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Season 2017

  • S2017E01 How to See Black Holes + Kugelblitz Challenge Answer

    • January 4, 2017
    • PBS

    Find out how scientists are mapping the black holes throughout the Milky Way and beyond as well as the answer to the Escape the Kugelblitz Challenge Question. Were you able to save humanity?

  • S2017E02 The EM Drive: Fact or Fantasy?

    • January 17, 2017
    • PBS

    Because you demanded it … we break down the EM Drive!

  • S2017E03 The Phantom Singularity

    • January 19, 2017
    • PBS

    Isaac Newton’s Universal Law of Gravitation tells us that there is a singularity to be found within a black hole, but scientists and mathematicians have found a number of issues with Newton’s equations. They don’t always accurately represent reality. Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity is a more complete theory of gravity. So does using the General Theory of Relativity eliminate the singularity? No. Not only does it concur with Newton’s Universal Law of Gravitation but it also reveals a second singularity, not at the center of the black hole but at the event horizon.

  • S2017E04 Why Quasars are so Awesome

    • January 25, 2017
    • PBS

    When Quasars were first discovered the amount of light pouring out of such a tiny dot in space seemed impossible. A hysterical flurry of hypothesizing followed: swarms of neutron stars, alien civilizations harnessing their entire galaxy’s power, bright, fast-moving objects being ejected by our own galaxy’s core. But by the 1980’s we were converging on the most awesome explanation. It goes a little like this: Take a black hole of millions to billions times the mass of the sun. Where from? It turns out every decent-sized galaxy has one at its core. Now drive gas into the galactic core. One way this can happen is when galaxies merge and grow. That gas descends into the waiting black hole’s gravitational well and gains incredible speed on the way. It is swept up in a raging whirlpool around the black hole that we call an accretion disk, where its energy of motion is turned into heat. The heat-glow of the accretion disk is so bright that we can see quasars to the ends of the universe.

  • S2017E05 The Geometry of Causality

    • February 2, 2017
    • PBS

    In this episode we dive deeper into the relationship between space and time and explore how we can geometrically map the causality of the universe and increase our understanding of how time and distance relate to one another.

  • S2017E06 Telescopes of Tomorrow

    • February 15, 2017
    • PBS

  • S2017E07 The Eye of Sauron Reveals a Forming Solar System!

    • February 22, 2017
    • PBS

    Fomalhaut is a massive young star surrounded by a ring of dust debris that can tell us a great deal about the formation of our own solar system.

  • S2017E08 The Treasures of Trappist-1

    • March 1, 2017
    • PBS

    Can humanity survive on one of the seven earth-like Trappist-1 planets? And be sure to check out Physics Girl’s Trappist episode right here https://youtu.be/lK2iJe7AM_Q Last week, seven earth-like planets were discovered orbiting a Red Dwarf star 39 light years away. Each one could be capable of supporting life.

  • S2017E09 The Race to a Habitable Exoplanet - Time Warp Challenge

    • March 8, 2017
    • PBS

    You’ve discovered a habitable exoplanet, but so has an an evil interplanetary mining corporation. Can you get to the planet before they strip it bare and leave it unsuitable for life? You’re going to need a ship, the Lorentz Transformation and the Wait Equation. Hang on, it’s going to be a bumpy ride.

  • S2017E10 Time Crystals!

    • March 15, 2017
    • PBS

    In this episode of the Space Time Journal Club Matt discusses how two independent research teams created their own Time Crystals, a form of matter that breaks time translational symmetry and could be used in quantum computers.

  • S2017E11 Superluminal Time Travel + Time Warp Challenge Answer

    • March 22, 2017
    • PBS

    Find out how traveling faster than light and traveling back in time are the same thing.

  • S2017E12 How Time Becomes Space Inside a Black Hole

    • March 29, 2017
    • PBS

    Find out how time and space switch roles when we move beyond the event horizon of the black hole.

  • S2017E13 Telescopes on the Moon

    • April 5, 2017
    • PBS

    Find out about China’s current telescope on the moon and what the future plans are for mounting larger telescopes on the lunar surface.

  • S2017E14 The Oh My God Particle

    • April 19, 2017
    • PBS

    In 1991 a single atomic nucleus slammed into our atmosphere with the intensity of a macroscopic object. It’s been named The Oh My God Particle.

  • S2017E15 Are You a Boltzmann Brain?

    • April 26, 2017
    • PBS

    Was an incredible drop in entropy responsible for the Big Bang? If that’s the case, this would lead us to conclude that a great many other things are possible, including the likelihood that you are a Boltzmann Brain.

  • S2017E16 Are We Living in an Ancestor Simulation?

    • May 3, 2017
    • PBS

    Neil deGrasse Tyson sits down with Matt to discuss Ancestor Simulations. And check out Matt and Neil discussing how sure we are about our map of the universe

  • S2017E17 The Great American Eclipse

    • May 10, 2017
    • PBS

    The first total solar eclipse in over 40 years is about to hit the United States.

  • S2017E18 Martian Evolution

    • May 17, 2017
    • PBS

    What will become of humanity after spend a few hundred years on Mars? What will happen after a few thousand? Evolution has, and still is, shaping humanity in rather drastic ways. How long will humans stop being human and become Martian?

  • S2017E19 The Fate of the First Stars

    • May 31, 2017
    • PBS

    Soon after the Big Bang, the first generation of monstrously large stars ignited, lit up the universe, and then died. The resulting swarms of supernova explosions enriched the universe with the first heavy elements and LOTs of black holes. They shaped everything that came after. These were the stars of Population III, and they are one of the most enduring mysteries in astrophysics.

  • S2017E20 Supervoids vs Colliding Universes!

    • June 7, 2017
    • PBS

    If you study a map of the Cosmic Microwave Background, or CMB, you may notice a large, deep blue splotch on the lower right. This area, creatively named the Cold Spot. Is this feature a statistical fluke, the signature of vast supervoids, or even the imprint of another universe?

  • S2017E21 Anti-Matter and Quantum Relativity

    • June 21, 2017
    • PBS

    Paul Dirac’s insights into the nature of Quantum Mechanics laid the foundation for Quantum Field Theory and predicted the existence of anti-matter.

  • S2017E22 The First Quantum Field Theory

    • June 28, 2017
    • PBS

    Quantum mechanics is perhaps the most unintuitive theory ever devised. And yet it’s also the most successful, in terms of sheer predictive power. Simply by following the math of quantum mechanics, incredible discoveries have been made. Its wild success tells us that the mathematical description provided by quantum mechanics reflects deep truths about reality. And by far the most successful, most predictive formulation of quantum mechanics is quantum field theory. It is our best description we have of the fundamental workings of reality. And the first part of quantum field theory that was derived – quantum electrodynamics – is the most precise, most accurate of all.

  • S2017E23 Feynman's Infinite Quantum Paths

    • July 7, 2017
    • PBS

    How to predict the path of a quantum particle. Part 3 in our Quantum Field Theory Series.

  • S2017E24 Solving the Impossible in Quantum Field Theory

    • July 12, 2017
    • PBS

    How do you calculate infinite quantum outcomes? Feynman Diagrams.

  • S2017E25 The Real Star Wars

    • July 19, 2017
    • PBS

    Anti-Satellite weaponry, giant X-ray lasers and kinetic impact missiles nicknamed the “Rods from God.” Find out about the history of the real star wars that have been waged over the past 50 years.

  • S2017E26 The Secrets of Feynman Diagrams

    • July 26, 2017
    • PBS

    Unlock the secrets of Feynman Diagrams. Part 5 in our Quantum Field Theory series. And if you're submitting an answer to our challenge question email your answer by August 2nd to pbsspsacetime@gmail.com with the subject line "Feynman Diagram Challenge."

  • S2017E27 Dark Flow

    • August 2, 2017
    • PBS

    Why does the universe seem to be moving in one particular direction?

  • S2017E28 The One-Electron Universe

    • August 10, 2017
    • PBS

    Could it be that all the electrons in the universe are simply one, single electron moving back and forth through time?

  • S2017E29 Extraterrestrial Superstorms

    • August 16, 2017
    • PBS

    Earth has its share of monster storms, but even our most powerful hurricanes are a breeze compared to the great, planet-sized tempests of the gas giants.

  • S2017E30 First Detection of Life

    • August 24, 2017
    • PBS

    What does life look like from space?

  • S2017E31 White Holes

    • August 30, 2017
    • PBS

    Black holes are very well known but... What is a White Hole?

  • S2017E32 Neutron Stars Collide in New LIGO Signal?

    • September 13, 2017
    • PBS

    LIGO may have just detected gravitational waves from the collision of two Neutron Stars.

  • S2017E33 The Future of Space Telescope

    • September 20, 2017
    • PBS

    The mysteries of our universe seem limitless. However to unlock them, we’re going to need some incredible technologies to peer deeper and more sharply into space time.

  • S2017E34 Are the Fundamental Constants Changing?

    • September 28, 2017
    • PBS

    The laws of physics are the same everywhere in the universe. At least we astrophysicists hope so. After all, it’s hard to unravel the complexities of distant parts of the universe if we don’t know the basic rules. But what if this is wrong? There is a hint of evidence that the fundamental constants that govern our universe may evolve over time, and even from one location to another.

  • S2017E35 When Quasars Collide STJC

    • October 4, 2017
    • PBS

    So what happens when two Super Massive Black Holes collide? We may be about to find out, because astronomers have spotted a pair of them in a close binary orbit for the very first time.

  • S2017E36 Absolute Cold

    • October 11, 2017
    • PBS

    Can we ever achieve absolute cold?

  • S2017E37 The Nature of Nothing

    • October 19, 2017
    • PBS

    It turns out that "nothing" is one of the most interesting somethings in all of physics.

  • S2017E38 The Missing Mass Mystery

    • October 25, 2017
    • PBS

    For years, astronomers have been unable to find up to half of the matter in the universe. We may just have solved this problem. Fingers crossed.

  • S2017E39 The Vacuum Catastrophe

    • November 3, 2017
    • PBS

    If vacuum energy really does have the enormous value predicted by quantum field theory then our gently expanding, geometrically flat universe shouldn’t exist. This is the vacuum catastrophe.

  • S2017E40 Zero-Point Energy Demystified

    • November 8, 2017
    • PBS

    Let’s talk about the mysterious zero-point energy and what it really can, and really can’t do.

  • S2017E41 Suicide Space Robots

    • November 22, 2017
    • PBS

    Let’s take a moment to remember the selfless sacrifices made by some amazing robotic explorers. And be sure to learn more about your personal DNA story by going to 23andMe.com/spacetime and taking advantage of their special holiday offer.

  • S2017E42 Citizen Science + Zero-Point Challenge Answer

    • November 29, 2017
    • PBS

    The future of science is you.

  • S2017E43 Understanding the Uncertainty Principle with Quantum Fourier Series

    • December 6, 2017
    • PBS

    Sometimes intuitive, large-scale phenomena can give us incredible insights into the extremely unintuitive world of quantum mechanics.

  • S2017E44 The Origin of Our First Interstellar Visitor

    • December 13, 2017
    • PBS

    We were recently visited by a traveler from outside our solar system. This is the first time we’ve ever seen an object that came to us from interstellar space. It's name is 'Oumuamua.

  • S2017E45 Extinction by Gamma-Ray Burst

    • December 20, 2017
    • PBS

    Find out about the last time and the next time the Earth will be hit by a Gamma-ray Burst.

Season 2018

  • S2018E01 What Do Stars Sound Like?

    • January 10, 2018
    • PBS

    We can now map the interiors of stars by “listening” to their harmonies as they vibrate with seismic waves.

  • S2018E02 Horizon Radiation

    • January 17, 2018
    • PBS

    Learn about Horizon radiation and why it's essential for us to understand as we continue our journey towards the Unruh Effect and Hawking Radiation.

