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  • The universe is pretty big and very strange.

  • Hundreds of billions of galaxies with sextillions of stars and planets and in the middle of

  • it all there is earth, with you and us.

  • But as enormous as the universe seems looking up, it seems to get even larger when you start

  • looking down.

  • You are towering over worlds within worlds, within worldseach in plain sight and

  • yet hidden from your experience.

  • Let's go on a journeywe'll start in a park, about a thousand meters long, enough

  • for a 15 minute walk.

  • Every time we click this magic button, we'll become a thousand times smaller.

  • Please slip into this magic science suit, so you don't die and can still see.

  • Ready?

  • Let's go.

  • click

  • The Miniature Realm

  • You are the size of a grain of sand just 2 mm high, standing on a blade of grass that

  • seems as tall as an eight storey building to you.

  • A square meter of lawn is now a dense metropolitan area, with 100,000 blades, or two Manhattans

  • worth of grass towers.

  • From your new tiny perspective, the park that you could quickly stroll through before, is

  • now the size of France.

  • Crossing it would take at least a week.

  • Human sized humans loom over you, 4 times taller than the Empire state building, their

  • steps falling from horizon to horizon.

  • A bee the size of a helicopter lands near you, making the ground shake, as its hairy

  • carapace vibrates with each wingbeat.

  • You try to escape but are barely able to move because the air is sogooey.

  • Before you clicked the button air resistance was barely noticeablebut as you're

  • now a thousand times smaller, it is as if the air has become a thousand times denser.

  • It feels like you are moving through honey.

  • Flying insects like bees use this to their advantage.

  • Their wings are not made for gliding but like paddles that row through the air.

  • Scaled up to human size, the bee would outrun a Concorde Jetexcept it couldn't even

  • take off because it would be too heavy for its wings.

  • click

  • The Microscopic Realm

  • You've entered the microscopic realm and are now less than 2 micrometers tall, about

  • the size of an e coli bacteria.

  • From your new tiny perspective, the park you started in is now a million kilometers wide

  • to youif you walked non stop it would take some 25 years to cross it.

  • It is hard to grasp just how huge the microscopic world is to its tiny inhabitants.

  • The giant bee that was close a moment ago, is now the size of Mt.

  • Everest, towering high into the skybut alive, humming and vibrating.

  • The air here feels almost solid to you, on the human scale it would be as viscous as

  • lava, extremely hard to push through.

  • The blade of grass now expands so far you can't see its edges, stretching as wide

  • as Paris would to a regular sized human.

  • You see valleys that look like dried up riverbeds, dead patches like deserts and giant craters

  • left behind by voracious aphids.

  • But if you look closely, this is not terrain.

  • These are rows of individual cells, each the size of a house with hard exteriors like glass

  • shells.

  • Every few cells, there are huge openings called stomata, like mouths, sucking in air and blowing

  • out oxygen.

  • Suddenly the gigantic bee begins to move – a construct made of rigid pieces that slide

  • against each other, like a suit of armor.

  • It takes off to escape a drop of water the size of an Asteroid, that fell from another

  • blade of grass and is now rushing at you at breathtaking speeds.

  • You brace for impact but instead of feeling a strong punch you just get sucked in.

  • You try to swim but the water feels thick and sticky and holds onto your limbs like

  • glue.

  • Air molecules are free spirits while water molecules act more like social creatures that

  • group together whenever possible.

  • They pull on each other and create a relatively strong cohesive force that traps you.

  • You can't help it but you are still moving, tumbling in all directions, helplessly dragged

  • along by an invisible current.

  • Floating in this miniature lake are tens of thousands of micro-organisms.

  • They take on many formsviruses the size of tennis balls float around you aimlessly,

  • others like the Euglena oxyuris cells which pass you like freight trains.

  • But most look like oily jellyfish the size of a car, sporting long tentacles that act

  • like super charged propellers.

  • Despite the water holding onto them like glue, some move hundreds of body lengths per second,

  • equivalent to a person shovelling through mud at over 600 km/h.

  • However bacteria weigh so little and water is so viscous that they basically have no

  • inertiathere is no gliding on this scale.

  • The result is a weird jerky motion that's hard to keep track of.

  • Maybe we can learn more about this strange motion if we go even deeper.

  • click

  • Molecule Realm

  • You've become the size of a molecule, just under two nanometers wide.

  • At your new tiny scale, the droplet now seems as big as the Moon to a regular human.

  • The blade of grass it rests on could reach from the tip of Alaska to the end of Australia,

  • and the park is now almost the size of the Solar Systembut instead of mostly empty

  • space, it is filled with stuff.

