 00:36:16,864 We typically fire from 300 to 400 shots in each 45 minute period. 542 00:36:16,898 --> 00:36:20,799 Since the laser pulse is about three feet long, 543 00:36:20,833 --> 00:36:24,872 going up to the moon we can very accurately time how long it takes 544 00:36:24,872 --> 00:36:27,323 to get there and back. 545 00:36:27,357 --> 00:36:30,912 We always have to station an aircraft observer outside 546 00:36:30,981 --> 00:36:34,640 the dome to keep track of any possible nearby aircraft because of the 547 00:36:34,675 --> 00:36:36,194 intensity of the beam. 548 00:36:38,713 --> 00:36:41,199 We're going to start ranging on the reflector now 549 00:36:41,233 --> 00:36:47,274 and Robert will start firing at the Soviet, site. 550 00:36:49,137 --> 00:36:50,760 His job is the most demanding 551 00:36:50,829 --> 00:36:54,246 because he has to point the telescope 552 00:36:54,246 --> 00:36:56,214 with an accuracy which is 553 00:36:56,248 --> 00:36:57,836 equivalent to trying to hit a penny 554 00:36:57,870 --> 00:37:00,563 at a distance of perhaps a mile. 555 00:37:01,564 --> 00:37:03,600 And we help him out as much as we can 556 00:37:03,669 --> 00:37:07,535 by putting a small red flash on the image of the moon in order 557 00:37:07,570 --> 00:37:11,367 to, show him precisely where the beam is pointed. 558 00:37:13,231 --> 00:37:15,750 In really good conditions we can get a return 559 00:37:15,785 --> 00:37:21,239 back on the teletype perhaps every fifth or every tenth laser shot. 560 00:37:21,273 --> 00:37:24,138 And when it happens they ring a bell 561 00:37:24,138 --> 00:37:28,763 so that Robert knows precisely whether or not he's located at the right position. 562 00:37:33,112 --> 00:37:36,115 But even with such precise measurements, it's not easy 563 00:37:36,115 --> 00:37:38,428 to calculate the moon's orbit 564 00:37:38,463 --> 00:37:42,432 because of the myriad of small effects that influence its motion. 565 00:37:44,710 --> 00:37:48,335 My colleagues and I use the measurements made here at 566 00:37:48,404 --> 00:37:52,235 McDonald to actually compute the moon's orbit to very high 567 00:37:52,270 --> 00:37:57,516 accuracy and found it to agree very well with Einstein's claim. 568 00:37:58,483 --> 00:38:00,795 So Einstein's theory has again 569 00:38:00,830 --> 00:38:05,144 withstood another stringent test and rival theories 570 00:38:05,179 --> 00:38:08,631 are put under much greater constraints if they're going to be in 571 00:38:08,665 --> 00:38:12,635 accord with the behavior of nature.Fantastic. 572 00:38:17,156 --> 00:38:21,644 I left them contentedly ringing the bell for Einstein while 573 00:38:21,678 --> 00:38:25,958 tending a half-baked bun of comprehension in my brain. 574 00:38:25,993 --> 00:38:29,203 I'd pictured the moon faithfully circling in the warped space 575 00:38:29,272 --> 00:38:34,312 around the earth and the sun's gravity toying with our own great planet. 576 00:38:40,663 --> 00:38:42,527 Einstein wouldn't be happy 577 00:38:42,527 --> 00:38:46,703 if we didn't tell you his story in the simplest words. 578 00:38:46,772 --> 00:38:49,706 Space tells matter how to move 579 00:38:49,775 --> 00:38:53,296 and matter tells space how to curve. 580 00:38:57,990 --> 00:39:01,718 Warped space didn't trouble me too deeply. I remembered how easily 581 00:39:01,787 --> 00:39:05,791 any exercise in straight line geometry can be botched. 582 00:39:05,826 --> 00:39:09,485 If the young Ustinov could bend the world... 583 00:39:09,519 --> 00:39:11,210 Why not Einstein? 584 00:39:13,351 --> 00:39:17,665 But to step onto the quicksands of Einsteinian time, 585 00:39:17,700 --> 00:39:20,358 er, that was uncanny. 586 00:39:22,221 --> 00:39:26,364 Unsuspectingly, I watched next morning as a visitor, John Engelbrecht, 587 00:39:26,398 --> 00:39:27,779 measured the speed of light. 588 00:39:28,918 --> 00:39:31,472 I'm generating the light pulse 589 00:39:31,507 --> 00:39:35,131 with a sparker which I'm going to turn on here. 590 00:39:36,650 --> 00:39:40,067 And that creates sparks, essentially, short beams of light 591 00:39:40,101 --> 00:39:41,551 that travel across to the other dome 592 00:39:42,241 --> 00:39:43,553 where we have the mirror 593 00:39:43,588 --> 00:39:47,212 and the mirror reflects the beam of light into this 594 00:39:47,246 --> 00:39:51,458 telescope right here, where we have a photo-multiplier tube 595 00:39:51,458 --> 00:39:56,186 to pick up the light signal so that we can look at it 596 00:39:56,221 --> 00:39:57,705 on the oscilloscope right here. 597 00:39:58,430 --> 00:40:00,915 We measure the time interval 598 00:40:01,847 --> 00:40:04,125 by measuring the distance 599 00:40:04,194 --> 00:40:09,752 between the two blips on the oscilloscope where distance across the screen is time. 600 00:40:09,786 --> 00:40:12,375 Looks like about 450 nanoseconds? 601 00:40:12,410 --> 00:40:15,689 And the round-trip distance is 134 meters. 602 00:40:15,723 --> 00:40:16,759 Yes. 603 00:40:18,450 --> 00:40:19,865 Well it's not bad. 604 00:40:19,900 --> 00:40:23,524 You've determined the speed of light this morning to be about 605 00:40:23,559 --> 00:40:27,908 298 million meters per second. 606 00:40:27,942 --> 00:40:30,669 An accuracy of about, oh about, 607 00:40:31,429 --> 00:40:34,501 oh, about, one percent. 608 00:40:34,570 --> 00:40:39,954 Um, the speed of light is in fact, Peter, known to, great accuracy. 609 00:40:39,989 --> 00:40:42,957 It's one of the most precisely known numbers in all of physics. 610 00:40:42,992 --> 00:40:46,236 The national Bureau of Standards in the United States 611 00:40:46,271 --> 00:40:52,933 has a figure of about 299,792,457.4 meters per second. 612 00:40:56,661 --> 00:40:57,800 Point four? 613 00:40:57,834 --> 00:41:01,182 Well, the National Physical Laboratory in London 614 00:41:01,182 --> 00:41:03,150 er, perhaps would disagree with the last figure. 615 00:41:03,219 --> 00:41:05,324 Yes, I thought so. 616 00:41:06,912 --> 00:41:09,812 Einstein was emphatic that a blast of light is 617 00:41:09,846 --> 00:41:14,472 always a constant no matter what the motion of the source or the motion of the observer. 618 00:41:14,506 --> 00:41:18,648 I've checked this, in fact, using not light but x-rays 619 00:41:18,683 --> 00:41:21,099 which are a form of light but at very high energies. 620 00:41:26,725 --> 00:41:30,349 In 1970, a satellite was launched off the coast of Kenya for the purpose 621 00:41:30,349 --> 00:41:32,835 of doing x-ray astronomy. 622 00:41:34,837 --> 00:41:35,976 It was called Uhuru. 623 00:41:37,564 --> 00:41:41,947 It discovered and began observing a peculiar class of star. 624 00:41:41,982 --> 00:41:45,226 An x-ray binary pulsar gives off regular bursts of x-rays 625 00:41:45,226 --> 00:41:47,850 while orbiting at high speed around another star. 626 00:41:48,954 --> 00:41:51,198 Now suppose that Einstein were wrong 627 00:41:51,232 --> 00:41:53,303 and that x-rays go faster if they were launched 628 00:41:53,338 --> 00:41:56,306 when the pulsar is moving towards the earth. 629 00:41:56,341 --> 00:41:59,206 Then x-rays from that part of the orbit could overtake 630 00:41:59,240 --> 00:42:02,243 x-rays that are coming from the other part of the orbit, 631 00:42:02,312 --> 00:42:05,350 making a simple picture quite complicated. 632 00:42:05,384 --> 00:42:09,975 For example, you could see the pulsar coming and going at the same time. 633 00:42:14,911 --> 00:42:18,743 Peter, from my friend Ethan Schreier 634 00:42:18,743 --> 00:42:22,091 at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, 635 00:42:22,091 --> 00:42:24,093 who worked on the Uhuru satellite, 636 00:42:24,162 --> 00:42:27,475 I got the following tracing of x-ray pulses 637 00:42:27,510 --> 00:42:31,445 coming from the x-ray pulsar Centaurus X-3. 638 00:42:31,514 --> 00:42:33,930 And as you can see by looking at these pulses, 639 00:42:33,930 --> 00:42:36,208 they're absolutely regular. 640 00:42:36,243 --> 00:42:39,867 Each pulse comes along at a specific time interval 641 00:42:39,902 --> 00:42:44,216 and there are no spurious ghost pulses lying in between the pulses that we see here. 642 00:42:44,251 --> 00:42:46,460 This is direct proof that the speed of light 643 00:42:46,460 --> 00:42:49,256 is indeed independent of the velocity of the source. 644 00:42:49,290 --> 00:42:51,292 I looked at three separate sources. 645 00:42:51,292 --> 00:42:55,642 The most distant one, lying in the small Magellanic Cloud, 646 00:42:55,711 --> 00:42:59,369 the light took 200,000 years to arrive at the earth 647 00:42:59,404 --> 00:43:00,681 from that source. 648 00:43:00,716 --> 00:43:03,891 And in all that time, the pulses emitted 649 00:43:03,926 --> 00:43:07,654 when the pulsar came towards us, never 650 00:43:07,723 --> 00:43:10,864 overran those that were emitted when it went away. 651 00:43:10,898 --> 00:43:15,903 By more than a factor of perhaps a part in a billion. 652 00:43:15,938 --> 00:43:20,459 To put it in earthly terms, that would be about the speed of a 653 00:43:20,459 --> 00:43:22,323 turtle moving along the ground. 654 00:43:22,323 --> 00:43:24,015 That's a very earthly term. 655 00:43:28,398 --> 00:43:32,161 In deference to this evident obsession of Einstein's, 656 00:43:32,161 --> 00:43:36,406 I accepted that in cosmic space the speed of x-rays 657 00:43:36,441 --> 00:43:41,826 or visible light or radio waves, never varies. 658 00:43:41,826 --> 00:43:45,692 But, dear me, how promptly that golden rule was broken. 659 00:43:47,970 --> 00:43:50,455 If we send radio pulses 660 00:43:50,489 --> 00:43:52,975 to another planet like Mercury or Venus 661 00:43:53,009 --> 00:43:56,116 when they're on the other side of the sun from earth, 662 00:43:56,150 --> 00:44:01,190 they can appear to be slowed down by the direct effect of the sun's gravity 663 00:44:01,259 --> 00:44:03,986 on the waves as they pass near the sun. 664 00:44:05,608 --> 00:44:08,853 It looks, from where we are, as if the sun's gravity 665 00:44:08,887 --> 00:44:12,960 acts very like a lens, bending the light and slowing it down. 666 00:44:15,169 --> 00:44:17,171 About fifteen years ago 667 00:44:17,206 --> 00:44:20,727 it occurred to me that this increase in the travel time 668 00:44:20,727 --> 00:44:25,490 was a direct consequence of Einstein's general theory of relativity. 669 00:44:26,456 --> 00:44:28,493 In those days of increasing 670 00:44:28,527 --> 00:44:31,151 science budgets and low rate of inflation 671 00:44:31,185 --> 00:44:33,222 it took less than two years 672 00:44:33,291 --> 00:44:36,984 to convert that idea into a very sophisticated radar 673 00:44:37,019 --> 00:44:41,023 system which we installed on the Haystack telescope 674 00:44:41,057 --> 00:44:44,543 to make these measurements on Mercury and Venus. 675 00:44:46,062 --> 00:44:48,858 Now the actual predicted effect is very small, 676 00:44:48,893 --> 00:44:53,829 it's only 200 millionths of a second out of a total round-trip time 677 00:44:53,863 --> 00:44:56,866 of about 1,500 seconds or approximately 678 00:44:56,901 --> 00:44:59,041 one part in 10 million. 679 00:44:59,075 --> 00:45:01,595 And we were able to measure it with an accuracy 680 00:45:01,664 --> 00:45:06,255 of approximately five or ten percent with this radar experiments. 681 00:45:06,255 --> 00:45:08,119 Now, if we could turn to Mars... 682 00:45:11,916 --> 00:45:14,539 You can't expect to make that image of Mars just now 683 00:45:14,573 --> 00:45:17,404 because it's right on the far side of the sun 684 00:45:17,404 --> 00:45:20,200 and it's close to the horizon. 685 00:45:20,234 --> 00:45:22,892 But, maybe we'll get an impression. 686 00:45:24,411 --> 00:45:28,518 Mars is now very near the far side of the sun 687 00:45:28,553 --> 00:45:30,037 as we view it from Earth 688 00:45:30,072 --> 00:45:33,696 and is in a good position to see this effect. 689 00:45:33,731 --> 00:45:37,355 And in fact, the last time Mars was in this position, 690 00:45:37,389 --> 00:45:40,876 we used radio waves sent to the Viking spacecraft 691 00:45:40,910 --> 00:45:43,292 which we landed on the surface of Mars 692 00:45:43,292 --> 00:45:47,952 to measure this predicted slow-down much more accurately. 