  • S2018E03 The End of the Habitable Zone

    • January 24, 2018
    • PBS

    The Sun is slowly burning through its fuel. Hydrogen is fused into helium in the Sun’s core, producing energy that keeps it shining, and keeping the Earth warm and hospitable to life. But that fuel WILL run out, after which the Sun will swell into a red giant and flash-fry the Earth. But in fact that frying – well, slow-roasting – will begin much earlier. See, the Sun is getting brighter even now. This has complex, and for the most part terrible implications for life. The end of the world will come sooner than you think.

  • S2018E04 Kronos: Devourer Of Worlds

    • January 31, 2018
    • PBS

    What happens when a star eats its planets? Find out on today’s Space Time Journal Club.

  • S2018E05 What is Energy?

    • February 14, 2018
    • PBS

    Energy is the most powerful and useful concept in all of physics, but what exactly is it?

  • S2018E06 The Death of the Sun

    • February 21, 2018
    • PBS

    What exactly will happen when the sun dies?

  • S2018E07 The Trebuchet Challenge

    • February 28, 2018
    • PBS

    Do you have what it takes to calculate the awesome power of the trebuchet?

  • S2018E08 Should Space be Privatized?

    • March 7, 2018
    • PBS

    Will the future of space exploration be guided by public or private entities? Which is better?

  • S2018E09 Hawking Radiation

    • March 15, 2018
    • PBS

    It’s the most famous prediction of perhaps the most famous genius of our time ... Stephen Hawking's theory of Hawking Radiation

  • S2018E10 Scientists Have Detected the First Stars

    • March 21, 2018
    • PBS

    What do the first stars in the universe, dark matter, and superior siege engines have in common?

  • S2018E11 The Andromeda-Milky Way Collision

    • March 28, 2018
    • PBS

    The Andromeda galaxy is heading straight toward our own Milky Way. The two galaxies will inevitably collide. Will that be the very last night sky our solar system witnesses?

  • S2018E12 The Unruh Effect

    • April 4, 2018
    • PBS

    Worried about black holes? Consider this: Every time you accelerate - you generate an event horizon behind you. The more you accelerate away from it the closer it gets. Don’t worry, it can never catch up to you, but the Unruh radiation it generates sure can.

  • S2018E13 Physics of Life

    • April 11, 2018
    • PBS

    Our universe is prone to increasing disorder and chaos. So how did it generate the extreme complexity we see in life? Actually, the laws of physics themselves may demand it.

  • S2018E14 Using Stars to See Gravitational Waves

    • April 18, 2018
    • PBS

    Now that gravitational waves are definitely a thing, it’s time to think about some of the crazy things we can figure out with them. In some cases we’re going to need a gravitational wave observatory - in fact, we've already built one.

  • S2018E15 Black Hole Swarms

    • April 25, 2018
    • PBS

    It’s been conjectured that the center of the Milky Way is swarming with tens of thousands of black holes. And now we’ve actually seen them.

  • S2018E16 The Star at the End of Time

    • May 2, 2018
    • PBS

    If we, or any conscious being is around to witness the very distant future our galaxy, what will they see? How long will life persist as the stars begin to die?

  • S2018E17 How Gaia Changed Astronomy Forever

    • May 9, 2018
    • PBS

    The great advances in any science tend to come in sudden leaps. April 25th of 2018 marks the beginning of just such a leap for much of astronomy. In the early hours of the morning, the Gaia mission’s second data release dropped. Our understanding of our own galaxy will never be the same again.

  • S2018E18 Noether's Theorem and The Symmetries of Reality

    • May 16, 2018
    • PBS

    Conservation laws are among the most important tools in physics. They feel as fundamental as you can get. And yet they’re wrong - or at least they’re only right sometimes. These laws are consequences of a much deeper, more fundamental principle: Noether’s theorem.

  • S2018E19 Why Quantum Information is Never Destroyed

    • May 23, 2018
    • PBS

    If you have perfect knowledge of every single particle in the universe, can you use the laws of physics to rewind all the way back to the Big Bang? Is the entire history of the universe perfectly knowable? Or has information somehow lost along the way?

  • S2018E20 What Survives Inside A Black Hole?

    • June 13, 2018
    • PBS

    We’ve established by now that black holes are weird. The result of absolute gravitational collapse of a massive body: a point of hypothetical infinite density surrounded by an event horizon. At that horizon time is frozen and the fabric of space itself cascades inwards at the speed of light. Nothing can travel faster than light, and so nothing can escape from below the event horizon- not matter, not light, not even information.

  • S2018E21 The Black Hole Information Paradox

    • June 20, 2018
    • PBS

    We’ve established by now that black holes are weird. The result of absolute gravitational collapse of a massive body: a point of hypothetical infinite density surrounded by an event horizon. At that horizon time is frozen and the fabric of space itself cascades inwards at the speed of light. Nothing can travel faster than light, and so nothing can escape from below the event horizon- not matter, not light, not even information.

  • S2018E22 How Asteroid Mining Will Save Earth

    • June 27, 2018
    • PBS

    The days of oil may be numbered, but there’s another natural resource that’s never been touched, Asteroids.

  • S2018E23 Will A New Neutrino Change The Standard Model?

    • July 4, 2018
    • PBS

    Since the discovery of the Higgs boson, physicists have searched and searched for any hint of new particles. That search has been fruitless. Until, perhaps, now. Today on Space Time Journal Club we’ll look at a paper that reports a compelling hint of a new particle outside the standard model: the sterile neutrino.

  • S2018E24 Quantum Invariance & The Origin of The Standard Model

    • July 11, 2018
    • PBS

    In simple terms a gauge theory is one that has mathematical parameters, or “degrees of freedom” that can be changed without affecting the predictions of the theory.

  • S2018E25 The Misunderstood Nature of Entropy

    • July 18, 2018
    • PBS

    Entropy and the second law of thermodynamics has been credited with defining the arrow of time.

  • S2018E26 Reversing Entropy with Maxwell's Demon

    • July 25, 2018
    • PBS

    Can a demon defeat the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics?

  • S2018E27 How Close To The Sun Can Humanity Get?

    • August 1, 2018
    • PBS

  • S2018E28 Quantum Theory's Most Incredible Prediction

    • August 15, 2018
    • PBS

    Let’s talk about the best evidence we have that the theories of quantum physics truly represent the underlying workings of reality.

  • S2018E29 How Will the Universe End?

    • August 23, 2018
    • PBS

    We live in an unusual age – the age when the stars still shine. We should count ourselves lucky – nearly all of future history will be dark. But events will still unfold in that long, cooling darkness, and civilizations may endure. So how will the universe and its far-future denizens spend eternity?

  • S2018E30 Is There Life on Mars?

    • August 30, 2018
    • PBS

    There is no greater hero in our search for life on mars than a little robot named Opportunity.

  • S2018E31 The Black Hole Entropy Enigma

    • September 5, 2018
    • PBS

    Black Holes should have no entropy, but they in fact hold most of the entropy in the universe. Let’s figure this out.

  • S2018E32 How Much Information is in the Universe?

    • September 12, 2018
    • PBS

    There’s quite a bit of stuff in the universe, to put it mildly.

  • S2018E33 Quantum Gravity and the Hardest Problem in Physics

    • September 20, 2018
    • PBS

    Between them, general relativity and quantum mechanics seem to describe all of observable reality.

  • S2018E34 How to Detect Extra Dimensions

    • October 3, 2018
    • PBS

    Physics seems to be telling us that it’s possible to simulate the entire universe on a computer smaller than the universe.

  • S2018E35 Computing a Universe Simulation

    • October 10, 2018
    • PBS

    Physics seems to be telling us that it’s possible to simulate the entire universe on a computer smaller than the universe.

  • S2018E36 What are the Strings in String Theory?

    • October 18, 2018
    • PBS

    Why strings? What are they made of? How did physicists even come up with this bizarre idea? And what’s all this nonsense of extra dimensions?

  • S2018E37 Will We Ever Find Alien Life?

    • October 25, 2018
    • PBS

    The silence of the galaxy and the resulting Fermi Paradox has perplexed us for nearly 50 years. But our most recent surveys of the Milky Way finally allow us to draw scientific conclusions about the depressingly persistent absence of aliens.

  • S2018E38 Are Virtual Particles A New Layer of Reality?

    • October 31, 2018
    • PBS

    Let me tell you a story about virtual particles. It may or may not be true.

  • S2018E39 Why String Theory is Right

    • November 7, 2018
    • PBS

    Some see string theory as the one great hope for a theory of everything – that it will unite quantum mechanics and gravity and so unify all of physics into one glorious theory.

  • S2018E40 Supersymmetric Particle Found?

    • November 14, 2018
    • PBS

    With the large hadron collider running out of places to look for clues to a deeper theory of physics, we need a bigger particle accelerator. We have one - the galaxy.

  • S2018E41 'Oumuamua Is Not Alien

    • November 21, 2018
    • PBS

    To repeat the space time maxim: it’s never aliens … until it is. So let’s talk about ‘oumuamua.

  • S2018E42 Did Life on Earth Come from Space?

    • December 6, 2018
    • PBS

    How did life on Earth get started? Did life on Earth originate on another planet? Either Mars, or in a distant solar system? Could Earth life have spread to have seeded life elsewhere? Let’s see what modern science has to say about the plausibility of panspermia.

  • S2018E43 Quantum Physics in a Mirror Universe

    • December 12, 2018
    • PBS

    When you look in mirror, and see what you think is a perfect reflection. You might be looking at universe whose laws are fundamentally different.

  • S2018E44 Why String Theory is Wrong

    • December 20, 2018
    • PBS

    There’s this idea that beauty is a powerful guide to truth in the mathematics of physical theory. String theory is certainly beautiful in the eyes of many physicists. Beautiful enough to pursue even if it’s wrong?

Season 2019

  • S2019E01 Are Dark Matter And Dark Energy The Same?

    • January 9, 2019
    • PBS

    Astronomers are the worst at naming things. Dark energy AND dark matter? Who can remember which is which. But perhaps one astronomer has just fixed it, with a theory that says perhaps actually they are they same stuff.

  • S2019E02 Our Antimatter, Mirrored, Time-Reversed Universe

    • January 16, 2019
    • PBS

    The foundations of quantum theory rests on its symmetries. For example, it should be impossible to distinguish our universe from one that is that is the perfect mirror opposite in charge, handedness, and the direction of time. But one by one these symmetries were found to be broken, threatening to break all of physics along with them.

  • S2019E03 The Crisis in Cosmology

    • January 24, 2019
    • PBS

    The search for a single number: the hubble constant, which is the rate of expansion of our universe, has consumed astronomers for generations. Finally, two powerful and independent methods have refined its measurement to unprecedented precision. The only problem is that they don’t agree. This calls into question some of our most basic assumptions about the universe.

  • S2019E04 Perpetual Motion From Negative Mass?

    • January 30, 2019
    • PBS

    Exotic matter – matter with negative mass - has long been the pipedream of science fiction writers, futurists, and certain rather. . . optimistic researchers. It’s the key to faster than light travel because it’s the only stuff that can curve space in the right way to hold open wormholes and construct warp fields. And if you can travel faster than light you can also travel backwards in time. We’ve been over those already. And we also recently covered a very new use for negative mass: as “dark fluid”, a proposed explanation for both dark matter and dark energy. That episode really got me thinking about the subtleties of negative mass and how it should really behave gravitationally. Turns out it’s complicated, and to answer it we really have to question the very definition of mass.

  • S2019E05 Sound Waves from the Beginning of Time

    • February 7, 2019
    • PBS

    Invisible to the naked eye, our night sky is scattered with the 100s of billions of galaxies the fill the known universe. Like the stars, these galaxies form constellations – hidden patterns that echo the reverberations of matter and light in an epoch long before galaxies ever formed. These are the baryon acoustic oscillations, and they may hold the key to understanding the nature of dark energy.

  • S2019E06 Secrets of the Cosmic Microwave Background

    • February 20, 2019
    • PBS

    Hook up an old antenna to your TV and scan between channels. The static buzz you hear is mostly due to the ambient radio produced by our noisy pre-galactic civilization. But around one percent of that buzz is something very different – it’s the cosmic microwave background radiation – the remnant of the heat-glow released when the hot, dense early universe became transparent for the first time. It sound likes random static, but that buzz contains an incredible wealth of hidden information. It holds the secrets of the universe’s fiery beginning.

