1 00:00:01,080 --> 00:00:03,840 Space, the final frontier. 2 00:00:05,880 --> 00:00:09,336 I first heard these words when I was just six years old, 3 00:00:09,360 --> 00:00:11,616 and I was completely inspired. 4 00:00:11,640 --> 00:00:14,016 I wanted to explore strange new worlds. 5 00:00:14,040 --> 00:00:15,536 I wanted to seek out new life. 6 00:00:15,560 --> 00:00:18,760 I wanted to see everything that the universe had to offer. 7 00:00:19,840 --> 00:00:23,536 And those dreams, those words, they took me on a journey, 8 00:00:23,560 --> 00:00:25,016 a journey of discovery, 9 00:00:25,040 --> 00:00:27,216 through school, through university, 10 00:00:27,240 --> 00:00:30,680 to do a PhD and finally to become a professional astronomer. 11 00:00:31,920 --> 00:00:34,936 Now, I learned two amazing things, 12 00:00:34,960 --> 00:00:36,496 one slightly unfortunate, 13 00:00:36,520 --> 00:00:38,576 when I was doing my PhD. 14 00:00:38,600 --> 00:00:41,016 I learned that the reality was 15 00:00:41,040 --> 00:00:44,200 I wouldn't be piloting a starship anytime soon. 16 00:00:45,440 --> 00:00:50,056 But I also learned that the universe is strange, wonderful and vast, 17 00:00:50,080 --> 00:00:52,880 actually too vast to be explored by spaceship. 18 00:00:53,720 --> 00:00:57,080 And so I turned my attention to astronomy, to using telescopes. 19 00:00:57,840 --> 00:01:00,616 Now, I show you before you an image of the night sky. 20 00:01:00,640 --> 00:01:02,560 You might see it anywhere in the world. 21 00:01:03,040 --> 00:01:07,000 And all of these stars are part of our local galaxy, the Milky Way. 22 00:01:07,560 --> 00:01:10,256 Now, if you were to go to a darker part of the sky, 23 00:01:10,280 --> 00:01:12,816 a nice dark site, perhaps in the desert, 24 00:01:12,840 --> 00:01:15,256 you might see the center of our Milky Way galaxy 25 00:01:15,280 --> 00:01:18,240 spread out before you, hundreds of billions of stars. 26 00:01:18,840 --> 00:01:20,416 And it's a very beautiful image. 27 00:01:20,440 --> 00:01:21,776 It's colorful. 28 00:01:21,800 --> 00:01:25,416 And again, this is just a local corner of our universe. 29 00:01:25,440 --> 00:01:28,736 You can see there's a sort of strange dark dust across it. 30 00:01:28,760 --> 00:01:30,736 Now, that is local dust 31 00:01:30,760 --> 00:01:33,416 that's obscuring the light of the stars. 32 00:01:33,440 --> 00:01:35,016 But we can do a pretty good job. 33 00:01:35,040 --> 00:01:38,496 Just with our own eyes, we can explore our little corner of the universe. 34 00:01:38,520 --> 00:01:39,856 It's possible to do better. 35 00:01:39,880 --> 00:01:43,640 You can use wonderful telescopes like the Hubble Space Telescope. 36 00:01:44,200 --> 00:01:46,376 Now, astronomers have put together this image. 37 00:01:46,400 --> 00:01:48,296 It's called the Hubble Deep Field, 38 00:01:48,320 --> 00:01:52,656 and they've spent hundreds of hours observing just a tiny patch of the sky 39 00:01:52,680 --> 00:01:55,080 no larger than your thumbnail held at arm's length. 40 00:01:55,520 --> 00:01:56,776 And in this image 41 00:01:56,800 --> 00:01:58,456 you can see thousands of galaxies, 42 00:01:58,480 --> 00:02:01,936 and we know that there must be hundreds of millions, billions of galaxies 43 00:02:01,960 --> 00:02:03,336 in the entire universe, 44 00:02:03,360 --> 00:02:06,016 some like our own and some very different. 45 00:02:06,040 --> 00:02:08,696 So you think, OK, well, I can continue this journey. 46 00:02:08,720 --> 00:02:11,416 This is easy. I can just use a very powerful telescope 47 00:02:11,440 --> 00:02:13,240 and just look at the sky, no problem. 