  • Everywhere you look, there are innumerable amounts of molecules and atoms.

  • The rigid walls of the grass cells beneath you are clearly vibrating, rippling with waves

  • of energy.

  • The water droplet contains nearly a sextillion water molecules that are all in motion.

  • Water is actually a storm of H2O molecules smashing into each other hundreds of trillions

  • of times a second.

  • Each of them is moving at speeds of around 2300 km/h and bombard their surroundings mercilessly,

  • sending small objects hurtling in all directions.

  • This is the source of the invisible current that you noticed when you were a thousand

  • times larger.

  • Scaling this speed up to the human scale is impossible, as a human sized molecule would

  • be 2000 times faster than the speed of light.

  • All this furious motion comes from heat.

  • Heat is a bit abstract at our human scale, where you touch something and get a vague

  • sense of whether it is hot or cold.

  • But down here, you really feel what 'heat' is: the motion of molecules, vibrating, twisting

  • and colliding as if they're inside a furious ballpit.

  • When these molecules lose heat, they move more slowly and collide less often.

  • When they gain heat, they speed up and smash together with renewed fervour.

  • Temperature is basically the measure of the average speed of these fantastic dancers performing

  • all day.

  • Suddenly a molecule hits you especially hard and you are catapulted out of the water droplet

  • into the air again.

  • And here you see something unexpected: The stuff between the air molecules: Nothing.

  • Between the molecules that make up the air there is a vacuum.

  • On average a molecule in the air travels for about 60 nanometers, which is about the length

  • of a hockey rink if it were the size of a human.

  • If we were to compress all the molecules and atoms buzzing around in the room you are watching

  • this in, they would only fill about 0.1% of its volume.

  • 99.9% of the space around you is a vacuum, you just don't notice it.

  • Which also means that every time you take a breath, you breathe in mostly nothing with

  • a few atoms.

  • Click

  • Subatomic Realm

  • At your size of under 2 picometers, scale starts to lose its meaning.

  • A human would be nearly 2 billion kilometers tall relative to you, so large they could

  • stretch their arms from the Sun to Saturn.

  • An atomic nucleus would be the size of a grain of sand you could hold on the tip of your

  • finger.

  • That grain holds 99.97% of the atom's mass.

  • The rest, a sphere of influence about as large as the Eiffel tower from your perspective,

  • is filled with an electron cloud.

  • That's basically all the places where electrons might be at any given moment in time.

  • Electrons are shapeshifters that morph around outside a nucleus, creating a new and vibrating

  • mess of different shapes with every new moment.

  • Unlike the graceful motion of planets, the atomic nuclei are chaotic blurs.

  • They bulge, roll, quiver and breathe.

  • They hold back the same energy that powers nuclear bombs and it doesn't let them sit

  • still..

  • They twist and vibrate sextillions of times a second.

  • It is time to end our journey and return to

  • click

  • What are you doing?

  • click

  • Stop it!

  • click, click, click, click, click, click, click….

  • The Smallest Place (?)

  • We have reached the bottom, the border between reality and unreality.

  • The scale here is the Planck length, which is the distance light travels in a Planck

  • Time.

  • Planck time is the time it takes light to travel a Planck length.

  • Ah ok.

  • None of our models of the universe make sense at scales smaller than this, so for now, this

  • is it.

  • Sad click :(

  • We think that down here, particles bubble into existence and then spontaneously disappear,

  • creating a quantum foam of unimaginable energy.

  • Can we go even smaller?

  • We don't know.

  • It is time to return.

  • If you look up, the universe is large and strange.

  • So incredibly large and strange.

  • But if you look down, into the tiny and extremely tiny, the universe seems even larger, and

  • even stranger.

  • In the end, the perfect place might be where you are right nownot too big, not too

  • small.

  • These hidden worlds are all part of our 12,023 Human Era Calendar.

  • This time you can join us on a journey through the microcosm.

  • With each turn of the page you will reveal a new world you didn't know existed right

  • beneath your feet.

  • You know the drill by now: as always it's a super high-quality calendar, very shiny

  • andonly available for a short time.

  • We also have a few special deals for you in our shop.

  • The calendar is a true piece of kurzgesagt you can take home with you.

  • And we say this every year but it's true: every calendar purchase directly supports

  • what we do here at kurzgesagt.

  • And that's not just creating videos butsparking curiosity all around the world.

  • So because of you, we can spread knowledge and ignite an appreciation for space, nature

  • and life in people everywhere.

  • Thank you so much for making this possible!

  • Have a wonderful 12,023!

  • See you down in January!

The universe is pretty big and very strange.

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