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What Is Hidden In The Darkness At The Beginning Of Time?

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Close your eyes and imagine yourself within a supervoid.

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Darkness envelops you, holding you captive and isolated.

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With your eyes, even with any amateur telescope, you see nothing, no stars,

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no hint of the fuzzy smudges we now know as our own neighbouring galaxies.

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To you, the Universe is empty. The Boötes void is a spherical

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region 330 million light years across, approximately 0.2% the diameter of the

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entire observable cosmos/universe. The Milky Way could fit inside it millions of times over,

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and yet within a volume of about one million cubic Mpc, where there should be thousands of galaxies,

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we have observed only 60 - spiral galaxies, blue with the light of new star formation.

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To quote astronomer Greg Aldering: "If the Milky Way had been in the center

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of the Bootes void—we wouldn't have known there were other galaxies until the 1960s."

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Indeed, were Earth to rest on one edge of this void, observers on the other

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side would only now be receiving light from a time when amphibians dominated the earth,

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before even the age of the dinosaurs. Even now, we do not fully understand how such

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a void came to be. The age of the Universe sets a limit for the maximum size of any structure,

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galaxy clusters, and indeed the voids in between. There should be no single

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structure in the Universe that is already greater than tens of millions of light years across.

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The Great Nothing, as the void is known, shatters this limit.

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Though its absence of structure does give us an insight into the growth of structure

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at the earliest of times - the few galaxies observed within the void following a tube shape,

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perhaps the crumbled remnants of a wall between two voids. Individually,

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these voids would each fit in with the growth limit, but together they form a supervoid.

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And so even here, in the “Great Nothing”, one of the darkest places in the Universe,

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there is the light of galaxies, unveiling their secrets to us through the visible spectrum.

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To find true darkness, we have to look farther than the Boötes void, farther back in time.

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We can only find complete oblivion in the time before stars and galaxies and

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planets existed - forebodingly known as the Cosmic Dark Ages.

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Here, the darkness was total, and long-lived. Although for about 200 million years after the

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Big Bang the Universe contained a variety of ingredients that could produce the first stars,

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none formed. There was no visible light at all.

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But why was the cosmos dark for so long?

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What does this mean for the stars and galaxies we see around us today?

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And how can we possibly hope to shed any light on an era when there was only darkness?

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In 1543, Nicolas Copernicus showed the earth isn´t the centre of the solar system, in the 1920s Jon

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Oort discovered the sun wasn´t in the centre of our galaxy, and in that same decade Hubble

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discovered our galaxy was just one of countless others. Cosmologically we arent the centre of

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anything - and that is a sobering realization. This video has been kindly sponsored by

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In 1995, the then-director of the Hubble Space Telescope Bob Williams

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had ring-fenced some personal observing time.

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He was the envy of the scientific world, holding precious hours on the world’s greatest telescope,

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able to look at anything he wanted. At the time Hubble was in the spotlight - but

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not for the right reasons, having used up billions of dollars of public funds only to require a

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crewed space mission to correct a near-fatal flaw in the system's optics. The mirror which

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reflects gathered light into the instruments needed to be extraordinarily smooth in order

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for the image to be in focus. Hubble’s mirror was very smooth indeed, but the first images had been

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disappointingly blurry, a devastating blow to the intended science aims of the mission.

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It was determined that the mirror had an aberration less than a fiftieth of the width

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of a human hair that was causing the incoming rays of light to focus at different points,

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clouding our view of the cosmos. For most space missions, this would have been fatal,

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but Hubble was in low-Earth orbit, making a repair mission not unrealistic.

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Astronauts installed several clever adaptations and replacements,

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correcting Hubble’s eyesight to perfection. But now, Williams was under pressure to produce

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something of worth, something that would dispel the naysayers in politics, press,

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and even within the corridors of NASA. And so he decided to look at nothing.

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Against the counsel of his colleagues, Williams and his students steered the

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eye of the billion-dollar machinery such that it looked past the planets, sidestepped the stars,

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and away from the galaxies. Hubble instead settled its sights on a tiny patch of sky

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only 1/30th the diameter of the Moon. And there, it stared, for ten whole days.

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To our eyes, and any other telescope that had come before, this patch was barren of

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structure - but this technology was a giant leap forward in astronomy - and

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the fine resolution and sensitivity of the Hubble Space Telescope revealed shapes in the darkness.

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Over a long exposure, the new Hubble could slowly gather photons coming

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from the farthest and faintest objects in the Universe - and distant galaxies of every size,

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shape and colour emerged from the darkness. We now know this as the Hubble Deep Field,

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one of the most iconic images in astronomy. As with any photograph, this image is a 2D

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projection of a 3D landscape - galaxies far removed in distance appear to be neighbours.