48 00:02:13,960 --> 00:02:17,976 It's actually really missing out if we just do that. 49 00:02:18,000 --> 00:02:20,736 Now, that's because everything I've talked about so far 50 00:02:20,760 --> 00:02:24,656 is just using the visible spectrum, just the thing that your eyes can see, 51 00:02:24,680 --> 00:02:26,096 and that's a tiny slice, 52 00:02:26,120 --> 00:02:29,480 a tiny, tiny slice of what the universe has to offer us. 53 00:02:30,160 --> 00:02:34,896 Now, there's also two very important problems with using visible light. 54 00:02:34,920 --> 00:02:37,656 Not only are we missing out on all the other processes 55 00:02:37,680 --> 00:02:40,856 that are emitting other kinds of light, 56 00:02:40,880 --> 00:02:42,296 but there's two issues. 57 00:02:42,320 --> 00:02:45,696 Now, the first is that dust that I mentioned earlier. 58 00:02:45,720 --> 00:02:48,656 The dust stops the visible light from getting to us. 59 00:02:48,680 --> 00:02:53,376 So as we look deeper into the universe, we see less light. 60 00:02:53,400 --> 00:02:54,960 The dust stops it getting to us. 61 00:02:55,520 --> 00:02:58,936 But there's a really strange problem with using visible light 62 00:02:58,960 --> 00:03:00,920 in order to try and explore the universe. 63 00:03:01,640 --> 00:03:03,896 Now take a break for a minute. 64 00:03:03,920 --> 00:03:06,600 Say you're standing on a corner, a busy street corner. 65 00:03:07,080 --> 00:03:08,576 There's cars going by. 66 00:03:08,600 --> 00:03:10,000 An ambulance approaches. 67 00:03:10,840 --> 00:03:12,216 It has a high-pitched siren. 68 00:03:12,240 --> 00:03:15,976 (Imitates a siren passing by) 69 00:03:16,000 --> 00:03:18,336 The siren appeared to change in pitch 70 00:03:18,360 --> 00:03:20,440 as it moved towards and away from you. 71 00:03:20,960 --> 00:03:24,840 The ambulance driver did not change the siren just to mess with you. 72 00:03:26,040 --> 00:03:28,616 That was a product of your perception. 73 00:03:28,640 --> 00:03:31,376 The sound waves, as the ambulance approached, 74 00:03:31,400 --> 00:03:32,616 were compressed, 75 00:03:32,640 --> 00:03:34,576 and they changed higher in pitch. 76 00:03:34,600 --> 00:03:37,376 As the ambulance receded, the sound waves were stretched, 77 00:03:37,400 --> 00:03:39,456 and they sounded lower in pitch. 78 00:03:39,480 --> 00:03:41,480 The same thing happens with light. 79 00:03:42,040 --> 00:03:44,416 Objects moving towards us, 80 00:03:44,440 --> 00:03:47,616 their light waves are compressed and they appear bluer. 81 00:03:47,640 --> 00:03:49,856 Objects moving away from us, 82 00:03:49,880 --> 00:03:52,536 their light waves are stretched, and they appear redder. 83 00:03:52,560 --> 00:03:55,440 So we call these effects blueshift and redshift. 84 00:03:56,440 --> 00:03:59,376 Now, our universe is expanding, 85 00:03:59,400 --> 00:04:03,576 so everything is moving away from everything else, 86 00:04:03,600 --> 00:04:06,280 and that means everything appears to be red, 87 00:04:07,040 --> 00:04:10,776 and oddly enough, as you look more deeply into the universe, 88 00:04:10,800 --> 00:04:15,096 more distant objects are moving away further and faster, 89 00:04:15,120 --> 00:04:16,839 so they appear more red. 90 00:04:17,560 --> 00:04:20,495 So if I come back to the Hubble Deep Field 91 00:04:20,519 --> 00:04:23,216 and we were to continue to peer deeply into the universe 92 00:04:23,240 --> 00:04:24,776 just using the Hubble, 93 00:04:24,800 --> 00:04:27,496 as we get to a certain distance away, 94 00:04:27,520 --> 00:04:29,120 everything becomes red, 95 00:04:29,920 --> 00:04:31,896 and that presents something of a problem. 