TRANSCRIPCIÓNEnglish

Why Is The Universe The Same Everywhere?

38m 27s5,301 palabras1,039 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPCIÓN COMPLETA

0:00

[Music]

0:04

a great

0:05

orbiting telescope floats serenely in

0:08

the black

0:09

collecting light from the heavens above

0:13

it adjusts its field of view slightly

0:16

turning away from the nearby stars

0:18

and peers deeper into the darker reaches

0:21

of the night sky

0:23

beneath it the planet turns its white

0:26

clouds

0:27

swirling serenely in the faint stellar

0:30

glow and positioned as it is

0:33

above the turbulent atmosphere this

0:36

telescope

0:36

has an unrivalled view of the cosmos

0:42

closest just a few light years away are

0:45

individual stars

0:46

unique suns just like the one now hiding

0:49

out of sight behind the planet

0:51

they cluster thickest in a wide bright

0:53

band that cuts the blackness in two

0:56

this is the galactic plane looking along

0:59

it

0:59

is to look to the center of the galaxy

1:01

some 100

1:02

000 light years away and the galaxy is

1:06

an immense

1:06

flattened spiral home to 400 billion

1:10

suns but the little telescope turns its

1:13

gaze away

1:14

from this blinding light looking up

1:17

above the galactic plain

1:19

the stars are more sparsely scattered

1:21

but the sky is lit instead by

1:23

dim multi-coloured smears each is a

1:26

galaxy in its own right

1:27

containing billions of stars that burn

1:29

just as brightly as those nearby

1:31

but whose intensity is masked by sheer

1:34

distance

1:35

mapping the positions of these diverse

1:37

galaxies the orbiting telescope sees a

1:39

few dozen cluster loosely together in a

1:41

local group

1:42

deeper into the blackness even dimmer

1:44

smudges hint at more distant

1:46

galactic clusters with enough time the

1:49

telescope can map these too

1:51

finding that they cling together in even

1:54

vaster

1:54

superclusters several hundred million

1:57

light years across

1:58

and bordered by gaping black voids where

2:01

no galaxies are to be found at all

2:05

and at the very edge of its magnified

2:07

site the instrument glimpses

2:09

the very edge of the observable universe

2:13

45 billion light years away

2:18

thus the structure of the universe is

2:21

revealed in the simple curved mirror

2:23

of an orbiting telescope but this

2:26

instrument

2:28

does not orbit the earth

2:35

it is a machine of another world

2:38

orbiting an

2:38

alien planet that itself orbits an alien

2:41

sun

2:42

the bright streak of the galactic plane

2:44

is not that of the milky way

2:46

and the nearby galaxies are also foreign

2:48

and unfamiliar

2:49

our home planet is somewhere else in

2:51

that extraterrestrial instrument

2:53

sites although it would be almost

2:54

impossible to pinpoint

2:56

there are no landmarks in the

2:58

large-scale structure of the cosmos

3:00

no major differences from place to place

3:02

that help us find our way

3:04

the universe looks surprisingly similar

3:08

wherever you happen to be looking from

3:11

it has broadly the same temperature

3:13

and the same lumpy structure of dense

3:15

superclustered galaxies and hollow voids

3:18

looked at from an omnipotent external

3:20

point of view where entire galactic

3:22

clusters are reduced to mere points of

3:24

light

3:24

the cosmos is remarkably uniform

3:28

but how did this come to be

3:32

how could such distant parts of the

3:34

universe separated by tens of billions

3:36

of light years

3:38

be so similar places so distant

3:41

that they could never ever have had any

3:44

contact

3:46

it is a mystery that has plagued our

3:49

accepted cosmological histories

3:51

since they were written a gaping hole in

3:54

our understanding

3:55

is our story of the origin of the

3:57

universe incomplete

4:00

or is this evidence of uniformity merely

4:02

a freak occurrence a bizarre coincidence

4:04

localized to our view

4:06

of the infinite cosmos to truly

4:09

investigate this mystery

4:10

cosmological detectives must take an

4:12

explosive journey

4:14

right back to the very beginning we must

4:17

probe improbable connections between the

4:19

minuscule quantum world

4:21

and the gigantic realm of superclusters

4:24

and open our minds to the even wider

4:27

even weirder

4:28

possibility of a nested multiverse

4:30

hiding within our very own cosmos

4:35

we must ask what put the bang

4:38

into the big bang or if the bang

4:43

should even be there at all

4:58

[Music]