  • S2019E07 The Impossibility of Perpetual Motion Machines

    • March 6, 2019
    • PBS

    Bad ideas come and go in physics. But there’s one bit of nonsense that is perhaps more persistent than all others: the perpetual motion machine. No working perpetual motion machine has ever been experiment verified. All break the laws of thermodynamics. In fact, we classify based on WHICH law of thermodynamics they break. We have perpetual motion machines of the first kind - they violate energy conservation - they pump more energy out than they need to keep running. This includes most of the historical devices. Then there are machines of the second kind - they’re a bit more subtle in their wrongness because break the second law of thermodynamics - extracting energy by reversing entropy. Many modern “free-energy” devices fall into this category. Now the best modern designs are by you - answers to our recent challenge question, which we’ll get to at the end. But first let’s take a look at examples of what other people came up with - this’ll be a fun little journey through some pretty terrible science.

  • S2019E08 Will You Travel to Space?

    • March 13, 2019
    • PBS

    The Future of Space Tourism with Richard Branson The private space-race has been on for a while now. The attention has been on Space-X and Blue Origin with their reusable rockets. But there’s one private space program that’s been doing things a little differently. Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic isn’t building rockets at all – it’s building spaceships. And I got to sit down and talk to him about it.

  • S2019E09 Is Dark Energy Getting Stronger?

    • March 20, 2019
    • PBS

    The power of Dark Energy may be increasing as the universe ages. Subtle clues are emerging that the accepted model for the nature of dark energy and dark matter may not be all that. We saw the first such clue recently in our recent episode on the Crisis in Cosmology. Today we’re doing a Space Time Journal Club to reveal another clue. We’re looking at a new paper in Nature Astronomy, “Cosmological constraints from the Hubble diagram of quasars at high redshifts” by Risaliti and Lusso. It hints that the cosmological constant may not be so constant after all. In fact it may be increasing. If this is true, then our prediction for the future of our universe looks VERY different, and may involve the entire universe tearing itself to shreds at the subatomic level in the Big Rip.

  • S2019E10 Could the Universe End by Tearing Apart Every Atom?

    • March 28, 2019
    • PBS

    Of all the unlikely ends of the universe, the Big Rip has to be the most spectacular. Galaxies ripped to shreds, dogs and cat first living together, then tragically separated by the infinitely accelerating expansion of space on subatomic scales. Good thing it's not going to happen. Or is it?

  • S2019E11 The Edge of an Infinite Universe

    • April 3, 2019
    • PBS

    Have you ever asked “what is beyond the edge of the universe?” And have you ever been told that an infinite universe that has no edge? You were told wrong. In a sense. We can define a boundary to an infinite universe, at least mathematically. And it turns out that boundary may be as real or even more real than the universe it contains.

  • S2019E12 The Holographic Universe Explained

    • April 10, 2019
    • PBS

    We live in a universe with 3 dimensions of space and one of time. Up, down, left, right, forward, back, past, future. 3+1 dimensions. Or so our primitive Pleistocene-evolved brains find it useful to believe. And we cling to this intuition, even as physics shows us that this view of reality may be only a very narrow perception. One of the most startling possibilities is that our 3+1 dimensional universe may better described as resulting from a spacetime one dimension lower – like a hologram projected from a surface infinitely far away.

  • S2019E13 No Dark Matter = Proof of Dark Matter?

    • April 24, 2019
    • PBS

    We’ve been failing to detect dark matter for decades. Finally, the latest failure to detect dark matter may have actually proved its existence. One of these is true: either most of the matter in the universe is invisible and formed of something not explained by modern particle physics OR our understanding of gravity is completely broken. The debate over which is true has raged for decades, but may finally have been resolved in an unlikely way: the proof that dark matter exists, and really is an exotic, unknown substance, may have come from the discovery of two galaxies that appear to have no dark matter at all. Today on Space Time Journal Club we’ll look at the papers that reveal this discovery.

  • S2019E14 The Real Science of the EHT Black Hole

    • May 1, 2019
    • PBS

    How do you take a picture of a black hole and what can we learn from it? Our first ever actual bona fide photo of a black hole, made by the Event Horizon Telescope and revealed to the world in a press conference on April 10th. Since then it’s got plenty of coverage, because … I mean look at it. It’s a freaking black hole. It’s black, it’s holey, it’s everything we hoped it would be. Now that the giddiness has subsided and I personally have stopped spending hours on end staring at a black spot, we can take a breath and actually look at the real science here and discuss exactly how a picture like this could be taken and what we can learn from it.

  • S2019E15 Why Quantum Computing Requires Quantum Cryptography

    • May 9, 2019
    • PBS

    Quantum computing is cool, but you know what would be extra awesome - a quantum internet. In fact if we want the first we’ll need the latter. And the first step to the quantum internet is quantum cryptography.

  • S2019E16 The Cosmic Dark Ages

    • May 16, 2019
    • PBS

    We live in the stelliferous era. Somewhere between 10 and 1000 billion trillion stars fill the observable universe with light. But there was a time before the first star ignited. A time we call the cosmic dark ages.

  • S2019E17 The Alchemy of Neutron Star Collisions

    • June 6, 2019
    • PBS

    Carl Sagan’s famous words: “We are star stuff” refers to a mind-blowing idea – that most atomic nuclei in our bodies were created in the nuclear furnace and the explosive deaths of stars that lived in the ancient universe. In recent years it’s become clear that the truth is even more mind-blowing. Many heavy elements - includes most precious metals - were produced in an even more spectacular event: the collision of neutron stars. In fact, according to a recent study most of the Earth’s supply of these elements was created in a single neutron star merger that took place near our Sun’s birth nebula 80 million years ago before Earth formed.

  • S2019E18 How Black Holes Kill Galaxies

    • June 17, 2019
    • PBS

    Black holes are really only dangerous if you get too close. Ha, who am I kidding. It turns out they may be responsible for ending star formation across the entire universe.

  • S2019E19 The Quasar from The Beginning of Time - STELLAR

    • June 20, 2019
    • PBS

    Recently, the oldest quasar ever seen was discovered by the Gemini North telescope in Hawaii, the Magellan Telescopes at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile, as well as the Large Binocular Telescope in Arizona. In this first episode of the PBS DS mini-series, STELLAR, Matt travels to the top of Mauna Kea to visit the Gemini North telescope and see just how they found this ancient Quasar and it’s massive black hole.

  • S2019E20 Thorium and the Future of Nuclear Energy

    • July 1, 2019
    • PBS

    Energy too cheap to meter - that was the promise of nuclear power in the 1950s, at least according to Lewis Strauss chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission. That promise has not come to pass - but with some incredible new technologies, perhaps it still could. The question is - should it?

  • S2019E21 The Quantum Internet

    • July 15, 2019
    • PBS

    When we finally have a quantum internet you’ll be able to simultaneously like and dislike this video. But we don’t. So I hope you like it. The world is widely regarded as being well and truly into the digital age, also called the information age. No longer are economies and industries solely characterised by the physical goods they produce, and in fact some of the largest companies in the world produce no physical goods at all: digital information is a commodity in its own right. As discussed in a previous episode, this worldwide digital economy is fundamentally reliant on certain cryptographic processes. Currently these processes work in the realm of classical cryptography, but one day soon this may not be enough and so quantum cryptographic methods and algorithms are being developed. However, it’s one thing to design a protocol, it’s something else entirely to build a system to support it. To understand what needs to be done we need to get to the foundations of quantum mechanics - we need to talk about quantum information theory.

  • S2019E22 Did Time Start at the Big Bang?

    • July 18, 2019
    • PBS

  • S2019E23 Deciphering The Vast Scale of the Universe - STELLAR

    • July 25, 2019
    • PBS

    One of the fundamental questions humanity has always asked is how big is our Universe? For much of human history, people believed that Planet Earth was the very center of the entire universe. And Earth is pretty big. But compared the rest of the universe, we are infinitesimally small.

  • S2019E24 What Caused the Big Bang?

    • August 6, 2019
    • PBS

    Every astronomy textbook tells us that soon after the Big Bang, there was a period of exponentially accelerating expansion called cosmic inflation. In a tiny fraction of a second, inflationary expansion multiplied the size of the universe by a larger factor than in the following 13 and a half billion years of regular expansion. This story seems like a bit of a … stretch. Is there really any mechanism that could cause something like this to happen? What what we’re covering today – the real physics of cosmic inflation.

  • S2019E25 Exploring a HUGE Radio Telescope in VR 180

    • August 12, 2019
    • PBS

    How can you build a telescope that can see the entire night sky without moving its dish? Well in this special episode of Space Time we took a tour of the Arecibo Observatory with a VR 180 camera so you could explore the incredible ingenuity of Arecibo's giant spherical dish that allows it to reflect light from every spot on the sky in a symmetric way. We also talked to Dr. Abel Méndez about Exoplantes and Aliens!

  • S2019E26 What Happened Before the Big Bang?

    • August 19, 2019
    • PBS

    We actually have a pretty good idea of what might have happened before the Big Bang. That is, as long as we define the Big Bang as the extremely hot, dense, rapidly expanding universe that is described by Einstein’s equations. That picture of the universe is very solid down to about a trillionth of a second after the supposed beginning of time. We can make good guesses down to about 10^-30th of a second. But before that?

  • S2019E27 How To Become an Astrophysicist + Challenge Question!

    • August 26, 2019
    • PBS

    Do you want to major in Astrophysics? Are you thinking about becoming (or ever just wondered how one becomes) an Astrophysicists? Do you want to know Matt O’Dowd’s origin story? Then buckle up and enjoy the ride and try your astrophysics skill in calculating bubble universes to try to win some free Space Time Swag from the Merch Store.

  • S2019E28 Is Earth's Magnetic Field Reversing?

    • September 3, 2019
    • PBS

    Earth’s magnetic field protects us from deadly space radiation. What if it were drastically weakened, as a precursor to flipping upside down? I mean, it has before … many, many times..

  • S2019E29 Could We Terraform Mars?

    • September 16, 2019
    • PBS

    Humanity’s future is glorious. As we master space travel, we’ll hop from one lifeless world to the next. Life will blossom in our path and the galaxy with shimmer with beautiful Earth-like orbs. Hmmm… maybe. This won’t sound so far fetched if we prove we can do it at least once. If we successfully terraform Mars.

  • S2019E30 Is Pluto a Planet?

    • September 23, 2019
    • PBS

    You know what a planet is, right? A big round thing that orbits a star. Uh, not so fast. The surprisingly vicious debate over the planetary status of Pluto has given us a fascinating glimpse into what a scientific definition really is. And perhaps the word planet is too vague to be used as a scientific definition at all.

  • S2019E31 How Many Universes Are There?

    • September 30, 2019
    • PBS

    The universe is big, but it’s peanuts compared to the eternally inflating multiverse. But just how many universes are there? What are they like? And most importantly, what can they tell us about … aliens?

  • S2019E32 Black Hole Harmonics

    • October 7, 2019
    • PBS

    Black holes are crazy enough on their own – but crash two together and you end up with a roiling blob of inescapable space that vibrates like a beaten drum. And the rich harmonics of those vibrations, seen through gravitational waves, could hold the secrets to the nature of the fabric of spacetime itself. Today on space time journal club we’ll explore the papers that claim to have detected black hole harmonics. We’ll also give you the latest updates on the most recent – in some cases quite bizarre - LIGO detections.

  • S2019E33 Loop Quantum Gravity Explained

    • October 15, 2019
    • PBS

    It’s time we talked about loop quantum gravity. What exactly is it? What are the loops? And can it really defeat string theory in our quest for a Theory of Everything?

  • S2019E34 Is Time Travel Impossible?

    • October 21, 2019
    • PBS

    Time travel stories are cool because both the past and future are somehow more interesting that the present and because everyone wants a redo. But so far it appears we’re doomed to live consumed by regret in the eternal, boring present. Time marches on, inexorably and only forward. Or so we thought until Einstein came along. His special and general theories of relativity changed the way we think about time forever, and believe it or not, their raw equations permit time travel. They even tell us how to do it. So let’s review the possibilities, and decide how possible they really are.