96 00:04:31,920 --> 00:04:33,976 Eventually, we get so far away 97 00:04:34,000 --> 00:04:36,976 everything is shifted into the infrared 98 00:04:37,000 --> 00:04:39,000 and we can't see anything at all. 99 00:04:39,680 --> 00:04:41,376 So there must be a way around this. 100 00:04:41,400 --> 00:04:43,216 Otherwise, I'm limited in my journey. 101 00:04:43,240 --> 00:04:45,136 I wanted to explore the whole universe, 102 00:04:45,160 --> 00:04:49,080 not just whatever I can see, you know, before the redshift kicks in. 103 00:04:50,160 --> 00:04:51,416 There is a technique. 104 00:04:51,440 --> 00:04:52,816 It's called radio astronomy. 105 00:04:52,840 --> 00:04:55,176 Astronomers have been using this for decades. 106 00:04:55,200 --> 00:04:56,496 It's a fantastic technique. 107 00:04:56,520 --> 00:04:59,936 I show you the Parkes Radio Telescope, affectionately known as the Dish. 108 00:04:59,960 --> 00:05:01,816 You may have seen the movie. 109 00:05:01,840 --> 00:05:03,416 And radio is really brilliant. 110 00:05:03,440 --> 00:05:05,976 It allows us to peer much more deeply. 111 00:05:06,000 --> 00:05:08,696 It doesn't get stopped by dust, 112 00:05:08,720 --> 00:05:10,976 so you can see everything in the universe, 113 00:05:11,000 --> 00:05:12,856 and redshift is less of a problem 114 00:05:12,880 --> 00:05:16,080 because we can build receivers that receive across a large band. 115 00:05:16,600 --> 00:05:20,536 So what does Parkes see when we turn it to the center of the Milky Way? 116 00:05:20,560 --> 00:05:22,520 We should see something fantastic, right? 117 00:05:23,160 --> 00:05:26,056 Well, we do see something interesting. 118 00:05:26,080 --> 00:05:27,736 All that dust has gone. 119 00:05:27,760 --> 00:05:31,200 As I mentioned, radio goes straight through dust, so not a problem. 120 00:05:31,840 --> 00:05:33,736 But the view is very different. 121 00:05:33,760 --> 00:05:37,576 We can see that the center of the Milky Way is aglow, 122 00:05:37,600 --> 00:05:39,280 and this isn't starlight. 123 00:05:39,960 --> 00:05:43,096 This is a light called synchrotron radiation, 124 00:05:43,120 --> 00:05:47,720 and it's formed from electrons spiraling around cosmic magnetic fields. 125 00:05:48,280 --> 00:05:51,376 So the plane is aglow with this light. 126 00:05:51,400 --> 00:05:54,696 And we can also see strange tufts coming off of it, 127 00:05:54,720 --> 00:05:57,216 and objects which don't appear to line up 128 00:05:57,240 --> 00:05:59,560 with anything that we can see with our own eyes. 129 00:06:00,520 --> 00:06:02,656 But it's hard to really interpret this image, 130 00:06:02,680 --> 00:06:05,456 because as you can see, it's very low resolution. 131 00:06:05,480 --> 00:06:07,656 Radio waves have a wavelength that's long, 132 00:06:07,680 --> 00:06:09,976 and that makes their resolution poorer. 133 00:06:10,000 --> 00:06:12,056 This image is also black and white, 134 00:06:12,080 --> 00:06:15,840 so we don't really know what is the color of everything in here. 135 00:06:16,640 --> 00:06:18,016 Well, fast-forward to today. 136 00:06:18,040 --> 00:06:19,496 We can build telescopes 137 00:06:19,520 --> 00:06:22,136 which can get over these problems. 138 00:06:22,160 --> 00:06:25,496 Now, I'm showing you here an image of the Murchison Radio Observatory, 139 00:06:25,520 --> 00:06:28,296 a fantastic place to build radio telescopes. 