5:17

about 13.8 billion years ago

5:20

the universe began

5:25

we don't know for sure how it happened

5:27

what it looked like or how it behaved

5:29

during its very first moments but all of

5:31

the evidence we have suggests that

5:34

at the beginning it was very very small

5:37

and very very hot calculations by the

5:40

physicist and priest george lemaitre

5:42

in the 1920s revealed that we live in an

5:44

expanding universe

5:46

which logically must have begun much

5:48

smaller than it is today

5:50

subsequent observations have bolstered

5:52

his mathematical viewpoint

5:53

the light from distant galaxies appears

5:55

more red than it should do

5:57

as if the wavelengths themselves have

5:59

been stretched

6:00

the further those galaxies are the more

6:02

red they appear

6:03

so the faster they are receding such a

6:05

pattern could only arise if the entire

6:08

cosmos were expanding

6:09

and had been since the beginning of time

6:12

thanks to the finite speed of light

6:14

those distant far reaches of the

6:16

observable universe are also

6:18

gaping windows into the distant past and

6:21

they too

6:22

bear the marks of a smaller hotter

6:24

beginning

6:25

based on this startling agreement of

6:27

mathematical theory and highly precise

6:29

observations

6:30

the so-called big bang has become the

6:32

most widely accepted

6:34

theory for the origin of our universe

6:37

but there is a problem

6:42

there are many features of our modern

6:44

universe that don't

6:46

fit with a simplistic expanding big bang

6:49

origin story not least an infinitely

6:52

small infinitely dense and infinitely

6:54

hot beginning violating

6:56

all known laws of physics but there is

6:59

more

7:00

there are features of the cosmos today

7:02

that are very hard to explain

7:03

if the universe had simply been

7:05

expanding at a steady rate

7:07

all this time thorns in the side of the

7:10

big bang theory

7:12

that threaten to bring it all crashing

7:15

back down

7:18

the first is known as the horizon

7:21

problem

7:25

an alien observer looking at the

7:27

universe from tens of billions of light

7:29

years away would see a cosmos almost

7:31

indistinguishable from our own in

7:33

particular

7:34

the background radiation which raises

7:36

the average temperature of space to a

7:38

few degrees above absolute zero

7:40

wherever in the observable universe one

7:42

happens to observe it

7:44

the chances of this being the case under

7:46

a simplistic big bang regime are

7:48

vanishingly small

7:49

the only way that the temperature of the

7:51

cosmos can be so homogenized

7:53

is if all parts of that cosmos were in

7:56

contact

7:56

long enough for them to reach

7:58

equilibrium

8:00

a cold room with a single heat source in

8:02

one corner

DESBLOQUEAR MÁS

Regístrate gratis para acceder a funciones premium

VISOR INTERACTIVO

Mira el video con subtítulos sincronizados, superposición ajustable y control total de la reproducción.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

RESUMEN DE IA

Obtén un resumen instantáneo generado por IA del contenido del video, los puntos clave y las conclusiones.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

TRADUCIR

Traduce la transcripción a más de 100 idiomas con un solo clic. Descarga en cualquier formato.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

MAPA MENTAL

Visualiza la transcripción como un mapa mental interactivo. Comprende la estructura de un vistazo.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

CHATEA CON LA TRANSCRIPCIÓN

Haz preguntas sobre el contenido del video. Obtén respuestas impulsadas por IA directamente desde la transcripción.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

SACA MÁS PARTIDO A TUS TRANSCRIPCIONES

Regístrate gratis y desbloquea el visor interactivo, los resúmenes de IA, las traducciones, los mapas mentales y mucho más. No se requiere tarjeta de crédito.

    Why Is The Univ… - Transcripción Completa | YouTubeTranscript.dev