WEBVTT 00:00:00.799 --> 00:00:02.565 The beginning of everything. 00:00:02.565 --> 00:00:03.744 The Big Bang. 00:00:04.474 --> 00:00:08.875 The idea that the universe was suddenly born and is not infinite. 00:00:09.225 --> 00:00:13.484 Up to the middle of the 20th century, most scientists thought of the universe 00:00:13.484 --> 00:00:15.780 as infinite and ageless. 00:00:16.690 --> 00:00:21.082 Until Einstein’s theory of relativity gave us a better understanding of gravity, 00:00:21.082 --> 00:00:25.234 and Edwin Hubble discovered that galaxies are moving apart from one another 00:00:25.234 --> 00:00:27.574 in a way that fits previous predictions. 00:00:28.974 --> 00:00:33.491 In 1964, by accident, cosmic background radiation was discovered, 00:00:33.491 --> 00:00:35.442 a relic of the early universe, 00:00:35.442 --> 00:00:39.049 which, together with other observational evidence, made the Big Bang 00:00:39.049 --> 00:00:41.297 the accepted theory in science. 00:00:41.907 --> 00:00:44.942 Since then, improved technology like the Hubble telescope 00:00:44.942 --> 00:00:48.922 has given us a pretty good picture of the Big Bang and the structure of the cosmos. 00:00:49.822 --> 00:00:53.704 Recent observations even seem to suggest that the expansion of the universe 00:00:53.704 --> 00:00:55.005 is accelerating. 00:00:55.775 --> 00:00:57.915 But how did this Big Bang work? 00:00:58.775 --> 00:01:00.902 How can something come from nothing? 00:01:01.502 --> 00:01:03.184 Let’s explore what we know. 00:01:10.790 --> 00:01:12.829 We can ignore the beginning part for now. 00:01:12.889 --> 00:01:16.494 First of all, the Big Bang was not an explosion. 00:01:16.964 --> 00:01:20.364 It was all space stretching everywhere all at once. 00:01:21.104 --> 00:01:23.806 The universe started very, very, very small 00:01:23.806 --> 00:01:26.338 and quickly expanded to the size of a football. 00:01:27.508 --> 00:01:32.777 The universe didn’t expand into anything, space was just expanding into itself. 00:01:33.379 --> 00:01:37.837 The universe cannot expand into anything because the universe has no borders; 00:01:37.837 --> 00:01:41.003 there is, by definition, no “outside” the universe. 00:01:41.621 --> 00:01:43.602 The universe is all there is. 00:01:44.512 --> 00:01:47.849 In this hot, dense environment, energy manifested itself 00:01:47.849 --> 00:01:51.547 in particles that existed only for the tiniest glimpses of time. 00:01:52.317 --> 00:01:56.073 From gluons, pairs of quarks were created, which destroyed one another, 00:01:56.073 --> 00:01:58.395 perhaps after giving off more gluons. 00:01:59.115 --> 00:02:01.540 These found other short-lived quarks to interact with, 00:02:01.540 --> 00:02:03.827 forming new quark pairs and gluons again. 00:02:04.657 --> 00:02:07.984 Matter and energy were not just theoretically equivalent, 00:02:07.984 --> 00:02:11.072 it was so hot they were practically the same stuff. 00:02:12.342 --> 00:02:15.453 Somewhere around this time, matter won over antimatter. 00:02:15.913 --> 00:02:19.899 Today, we’re left with almost all matter and nearly no antimatter at all. 00:02:20.439 --> 00:02:23.695 Somehow, one billion and one matter particles were formed 00:02:23.695 --> 00:02:26.444 for every one billion particles of antimatter. 00:02:27.434 --> 00:02:30.515 Instead of one massive ultimate force in the universe, 00:02:30.515 --> 00:02:34.778 there were now several refined versions of it acting under different rules. 00:02:35.648 --> 00:02:39.288 By now the universe has stretched to a billion kilometers in diameter, 00:02:39.288 --> 00:02:41.482 which leads to a decrease in temperature. 00:02:42.092 --> 00:02:44.880 The cycle of quarks being born and converted back to energy 00:02:44.880 --> 00:02:46.034 suddenly stops. 