140 00:06:28,320 --> 00:06:30,616 It's flat, it's dry, 141 00:06:30,640 --> 00:06:33,616 and most importantly, it's radio quiet: 142 00:06:33,640 --> 00:06:36,736 no mobile phones, no Wi-Fi, nothing, 143 00:06:36,760 --> 00:06:39,256 just very, very radio quiet, 144 00:06:39,280 --> 00:06:42,000 so a perfect place to build a radio telescope. 145 00:06:42,880 --> 00:06:45,736 Now, the telescope that I've been working on for a few years 146 00:06:45,760 --> 00:06:47,696 is called the Murchison Widefield Array, 147 00:06:47,720 --> 00:06:50,736 and I'm going to show you a little time lapse of it being built. 148 00:06:50,760 --> 00:06:54,016 This is a group of undergraduate and postgraduate students 149 00:06:54,040 --> 00:06:55,296 located in Perth. 150 00:06:55,320 --> 00:06:57,056 We call them the Student Army, 151 00:06:57,080 --> 00:06:59,896 and they volunteered their time to build a radio telescope. 152 00:06:59,920 --> 00:07:01,560 There's no course credit for this. 153 00:07:02,320 --> 00:07:05,216 And they're putting together these radio dipoles. 154 00:07:05,240 --> 00:07:10,200 They just receive at low frequencies, a bit like your FM radio or your TV. 155 00:07:11,000 --> 00:07:14,096 And here we are deploying them across the desert. 156 00:07:14,120 --> 00:07:16,536 The final telescope covers 10 square kilometers 157 00:07:16,560 --> 00:07:18,696 of the Western Australian Desert. 158 00:07:18,720 --> 00:07:21,696 And the interesting thing is, there's no moving parts. 159 00:07:21,720 --> 00:07:23,976 We just deploy these little antennas 160 00:07:24,000 --> 00:07:25,856 essentially on chicken mesh. 161 00:07:25,880 --> 00:07:27,296 It's fairly cheap. 162 00:07:27,320 --> 00:07:29,296 Cables take the signals 163 00:07:29,320 --> 00:07:31,376 from the antennas 164 00:07:31,400 --> 00:07:33,936 and bring them to central processing units. 165 00:07:33,960 --> 00:07:35,736 And it's the size of this telescope, 166 00:07:35,760 --> 00:07:38,416 the fact that we've built it over the entire desert 167 00:07:38,440 --> 00:07:41,240 that gives us a better resolution than Parkes. 168 00:07:41,880 --> 00:07:45,416 Now, eventually all those cables bring them to a unit 169 00:07:45,440 --> 00:07:48,976 which sends it off to a supercomputer here in Perth, 170 00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:50,286 and that's where I come in. 171 00:07:51,320 --> 00:07:52,536 (Sighs) 172 00:07:52,560 --> 00:07:53,776 Radio data. 173 00:07:53,800 --> 00:07:55,616 I have spent the last five years 174 00:07:55,640 --> 00:07:58,496 working with very difficult, very interesting data 175 00:07:58,520 --> 00:08:00,496 that no one had really looked at before. 176 00:08:00,520 --> 00:08:02,656 I've spent a long time calibrating it, 177 00:08:02,680 --> 00:08:06,576 running millions of CPU hours on supercomputers 178 00:08:06,600 --> 00:08:08,800 and really trying to understand that data. 179 00:08:09,360 --> 00:08:11,296 And with this telescope, 180 00:08:11,320 --> 00:08:12,576 with this data, 181 00:08:12,600 --> 00:08:16,536 we've performed a survey of the entire southern sky, 182 00:08:16,560 --> 00:08:21,656 the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky MWA Survey, 183 00:08:21,680 --> 00:08:23,560 or GLEAM, as I call it. 184 00:08:24,440 --> 00:08:25,896 And I'm very excited. 185 00:08:25,920 --> 00:08:29,301 This survey is just about to be published, but it hasn't been shown yet, 186 00:08:29,325 --> 00:08:31,256 so you are literally the first people 187 00:08:31,280 --> 00:08:34,080 to see this southern survey of the entire sky. 188 00:08:34,799 --> 00:08:38,120 So I'm delighted to share with you some images from this survey. 