Are The First Stars Really Still Out There?
FULL TRANSCRIPT
okay
look
up
when you peer at the heavens on a clear
moonless night you can see the stars of
our galaxy strewn across the black
we cannot help but seek recognizable
outlines by tracing our finger from one
star to the next like searching for
shapes in clouds
we see ourselves in the groups of stars
assigning them names and meaning to our
eyes the individual Stars making up
these constellations seem uniform
remarkable only when forming part of a
larger group
but with a powerful enough telescope the
truth reveals itself and we can finally
reshape the sky according to science not
symbolism
so let us take a tour of the Stars
in order of their Rarity
we begin with the failed Stars Brown
dwarfs below eight percent of the mass
of the Sun these are protostars without
the gravitational clout to spark Fusion
in their cores the Galaxy is littered
with these failures one for every
successful star
stars in the prime of their Stellar
lives make up 90 of the several hundred
billion in the Milky Way our sun is one
part of the yellow dwarf category in
which only about seven percent of stars
fall a relative Rarity far more numerous
are the cooler and smaller red dwarfs
that make up a much larger 75 percent as
we look for stars with larger masses the
search becomes more difficult thanks to
their volatility and short lifespan
white supergiants like cannipus the
second brightest star in the sky despite
its great distance from us comprised
less than one percent of the start in
our galaxy and more extreme hypergiants
like the largest known star Stevenson
218 are even harder to find their size
resulting in strong Stellar winds where
Stellar material the mass of Jupiter is
blown away in single events almost
evaporating the star as fast as it grows
While most stars are enjoying their best
life there are tens of billions in the
final stages of their Stellar Revolution
smaller Stars such as the sun will
eventually puff out into red giants a
fleeting midpoint on the way to a white
dwarf these dense and compact Stellar
remnants comprise about five percent of
stars in the present day though
eventually 97 percent of the Milky Ways
Stellar population will shrivel into
these gently fading spheres
neutron stars and black holes are exotic
high density phenomena making up 0.5
percent and point zero zero zero five
percent of our Galaxy's population
respectively and the result of
supernovae by the largest Stars while
spinning neutron stars pulsars have been
observed in their thousands since the
1960s we've only observed 31 of their
most extreme form
natash
this type of neutron star has a magnetic
field a thousand trillion times stronger
than that of the earth and star Quakes
on their surface produce powerful bursts
of gamma rays these star Quakes are also
much stronger than our equivalent
reaching up to 23 on the Richter scale
but even that is still not the rarest
form of star scientists predict could be
out there
in its early days the universe was
filled with hypergiants but they were
much different to those we see now the
first lights that kindled in the cosmos
were vast hungry and short-lived living
and dying in a cosmic blink of an eye
known as population 3 stars they were
the ancestors of us all and they may
still linger out there in the black
the rarest stars in the universe
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[Music]
in Japanese mythology the god of
creation gives birth to many deities but
three a particularly Divine tsukuyomi
the moon God susano the god of Storms
and seas and Amaterasu the goddess of
the Sun the highest deity of all
in the most famous Legend involving the
sun goddess susano threw a holy horse
into a loom flaying it alive and killing
a nearby weaving Maiden Amaterasu was so
upset that she fled and hid in a cave
blocking the entrance
Sun disappeared from the sky and a
permanent night fell on Japan this
eternal night only ended when the other
gods and goddesses staged a ritual
outside the cave laughing so loudly that
Amaterasu could not help but come out to
see what was going on the deities sealed
the cave shut as she emerged and Japan
once again became the Land of the Rising
Sun
[Music]
the sun is essential to all life on
Earth its calm and predictability
nurtures plants animals and humans alike
surrounding them with light and warmth
it is no wonder then that right from
where the earliest civilizations formed
the sun has often been portrayed as a
benevolent God want to be feared perhaps
but only because of its possible
disappearance
now of course we understand that stars
are physical entities still full of
wonder but explainable using modern
science
for the longest time we were reliant on
only our own eyes until Galileo ground
his artificial lenses and magnified the
skies with his telescope
the haze of the Milky Way resolved into
millions of stars and even some
individual Stars revealed themselves to
be binary systems hundreds of years
passed and we cataloged the positions of
these stars with increasing accuracy and
with the Advent of spectroscopy we could
even begin to identify barcodes
individual to each star the gaps in
which revealed which heavy elements were
present in that Stellar atmosphere
we could identify what these distant
Suns
were really made of
but that was not all
[Music]
chemical elements comprise a nucleus
surrounded by electrons these electrons
naturally rest in the ground state but
can be excited up into different energy
levels by the absorption of a photon
with an energy equal to a particular
energy gap
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