  • S2019E35 Why We Might Be Alone in the Universe

    • November 4, 2019
    • PBS

    Why does it appear, that humanity is the lone intelligence in the universe? The answer might be that planet Earth is more unique than we've previously assumed. The rare earth hypothesis posits exactly this - that a range of factors made Earth exceptionally unusual and uniquely able to produce intelligent life.

  • S2019E36 Does Life Need a Multiverse to Exist?

    • November 11, 2019
    • PBS

    Life exists in our universe. There we go - one hopefully uncontroversial statement. Therefore our universe is capable of producing and supporting life. How am I going? Two for two? Let’s try for three: therefore there are countless universes. Hmmm. Did I break my streak?

  • S2019E37 Can You Observe a Typical Universe?

    • November 18, 2019
    • PBS

    The moment you started observing reality, you hopelessly polluted any conclusions you might make about it. The anthropic principle guarantees that you are NOT seeing the universe in most typical state. But used correctly, this highly controversial idea can be extremely powerful. So, how do you correctly use the anthropic principle?

  • S2019E38 Is The Universe Finite?

    • December 2, 2019
    • PBS

    The universe is big, really, really big. Although according to a new paper, it may literally be infinitely smaller than we previously thought.

  • S2019E39 The Doomsday Argument

    • December 9, 2019
    • PBS

    Since the dawn of humanity around 100 billion people have lived. How many will live in the future of our species? We might hope for a trillion times that if we colonize the galaxy. But a simple statistical argument tells us that the doom of our species is much, much closer.

  • S2019E40 Do Black Holes Create New Universes?

    • December 17, 2019
    • PBS

    What if every single black hole that formed in our universe sparked the big bang of a new universe? Cosmological natural selection proposes exactly this - but even better, it claims to be able to test the hypothesis.

Season 2020

  • S2020E01 How To Capture Ghost Particles

    • January 6, 2020
    • PBS

    Why is there something rather than nothing? Well the answer may be found in the weakest particle in the universe: the neutrino. For over half a century Fermilab has been the premier particle accelerator facility of the United States and we got to visit with Don Lincoln to explore it’s science and its engineering. These days many of the super-powered geniuses of Fermilab are tackling the mysteries of the neutrino. Why? Because this elusive particle may hold powerful secrets: from the unification of the forces of nature to the biggest question of all: why is there something rather than nothing?

  • S2020E02 How To Capture Black Holes

    • January 13, 2020
    • PBS

    Black holes are awesome - but how about black holes being captured by the screaming vortex of a quasar, where they merge and grow like some monstrous version of a solar system. This insane hypothesis is getting closer to reality, according to the papers in today’s space time journal club.

  • S2020E03 Solutions to the Three Body Problem

    • January 20, 2020
    • PBS

    The three body problem is famous for being impossible to solve. But actually it's been solved many times, and in ingenious ways. Some of those solutions are incredibly useful, and some are incredibly bizarre.

  • S2020E04 Hacking the Nature of Reality

    • January 27, 2020
    • PBS

    In particle physics we try to understand reality by looking for smaller and smaller building blocks. But what if that has been the wrong philosophy all along?

  • S2020E05 Are there Infinite Versions of You?

    • February 3, 2020
    • PBS

    If the universe goes on forever, does that mean there are infinite versions of you out there?

  • S2020E06 Are Axions Dark Matter?

    • February 11, 2020
    • PBS

    What does the strong nuclear force, the fundamental symmetries of nature, and a laundry detergent have in common? They’re all important parts of the tale of the axion - a tale whose end may take us beyond the standard model and solve one of the most vexing mysteries in astrophysics.

  • S2020E07 Does Consciousness Influence Quantum Mechanics?

    • February 18, 2020
    • PBS

    It’s not surprising that the profound weirdness of the quantum world has inspired some outlandish explanations - nor that these have strayed into the realm of what we might call mysticism. One particularly pervasive notion is the idea that consciousness can directly influence quantum systems - and so influence reality. Today we’re going to see where this idea comes from, and whether quantum theory really supports it.

  • S2020E08 How Decoherence Splits The Quantum Multiverse

    • February 24, 2020
    • PBS

    Why is it that we can see these multiple histories play out on the quantum scale, and why do lose sight of them on our macroscopic scale? Many physicists believe that the answer lies in a process known as quantum decoherence.

  • S2020E09 Does Quantum Immortality Save Schrödinger's Cat?

    • March 3, 2020
    • PBS

    If we can’t ever peer into these other realities that are used to explain quantum mechanics, how do we know they exist? In order to understand what happens to those different branches, and to understand why we find ourselves in one of them, we need to embrace one of the interpretations of quantum mechanics.

  • S2020E10 How Do Quantum States Manifest In The Classical World?

    • March 16, 2020
    • PBS

    In quantum world things are routinely in multiple states at once - what we call a “superposition” of states. But in the classical world of large scales, things are either this or that. The famous thought experiment is Schrodinger’s cat - in which a cat is in an opaque box with a vial of deadly poison that’s released on the radioactive decay of an atom. Quantum mechanics tells us that the atom’s wavefunction can be in a superposition of states - simultaneously decayed or not decayed. So is the cat’s wavefunction also in a superposition of both dead and alive.

  • S2020E11 How Black Holes Spin Space Time

    • March 24, 2020
    • PBS

    If there’s one thing cooler than a black hole it’s a rotating black hole. Why? Because we can use them as futuristic power generators, galactic-scale bombs, and portals to other universes.

  • S2020E12 What’s On The Other Side Of A Black Hole?

    • March 31, 2020
    • PBS

    Normal maps are useless inside black holes. At the event horizon - the ultimate point of no return as you approach a black hole - time and space themselves change their character. We need new coordinate systems to trace paths into the black hole interior. But the maps we draw using those coordinates reveal something unexpected - they don’t simply end inside the black hole, but continue beyond. In these maps, black holes become wormholes, and new universes lie on the other side.

  • S2020E13 How We Know The Earth Is Ancient

    • April 7, 2020
    • PBS

    In astronomy we talk about billions of years like it’s no big deal. But how can we be sure about timescales so far beyond the capacity for human intuition? Our discovery of what we now call deep time is very recent - as recent as our discovery of the true spatial vastness of our universe. And it came as scientists tried to measure the age of the Earth. What they found was as shocking and humbling as anything seen through the telescope.

  • S2020E14 Was the Milky Way a Quasar?

    • April 14, 2020
    • PBS

    The Milky Way galaxy is relatively calm by the destructive standards of the rest of the Universe, and compared to its own very violent past. But just recently we discovered that its violent past was much more recent than we thought - and could even happen again.

  • S2020E15 Will Wormholes Allow Fast Interstellar Travel?

    • April 22, 2020
    • PBS

    From Stargate to Interstellar, wormholes are our favorite method for traveling across fictional universes. But they are also a very serious field of study for some of our greatest minds over the last century. So what’s the holdup? When do we get to wormhole ourselves out of here?

  • S2020E16 How We Know The Universe is Ancient

    • May 4, 2020
    • PBS

    The universe is precisely 13.8 billion year old - or so our best scientific methods tell us. But how do you learn the age of the universe when there’s no trace left of its beginnings?

  • S2020E17 How Luminiferous Aether Led to Relativity

    • May 11, 2020
    • PBS

    As the 19th century came to a close, physicists were feeling pretty satisfied with the state of their science. The great edifice of physical theory seemed complete. A few minor experiments remained to verify everything. Little did those physicists know that one of those experiments would bring the entire structure crashing down paving the way for the physics revolution of the 20th century.

  • S2020E18 Mapping the Multiverse

    • May 18, 2020
    • PBS

    This is a map of the multiverse. Or in physics-ese, it’s the maximally extended Penrose diagram of a Kerr spacetime. And in english: when you solve Einstein’s equations of general relativity for a rotating black hole, the universe does not come to an abrupt halt at the bottom of the gravitational pit. Instead, a path can be traced out again but you do not end up in the universe that you started in. Like I said, it’s a map of the multiverse.

  • S2020E19 Does Gravity Require Extra Dimensions?

    • May 27, 2020
    • PBS

    It’s been 120 years since Henry Cavendish measured the gravitational constant with a pair of lead balls suspended by a wire. The fundamental nature of gravity still eludes our best minds - but those secrets may be revealed by turning back to the Cavendish experiment. That steampunk contraption may even reveal the existence of extra dimensions of space.

  • S2020E20 Can Viruses Travel Between Planets?

    • June 8, 2020
    • PBS

    With the global pandemic of Covid 19 still encompassing the word, we are generally not big fans of viruses right now. But we sure are thinking about them a lot. That’s right, even astrophysicists are pondering these bizarre little critters. In fact, astrovirology, although very new, is actually an emerging subfield of astrobiology. And that’s because it turns out viruses don’t just influence organisms - they’re incredibly important on a planetary scale. Perhaps an interplanetary scale.

  • S2020E21 What Happens After the Universe Ends?

    • June 15, 2020
    • PBS

    Conformal Cyclic Cosmology is a story of the origin and the end of our universe from great mathematical physicist Sir Roger Penrose. It’s goes like this: the infinitely far future, when the universe has expanded exponentially to to an unthinkably large size, and every black hole and particle has decayed into faint radiation .... that infinite stretch of space and time is identically the SAME THING as the infinitesimal and instantaneous big bang of a new universe, and our universe is just one in an endless chain.

  • S2020E22 Building Black Holes in a Lab

    • June 22, 2020
    • PBS

    Black holes are about the worst subjects for direct study in the universe. But at this stage, it’s all we can do to convince ourselves of their existence. Actually studying the physics of real black holes is much, much harder. I mean, we could try to make one - but that’s way beyond our current tech level, and also potentially humanity-destroying. Well it turns out we don’t need to make real black holes to at least get started with the lab work. We can instead study analog black holes - and by analog, I don’t mean old fashioned clockwork black holes - I mean analogies. Physical systems that aren’t black holes but that behave in similar ways - and may reveal the real behaviours of real black holes.

  • S2020E23 Dissolving an Event Horizon

    • June 30, 2020
    • PBS

    Black hole singularities break physics - fortunately, the universe seems to conspire to protect itself from their causality-destroying madness. At least, so says the cosmic censorship hypothesis. Only problem is many physicists think it might be wrong, and that naked singularities may exist after all.

  • S2020E24 Does Antimatter Explain Why There's Something Rather Than Nothing?

    • July 8, 2020
    • PBS

    The most precious substance in our universe is not gold, nor oil. It’s not even printer ink. It’s antimatter. But it’s worth every penny of it’s very high cost, because it may hold the answer to the question of why anything exists in our universe at all.

  • S2020E25 The Boundary Between Black Holes & Neutron Stars

    • July 20, 2020
    • PBS

    When we detected the very first gravitational wave, a new window was opened to the mysteries of the universe. We knew we’d see things previously thought impossible. And we just did - an object on the boundary between neutron stars and black holes, which promises to reveal the secrets of both.

  • S2020E26 How Stars Destroy Each Other

    • August 17, 2020
    • PBS

    Our galaxy is full of dysfunctional stellar relationships. With more than half of all stars existing in binary orbits, it’s inevitable that many stellar remnants will end up in parasitic spirals with their partners. Today we’re going to look at the worst of these - from the novae produced by white dwarfs, to X-ray binaries created by neutron stars and black holes - and much weirder things besides.

  • S2020E27 Can Future Colliders Break the Standard Model?

    • August 24, 2020
    • PBS

    If you wanna make an omelet you gotta break a few eggs. And by omelet I mean a theory of everything, and by eggs I mean a billion billion subatomic particles obliterated in the next generation of giant particle colliders.

  • S2020E28 How Do We Know What Stars Are Made Of?

