1
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SAGAN: This is the age of
planetary exploration...

2
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...when our ships have begun
to sail the heavens.

3
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In those heavens, there are
some worlds much like hell.

4
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Our planet is, in comparison,
much like a heaven.

5
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But the gates of heaven and hell...

6
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...are adjacent and unmarked.

7
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The Earth is a lovely...

8
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...and more or less placid place.

9
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Things change, but slowly.

10
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You can lead a full life and never
encounter a natural catastrophe...

11
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...more violent than a storm.

12
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And so we become complacent...

13
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...relaxed...

14
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...unconcerned.

15
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But in the history of the solar
system and even in human history...

16
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...there are clear records
of extraordinary...

17
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...and devastating catastrophes.

18
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We have now achieved
the dubious distinction...

19
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...of making our own
major catastrophes...

20
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...both intentional and inadvertent.

21
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On the landscapes of other planets...

22
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...where past records
are better preserved...

23
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...there's abundant evidence
of major catastrophes.

24
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It's all a matter of time scale.

25
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An event which is improbable
in 100 years...

26
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...may be inevitable
in 100 million.

27
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But even on the Earth
in this century...

28
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...there have been
bizarre natural events.

29
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In remote central Siberia...

30
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...there was a time
when the Tungus people...

31
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...told strange tales
of a giant fireball...

32
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...that split the sky
and shook the Earth.

33
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They told of a blast
of searing wind...

34
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...that knocked down
people and forests.

35
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It happened, they said,
on a summer's morning...

36
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...in the year 1908.

37
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In the late 1920s...

38
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...L.A. Kulik, a Soviet scientist...

39
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...organized expeditions
to try and solve the mystery.

40
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He built boats to penetrate
this trackless land:

41
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Snowbound in winter...

42
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...a swampy morass in summer.

43
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Eyewitnesses told of
a ball of flame...

44
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...larger than the sun...

45
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...that had blazed across the sky
20 years before.

46
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Kulik assumed a giant meteorite
had struck the Earth.

47
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He expected to find an enormous
impact crater...

48
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...and rare meteorite fragments...

49
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...chipped off some distant asteroid.

50
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However, at ground zero...

51
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...Kulik found upright trees
stripped of their branches...

52
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...but not a trace of the meteorite
or its impact crater.

53
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He was deeply puzzled.

54
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He thought there were meteorite
fragments buried in the swampy ground.

55
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So he set about digging trenches
and pumping out the water.

56
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But the expected meteoritic rock
and iron was not found.

57
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Undaunted, Kulik went on
to make a thorough survey...

58
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...despite the swarms of insects
and other hardships.

59
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Because he discovered something that,
in his own words...

60
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..."exceeded all tales of eyewitnesses
and my wildest expectations."

61
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For more than 20 kilometers
in every direction from ground zero...

62
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...the trees were flattened radially
outward like broken matchsticks.

63
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There must've been
a powerful explosion...

64
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...several kilometers
above the ground.

65
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The pressure wave, spreading out
at the speed of sound...

66
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...was reconstructed from barometric
records at weather stations...

67
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...across Siberia, through Russia
and on into Western Europe.

68
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Dust from the explosion reflected
so much sunlight back to Earth...

69
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...that people could
read by it at night...

70
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...in London, 10,000 kilometers away.

71
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This really remarkable occurrence...

72
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...is called the Tunguska Event.

73
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But what was it?

74
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Well, perhaps, some scientists
have suggested...

75
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...it was a chunk of antimatter
from space...

76
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...annihilated on contact with
the ordinary matter of the Earth...

77
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...disappearing in a flash
of gamma rays.

78
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But the radioactivity you'd expect
from matter-antimatter annihilation...

79
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...is to be found nowhere
at the impact site.

80
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Or, perhaps, other scientists
have suggested...

81
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...it was a mini black hole
from space...

82
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...which impacted the Earth
in Siberia...

83
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...tunneled through
the solid body of Earth...

84
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...and plunged out the other side.

85
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But the records of atmospheric
shock waves give not a hint...

86
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...of something booming out of
the North Atlantic later that day.

87
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Or maybe, other people have speculated,
it was a spaceship...

88
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...of some unimaginably advanced
extraterrestrial civilization...

89
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...in desperate mechanical trouble...

90
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...crashing in a remote region
of an obscure planet.

91
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Well, if so, it's pretty startling
that at the impact site...

92
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...there is not a piece,
not the tiniest transistor...

93
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...of a crashed spacecraft.

94
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More prosaically, perhaps it was
a large meteorite...

95
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...or a small asteroid
which hit the Earth.

96
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But even here,
there are no observable telltale...

97
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...rocky or metallic fragments
of the sort...

98
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...that you'd expect
from such an impact.

99
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The key point of the Tunguska Event...

100
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...is that there was a tremendous
explosion, a great shock wave...

101
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...many trees burned,
an enormous forest fire...

102
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...and yet, no crater in the ground.

103
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There seems to be
only one explanation...

104
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...which is consistent
with these facts.

105
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And that explanation is this:

106
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In 1908, a piece of a comet...

107
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...hit the Earth.

108
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No one saw it approach.

109
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A small point of light
lost in the glare of the morning sun.

110
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It had been drifting for centuries
through the inner solar system...

111
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...like an iceberg in the ocean
of interplanetary space.

112
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But this time, by accident...

113
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...there was a planet in the way.

114
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From the time and direction of
its approach, what hit the Earth...

115
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...seems to have been a fragment
of a comet named Encke.

116
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Hurtling at more than
100,000 kilometers an hour...

117
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...it was a mountain of ice
about the size of a football field...

118
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...and weighing almost a million tons.

119
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There was no warning, until
it plunged into the atmosphere.

120
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(COMET RUMBLES)

121
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If such an explosion happened today...

122
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...it might be thought,
in the panic of the moment...

123
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...to be produced by a nuclear weapon.

124
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Such a cometary impact and fireball...

125
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...simulates all the effects
of a 15-megaton nuclear burst...

126
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...including the mushroom cloud,
with one exception:

127
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There would be no radiation.

128
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So could a rare but natural event...

129
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...the impact of a comet with Earth...

130
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...trigger a nuclear war?

131
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It's a strange scenario:
A small comet hits the Earth...

132
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...as millions have during
Earth's history...

133
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...and the response
of our civilization...

134
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...is promptly to self-destruct.

135
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Maybe it's unlikely,
but it might be a good idea...

136
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...to understand comets
and collisions and catastrophes...

137
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...a little bit better than we do.

138
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Now, a comet, at least as far as
we understand them today...

139
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...is made mostly of ice:

140
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Water ice, maybe some ammonia ice...

141
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...a little bit of methane ice.

142
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So in striking
the Earth's atmosphere...

143
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...a modest cometary fragment...

144
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...will produce a great radiant
fireball and a mighty blast wave.

145
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It'll burn trees and level forests...

146
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...and make a sound
heard around the world.

147
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But it need not make
a crater in the ground.