693 00:45:47,952 --> 00:45:50,437 And with such measurements we're able to verify 694 00:45:50,471 --> 00:45:54,475 the predictions of general relativity on regard to the slow-down 695 00:45:54,475 --> 00:45:58,617 to an accuracy of about one-tenth of one percent. 696 00:45:58,652 --> 00:46:02,690 Okay, you say light slows down near the sun. 697 00:46:02,725 --> 00:46:04,451 But Ken Brecher told us just now 698 00:46:04,485 --> 00:46:08,455 that light seems always to go at the same speed. 699 00:46:08,489 --> 00:46:10,422 I think, Peter, that as a theorist, 700 00:46:10,457 --> 00:46:14,668 Roger Penrose here might resolve that contradiction for us. 701 00:46:14,737 --> 00:46:17,395 Yes, well, you see, it really depends where the measurement is done. 702 00:46:17,429 --> 00:46:19,949 If you measure the speed of light 703 00:46:19,984 --> 00:46:22,434 as it appears at the surface of the sun 704 00:46:22,469 --> 00:46:26,093 from here then it would seem as though it slows down. 705 00:46:26,128 --> 00:46:30,270 It would seem as though the sun was surrounded by some sort of lens 706 00:46:30,304 --> 00:46:33,273 that should not only slow the light but also bend the light. 707 00:46:33,307 --> 00:46:36,448 But if you did the measurement at the surface of the sun 708 00:46:36,483 --> 00:46:38,865 then you would get the same answer for the speed of light 709 00:46:38,865 --> 00:46:41,799 as you get from the speed of light at the surface of the Earth. 710 00:46:43,110 --> 00:46:45,112 We had come to the nub. 711 00:46:45,147 --> 00:46:49,668 To keep his blessed speed of light always reading the same, 712 00:46:49,703 --> 00:46:56,158 Einstein decided that time itself must slow down near a massive object. 713 00:46:58,712 --> 00:47:03,130 So gravity has the apparent effect of reducing the speed of light 714 00:47:03,165 --> 00:47:05,892 and slowing down time. 715 00:47:05,892 --> 00:47:09,688 So if you imagined the extreme situation of a black hole 716 00:47:09,723 --> 00:47:14,314 then light would be reduced to zero speed apparently 717 00:47:14,348 --> 00:47:19,698 and time would apparently have been stopped completely at the surface. 718 00:47:19,767 --> 00:47:21,390 Apparently? 719 00:47:21,390 --> 00:47:25,152 Well, I feel awfully guilty asking this because I'm opening, 720 00:47:25,187 --> 00:47:27,223 as they say here, a new can of peas, 721 00:47:27,223 --> 00:47:30,054 but we've heard so much about black holes. 722 00:47:30,054 --> 00:47:32,988 What is a black hole apparently? 723 00:47:33,022 --> 00:47:35,714 Yes, well, according to Einstein's theory, 724 00:47:35,749 --> 00:47:39,787 if you have the final fate of a very massive star, 725 00:47:39,822 --> 00:47:42,583 would be an object so concentrated 726 00:47:42,652 --> 00:47:45,690 that light itself couldn't escape from it. 727 00:47:45,724 --> 00:47:50,419 The object collapses inwards and, signals, 728 00:47:50,419 --> 00:47:53,491 light, any other kind of signal, any object, 729 00:47:53,525 --> 00:47:55,148 cannot escape from this region 730 00:47:55,182 --> 00:47:58,082 into which the star would collapse. 731 00:47:58,151 --> 00:48:01,533 The black hole that results from the collapse of a star 732 00:48:01,568 --> 00:48:03,363 several times the mass of the sun, 733 00:48:03,397 --> 00:48:07,263 would be an object several miles in diameter. 734 00:48:07,263 --> 00:48:09,576 But if you, say, imagined the Earth 735 00:48:09,610 --> 00:48:12,786 compressed right down until it became a black hole, 736 00:48:12,786 --> 00:48:17,584 the dimension would be a bit less than an inch or something like that. 737 00:48:17,618 --> 00:48:19,758 That's the Earth?The Earth would have to be compressed 738 00:48:19,793 --> 00:48:22,071 into that size to be a black hole.USTINOV: I see. 739 00:48:22,106 --> 00:48:23,417 So, you shouldn't be candid. 740 00:48:23,452 --> 00:48:25,316 Don't worry. - I see. 741 00:48:27,456 --> 00:48:29,768 Light at the surface of a black hole trying to escape 742 00:48:29,768 --> 00:48:31,287 would hover there forever. 743 00:48:31,356 --> 00:48:34,773 And judged by us, looking from a safe distance, 744 00:48:34,842 --> 00:48:36,430 time there appears to stop. 745 00:48:42,954 --> 00:48:46,130 You'd wait forever for the next tick of the clock. 746 00:48:46,199 --> 00:48:48,477 A short distance away from the black hole, 747 00:48:48,546 --> 00:48:52,170 time does seem to pass but rather slowly by our reckoning. 748 00:48:54,172 --> 00:48:56,899 You can think of the black hole to be surrounded by shells 749 00:48:56,934 --> 00:48:59,626 in which time runs progressively faster. 750 00:49:04,424 --> 00:49:07,461 That's what happens in the immediate vicinity of a black hole. 751 00:49:07,496 --> 00:49:10,292 But the effects on time extend for thousands of miles 752 00:49:10,326 --> 00:49:14,261 with time getting gradually closer to what we regard as the normal rate. 753 00:49:18,783 --> 00:49:20,336 If you imagine that little black hole 754 00:49:20,336 --> 00:49:21,855 with the same mass as the Earth 755 00:49:21,924 --> 00:49:24,651 and surround it by a sphere representing the Earth's surface, 756 00:49:24,651 --> 00:49:26,170 where we live, 757 00:49:26,170 --> 00:49:29,552 our clocks run at the appropriate rate. 758 00:49:31,313 --> 00:49:34,454 There isn't really a black hole at the center of the Earth 759 00:49:34,488 --> 00:49:36,456 but time at the Earth's surface 760 00:49:36,490 --> 00:49:39,252 is so little just as if they were. 761 00:49:39,286 --> 00:49:42,531 Compared with the very gradually increasing rates of time 762 00:49:42,600 --> 00:49:45,223 way out in space high above the Earth's surface. 763 00:49:56,372 --> 00:50:00,376 "The observer will interpret what he sees 764 00:50:00,445 --> 00:50:02,482 "as showing that one clock 765 00:50:02,516 --> 00:50:05,830 "really goes more slowly than another clock. 766 00:50:05,864 --> 00:50:09,696 "So, he will be obliged to define time in such a way 767 00:50:09,730 --> 00:50:14,632 "that the rate of a clock depends on where the clock may be." 768 00:50:17,393 --> 00:50:23,365 Peter, the interesting thing about general relativity is that my clock, 769 00:50:23,399 --> 00:50:26,161 whether I'm sitting here on the surface of the Earth, 770 00:50:26,195 --> 00:50:28,335 whether I'm orbiting around a black hole, 771 00:50:28,370 --> 00:50:31,994 will appear to me always to be running at the same rate. 772 00:50:32,029 --> 00:50:37,965 The gravitational effects don't change the actual clockwork mechanism, 773 00:50:38,000 --> 00:50:39,726 and don't affect it in any way. 774 00:50:39,760 --> 00:50:41,935 Nonetheless, from your point of view, 775 00:50:42,004 --> 00:50:44,731 you might see my clock running at a different rate 776 00:50:44,765 --> 00:50:48,597 and we would appear to have time running at different rates. 777 00:50:48,666 --> 00:50:51,186 We could correct for this, and general relativity in fact tells us 778 00:50:51,220 --> 00:50:52,980 exactly how to do that, 779 00:50:53,015 --> 00:50:57,364 um, but the, the clocks themselves 780 00:50:57,399 --> 00:51:01,265 are in fact not disturbed by the gravitational field. 781 00:51:01,334 --> 00:51:02,956 Yeah. I... I don't quite understand one thing 782 00:51:03,025 --> 00:51:05,786 because obviously we are our own terms of reference 783 00:51:05,786 --> 00:51:08,996 and therefore our clocks are our own terms of reference, 784 00:51:09,031 --> 00:51:10,688 they become part of us. 785 00:51:10,722 --> 00:51:14,899 If I take an airplane, as we all do and fly very high, 786 00:51:14,933 --> 00:51:17,971 is there what is shown on the clock face 787 00:51:18,040 --> 00:51:21,112 affected by the fact that I have flown high 788 00:51:21,181 --> 00:51:23,287 or not, by the time I arrive? 789 00:51:23,356 --> 00:51:25,392 Yes, it is in fact affected 790 00:51:25,427 --> 00:51:29,258 and when you come back it will read differently from the identical clock 791 00:51:29,293 --> 00:51:32,813 which you left behind which didn't take part in the airplane ride. 792 00:51:32,813 --> 00:51:36,817 But although the clock reading is different when you come back on the ground, 793 00:51:36,817 --> 00:51:38,543 the clock, once it's back on the ground 794 00:51:38,578 --> 00:51:42,961 will continue to run at the same rate it used to run on the ground. 795 00:51:42,996 --> 00:51:45,964 So that the difference in reading will then remain constant 796 00:51:46,033 --> 00:51:47,518 as time goes on. 797 00:51:47,587 --> 00:51:51,591 The important point is that this effect is not a psychological effect. 798 00:51:51,625 --> 00:51:54,732 It's a genuine, measurable, physical effect. 799 00:51:54,766 --> 00:51:58,736 In the last decade or so, extraordinarily accurate atomic clocks 800 00:51:58,770 --> 00:52:00,979 have been made which are sensitive enough 801 00:52:01,048 --> 00:52:03,499 to see these very small effects. 802 00:52:03,499 --> 00:52:05,501 Such that, for example, the difference between 803 00:52:05,570 --> 00:52:07,607 the rate of a clock running on the ground 804 00:52:07,641 --> 00:52:10,437 and one running on the second story of a building 805 00:52:10,472 --> 00:52:14,441 could be observed and measured very accurately. 806 00:52:14,476 --> 00:52:16,823 Oh, so Big Ben's been wrong all the time 807 00:52:16,857 --> 00:52:18,618 because it's at about the eighth floor? 808 00:52:18,652 --> 00:52:21,448 I see.Right, it's gaining relative to your clocks. 809 00:52:21,483 --> 00:52:24,934 My common sense was outraged, of course. 810 00:52:24,969 --> 00:52:27,627 Yet, recent results have evidently smothered 811 00:52:27,661 --> 00:52:32,494 all expert and inexpert doubts about Einsteinian time. 812 00:52:33,943 --> 00:52:37,119 Sidney Drell set the scene. 813 00:52:37,154 --> 00:52:41,710 The atomic clock is not just an instrument for scientific laboratories 814 00:52:41,779 --> 00:52:46,887 to run their equipment with or part of their play equipment. 815 00:52:46,887 --> 00:52:52,548 In fact, in everyday life it sets the time by which we live. 816 00:52:52,617 --> 00:52:56,518 Here, one has a crystal oscillator 817 00:52:56,552 --> 00:53:00,556 which keeps time relative to an atomic clock 818 00:53:00,625 --> 00:53:03,421 which signal is being received here 819 00:53:03,421 --> 00:53:07,908 with due allowance for the time it takes for light to bring the signal here. 820 00:53:07,977 --> 00:53:11,188 Here is the time that it's reading out. 821 00:53:13,466 --> 00:53:15,571 I notice that my own crystal watch 822 00:53:15,640 --> 00:53:19,541 is two seconds slow by the time given there. 823 00:53:21,405 --> 00:53:25,581 Well... Mine is six seconds out. That's terrible. 824 00:53:25,650 --> 00:53:28,101 Well, this will go back to the maker. 825 00:53:28,170 --> 00:53:32,381 Back in Washington, there sits the master atomic clock 826 00:53:32,416 --> 00:53:35,177 against which all other time is referenced 827 00:53:35,212 --> 00:53:37,179 for an international time standard. 828 00:53:38,387 --> 00:53:41,425 The atomic clocks keep time to an accuracy 829 00:53:41,425 --> 00:53:44,945 which approaches one second out of a million years. 830 00:53:45,014 --> 00:53:46,809 That is how far they have come. 831 00:53:48,949 --> 00:53:52,021 To understand the atomic clock 832 00:53:52,056 --> 00:53:56,440 we have to now enter into the theory of atoms. 833 00:53:56,440 --> 00:53:58,442 And this is another theory, 834 00:53:58,476 --> 00:54:03,895 the theory of, how light is emitted and absorbed by atoms 835 00:54:03,930 --> 00:54:09,315 and how light propagates with very sharply defined frequencies. 836 00:54:09,315 --> 00:54:12,456 There's another, theory to which Einstein made 837 00:54:12,456 --> 00:54:15,390 very enormous contributions. 838 00:54:15,424 --> 00:54:18,185 Sometimes we think of the year 1905, 839 00:54:18,220 --> 00:54:20,464 when Einstein was 26 years old, 840 00:54:20,533 --> 00:54:22,466 as one of the miracle years of the world. 