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How Did The Universe Begin?

2h 26m 40s21,077 単語3,364 segmentsEnglish

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13.8 billion years ago the universe

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began in one moment there was nothing

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and the

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next everything just how this is

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possible is perhaps the biggest question

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in all of science crossing the

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boundaries between Theory and experiment

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physics and philosophy everything we

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know about our universe hinges on

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mechanism process and causality we

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strive to understand understand the

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reasons things are the way they are and

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yet at the most fundamental level we do

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not know how or why the entire universe

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came to

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[Music]

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be but this lack of explanation is not

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for want of

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searching perhaps as famed cosmologist

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Steven Hawking once supposed there

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really was nothing before considering

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space and time as inherent conjoined

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properties of the universe we inhabit

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the beginning of that Universe marked

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the beginning of time before time there

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could be no space and therefore no

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Universe considering the geometry of

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SpaceTime back through the ages he saw

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it contract curve around and eventually

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round off searching for something beyond

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that would be as meaningless as

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searching for something that was north

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of the North Pole or perhaps there was

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no actual beginning but rather a limit

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to our powers of observation scientists

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believe that it was a split second

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period of exponential expansion known as

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inflation that put the bang in the Big

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Bang and which set the stage for

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everything that was to follow our

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inflation stopped after a tiny fraction

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of a second but some physicists have

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argued that this is not the only period

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of inflation in the cosmos as a whole

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rather inflation would continue

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elsewhere eternally producing bubble

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universes distributed through a potent

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Everlasting Multiverse or perhaps our

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current universe is merely the latest in

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a long and potentially infinite series

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of expanding and Contracting Cosmos a

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theory known as the big bounce in this

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instead of starting from nothing and

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inflating exponentially to reduce the

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structure we see today contemporary

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physicists like Paul steinhardt suggest

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a cyclical growth and contraction of

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everything within the universe or

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perhaps our understanding of scale is

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fundamentally incomplete physicist Roger

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Penrose considered the properties of

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shapes regardless of their size and

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believes we can do the same with the

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cosmos in this idea the universe loses a

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sense of time and scale at the

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infinitely small and the infinitely big

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and becomes to all intents and purposes

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equivalent the game of chess played the

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same whether on a board that fits in

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your pocket or spans an entire Courtyard

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or perhaps our Cosmos came about as a

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transient Collision of dimension

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String Theory attempts to explain the

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fundamentals of reality as Tiny

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vibrating strings within an

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11-dimensional reality of hyperspace the

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three dimensions of space and one

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dimension of time that we experience

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within our Cosmos are merely a single

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brain in the overall bulk with the

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beginning and growth of our universe

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coming about as higher order brains

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Collide or perhaps there is something

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else some corner of mathematics or

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physics that we have yet to shine a

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light into and which for the time being

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eludes our

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understanding for now our universe's

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origin story remains a mystery a

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multiple choice Choose Your Own

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Adventure nevertheless 13.8 billion

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years ago the universe did begin and

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this is the story of what happen

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[Music]

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next thank you to better help for

4:17

sponsoring this video this is Proxima

4:20

centuri even if we traveled at more than

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50,000 km an hour it would still take us

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more than 80,000 years to arrive there

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and it is our closest star it's

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estimated there are 100,000 million more

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distant stars in the Milky Way and so

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sometimes it can be overwhelming to

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square our own lives with the vastness

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of everything else and to work these

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hotu and I've also linked them Below in

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the description thanks to betterhelp for

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supporting educational content on

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YouTube where is the hottest place in

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the

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universe you might expect to find it in

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the natural Fusion reactor at the center

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of a star but even as you incinerate in

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the the plunge through its fiery depths

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your journey would be in vain

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temperatures at the core reach a mere 15

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million de Celsius you may look to even

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more violent phenomena in the cosmos

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like explosive supern noi here during

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the dramatic death of a star superheated

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shells of gas are rejected many light

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years in every direction leaving a

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gravitationally compactified neutron

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star at their Center temperatures here

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far exceed normal Stellar furnaces

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reaching 100 billion de C but this still

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isn't the hottest temperature to be

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found in fact the highest temperature

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that has ever been recorded anywhere in

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our vast Cosmos was 100 m beneath the

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snow covered ground near the shores of

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Lake Lal in

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Switzerland and it didn't come about

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from a natural process but rather the

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concerted efforts of hundreds of

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scientists and billions of euros worth

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of research and development in cern's

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Large Hadron Collider where individual

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particles are routinely smashed into one

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another at velocities approaching the

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speed of light the Collision of two lead

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atoms in 2012 briefly produced a

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temperature of around

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5.5 trillion de C 50 times hotter than a

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supernova but this still isn't even

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close to the highest possible

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temperature temperature is little more

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than a manifestation of a particle's

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energy its motion or how fast it's

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vibrating absolute zero marking 0 Kelvin

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is the lowermost limit where particles

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hypothetically would come to a complete

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shuddering stop were it possible to

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reach but there is also an upper limit

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too an absolute hot that marks the

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highest temperature before the particles

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themselves are torn apart by their own

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energy it it's known as the plank

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temperature and it is around 1.4 * 10 to

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the 32 kelv Max plank who gave his name

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to this impossibly blistering

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temperature was a German theoretical

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physicist who found his academic stride

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around the beginning of the 20th century

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his ideas are seen as the founding

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blocks of quantum physics and led to the

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quantization of light into discrete

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chunks of energy called photons but they

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also led him to consider the fundamental

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Quant of other natural

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phoma using such Universal qualities as

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the speed of light and the force of

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gravity in combination with his aonomus

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plank constant he defined the plank

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length the smallest Quantum of distance

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as around 1.6 * 10- 35 M about 100

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quintilian times smaller than a proton

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the time it takes for light to travel

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