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What's the biggest question that you could possibly ask?
Surely, what it might be is, "How did everything begin?"
That's a question that all origin stories ask
and they have a huge diversity of answers.
Some say there wasn't a beginning
because everything has always existed.
Some say perhaps a multicolored serpent
was traveling through the land and as it did so,
it created the mountains and the rivers and the streams
and maybe even the stars and maybe even you and me.
Some say there was a sort of committee of gods
that created the world
or perhaps the one true God created the world.
There's a huge diversity of these stories,
but each of them makes claims.
And that's because every origin story
is, in a sense, an explanation.
It's trying to tell you how things happened.
And as a result of that, origin stories aren't fixed.
They change.
They change over time because new information comes in,
new evidence,
and the explanations have to change.
Now, what we're going to look at in this unit
is how the modern, scientific answer
to that great question emerged.
And we'll see that new evidence over several hundred years
changed the story.
We'll begin by going back 500 years to Europe
and this is because modern science
first flourished in Europe.
Europe at the time, 500 years ago,
was predominantly a Christian region.
And the Christian church, like most religions,
had its own answers to that question,
"How did everything begin?"
And the Christian church's answer was that God
created the Universe several thousand years ago,
but they tied that answer to a great model of the Universe
that had been constructed about 1,900 years ago
by an astronomer called Ptolemy,
who lived in Alexandria in Egypt.
Now, this is what Ptolemy's model
of the Universe looked like.
He believed that the Earth was at the center
of the Universe.
And the Earth was a realm of imperfection.
And around it was the realm of perfection.
And that realm consisted of several
concentric transparent spheres and those spheres carried
the Sun, the Moon, the stars, all the heavenly bodies
moving in different ways depending on which sphere
they were in.
And then beyond them was the perfect realm of Heaven.
Now, Ptolemy's model of the Universe
worked pretty well.
People accepted it not just because the Church
said they should, but also because
there was a lot of evidence for it.
And this was because astronomers in his time--
or astronomers in the 16th century,
I should say, and in Ptolemy's time--
were studying the Earth using the naked eye.
Now, think about this.
If you were studying the Universe
using just the naked eye,
just looking directly at the skies,
you might be very tempted to think
that the Universe revolves around the Earth, mightn't you?
Between 1550 and 1700, new evidence began to kick in,
some of it supplied by new technologies.
And what that did was it began to undermine
Ptolemy's idea of the Universe.
Some astronomers, for example, pointed out that every year,
the planets, as they orbit the Earth,
seem to move backwards for a period.
And Ptolemy's model really struggled
to explain that.
The astronomer Copernicus in the 16th century
pointed out that if you imagine that it's actually the Sun
that's at the center of the Universe
instead of the Earth, you could solve that problem
quite easily.
So that's one little glitch.
Then another astronomer, Kepler, found that the orbits
of the planets are actually
not perfect circles as Ptolemy had imagined.
They are ellipses, ovals like this.
That was a problem.
Third, an Italian astronomer called Galileo
began to use what was the hot new technology
of the time, the telescope.
And he was one of the first astronomers
to actually look at the heavens
through the telescope.
And what he saw showed the heavens were much less perfect
than Ptolemy had thought.
For example, if you look at the Sun,
it's got sunspots.
These are real, sort of blotches
on the faces of the Sun.
No one liked that.
And if you look at Jupiter, you find
it's not a single planet, it's got little moons,
lots of moons orbiting it.
So for all of these reasons, people began to worry
about Ptolemy's model.
And notice how new technologies, new evidence and logic
have begun to undermine a traditional explanation
of how the Universe works.
Late in the 17th century, the great English scientist
Isaac Newton began to argue that it wasn't
concentric spheres that held together
all the bodies of the Universe.
It was actually a mysterious force that pervaded
the entire Universe that was called gravity
and it pulled everything together.
By 1700, most astronomers had dropped
Ptolemy's model of the Universe.
They now came to believe there were no edges
to the Universe, there were no spheres
or perhaps, the entire Universe was infinite in size
and infinitely old and just held together
by this force of gravity.
Now, notice how evidence has begun
to change the old story.
This is, in fact, the first model of the Universe
that was scientific in the sense
that it was based primarily on evidence.