841 00:54:22,500 --> 00:54:26,608 Because in that year when he was giving us special relativity, Peter, 842 00:54:26,642 --> 00:54:29,645 he was also giving us the theory of light 843 00:54:29,645 --> 00:54:33,718 occurring in discrete packages and with precise frequencies. 844 00:54:33,753 --> 00:54:37,584 It was, in fact, with this work that in 1921, 845 00:54:37,619 --> 00:54:39,793 he received the Nobel Prize, 846 00:54:39,828 --> 00:54:43,141 when the relativity theory was still viewed as too mathematical, 847 00:54:43,176 --> 00:54:48,423 too controversial and not really of practical importance. 848 00:54:48,457 --> 00:54:50,183 This side of Washington, they keep the clocks 849 00:54:50,252 --> 00:54:52,012 that directly answer your question, Peter, 850 00:54:52,012 --> 00:54:55,533 about how time passes in an aircraft. 851 00:54:55,533 --> 00:54:59,296 Karel Ally of the University of Maryland, and his colleagues, 852 00:54:59,330 --> 00:55:03,507 put one set of atomic clocks aboard a US Navy airplane. 853 00:55:03,576 --> 00:55:05,888 And this was starting in 1975. 854 00:55:07,683 --> 00:55:09,340 And you remember, on the moon, 855 00:55:09,340 --> 00:55:11,860 those man-made corner reflectors, 856 00:55:11,929 --> 00:55:14,345 well, the aircraft carried one of them 857 00:55:14,414 --> 00:55:17,348 to throw back yet more laser pulses. 858 00:55:17,348 --> 00:55:20,386 Providing a link to another set of clocks 859 00:55:20,386 --> 00:55:23,354 kept in a cabin on the ground for comparison. 860 00:55:23,423 --> 00:55:25,529 The same types of atomic clock? 861 00:55:25,598 --> 00:55:27,841 Yes, they're twin brothers in effect. 862 00:55:34,192 --> 00:55:36,022 The prediction of general relativity 863 00:55:36,056 --> 00:55:38,714 is that as you get higher above the ground, 864 00:55:38,714 --> 00:55:40,854 the grip of gravity on time weakens 865 00:55:40,889 --> 00:55:43,340 and your clock should run a little faster. 866 00:55:44,479 --> 00:55:47,033 The laser flashes coming from base 867 00:55:47,067 --> 00:55:50,485 serve to check the time recorded in the air 868 00:55:50,519 --> 00:55:53,073 against the readings of the clocks on the ground 869 00:55:53,073 --> 00:55:57,146 while the aircraft flew around and around Chesapeake Bay. 870 00:55:59,079 --> 00:56:01,323 The ground radar kept track of it. 871 00:56:01,358 --> 00:56:04,740 The aircraft's speed, by the way, also had a very small effect on time 872 00:56:04,740 --> 00:56:07,364 by a quite different prediction of relativity 873 00:56:07,398 --> 00:56:10,539 but the experimenters took that accurately into account. 874 00:56:10,574 --> 00:56:13,093 Yes, I'm sure they did. 875 00:56:13,093 --> 00:56:17,374 The main effect on time related to the aircraft's height. 876 00:56:17,995 --> 00:56:20,204 At 35,000 feet, 877 00:56:20,238 --> 00:56:24,346 the airborne clocks gained about three billionths of a second every hour, 878 00:56:24,381 --> 00:56:27,418 and each flight lasted about 15 hours 879 00:56:27,487 --> 00:56:30,076 and five flights like that accurately confirmed 880 00:56:30,145 --> 00:56:32,561 the effect of gravity on time. 881 00:56:35,357 --> 00:56:39,361 So Einstein's account of how the world works triumphs yet again. 882 00:56:42,709 --> 00:56:47,127 "To punish me for my contempt for authority, 883 00:56:47,196 --> 00:56:51,408 "fate made me authority myself." 884 00:56:55,239 --> 00:56:57,793 And what's true of atoms and atomic clocks 885 00:56:57,862 --> 00:57:01,279 is also true of atoms in ordinary objects like an apple. 886 00:57:01,314 --> 00:57:03,592 And perhaps we could draw some of these threads together 887 00:57:03,627 --> 00:57:06,733 by telling, how in a time shell, 888 00:57:06,768 --> 00:57:11,082 starting at the top of a tree and moving into a time shell lower down, 889 00:57:11,117 --> 00:57:15,052 an apple manages to accelerate in the way that's so familiar. 890 00:57:17,123 --> 00:57:20,713 It's moving into shells, very fine shells, 891 00:57:20,747 --> 00:57:23,060 of ever slowing time. 892 00:57:23,094 --> 00:57:25,476 Its atoms are operating more slowly. 893 00:57:25,476 --> 00:57:28,445 It seems to be losing internal energy 894 00:57:28,479 --> 00:57:31,137 which has to reappear in some new form 895 00:57:31,171 --> 00:57:33,829 and the form it takes is energy of motion. 896 00:57:33,829 --> 00:57:38,178 So the apple is going faster and faster as it moves down 897 00:57:38,247 --> 00:57:41,837 into slower and slower zones of time. 898 00:57:41,906 --> 00:57:44,668 Until finally it hits the ground 899 00:57:44,668 --> 00:57:47,740 and that energy of motion is destroyed. 900 00:57:52,607 --> 00:57:56,990 Well, Nigel, just two little points I'd like to clarify 901 00:57:57,025 --> 00:58:00,131 before we all go further into this adventure. 902 00:58:00,166 --> 00:58:04,377 It seems to me that the apple has acquired such a particular status 903 00:58:04,377 --> 00:58:07,518 with Newton, that perhaps one ought to realize 904 00:58:07,587 --> 00:58:11,384 for uninitiated agriculturalists 905 00:58:11,453 --> 00:58:17,183 that pears and grapes and, in fact, people are subject to the same laws, 906 00:58:17,183 --> 00:58:19,772 that pears are not exempt. 907 00:58:19,806 --> 00:58:21,636 Exempt from the action of gravity. 908 00:58:21,670 --> 00:58:23,810 Well, certainly not, because, 909 00:58:23,845 --> 00:58:25,812 especially since Einstein, 910 00:58:25,847 --> 00:58:28,781 the emphasis in present thinking 911 00:58:28,815 --> 00:58:33,164 is that gravity affects everything in just the same way. 912 00:58:33,199 --> 00:58:35,132 And in the case of people 913 00:58:35,166 --> 00:58:39,688 our atoms also are affected in that rate of operation 914 00:58:39,723 --> 00:58:43,002 according to whether we're living down in the valley 915 00:58:43,036 --> 00:58:45,349 or up on the mountain. 916 00:58:45,383 --> 00:58:46,661 I found the propositions 917 00:58:46,695 --> 00:58:49,629 of general relativity easy to state. 918 00:58:49,664 --> 00:58:53,288 Gravity bends light and warps space. 919 00:58:55,048 --> 00:59:00,019 Gravity slows down light and slows down time. 920 00:59:00,053 --> 00:59:04,402 Bewilderingly simple, really, as their full meaning sank in. 921 00:59:07,405 --> 00:59:10,892 You could think, if you dared, of visiting a black hole 922 00:59:10,926 --> 00:59:13,204 and hovering there for a while. 923 00:59:13,239 --> 00:59:18,934 And there in the slow running time shells close to the black hole, 924 00:59:18,934 --> 00:59:21,696 perhaps only a few years would pass 925 00:59:21,730 --> 00:59:25,078 while hundreds of years were passing on Earth. 926 00:59:25,113 --> 00:59:26,942 Maybe you'd like to imagine yourself 927 00:59:27,011 --> 00:59:30,152 as twin brothers testing this theory. 928 00:59:32,120 --> 00:59:36,262 "The adventurous one is my twin brother, Peter, 929 00:59:37,366 --> 00:59:41,923 "and my cautious one is... Albert." 930 00:59:43,580 --> 00:59:48,930 And Peter wanted very badly to investigate this black hole. 931 00:59:50,794 --> 00:59:53,520 He's always been reckless.You coming? 932 00:59:53,555 --> 00:59:55,522 You silly boy. 933 00:59:59,388 --> 01:00:01,459 It's going to be great up there! 934 01:00:02,702 --> 01:00:03,876 That's certain. 935 01:00:06,292 --> 01:00:09,398 How about that? 936 01:00:09,433 --> 01:00:13,886 That's the last we've seen of Peter on this Earth anyway. 937 01:00:13,920 --> 01:00:16,302 Would I dare make the imaginary journey 938 01:00:16,336 --> 01:00:18,960 to the black hole now proposed? 939 01:00:19,788 --> 01:00:22,480 Well... Why not? 940 01:00:29,833 --> 01:00:31,386 Goodbye! 941 01:00:32,421 --> 01:00:33,733 Goodbye. 942 01:00:37,841 --> 01:00:39,912 Oh, do take care. 943 01:00:47,367 --> 01:00:50,854 I shook the dust of the 20th century from my feet 944 01:00:50,923 --> 01:00:55,099 as my imagination bounded towards the black hole. 945 01:01:04,661 --> 01:01:10,114 I'm just nosing in towards the black hole now. 946 01:01:13,462 --> 01:01:19,986 I'm just nosing in towards the black hole now. 947 01:01:24,957 --> 01:01:26,199 Well... 948 01:01:27,338 --> 01:01:29,064 At least that black hole has slowed down 949 01:01:29,064 --> 01:01:34,380 the hectic pace of his life but I hope to God he takes care. 950 01:01:39,040 --> 01:01:43,147 The rate of time seemed entirely normal to me, but on the Earth 951 01:01:43,182 --> 01:01:46,392 it was evidently racing along. 952 01:01:49,775 --> 01:01:55,919 The gravitational effects don't change the actual clockwork mechanism. 953 01:01:55,988 --> 01:01:58,093 Nonetheless, from your point of view, 954 01:01:58,162 --> 01:02:00,855 you might see my clock running at a different rate. 955 01:02:04,168 --> 01:02:06,377 Pictures from the Earth showed the days 956 01:02:06,412 --> 01:02:08,414 passing in a matter of minutes. 957 01:02:24,602 --> 01:02:30,367 I saw who won the Grand National in 1990 but I shan't tell. 958 01:02:34,820 --> 01:02:38,893 It was hard to make out what Albert was saying in mission control. 959 01:02:49,558 --> 01:02:52,423 Anyway, your will is in spirit 960 01:02:52,458 --> 01:02:56,220 and we'll be able to celebrate any moment now. 961 01:02:56,255 --> 01:02:57,566 Yes! 962 01:02:58,119 --> 01:03:00,569 A happy new century! 963 01:03:00,604 --> 01:03:02,192 Happy day... Yeah. 964 01:03:05,298 --> 01:03:08,474 Missed the bloody bottle! 965 01:03:09,751 --> 01:03:13,306 I see, you look very spry, yes, you do. 966 01:03:16,137 --> 01:03:18,587 Twenty-first century? 967 01:03:18,622 --> 01:03:23,523 We're still 20 years off by my reckoning. 968 01:03:23,523 --> 01:03:27,355 As years passed on Earth and only months on my spaceship, 969 01:03:27,424 --> 01:03:30,185 my greatest concern was for Albert. 970 01:03:30,185 --> 01:03:33,326 My twin brother was aging before my eyes. 971 01:03:35,328 --> 01:03:38,262 As for me, I was only a few months older. 972 01:03:40,609 --> 01:03:47,340 Well, it would appear that Mr. Einstein was right. 973 01:03:47,409 --> 01:03:48,686 Eh, Peter? 974 01:03:51,793 --> 01:03:56,625 As you can see, I'm still trying to look after you 975 01:03:56,660 --> 01:03:58,696 in spite of... 976 01:04:00,698 --> 01:04:01,838 Nurse... 977 01:04:09,742 --> 01:04:13,539 It wasn't long before the Earth forgot all about me. 978 01:04:14,367 --> 01:04:16,542 Time to go home. 979 01:04:26,897 --> 01:04:28,243 Before I could even think 980 01:04:28,243 --> 01:04:31,729 of playing Rip Van Winkle in the world of the 21st century, 981 01:04:31,764 --> 01:04:35,147 there was one visit I had to make. 982 01:05:04,417 --> 01:05:06,903 Alas, poor Albert. 983 01:05:09,077 --> 01:05:12,598 Even in imagination, this time travel by means of gravity 984 01:05:12,598 --> 01:05:16,291 seemed a joyless enterprise. 985 01:05:16,326 --> 01:05:20,744 There was no method for retracing my steps through Einsteinian time 986 01:05:20,778 --> 01:05:23,436 and returning to the 20th century. 987 01:05:27,785 --> 01:05:29,718 We've talked about the warping of space 988 01:05:29,753 --> 01:05:33,653 and about the effects of gravity on time, in space and time. 989 01:05:33,722 --> 01:05:38,141 But relativists like to combine the two into space-time. 990 01:05:38,210 --> 01:05:41,178 With time as being the fourth dimension. 991 01:05:41,178 --> 01:05:45,286 "The non-mathematician is seized by a mysterious shuddering 992 01:05:45,320 --> 01:05:49,566 "when he hears of four-dimensional things. 993 01:05:49,600 --> 01:05:54,674 "By a feeling not unlike that awakened by thoughts of the occult. 994 01:05:54,674 --> 01:05:57,988 "And yet, there is no more commonplace statement 995 01:05:58,057 --> 01:06:00,853 "than that the world in which we live 996 01:06:00,922 --> 01:06:06,686 "is a four-dimensional space-time continuum." 997 01:06:06,686 --> 01:06:09,310 Here we are at a certain place in Western Texas. 998 01:06:10,242 --> 01:06:12,658 And the time is half past eleven. 999 01:06:13,831 --> 01:06:15,178 Put the two together... 1000 01:06:15,178 --> 01:06:19,458 I clap my hands, that's an event in space-time. 1001 01:06:19,492 --> 01:06:23,703 Now each of our lives is a series of such events strung together 1002 01:06:23,703 --> 01:06:26,844 into a world line in space-time. 1003 01:06:26,879 --> 01:06:30,676 And here we meet together, our world lines more or less intersect. 