    • September 1, 2020
    • PBS

    Pin-pricks in the celestial sphere, through which shines the light of heaven? Or gods and heroes looking down from their constellations? Or lights kindled above middle earth by Varda Elbereth and brightened with the dew of the trees of Valinor? Science has long pondered the mysteries of the stars. This is how we finally figured them out.

  • S2020E29 The Truth About Beauty in Physics

    • September 8, 2020
    • PBS

    The great physicist Hermann Weyl once said: "My work always tried to unite the true with the beautiful, but when I had to choose one or the other, I usually chose the beautiful." But is this actually good advice for doing physics?

  • S2020E30 Could Life Evolve Inside Stars?

    • September 21, 2020
    • PBS

    One of the most bizarre proposals for life not as we know it doesn’t even use atoms. It proposes that fundamental kinks and defects in the fabric of the universe - cosmic strings beaded with magnetic monopoles - may evolve into complex structures, and even life, within stars. This idea was just published in Letters High Energy Physics Letters by physicists Luis Anchordoqui and Eugene Chudnovsky, and today on Space Time Journal Club we’re going to see how legit this actually is.

  • S2020E31 Solving Quantum Cryptography

    • September 28, 2020
    • PBS

    Your extensive posting history on r/birdswitharms and your old fanfiction-heavy livejournal are both one tiny math problem away from becoming public knowledge. That math problem is prime number factoring, and the new era of quantum computers may lay bare your indiscretions, as well as collapse the entire digital economy. Unless we get us some post-quantum cryptography post-haste. So, how close are we?

  • S2020E32 Venus May Have Life!

    • October 5, 2020
    • PBS

    If you rank the most habitable places in our solar system Venus lands pretty low, with surface temperatures hot enough to melt lead and sulphuric acid rain. And yet it may have just jumped to the front of the pack. In fact, we may have detected the signature of alien life - Venusian life -for the first time.

  • S2020E33 Do the Past and Future Exist?

    • October 13, 2020
    • PBS

    Is all that exists just whatever exists right now? Is the past erased and the future a void yet to be filled? Well, the answer lies in between the past and the future - in the elusive, ever-moving eye-blink that we call the present.

  • S2020E34 Is The Future Predetermined By Quantum Mechanics?

    • October 20, 2020
    • YouTube

    Einstein’s special theory of relativity combines space and time into one dynamic, unified entity - spacetime. But if time is connected to space, could the universe be anything but deterministic? And does that mean that the future is predestined?

  • S2020E35 How The Penrose Singularity Theorem Predicts The End of Space Time

    • October 27, 2020
    • YouTube

    The Nobel prize in physics this year went to black holes. Generally speaking. Specifically, it was shared by the astronomers who revealed to us the Milky Way’s central black hole and by Roger Penrose, who proved that in general relativity, every black hole contains a place of infinite gravity - a singularity. But the true impact of Penrose’s singularity theorem would is much deeper - it leads us to the limits Einstein’s great theory and to the origin of the universe.

  • S2020E36 Electroweak Theory and the Origin of the Fundamental Forces

    • November 4, 2020
    • YouTube

    Our universe seems pretty complicated. We have a weird zoo of elementary particles, which interact through very different fundamental forces. But some extremely subtle clues in nature have led us to believe that the forces of nature were once unified, ruled by a single, grand symmetry. But how does one force separate into multiple? And how do the forces of nature arise from mathematical symmetries in the first place?

  • S2020E37 Can Free Will be Saved in a Deterministic Universe?

    • November 11, 2020
    • YouTube

    Physicists have a long history of sticking our noses where they don’t belong - and one of our favorite places to step beyond our expertise is the question of consciousness and free will. Sometimes our musings are insightful, sometimes incoherent, and usually at least somewhat naive. Which a fair description of this show, so of course Space Time needs to weigh in physics and free will..

  • S2020E38 The Arrow of Time and How to Reverse It

    • November 18, 2020
    • YouTube

    Ever wish you could travel backward in time and do things differently? Good news: the laws of physics seem to say traveling backward in time is the same as traveling forwards. So why do we seem to be stuck in this inexorable flow towards the future? It's time to begin our journey towards really understanding time.

  • S2020E39 Why Do You Remember The Past But Not The Future?

    • December 8, 2020
    • YouTube

    The laws of physics don’t specify an arrow of time - they don’t distinguish the past from the future. The equations we use to describe how things evolve forward in time also perfectly describe their evolution backwards in time. So the brain is a thing ruled by the laws of physics - why does the brain and the conscious experience that emerges from it, see the arrow of time so clearly? In other words why do we remember the past and not the future?

  • S2020E40 The Supernovas At The End of The Universe

    • December 15, 2020
    • YouTube

    Good news everyone: it looks like the universe is going to end with a series of catastrophic explosions. The very, very long story short is that the universe ends in heat death, as it approaches maximum entropy, and its eternal exponential expansion drives it to effective utter emptiness and absolute cold. But new calculations have revealed we may be able to look forward to one last source of astrophysical cataclysms - a new type of supernova that can only happen at the end of the universe.

  • S2020E41 Navigating with Quantum Entanglement

    • December 22, 2020
    • YouTube

    We often think of quantum mechanics as only affecting only the smallest scales of reality, with classical reality taking over at some intermediate level. But in his 1944 book, What is Life?, the quantum physicist Erwin Schrödinger suggested that “incredibly small groups of atoms, much too small to display exact statistical laws, do play a dominating role in the very orderly and lawful events within a living organism.” Schrodinger was a visionary - and perhaps very specifically in this case. Because it turns out we might need all the weirdness of quantum mechanics to explain birds.

Season 2021

  • S2021E01 What Happens During a Quantum Jump?

    • January 12, 2021

    Since the very beginning of quantum mechanics, a debate has raged about how to interpret its bizarre predictions. And at the heart and origin of that debate is the quantum jump or quantum leap - the seemingly miraculous and instantaneous transitions of quantum systems that have always defied observation or prediction. At least, until now.

  • S2021E02 Can We Break the Universe?

    • January 19, 2021

    Today we’re going to delve into a couple of the most famous paradoxes of special relativity: the Twin Paradox, The Ladder Paradox (aka the Barn-Pole Paradox), and a paradox suggested by our very own viewers, which asks whether a spaceship could wrap around the universe & destroy itself. We’ll explore these paradoxes and see why, against our intuition, the universe really does work in this seemingly nonsensical way. But the point of this episode is to go much further - we’re going to try to break the universe by pushing these paradoxes beyond the limit.

  • S2021E03 Is Dark Matter Made of Particles?

    • January 26, 2021
    • YouTube

    Dark Matter Particles: Gateway to The Dark Universe

  • S2021E04 How Does Gravity Warp the Flow of Time?

    • February 10, 2021
    • YouTube

    There’s a deep connection between gravity and time - gravitational fields seem to slow the pace of time in what we call gravitational time dilation. And today we’ll explore the origin of this effect. And ultimately, we’ll use what we learn to understand how curvature in time - this gradient of time dilation - can be thought of as the true source of the force of gravity.

  • S2021E05 Gravitational Wave Background Discovered?

    • February 17, 2021
    • YouTube

    It was pretty impressive when LIGO detected gravitational waves from colliding black holes. Well we’ve just taken that to the next level with a galaxy-spanning gravitational wave detector that may have detected a foundational element of space itself - the gravitational wave background.

  • S2021E06 Does Time Cause Gravity?

    • February 24, 2021
    • YouTube

    We know that gravity must cause clocks to run slow on the basis of logical consistency. And we know that gravity DOES cause clocks to run slow based on many brilliant experiments. But I never explained WHY or HOW gravity causes the flow of time to slow down. And I’m not going to explain it now - because in a sense it’s not true. Gravity does NOT warp the flow of time. It’s the other way around - the warping of time causes gravity.

  • S2021E07 How Does Gravity Affect Light?

    • March 9, 2021
    • YouTube

    We know that gravity exerts its pull on light, and we have an explanation for why. Actually, we have multiple explanations that all predict the same thing. And at first glance, these explanations seem to describe completely different causes. So what is the true connection between light and gravity, or is truth, in fact, entirely relative?

  • S2021E08 The NEW Crisis in Cosmology

    • March 16, 2021
    • YouTube

    I have good news and bad news. Bad news first: two years ago we reported on the Crisis in Cosmology. Since then, it’s only gotten worse. And actually, the good news is also that the crisis in cosmology has actually gotten worse, which means we may be onto something! The most exciting thing for any scientist is when something they thought they knew turns out to be wrong. So it’s no wonder that many cosmologists are starting to get excited by what has become known as the Hubble tension, or the crisis in cosmology. The “crisis” is the fact that we have two extremely careful, increasingly precise measurements of how fast the universe is expanding which should agree with each other, and yet they don’t.

  • S2021E09 Zeno's Paradox & The Quantum Zeno Effect

    • March 23, 2021
    • YouTube

    “A moving arrow is at rest.” This is obviously a nonsensical contradiction. But Zeno, a Greek philosopher famous for his metaphysical trolling, devised a paradox whose conclusion is just this. Here’s how it goes: if you look at an arrow flying through the air at any instantaneous snapshot in time, the arrow doesn’t travel any distance. If time is composed of an infinite number of these snapshots, and the arrow doesn’t move in any of them, then the arrow is at rest during the entirety of its flight. The moving arrow is at rest.

  • S2021E10 Why the Muon g-2 Results Are So Exciting!

    • April 7, 2021
    • YouTube

    When a theory makes a prediction that disagrees with an experimental test, sometimes it means we should throw the theory away. But what if that theory has otherwise produced the most successful predictions in all of physics? Then, that little glitch may be pointing the way to layers of physics deeper than we've yet imagined. Well, FermiLabs Muon G-2 experiment has been chasing the most promising glitch of all, and they've just announced their results

  • S2021E11 What If Dark Matter Is Just Black Holes?

    • April 13, 2021
    • YouTube

    It may be that for every star in the universe there are billions of microscopic black holes streaming through the solar system, the planet, even our bodies every second. Sounds horrible - but hey, at least we’d have explained dark matter.

  • S2021E12 The NEW Warp Drive Possibilities

    • April 21, 2021
    • YouTube

    That Einstein guy was a real bummer for our hopes of a star-hopping, science-fiction-y future. His whole “nothing travels faster than light” rule seems to ensure that exploration of even the local part of our galaxy will be an excruciating slow. But Einstein also gave us a glimmer of hope. He showed us that space and time can be warped - and so the warp drive was conceived. Just recently, a couple of papers contend that these are not pure science fiction.

  • S2021E13 How To Know If It's Aliens

    • May 11, 2021
    • YouTube

    There’s one rule on Space Time: It’s never Aliens. But every rule has an exception and this rule is no exception because: It’s never aliens, until it is. So is it aliens yet? And on today’s Space Time we’re going to examine all the best case scenarios for life beyond Earth.

  • S2021E14 Breaking The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle

    • May 19, 2021
    • YouTube

    Quantum mechanics forbids us from measuring the universe beyond a certain level of precision. But that doesn’t stop us from trying. And in some cases succeeding, by squeezing the Heisenberg uncertainty principle to its breaking point.

  • S2021E15 What If (Tiny) Black Holes Are Everywhere?

    • May 25, 2021
    • YouTube

    It’s fair to say that black holes may be the scariest objects in the universe. Happily for us, the nearest is probably many light-years away. Unless of course, Planck relics are a thing - in which case they might be literally everywhere.

  • S2021E16 The (Slow) Crisis Of Space Junk

    • June 9, 2021
    • YouTube

    While recent news about the Chinese Long March 5 Rocket made a lot of people very nervous because a 22-ton rocket was going to fall out of the sky, this sort of thing happens all the time. Boosters, dead satellites, and sometimes even old space stations get dropped out of the sky fairly often. While the litter seems a little inconsiderate, this is probably far safer than the alternative. The accumulation of space junk poses a huge risk to all human operations in space especially if we cross the threshold into the chain reaction of exponentially growing collisions known as the Kessler Syndrome.

  • S2021E17 Can Space Be Infinitely Divided?