148
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Why? Because the ices in the comet
are all melted in the impact.

149
00:10:20,266 --> 00:10:23,724
And there's going to be very
few recognizable pieces of comet...

150
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...left on the ground.

151
00:10:32,078 --> 00:10:34,876
We humans like to think of
the heavens as stable...

152
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...serene, unchanging.

153
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But comets suddenly appear...

154
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...and hang ominously in the sky,
night after night, for weeks.

155
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So the idea developed that the comet
had to be there for a reason.

156
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The reason was that comets were
predictions of disaster...

157
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...that they foretold the deaths
of princes and the fall of kingdoms.

158
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In 1066, for example...

159
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...the Normans witnessed an apparition
or appearance of Halley's comet.

160
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Since a comet must, they thought,
predict the fall of some kingdom...

161
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...they promptly invaded England.

162
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Here's King Harold of England
looking a little glum.

163
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The events were noted
in the Bayeux tapestry...

164
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...a kind of newspaper of the day.

165
00:11:22,395 --> 00:11:24,454
Or, in the early 13th century...

166
00:11:24,664 --> 00:11:28,191
...Giotto, one of the founders
of modern realistic painting...

167
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...witnessed another apparition
of comet Halley...

168
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...and inserted it into a nativity
he was painting.

169
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A harbinger of a different
sort of change of kingdoms.

170
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Around 1517...

171
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...another great comet appeared.
This time it was seen in Mexico.

172
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And the Aztec emperor, Moctezuma...

173
00:11:48,254 --> 00:11:49,881
...maybe this is he...

174
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...promptly executed his astrologers.

175
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Why? They hadn't predicted the comet,
and they sure hadn't explained it.

176
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Moctezuma was positive that the comet
foretold some dreadful disaster.

177
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He became distant and gloomy...

178
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...and in that way,
helped to set the stage...

179
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...for the successful Spanish conquest
of Mexico under Cortés.

180
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In many cases, a superstitious
belief in comets...

181
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...becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

182
00:12:20,054 --> 00:12:22,614
Here are two quite different
representations...

183
00:12:22,822 --> 00:12:25,450
...of the great comet of 1577:

184
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This one pictured by the Turks...

185
00:12:31,231 --> 00:12:33,563
...and this one by the Germans.

186
00:12:40,139 --> 00:12:43,438
In 1705, Edmund Halley finally...

187
00:12:43,643 --> 00:12:46,168
...figured out that the same
spectacular comet...

188
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...was booming by the Earth
every 76 years, like clockwork.

189
00:12:50,383 --> 00:12:54,114
That comet is now called,
appropriately, comet Halley.

190
00:12:54,320 --> 00:12:58,120
And it's the same one that we talked
about before, the comet of 1066.

191
00:12:58,324 --> 00:13:01,259
At that point, the subject began
to lose a little...

192
00:13:01,461 --> 00:13:04,828
...of its burden of superstition,
but hardly all.

193
00:13:05,031 --> 00:13:08,797
Public fear of comets survived.
Well, for example...

194
00:13:09,336 --> 00:13:12,499
...look at this terribly
nasty comet of 1857...

195
00:13:12,706 --> 00:13:16,142
...that some people figured
would splinter the Earth.

196
00:13:17,477 --> 00:13:21,538
By 1910, Halley's comet
returned once more.

197
00:13:21,748 --> 00:13:25,206
But this time, astronomers using
a new tool, the spectroscope...

198
00:13:25,418 --> 00:13:30,321
...had discovered cyanogen gas
in the tail of a comet.

199
00:13:30,524 --> 00:13:32,856
Now, cyanogen is a poison.

200
00:13:33,059 --> 00:13:36,688
The Earth was to pass through
this poisonous tail.

201
00:13:36,896 --> 00:13:40,889
The fact that the gas was
astonishingly, fabulously thin...

202
00:13:41,101 --> 00:13:43,262
...reassured almost nobody.

203
00:13:43,469 --> 00:13:47,769
For example, look at the headlines
in the Los Angeles Examiner...

204
00:13:47,975 --> 00:13:50,671
...for May 9, 1910:

205
00:13:50,877 --> 00:13:54,870
"Say, Has That Comet
'Cyanogened' You Yet?"

206
00:13:55,082 --> 00:13:58,176
"Entire Human Race Due
For Free Gaseous Bath.

207
00:13:58,385 --> 00:14:00,410
Expect High Jinks."

208
00:14:00,620 --> 00:14:05,489
Or take this from the San Francisco
Chronicle, May 15, 1910:

209
00:14:05,693 --> 00:14:09,288
"Comet Comes And Husband Reforms."

210
00:14:09,495 --> 00:14:11,690
"Comet Parties Now Fad In New York."

211
00:14:11,898 --> 00:14:13,729
Amazing stuff!

212
00:14:13,933 --> 00:14:17,369
In 1910, people were holding
comet parties, not so much to...

213
00:14:17,570 --> 00:14:21,165
...celebrate the end of the world
as to make merry before it happened.

214
00:14:21,407 --> 00:14:25,935
There were entrepreneurs
who were hawking comet pills.

215
00:14:26,380 --> 00:14:28,439
I think I'm gonna take one for later.

216
00:14:28,648 --> 00:14:31,481
And there were those
who were selling...

217
00:14:31,951 --> 00:14:36,888
...gas masks to protect
against the cyanogen.

218
00:14:37,291 --> 00:14:41,660
And comet nuttiness
didn't stop in 1910.

219
00:14:46,899 --> 00:14:50,835
Long before 1066,
humans marveled at comets.

220
00:14:51,038 --> 00:14:54,235
Our generation is beginning
to understand them.

221
00:15:02,949 --> 00:15:05,281
Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars...

222
00:15:05,485 --> 00:15:08,943
...are small planets made mostly
of rock and iron.

223
00:15:09,722 --> 00:15:12,885
Farther out where it's colder,
are the giant planets...

224
00:15:13,092 --> 00:15:14,855
...made mostly of gas.

225
00:15:15,061 --> 00:15:18,258
But comets originate from
a great cloud beyond the planets...

226
00:15:18,464 --> 00:15:20,694
...almost halfway to the nearest star.

227
00:15:20,900 --> 00:15:23,130
Occasionally, one falls in...

228
00:15:23,336 --> 00:15:25,429
...accelerated by the sun's gravity.

229
00:15:25,639 --> 00:15:27,834
Because it's made mostly of ice,
the comet...

230
00:15:28,040 --> 00:15:30,167
...evaporates as it approaches
the sun.

231
00:15:30,376 --> 00:15:33,243
The vapor is blown back
by the solar wind...

232
00:15:33,447 --> 00:15:35,312
...forming the cometary tail.

233
00:15:35,515 --> 00:15:37,881
Then it's flung back
into outer darkness...

234
00:15:38,084 --> 00:15:39,415
...its orbit so large...

235
00:15:39,620 --> 00:15:42,418
...that it will not return
for millions of years.