1004 01:06:32,126 --> 01:06:33,955 In order to get a picture of space-time, 1005 01:06:33,990 --> 01:06:39,064 it's convenient to think of space as represented as a two-dimensional flat plate 1006 01:06:39,133 --> 01:06:42,446 and that frees the third dimension to represent time. 1007 01:06:48,418 --> 01:06:53,975 Now, let us imagine an object which is stationary in our description. 1008 01:06:54,010 --> 01:06:57,772 Then this would be represented by a vertical straight line. 1009 01:07:01,017 --> 01:07:06,056 An object which is moving uniformly but with some velocity, 1010 01:07:06,091 --> 01:07:10,440 would be represented again by a straight line but now tilted over. 1011 01:07:13,374 --> 01:07:16,239 What about an object which is accelerating? 1012 01:07:16,239 --> 01:07:19,518 Then that would be represented by a curved line. 1013 01:07:19,552 --> 01:07:22,141 This is the world line of the object. 1014 01:07:28,423 --> 01:07:30,218 Now let's think of the sun, 1015 01:07:30,253 --> 01:07:32,531 that again, thinking of it as stationary 1016 01:07:32,565 --> 01:07:34,567 would be represented by a straight line 1017 01:07:34,602 --> 01:07:37,777 and the Earth, in orbit around the sun, 1018 01:07:37,846 --> 01:07:40,401 would be represented by a spiral line. 1019 01:07:43,093 --> 01:07:46,441 But then the Earth, as we know, 1020 01:07:46,510 --> 01:07:49,168 is in free fall and should therefore be represented 1021 01:07:49,203 --> 01:07:52,137 by as straight a line as you can draw. 1022 01:07:52,137 --> 01:07:55,450 And how is it that it's drawn as this spiral line? 1023 01:07:55,519 --> 01:07:58,626 Well, this is because the space-time is really curved. 1024 01:07:58,626 --> 01:08:02,285 Now, remember our deformed billiard table, 1025 01:08:02,354 --> 01:08:06,323 the space then would be warped in a certain way. 1026 01:08:06,392 --> 01:08:11,880 And as the space evolves to give us our space-time picture, 1027 01:08:11,915 --> 01:08:14,711 the whole space-time is slightly deformed. 1028 01:08:14,745 --> 01:08:17,576 And this is why the apparently curved picture 1029 01:08:17,610 --> 01:08:19,992 of a spiral motion of the Earth 1030 01:08:20,061 --> 01:08:23,375 is really as straight a line as you can have in this curved geometry. 1031 01:08:27,103 --> 01:08:31,107 And I gather that I feel the burden of gravity here on Earth 1032 01:08:31,141 --> 01:08:35,421 because I go against the grain of space-time. 1033 01:08:37,285 --> 01:08:39,391 Gravity feels the same as acceleration 1034 01:08:39,425 --> 01:08:42,014 but, according to Einstein, in an important sense, 1035 01:08:42,014 --> 01:08:44,948 gravity is the same as acceleration. 1036 01:08:44,982 --> 01:08:49,055 In a gravitational field things behave as they do 1037 01:08:49,090 --> 01:08:51,851 in a space free of gravitation. 1038 01:08:51,851 --> 01:08:56,408 If one introduces a reference system which is accelerated. 1039 01:08:56,442 --> 01:08:58,513 Do you want me to try it? 1040 01:08:58,582 --> 01:09:00,757 Try it.Never get off the ground with me in it. 1041 01:09:02,655 --> 01:09:07,350 What Einstein called a reference system which is accelerated 1042 01:09:07,350 --> 01:09:09,938 was for me a curiously dumpy helicopter 1043 01:09:09,973 --> 01:09:13,010 to be flown as delicately as possible. 1044 01:09:16,531 --> 01:09:18,533 I'd ridden some awkward steeds for the movies 1045 01:09:18,602 --> 01:09:22,468 but nothing quite as undignified as doctor's scales. 1046 01:09:28,543 --> 01:09:31,684 As the helicopter lurched upward, my weight increased. 1047 01:09:31,719 --> 01:09:35,412 Each brief acceleration adding pseudo-gravity. 1048 01:09:40,383 --> 01:09:44,939 Whenever we climbed steadily or hovered, my weight went back to normal. 1049 01:09:46,699 --> 01:09:50,082 And when the pilot let the machine accelerate downwards, 1050 01:09:50,082 --> 01:09:54,949 a nasty feeling that... "Oh! How the pounds melted away." 1051 01:09:57,572 --> 01:10:00,955 In some neglected slot machine of my mind 1052 01:10:00,989 --> 01:10:03,406 a penny dropped. 1053 01:10:03,475 --> 01:10:07,237 When a vehicle accelerates, lurching in one direction, 1054 01:10:07,237 --> 01:10:09,481 all its loose contents are left behind 1055 01:10:09,515 --> 01:10:12,760 and seem to fall in the opposite direction. 1056 01:10:12,829 --> 01:10:16,729 As the master said, "It's just like gravity." 1057 01:10:18,179 --> 01:10:23,288 Acceleration could also put me on different scales of time. 1058 01:10:23,805 --> 01:10:25,842 Stand by, Albert. 1059 01:10:28,776 --> 01:10:33,229 It's not only gravity that affects the rate of a clock 1060 01:10:33,263 --> 01:10:34,989 and sew the passage of time, 1061 01:10:35,921 --> 01:10:38,682 even motion can do that. 1062 01:10:38,717 --> 01:10:42,479 And Einstein showed that already in 1905, 1063 01:10:42,479 --> 01:10:46,242 ten years before he developed the general theory of relativity. 1064 01:10:47,967 --> 01:10:51,143 What Einstein showed was that if an observer 1065 01:10:51,212 --> 01:10:55,734 moves out into interstellar space at high speed 1066 01:10:55,768 --> 01:10:58,495 and finding himself amongst the stars, 1067 01:10:58,495 --> 01:11:02,430 then turns round and comes back at close to the speed of light, 1068 01:11:02,465 --> 01:11:05,951 while the journey for him will seem short, 1069 01:11:05,985 --> 01:11:07,539 for the people who stay at home 1070 01:11:07,573 --> 01:11:09,748 it will seem much longer. 1071 01:11:09,782 --> 01:11:14,477 For instance, he will find that he has aged less during that journey 1072 01:11:14,546 --> 01:11:16,893 than the person who has stayed at home. 1073 01:11:23,589 --> 01:11:25,764 A little lonely up here in space. 1074 01:11:27,352 --> 01:11:31,079 Long after I'd fired my motors to turn for home, 1075 01:11:31,114 --> 01:11:34,013 my twin brother Albert was still receiving signals 1076 01:11:34,013 --> 01:11:36,878 sent by me on the outward leg of the journey. 1077 01:11:43,471 --> 01:11:47,682 Again, time seemed to me to pass normally. 1078 01:11:47,751 --> 01:11:51,755 But it was in this melancholy phase of my return journey 1079 01:11:51,790 --> 01:11:56,173 that I observed poor Albert growing older by the hour. 1080 01:12:04,043 --> 01:12:06,114 Just as for the visit to the black hole, 1081 01:12:06,149 --> 01:12:09,221 this high speed relativistic flight plan 1082 01:12:09,290 --> 01:12:13,501 took me on a one-way ticket into the twenty-first century. 1083 01:12:24,788 --> 01:12:27,170 Although he lived before the space age, 1084 01:12:27,204 --> 01:12:31,208 Einstein made many imaginary journeys like this. 1085 01:12:31,277 --> 01:12:33,210 Gedankenexperiments. 1086 01:12:33,245 --> 01:12:36,110 "Thought experiments," the physicists called them. 1087 01:12:38,975 --> 01:12:42,254 "One could imagine that the organism, 1088 01:12:42,254 --> 01:12:45,706 "after an arbitrarily lengthy flight, 1089 01:12:45,740 --> 01:12:51,194 "could be returned to its original spot in a scarcely altered condition 1090 01:12:51,228 --> 01:12:56,579 "while corresponding organisms which had remained in their original positions 1091 01:12:56,579 --> 01:13:00,548 "had long since given way to new generations." 1092 01:13:01,549 --> 01:13:03,379 Einstein said that many years ago, 1093 01:13:03,413 --> 01:13:08,694 but, people for many years didn't really accept that notion. 1094 01:13:08,729 --> 01:13:12,940 It, in fact, was the source of much argument 1095 01:13:13,009 --> 01:13:17,013 and was elevated at times into the notion of a paradox. 1096 01:13:17,047 --> 01:13:21,949 But now, with very fast moving atomic particles, 1097 01:13:22,018 --> 01:13:26,919 we have displayed this affect with extreme accuracy. 1098 01:13:26,954 --> 01:13:32,718 Most precisely, atomic particles in a storage ring at CERN, 1099 01:13:32,753 --> 01:13:35,411 so-called new mesons which normally live 1100 01:13:35,445 --> 01:13:37,723 a very fleeting fraction of a second, 1101 01:13:37,758 --> 01:13:40,519 perhaps a millionth or two millionths of a second, 1102 01:13:40,554 --> 01:13:44,454 have been shown to have their lives extended 1103 01:13:44,454 --> 01:13:46,974 by a factor of thirty or so 1104 01:13:47,043 --> 01:13:51,841 just by having them move at speeds very close to the speed of light. 1105 01:13:54,982 --> 01:13:58,157 Well, I understand that this is possible for particles 1106 01:13:58,157 --> 01:14:00,953 but it does sound rather like science fiction to me 1107 01:14:00,988 --> 01:14:03,439 and like fantasy, would it be... 1108 01:14:03,473 --> 01:14:05,786 Would it be really possible for this to happen? 1109 01:14:06,821 --> 01:14:07,995 For people, I mean. 1110 01:14:08,029 --> 01:14:10,929 Well, this is a matter of faith, not a matter of science. 1111 01:14:10,963 --> 01:14:15,071 There's nothing in principle, I believe, that stands in the way 1112 01:14:15,105 --> 01:14:17,901 of getting one up to speeds, 1113 01:14:17,936 --> 01:14:20,007 that are a significant fraction 1114 01:14:20,076 --> 01:14:22,492 of the velocity of light. 1115 01:14:22,527 --> 01:14:25,426 And, when one thinks of the incredible things 1116 01:14:25,461 --> 01:14:28,602 that we do with instruments these days, 1117 01:14:28,636 --> 01:14:32,778 measuring with accelerators that are many miles long, 1118 01:14:32,813 --> 01:14:35,643 timed to precisions of billionths of a second, 1119 01:14:35,678 --> 01:14:40,027 I would be the last to think it's impossible, and won't be done. 1120 01:14:40,096 --> 01:14:42,132 After all, we did send men to the moon and look 1121 01:14:42,167 --> 01:14:45,515 for how many centuries that seemed impossible. 1122 01:14:45,550 --> 01:14:48,380 Presumably, one of the great advantages there would be 1123 01:14:48,380 --> 01:14:52,211 if human beings ever attempted to travel between the stars, 1124 01:14:52,211 --> 01:14:57,182 that you not only gain in an apparent extension of life, 1125 01:14:57,216 --> 01:15:00,565 as compared with the Earth, but also you can travel greater distances 1126 01:15:00,634 --> 01:15:05,742 than you would think possible by normal reckoning of speeds from the Earth. 1127 01:15:05,742 --> 01:15:08,227 I would say it's not only an advantage, it's a requirement 1128 01:15:08,227 --> 01:15:11,576 because distances to other, stars, 1129 01:15:11,645 --> 01:15:14,751 and their presumed planets are so great that there's no way 1130 01:15:14,751 --> 01:15:18,134 we're going to ever explore them if we don't stretch out our lives, 1131 01:15:18,168 --> 01:15:19,342 our time scale. 1132 01:15:24,934 --> 01:15:28,593 It was one of Einstein's earliest ideas in relativity 1133 01:15:28,593 --> 01:15:33,494 that you could distort time and space just by traveling fast enough. 1134 01:15:36,221 --> 01:15:39,845 We've now left gravity and general relativity aside for a while 1135 01:15:39,880 --> 01:15:42,917 to hear instead about special relativity 1136 01:15:42,986 --> 01:15:45,506 and the strange effects of motion. 1137 01:15:48,095 --> 01:15:52,306 Now let's imagine that these bikes are capable of, say, 1138 01:15:52,340 --> 01:15:54,342 half the speed of light. 1139 01:15:54,377 --> 01:15:56,379 That's what their speedometers show anyway, 1140 01:15:56,413 --> 01:15:58,692 fractions of C, the speed of light. 1141 01:16:06,113 --> 01:16:08,115 What kinds of Einsteinian effects 1142 01:16:08,184 --> 01:16:10,842 can we illustrate with bikes like these? 1143 01:16:10,876 --> 01:16:13,396 Perhaps you should start with the simplest point of all. 1144 01:16:13,430 --> 01:16:15,053 From the point of view of the rider, 1145 01:16:15,087 --> 01:16:18,574 he's at rest and it's the landscape that's rushing towards him. 1146 01:16:21,438 --> 01:16:23,475 In Einstein's democratic universe, 1147 01:16:23,475 --> 01:16:26,512 that point of view is just as valid as yours or mine. 1148 01:16:29,136 --> 01:16:31,414 And then recall the Doppler effect, 1149 01:16:31,448 --> 01:16:33,519 the change in frequency in color of light. 1150 01:16:36,350 --> 01:16:40,009 An object rushing towards you looks blue because the light gets crowded together. 