    • June 16, 2021
    • YouTube

    How many times can I half the distance between my hands? Assume perfect coordination and the ability to localize my palms to the quantum level. 15 halvings gets them to within a cell’s width. 33 to within a single atom, 50 and they’re a proton’s width apart. Half the distance 115 times and they’re a single Planck-length apart - 1.6x10^-35 meters. Surely we can keep going - .8, .4, .2 x10^-35 m? Bizarrely, those distances might not even exist in any meaningful way.

  • S2021E18 How Quantum Entanglement Creates Entropy

    • June 23, 2021
    • YouTube

    Entropy is surely one of the most perplexing concepts in physics. It’s variously described as a measure of a system’s disorder - or as the amount of useful work that you can get from it - or as the information hidden by the system. Despite the seeming ambiguity in its definition, many physicists hold entropy to be behind one of the most fundamental laws of physics.

  • S2021E19 Electrons DO NOT Spin

    • July 7, 2021
    • YouTube

    Quantum mechanics has a lot of weird stuff - but there’s thing that everyone agrees that no one understands. I’m talking about quantum spin. Let’s find out how chasing this elusive little behavior of the electron led us to some of the deepest insights into the nature of the quantum world.

  • S2021E20 Where Are The Worlds In Many Worlds?

    • July 13, 2021
    • YouTube

    Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics proposes that every time a quantum event gets decided, the universe splits so that every possible outcome really does occur. But where exactly are those worlds, and can we ever see them?

  • S2021E21 How Magnetism Shapes The Universe

    • July 21, 2021
    • YouTube

    How far can you follow a compass needle? As far as the north magnetic pole where the needle starts spinning wildly? Compass needles align with magnetic field lines; and on the precise spot of magnetic north, those field lines are vertical. So just tilt your compass 90 degrees and you can continue your journey: either down to the molten iron dynamo surrounding Earth's core; or up. But up to where? The answer: to everywhere. And today that's exactly where we're going to go.

  • S2021E22 How An Extreme New Star Could Change All Cosmology

    • August 3, 2021
    • YouTube

    A new white dwarf has been discovered (poetically named: ZTF J1901+1458) that’s doing some stuff that no white dwarf should ever be able to do. In fact, it has multiple properties that are so extreme that it almost certainly did NOT form in the way that we thought all white dwarfs formed. This one peculiar point of faint light may change our understanding of not just white dwarfs, but of all cosmology.

  • S2021E23 How to Communicate Across the Quantum Multiverse

    • August 10, 2021
    • YouTube

    In the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, the universal wavefunction is the reality, encompassing all possible histories and futures and all exist. But we are only sensitive to a slice of the wavefunction corresponding to our “world”, and due to the superposition principle our world can happily do its thing unperturbed by other parts of the wavefunction - other “ripples,” or worlds. And while it may seem like it would be physically impossible to have any connection between worlds, it may turn out to be entirely possible to communicate between them.

  • S2021E24 How Vacuum Decay Would Destroy The Universe

    • August 18, 2021
    • YouTube

    The universe is going to end. But of all the possible ends of the universe vacuum decay would have to be the most thorough - because it could totally rewrite the laws of physics. Today I hope to help you understand exactly how terrified you should be.

  • S2021E25 First Detection of Light from Behind a Black Hole

    • September 7, 2021
    • YouTube

    How do you see the unseeable - how do you explore the inescapable? Our cleverest astronomers have figured out ways to catch light that skims the very edge of black holes. Let’s find out what they learned.

  • S2021E26 Neutron Stars: The Most Extreme Objects in the Universe

    • September 15, 2021
    • YouTube

    We’ve traveled to lots of weird places on this show - from the interiors of black holes to the time before the big bang. But today I want to take you on a journey to what has got to be the weirdest place in the modern universe - a place where matter exists in states I bet you’ve never heard of. Today we take a journey to the center of the neutron star.

  • S2021E27 How Electron Spin Makes Matter Possible

    • September 21, 2021
    • YouTube

    Today I’m going to explain why you’re not falling through your chair right now using one simple fact, and one object. The fact is that all electrons are the same as each other, and the object is a structurally critical item of my clothing. There’s a chance this episode could get very weird.

  • S2021E28 Why Magnetic Monopoles SHOULD Exist

    • October 5, 2021
    • YouTube

    What happens if you cut a bar magnetic in half? We get two magnets, each with their own North and South poles. But what happens if you keep on cutting, into fourths and eighths and sixteenths and so on? Will we ever get to a single pole? I’ll spoil the answer for you: we don’t know! But the idea of magnetic monopoles remains one of physics’ most tantalizing maybes.

  • S2021E29 New Results in Quantum Tunneling vs. The Speed of Light

    • October 13, 2021
    • YouTube

    Paradoxically, the most promising prospects for moving matter around faster than light may be to put a metaphorical brick wall in its way. New efforts in quantum tunneling - both theory and experiment - show that superluminal motion may be possible, while still managing to avoid the paradox of superluminal signaling.Paradoxically, the most promising prospects for moving matter around faster than light may be to put a metaphorical brick wall in its way. New efforts in quantum tunneling - both theory and experiment - show that superluminal motion may be possible, while still managing to avoid the paradox of superluminal signaling.

  • S2021E30 Will Constructor Theory REWRITE Physics?

    • October 20, 2021
    • YouTube

    The people behind the greatest leaps in physics - Einstein, Newton, Heisenberg, all had the uncanny ability to see the fundamentals - see the deepest, underlying facts about the world, and from simple statements about reality they built up their incredible theories. Well what if we all had a recipe book for doing exactly this. Well, one might be just around the corner and it’s called Constructor Theory.

  • S2021E31 Is ACTION The Most Fundamental Property in Physics?

    • November 2, 2021
    • YouTube

    It’s about time we discussed an obscure concept in physics that may be more fundamental than energy and entropy and perhaps time itself. That’s right - the time has come for Action.

  • S2021E32 What If Our Understanding of Gravity Is Wrong?

    • November 10, 2021
    • YouTube

    What if there is no such thing as dark matter? What if our understanding of gravity is just wrong? New work is taking another shot at that Einstein guy. Let’s see if we’ve finally scored a hit with Modified Newtonian Dynamics aka MOND.

  • S2021E33 Are Black Holes Actually Fuzzballs?

    • November 17, 2021
    • YouTube

    Black holes are a paradox. They are paradoxical because they simultaneously must exist but can’t, and so they break physics as we know it. Many physicists will tell you that the best way to fix broken physics is with string. String theory, in fact. And in the black holes of string theory - fuzzballs - are perhaps even weirder than the regular type.

  • S2021E34 What Happens If A Black Hole Hits Earth?

    • December 20, 2021
    • YouTube

    The possibility that a black hole could actually impact Earth may seem straight out of science fiction, but the reality is that microscopic primordial black holes could actually hit Earth. If one did, it wouldn't just impact like an asteroid, it'd pass straight through the entire Earth and exit the other side. Perhaps craziest of all, this may have already happened!

  • S2021E35 How to Find ALIEN Dyson Spheres

    • December 29, 2021
    • YouTube

    On our search for alien lifeforms we scan for primitive biosignatures, and wait and hope for their errant signals to happen by the Earth. But that may not be the best way. Any energy-hungry civilization more advanced than our own may leave an indisputable technological mark on the galaxy. And yes, we’re very actively searching for those also. Time to update you on the hunt for galactic empires.

  • SPECIAL 0x9 2022 Year End AMA

    • December 19, 2022

Season 2022

  • S2022E01 How To Simulate The Universe With DFT

    • January 12, 2022
    • YouTube

    If you used every particle in the observable universe to do a full quantum simulation, how big would that simulation be? At best a large molecule. That’s how insanely information dense the quantum wavefunction really is. And yet we routinely simulate systems with thousands, even millions of particles. How? By cheating. Using the ultimate compression algorithm: Density Functional Theory (DFT). Let’s learn how to cheat the universe.

  • S2022E02 How To Build The Universe in a Computer

    • January 19, 2022
    • YouTube

    We routinely simulate the universe on all of its scales, from planets to large fractions of the cosmos. Today we’re going to see how it’s possible to build a universe in a computer - and see whether there’s a limit to what we can simulate.

  • S2022E03 How Does Gravity Escape A Black Hole?

    • January 27, 2022
    • YouTube

    Fact: in a black hole, all of the mass is concentrated at the singularity at the very center. Fact: every black hole singularity is surrounded by an event horizon. Nothing can escape from within the event horizon unless it can travel faster than light. Fact: gravity travels at the speed of light. So how does a black hole manage to communicate its gravitational force to the outside universe? How does gravity escape a black hole?

  • S2022E04 Is The Wave Function The Building Block of Reality?

    • February 16, 2022
    • YouTube

    Objective Collapse Theories offer a explanation of quantum mechanics that is at once brand new and based in classical mechanics. In the world of quantum mechanics, it’s no big deal for particles to be in multiple different states at the same time, or to teleport between locations, or to influence each other faster than light. But somehow, none of this strangeness makes its way to the familiar scale of human beings - even though our world is made entirely of quantum-weird building blocks. The explanations of this transition range from the mystical influence of the conscious mind to the grandiose proposition of multiple realities. But Objective Collapse Theories feels as down to earth as the classical world that we’re trying to explain. Let’s see if it makes any sense.

  • S2022E05 Are Cosmic Strings Cracks in the Universe?

    • February 23, 2022

    Reality has cracks in it. Universe-spanning filaments of ancient Big Bang energy, formed from topological defects in the quantum fields, aka cosmic strings. They have subatomic thickness but prodigious mass and they lash through space at a close to the speed of light. They could be the most bizarre undiscovered entities that actually exist.

  • S2022E06 Is the Proxima System Our Best Hope For Another Earth?

    • March 8, 2022
    • YouTube

    At just four light years away, Proxima Centauri is our closest solar neighbor. The recent discovery of the new exoplanet Proxima D, has reopened the discussion of whether the proxima system is our best chance at reaching another Earth. How did we discover Proxima D? How do we know what the conditions are on planets so far away? Watch the episode to learn more.

  • S2022E07 What If Charge is NOT Fundamental?

    • March 16, 2022
    • YouTube

    If you've studied any physics you know that like charges repel and opposite charges attract. But why? It's as though this thing - electric charge - is as fundamental a property of an object as its mass. It just sort of ... is. Well it turns out if you dig deep enough, the fundamental-ness of charge unravels, and in many things, including mass itself, are unraveled with it.

  • S2022E08 Where Is The Center of The Universe?

    • March 23, 2022
    • YouTube

    Today we’re going to ask a simple-seeming question that will lead to so pretty wacky places. The question is this: If the universe has a center, where is it?

  • S2022E09 Could The Universe Be Inside A Black Hole?

    • March 30, 2022
    • YouTube

    What is inside a black hole? Inevitable crushing doom? Gateways to other universes? Weird, multidimensional libraries? If you’ve ever wanted to know then you might be in luck - Some physicists have argued that you’re inside one right now.

  • S2022E10 Does the Universe Create Itself?

    • April 20, 2022
    • YouTube

    Imagine you’re leading a game of 20 questions and you forget the thing you chose half way through. You have to keep answering yesses and nos and hope that you think of something that’s consistent with all your previous questions before the game is done. Well it could be that’s what the entire universe is doing. I hope it thinks of something good before we run out of questions.

  • S2022E11 Why Does the W Boson’s Mass Matter?

    • April 27, 2022
    • YouTube

    Fermilab physicists really care about the mass of the W boson. They spent nearly a decade recording collisions in the Tevatron collider and another decade analysing the data. This culminated in the April 7 announcement that this obscure particle’s mass seems to be heavier than expected. So why do we care? Because understanding why this particle even has mass was one of the most important breakthroughs in our understanding of the subatomic world. And because measuring its precise mass either doubles down on our current understanding or reveals a path to an even deeper knowledge. The FermiLab discrepancy is a tantalizing hint of the latter.

  • S2022E12 Does The Universe Expand Everywhere?

    • May 4, 2022
    • YouTube

    Space is big, and it’s getting bigger. But where does all that new space actually come from? And is it popping into existence all around you right now? Is that why the remote control is always further away than I thought?