236
00:15:42,622 --> 00:15:45,182
These are the long-period comets.

237
00:15:45,391 --> 00:15:48,758
For every one plunging close enough
to the sun to be discovered...

238
00:15:48,961 --> 00:15:50,690
...there may be a billion others...

239
00:15:50,898 --> 00:15:53,958
...slowly drifting
beyond Pluto's orbit.

240
00:15:54,468 --> 00:15:58,962
Very rarely, a long-period comet is
captured in the inner solar system...

241
00:15:59,172 --> 00:16:01,140
...becoming a short-period comet.

242
00:16:01,341 --> 00:16:04,799
It passes near a major planet,
like Saturn.

243
00:16:05,012 --> 00:16:07,640
The planet provides
a small gravitational tug...

244
00:16:07,848 --> 00:16:10,681
...enough to deflect it
into a much smaller orbit.

245
00:16:10,883 --> 00:16:13,545
Though few are captured this way,
those that are...

246
00:16:13,753 --> 00:16:17,587
...become well-known because
they all return in short intervals.

247
00:16:17,790 --> 00:16:21,453
Once trapped in the inner
solar system, among the planets...

248
00:16:21,662 --> 00:16:24,859
...the chances of another
near-collision are increased.

249
00:16:26,566 --> 00:16:29,228
Here, a second encounter
with Saturn...

250
00:16:29,436 --> 00:16:33,270
...further reduces the comet's
orbital period to decades.

251
00:16:33,473 --> 00:16:37,637
A comet may take 10,000 years
between close planetary encounters.

252
00:16:37,844 --> 00:16:41,678
But in this computer study,
we've sped things up.

253
00:16:42,315 --> 00:16:45,182
A third encounter,
this time with Jupiter...

254
00:16:45,384 --> 00:16:48,353
...further reduces
the comet's orbital period.

255
00:16:48,554 --> 00:16:51,216
Now the comet must approach the sun...

256
00:16:51,424 --> 00:16:54,018
...and grow a tail every few years.

257
00:16:54,227 --> 00:16:57,560
Since the dust and gas in the tail
are lost forever to space...

258
00:16:57,763 --> 00:17:00,391
...the comet must slowly be eroding.

259
00:17:00,601 --> 00:17:02,262
Pieces of it break off.

260
00:17:02,468 --> 00:17:05,562
Sometimes, as we've seen,
they even strike the Earth.

261
00:17:05,771 --> 00:17:07,204
In a few thousand years...

262
00:17:07,407 --> 00:17:10,433
...if a short-period comet
hasn't hit a planet...

263
00:17:10,643 --> 00:17:13,271
...it will have evaporated away
almost entirely...

264
00:17:13,479 --> 00:17:17,575
...leaving sand-sized fragments,
which become meteors...

265
00:17:17,784 --> 00:17:21,880
...and its core which, perhaps,
becomes an asteroid.

266
00:17:24,156 --> 00:17:27,956
Suppose I were a pretty typical comet.

267
00:17:28,161 --> 00:17:30,686
And what you would see
would be a kind of...

268
00:17:30,897 --> 00:17:33,491
...tumbling snowball...

269
00:17:33,699 --> 00:17:38,033
...spending most of my time out here
in the outer solar system.

270
00:17:38,237 --> 00:17:40,262
I'd be a kilometer across.

271
00:17:40,473 --> 00:17:42,236
I'd be living most of my days...

272
00:17:42,442 --> 00:17:46,401
...in the gloom beyond Saturn,
orbiting the sun.

273
00:17:46,613 --> 00:17:48,979
But once every century,
I would find myself...

274
00:17:49,182 --> 00:17:52,208
...careening inward,
faster and faster...

275
00:17:52,418 --> 00:17:54,784
...towards the inner solar system.

276
00:17:56,323 --> 00:17:59,759
By the time I would cross
the orbit of Jupiter...

277
00:17:59,960 --> 00:18:01,791
...on my way to the orbit of Mars...

278
00:18:01,994 --> 00:18:05,395
...I'd be heating up because
I'd be getting closer to the sun.

279
00:18:05,598 --> 00:18:07,463
I'd be evaporating a little bit.

280
00:18:07,668 --> 00:18:09,795
Small pieces of dust and ice...

281
00:18:10,002 --> 00:18:13,233
...would be blown behind me
by the solar wind...

282
00:18:13,439 --> 00:18:16,772
...forming an incipient cometary tail.

283
00:18:16,976 --> 00:18:19,410
On the scale of such
a solar system model...

284
00:18:19,612 --> 00:18:22,513
...l, me, a cometary nucleus...

285
00:18:22,715 --> 00:18:24,910
...would be smaller than a snowflake.

286
00:18:25,118 --> 00:18:29,418
Although, when fully developed,
my tail would be longer...

287
00:18:29,622 --> 00:18:32,921
...than the spacing
between the worlds.

288
00:18:34,293 --> 00:18:36,227
Now, sooner or later...

289
00:18:36,429 --> 00:18:40,195
...comets on these long, elliptical
trajectories around the sun...

290
00:18:40,399 --> 00:18:42,594
...must collide with planets.

291
00:18:42,802 --> 00:18:45,270
The Earth and the moon...

292
00:18:45,472 --> 00:18:49,135
...must have been bombarded
by comets and asteroids...

293
00:18:49,343 --> 00:18:52,312
...the debris from the early history
of the solar system.

294
00:18:52,512 --> 00:18:56,312
In interplanetary space, there are
more small objects than large ones.

295
00:18:56,516 --> 00:18:59,576
So there must be,
on a given planetary surface...

296
00:18:59,786 --> 00:19:04,086
...many more impacts of small objects
than of large objects.

297
00:19:04,290 --> 00:19:08,124
So a thing like the Tunguska impact
happens on the Earth...

298
00:19:08,327 --> 00:19:09,919
...maybe every thousand years.

299
00:19:10,130 --> 00:19:13,327
But the impact of a giant
cometary nucleus...

300
00:19:13,533 --> 00:19:15,467
...like Halley's comet, let's say...

301
00:19:15,668 --> 00:19:18,330
...happens only every
billion years or so.

302
00:19:19,071 --> 00:19:22,370
Now, is there evidence
of past collisions?

303
00:19:23,542 --> 00:19:24,941
When a large comet...

304
00:19:25,144 --> 00:19:27,806
...or a large, rocky asteroid
hits a planet...

305
00:19:28,015 --> 00:19:30,313
...it makes a bowl-shaped crater.

306
00:19:30,516 --> 00:19:34,680
The well-preserved impact craters on
Earth were all formed fairly recently.

307
00:19:34,888 --> 00:19:38,221
The older ones have been softened,
filled in or rubbed out...

308
00:19:38,425 --> 00:19:40,985
...by running water
and mountain building.

309
00:19:41,193 --> 00:19:44,685
Impacts make craters on other worlds
and about as often.

310
00:19:44,898 --> 00:19:46,365
But when the air is thin...