1151 01:16:41,286 --> 01:16:42,701 It has a higher frequency. 1152 01:16:46,325 --> 01:16:50,226 When it's going away it looks red because the light gets stretched out 1153 01:16:50,260 --> 01:16:51,952 and then it has a lower frequency. 1154 01:16:58,061 --> 01:17:00,546 I'd like to emphasize something there, Peter. 1155 01:17:00,581 --> 01:17:02,928 Compared with ordinary white light, 1156 01:17:02,963 --> 01:17:06,932 blue light has a higher frequency and more energy too. 1157 01:17:09,521 --> 01:17:15,216 But red light represents a low frequency and less energy. 1158 01:17:15,216 --> 01:17:19,186 Einstein made two important discoveries about the Doppler effect. 1159 01:17:19,186 --> 01:17:23,155 First, it doesn't make any difference who is said to be moving. 1160 01:17:23,190 --> 01:17:25,502 It's just the relative speed that counts. 1161 01:17:27,090 --> 01:17:29,852 Einstein's second discovery about the Doppler effect 1162 01:17:29,852 --> 01:17:32,648 is that when a high speed vehicle is just passing you, 1163 01:17:32,682 --> 01:17:34,201 strange things happen. 1164 01:17:34,270 --> 01:17:35,374 Imagine that you were quick enough to 1165 01:17:35,374 --> 01:17:36,721 photograph it with your camera. 1166 01:17:37,514 --> 01:17:38,654 You ready, Peter? 1167 01:17:41,346 --> 01:17:43,693 As the vehicle passes us by, 1168 01:17:43,728 --> 01:17:46,144 you'd think it would be neither red-shifted nor blue-shifted 1169 01:17:46,178 --> 01:17:49,009 because it's moving perpendicular to our line of sight. 1170 01:17:49,043 --> 01:17:51,011 But, in fact, it's slightly red-shifted. 1171 01:17:51,045 --> 01:17:53,599 What's more, it's rotated away from us. 1172 01:17:59,329 --> 01:18:00,917 Not shortened. 1173 01:18:00,986 --> 01:18:04,300 Many accounts of relativity would have the bike squeezed short. 1174 01:18:04,334 --> 01:18:07,199 No, it still appears to be undistorted 1175 01:18:07,234 --> 01:18:08,994 but slightly rotated away from us. 1176 01:18:13,205 --> 01:18:15,069 But from the point of view of the rider, 1177 01:18:15,069 --> 01:18:17,658 it could be very peculiar distortions of the scenery 1178 01:18:17,693 --> 01:18:21,386 if you rode past buildings, say, almost at the speed of light. 1179 01:18:27,116 --> 01:18:28,911 Perhaps the first thing you notice... 1180 01:18:28,945 --> 01:18:31,154 ...is the building and the truck curve in a little. 1181 01:18:34,123 --> 01:18:37,816 Then, as you speed up, you see that they seem to be twisted towards you. 1182 01:18:41,337 --> 01:18:44,064 Indeed, as your speed increases closer and closer 1183 01:18:44,098 --> 01:18:47,653 to the speed of light, you start seeing the far sides of the building and truck. 1184 01:18:48,931 --> 01:18:51,485 You seem to be seeing right around the corners. 1185 01:18:52,935 --> 01:18:54,522 It's like walking through a rain storm 1186 01:18:54,557 --> 01:18:57,698 when your front gets wet and your back stays dry. 1187 01:18:57,733 --> 01:19:00,494 The light approaches you from unexpected directions. 1188 01:19:04,774 --> 01:19:09,158 Consider two bicycles coming at each other at close to the speed of light. 1189 01:19:10,297 --> 01:19:13,058 You might think that their combined speed, 1190 01:19:13,093 --> 01:19:15,336 the rate at which they are coming together, 1191 01:19:15,371 --> 01:19:16,890 is faster than light. 1192 01:19:18,995 --> 01:19:22,447 But from each rider's point of view, it's not like that at all. 1193 01:19:26,589 --> 01:19:29,661 Their combined speed, as they measure it, 1194 01:19:29,730 --> 01:19:32,526 always remains less than the speed of light. 1195 01:19:36,841 --> 01:19:43,088 Einstein launched his disconcerting ideas from very simple premises. 1196 01:19:43,123 --> 01:19:47,852 The riders demonstrated why time runs slowly in a fast moving vehicle. 1197 01:19:47,852 --> 01:19:51,821 They just rode in company and threw a ball to represent a signal, 1198 01:19:51,821 --> 01:19:53,478 a flash of light. 1199 01:19:57,620 --> 01:20:02,349 From their point of view, the light went straight across between them. 1200 01:20:02,418 --> 01:20:06,940 But from our point of view, as onlookers watching the bikes go by, 1201 01:20:06,974 --> 01:20:11,668 the signal went obliquely and on a longer path. 1202 01:20:11,703 --> 01:20:14,326 But light always moves at the same speed 1203 01:20:14,361 --> 01:20:18,468 so that the time it takes for the signal to go from there to here 1204 01:20:18,503 --> 01:20:19,918 takes longer from our point of view 1205 01:20:19,953 --> 01:20:21,609 than from the point of view of the riders. 1206 01:20:22,921 --> 01:20:24,785 So Einstein tells us 1207 01:20:24,820 --> 01:20:27,546 that their clocks in the moving frame 1208 01:20:27,546 --> 01:20:30,791 move slower than ours in exactly proportioned 1209 01:20:30,826 --> 01:20:33,967 of this line to this line. 1210 01:20:38,557 --> 01:20:42,389 High speed travel also makes you seem heavier. 1211 01:20:42,423 --> 01:20:47,843 Time for rapidly moving bikes slows down and it accelerates more sluggishly. 1212 01:20:49,016 --> 01:20:51,329 Mass means resistance to acceleration 1213 01:20:51,363 --> 01:20:55,436 and the bike's mass piles on as it gets near the speed of light. 1214 01:21:00,303 --> 01:21:03,720 In fact, it continues to grow more massive without limit 1215 01:21:03,755 --> 01:21:05,653 as it gets very close to the speed of light 1216 01:21:05,688 --> 01:21:08,864 so that, in fact, it never can go faster than light. 1217 01:21:10,244 --> 01:21:11,901 But from the point of view of the rider, 1218 01:21:11,970 --> 01:21:13,869 his mass seems the same as usual. 1219 01:21:18,701 --> 01:21:21,428 When Einstein realized just how much the way things look 1220 01:21:21,497 --> 01:21:23,430 depend on where you stand, 1221 01:21:23,430 --> 01:21:25,328 he also saw a danger. 1222 01:21:25,363 --> 01:21:28,884 Because, he reasoned, the laws of physics must be the same 1223 01:21:28,918 --> 01:21:31,576 for the rider, as for the fixed observer. 1224 01:21:35,131 --> 01:21:38,755 Special relativity was born brilliantly out of that requirement. 1225 01:21:38,790 --> 01:21:41,103 But the price Einstein exacted from us 1226 01:21:41,172 --> 01:21:45,797 was the scrapping of the old ideas about time. 1227 01:21:45,866 --> 01:21:48,662 Einstein realized that although each person's view of events 1228 01:21:48,696 --> 01:21:50,422 is a little different, 1229 01:21:50,457 --> 01:21:53,391 everyone's view is equally valid. 1230 01:21:53,425 --> 01:21:58,396 And yet we are observing, all of us, the same laws of physics. 1231 01:22:00,950 --> 01:22:04,954 And the touchstone for the reliability of physical laws 1232 01:22:05,023 --> 01:22:07,750 was Einstein's old obsession, 1233 01:22:07,784 --> 01:22:09,925 the speed of light remaining constant 1234 01:22:09,959 --> 01:22:12,272 amid all the commotion of the cosmos. 1235 01:22:14,101 --> 01:22:17,346 Now, because of its motion in orbit around the sun, 1236 01:22:17,346 --> 01:22:22,938 our Earth is traveling at a speed of about 30 kilometers a second. 1237 01:22:22,972 --> 01:22:26,803 If the principle of relativity were not valid, 1238 01:22:26,838 --> 01:22:28,667 we should expect the laws of nature 1239 01:22:28,667 --> 01:22:33,086 to depend on the Earth's direction of motion at any moment. 1240 01:22:33,120 --> 01:22:37,504 But the most careful observations have never revealed 1241 01:22:37,504 --> 01:22:41,887 any lack of prevalence of different directions. 1242 01:22:41,922 --> 01:22:44,925 This is a very powerful argument 1243 01:22:44,960 --> 01:22:48,964 in favor of the principle of relativity. 1244 01:22:50,482 --> 01:22:54,141 But Einstein's revelations shook the planet. 1245 01:22:54,176 --> 01:22:57,248 From the reasoning of special relativity 1246 01:22:57,282 --> 01:23:02,287 emerged a law of creation and destruction. 1247 01:23:08,362 --> 01:23:12,332 It was time for us to consider the realm of the atom, 1248 01:23:12,366 --> 01:23:18,683 where relativistic events are more usual than on the roads of Texas. 1249 01:23:21,858 --> 01:23:24,171 First, for real motorcycles, 1250 01:23:24,206 --> 01:23:26,311 the velocities are much too low 1251 01:23:26,346 --> 01:23:29,211 for the effects of relativity to be noticeable. 1252 01:23:29,280 --> 01:23:31,489 Even, with a spacecraft, 1253 01:23:31,523 --> 01:23:33,974 circling the Earth every 90 minutes, 1254 01:23:34,009 --> 01:23:36,080 the speeds are too low. 1255 01:23:36,080 --> 01:23:40,222 They're being moved, in fact, about one forty-thousandth the speed of light 1256 01:23:40,291 --> 01:23:44,364 and, their increase in mass due to motion 1257 01:23:44,398 --> 01:23:47,884 is less than one part in a thousand million. 1258 01:23:49,679 --> 01:23:53,821 Astronomers looking at distant stars and distant objects 1259 01:23:53,856 --> 01:23:59,413 are seeing systems moving with a substantial fraction of the velocity of light. 1260 01:23:59,413 --> 01:24:01,519 And when we enter the atomic realm, 1261 01:24:01,553 --> 01:24:04,660 we, enter into an area where 1262 01:24:04,694 --> 01:24:08,491 the relativistic effects are very noticeable. 1263 01:24:08,526 --> 01:24:10,079 Even on your television screen, 1264 01:24:10,148 --> 01:24:13,255 the electrons that paint the television screen, 1265 01:24:13,289 --> 01:24:17,259 are moving with perhaps 20 to 30% of the velocity of light. 1266 01:24:17,293 --> 01:24:22,747 And, thereby their mass is increased to the order of a percent or so. 1267 01:24:22,781 --> 01:24:26,440 Out at Stanford, at the linear accelerator center, 1268 01:24:26,440 --> 01:24:30,375 we produce the highest energy electrons in the world. 1269 01:24:30,410 --> 01:24:32,895 They come so close to the speed of light 1270 01:24:32,929 --> 01:24:36,726 that their mass is increased by a factor of 40,000, 1271 01:24:36,761 --> 01:24:38,763 compared to what they started with. 1272 01:24:42,974 --> 01:24:47,772 As a result of this very high velocity and high energy that they acquire, 1273 01:24:47,841 --> 01:24:49,981 their clocks are slowed down, 1274 01:24:49,981 --> 01:24:51,603 and they don't realize that they have moved 1275 01:24:51,638 --> 01:24:53,260 a full two-mile of our accelerator. 1276 01:24:53,295 --> 01:24:55,538 In fact, from the electron's point of view, 1277 01:24:55,573 --> 01:24:56,953 their clocks are moving so slowly 1278 01:24:56,988 --> 01:24:58,921 they think they have gone only two and a half feet 1279 01:24:58,955 --> 01:25:01,682 by the time they come to the end of the accelerator. 1280 01:25:07,792 --> 01:25:12,072 At the end of the accelerator, we also have a storage ring, 1281 01:25:12,107 --> 01:25:16,490 so-called sphere ring, where we smash the particles into one another. 1282 01:25:16,559 --> 01:25:18,630 We create new matter. 1283 01:25:20,322 --> 01:25:24,464 And in this way we can very accurately measure 1284 01:25:24,498 --> 01:25:27,915 the conversion of energy of motion into matter. 1285 01:25:27,950 --> 01:25:31,850 And into mass. And in this way confirm with great accuracy 1286 01:25:31,850 --> 01:25:36,476 the Einstein equation, E = mc2. 1287 01:25:37,270 --> 01:25:39,134 What an equation that is. 1288 01:25:39,168 --> 01:25:40,825 It looks so innocent. 1289 01:25:40,894 --> 01:25:44,346 E... Energy, M... Mass, 1290 01:25:44,346 --> 01:25:48,004 and C... Not the speed of light 1291 01:25:48,004 --> 01:25:49,661 but the square of the speed of light. 1292 01:25:49,730 --> 01:25:51,525 An enormous number. 1293 01:25:51,594 --> 01:25:55,080 So that a little mass is worth a lot of energy. 1294 01:25:56,116 --> 01:25:57,773 It's hard to appreciate 1295 01:25:57,807 --> 01:26:01,363 what an enormous leap of intuition and imagination 1296 01:26:01,432 --> 01:26:05,298 it took to come to this simple formula. 