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  • Hi, I'm John Green, and this is Crash Course Big History

  • in which we'll be looking at the history of, like, everything.

  • I'm talking about 13.8 billion years--

  • from the Big Bang to now.

  • I mean, in this series, we are literally going to attempt

  • to tell you the story of what Douglas Adams famously called:

  • >> Mr. Green, Mr. Green!

  • That's not history, that's science.

  • And science is for nerds.

  • Oh, me from the past, things would be so much easier

  • for you if you would just accept that you are,

  • in fact, a nerd and that's okay.

  • I mean, look at this picture, dude.

  • Anyway, academics often describe history

  • as, like, all the stuff that's happened

  • since we started writing things down,

  • but they only start there

  • because that's where we have the best information.

  • And, yeah, I think that the advent

  • of writing was a huge deal, obviously,

  • but as a start date for history, it's totally arbitrary.

  • It's just a line we drew in the sand and said,

  • "Okay, history begins now!"

  • In Big History, we're going to start history

  • when it really starts-- at least, we think--

  • at the creation of the Universe.

  • And we're going to end that story where it ends.

  • Please let that be after I die.

  • Well, I guess it will definitely be after I die,

  • it's just, I want it to be a while after I die.

  • So we're even going to terrify traditional historians

  • by using physics to make some predictions about the future

  • and we're going to end many trillions and trillions

  • of years from now when the Universe itself--

  • spoiler alert-- dies, at least in a manner of speaking.

  • Hey! I'm not John.

  • If you're thinking we look a little bit the same,

  • that's because we're brothers.

  • I'm Hank.

  • Anyway, if you want to learn the 13.8-billion-year history

  • of the Universe in the same amount of time

  • that we usually cover the 238 years of American history,

  • you're not going to get the same resolution.

  • Of course, knowing the names and dates

  • of American history is important,

  • but we just can't do that in Big History.

  • As you zoom out, you see a lot more of the picture.

  • The details get a little fuzzy, but we quickly realize

  • that history is everything-- cosmology, geology,

  • biology, social sciences, literature, physics.

  • Everything.

  • You might think that such a scale would be filled

  • with way too much detail,

  • but the amount of detail an answer requires depends

  • on the nature of the question.

  • Some questions can only be explored by zooming out.

  • That is what Big History does.

  • Speaking of zoomed out, this is"Earthrise,"

  • one of the most famous photographs of all time.

  • William Anders, an Apollo astronaut,

  • took it in 1968.

  • From the surface of another world,

  • we see our planet as a little ball in space.

  • No borders, no people, no buildings,

  • just oceans and clouds and continents

  • being shined upon by the sun.

  • That sheer expansion of scale gives me perspective.

  • It lets me imagine all the complexity of life on Earth,

  • from the gasoline engine that powered my trip

  • to the studio, to political instability

  • in Nepal as part of a thriving, living, teeming mass of life

  • loading in the emptiness of space.

  • So what that photograph does for physical space,

  • Big History aims to do for everything.

  • I mean, we want to contextualize all of existence.

  • We want to outline the most powerful

  • and important breakthroughs, the tremendous scale of existence,

  • and how we know what we know, and why we're sure we know it.

  • All right, let's go to the Thought Bubble.

  • So, the Universe is big-- like, really big--

  • and it's also old-- like, 13.8 billion years old.

  • Which is enough years that there is no way

  • to actually comprehend it, so let's just compress

  • that age to 13 years--

  • small enough that our puny brains can handle it.

  • On that time scale, the Universe would have begun 13 years ago,

  • in 2001.

  • George W. Bush had just been sworn in as president.

  • Most Americans on the Internet were connecting

  • to it with dial-up modems.

  • Right, so the first stars and galaxies

  • would have formed 12 years ago, but seven and a half more years

  • would pass until the earth formed, about 4.5 years ago.

  • Move a little bit up to four years ago--

  • that's when the first single-celled life formed

  • on Earth.

  • Then leap forward nearly three and a half more years

  • before the first multicellular organisms

  • and the Cambrian explosion...

  • What I'm trying to explain is that all complex life

  • on Earth is a fairly recent development.

  • Like, on this scale, the dinosaurs went extinct

  • about three weeks ago-- roughly the last time

  • I changed my Facebook status.

  • Humans and chimpanzees split

  • from their last shared ancestor about three days ago.

  • The first homo sapiens emerged 50 minutes ago,

  • roughly the last time I checked my email.

  • We left Africa 26 minutes ago.

  • The American Indians reached the Americas six minutes ago--

  • roughly the last time I check my Twitter.

  • We invented agriculture five minutes ago,

  • Ancient Egypt three minutes ago, the Black Death 24 seconds ago,

  • The Industrial Revolution, six seconds,

  • World War I, two seconds.