311
00:19:46,565 --> 00:19:50,262
...when water rarely flows,
when mountain building is feeble...

312
00:19:50,469 --> 00:19:52,767
...the ancient craters are retained.

313
00:19:52,972 --> 00:19:55,770
This is the case on the moon
and Mercury and Mars...

314
00:19:55,976 --> 00:19:58,672
...our neighboring
terrestrial planets.

315
00:20:00,179 --> 00:20:02,409
They huddle around the sun...

316
00:20:02,616 --> 00:20:04,948
...their source of heat and light...

317
00:20:05,151 --> 00:20:08,450
...a little bit like campers
around a fire.

318
00:20:08,821 --> 00:20:11,415
They are about
4˝ billion years old.

319
00:20:11,624 --> 00:20:15,583
And all bear witness
to an age long gone...

320
00:20:15,795 --> 00:20:18,491
...of major collisions...

321
00:20:18,698 --> 00:20:23,101
...which do not happen at that scale
and frequency anymore.

322
00:20:23,737 --> 00:20:26,706
If we move out past...

323
00:20:26,907 --> 00:20:29,569
...the terrestrial planets
beyond Mars...

324
00:20:29,775 --> 00:20:33,836
...we find ourselves in a different
regime of the solar system...

325
00:20:34,047 --> 00:20:36,140
...in the realm of Jupiter...

326
00:20:36,348 --> 00:20:39,579
...and the other giant,
or Jovian planets.

327
00:20:40,619 --> 00:20:45,113
These are great worlds
composed largely of the gases...

328
00:20:45,325 --> 00:20:47,850
...hydrogen and helium,
some other stuff too.

329
00:20:48,061 --> 00:20:52,862
When we look at the surface,
we do not see a solid surface...

330
00:20:53,065 --> 00:20:56,831
...but only an occasional patch
of atmosphere...

331
00:20:57,036 --> 00:21:00,563
...and a complex array
of multicolored clouds.

332
00:21:00,873 --> 00:21:02,534
These are serious planets...

333
00:21:02,743 --> 00:21:06,839
...not fragmentary little world-lets
like the Earth.

334
00:21:07,046 --> 00:21:10,743
In fact, 1000 Earths would fit...

335
00:21:10,950 --> 00:21:13,316
...in the volume of Jupiter.

336
00:21:13,519 --> 00:21:17,387
If a comet or asteroid were to...

337
00:21:17,590 --> 00:21:22,527
...accidentally impact Jupiter, it would
be very unlikely to leave a crater.

338
00:21:22,728 --> 00:21:26,129
It might make a momentary hole
in the clouds, but that's it.

339
00:21:26,333 --> 00:21:30,030
Nevertheless, we know
that the outer solar system...

340
00:21:30,237 --> 00:21:33,229
...has been subject to
a many-billion-year history...

341
00:21:33,440 --> 00:21:35,533
...of impact cratering.

342
00:21:35,975 --> 00:21:39,968
Jupiter's moon Callisto is studded
with thousands of craters.

343
00:21:40,179 --> 00:21:43,671
Clear evidence of ancient
collisions beyond Mars.

344
00:21:43,884 --> 00:21:47,411
And there are craters
on other moons of Jupiter.

345
00:21:47,654 --> 00:21:50,452
Most of the thousands of
large craters on our own moon...

346
00:21:50,656 --> 00:21:53,386
...were excavated
billions of years ago.

347
00:21:53,592 --> 00:21:56,117
But were any recorded
in historical times?

348
00:21:56,328 --> 00:22:00,196
The odds against it
are about 1000-to-one.

349
00:22:01,233 --> 00:22:03,724
(BELL RINGS)

350
00:22:08,174 --> 00:22:11,337
Nevertheless, there's a possible
eyewitness account...

351
00:22:11,544 --> 00:22:13,444
...of just such an event.

352
00:22:13,646 --> 00:22:17,639
It was the Sunday before the
feast of Saint John the Baptist...

353
00:22:18,050 --> 00:22:20,484
...in the summer of 1178.

354
00:22:21,353 --> 00:22:25,551
The monks of Canterbury Cathedral had
completed their evening prayers...

355
00:22:25,758 --> 00:22:27,953
...and were about to retire
for the night.

356
00:22:28,160 --> 00:22:29,923
The scholarly brother, Gervase...

357
00:22:30,130 --> 00:22:31,995
...returned to his cell to read...

358
00:22:32,198 --> 00:22:33,790
...while some of the others...

359
00:22:34,000 --> 00:22:37,595
...went outside to enjoy
the gentle June air.

360
00:22:37,803 --> 00:22:39,498
(PLAYS FLUTE)

361
00:22:43,376 --> 00:22:45,401
In the midst of their recreation...

362
00:22:45,611 --> 00:22:48,944
...they chanced to witness
an astonishing sight:

363
00:22:49,148 --> 00:22:52,515
A violent explosion on the moon.

364
00:23:01,494 --> 00:23:02,859
This was a time...

365
00:23:03,062 --> 00:23:05,587
...when the heavens were
thought to be changeless.

366
00:23:05,798 --> 00:23:09,632
The moon, the stars and the planets
were deemed pure...

367
00:23:09,835 --> 00:23:13,828
...because they followed
an unvarying celestial routine.

368
00:23:14,073 --> 00:23:17,941
They were expected to behave
without unseemly disruptions...

369
00:23:18,678 --> 00:23:20,509
...like monks in a monastery.

370
00:23:21,046 --> 00:23:24,038
Was it wise to discuss such a vision?

371
00:23:30,923 --> 00:23:32,652
In every time and culture...

372
00:23:32,859 --> 00:23:36,295
...there are pressures to conform
to the prevailing prejudices.

373
00:23:37,396 --> 00:23:40,263
But there are also,
in every place and epoch...

374
00:23:40,467 --> 00:23:44,870
...those who value the truth,
who record the evidence faithfully.

375
00:23:45,070 --> 00:23:48,164
Future generations are in their debt.

376
00:23:54,214 --> 00:23:56,546
A fire on the moon.

377
00:23:56,749 --> 00:24:00,412
Might it be some portent
of ill fortune?

378
00:24:00,820 --> 00:24:04,051
Should the chronicler
of the monastery be told?

379
00:24:04,925 --> 00:24:08,361
Was this event an apparition
of the evil one?

380
00:24:11,197 --> 00:24:14,189
Gervase of Canterbury was
a historian...

381
00:24:14,401 --> 00:24:17,165
...considered today a reliable
reporter of political...

382
00:24:17,369 --> 00:24:19,769
...and cultural events of his time.

383
00:24:19,972 --> 00:24:24,170
This is his account of the
eyewitness testimony he was given:

384
00:24:24,777 --> 00:24:26,836
"Now there was a bright new moon...

385
00:24:27,046 --> 00:24:28,980
...and as usual in that phase...

386
00:24:29,182 --> 00:24:31,548
...its horns were tilted
toward the east.

387
00:24:31,750 --> 00:24:35,413
And suddenly the upper horn
split in two.

