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Light is the fastest thing we know.
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It's so fast that we measure
enormous distances
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by how long it takes for
light to travel them.
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In one year, light travels about
6,000,000,000,000 miles,
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a distance we call one light year.
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To give you an idea of just
how far this is,
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the Moon, which took the Apollo astronauts
four days to reach,
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is only one light-second from Earth.
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Meanwhile, the nearest star beyond
our own Sun is Proxima Centauri,
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4.24 light years away.
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Our Milky Way is on the order of
100,000 light years across.
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The nearest galaxy to our own, Andromeda,
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is about 2.5 million light years away
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Space is mind-blowingly vast.
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But wait, how do we know how
far away stars and galaxies are?
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After all, when we look at the sky,
we have a flat, two-dimensional view.
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If you point you finger to one star,
you can't tell how far the star is,
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so how do astrophysicists figure that out?
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For objects that are very close by,
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we can use a concept called
trigonometric parallax.
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The idea is pretty simple.
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Let's do an experiment.
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Stick out your thumb and
close your left eye.
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Now, open your left eye and
close your right eye.
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It will look like your thumb has moved,
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while more distant background objects
have remained in place.
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The same concept applies when
we look at the stars,
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but distant stars are much, much
farther away than the length of your arm,
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and the Earth isn't very large,
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so even if you had different telescopes
across the equator,
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you'd not see much of a shift in position.
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Instead, we look at the change in the
star's apparent location over six months,
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the halfway point of the Earth's
yearlong orbit around the Sun.
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When we measure the relative positions
of the stars in summer,
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and then again in winter,
it's like looking with your other eye.
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Nearby stars seem to have moved
against the background
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of the more distant stars and galaxies.
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But this method only works for objects no
more than a few thousand light years away.
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Beyond our own galaxy,
the distances are so great
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that the parallax is too small to detect
with even our most sensitive instruments.
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So at this point we have to rely
on a different method
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using indicators we call standard candles.
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Standard candles are objects whose
intrinsic brightness, or luminosity,
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we know really well.
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For example, if you know how bright
your light bulb is,
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and you ask your friend to hold
the light bulb and walk away from you,
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you know that the amount of light
you receive from your friend
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will decrease by the distance squared.
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So by comparing the amount
of light you receive
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to the intrinsic brightness
of the light bulb,
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you can then tell how far away
your friend is.
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In astronomy, our light bulb turns out to
be a special type of star
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called a cepheid variable.
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These stars are internally unstable,
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like a constantly inflating
and deflating balloon.
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And because the expansion and contraction
causes their brightness to vary,
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we can calculate their luminosity
by measuring the period of this cycle,
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with more luminous stars
changing more slowly.
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By comparing the light
we observe from these stars
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to the intrinsic brightness we've
calculated this way,
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we can tell how far away they are.
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Unfortunately, this is still not
the end of the story.
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We can only observe individual stars
up to about 40,000,000 light years away,
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after which they become
too blurry to resolve.
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But luckily we have another type
of standard candle:
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the famous type 1a supernova.
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Supernovae, giant stellar explosions
are one of the ways that stars die.
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These explosions are so bright,
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that they outshine the galaxies
where they occur.
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So even when we can't see
individual stars in a galaxy,
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we can still see supernovae
when they happen.
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And type 1a supernovae turn out
to be usable as standard candles
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because intrinsically bright ones
fade slower than fainter ones.
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Through our understanding
of this relationship
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between brightness and decline rate,
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we can use these supernovae
to probe distances
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up to several billions of light years away.
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But why is it important to see
such distant objects anyway?
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Well, remember how fast light travels.
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For example, the light emitted by the Sun
will take eight minutes to reach us,
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which means that the light we see now
is a picture of the Sun eight minutes ago.
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When you look at the Big Dipper,
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you're seeing what it looked like
80 years ago.
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And those smudgy galaxies?
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They're millions of light years away.
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It has taken millions of years for
that light to reach us.
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So the universe itself is in some sense
an inbuilt time machine.
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The further we can look back,
the younger the universe we are probing.
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Astrophysicists try to read the history
of the universe,
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and understand how and where
we come from.
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The universe is constantly sending us
information in the form of light.
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All that remains if for us to decode it.