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  • We think it all started with a Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago.

  • Just like that, the universe burst into existence, and we can still see the remnants of this

  • event's afterglow in the form of cosmic microwave background radiation.

  • But between then and today, there's a lot of time unaccounted for.

  • Now after 20 years of mapping the night sky, one project has filled in an 11 billion year

  • gap in our knowledge of the universe's history.

  • The project in question is the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, or SDSS, and since the year 2000,

  • its relatively small two and a half meter telescope in New Mexico has been regularly

  • studying the sky with the goal of creating the most detailed map of the observable universe

  • ever.

  • The quality of the data the SDSS has produced in that time has made it one of the most influential

  • tools in cosmology.

  • The SDSS has actually released four sets of observational data over the years.

  • The first one took place over 5 years and measured the spectra of over 700,000 celestial

  • objects.

  • SDSS-II lasted another three years and achieved the original goal of imaging half the northern

  • sky and mapping the three dimensional arrangement of 1 million galaxies.

  • SDSS-III introduced new instruments to conduct four surveys, including the Baryon Oscillation

  • Spectroscopic Survey, or BOSS.

  • BOSS mapped out the distribution of luminous red galaxies and quasars to measure the baryonic

  • acoustic scale created by ripples in the very early universe.

  • Back in the beginning, heavy subatomic particles like protons called baryons were caught in

  • a tug of war.

  • Gravity pulled them together while outward pressure from photon interactions pushed them

  • away.

  • These baryonic oscillations made waves that eventually formed structures like the walls

  • of galaxies and the voids of nothingness we can see in the universe today.

  • By establishing the scale of these oscillations, BOSS laid the groundwork to probe deeper into

  • the history of the universe than ever before.

  • The fourth and most recent observations for the SDSS started in 2014 and has wrapped up

  • in 2020.

  • Observations in the northern hemisphere have been finalized and tons of new data have just

  • been released.

  • When one component, the Extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey or eBOSS, was combined

  • with past phases of the SDSS, it was able to measure the expansion of the universe through

  • almost 80% of its history, going back 11 billion years.

  • That's a huge chunk of time that until now had been unknown to us.

  • Mapping the evolution of the universe to this degree has revealed some intriguing insights.

  • For example, SDSS-IV has helped us hone in on and measure the geometrical curvature of

  • the universe.

  • I knowcurvature of the universeis a pretty tantalizing phrase, but I'll let

  • you down quickly: it's looking more and more like it's flat.

  • But the latest survey isn't just putting mysteries to bed, it's also stirring up

  • some tough questions.

  • While the universe has been expanding since the Big Bang, that expansion appears to have

  • started accelerating about 6 billion years ago, and has only gotten faster since.

  • Today's rate of expansion, known as the Hubble Constant, seems to be about 10% lower

  • if measured with distant galaxies compared to local measurements.

  • Now, it doesn't make much sense to have a constant that's wellnot constant.

  • This so-calledHubble Tensionhas been roiling the field of cosmology... and the

  • new data provided by SDSS-IV hasn't clarified anything just yet.

  • Still, after 20 years, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey is showing no signs of stopping.

  • The fifth incarnation SDSS-V starts this fall and will map the Milky Way, the galaxies around

  • us, and supermassive black holes.

  • If the fifth survey is anything like the previous 4, it will reveal parts of the cosmos that had

  • been previously unseen, and have a lasting legacy on scientific study for years to come.

  • The value of the Hubble Constant is a major problem for astronomers and cosmologists.

  • Check out my video on why we can't agree on its value here.

  • I only mentioned the telescope in New Mexico, but shoutout to the Las Campanas Observatory

  • in Chile that joined SDSS-IV and is still taking observations until September 2020.

  • If you like this video, don't forget to subscribe.

  • Let us know your thoughts down in the comments, and I will see you next time on Seeker!

We think it all started with a Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago.

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