189 00:08:38,880 --> 00:08:40,775 Now, imagine you went to the Murchison, 190 00:08:40,799 --> 00:08:42,895 you camped out underneath the stars 191 00:08:42,919 --> 00:08:44,536 and you looked towards the south. 192 00:08:44,560 --> 00:08:46,227 You saw the south's celestial pole, 193 00:08:46,251 --> 00:08:47,456 the galaxy rising. 194 00:08:47,480 --> 00:08:50,096 If I fade in the radio light, 195 00:08:50,120 --> 00:08:52,776 this is what we observe with our survey. 196 00:08:52,800 --> 00:08:55,856 You can see that the galactic plane is no longer dark with dust. 197 00:08:55,880 --> 00:08:58,296 It's alight with synchrotron radiation, 198 00:08:58,320 --> 00:09:00,816 and thousands of dots are in the sky. 199 00:09:00,840 --> 00:09:04,136 Our large Magellanic Cloud, our nearest galactic neighbor, 200 00:09:04,160 --> 00:09:07,376 is orange instead of its more familiar blue-white. 201 00:09:07,400 --> 00:09:10,776 So there's a lot going on in this. Let's take a closer look. 202 00:09:10,800 --> 00:09:13,216 If we look back towards the galactic center, 203 00:09:13,240 --> 00:09:16,456 where we originally saw the Parkes image that I showed you earlier, 204 00:09:16,480 --> 00:09:18,856 low resolution, black and white, 205 00:09:18,880 --> 00:09:20,960 and we fade to the GLEAM view, 206 00:09:22,200 --> 00:09:26,056 you can see the resolution has gone up by a factor of a hundred. 207 00:09:26,080 --> 00:09:28,936 We now have a color view of the sky, 208 00:09:28,960 --> 00:09:30,296 a technicolor view. 209 00:09:30,320 --> 00:09:33,296 Now, it's not a false color view. 210 00:09:33,320 --> 00:09:35,720 These are real radio colors. 211 00:09:36,600 --> 00:09:39,416 What I've done is I've colored the lowest frequencies red 212 00:09:39,440 --> 00:09:41,056 and the highest frequencies blue, 213 00:09:41,080 --> 00:09:42,656 and the middle ones green. 214 00:09:42,680 --> 00:09:44,896 And that gives us this rainbow view. 215 00:09:44,920 --> 00:09:47,176 And this isn't just false color. 216 00:09:47,200 --> 00:09:50,136 The colors in this image tell us about the physical processes 217 00:09:50,160 --> 00:09:51,400 going on in the universe. 218 00:09:51,974 --> 00:09:54,736 So for instance, if you look along the plane of the galaxy, 219 00:09:54,760 --> 00:09:56,216 it's alight with synchrotron, 220 00:09:56,240 --> 00:09:58,616 which is mostly reddish orange, 221 00:09:58,640 --> 00:10:01,760 but if we look very closely, we see little blue dots. 222 00:10:02,320 --> 00:10:03,896 Now, if we zoom in, 223 00:10:03,920 --> 00:10:06,456 these blue dots are ionized plasma 224 00:10:06,480 --> 00:10:08,120 around very bright stars, 225 00:10:08,680 --> 00:10:11,456 and what happens is that they block the red light, 226 00:10:11,480 --> 00:10:13,120 so they appear blue. 227 00:10:13,880 --> 00:10:16,816 And these can tell us about these star-forming regions 228 00:10:16,840 --> 00:10:18,096 in our galaxy. 229 00:10:18,120 --> 00:10:19,736 And we just see them immediately. 230 00:10:19,760 --> 00:10:22,816 We look at the galaxy and the color tells us that they're there. 231 00:10:22,840 --> 00:10:24,416 You can see little soap bubbles, 232 00:10:24,440 --> 00:10:27,856 little circular images around the galactic plane, 233 00:10:27,880 --> 00:10:29,880 and these are supernova remnants. 234 00:10:30,600 --> 00:10:32,296 When a star explodes, 235 00:10:32,320 --> 00:10:34,776 its outer shell is cast off 236 00:10:34,800 --> 00:10:38,096 and it travels outward into space gathering up material, 237 00:10:38,120 --> 00:10:40,080 and it produces a little shell. 