388
00:24:35,622 --> 00:24:39,149
From the midpoint of this division,
a flaming torch sprang up...

389
00:24:39,359 --> 00:24:41,953
...spewing out
over a considerable distance...

390
00:24:42,161 --> 00:24:45,221
...fire, hot coals and sparks.

391
00:24:45,431 --> 00:24:48,594
After these transformations,"
Gervase continued...

392
00:24:48,801 --> 00:24:52,464
..."the moon from horn to horn
that is along its whole length...

393
00:24:52,671 --> 00:24:54,935
...took on a blackish appearance."

394
00:24:59,946 --> 00:25:04,212
Gervase took depositions
from all the eyewitnesses.

395
00:25:04,417 --> 00:25:05,714
He later wrote:

396
00:25:05,918 --> 00:25:10,514
"The writer was given this report by
men who saw it with their own eyes...

397
00:25:10,724 --> 00:25:13,215
...and are prepared to stake
their honor on an oath...

398
00:25:13,425 --> 00:25:16,826
...that they have made no addition
or falsification."

399
00:25:17,296 --> 00:25:19,321
Gervase committed the account
to paper...

400
00:25:19,531 --> 00:25:21,897
...enabling astronomers
eight centuries later...

401
00:25:22,102 --> 00:25:24,935
...to try and reconstruct
what really happened.

402
00:25:26,071 --> 00:25:29,006
It may be that 200 years
before Chaucer...

403
00:25:29,209 --> 00:25:32,201
...five monks saw an event
more wonderful...

404
00:25:32,412 --> 00:25:35,540
...than many another celebrated
Canterbury tale.

405
00:25:38,518 --> 00:25:41,715
If a small drifting mountain
were to hit the moon...

406
00:25:41,920 --> 00:25:44,684
...it would set our satellite
swinging like a bell.

407
00:25:44,890 --> 00:25:49,020
Eventually, the tremors would
die down, but not in a mere 800 years.

408
00:25:49,229 --> 00:25:52,426
So is the moon still quivering
from that impact?

409
00:25:52,632 --> 00:25:56,659
The Apollo astronauts emplaced arrays
of special mirrors on the moon.

410
00:25:56,870 --> 00:25:59,031
Reflectors made by
French scientists...

411
00:25:59,238 --> 00:26:02,366
...were also put on the moon
by Soviet Lunakhod vehicles.

412
00:26:02,574 --> 00:26:06,510
When a laser beam from Earth strikes
a mirror and bounces back...

413
00:26:06,713 --> 00:26:09,341
...the roundtrip travel time
can be measured.

414
00:26:09,548 --> 00:26:13,314
At the McDonald Observatory
of the University of Texas...

415
00:26:13,520 --> 00:26:17,354
...a laser beam is prepared for firing
at the reflectors on the moon...

416
00:26:17,557 --> 00:26:20,151
...380,000 kilometers away.

417
00:26:21,061 --> 00:26:24,121
By multiplying the travel time
by the speed of light...

418
00:26:24,330 --> 00:26:27,128
...the distance to that spot
can be determined...

419
00:26:27,332 --> 00:26:30,199
...to a precision of
7 to 10 centimeters:

420
00:26:30,402 --> 00:26:32,802
The width of a hand.

421
00:26:36,475 --> 00:26:39,410
When such measurements are
repeated over years...

422
00:26:39,611 --> 00:26:43,240
...even an extremely slight wobble
in the moon's motion...

423
00:26:43,449 --> 00:26:45,246
...can be determined.

424
00:26:45,452 --> 00:26:48,285
The accuracy is phenomenal.

425
00:26:48,488 --> 00:26:50,854
The error is much less...

426
00:26:51,056 --> 00:26:54,253
...than one-millionth of a percent.

427
00:26:55,962 --> 00:26:59,625
The moon, it turns out,
is gently swinging like a bell...

428
00:26:59,833 --> 00:27:02,393
...just as if it had been
hit by an asteroid...

429
00:27:02,602 --> 00:27:04,968
...less than 1000 years ago.

430
00:27:05,170 --> 00:27:07,138
(RINGING)

431
00:27:08,173 --> 00:27:12,337
So there may be physical evidence
in the age of space flight...

432
00:27:12,711 --> 00:27:17,148
...for the account of the Canterbury
monks in the 12th century.

433
00:27:20,053 --> 00:27:22,920
If 800 years ago
a big asteroid hit the moon...

434
00:27:23,122 --> 00:27:25,056
...the crater should be
prominent today...

435
00:27:25,257 --> 00:27:27,657
...still surrounded by bright rays...

436
00:27:27,861 --> 00:27:31,228
...thin streamers of dust
spewed out by the impact.

437
00:27:31,431 --> 00:27:33,865
In billions of years,
lunar rays are eroded...

438
00:27:34,067 --> 00:27:35,659
...but not in hundreds.

439
00:27:35,868 --> 00:27:39,531
And there is a recent ray crater
called Giordano Bruno...

440
00:27:39,738 --> 00:27:43,174
...in the region of the moon
where an explosion was reported...

441
00:27:43,375 --> 00:27:45,240
...in 1178.

442
00:27:50,916 --> 00:27:52,884
The entire evolution of the moon...

443
00:27:53,086 --> 00:27:55,554
...is a story of catastrophes.

444
00:27:55,755 --> 00:27:57,347
4 1/2 billion years ago...

445
00:27:57,556 --> 00:28:00,252
...the moon was accreting
from interplanetary boulders...

446
00:28:00,459 --> 00:28:03,053
...and craters were forming
all over its surface.

447
00:28:03,263 --> 00:28:06,096
The energy so released
helped melt the crust.

448
00:28:06,299 --> 00:28:10,759
After most of this debris was swept up
by the moon, the surface cooled.

449
00:28:11,203 --> 00:28:13,535
But about 3.9 billion years ago...

450
00:28:13,740 --> 00:28:16,675
...a great asteroid impacted.

451
00:28:21,446 --> 00:28:25,576
It generated an expanding shock wave
and re-melted some of the surface.

452
00:28:25,784 --> 00:28:27,809
The resulting basin
was then flooded...

453
00:28:28,021 --> 00:28:29,613
...probably by dark lava...

454
00:28:29,821 --> 00:28:33,188
...producing one of
the dry seas on the moon.

455
00:28:33,392 --> 00:28:36,589
More recent impacts excavated
craters with bright rays...

456
00:28:36,795 --> 00:28:40,492
...named after Eratosthenes
and Copernicus.

457
00:28:40,700 --> 00:28:42,725
The familiar features
of the man in the moon...

458
00:28:42,935 --> 00:28:45,961
...are a chronicle of ancient impacts.

459
00:28:47,540 --> 00:28:50,202
Most of the original asteroids
were swept up...

460
00:28:50,409 --> 00:28:52,400
...in the making
of the moon and planets.

461
00:28:52,612 --> 00:28:55,740
Many still orbit the sun
in the asteroid belt.