  • S2022E13 What If the Galactic Habitable Zone LIMITS Intelligent Life?

    • May 18, 2022
    • YouTube

    Our solar system is a tiny bubble of habitability suspended in a vast universe that mostly wants to kill us. In fact, a good fraction of our own galaxy turns out to be utterly uninhabitable, even for sun—like stellar systems. Is this why .. most of us .. haven’t seen aliens?

  • S2022E14 How Was the Modern Milky Way Born?

    • May 25, 2022
    • YouTube

    When we scan the heavens with giant telescopes we see galactic cannibalism everywhere. We see moments that appear frozen on the human timescale, but are really snapshots of the incredibly violent process of galaxy formation. This is how all galaxies are made. We can piece together a pretty good understanding of this process from countless snapshots. Looking into the distance means looking into the past, so it’s possible to stitch together a Frankenstein flip book of galaxy evolution.

  • S2022E15 What If Physics IS NOT Describing Reality?

    • June 1, 2022
    • YouTube

    Neils Bohr said, “It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how Nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about Nature.” Well it turns out that if we pay attention to this subtle difference, some of the most mysterious aspects of nature make a lot more sense.

  • S2022E16 Has The Black Hole Information Paradox Been SOLVED?

    • June 15, 2022
    • YouTube

    Black holes are very real, but are also a theoretical nightmare. It turns out that in order to make sense of their paradoxical nature, every black hole has to be thought of as a multitude of imaginary black holes, all connected by wormholes. And you thought the universe couldn’t get any weirder.

  • S2022E17 Is Interstellar Travel Impossible?

    • June 22, 2022
    • YouTube

    Space is pretty deadly. But is it so deadly that we’re effectively imprisoned in our solar system forever? Many have said so, but a few have actually figured it out.

  • S2022E18 Could We Decode Alien Physics?

    • June 30, 2022
    • YouTube

    How hard can it really be to decode alien physics and engineering? It’s gotta map to our own physics - I mean, we live in the same universe. We start by noticing that the alien technology seems to use good ol’ fashioned electronics, even if it is insanely complex. We know this because the particle carried by the alien circuitry looks like the electron. We decide this through a process of elimination.

  • S2022E19 What If We Live in a Superdeterministic Universe?

    • July 20, 2022
    • YouTube

    Today we’re going to try to save reality - or at least realism. However this rescue effort has a price; one that you may not be willing to pay. Your very soul, or at least your free will, is on the line.

  • S2022E20 How Many States Of Matter Are There?

    • July 27, 2022
    • YouTube

    Let’s talk about states of matter. You know your states of matter don’t you? We have solids, liquids and gasses, and plasmas, quark-gluon plasmas, nuclear matter, bose-einstein condensates, neutronium, time crystals, and sand. Come to think of it, maybe I don’t know my states of matter. Or what a state of matter even is. Let’s see if we can figure it out.

  • S2022E21 What Happens Inside a Proton?

    • August 3, 2022
    • YouTube

    If we ever want to simulate a universe, we should probably learn to simulate even a single atomic nucleus. But it’s taken some of the most incredible ingenuity of the past half-century to figure out how that out. All so that today I can teach you how to simulate a very very small universe.

  • S2022E22 What If Dark Energy is a New Quantum Field?

    • August 17, 2022
    • YouTube

    What is Quintessence? Well we know that something is up with the way the universe is expanding - there’s some kind of anti-gravitational effect that’s causing the expansion to accelerate. We don’t know what it is - just that it competes against the inward-pulling effect of gravity. And it’s winning - it looks like the universe will expand forever, at an ever-increasing rate. We call this mysterious influence dark energy, but while we’ve talked a lot about how it behaves, we’ve never really explored what it is. So, what is dark energy, really?

  • S2022E23 What Makes The Strong Force Strong?

    • August 24, 2022
    • YouTube

    Original Title: Why Isn’t The Nucleus Ripped Apart? Quantum mechanics gets weirder as you go to smaller sizes and higher energies. It’s strange enough for atoms, but positively bizarre when we get to the atomic nucleus. And today we’re going nuclear, as we dive into the weird world of quantum chromodynamics and the strong force.

  • S2022E24 Could the Higgs Boson Lead Us to Dark Matter?

    • September 14, 2022
    • YouTube

    The discovery of the Higgs boson ten years ago in the Large Hadron Collider was the culmination of decades of work and the collaboration of 1000s of brilliant and passionate people. It was the final piece needed to confirm the standard model of particle physics as it now stands. There are still many outstanding questions - for example, it seems like nothing in the standard model can explain what dark matter is. So the discovery of the Higgs wasn’t the end of particle physics - but it may be the way forward. Many physicists think that the secret to finding the elusive dark matter particle will come by studying the Higgs. In fact, the first tantalizing evidence is already in.

  • S2022E25 How YOU Can Use JWST

    • September 21, 2022
    • YouTube

    You’ve probably heard about the James Webb Space Telescope and seen some cool pictures. But why should astronomers have all the fun? How do we get to use this new toy ourselves?

  • S2022E26 Why Is 1/137 One of the Greatest Unsolved Problems In Physics?

    • September 28, 2022
    • YouTube

    The Fine Structure Constant is one the strangest numbers in all of physics. It’s the job of physicists to worry about numbers, but there’s one number that physicists have stressed about more than any other. That number is 0.00729735256 - approximately 1/137. This is the fine structure constant, and it appears everywhere in our equations of quantum physics, and we’re still trying to figure out why.

  • S2022E27 The REAL Possibility of Mapping Alien Planets!

    • October 12, 2022
    • YouTube

    I’m going to tell you about the craziest proposal for an astrophysics mission that has a good chance of actually happening. A train of spacecraft sailing the sun’s light to a magical point out there in space where the Sun’s own gravity turns it into a gigantic lens. What could such a solar-system-sized telescope do? Pretty much anything. But definitely map the surfaces of alien worlds.

  • S2022E28 The Equation That Explains (Nearly) Everything!

    • October 19, 2022
    • YouTube

  • S2022E29 Why Did Quantum Entanglement Win the Nobel Prize in Physics?

    • October 26, 2022
    • YouTube

    The Nobel prize in physics is typically awarded to scientists who make sense of nature; those whose discoveries render the universe more comprehensible. But the 2022 Nobel has been awarded to three physicists who revealed that the universe is even stranger than we thought thanks to Quantum Entanglement

  • S2022E30 What If Humanity Is Among The First Spacefaring Civilizations?

    • November 9, 2022
    • YouTube

    Half of the universe is filled with expansionist alien civilizations, and it’s only a matter of time before they’ll reach us. OK, that sounded a little sensationalist. But it’s also the conclusion of a recent astrophysics paper. Let’s see how they figure this, and whether we should take it seriously.

  • S2022E31 Are there Undiscovered Elements Beyond The Periodic Table?

    • November 16, 2022
    • YouTube

    Adamantium, bolognium, dilithium. Element Zero, Kryptonite. Mythril, Netherite, Orichalcum, Unobtanium. We love the idea of fictional elements with miraculous properties that science has yet to discover. But is it really possible that new elements exist beyond the periodic table?

  • S2022E32 How To See Black Holes By Catching Neutrinos

    • November 23, 2022
    • YouTube

    Neutrinos are one of the most bizarre of known particles. Black holes are probably the most bizarre of astrophysical objects. Makes sense we should use one to study the other, no? Well, today we’re doing just that.

  • S2022E33 How Are Quasiparticles Different From Particles?

    • December 8, 2022
    • YouTube

    The device you’re watching this video on is best understood by thinking about positive and negative charges moving around a circuit of diodes and transistors. But the only elementary particle actually flowing in the circuit is the negatively charged electron. And yet those flowing positive charges are there, in the form of a particle you may never have heard of.

  • S2022E34 How Can Matter Be BOTH Liquid AND Gas?

    • December 14, 2022
    • YouTube

    Supercritical Fluids are one the strangest states of matter and yet they are found everywhere from Decaf Coffee, to dry cleaning, to the atmosphere of Jupiter. When we think of an exotic state of matter we tend to think of the really weird things that matter can do in extreme circumstances - like how at very high temperatures we get the plasma that the sun is made of, or at extreme densities we get the nuclear matter of neutron stars. But there’s one state of matter - supercritical fluid - that’s not solid, liquid or gas, but is also not confined to extreme or rare environments. In fact, there are planets in our solar system completely covered with oceans of the stuff, and you’ve often been the beneficiary of its powers without even knowing it.

  • SPECIAL 0x10 Comment Response Live Stream

    • April 24, 2023

Season 2023

  • S2023E01 The NEW SCIENCE of Moon Formation

    • January 11, 2023
    • YouTube

    Einstein once asked whether “the moon exists only when I look at it?". It was rhetorical objection to the idea that measurement in quantum mechanics causes reality to become real. But there was a time when the moon didn’t exist, and then hours later suddenly did. At least, according to the latest simulations of its formation.

  • S2023E02 What If The Universe Is Math?

    • January 18, 2023
    • YouTube

    In his essay “The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics”, the physicist Eugine Wigner said that “the enormous usefulness of mathematics in the natural sciences is something bordering on the mysterious”. This statement was inspired by the observation that so many aspects of the physical world seem to be describable and predictable by mathematical equations to incredible precision especially as quantum phenomena. But quantum phenomena have no subjective qualities and have questionable physicality. They seem to be completely describable by only numbers, and their behavior precisely defined by equations. In a sense, the quantum world is made of math. So does that mean the universe is made of math too? If you believe the Mathematical Universe Hypothesis then yes. And so are you.

  • S2023E03 What If Alien Life Were Silicon-Based?

    • January 26, 2023
    • YouTube

    Life as we know it is carbon-based, but does it have to be this way? There’s another element on the periodic table that shares some of the key properties of carbon but is far more abundant on most planets. I’m talking about silicon. So is there silicon-based life out there?

  • S2023E04 How Earth REALLY Moves Through the Galaxy

    • February 8, 2023
    • YouTube

    Perhaps you’ve seen videos of how the planets of the solar system move through the universe in this cool helix. Not only are these misleading, but the Earth’s real motion - YOUR motion through the universe, is way more complicated and way more interesting.

  • S2023E05 How Does The Nucleus Hold Together?

    • February 15, 2023
    • YouTube

    Two protons next to each other in an atomic nucleus are repelling each other electromagnetically with enough force to lift a medium-sized labradoodle off the ground. Release this energy and you have, well, you have a nuclear explosion. Just as well there's an even stronger force than the electromagnetism holding our nuclei together. But it's not the strong force, as you might have imagined. At least not directly. Nuclei are held together by a quirk of nature, without which we would have no complex atoms, no chemistry, and certainly no labradoodles.

  • S2023E06 What If Space And Time Are NOT Real?

    • February 23, 2023
    • YouTube

    Physics progresses by breaking our intuitions, but we’re now at a point where further progress may require us to do away with the most intuitive and seemingly fundamental concepts of all—space and time.

  • S2023E07 What If Space & Time Are Created By Our Brains?

    • March 15, 2023
    • YouTube

    Physics is the business of figuring out the structure of the world. So are our brains. But sometimes physics comes to conclusions that are in direct conflict with concepts fundamental to our minds, such as the realness of space and time. How do we tell who’s correct? Are time and space objective realities or human-invented concepts?

  • S2023E08 What If Black Holes ARE Dark Energy?

    • March 22, 2023
    • YouTube

    We tend to imagine there are connectings between things that we don’t understand. Quantum mechanics and consciousness, aliens and pyramids, black holes and dark matter, dark matter and dark energy, dark energy and black holes. Usually there’s no real relationship whatsoever, but this last pair—black holes and dark energy being the same thing—has received some recent hype in the press. Let’s see if it might actually be true.

  • S2023E09 How Much Of The Universe Can Humanity Ever See?

    • March 29, 2023
    • YouTube

    There’s an absolute limit to our access to the universe beyond our own galaxy. There’s a limit to what we can ever hope to explore or send signals to, and a very different limit to what we can ever hope to witness. Today we’re going to explore the latter. We’re going to figure out the absolute limit of our future view of the universe, and of the universe’s ability to influence us. Next time we’ll turn it around and ask: how much of the external universe can WE potentially influence, and even explore?