238 00:10:40,800 --> 00:10:44,176 It's been a long-standing mystery to astronomers 239 00:10:44,200 --> 00:10:46,280 where all the supernova remnants are. 240 00:10:46,960 --> 00:10:51,296 We know that there must be a lot of high-energy electrons in the plane 241 00:10:51,320 --> 00:10:53,976 to produce the synchrotron radiation that we see, 242 00:10:54,000 --> 00:10:56,576 and we think they're produced by supernova remnants, 243 00:10:56,600 --> 00:10:58,376 but there don't seem to be enough. 244 00:10:58,400 --> 00:11:02,296 Fortunately, GLEAM is really, really good at detecting supernova remnants, 245 00:11:02,320 --> 00:11:04,800 so we're hoping to have a new paper out on that soon. 246 00:11:05,800 --> 00:11:07,056 Now, that's fine. 247 00:11:07,080 --> 00:11:09,416 We've explored our little local universe, 248 00:11:09,440 --> 00:11:11,816 but I wanted to go deeper, I wanted to go further. 249 00:11:11,840 --> 00:11:13,920 I wanted to go beyond the Milky Way. 250 00:11:14,520 --> 00:11:18,296 Well, as it happens, we can see a very interesting object in the top right, 251 00:11:18,320 --> 00:11:20,536 and this is a local radio galaxy, 252 00:11:20,560 --> 00:11:21,800 Centaurus A. 253 00:11:22,240 --> 00:11:23,496 If we zoom in on this, 254 00:11:23,520 --> 00:11:26,920 we can see that there are two huge plumes going out into space, 255 00:11:27,600 --> 00:11:30,496 and if you look right in the center between those two plumes, 256 00:11:30,520 --> 00:11:32,896 you'll see a galaxy just like our own. 257 00:11:32,920 --> 00:11:35,376 It's a spiral. It has a dust lane. 258 00:11:35,400 --> 00:11:37,016 It's a normal galaxy. 259 00:11:37,040 --> 00:11:40,656 But these jets are only visible in the radio. 260 00:11:40,680 --> 00:11:43,856 If we looked in the visible, we wouldn't even know they were there, 261 00:11:43,880 --> 00:11:46,920 and they're thousands of times larger than the host galaxy. 262 00:11:47,480 --> 00:11:49,880 What's going on? What's producing these jets? 263 00:11:51,160 --> 00:11:54,696 At the center of every galaxy that we know about 264 00:11:54,720 --> 00:11:56,976 is a supermassive black hole. 265 00:11:57,000 --> 00:12:00,416 Now, black holes are invisible. That's why they're called that. 266 00:12:00,440 --> 00:12:03,456 All you can see is the deflection of the light around them, 267 00:12:03,480 --> 00:12:07,776 and occasionally, when a star or a cloud of gas comes into their orbit, 268 00:12:07,800 --> 00:12:10,536 it is ripped apart by tidal forces, 269 00:12:10,560 --> 00:12:13,040 forming what we call an accretion disk. 270 00:12:13,640 --> 00:12:16,856 The accretion disk glows brightly in the x-rays, 271 00:12:16,880 --> 00:12:21,296 and huge magnetic fields can launch the material into space 272 00:12:21,320 --> 00:12:23,040 at nearly the speed of light. 273 00:12:23,520 --> 00:12:26,680 So these jets are visible in the radio 274 00:12:27,240 --> 00:12:29,400 and this is what we pick up in our survey. 275 00:12:30,040 --> 00:12:34,056 Well, very well, so we've seen one radio galaxy. That's nice. 276 00:12:34,080 --> 00:12:36,256 But if you just look at the top of that image, 277 00:12:36,280 --> 00:12:38,016 you'll see another radio galaxy. 278 00:12:38,040 --> 00:12:41,280 It's a little bit smaller, and that's just because it's further away. 279 00:12:41,800 --> 00:12:44,456 OK. Two radio galaxies. 280 00:12:44,480 --> 00:12:46,056 We can see this. This is fine. 281 00:12:46,080 --> 00:12:47,816 Well, what about all the other dots? 282 00:12:47,840 --> 00:12:49,400 Presumably those are just stars. 