You'll travel 1 trillion kilometers through space - Fabio Pacucci and Lindsay DeMarchi

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2024-10-01 ・ TED-Ed


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You'll travel 1 trillion kilometers through space - Fabio Pacucci and Lindsay DeMarchi

136,827 views ・ 2024-10-01

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:10
Happy 100th birthday!
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Your favorite granddaughter (shh, don’t tell the others)
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created a surprise:
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a holographic map displaying everywhere you’ve traveled—
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not just on Earth, but through the universe!
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00:25
While you haven’t literally been to space,
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you've lived on a spinning rock hurtling around a sun, whizzing through a galaxy,
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and the journey only gets wilder from there.
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You’ve made some real progress in the grand scheme of things.
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But... how much, exactly?
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Your atlas starts on the planet’s surface.
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00:49
Over the course of your life you’ve walked about 120,000 kilometers—
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the equivalent of three trips around the globe.
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Daily commutes and international travel add a few more.
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01:01
This may seem remarkable until you factor in your pirouette around the planet
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each day due to its rotation.
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01:11
The distance traveled this way differs from person to person—
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those close to the poles trace a smaller circle than those at the equator.
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Living halfway between them you’ve picked up 30,000 kilometers every day
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01:24
without shifting a muscle.
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01:27
Except, your motion isn’t perfectly circular.
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It's a curlicue.
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As the Earth elliptically orbits the Sun, there you go,
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adding roughly another 940 million kilometers every year.
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01:40
But it doesn’t end there.
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Our entire solar system is contained within the heliosphere,
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a bubble of charged particles emitted by the Sun.
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That bubble orbits the Milky Way’s center, which harbors a supermassive black hole,
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at a speed of about 200 kilometers per second.
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02:00
One full orbit takes 230 million years—
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meaning we've aged little more than one galactic year since the first dinosaurs.
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02:09
In your 100 years, you’ve witnessed four ten millionths of one rotation.
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That’s still 600 billion kilometers,
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or 2,200 round trips between the Earth and Sun.
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Our galaxy and over 100 neighbors together constitute “The Local Group.”
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The Milky Way and Andromeda are hurtling towards each other
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at 125 kilometers per second,
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and will collide in about 4.5 billion years.
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The Local Group is a speck within the Virgo Supercluster,
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which is itself just one of many lobes of the Laniakea Supercluster
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that contains over 100,000 galaxies.
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02:51
This supercluster has a mysterious gravitational center
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called the Great Attractor.
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02:57
Because these enormous masses all gravitationally tug on each other,
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03:01
our galaxy’s motion is much more helter-skelter
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than a clean, circular orbit.
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In your lifetime, you’ve traveled 2 trillion kilometers
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03:12
at about 600 kilometers per second relative to the Great Attractor.
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03:17
The Laniakea Supercluster is, you guessed it,
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moving with respect to everything else in the universe.
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At every step thus far, your granddaughter has used central reference points
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to describe your relative motion.
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03:31
But the universe has no center.
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03:35
Instead, astronomers use the Cosmic Microwave Background, or CMB,
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an echo of the early universe, which involves low-energy photons
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bouncing around everywhere in all directions, all the time.
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Imagine standing somewhere where the wind blows toward you
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at the same speed from every direction.
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If you started running any which way,
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the wind in your face would have a higher speed,
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while the wind at your back would be gentler.
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04:02
The CMB is like that—
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any direction we travel, the CMB appears more energetic or blue-shifted,
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while behind us it appears red-shifted.
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By measuring the degree and direction of that shift,
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we can determine where we’re going and how fast, relative to the CMB.
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And the answer is:
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630 kilometers per second towards the Great Attractor.
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To recap: you’re spiraling around a sun circling a supermassive black hole,
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hurtling towards another galaxy,
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chaotically weaving around a supercluster, and barreling out into the great expanse.
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Yet you’ve felt none of that;
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tucked as you are into your planetary spaceship by gravity’s embrace.
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If you drew a straight line from the point where you were born
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to where you are today,
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it would measure about one fifth of a light year!
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05:03
That may not sound like much,
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but neither does hiking through a park or sitting through a sunset.
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There’s wonder to be found at every point of our all too brief journeys.
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