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How Many Multiverses Are There?

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[Music]

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in 1828 amateur cartographer edward

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quinn finished his magnum opus

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the historical

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atlas

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published two years after his death it

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depicts our knowledge of the world as a

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flickering light blowing away clouds of

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ignorance unveiling continents and

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civilizations shrouded beneath

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it starts in 2348 bc beginning with the

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bible the dispersal of the clouds mirror

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european expansion into the lands beyond

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his known world little more than the

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lands of the euphrates and tigris rivers

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time marches on as we step through the

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pages of the atlas through the exodus of

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the israelites and the coming of the

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roman empire more of the world is

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revealed

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by the early 19th century the clouds are

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fully dispersed

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all the continents are visible there is

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no more land left to discover

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of course for the artist in china india

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australia or the americas the focus

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would be different each with their own

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origin story their own small portion of

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the world surrounded by their own

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darkness

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and indeed these clouds are not solely

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geographical

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all human endeavors begin in a fog of

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mystery a fog that only begins to clear

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when we learn something new

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like the sheathed surface of the earth

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clouds of mystery have also shrouded

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the universe

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over the last few hundred years we have

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turned our attention to the heavens with

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our most powerful telescopes we have

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peered deeper and deeper into the cosmos

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we have spied stars and galaxies black

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holes and planets we have peered back

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over 13 billion years and seen the very

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afterglow of creation we can even deduce

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the future history of our universe

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looking to the days of the last star

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trillions of years hence and even

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further to the time when mata melts and

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black holes evaporate

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one by one the universe has given up its

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secrets

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the cosmic clouds have steadily been

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lifted

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it might now appear that we have learned

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all there is to learn about the cosmos

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but just as the polymath simon newcombe

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found after claiming we had reached the

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limits of astronomy in 1888 and dying in

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1909 as einstein was upending the world

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of physics it is always a bad idea to

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bet against further

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discoveries

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and so this is where scientists find

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themselves

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now

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standing tall on towers of complex

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equations elaborate theories and

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remarkable observational tools they try

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to peer further

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into

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the fog

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but unlike quinn's atlas

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this is not only a fog

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of distance

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these are clouds that linger around us

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within us

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before us

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these are new universes born beyond our

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cosmic horizon in our distant cosmic

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past even inside us with every instance

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that passes

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as our knowledge of theoretical physics

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has grown what had once seemed radical

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has gradually forced its way into

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possibility and even probability

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multiverse theories have proliferated

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hoping to answer the deepest questions

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about what we

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and the entire cosmos

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is

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from parallel worlds of infinite use to

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barren deserts of endless nothing

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scientists are blowing away the cosmic

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fog of unknowing revealing a warped

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russian doll of infinities nestled both

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within and right next to each other

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[Music]

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welcome

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to the multiverses

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[Music]

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according to the european space agency

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there are approximately 106 stillion

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stars in the observable universe and

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across the cosmos they form huge

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filaments and clusters but on a more

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personal level have you ever wondered

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what the night sky looked like when you

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were born

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under lucky stars have been kind enough

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to support this video and their

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beautiful framed star maps are a great

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gift option to remember an important

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moment in your life a personalized chart

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with over 15 designs to choose from and

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printed on durable museum quality paper

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showing what the stars were like on a

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day and time you choose they are the

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original star map maker and their

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methods are verified by nasa

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astrophysicists and enjoyed by neil

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himself they also sent me one over and

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koko absolutely loves it really ties the

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room together

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the company are also committed to

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keeping the skies clean organizing

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fundraisers for the international dark

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sky association it's a great thoughtful

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gift for someone or indeed yourself

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especially as they're now offering an

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exclusive 10 discount to history of the

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universe viewers head over to

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underluckystars.com forward slash

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universe and use your code universe to

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start your starmap journey

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in april 1920 a great debate was held at

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the smithsonian museum of natural

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history in washington dc

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on the stage were harlow shapley and

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heber curtis

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both renowned astronomers shapley was

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well known for mapping the locations of

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stars throughout the milky way curtis

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the first to observe a thin stream of

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material in the object m87 though he

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didn't know it at the time he had

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discovered a relativistic jet of matter

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ejected from an immense black hole

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the topic of their debate

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just how big is the universe

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[Music]

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the two camps presented their arguments

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shapley argued that the cosmos was small

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the stars of the milky way he claimed

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were the entire universe

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that was it there was nothing beyond

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he knew that astronomers had spied

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several strange nebulae through their

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telescopes but these he told the

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audience were features buried within the

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stars of the milky way curtis however

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objected he was no fan of this compact

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cosmos instead he argued the universe

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was a large much larger than most

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astronomers were comfortable with the

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spiral nebuli he declared were not

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within the milky way but were many

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millions of light years away each was an

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island universe an individual galaxy

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home to billions of stars and there

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could be uncountable galaxies beyond the

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edge of the milky way

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[Music]

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eventually the debate came to a close

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the audience had been taken on a wild

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ride across the universe but there was

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no clear winner

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shapley and curtis went their separate

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ways and the size of the universe

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remained unsolved

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but things were changing quickly

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on the other side of the country edwin

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hubble had recently joined the mount

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wilson observatory in california he was

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on a quest to answer the question of the

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size of the universe

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once and for all the timing was

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fortuitous as the world's largest

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telescope the 100-inch hooker had just

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been installed it was the ideal

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instrument for surveying the sky and

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charting the distances to heavenly

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bodies and hubble's first target was the

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fuzzy nebula in the constellation of

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andromeda he knew that astronomers had

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seen individual stars within andromeda's

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nebula but just how far away were they

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they could be intrinsically faint stars

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that were closer or they could be

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