The Ultimate Guide To Absolutely Everything In The Universe
FULL TRANSCRIPT
[Music]
It had seen planets crumble and stars
ignite. It had skimmed super massive
black holes and galaxy destroying quazar
jets. It had crossed light years of
nothingness and caught a glimmer of the
edge of the universe.
And now, more than 4 billion years after
its epic journey had begun, the probe
had returned
home. The sun was a swollen red giant,
grotesque and violent. Mercury and Venus
were gone. Earth, such as it was,
survived, but only as a tattered lump of
iron and nickel orbiting dangerously
close to the dying
star. Humanity, barely a 100 million in
total, had found a new home on Europa.
The heat from the red sun had melted its
ices long ago, and now the little moon
of Jupiter was the only sanctuary they
could
reach. It took the probe several minutes
to decipher the strange language of the
radio signals they sent. It seemed the
remaining humans were a buzz with
curiosity, tinged with hope. They
remembered the probe even though it had
been launched so long ago. Memory of the
event miraculously preserved through the
ages. Humanity, they said, had tried and
tried again to spread amongst the
galaxy, but every attempt at a colony
had failed. They could send machines out
into interstellar space, but every time
they had attempted the crossing for
themselves of the great void between the
stars, their frail bodies had failed
them. As far as the humans knew, they
were all that was left. And as the
beating red sun at the heart of their
solar system constantly reminded them,
they were running out of time.
[Music]
But they also knew that long ago
interstellar spacecraft like the
returning probe had been created,
fashioned with artificial intelligence
as keen and sharp as any biological
brain to go forth into the galaxy and
the greatness
beyond. These probes had been tasked
with cataloging everything, yielding the
history and secrets of the universe in a
way that no mid telescope ever could.
From the relative proximity of the inner
solar system to the most distant alien
and bizarre things in the cosmos, the
probes had been told to see it all. The
largest, the most powerful, the
weirdest, all of
it. And all of this searching, all of
this cataloging, all of this measuring
was to be in service of a greater goal.
To find a way for humanity to travel
beyond the solar
system. Over the unfathomable ages,
millions of spacecraft had been sent.
But only one had returned.
And so, fulfilling its promised mission
to its long deadad creators, the Lonely
Probe began to tell its
multi-billionyear story, relating what
it had learned, the extraordinary events
it had encountered, the remarkable
places it had
been. It began to describe everything
within the universe.
[Music]
There are parts of the universe that are
impossible to film. From quantum
particles to spectacular distant
quazars, sometimes it's a struggle to
pull together visuals that help show
what we are describing. But Story Blocks
has been a big help. Not only do they
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microscopic world, they also help us
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[Music]
Mission parameter one, search for signs
of life outside the solar
system. The probe had called itself
Batuta. It had taken the name from the
great 14th century explorer Iban Batuta
who had traveled over the course of
three decades across the entire known
Muslim world in his lifetime covering
almost 117,000 km and handily beating
out other great explorers such as Marco
Polo and Jung
Hur. The spacecraft knew that such a
name would be fitting as it ventured out
into the seemingly endless black.
But before it could begin its journey
beyond the solar system, it had to pass
a series of
[Music]
tests. It had a thousand siblings, each
one as smart and capable as itself. But
only a select few would be granted the
privilege of fully independent thought
and autonomous action outside of any
human control. Those who failed would be
stuck forever inside the solar system.
Batuta had to show its human creators
that it could survive the harsh
conditions it would face in the wider
universe and that it could concoct
clever experiments to divine nature's
most closely held secrets. And so it
began its trials on Titan, the largest
of Saturn's moons and one holding
remarkable secrets. Secrets uncovered by
a probe just like Batutoa many millennia
before. Titan was discovered by humanity
in 1655 when pioneering astronomer
Christian Hygens spotted it with his
homemade telescope. Hygens himself was a
key figure in the evolving scientific
revolution and was also the first to
attempt to scientifically explore the
possibility of life on other worlds.
writing, "Some planets indeed might be
capable of accommodating several species
of rational creatures possessed of
different degrees of reason and
sense, but little did Hygens know that
Titan itself would be a
candidate." And it was on that moon that
centuries later, humanity achieved a
great milestone of space exploration. In
2005, a small probe not even 3 meters
wide broke free from its attachment
harness on the left side of the Cassini
spacecraft that had spent nearly seven
years in its journey to Saturn. And it
took the probe a further 22 days to
coast from Cassini's orbit to Titan.
This craft named after Hygens used a
parachute to slow its descent through
Titan's atmosphere. This only working
because among all the worlds in the
solar system, Titan is the only place
besides Earth and Venus to host a
significant atmosphere surrounding a
rocky
body. Hygens landed gently, making a
dent in the icy surface before bouncing
and sliding to a stop. The first time
that an emissary of humanity had touched
the surface of a world in the outer
solar system.
For Batuta, Hygens was a true
pioneer. And indeed, the world it
touched down on was unlike anything else
that humanity had ever
encountered. 50% larger than Earth's
moon and 80% more massive, Titan is
appropriately named. Its core is mainly
rock, but its crust is made of ice.
Surrounding that is a dense, thick
atmosphere, even denser than the
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