  • The Cold War, the first man on the moon, your birth,

  • the internet, the Big Mac, all within the last second.

  • But in many other ways, complex life

  • and humanityareexceptional.

  • >> Thanks, Thought Bubble.

  • Also exceptional, by the way, the Mongols.

  • Okay, let's begin at the beginning-- the Big Bang.

  • Hank, wait a second... whoa, whoa, whoa.

  • I don't understand how we know that the Big Bang

  • is really the beginning.

  • Like, what happened before the Big Bang?

  • Well, okay, theoretical physicists say

  • that space and time are not two different things.

  • They are two expressions of one thing: spacetime.

  • And spacetime was created by the Big Bang,

  • thus, time didn't exist before the Big Bang,

  • so it doesn't make much sense to ask what happened before it.

  • There was no "then" then.

  • Of course, this, like many ideas in cosmology,

  • doesn't really make any sense to our puny human brains.

  • It's largely beyond our comprehension

  • rather like explaining color to a blind person.

  • We know that it's true because the math works

  • and it explains our observations so elegantly,

  • but it's so far outside of how we directly perceive the world

  • that I don't think it's something

  • even the most genius physicists are able to imagine.

  • But, yeah, if you're going to do a chronological study

  • of the Universe, the creation of time

  • is probably a pretty good place to start the story.

  • So the Big Bang wasn't something that happened

  • inside the Universe, nor did it expand into some kind of void.

  • It was literally the moment when both time

  • and space were created.

  • The thing that was banging was the Universe itself.

  • It was expanding from an unimaginably tiny point

  • to an unimaginably large Universe unimaginably quickly.

  • "Unimaginable" is basically the subtitle to the story

  • of the Big Bang, but then again, it's also kind of the subtitle

  • to everything else in Big History.

  • I mean, I can only do this occasionally,

  • but sometimes you look outside and you're like,

  • "Oh, my goodness, this is nuts!

  • How did we get trees?"

  • Needless to say, we will be talking about that.

  • Anyway, the Universe is a hard worker

  • and it got most of the heavy lifting done

  • in those first few seconds.

  • For comparison, it takes me about 20 minutes

  • after I wake up for me to even get myself

  • into a standing position.

  • But the Universe is somewhat more efficient.

  • In the barest fraction of the first second,

  • the Universe inflated

  • from something many, many, many times smaller than an atom

  • to about the size of a grapefruit.

  • Like, think of it this way.

  • In much less than a blink of an eye,

  • if it had originally been the size of a tennis ball,

  • it would have inflated to over 90 billion light-years across.

  • This inflation theory has been well backed up

  • by mathematics for a long time now,

  • but it has recently received some staggering new support

  • from the BICEP Project of the South Pole

  • which sadly has nothing to do with my guns.

  • Ten seconds after the Big Bang, the Universe had expanded enough

  • that the normal rules of the Universe

  • with atomic forces and gravity and electromagnetism

  • that we know and love today were already in charge.

  • All of the antimatter created in the Big Bang had combined

  • with matter and annihilated itself leaving

  • behind only one-billionth of the matter created in the Big Bang.

  • And that billionth is everything.

  • And I mean everything-- every grain of sand,

  • every blueberry you will ever eat,

  • every star that you will ever see.

  • Everything.

  • We're already tried to understand how big a billion is,

  • but just pause to think about that.

  • Everything--everything-- is one-billionth of the matter

  • created in the Big Bang.

  • (imitates explosion)

  • The First Law of Thermodynamics is that

  • matter and energy cannot be created or destroyed.

  • Everything we have now, we had then.

  • The matter that makes up your body right now has been around

  • since those moments 13.8 billion years ago.

  • It's simply changed form.

  • After just three minutes, the Universe was cool enough

  • that the nuclei of atoms started forming--

  • just hydrogen and helium back then, the two simplest elements.

  • Keep those two in mind, however, because it turns out

  • if you take a bunch of hydrogen and you wait, like,

  • several billion years, you might just grow yourself some humans.

  • Let's remember, at this time,

  • the Universe was still very, very hot.

  • I don't want to use the world "unimaginable" too often.

  • But it was unimaginably hot.

  • The Universe remained, like, an uber hot sea dominated

  • by radiation, but then luckily it simmered down

  • to a balmy 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit

  • about 380,000 years after the Big Bang,

  • allowing matter and radiation to separate.

  • And remember:

  • I mean, you are a somewhat firm bag of energy.

  • In my case, I'm not that firm.

  • So anyway, at 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit,

  • radiation was finally able to move freely

  • through the Universe, and we see that radiation today

  • as the end of the dark ages that followed the Big Bang

  • and the beginning of a brilliant flash that we call:

  • Which is a great name for a band.

  • Physicists call it "The fingerprint of the Universe"

  • and it's one of the most important pieces

  • of historical evidence we have for the Big Bang

  • because CBR is everywhere.