283 00:12:49,880 --> 00:12:51,096 They're not. 284 00:12:51,120 --> 00:12:52,720 They're all radio galaxies. 285 00:12:53,320 --> 00:12:56,216 Every single one of the dots in this image 286 00:12:56,240 --> 00:12:57,976 is a distant galaxy, 287 00:12:58,000 --> 00:13:00,856 millions to billions of light-years away 288 00:13:00,880 --> 00:13:03,496 with a supermassive black hole at its center 289 00:13:03,520 --> 00:13:07,096 pushing material into space at nearly the speed of light. 290 00:13:07,120 --> 00:13:08,880 It is mind-blowing. 291 00:13:09,680 --> 00:13:13,416 And this survey is even larger than what I've shown here. 292 00:13:13,440 --> 00:13:15,976 If we zoom out to the full extent of the survey, 293 00:13:16,000 --> 00:13:20,096 you can see I found 300,000 of these radio galaxies. 294 00:13:20,120 --> 00:13:23,016 So it's truly an epic journey. 295 00:13:23,040 --> 00:13:25,696 We've discovered all of these galaxies 296 00:13:25,720 --> 00:13:29,280 right back to the very first supermassive black holes. 297 00:13:29,960 --> 00:13:32,680 I'm very proud of this and it will be published next week. 298 00:13:33,280 --> 00:13:36,096 Now, that's not all. 299 00:13:36,120 --> 00:13:40,456 I've explored the furthest reaches of the galaxy with this survey, 300 00:13:40,480 --> 00:13:43,440 but there's something even more in this image. 301 00:13:44,320 --> 00:13:47,616 Now, I'll take you right back to the dawn of time. 302 00:13:47,640 --> 00:13:51,296 When the universe formed, it was a big bang, 303 00:13:51,320 --> 00:13:55,376 which left the universe as a sea of hydrogen, 304 00:13:55,400 --> 00:13:56,896 neutral hydrogen, 305 00:13:56,920 --> 00:13:59,696 and when the very first stars and galaxies switched on, 306 00:13:59,720 --> 00:14:01,816 they ionized that hydrogen. 307 00:14:01,840 --> 00:14:05,280 So the universe went from neutral to ionized. 308 00:14:06,160 --> 00:14:09,336 That imprinted a signal all around us. 309 00:14:09,360 --> 00:14:11,096 Everywhere, it pervades us, 310 00:14:11,120 --> 00:14:12,536 like the Force. 311 00:14:12,560 --> 00:14:16,280 Now, because that happened so long ago, 312 00:14:17,000 --> 00:14:18,800 the signal was redshifted, 313 00:14:19,560 --> 00:14:22,856 so now that signal is at very low frequencies. 314 00:14:22,880 --> 00:14:25,336 It's at the same frequency as my survey, 315 00:14:25,360 --> 00:14:26,736 but it's so faint. 316 00:14:26,760 --> 00:14:30,640 It's a billionth the size of any of the objects in my survey. 317 00:14:31,320 --> 00:14:36,216 So our telescope may not be quite sensitive enough to pick up this signal. 318 00:14:36,240 --> 00:14:38,736 However, there's a new radio telescope. 319 00:14:38,760 --> 00:14:40,416 So I can't have a starship, 320 00:14:40,440 --> 00:14:41,696 but I can hopefully have 321 00:14:41,720 --> 00:14:44,576 one of the biggest radio telescopes in the world. 322 00:14:44,600 --> 00:14:48,216 We're build the Square Kilometre Array, a new radio telescope, 323 00:14:48,240 --> 00:14:50,976 and it's going to be a thousand times bigger than the MWA, 324 00:14:51,000 --> 00:14:54,216 a thousand times more sensitive, and have an even better resolution. 325 00:14:54,240 --> 00:14:56,456 So we should find tens of millions of galaxies. 326 00:14:56,480 --> 00:14:58,816 And perhaps, deep in that signal, 327 00:14:58,840 --> 00:15:03,016 I will get to look upon the very first stars and galaxies switching on, 328 00:15:03,040 --> 00:15:05,400 the beginning of time itself. 329 00:15:05,920 --> 00:15:07,136 Thank you. 330 00:15:07,160 --> 00:15:09,920 (Applause)