462
00:28:55,949 --> 00:28:59,578
Some, themselves almost fractured
by gravity tides...

463
00:28:59,785 --> 00:29:01,946
...and by impacts
with other asteroids...

464
00:29:02,155 --> 00:29:05,852
...have been captured by planets:
Phobos around Mars, for example...

465
00:29:06,059 --> 00:29:10,120
...or a close moon of Jupiter
called Amalthea.

466
00:29:11,730 --> 00:29:14,563
Similar to the asteroid belt
are the rings of Saturn...

467
00:29:14,766 --> 00:29:19,396
...composed of millions
of small, tumbling, icy moonlets.

468
00:29:19,606 --> 00:29:23,064
Maybe the rings of Saturn
are a moon...

469
00:29:23,276 --> 00:29:27,406
...which was prevented from
forming by the tides of Saturn.

470
00:29:27,614 --> 00:29:30,811
Or maybe it's the remains
of a moon that wandered too close...

471
00:29:31,017 --> 00:29:33,611
...and was torn apart by
the tides of Saturn.

472
00:29:33,820 --> 00:29:36,755
It's certainly a lovely place.

473
00:29:36,956 --> 00:29:41,086
Jupiter also has
a newly discovered ring system...

474
00:29:41,294 --> 00:29:44,024
...which is invisible from the Earth.

475
00:29:46,732 --> 00:29:51,669
Now, there is a curious argument...

476
00:29:51,938 --> 00:29:55,396
...alleging major recent collisions
in the solar system...

477
00:29:55,608 --> 00:29:58,099
...proposed by a psychiatrist...

478
00:29:58,311 --> 00:30:02,213
...named Immanuel Velikovsky in 1950.

479
00:30:02,615 --> 00:30:04,879
He suggested...

480
00:30:05,084 --> 00:30:08,611
...that an object of planetary mass,
which he called a comet...

481
00:30:08,821 --> 00:30:12,313
...was somehow produced
in the Jupiter system.

482
00:30:12,525 --> 00:30:15,790
He doesn't say exactly
how it's produced...

483
00:30:16,629 --> 00:30:17,994
...but maybe...

484
00:30:21,400 --> 00:30:23,630
...it's spat out...

485
00:30:26,773 --> 00:30:28,104
...of Jupiter.

486
00:30:28,940 --> 00:30:33,877
Anyway, however it was made
some 3500 years ago, he imagines...

487
00:30:34,446 --> 00:30:39,179
...it made repeated
close encounters with Mars...

488
00:30:40,019 --> 00:30:42,351
...with the Earth-moon system...

489
00:30:42,721 --> 00:30:47,658
...having as entertaining
biblical consequences...

490
00:30:48,527 --> 00:30:53,226
...the parting of the Red Sea so that
Moses and the Israelites could...

491
00:30:53,432 --> 00:30:56,060
...safely avoid the host of pharaoh...

492
00:30:56,268 --> 00:30:59,032
...and the stopping of
the Earth's rotation when...

493
00:30:59,237 --> 00:31:03,731
...Joshua commanded the sun
to stand still in Gibeon.

494
00:31:03,942 --> 00:31:06,570
He also imagined that
there was extensive flooding...

495
00:31:06,778 --> 00:31:10,009
...and the volcanoes all over
the Earth at that time.

496
00:31:10,515 --> 00:31:15,111
Well, then after
a very complicated game...

497
00:31:15,321 --> 00:31:19,052
...of interplanetary billiards
is completed...

498
00:31:19,258 --> 00:31:23,786
...Velikovsky proposed
that this comet...

499
00:31:23,995 --> 00:31:27,897
...entered into a stable,
almost perfectly circular orbit...

500
00:31:28,100 --> 00:31:29,397
...becoming...

501
00:31:32,205 --> 00:31:33,832
...the planet Venus...

502
00:31:34,039 --> 00:31:37,406
...which he claimed
never existed until then.

503
00:31:38,777 --> 00:31:43,612
Now, these ideas are
almost certainly wrong.

504
00:31:44,217 --> 00:31:46,879
There's no objection
in astronomy to collisions.

505
00:31:47,086 --> 00:31:49,281
We've seen collision fragments...

506
00:31:49,488 --> 00:31:52,787
...and evidence throughout
the solar system.

507
00:31:52,991 --> 00:31:56,825
The problem is with recent
and major collisions.

508
00:31:57,029 --> 00:31:59,259
In any scale model like this...

509
00:31:59,464 --> 00:32:02,729
...it's impossible to have both
the sizes of the planets...

510
00:32:02,934 --> 00:32:05,402
...and the sizes of their orbits
to the same scale...

511
00:32:05,604 --> 00:32:08,767
...because then the planets
would be too small to see.

512
00:32:08,975 --> 00:32:12,035
If the planets were really
to scale in such a model...

513
00:32:12,245 --> 00:32:14,713
...as grains of dust...

514
00:32:14,914 --> 00:32:17,178
...it would then be entirely clear...

515
00:32:17,382 --> 00:32:20,317
...that a comet entering
the inner solar system...

516
00:32:20,519 --> 00:32:23,420
...would have a negligible chance
of colliding with a planet...

517
00:32:23,622 --> 00:32:25,783
...in only a few thousand years.

518
00:32:25,992 --> 00:32:27,289
Moreover...

519
00:32:27,492 --> 00:32:30,950
...Venus is a rocky and metallic...

520
00:32:31,163 --> 00:32:33,529
...hydrogen-poor world...

521
00:32:33,732 --> 00:32:36,667
...whereas Jupiter, where Velikovsky
imagines it comes from...

522
00:32:36,869 --> 00:32:39,497
...is made of almost nothing
but hydrogen.

523
00:32:39,705 --> 00:32:44,506
There is no energy source in Jupiter
to eject planets or comets.

524
00:32:44,709 --> 00:32:48,440
If one did enter
the inner solar system...

525
00:32:48,647 --> 00:32:52,174
...there is no way it could stop
the Earth from rotating.

526
00:32:52,384 --> 00:32:55,785
And if it could, there's no way
Earth could start rotating again...

527
00:32:55,987 --> 00:32:58,387
...at anything like 24 hours a day.

528
00:32:58,590 --> 00:33:01,923
There's no geological evidence
for flooding and volcanism...

529
00:33:02,127 --> 00:33:04,186
...3500 years ago.

530
00:33:04,397 --> 00:33:07,560
Babylonian astronomers
observed Venus...

531
00:33:07,767 --> 00:33:10,395
...in its present stable orbit...

532
00:33:10,603 --> 00:33:13,595
...before Velikovsky said it existed.

533
00:33:13,806 --> 00:33:16,331
And so on.

534
00:33:20,847 --> 00:33:23,611
There are many hypotheses
in science which are wrong.

535
00:33:23,815 --> 00:33:27,342
That's all right. It's the aperture
to finding out what's right.

536
00:33:27,552 --> 00:33:30,385
Science is a self-correcting process.