  • S2023E10 How Far Beyond Earth Could Humanity Expand?

    • April 12, 2023
    • YouTube

    We humans have always been explorers. The great civilizations that have arisen across the world are owed to our restless ancestors. These days, there’s not much of Earth left to explore. But if we look up, there’s a whole universe out there waiting for us. Future generations may one day explore the cosmos and even settle entire other galaxies. But there is a hard limit to how much of the universe we can expand into. So, how big can humanity get?

  • S2023E11 NEW DISCOVERY About Supermassive Black Holes Explained!

    • April 20, 2023
    • YouTube

    Astrophysicists have discovered a black hole that for millions of years has been blasting vast particle beams in opposite directions across the sky. And has recently swiveled to point its one of these jets directly at us. Is this an intergalactic death ray of an alien civilization that has suddenly noticed us? Absolutely not, and there’s no danger at all. But it’s a pretty cool phenomenon anyway, and something we’ve never seen before.

  • S2023E12 Fermions Vs. Bosons Explained with Statistical Mechanics!

    • May 11, 2023
    • YouTube

  • S2023E13 Could LIGO Find MASSIVE Alien Spaceships?

    • May 17, 2023
    • YouTube

    Whenever we open a new window on the universe, we discover things that no one expected. Our newfound ability to measure ripples in the fabric of spacetime—gravitational waves—is a very new window, and so far we’ve seen a lot of wild stuff. We’ve observed black holes colliding, and their oddly high masses challenges our understanding of black hole formation and growth. We’ve seen colliding neutron stars that have forced us to rewrite our ideas of how many of the elements of the periodic table get made. But what else might be hiding in the ripples’ of spacetime? Oh, I know: how about the gravitational wakes caused by planet-sized alien spacecraft accelerating to near light speed.

  • S2023E14 Is 'Perpetual Motion' Possible with Superfluids?

    • May 24, 2023
    • YouTube

    The weird rules of quantum mechanics lead to all sorts of bizarre phenomena on tiny scales— particles teleporting through walls or being in multiple places at once or simultaneously existing and not. Shame all this magical behavior doesn’t happen on scales large enough for us to see. Except that there is a way for us to see large-scale quantum weirdness, and that’s Bose-Einstein Condensates & Superfluids.

  • S2023E15 Can We Move THE SUN?

    • May 31, 2023
    • YouTube

    Interstellar travel is horrible-what with the cramped quarters of your spaceship and only the thin hull separating you from deathly cold and deadly cosmic rays. Much safer to stay on here Earth with our gloriously habitable biosphere, protective magnetic field, and endless energy from the Sun. But what if we could have the best of all worlds? No pun intended. What if we could turn our entire solar system into a spaceship and drive the Sun itself around the galaxy? Well, I don't know if we definitely can, but we might not not be able to.

  • S2023E16 What Supernova Distance Would Trigger Mass Extinction?

    • June 14, 2023
    • YouTube

    The deaths of massive stars results in one of the most beautiful and violent events in the universe: the supernova. They are so luminous we can see them here on Earth and historical records show that we can even see them into the day. But supernovas release deadly and violent radiation that could destroy our atmosphere. So how far away do these supernova have to be for humanity to be safe? And when will the next supernova occur

  • S2023E17 Did AI Prove Our Proton Model WRONG?

    • June 21, 2023
    • YouTube

    The humble proton may seem simple enough, and they’re certainly common. People are made of cells, cells are made of molecules, molecules are made of atoms, atoms are made of electrons, protons, and neutrons. And protons are each made of three up or down quarks. Simple stuff, right? All except for that last part. Protons are actually made of many, many quarks that happen to look like three only when we look at them in a particular way. And even then, sometimes they’re made of 5 quarks - including the charm quark.

  • S2023E18 Does Axionic Dark Matter Bind Galaxies Together?

    • June 28, 2023
    • YouTube

    Quantum mechanics is our best theory of the fundamental nature of reality, but it's usually only distinguishable from familiar classical mechanics on the smallest scales. However, there are some fringe cases where its distinct features manifest on scales we can observe—in things like superfluids, or the interiors of collapsed stars. But it’s also possible that our entire galaxy is filled with a reverberating quantum mechanical wave that literally holds the galaxy together—and in fact explains all the dark matter that we see across the universe. And this isn’t even a fringe theory. It’s axionic dark matter.

  • S2023E19 What If The Speed of Light is NOT CONSTANT?

    • July 19, 2023
    • YouTube

    One of the most fundamental physics facts is that the speed of light in a vacuum is constant for all observers. But can we really be sure that the speed of light wasn’t different in the past, or perhaps in other parts of the universe? In fact, variable speed of light theories have long been used to try to explain everything from dark energy to gravity itself. Let’s explore how constant this fundamental constant really is.

  • S2023E20 Was the Gravitational Wave Background Finally Discovered?!?

    • July 26, 2023
    • YouTube

    A few weeks ago a large team of gravitational wave astronomers announced something pretty wild. The moderately confident detection of pervasive ripples in the fabric of space time that presumably fills the cosmos, detected by watching for subtle connections between the signals from rapidly spinning cores of dead stars in our galactic neighborhood. In other words, the gravitational wave background has probably been detected using a pulsar timing array.

  • S2023E21 Do We Need a NEW Dark Matter Model?

    • August 2, 2023
    • YouTube

    We have no idea what dark matter is, other than it’s some source of gravity that is completely invisible but exerts way more pull that all of the regular matter. More than all of the stars, all of the gas, all of the black holes…unless dark matter is black holes, then black holes are most of everything. Dark matter constitutes 80% or so of the mass in the universe, which means even our Milky Way galaxy is mostly a vast ball of dark matter that happens to have attracted a relative sprinkling of baryons—atoms in the form of gas, which lit up as starry glitter spinning in the middle of this invisible gravitational well.

  • S2023E22 Did JWST Discover Dark Matter Stars?

    • August 16, 2023
    • YouTube

    We knew that the James Webb Space Telescope would find interesting stuff, especially about the mysterious early times. For example, there are hints that the galaxies we’re seeing are brighter and more regular than expected given the short amount of time they’d had to grow. Well, perhaps no one was expecting that we’d find a completely new type of star—one mostly made of and powered by dark matter and shining as bright as an entire galaxy. Which, by the way, might help us explain those pesky giant galaxies.

  • S2023E23 What If Space is NOT Empty?

    • August 24, 2023
    • YouTube

    Spacetime on its smallest scales is a seething ocean of black holes and wormholes flickering into and out of existence—or so many physicists think has to be the case. But why should we take this spacetime foam seriously if we’ve never seen any evidence of it?

  • S2023E24 What NEW SCIENCE Would We Discover with a Moon Telescope?

    • September 13, 2023
    • YouTube

    In order to see the faint light from objects in deepest space, astronomers go to the darkest places on the planet. In order to listen to their quite radio signals, they head as far from any radio-noisy humans as possible. But there’s nowhere on the earth, or even orbiting the Earth, that’s far enough to hear to the faint radio hum from the time before stars. In fact, we may need to build a giant radio telescope in the quietest place in the solar system—the far side of the moon.

  • S2023E25 Are Room Temperature Superconductors IMPOSSIBLE?

    • September 20, 2023
    • YouTube

    Superconductive materials seem miraculous. Their resistanceless flow of electricity has been exploited in some powerful ways—from super-strong magnets used in MRIs, particle accelerators and fusion plants. And then there’s, their bizarre ability to levitate in magnetic fields. But the broader use of superconductors is limited because they need to be cooled to extremely low temperatures to work. But what if we could produce superconductivity at room temperature? It would change the world.

  • S2023E26 Are Many Worlds & Pilot Wave THE SAME Theory?

    • September 28, 2023
    • YouTube

    Are Pilot Wave & Many Worlds THE SAME Theory? It’s hard to interpret the strange results of quantum mechanics, though many have tried. Interpretations range from the outlandish—like the multiple universes of Many Worlds, to the almost mundane, like the very mechanical Pilot Wave Theory. But perhaps we’re converging on an answer, because some are arguing that these two interpretations are really the same thing.

  • S2023E27 The Farthest Star Ever Seen!

    • October 12, 2023
    • YouTube

    To understand where we came from—how earth, the solar system, the galaxy became what they are today—we need to understand the beginning of time. For example, how did the first galaxies pull themselves together from the dark universe-filling ocean of gas that followed the Big Bang? With the James Webb Space Telescope we’re starting to be able to find those first galaxies. It’s hard work because at those crazy distances all we see is tiny, faint and fuzzy blobs. If only we could see the individual stars in those galaxies we could learn so much more. Well, now using this one weird trick we can do exactly that. Or at least we have one lonely star at the end of the universe. But it won’t be lonely for long.

  • S2023E28 Why Did Attosecond Physics Win the NOBEL PRIZE?

    • October 19, 2023
    • YouTube

    Whenever we open a new window on the universe we discover something new. Whether it's figuring out how to see to greater distances like with telescopes, or down to smaller size-scales like with microscopes, or perhaps expanding our vision to new wavelengths of light or via exotic means such as in neutrinos or gravitational waves. Well, the 2023 Nobel prize in physics has been awarded to three physicists for opening just such a new window—but it's not a window to a new size scale or a new mode of seeing—-it’s for a new window in time. It’s for attosecond physics—the billionth of a billionth of a second that represents the timescale of the insides of atoms. This year’s Nobel in physics is for a microscope in time.

  • S2023E29 How Will We (Most Likely) Discover Alien Life?

    • November 2, 2023
    • YouTube

  • S2023E30 What If Gravity is NOT Quantum?

    • November 9, 2023
    • YouTube

  • S2023E31 Does Many Worlds Explain Quantum Probabilities?

    • November 30, 2023
    • YouTube

    Can The Measurement Problem Be Solved?

  • S2023E32 What if Humans Are NOT Earth's First Civilization? | Silurian Hypothesis

    • December 7, 2023
    • YouTube

  • S2023E33 What If There's A Black Hole Inside The Sun? | Hawking Stars

    • December 20, 2023
    • YouTube

Season 2024

Additional Specials

  • SPECIAL 0x1 Here's Why I Love PBS

    • April 10, 2017

  • SPECIAL 0x2 Space Time VR

    • December 22, 2017

  • SPECIAL 0x3 Space Time Livestream: Ask Matt Anything

    • April 28, 2020
    • PBS

    In today's livestream you'll be able to Ask Matt O'Dowd, a PhD in astrophysics, anything. Tune in to ask your own question or see some of the great questions our audience has for Matt!

  • SPECIAL 0x4 Theory of Everything Livestreams with Amazing Guests

    • July 23, 2020

  • SPECIAL 0x5 What is a Theory of Everything Livestream

    • July 28, 2020
    • PBS

    In this 90 minute conversation we explore what Theories of Everything really are outside the hype, dig into the essential physics mysteries that compel us to search for one, and survey the major TOE contenders currently being explored by the physics community.

  • SPECIAL 0x6 Theory of Everything Controversies: Livestream

    • August 10, 2020
    • PBS

    The second in our two event series about Theories of Everything! Watch the first one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_izoc... Please subscribe to Brian Keating's YouTube Channel to watch one-on-one interviews with the guest speakers and more: https://www.youtube.com/DrBrianKeating Existing Theories of Everything have not yet produced experimental evidence that solves the fundamental challenges facing physics. That lack of progress has opened up a sea of controversy, from disagreements about the very necessity of TOEs, to questioning the cost/benefit of mega-billion dollar particle accelerators in search of them, to the emergence of competing TOEs from physicists outside of the academic community. In this 90 minute chat we dive into the existential questions around TOEs. Special thanks to Brian Keating, Lee Smolin, Sabine Hossenfelder, and Eric Weinstein for helping us create this great event.

  • SPECIAL 0x7 2021 End of Year AMA!

    • December 10, 2021

  • SPECIAL 0x8 The Nature of Space and Time AMA

    • February 10, 2022