1297 01:26:05,332 --> 01:26:08,646 Einstein had been thinking, from the age of 16 to 26, 1298 01:26:08,680 --> 01:26:13,685 consistently about the nature of light and electromagnetic radiation 1299 01:26:13,720 --> 01:26:19,381 and almost as a by-product of his... Of his, thinking on this subject, 1300 01:26:19,450 --> 01:26:22,073 he came to the following conclusion, 1301 01:26:22,073 --> 01:26:25,283 that if you look at light, say, from the sun, 1302 01:26:25,318 --> 01:26:27,906 and if you were moving towards the sun, 1303 01:26:27,906 --> 01:26:30,530 as we've already discussed, the light would become bluer. 1304 01:26:32,428 --> 01:26:37,088 Now, the blue light has more energy than the white light we normally see, 1305 01:26:37,088 --> 01:26:40,643 and therefore, he reasoned, there must be more energy 1306 01:26:40,678 --> 01:26:42,369 apparently coming from the sun. 1307 01:26:44,509 --> 01:26:47,823 But if that energy is not drawn from any change in the motion of the sun, 1308 01:26:47,857 --> 01:26:52,276 it must mean that that energy is coming from the mass itself. 1309 01:26:53,898 --> 01:26:55,589 And so he concluded 1310 01:26:55,624 --> 01:27:00,284 that the mass of the sun itself is converted directly into energy. 1311 01:27:00,353 --> 01:27:07,118 He then made the enormous leap to generalize this result to all forms of energy. 1312 01:27:07,187 --> 01:27:09,948 In the 19th century, there had been energy of motion, 1313 01:27:09,948 --> 01:27:13,366 and energy of light, energy of heat, but not interconvertible. 1314 01:27:13,400 --> 01:27:15,299 And so he came to the startling conclusion 1315 01:27:15,299 --> 01:27:18,923 that all mass and all energy are in fact equivalent. 1316 01:27:20,787 --> 01:27:23,893 "We are led to the more general conclusion 1317 01:27:23,928 --> 01:27:28,657 "that the mass of an object is a measure of its energy content. 1318 01:27:29,623 --> 01:27:31,763 "It is not impossible 1319 01:27:31,798 --> 01:27:35,042 "that with materials whose energy content is variable 1320 01:27:35,077 --> 01:27:39,288 "to a high degree, for example with radium salt, 1321 01:27:39,288 --> 01:27:43,396 "the theory may be successfully put to the test." 1322 01:27:43,430 --> 01:27:48,884 What Einstein is noting here is that the energy released in nuclear reactions 1323 01:27:48,918 --> 01:27:54,752 is so great that there is actually a measurable change 1324 01:27:54,786 --> 01:27:56,167 in the mass. 1325 01:27:56,236 --> 01:28:02,277 That can be detected and his formula can be verified. 1326 01:28:02,311 --> 01:28:05,832 The, nuclear burning together 1327 01:28:05,901 --> 01:28:10,043 with the Einstein relation, E=mc2, 1328 01:28:10,077 --> 01:28:12,494 solved a long-standing riddle, 1329 01:28:12,494 --> 01:28:15,807 namely, how is it that the stars, the sun, 1330 01:28:15,842 --> 01:28:21,710 can burn for billions of years without running out of, material? 1331 01:28:22,642 --> 01:28:25,403 This equation, E=mc2, 1332 01:28:25,438 --> 01:28:27,750 and the efficiency of nuclear burning, 1333 01:28:27,785 --> 01:28:32,583 were tested quantitatively in 1932, 1334 01:28:32,617 --> 01:28:36,311 by Cockcroft and Walton with their accelerator. 1335 01:28:36,345 --> 01:28:39,521 They verified it for the first time. 1336 01:28:39,555 --> 01:28:43,697 But it was a long time before any practical use was made of it. 1337 01:28:43,766 --> 01:28:46,942 Einstein was hounded out of Germany, 1338 01:28:46,976 --> 01:28:48,875 he came to Princeton, 1339 01:28:48,875 --> 01:28:52,637 where I had the pleasure of seeing him after his arrival. 1340 01:28:52,672 --> 01:28:56,365 But it was five years from that until that fateful day 1341 01:28:56,365 --> 01:28:59,195 when I went down to the pier in New York, 1342 01:28:59,264 --> 01:29:01,888 and a ship came in with Niels Bohr, 1343 01:29:01,888 --> 01:29:05,961 and the word of the discovery of the fission of uranium. 1344 01:29:07,272 --> 01:29:10,241 January 16, 1939, 1345 01:29:10,241 --> 01:29:14,901 and not long after that Einstein wrote that fateful letter 1346 01:29:14,901 --> 01:29:18,180 to Roosevelt with all its consequences. 1347 01:29:20,941 --> 01:29:26,430 "Extremely powerful bombs of a new type may thus be constructed. 1348 01:29:26,499 --> 01:29:30,399 "I understand that Germany has actually stopped the sale of uranium 1349 01:29:30,468 --> 01:29:33,229 "from the Czechoslovakian mines." 1350 01:29:35,093 --> 01:29:39,512 And it was hardly 200 miles from here across the desert, 1351 01:29:39,546 --> 01:29:43,239 that that first dramatic explosion took place 1352 01:29:43,308 --> 01:29:46,484 that brought us into the true atomic era. 1353 01:29:59,117 --> 01:30:02,258 Einstein, who set it all in train, 1354 01:30:02,293 --> 01:30:05,365 was appalled by the nuclear arms race. 1355 01:30:05,400 --> 01:30:10,474 It's ironic that this humble, gentle man who had been an avowed pacifist 1356 01:30:10,543 --> 01:30:16,100 should now be etched in the history of mankind as the father of nuclear weapons. 1357 01:30:16,134 --> 01:30:18,274 He believed, as do many today, 1358 01:30:18,309 --> 01:30:20,276 including many scientists who are familiar with 1359 01:30:20,311 --> 01:30:22,969 the devastating effects of these weapons, 1360 01:30:23,038 --> 01:30:26,075 that survival in a world with nuclear weapons 1361 01:30:26,110 --> 01:30:29,734 is one of the great challenges of our generation. 1362 01:30:29,769 --> 01:30:32,979 It was, I believe, his last official act, 1363 01:30:32,979 --> 01:30:37,880 to endorse a manifesto in 1955 1364 01:30:37,915 --> 01:30:41,884 with Bertrand Russell, which I believe you have here. 1365 01:30:41,919 --> 01:30:44,404 Yes. 1366 01:30:44,439 --> 01:30:50,375 "We appeal to you as human beings to human beings. 1367 01:30:50,410 --> 01:30:54,518 "Remember your humanity and forget the rest. 1368 01:30:54,587 --> 01:30:59,143 "If you can do so, the way lies open to a new paradise. 1369 01:30:59,177 --> 01:31:06,633 "If you cannot, there lies before you the risk of universal death." 1370 01:31:06,668 --> 01:31:09,774 I think, in talking about Einstein's great achievement, 1371 01:31:09,809 --> 01:31:14,503 we should really stress the fact that it lies at the basis of all life. 1372 01:31:14,538 --> 01:31:17,230 The nuclear weapons are only a small by-product 1373 01:31:17,264 --> 01:31:19,232 of human folly. 1374 01:31:21,476 --> 01:31:23,754 Even when I strike this match, 1375 01:31:23,788 --> 01:31:27,516 a minute amount of the mass is converted into energy. 1376 01:31:27,516 --> 01:31:29,863 If I took all the mass in this match, 1377 01:31:29,863 --> 01:31:32,556 and converted it into free energy, 1378 01:31:32,625 --> 01:31:35,282 there's enough energy here to lift the entire mountain, 1379 01:31:35,317 --> 01:31:37,664 on which we're sitting now, about ten feet off the ground. 1380 01:31:38,872 --> 01:31:43,049 This energy plays a role in the hum of a violin, 1381 01:31:43,083 --> 01:31:46,742 in the growing plants here, and in fact in the expansion of the universe. 1382 01:31:49,227 --> 01:31:54,336 All of astrophysics is about nature's attempt 1383 01:31:54,370 --> 01:31:57,650 to release the energy hidden in ordinary matter. 1384 01:31:57,684 --> 01:32:01,861 Energy defined by the equation E equals MC2. 1385 01:32:01,895 --> 01:32:06,072 So I learned to perceive the sun, hot enough in Texas, 1386 01:32:06,072 --> 01:32:10,525 as a natural nuclear furnace and a typical star. 1387 01:32:10,559 --> 01:32:15,668 Energy can create matter, so matter has hidden energy. 1388 01:32:15,702 --> 01:32:19,810 Falling down, like the apple, can liberate some of it. 1389 01:32:19,844 --> 01:32:23,089 So Wallace Sargent led me back to gravity, 1390 01:32:23,158 --> 01:32:26,471 saying it can overwhelm a star. 1391 01:32:28,163 --> 01:32:31,200 When the sun grows old, it will first of all 1392 01:32:31,235 --> 01:32:33,030 become a red giant, in which it becomes 1393 01:32:33,064 --> 01:32:36,896 much bigger and a little cooler than it is now. 1394 01:32:38,104 --> 01:32:40,727 At this time, the Earth will be consumed, 1395 01:32:40,762 --> 01:32:44,559 but fortunately, it will not happen for several more billion years. 1396 01:32:46,422 --> 01:32:50,944 After that, the sun will shrink and become a white dwarf 1397 01:32:50,944 --> 01:32:52,636 which is about the size of the Earth. 1398 01:32:55,086 --> 01:32:59,056 During this time, a lot of hidden energy will be released, 1399 01:32:59,090 --> 01:33:01,265 but not as much as has been released by 1400 01:33:01,299 --> 01:33:05,062 nuclear burning at earlier stages of its evolution. 1401 01:33:06,615 --> 01:33:09,791 Stars much more massive than the sun 1402 01:33:09,860 --> 01:33:11,931 end their lives as supernovae, 1403 01:33:11,965 --> 01:33:14,865 that is they undergo gigantic explosions. 1404 01:33:14,899 --> 01:33:18,627 During this event, the inner parts of the star 1405 01:33:18,662 --> 01:33:21,699 is driven inwards in an enormous implosion. 1406 01:33:23,839 --> 01:33:27,774 This forms a neutron star, which in turn becomes a pulsar. 1407 01:33:29,327 --> 01:33:34,747 The matter in the neutron star is extraordinarily dense, 1408 01:33:34,781 --> 01:33:37,681 and the atoms are crushed together, 1409 01:33:37,681 --> 01:33:41,339 and a substantial fraction of the hidden energy 1410 01:33:41,408 --> 01:33:45,516 originally in the star is set free. 1411 01:33:45,516 --> 01:33:49,693 Well, so neutron stars exist, but theoretical calculations tell us 1412 01:33:49,762 --> 01:33:54,974 that some thing of three times the mass of the sun can't exist as a neutron star. 1413 01:33:56,596 --> 01:33:58,874 It's a short step from a neutron star 1414 01:33:58,874 --> 01:34:01,463 to matter being crushed by implosion into a black hole. 1415 01:34:04,155 --> 01:34:07,365 In the case of a collapsed star, ten times the sun's mass, 1416 01:34:07,365 --> 01:34:11,542 the resulting black hole would be only about 40 miles across. 1417 01:34:11,611 --> 01:34:13,717 Nothing could escape from it, not even light. 1418 01:34:16,754 --> 01:34:18,445 Material falling into such a black hole 1419 01:34:18,480 --> 01:34:19,861 would liberate tremendous energy 1420 01:34:19,861 --> 01:34:22,035 just before disappearing into the hole, 1421 01:34:22,035 --> 01:34:24,693 giving out intense x-rays. 1422 01:34:24,762 --> 01:34:27,627 And these x-rays could be seen from the Earth, 1423 01:34:27,662 --> 01:34:30,319 and that's in fact how we could expect to detect such a thing. 1424 01:34:32,390 --> 01:34:35,048 Well, the x-ray source called Cygnus X-1 1425 01:34:35,048 --> 01:34:38,327 meets these specifications and may well be a black hole. 1426 01:34:38,362 --> 01:34:42,538 And it's sucking material apparently from a companion super giant star. 1427 01:34:48,027 --> 01:34:50,581 Well, now we're on Cygnus X-1. 1428 01:34:50,581 --> 01:34:55,379 What we can actually see here is the companion to the star. 1429 01:34:56,380 --> 01:34:58,071 Not the black hole itself. 1430 01:34:58,140 --> 01:35:01,799 The black hole is orbiting around the star that you can see. 1431 01:35:03,076 --> 01:35:07,494 This is a record of the extra emissions from Cygnus X-1. 1432 01:35:07,529 --> 01:35:10,152 And you see there's no regularity in it 1433 01:35:10,187 --> 01:35:12,016 as there would be if it were a neutron star. 1434 01:35:12,051 --> 01:35:14,191 No, they're not very regular, are they? 1435 01:35:15,710 --> 01:35:18,160 The quest for black holes was, for me, 1436 01:35:18,195 --> 01:35:21,025 the culminating proof that Einstein's theories 1437 01:35:21,060 --> 01:35:23,372 still inspire the very latest research. 1438 01:35:24,684 --> 01:35:27,204 It led us to distant galaxies of stars 1439 01:35:27,238 --> 01:35:31,933 as big as our own Milky Way, but erupting most violently. 1440 01:35:31,967 --> 01:35:36,938 In order to explain many of the phenomena out there in the universe, 1441 01:35:36,938 --> 01:35:41,287 we have to invoke enormous energy sources. 1442 01:35:41,287 --> 01:35:45,601 And it looks more and more as though black holes may be the only possibility 1443 01:35:45,670 --> 01:35:48,570 to provide such large sources of energy. 1444 01:35:48,604 --> 01:35:53,023 In this kind of theory, an enormous black hole with a mass 1445 01:35:53,057 --> 01:35:56,543 probably several billion times the mass of the sun, 1446 01:35:56,578 --> 01:36:02,308 sits at the center of the galaxy and releases energy 1447 01:36:02,377 --> 01:36:04,551 in some way, which we don't yet understand, 1448 01:36:04,586 --> 01:36:09,556 by swallowing entire stars and gas from the surrounding galaxy. 