537
00:33:30,589 --> 00:33:33,114
To be accepted,
new ideas must survive...

538
00:33:33,325 --> 00:33:37,625
...the most rigorous standards
of evidence and scrutiny.

539
00:33:37,963 --> 00:33:40,955
The worst aspect of
the Velikovsky affair is not...

540
00:33:41,166 --> 00:33:43,726
...that many of his ideas were
wrong or silly...

541
00:33:43,935 --> 00:33:46,597
...or in gross contradiction
to the facts.

542
00:33:46,806 --> 00:33:50,674
Rather, the worst aspect is
that some scientists...

543
00:33:50,876 --> 00:33:54,243
...attempted to suppress
Velikovsky's ideas.

544
00:33:54,479 --> 00:33:58,711
The suppression of uncomfortable ideas
may be common in religion...

545
00:33:58,917 --> 00:34:02,785
...or in politics,
but it is not the path to knowledge.

546
00:34:02,989 --> 00:34:06,288
And there's no place for it
in the endeavor of science.

547
00:34:06,492 --> 00:34:08,187
We do not know beforehand...

548
00:34:08,393 --> 00:34:12,420
...where fundamental insights
will arise from...

549
00:34:12,631 --> 00:34:16,761
...about our mysterious
and lovely solar system.

550
00:34:16,969 --> 00:34:20,598
And the history of our study
of the solar system shows clearly...

551
00:34:20,806 --> 00:34:24,833
...that accepted and conventional
ideas are often wrong...

552
00:34:25,044 --> 00:34:27,012
...and that fundamental insights...

553
00:34:27,212 --> 00:34:31,046
...can arise from
the most unexpected sources.

554
00:34:32,685 --> 00:34:34,448
We've evolved on the planet Earth...

555
00:34:34,654 --> 00:34:37,248
...and so we find it
a congenial place.

556
00:34:37,455 --> 00:34:39,787
But just next door is Venus...

557
00:34:39,991 --> 00:34:42,983
...until recently, enveloped
in mystery.

558
00:34:43,195 --> 00:34:46,096
It has almost the same size
and mass as the Earth.

559
00:34:46,299 --> 00:34:50,292
Might our sister world
be a balmy summer planet...

560
00:34:50,502 --> 00:34:53,835
...a little warmer than the Earth
because it's closer to the sun?

561
00:34:54,039 --> 00:34:58,373
Are there craters, volcanoes,
mountains, oceans, life?

562
00:34:59,412 --> 00:35:04,111
The first to look at Venus through
a telescope was Galileo in 1609.

563
00:35:04,316 --> 00:35:07,114
But all he could see
was a featureless disk.

564
00:35:07,687 --> 00:35:11,214
As optical telescopes got bigger,
that's all anybody could see:

565
00:35:11,423 --> 00:35:14,017
A disk with no details on it at all.

566
00:35:14,226 --> 00:35:17,992
Venus evidently was covered
with an opaque layer...

567
00:35:18,197 --> 00:35:21,325
...thick clouds concealing the surface.

568
00:35:21,534 --> 00:35:26,130
For centuries, even the composition
of the clouds of Venus was unknown.

569
00:35:26,338 --> 00:35:30,866
I mean, you could go outside, look up,
see Venus with the naked eye...

570
00:35:31,077 --> 00:35:34,171
...observe sunlight reflected
from the clouds of Venus.

571
00:35:34,380 --> 00:35:36,974
What were you looking at?
What were the clouds made of?

572
00:35:37,182 --> 00:35:38,740
Nobody knew.

573
00:35:38,951 --> 00:35:42,648
As a result, imagination ran riot.

574
00:35:42,855 --> 00:35:45,722
The absence of anything you
could see on Venus...

575
00:35:45,925 --> 00:35:49,361
...led some scientists and others
to deduce...

576
00:35:49,562 --> 00:35:51,723
...that the surface was a swamp.

577
00:35:53,032 --> 00:35:57,025
The argument, if we can dignify it
with such a phrase...

578
00:35:57,435 --> 00:35:58,367
...went like this:

579
00:35:58,571 --> 00:36:00,869
"I can't see a thing
on the surface of Venus."

580
00:36:01,072 --> 00:36:01,731
"Why not?"

581
00:36:01,941 --> 00:36:05,069
"Because it's covered with
a dense layer of clouds."

582
00:36:05,276 --> 00:36:06,743
"What are clouds made of?"

583
00:36:06,946 --> 00:36:10,575
"Water, of course. Therefore, Venus
must have a lot of water on it."

584
00:36:10,783 --> 00:36:12,273
"Then the surface must be wet."

585
00:36:12,485 --> 00:36:15,181
"If the surface is wet,
it's probably a swamp.

586
00:36:15,387 --> 00:36:18,220
If there's a swamp, there's ferns.
If there's ferns...

587
00:36:18,423 --> 00:36:20,789
...maybe there's even dinosaurs."

588
00:36:20,993 --> 00:36:22,927
Observation:
You couldn't see a thing.

589
00:36:23,129 --> 00:36:25,723
Conclusion: dinosaurs.

590
00:36:26,298 --> 00:36:29,096
If just looking at Venus
was so unproductive...

591
00:36:29,300 --> 00:36:30,733
...what else could you do?

592
00:36:30,936 --> 00:36:34,303
The next clue came from
early work with that:

593
00:36:34,507 --> 00:36:36,031
A glass prism.

594
00:36:36,241 --> 00:36:40,371
An intense beam of ordinary white
light is passed through a narrow slit...

595
00:36:40,579 --> 00:36:42,171
...and then through the prism.

596
00:36:42,381 --> 00:36:44,975
The result is to spread
the white light out...

597
00:36:45,184 --> 00:36:48,551
...into its constituent
rainbow of colors.

598
00:36:49,188 --> 00:36:52,521
This rainbow pattern
is called a spectrum.

599
00:36:52,725 --> 00:36:55,523
Think about it.
White light enters the prism...

600
00:36:55,728 --> 00:36:58,492
...what comes out of the prism
is colored light.

601
00:36:58,698 --> 00:37:00,723
Lots of colors.
Where did they come from?

602
00:37:00,932 --> 00:37:02,957
They must've been hiding
in the white light.

603
00:37:03,169 --> 00:37:06,297
White light must be
a mixture of many colors.

604
00:37:06,505 --> 00:37:09,269
Here we see the spectrum
running from...

605
00:37:09,475 --> 00:37:12,876
...violet, blue, green,
yellow, orange, to red.

606
00:37:13,079 --> 00:37:17,516
Since we see these colors, we call
this the spectrum of visible light.

607
00:37:18,550 --> 00:37:22,577
The sun emits lots of visible light.
The air is transparent to it.

608
00:37:22,788 --> 00:37:25,450
So our eyes evolved
to work in visible light.

609
00:37:25,657 --> 00:37:29,149
But there are many other frequencies
of light which our eyes can't detect.

610
00:37:29,361 --> 00:37:31,420
Beyond the violet
is the ultraviolet.

