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What Is Hidden In The Core Of A Neutron Star?

55m 15s7,624 palabras1,255 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPCIÓN COMPLETA

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[Music]

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A buildup of magnetic energy within a

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star leads to a massive solar flare

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lashing outwards into the cold of space.

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A distant super giant begins to fuse

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iron within its core, setting off a

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chain reaction that will tear it apart

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completely in a spectacular hypernova.

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and pressure builds up within a rapidly

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spinning magnetar, causing a star quake

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on its surface that releases a

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superpowered gammaray

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burst. These are all examples of cosmic

0:36

tipping points, moments when the

0:39

universe snaps.

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The material that makes up planets,

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stars, galaxies, and even ourselves may

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appear stable, but it all teters on a

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delicate tight rope. From the tiniest

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atom to the largest supercluster, push

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anything beyond a critical tipping

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point, and chaos

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ensues. Yet, there is often salvation.

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Almost always, some subatomic safety net

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kicks in to wrestle back stability and

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prevent complete destruction. a way for

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Jackal to keep Hyde in check. And

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nowhere is this more true than inside

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Neutron stars, the final barrier before

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cosmic oblivion. The most extreme object

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possible within space and

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[Music]

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time. Tiny, incomprehensibly heavy, dead

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stars that spin at dizzying speeds.

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Their very existence strains the laws of

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physics. The gravity on their surfaces

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is so strong that mountains can only

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form fractions of a millimeter high. And

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if you dropped something, it would reach

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half the speed of light before it hit

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the ground. And yet somehow they only

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get more extreme as we explore deeper.

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And the bizarre secret of what dwells in

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their center, where matter is put under

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pressures seen nowhere else in the

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cosmos, may even force us to rethink

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what we understand about the universe

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itself.

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They are the ultimate physics

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experiments, forcing ordinary matter

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into extraordinary situations that

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teeter on the edge of oblivion. To

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understand the interior of neutron stars

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is to understand the true nature of

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reality. And so just how far can you

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push the universe before it breaks?

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[Music]

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4 years ago, I started the entire

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of the universe and get started on your

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passion

4:11

project. What are stars made

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of? It is Christmas Eve 2024. For those

4:20

of us on Earth and kneedeep in Marrynt,

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the Parker Solar Probe is shattering

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records. Hurtling through space at a

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staggering 200 km/s, it swoops to within

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6 million km of the sweltering solar

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surface. It is the closest any

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human-made object has ever dared to

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venture to our sun. 6 million km may

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sound a long way, but it's enough to

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place Parker inside the sun's outer

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atmosphere. a wispy gossamer layer known

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as the corona. It is from here that the

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sun launches its tirade of coronal mass

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ejections. Mountain-sized bombs of

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subatomic shrapnel that can cause

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widespread power cuts if they reach

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earth and overwhelm our magnetic field.

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Drop below the corona and you'll find a

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thin layer called the chromosphere.

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Roughly 5,000° C just before you reach

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the visible surface of the sun, the

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photosphere.

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The photosphere is constantly roing and

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churning as super hot material bubbles

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up from the cauldron below. It is an

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arresting image. But to truly understand

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this bizarre alien environment, what

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it's actually made of, and indeed what

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the interior of our own sun means for

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the mysterious cause of neutron stars,

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we have to go back in time more than a

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century before the Parker Solar Probe

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was even conceived of to Kolkata, India.

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Lord Kerzen sits hunched over a map of

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southern Asia, his sweat dripping onto

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archipelos and

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peninsulas. As viceroy of India in 1905,

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he's the direct representative of the

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British crown in this part of its

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sprawling empire. And he has a growing

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problem.

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Bengalian Indian nationalists are

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becoming increasingly vocal with their

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descent against the British Raj. Keren's

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eventual solution to partition Bengal

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along religious lines creating West

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Bengal for Hindus and East Bengal for

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Muslims. It is a disastrous move only

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serving to swell levels of discontent

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leading to boycots of British produce.

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And among those affected is teenager

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Maggnad Saha. Born to a poor family in

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Dha, now part of Bangladesh, he'd earned

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a full scholarship to the British run

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Dhaka Collegiate School, but was

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expelled due to his participation in

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these protests. The episode obviously

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had a profound impact on Saha as he

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remained actively involved in politics

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for the rest of his life. An avid

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champion of Indian

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independence. But Saha's expulsion was

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only a temporary setback in a

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flourishing academic career. And by 1923

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he'd become a professor at the

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University of

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Alahabad. And today he is most famous

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for his work on the Saha ionization

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equation. Thanks to which astronomers

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can take the local temperature and

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pressure and calculate how much of

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different parts of our sun is ionized

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and therefore what state of matter they

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are made up

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[Music]

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of. In physics, ionization is the

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process of destroying atoms, pushing

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them beyond a tipping point. In the most

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simplistic depiction of an atom,

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negatively charged particles called

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electrons orbit around a central

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positively charged nucleus. Although far

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from a perfect analogy, you can think of

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this as similar to planets orbiting

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around the sun. Whole atoms are

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electrically neutral with the opposite

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electric charges of the electrons and

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the nucleus canceling each other out.

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These opposite charges also provide an

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attractive force that keeps the

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electrons in orbit. Give these electrons

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an energy boost, however, perhaps by

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raising the temperature and they

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suddenly have enough energy to break

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free from their subatomic shackles. Like

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India, breaking away from colonial rule,

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the electrons have declared their

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independence. In the language of

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physicists, the material has been

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ionized. The result is an electrically

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charged soup of electrons and atomic

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nuclei known as a

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