  • Tune your radio to a frequency that doesn't have a station,

  • a portion of the static you hear is actually

  • that cosmic background radiation being picked up by your radio.

  • So you can literally hear the Universe in its infancy.

  • Sometimes it can be tricky to know what's true,

  • especially when we're talking about stuff

  • that happened so far in the distant past.

  • That is why we created science:

  • So just using your limited human senses, you might come

  • to the same conclusion as 19th century scientists--

  • that the Universe is static, eternal, and infinite.

  • Then, using our minds, if the Universe is infinite--

  • it contains infinite stars and it has always existed--

  • then the night sky and the daytime sky for that matter

  • would literally be filled with stars,

  • so much that day and night would be indistinguishable.

  • This is clearly not the case, so something must be amiss.

  • The Universe must either be not static,

  • not infinite, or not eternal.

  • So which is it?

  • You know how when an ambulance drives towards you,

  • the sound waves are compressed

  • and the siren sounds higher pitched,

  • and as it speeds away the waves are stretched out

  • and the pitch is lower?

  • It's the Doppler effect.

  • Well, here's another name you've heard:

  • Edwin Hubble.

  • He realized that light does the same thing.

  • Galaxies in stars moving away

  • from us have their lights stretch out,

  • making it more red, and stars moving toward us

  • have their light compressed, making it more blue.

  • Combined with the work of Henrietta Leavitt,

  • which allowed us to accurately estimate how far away stars are,

  • Hubble was able to determine that stars

  • on the whole are flying away from each other.

  • He discovered that the most remote objects

  • in the sky were all red-shifted and were actually

  • other galaxies beyond the Milky Way moving away from us.

  • From here, he built upon the work

  • of Belgian Catholic priest Georges Lemaitre

  • who hypothesized that the Universe began

  • at a single point.

  • Big Bang cosmologists wanted proof, though.

  • They knew that the amount of radiation released

  • by the Big Bang would be massive and they wanted to see it.

  • It wasn't until the 1960s that it was found-- accidentally--

  • by two guys working on an antenna

  • at Bell Laboratories in New Jersey.

  • They were trying to eliminate all the background noise

  • from an extremely sensitive radio antenna,

  • but they found this faint hum coming from every direction.

  • They tried everything they could to get rid of it,

  • including murdering the pigeons

  • that kept pooping on the antenna.

  • Kind of sad, but those pigeons, they gave their lives

  • for one of the most profound discoveries in modern science.

  • A conversation with a local radio astronomer led them

  • to show their findings to an astronomer

  • at Princeton who confirmed the existence

  • of what had been predicted for years.

  • The final piece of that Big Bang puzzle is that we can see it.

  • Light has a speed.

  • When we look at the sun, we're seeing the light

  • that left it eight minutes ago.

  • But if we look at something

  • that's 13.8 billion light-years away,

  • we're seeing the stuff that happened 13.8 billion years ago.

  • That radiation has been traveling

  • since the very beginning of the Universe.

  • Not only can we tell very clearly

  • that there was just nothing there before that,

  • we can now study that radiation to learn the sequence

  • of events of the Big Bang.

  • We can also see that the chemical composition

  • of the early Universe is what we'd expect to see.

  • A lot of hydrogen, a lot of helium,

  • and a tiny pinch of lithium.

  • The rest of the period table had to wait

  • for the fiery furnaces in the bellies of stars to be created.

  • But more on that next episode.

  • As far as we've come in the past century

  • in crafting a history of the Universe,

  • there are still many things

  • cosmologists have yet to discover.

  • For instance, the Universe behaves

  • as if there's a bunch of matter in it

  • that we can't see or detect.

  • Galaxies' gravitation is affected by this matter,

  • but it's otherwise completely invisible to us.

  • Physicists call it "dark matter"

  • but we have no idea what it is.

  • But as in any historical endeavor,

  • new discoveries will alter the story in future years,

  • so expect the Big Histories of ten or 20 years from now

  • to look very different from today's.

  • But this isn't discouraging because, like,

  • knowing everything would be boring.

  • There's a lot left to discover and at the current pace

  • of scientific inquiry, many of those amazing discoveries

  • will await us in our lifetime-- or at least in your lifetime.

  • - Whether it be World War II or the life of Abe Lincoln,

  • all histories ultimately start with the Big Bang.

  • Yeah, it would be silly to start

  • your typical World War II textbook with the Big Bang,

  • but it would be about 100 trillion trillion times

  • more ridiculous to say the Big Bang,

  • the mother of all historical events, was not history.

  • And that's why Big History reaches

  • into the lives of every person on this tiny speck of dust

  • we call home regardless of nation, class, or creed,

  • and forms our common story.

  • See you next time.

Hi, I'm John Green, and this is Crash Course Big History

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