1449 01:36:14,320 --> 01:36:16,632 For the past couple of years, several of us 1450 01:36:16,667 --> 01:36:19,566 have been paying particular attention to the galaxy M87. 1451 01:36:20,498 --> 01:36:22,293 It's a very distinctive galaxy 1452 01:36:22,328 --> 01:36:26,435 with a jet of luminous matter poking out at one side. 1453 01:36:28,127 --> 01:36:33,097 M87 is a strong source of radio waves and also x-rays. 1454 01:36:33,132 --> 01:36:36,825 And all together, it's a very energetic galaxy. 1455 01:36:36,860 --> 01:36:40,656 Most of the work that we've done has been observations 1456 01:36:40,691 --> 01:36:43,280 at the Kitt Peak Observatory in Arizona 1457 01:36:43,314 --> 01:36:46,110 and at Palomar Observatory in California. 1458 01:36:46,145 --> 01:36:48,492 We've used a very sensitive light detector 1459 01:36:48,526 --> 01:36:51,978 brought out from London by Alec Boksenberg. 1460 01:36:52,013 --> 01:36:54,774 What we do is to look at slices of M87 1461 01:36:54,809 --> 01:36:58,329 at different distances from the center and use the Doppler shift 1462 01:36:58,364 --> 01:37:03,334 to tell how fast the stars in the galaxy are moving around. 1463 01:37:03,369 --> 01:37:07,200 What we find is that the stars in the very center of M87 1464 01:37:07,200 --> 01:37:11,618 are moving around much more rapidly than we would expect. 1465 01:37:11,653 --> 01:37:14,207 As far as we can see, they're moving fast 1466 01:37:14,207 --> 01:37:17,383 because they're orbiting around an invisible object. 1467 01:37:17,383 --> 01:37:19,730 But we can use the speeds of the stars 1468 01:37:19,730 --> 01:37:22,733 to estimate the mass of this invisible object. 1469 01:37:22,802 --> 01:37:27,082 It turns out to be about 5,000 million times as big as the sun. 1470 01:37:27,082 --> 01:37:31,155 Just about the kind of mass that we would expect for a black hole, 1471 01:37:31,190 --> 01:37:34,641 if it really is powering all the phenomena that we see in M87. 1472 01:37:36,195 --> 01:37:37,403 The problem is 1473 01:37:37,403 --> 01:37:40,061 that the volume you would expect for a black hole 1474 01:37:40,095 --> 01:37:46,550 of the mass that we think the one in M87 has is very small indeed. 1475 01:37:46,584 --> 01:37:49,587 And so, really, the problem is to try 1476 01:37:49,587 --> 01:37:52,383 and resolve much smaller angular distances. 1477 01:37:52,418 --> 01:37:54,834 Small, angular distances. 1478 01:37:54,869 --> 01:37:57,872 I suppose that's the penny at a distance of a mile again. 1479 01:37:59,356 --> 01:38:03,256 In order to try and do this, I've turned radio astronomer 1480 01:38:03,325 --> 01:38:08,020 and with colleagues used the radio telescopes 1481 01:38:08,054 --> 01:38:11,747 at Goldstone in California, 1482 01:38:11,782 --> 01:38:15,786 and at Madrid in Spain, 5,000 miles away. 1483 01:38:15,786 --> 01:38:20,377 The object is to try and get a telescope as large as the Earth 1484 01:38:20,411 --> 01:38:23,345 by means of which you can resolve very small distances. 1485 01:38:24,346 --> 01:38:27,108 I'd just like to know, at this juncture, 1486 01:38:27,142 --> 01:38:31,940 to what extent is all this a logical consequence of Einstein's work 1487 01:38:32,009 --> 01:38:34,563 or has it already taken off on its own? 1488 01:38:36,048 --> 01:38:38,636 Well, it was certainly not known to Einstein 1489 01:38:38,636 --> 01:38:41,950 that black holes would be a consequence of his work. 1490 01:38:42,019 --> 01:38:44,090 On the other hand, later work, 1491 01:38:44,125 --> 01:38:48,577 since Einstein died in fact, has pointed very clearly 1492 01:38:48,612 --> 01:38:49,820 to the fact that within his theory, 1493 01:38:49,889 --> 01:38:53,272 at least, within general relativity, one... 1494 01:38:53,306 --> 01:38:55,895 This is a very clear prediction of the theory. 1495 01:38:57,138 --> 01:39:00,037 And of course, independent of the actual nature 1496 01:39:00,072 --> 01:39:02,108 of the underlying object, we know that it has to 1497 01:39:02,143 --> 01:39:05,387 put out a great deal of energy because we see that directly. 1498 01:39:05,422 --> 01:39:10,220 And that implies huge underlying mass from E=mc2. 1499 01:39:10,254 --> 01:39:15,052 And of course the light that we get directly from the object 1500 01:39:15,087 --> 01:39:17,434 as analyzed by Wallace Sargent... 1501 01:39:17,468 --> 01:39:18,987 Well, they used the Doppler Effect 1502 01:39:19,056 --> 01:39:22,818 and didn't pose to us as photons. 1503 01:39:22,818 --> 01:39:24,993 So the richness of Einstein's ideas 1504 01:39:25,028 --> 01:39:30,550 bears on the entire range of actual observations of these objects. 1505 01:39:32,000 --> 01:39:35,486 A computer charted the fathomless warp of space 1506 01:39:35,521 --> 01:39:39,456 in an imagined collision between two black holes. 1507 01:39:53,056 --> 01:39:56,921 Our ancestors frightened themselves with dragons and hobgoblins, 1508 01:39:56,956 --> 01:40:00,615 we haveJaws and black holes. 1509 01:40:13,214 --> 01:40:15,871 In fact, at the dead center of a black hole, 1510 01:40:15,906 --> 01:40:19,082 I found that even Einstein's ideas falter. 1511 01:40:21,015 --> 01:40:24,156 Here, if general relativity can now be 1512 01:40:24,190 --> 01:40:26,399 adequately applied to the black hole itself 1513 01:40:26,399 --> 01:40:29,920 and a certain distance in, then it's possible to show 1514 01:40:29,920 --> 01:40:33,820 that even the theory itself predicts its own downfall. 1515 01:40:33,855 --> 01:40:39,343 And this is one of the things which was not appreciated before Einstein died. 1516 01:40:39,378 --> 01:40:43,830 Certainly, everything does get compressed into a very, very small region. 1517 01:40:43,865 --> 01:40:45,591 And there comes a point somewhere, 1518 01:40:45,660 --> 01:40:47,041 when new physics has to come in. 1519 01:40:47,075 --> 01:40:49,388 The argument really is at what point 1520 01:40:49,422 --> 01:40:50,734 and what new physics comes in. 1521 01:40:52,494 --> 01:40:56,429 Of course, when you're at states of very high density, 1522 01:40:56,498 --> 01:41:00,330 you can no longer deal with gravitation in isolation, 1523 01:41:00,364 --> 01:41:02,435 while the other forces of matter, 1524 01:41:02,435 --> 01:41:06,612 the strong nuclear forces, the weak forces of radioactive decay 1525 01:41:06,612 --> 01:41:08,924 and the electromagnetic forces. 1526 01:41:08,959 --> 01:41:13,826 Nor can you stay strictly within the realm of classical physics 1527 01:41:13,860 --> 01:41:16,587 and ignore the quantum ideas. 1528 01:41:17,450 --> 01:41:18,831 Yes, you're right. 1529 01:41:18,900 --> 01:41:24,457 It's ironic that Einstein, who was a founder of the quantum theory 1530 01:41:24,526 --> 01:41:27,564 through his discovery of the quantum of the photon, 1531 01:41:27,598 --> 01:41:29,462 which is the particle of light, 1532 01:41:29,531 --> 01:41:32,396 never felt comfortable, never felt satisfied 1533 01:41:32,431 --> 01:41:35,744 with that theory because of the element of uncertainty, 1534 01:41:35,779 --> 01:41:39,369 the element of chance that it brings in 1535 01:41:39,403 --> 01:41:43,994 to a description of the behavior of particles. 1536 01:41:44,063 --> 01:41:46,755 Apprehending more than I could possibly comprehend, 1537 01:41:46,790 --> 01:41:50,104 I listened like a child allowed to stay up late 1538 01:41:50,138 --> 01:41:54,073 to ideas that might surpass Einstein's. 1539 01:41:54,108 --> 01:41:55,971 On a theoretical front here, I might say that 1540 01:41:56,006 --> 01:42:00,044 it seems to me we're no closer to knowing where we're going. 1541 01:42:00,079 --> 01:42:02,495 They are the very beginnings of efforts 1542 01:42:02,564 --> 01:42:05,015 to make a super gravity theory, 1543 01:42:05,015 --> 01:42:09,468 a quantum theory that embraces gravity and the other forces of matter 1544 01:42:09,502 --> 01:42:13,403 that are all unified together in this great dream, the grand synthesis 1545 01:42:13,437 --> 01:42:17,786 that Einstein spent 30 years, the last 30 years of his life 1546 01:42:17,821 --> 01:42:21,100 trying to create and failed. 1547 01:42:21,135 --> 01:42:26,105 That in alone is a measure, a statement of how difficult the problem is. 1548 01:42:27,486 --> 01:42:30,696 When you get down to the size of an elementary particle, 1549 01:42:30,765 --> 01:42:33,077 the question is, does the concept of space and time 1550 01:42:33,112 --> 01:42:35,701 still apply at a smaller scale than this. 1551 01:42:35,770 --> 01:42:38,773 And I think most physicists would take the view 1552 01:42:38,807 --> 01:42:41,879 that it does apply and that it goes on 1553 01:42:41,879 --> 01:42:45,814 until you're down to a tiny fraction of the size of a particle. 1554 01:42:45,849 --> 01:42:50,957 But this sort of line that we're following is one which suggests 1555 01:42:50,992 --> 01:42:55,030 that perhaps things go wrong before that and the idea is that the point, 1556 01:42:55,065 --> 01:42:59,000 the concept of a point in space is not the primary concept. 1557 01:42:59,034 --> 01:43:01,554 This is only a mathematical artifact, 1558 01:43:01,623 --> 01:43:04,074 and that something a little closer to the idea 1559 01:43:04,074 --> 01:43:06,559 of a particle, although not actually a particle. 1560 01:43:06,628 --> 01:43:08,389 It's a thing that we call a twister, 1561 01:43:08,423 --> 01:43:13,566 which is, um... Well, it's something I couldn't explain in detail, 1562 01:43:13,566 --> 01:43:17,018 but the idea is that the concept of a particle 1563 01:43:17,052 --> 01:43:19,227 and of space itself are both things 1564 01:43:19,227 --> 01:43:22,057 which emerge out of this more primitive concept. 1565 01:43:22,092 --> 01:43:26,061 And this is the line we've been pursuing for many years now. 1566 01:43:26,130 --> 01:43:28,409 And one of the great problems is to see 1567 01:43:28,409 --> 01:43:34,415 how to tie it in with general relativity in a very clear way. 1568 01:43:34,484 --> 01:43:36,589 And there are some encouraging features, 1569 01:43:36,658 --> 01:43:39,213 but it's certainly not finished yet. 1570 01:43:41,353 --> 01:43:43,941 From the minutest quantities of space 1571 01:43:43,941 --> 01:43:46,565 to the immensities of the universe, 1572 01:43:47,600 --> 01:43:50,431 the director recognized the little boy in me 1573 01:43:50,465 --> 01:43:53,330 and he let me drive the big telescope across the sky. 1574 01:43:55,298 --> 01:43:58,197 Beautiful, isn't it?USTINOV: Yes, that's fantastic. 1575 01:43:58,232 --> 01:44:00,682 The rings of Saturn mapped for me 1576 01:44:00,717 --> 01:44:03,582 the warped space surrounding the giant planet. 1577 01:44:05,791 --> 01:44:08,897 As I scanned the Milky Way, Harland Smith reminded me 1578 01:44:08,932 --> 01:44:12,176 that the stars, billions of them, and including the sun, 1579 01:44:12,211 --> 01:44:15,870 all circle under their mutual gravity. 1580 01:44:15,904 --> 01:44:17,872 And we looked beyond our own galaxy 1581 01:44:17,906 --> 01:44:22,186 to similar whirlpools of stars far away in space-time. 1582 01:44:23,774 --> 01:44:26,708 To sample a few of the billions of galaxies 1583 01:44:26,743 --> 01:44:31,057 prepared me for contemplating the whole of Einstein's universe 1584 01:44:31,092 --> 01:44:35,061 and its presumed origin in the Big Bang. 1585 01:44:35,096 --> 01:44:36,580 And it was brought home to me 1586 01:44:36,615 --> 01:44:39,790 how Einstein's discoveries about space and time, 1587 01:44:39,825 --> 01:44:45,796 light and matter, all connect and make a girdle of the universe. 1588 01:44:48,109 --> 01:44:52,113 Could we pull Einstein's ideas all together. 1589 01:44:52,147 --> 01:44:56,462 Energy has mass and mass has energy. 1590 01:44:56,497 --> 01:44:59,500 And the mass of the sun, so gigantic, 1591 01:44:59,569 --> 01:45:02,296 has only to be burned up a little at a time 1592 01:45:02,330 --> 01:45:05,747 to provide us with all the heat and light and power 1593 01:45:05,782 --> 01:45:08,232 that we see here on Earth. 