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It is also a projection of time. Photons from the farther galaxies have travelled for longer,

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and so we see those galaxies as they were farther back in time. Galaxies

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can even appear to be colliding, when they existed as pictured billions of years apart.

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To understand why, let us consider the observable universe as

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constructed of a series of shells around us. The shell closest us to us is easy to observe

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because the light travels to our telescopes almost instantaneously. Light from the Sun takes about

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eight minutes to arrive to Earth. Move a shell outwards, perhaps to our nearest neighbouring

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galaxy, Andromeda, and from here, the light we see today has taken 2.5 million years to get to us,

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released when one of humanity’s earliest ancestors, Homo Habilis, walked the Earth.

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This may be a long time for us, but it is still a short time in terms of the

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cosmological timeline of 13.8 billion years. As we consider the light from even farther shells,

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the photons we receive get progressively more ancient, and so we can see further back in time.

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And so with Hubble we could finally observe light from galaxies as they

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were only hundreds of millions of years after the Big Bang,

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so faint and poorly resolved that they are mere red smudges in the sky - just as our closest

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galaxies were once smudges on the sky for the astronomers of the last century and before.

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We have the means to pick apart the light that we observe, working out the composition of that

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galaxy and comparing known element markers to work out the distance to, and age of,

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the galaxies we see. This method uses the same principle that causes a fire engine’s siren to

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change pitch as it approaches and passes you on the street. As the fire engine approaches,

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the wavefronts of sound pile up, and we perceive a sound of shorter wavelength,

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or higher frequency. Conversely, as the fire engine recedes, the wavefronts are increasingly

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spaced out, and we hear a lower pitch. The inherent siren pitch remains the same,

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but it is the relative movement between the source and the listener that causes a shift.

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Now imagine a galaxy as our siren, except instead of listening for the sound, we observe the siren

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light. This light is a specific colour, blue, and does not change. As the galaxy recedes from us,

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however, the light wavefronts stretch out and we observe a longer wavelength light:

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the siren gets redder. We call this shifting of the light spectrum redshift.

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Certain chemical elements are natural siren lights in the spectrum, producing a clear emission line

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at a known frequency. By measuring how much that line has shifted in a galaxy’s spectrum,

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we can calculate the speed at which it is travelling away from us. Edwin Hubble, the famous

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astronomer for whom the telescope was named, observed that the farther the galaxy, the faster

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it appeared to be travelling away: a keystone of the Big Bang theory. As a rule of thumb,

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the oldest light is the most redshifted. In this way, we prise apart the thousands of galaxies that

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appear tangled in the deep field images, and brush away layers of young galaxies, until we are left

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with only the oldest, the first of their kind. The latest deep field image from the James Webb

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Space Telescope covers the area of just a grain of sand in the sky and yet still,

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thousands of galaxies emerged from the darkness - pushing back the cosmic frontier to only a few

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hundred millions of years after the Big Bang. We are finally reaching a time in the Universe

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where there was no visible light at all, a time that even JWST is blind

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to - the frontier of the First Stars. But does this mean we can go no further?

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Are we forever closed off from the darkness that lay before?

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In the beginning, light ruled the Universe.

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The energy density of radiation far outweighed the energy density of matter, and interactions between

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the two were commonplace. So much so that photons of light quickly broke apart any atoms that formed

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and, as a result, the photons could not travel freely in this super-hot dense plasma of matter.

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This soon changed however. While both densities reduced as the

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volume of the Universe increased, radiation fell faster because of an extra factor: the

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stretching of light into the longer wavelengths as the universe expanded, and lower equivalent

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temperatures - cosmological redshift. After around 380,000 years of expansion,

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the energy density of radiation had fallen below that of matter, and the dominion of light in the

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cosmos was long over. The temperature of the plasma had in fact cooled to such an

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extent that atomic nuclei could now reliably combine with electrons into simple atoms.

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Though light was now no longer the dominant force in the universe, there was an upside - the

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creation of atoms now meant photons had space to travel, having their paths diverted only

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occasionally through interactions with matter. And so light was free - but what would you have

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actually been able to see? The answer is hard to know

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for certain - but we can estimate what the Universe would have looked like.

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The radiation at the point of recombination emitted as a blackbody: an object that emits

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radiation across the wavelengths with a predictable shape, as long as you know

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its temperature. To an onlooker, the Universe would have seemed to have a warm orange glow.