00:02:46.594 --> 00:02:48.497 From now on, we work with what we have. 00:02:49.367 --> 00:02:53.830 Quarks begin forming new particles, hadrons, like protons and neutrons. 00:02:54.490 --> 00:02:58.144 There are many, many combinations of quarks that can form all sorts of hadrons, 00:02:58.144 --> 00:03:01.739 but only very few are reasonably stable for any length of time. 00:03:03.019 --> 00:03:07.703 Please take a moment to appreciate that by now, only one second has passed 00:03:07.703 --> 00:03:09.508 since the beginning of everything. 00:03:11.338 --> 00:03:14.388 The universe, which has grown to one hundred billion kilometers, 00:03:14.388 --> 00:03:18.526 is now cold enough to allow most of the neutrons to decay into protons 00:03:18.526 --> 00:03:21.062 and form the first atom, hydrogen. 00:03:22.242 --> 00:03:25.544 Imagine the universe at this point as an extremely hot soup, 00:03:25.544 --> 00:03:30.353 ten billion degrees Celsius, filled with countless particles and energy. 00:03:30.953 --> 00:03:34.901 Over the next few minutes, things cooled and settled down very fast. 00:03:35.991 --> 00:03:38.853 Atoms formed out of hadrons and electrons, 00:03:38.853 --> 00:03:42.163 making for a stable and electrically neutral environment. 00:03:42.703 --> 00:03:45.788 Some call this period the Dark Age, because there were no stars 00:03:45.788 --> 00:03:49.164 and the hydrogen gas didn’t allow visible light to move around. 00:03:49.764 --> 00:03:52.974 But what’s the meaning of visible light, anyway, when there’s nothing alive yet 00:03:52.974 --> 00:03:54.000 that could have eyes? 00:03:55.120 --> 00:03:58.391 When the hydrogen gas clumped together after millions of years and 00:03:58.391 --> 00:04:02.473 gravity put it under great pressure, stars and galaxies began to form. 00:04:03.043 --> 00:04:06.675 Their radiation dissolved the stable hydrogen gas into a plasma 00:04:06.675 --> 00:04:11.098 that still permeates the universe today and allows visible light to pass. 00:04:11.898 --> 00:04:14.167 Finally, there was light! 00:04:15.277 --> 00:04:18.258 Okay, but what about the part we didn’t talk about? 00:04:18.608 --> 00:04:20.264 What happened right at the beginning? 00:04:21.144 --> 00:04:23.696 This part can be defined as the Big Bang. 00:04:24.386 --> 00:04:25.922 We don’t know at all what happened here. 00:04:26.882 --> 00:04:28.982 At this point, our tools break down. 00:04:29.462 --> 00:04:33.398 Natural laws stop making sense, time itself becomes wibbly-wobbly. 00:04:34.338 --> 00:04:37.232 To understand what happened here, we need a theory that unifies 00:04:37.232 --> 00:04:41.370 Einstein’s relativity and quantum mechanics, something countless 00:04:41.370 --> 00:04:43.496 scientists are working on right now. 00:04:44.096 --> 00:04:46.998 But this leaves us with lots of unanswered questions. 00:04:47.888 --> 00:04:49.846 Were there universes before our own? 00:04:50.296 --> 00:04:52.235 Is this the first and only universe? 00:04:52.775 --> 00:04:56.164 What started the Big Bang, or did it just occur naturally, 00:04:56.164 --> 00:04:58.679 based on laws we don’t understand yet? 00:04:59.859 --> 00:05:02.228 We don’t know, and maybe we never will. 00:05:02.818 --> 00:05:06.921 But what we do know is that the universe as we know it started here 00:05:06.921 --> 00:05:13.383 and gave birth to particles, galaxies, stars, the Earth, and you. 00:05:14.423 --> 00:05:17.804 Since were ourselves are made of dead stars, we are not separate 00:05:17.804 --> 00:05:20.153 from the universe; we are part of it. 00:05:20.553 --> 00:05:25.409 You could even say that we are the universe’s way of experiencing itself. 00:05:26.139 --> 00:05:30.573 So, let’s keep on experiencing it, until there are no more questions to ask.