And notice one more thing.
Notice how scientists
in different parts of the world communicate with each other,
share their information, share their evidence
to construct a new story.
This is the process that we're going to call
in this course Collective Learning.
And here's a very powerful example of how it works.
Let's call this model of the Universe
we've just been describing "Newton's Universe."
It described the Universe as infinitely large
and infinitely old.
And that model worked pretty well for about 200 years.
Most astronomers accepted it until in the 19th century
problems began to emerge
as new forms of evidence appeared and new technologies.
Now, I'm going to describe this new evidence
and how it undermined Ptolemy's Universe very briefly.
Your job is to dig much deeper into the evidence.
So let's go.
What 19th century astronomers were really interested in
was trying to map the Universe.
This meant two things.
First, can you find the distance to stars?
Can you tell how far away they are?
And secondly, can you figure out how they're moving?
Now, let's begin with the problem of distance.
Can you imagine how could you figure out
how far away the stars are?
It's not easy at all.
But in fact, the Greeks, who were really good
at thinking about the Universe logically and rationally
had already figured out how you do it.
And the method is that of parallax.
Let me try and explain.
Now, take your finger, put it right
in front of your nose, and now, hold the finger steady
and waggle your head and notice that the finger
moves against the background.
Okay?
Now, move the finger away, do the same thing
and what you'll notice is the finger seems to move
far less against the background.
Now, the Greeks had figured out that something like this
might be true of the Universe.
If there's a star that's near us,
it's a bit like your finger.
You may see it moving against the background.
By figuring out how much it moves,
you ought to be able to calculate how far away it is
using trigonometry, which is the math
all surveyors use.
But there was a problem.
The Greeks simply didn't have the technology
to make precise enough measurements
and the movements of stars, even the very nearest,
are absolutely tiny.
So it was not until the 19th century
when new, better telescopes emerged that we were able
to make the first parallax measurements
and the first measurements of the distance to nearby stars.
Astronomers also developed a whole series of other ways
of measuring the distance to stars.
I'll give you just one more example.
It involves a special type of star called a Cepheid.
Cepheids vary.
The pole star is a Cepheid.
An American astronomer called Henrietta Leavitt
began to study Cepheids.
And what she found out is that from the way they vary
you can tell exactly how bright they really are.
Now, if you know how bright they really are,
you can figure out how far away they are
because you can figure out how much light
has been lost in between.
So that's one of a whole series of ways
of measuring the distance to stars.
Now, astronomers also began to figure out ways
of measuring whether stars are moving away from us
or towards us.
At first sight, that may sound impossible.
The techniques are very clever.
They're based on the principle of the Doppler effect.
Now, you know if an ambulance goes past you,
the pitch seems to drop.
It goes (imitates siren) as it moves past you.
We've all seen this. Okay?
What's happening is that the frequency is dropping
as it starts moving away from you.
Now, astronomers figured out that the same thing happens
with the light from distant stars or galaxies.
Its frequency drops.
That means it's shifted towards the red end
of the spectrum.
So astronomers say it's "redshifted."
Now, if you find a distant galaxy is redshifted,
that means it's moving away from us.
In the 1920s, an American astronomer, Edwin Hubble,
used the Mount Wilson Telescope
in L.A. to make an astonishing discovery.
What he did was he used all the information
we've just been describing and what he found was first,
that most galaxies seem to be moving away
from the Earth.
That was a surprise.
But they found something even more astonishing.
The further away they were, the faster they seemed
to be moving away from Earth.
Okay, think about this for a moment.
What could that possibly mean?
Well, it seemed to mean first
that Newton's model of the Universe simply doesn't work.
The Universe is not fixed in time and space.
Instead, it's expanding.
Now, for most astronomers, that was a quite remarkable
and unexpected conclusion because if it's expanding now,
think about the past.
It must have been smaller in the past.
And at some time in the past, it must have been
infinitely small.
That's what the Belgian astronomer
Lemaitre called the "primordial atom"
from which everything came.
Now, this was a revolution.
It was a revolution in astronomical thinking.
And what it meant was that the Universe,
like you and me, has a history of change over time.
But it took 40 or 50 years to figure out
all the implications of what Hubble had found
and to actually tease out that history.