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Over the next few hundred million years, as the Universe expanded further, the dropping

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temperatures lead that glow to redden with time. Finally, it cooled such that there was no longer

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radiation emitted in the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum at all. The embers

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of the Big Bang faded entirely into the infrared, microwave and radio wavelengths. Darkness fell.

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In the midst of the black, though, all was not quiet.

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For another kind of matter was created in the Big Bang, a kind of matter that

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is still mysterious to us today: dark matter. In the 1960s, scientists Kent Ford and Vera Rubin

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measured the orbital velocities of stars in spiral galaxies and found that something didn’t add up.

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Orbital velocity, the speed that stars orbited the galaxy,

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is a fine balance. Too slow and gravity causes the star to spiral inwards, too fast, and the

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star overcomes gravity and flies out of orbit. The astronomers carefully estimated the stellar

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mass, and hence gravitational pull, of a variety of galaxies and found that stars were simply

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moving far too fast. Observation after observation pointed to an uncomfortable truth: there must be a

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hidden component of mass keeping them in orbit. And that hidden mass was known as “dark matter.”

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Calculations show that this ‘dark matter’ makes up four-fifths of all matter in the Universe,

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yet it still evades our direct detection and capture today.

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The matter we see around us interacts with the Universe both gravitationally

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and electromagnetically. Dark matter, in contrast,

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only interacts with the gravitational field. It cannot absorb or emit photons and so has

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no imprint on a spectrum in the same way chemical elements do. It does possess a gravitational pull,

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however, and so high-density areas of dark matter can grow

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and collapse through accretion. But only up to a certain point.

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And this is key - there can be no stars or planets made of dark matter.

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As a cloud of matter collapses, the pressure of the particles in the cloud fights back.

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Pressure is linked to temperature: the denser the particles, the hotter they are, and the more

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kinetic energy they have to more effectively create an outward-acting pressure force.

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Normal matter can convert thermal and kinetic energy into electromagnetic radiation via the

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excitation of electrons in colliding atoms. The atoms move apart at a slower pace and

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when the electrons naturally return to their ground states, they emit photons

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which carry away the parcel of energy from the cloud. The pressure is reduced permanently.

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But dark matter does not interact electromagnetically and so cannot

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emit photons. There is no escape valve. This means that once the outwards thermal pressure

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of the system balances the inwards gravitational pressure, the collapse is simply halted.

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And so instead dark matter collapses into filaments, connecting at their densest

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points into halos. Unable to emit light, our Big Bang observer could not see this vast background

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web of dark matter, behind the uniform orange or red glow of the gas. Even in the total darkness

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that followed as the radiation shifted out of the visible, the dark matter remained hidden.

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For close to two-hundred million years, this remained the state of play - a web of

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dark matter that was doomed to darkness forever, and a mist of gas too dilute to ignite fusion.

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And so how could the Universe ever form a star to break the impasse?

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And hidden as the evidence is in the total darkness at the

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beginning of time - how could we ever know what happened?

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On 6th May 1937, flames viciously engulfed the German airship Hindenburg as it attempted to dock

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with its mooring mast in New Jersey. Bystanders could only look on in horror. Pride of the fleet,

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the ship regularly carried passengers across the Atlantic Ocean at a stately 80 miles per hour.

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This journey had been no different until the very last moment, when the hydrogen cells filling the

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balloon ignited one by one, causing explosive damage as the fuel tanks erupted. Remarkably,

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just under two-thirds of the passengers and crew survived,

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thanks only to its proximity to the ground and the extended duration of the disaster. Most victims

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however were severely burnt, and grief ripped through the families of the 35 lost souls.

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Airships had been a regular sight across city skies, carrying army personnel, passengers and

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freight across and between continents. Most airships utilised hydrogen as a way of filling

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the balloon, as its buoyancy is well above that of air - but hydrogen also boasts another property:

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it is extremely flammable.

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Most evidence points to the cause of the Hindenburg disaster as a hydrogen leak

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in the fuel tanks. When this hydrogen mixed with oxygen in the air, the gas holding up the balloon

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became ready to blow, and it is thought that a simple flash of static electricity provided

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the source of ignition, thus ending the era of airships with almost immediate effect.

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Hydrogen. One proton, one electron. Simplicity itself.

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This most basic atomic structure is odourless and tasteless, and it will combust when exposed

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to even the lowest concentrations of air and an ignition, as seen in the Hindenburg incident.

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But even that fatal destruction is far from the full power held within this small orbital system.

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Nagasaki. Hiroshima.

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These cities act as reminders of the horror that humankind can unleash upon

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