1594 01:45:08,267 --> 01:45:12,306 But that mass has more gravitational pull 1595 01:45:12,340 --> 01:45:16,068 that pulls light, bends it, pulls other stars, 1596 01:45:16,965 --> 01:45:21,418 and when stars start flying apart, 1597 01:45:21,453 --> 01:45:23,696 in the earliest days of the universe, 1598 01:45:23,696 --> 01:45:28,011 that gravitational pull slows down their outward flight. 1599 01:45:30,807 --> 01:45:34,500 The universe comes into being out of nothingness. 1600 01:45:37,331 --> 01:45:41,990 Matter, light, energy. All at once. 1601 01:45:42,025 --> 01:45:44,476 And this matter, this light and this energy, 1602 01:45:44,510 --> 01:45:47,306 all expand, get more dilute. 1603 01:45:49,619 --> 01:45:54,969 Contract into stars, galaxies, planets 1604 01:45:55,003 --> 01:45:58,075 and the whole thing goes on expanding, 1605 01:45:58,075 --> 01:46:00,630 getting bigger, farther apart, 1606 01:46:03,011 --> 01:46:05,911 and that's the phase we live in now, 1607 01:46:05,911 --> 01:46:09,155 as these galaxies are flying apart from each other. 1608 01:46:11,088 --> 01:46:15,265 But then comes the moment, we believe, down the line, 1609 01:46:15,334 --> 01:46:19,649 when they stop flying apart and their gravitational attraction 1610 01:46:19,683 --> 01:46:22,755 pulls them back together again. 1611 01:46:22,824 --> 01:46:29,003 The whole thing contracts, energies go up once more, 1612 01:46:29,037 --> 01:46:33,076 we get to a gigantic, big crunch. 1613 01:46:43,017 --> 01:46:46,123 In its pristine form, 60 years ago, 1614 01:46:46,192 --> 01:46:49,679 general relativity clearly required the Big Bang 1615 01:46:49,713 --> 01:46:51,957 for the birth of the universe. 1616 01:46:52,026 --> 01:46:56,824 But that melodramatic story conflicted with the astronomy of the day, 1617 01:46:56,893 --> 01:47:02,346 and Einstein doctored his equations to describe a more restful universe. 1618 01:47:03,589 --> 01:47:08,525 "In order to arrive at this consistent view, 1619 01:47:08,560 --> 01:47:11,286 "we admittedly had to introduce an extension 1620 01:47:11,321 --> 01:47:14,462 "of the field equations of gravitation, 1621 01:47:14,497 --> 01:47:21,262 "which is not justified by our actual knowledge of gravitation." 1622 01:47:21,296 --> 01:47:25,162 "The introduction of that cosmological term 1623 01:47:25,162 --> 01:47:30,064 "was the biggest blunder I ever made." 1624 01:47:30,098 --> 01:47:34,551 "Death alone can save one from making blunders." 1625 01:47:36,795 --> 01:47:42,663 In fairness to Einstein, just about the time that he made this remark, 1626 01:47:42,732 --> 01:47:47,115 astronomers' ideas of the universe were changing rapidly. 1627 01:47:47,150 --> 01:47:49,428 It was discovered about that time that not only 1628 01:47:49,463 --> 01:47:51,672 was there our Milky Way galaxy 1629 01:47:51,706 --> 01:47:55,261 but there were billions of other galaxies in the universe as well. 1630 01:47:55,296 --> 01:47:58,437 But more surprisingly, it was found that they were 1631 01:47:58,472 --> 01:48:02,027 rushing away from one another at enormous speeds. 1632 01:48:02,027 --> 01:48:05,444 This was discovered by means of the redshift 1633 01:48:05,479 --> 01:48:09,517 that occurs in the spectrum of the light due to the Doppler shift 1634 01:48:09,586 --> 01:48:12,865 when things are moving away from us. 1635 01:48:12,900 --> 01:48:17,318 I'm using this particular machine to measure the redshift of the galaxy. 1636 01:48:17,352 --> 01:48:22,496 This is the galaxy and this is the spectrum of the galaxy 1637 01:48:22,530 --> 01:48:27,121 under the nearby object which has no redshift at all. 1638 01:48:27,155 --> 01:48:30,676 When I change the magnification, 1639 01:48:30,711 --> 01:48:33,921 here is a spectral line due to sodium. 1640 01:48:33,921 --> 01:48:38,166 And in the distant galaxy, the spectrum line is shifted towards the red 1641 01:48:38,201 --> 01:48:41,722 and from the separation of the two lines, 1642 01:48:41,756 --> 01:48:46,968 one can tell that, roughly, the redshift is about 7000 kilometers per second. 1643 01:48:48,211 --> 01:48:50,351 This is one of the most important kinds of 1644 01:48:50,385 --> 01:48:52,353 measurements that astronomers make. 1645 01:48:52,387 --> 01:48:55,563 We often make redshift measurements. 1646 01:48:55,563 --> 01:48:59,705 It was first discovered about 50 years ago, 1647 01:48:59,740 --> 01:49:03,675 and this led to the idea of the expanding universe. 1648 01:49:03,709 --> 01:49:07,920 Later, in 1965, a radio telescope in New Jersey 1649 01:49:07,989 --> 01:49:09,577 revealed that the whole universe, 1650 01:49:09,577 --> 01:49:12,822 even the apparently empty parts of the sky, 1651 01:49:12,856 --> 01:49:15,376 were aglow with radio emission. 1652 01:49:15,410 --> 01:49:20,070 This is apparently left over from the birth of the universe. 1653 01:49:20,105 --> 01:49:25,420 It's this particular discovery that makes the Big Bang theory 1654 01:49:25,455 --> 01:49:28,700 the dominant theory of cosmology at the present time. 1655 01:49:34,084 --> 01:49:38,226 They represented the expanding Einsteinian universe 1656 01:49:38,261 --> 01:49:40,884 by a balloon studded with galaxies. 1657 01:49:42,196 --> 01:49:43,956 They told me that it served as a note 1658 01:49:43,991 --> 01:49:48,789 of the entire universe with its space curving right back on itself 1659 01:49:48,789 --> 01:49:53,241 because of the gravity of all its contents. 1660 01:49:53,276 --> 01:49:57,004 And they induced a cooperative Texan bug to travel in it. 1661 01:49:59,385 --> 01:50:02,112 In sympathy with that cosmic bug, 1662 01:50:02,147 --> 01:50:05,288 my mind voyaged among the galaxies. 1663 01:50:07,739 --> 01:50:13,399 I couldn't really visualize the overall warping of cosmic space. Who can? 1664 01:50:13,434 --> 01:50:16,817 But I sensed that gravity might indeed close up the universe, 1665 01:50:16,886 --> 01:50:19,785 so that if I traveled far enough, 1666 01:50:19,820 --> 01:50:24,618 I should find myself coming full circle back to my starting point. 1667 01:50:27,241 --> 01:50:32,039 The bug has nowhere to go but around. 1668 01:50:32,073 --> 01:50:34,006 There's no end. 1669 01:50:34,075 --> 01:50:36,250 Nowhere at end to the universe. 1670 01:50:37,389 --> 01:50:40,634 It's closed universe 1671 01:50:40,668 --> 01:50:42,497 but unbounded universe. 1672 01:50:46,363 --> 01:50:50,609 Einstein's picture was the universe is closed. 1673 01:50:50,644 --> 01:50:53,267 At least that's what he wrote in the last edition 1674 01:50:53,301 --> 01:50:58,962 of his book published in the year of his death, 1955. 1675 01:50:58,997 --> 01:51:04,865 Today, of course, we don't really know how the evidence is. 1676 01:51:04,865 --> 01:51:06,314 Whether there's enough matter 1677 01:51:06,349 --> 01:51:08,903 to curve the universe up into closure. 1678 01:51:09,973 --> 01:51:14,495 But to predict, as Einstein did, 1679 01:51:14,529 --> 01:51:17,740 the expansion of the universe, 1680 01:51:17,740 --> 01:51:23,055 and to predict it correctly, and to predict it against all expectation... 1681 01:51:23,124 --> 01:51:26,818 So fantastic a thing... To my idea, 1682 01:51:26,852 --> 01:51:30,649 is the greatest prediction that mankind has ever made. 1683 01:51:30,684 --> 01:51:36,759 And to my mind, gives us more faith than anything that we could have, 1684 01:51:36,828 --> 01:51:42,005 that some day we'll find how the universe itself came into being. 1685 01:51:53,154 --> 01:51:55,501 I think it's quite right to have celebrated Einstein 1686 01:51:55,536 --> 01:51:58,263 out here on the far frontier of Texas. 1687 01:51:58,263 --> 01:52:02,923 Because not only is it the site of a major observatory... 1688 01:52:02,923 --> 01:52:04,718 And observatories are going to be 1689 01:52:04,752 --> 01:52:08,618 where Einstein's theories will have to be tested in the distant future... 1690 01:52:08,618 --> 01:52:11,725 But also, because we have all around us still, 1691 01:52:11,759 --> 01:52:14,520 the great frontier, the American West. 1692 01:52:14,555 --> 01:52:18,939 And this symbolizes, in a way, Einstein's general relativity 1693 01:52:19,008 --> 01:52:21,079 which is at the far frontier of the human mind. 1694 01:52:22,632 --> 01:52:29,190 The most beautiful thing that we can experience is the mysterious. 1695 01:52:29,225 --> 01:52:34,264 It's the only source of true art and science. 1696 01:52:34,299 --> 01:52:38,303 And he to whom this emotion is a stranger, 1697 01:52:38,303 --> 01:52:44,136 he who can no longer pause in wonder or stand rapt in awe, 1698 01:52:44,136 --> 01:52:45,897 well, he's already half dead. 1699 01:52:46,621 --> 01:52:47,933 His eyes are shut. 1700 01:52:49,624 --> 01:52:54,077 It was Einstein's passion to understand the universe. 1701 01:52:54,112 --> 01:52:59,117 For him, that understanding was the only real power, 1702 01:52:59,151 --> 01:53:02,845 and he did more to create it than any other man who's ever lived. 1703 01:53:04,087 --> 01:53:07,125 Well, that's a very large claim, 1704 01:53:07,159 --> 01:53:10,093 and I'm sure you're right, but would you agree with that, Wall? 1705 01:53:10,128 --> 01:53:13,821 Yes. Astronomers use Einstein's ideas all the time, 1706 01:53:13,890 --> 01:53:17,204 often without remembering who thought of them. 1707 01:53:17,273 --> 01:53:21,760 It's the ultimate distinction in science to be part of the furniture, like Newton. 1708 01:53:32,150 --> 01:53:35,429 You ask me if one can eventually express 1709 01:53:35,463 --> 01:53:37,949 everything in scientific terms. 1710 01:53:40,192 --> 01:53:43,230 Yes, it's possible, but it is useless. 1711 01:53:44,541 --> 01:53:47,648 It is as though one were to reproduce 1712 01:53:47,682 --> 01:53:54,310 Beethoven's Ninth Symphony in the shape of an air pressure curve. 1713 01:54:02,214 --> 01:54:05,700 I propose a toast to Albert Einstein. 1714 01:54:05,769 --> 01:54:08,151 One of our greatest heroes. 1715 01:54:08,186 --> 01:54:11,154 Musicians have Mozart, Beethoven. 1716 01:54:11,189 --> 01:54:14,157 We have Newton and Einstein. 1717 01:54:14,192 --> 01:54:16,090 And it's appropriate that most of our talk 1718 01:54:16,159 --> 01:54:20,474 has been about his physics, but we shouldn't forget the other side, 1719 01:54:20,508 --> 01:54:23,408 Albert Einstein the folk hero. 1720 01:54:23,408 --> 01:54:27,239 Though widely honored, he was a simple man who spurned 1721 01:54:27,308 --> 01:54:32,486 and shunned wealth, power and status. 1722 01:54:32,520 --> 01:54:35,213 A refugee on the run from Hitler, 1723 01:54:35,247 --> 01:54:39,734 he was a dignified and gentle symbol 1724 01:54:39,769 --> 01:54:43,359 of scientific inspiration that was a great 1725 01:54:43,393 --> 01:54:46,258 particular inspiration for young refugees 1726 01:54:46,327 --> 01:54:48,743 and immigrants interested in science. 1727 01:54:48,778 --> 01:54:52,437 The reputed grandfather of the atom bomb, 1728 01:54:52,506 --> 01:54:56,268 he was the moral leader of the efforts 1729 01:54:56,303 --> 01:55:03,103 to bring that dangerous and deadly application of E=mc2 under international control. 1730 01:55:03,172 --> 01:55:06,451 I propose a toast to the memory of Albert Einstein. 1731 01:55:06,520 --> 01:55:10,593 Hear, Hear. To Albert Einstein. 1732 01:55:16,461 --> 01:55:21,776 The most daring proposition in relativity is that the laws of nature 1733 01:55:21,811 --> 01:55:26,298 must remain the same at all places and at all times, 1734 01:55:26,298 --> 01:55:29,646 even in galaxies so far away 1735 01:55:29,681 --> 01:55:35,583 that their light has traveled for thousands of millions of years to reach us. 1736 01:55:35,618 --> 01:55:39,622 If so, Albert Einstein's own laws of nature, 1737 01:55:39,656 --> 01:55:43,626 conceived with pen and paper on the planet Earth, 1738 01:55:44,316 --> 01:55:46,940 hold good everywhere. 1739 01:55:52,531 --> 01:55:57,398 "What really interests me is whether God had any choice" 1740 01:55:57,433 --> 01:56:00,643 "in the creation of the world." 144134

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