611
00:37:31,629 --> 00:37:34,757
It's just as real, but you need
instruments to detect it.

612
00:37:34,967 --> 00:37:38,300
Beyond the ultraviolet are
the x-rays and then the gamma rays.

613
00:37:38,837 --> 00:37:41,203
On the other side of visible light,
beyond the red...

614
00:37:41,407 --> 00:37:44,137
...is the infrared,
again real, again invisible.

615
00:37:44,343 --> 00:37:47,540
Beyond the infrared
are the radio waves.

616
00:37:47,747 --> 00:37:51,513
Now, this entire range from
the gamma rays way over there...

617
00:37:51,717 --> 00:37:54,117
...to the radio waves
all the way over here...

618
00:37:54,320 --> 00:37:56,686
...are simply different
kinds of light.

619
00:37:56,888 --> 00:37:59,083
They differ only in the frequency.

620
00:37:59,291 --> 00:38:02,260
They're all useful, by the way,
in astronomy.

621
00:38:02,461 --> 00:38:05,089
But because of the limitations
of our eyes...

622
00:38:05,297 --> 00:38:09,631
...we have a prejudice,
a bias, a chauvinism...

623
00:38:09,835 --> 00:38:13,430
...to this tiny rainbow band
of visible light.

624
00:38:13,638 --> 00:38:17,802
Now, a spectrum can be used
in a simple and elegant way...

625
00:38:18,042 --> 00:38:21,307
...to determine the chemical
composition of the atmosphere...

626
00:38:21,513 --> 00:38:22,878
...of a planet or star.

627
00:38:23,082 --> 00:38:25,448
Different atoms and molecules
absorb...

628
00:38:25,651 --> 00:38:28,415
...different frequencies
or colors of light.

629
00:38:28,620 --> 00:38:33,114
And those absorbed or missing
frequencies appear as black lines...

630
00:38:33,325 --> 00:38:37,159
...in the spectrum of the light
we receive from the planet or star.

631
00:38:37,363 --> 00:38:41,697
Each and every substance
has a characteristic fingerprint...

632
00:38:41,900 --> 00:38:44,198
...a spectral signature...

633
00:38:44,403 --> 00:38:47,338
...which permits it to be detected
over a great distance.

634
00:38:47,540 --> 00:38:51,101
As a result, the gases
in the atmosphere of Venus...

635
00:38:51,310 --> 00:38:54,211
...at a distance of
60 million kilometers...

636
00:38:54,413 --> 00:38:58,144
...their composition's been determined
from the Earth.

637
00:38:58,350 --> 00:39:02,844
It's amazing to me still, we can tell
what a thing is made out of...

638
00:39:03,054 --> 00:39:06,683
...at an enormous distance away,
without ever touching it.

639
00:39:08,027 --> 00:39:12,157
Our eyes can't see in the near
infrared part of the spectrum.

640
00:39:12,364 --> 00:39:13,763
But our instruments can.

641
00:39:13,965 --> 00:39:17,799
Here's the absorption pattern
of lots and lots of carbon dioxide:

642
00:39:18,003 --> 00:39:22,463
Dark lines in characteristic patterns
at specific frequencies.

643
00:39:22,708 --> 00:39:25,506
You'd detect a different set
of infrared lines...

644
00:39:25,711 --> 00:39:28,373
...if, say, water vapor were present.

645
00:39:29,148 --> 00:39:34,051
If Venus were really soaking wet,
then you could determine that...

646
00:39:34,419 --> 00:39:38,219
...by finding the pattern
of water vapor in its atmosphere.

647
00:39:38,423 --> 00:39:41,517
But around 1920, when this experiment
was first performed...

648
00:39:41,726 --> 00:39:44,388
...the Venus atmosphere seemed to
have not a hint...

649
00:39:44,597 --> 00:39:48,795
...not a smidgen, not a trace
of water vapor above the clouds.

650
00:39:49,000 --> 00:39:53,096
And so instead of a swampy,
soaking wet surface...

651
00:39:53,305 --> 00:39:56,968
...it was suggested that Venus
was bone-dry, a desert planet...

652
00:39:57,176 --> 00:40:00,668
...with clouds composed
of fine silicate dust.

653
00:40:01,247 --> 00:40:04,114
But later, spectroscopic
observations revealed...

654
00:40:04,316 --> 00:40:06,216
...the characteristic
absorption lines...

655
00:40:06,417 --> 00:40:09,284
...of an enormous amount
of carbon dioxide.

656
00:40:09,487 --> 00:40:13,856
Scientists thought there must be lots
of carbon compounds on the surface...

657
00:40:14,059 --> 00:40:17,654
...making this a planet
covered with petroleum.

658
00:40:17,897 --> 00:40:21,856
Others agreed that the atmosphere was
dry but thought the surface was wet.

659
00:40:22,067 --> 00:40:25,559
With all that CO 2,
it had to be carbonated water.

660
00:40:25,771 --> 00:40:29,673
Venus, they thought, was covered
with a vast ocean of seltzer.

661
00:40:29,875 --> 00:40:33,311
The first hint of the true situation
on Venus came...

662
00:40:33,512 --> 00:40:37,004
...not from the visible, ultraviolet
or infrared part of the spectrum...

663
00:40:37,216 --> 00:40:40,185
...but from over here
in the radio region.

664
00:40:40,386 --> 00:40:43,787
We're used to the idea of
radio signals from intelligent life...

665
00:40:43,989 --> 00:40:47,948
...or at least semi-intelligent life,
radio and television stations.

666
00:40:48,159 --> 00:40:52,152
But there are all kinds of reasons
why natural objects emit radio waves.

667
00:40:52,363 --> 00:40:54,957
One reason is that they're hot.

668
00:40:55,266 --> 00:40:57,234
And when, in 1956...

669
00:40:57,436 --> 00:41:00,599
...Venus was, for the first time,
observed by a radio telescope...

670
00:41:00,806 --> 00:41:03,866
...the planet was discovered
to be emitting radio waves...

671
00:41:04,076 --> 00:41:07,341
...as if it were at
an extremely high temperature.

672
00:41:07,546 --> 00:41:12,279
But the real demonstration that Venus'
surface was astonishingly hot...

673
00:41:12,483 --> 00:41:17,420
...came when the first spacecraft
penetrated the clouds of Venus...

674
00:41:17,756 --> 00:41:21,988
...and slowly settled on the surface
of the nearest planet.

675
00:41:25,064 --> 00:41:30,001
These were the unmanned spacecraft
of the Soviet Venera series.

676
00:41:32,604 --> 00:41:37,268
In our spaceship of the imagination,
we retrace their course.

677
00:41:38,677 --> 00:41:43,114
From a distance, our sister planet
seems serene and peaceful...

678
00:41:43,315 --> 00:41:45,510
...its clouds motionless.

679
00:41:48,520 --> 00:41:51,978
These clouds are near the top
of a great ocean of air...

680
00:41:52,191 --> 00:41:56,958
...about 100 kilometers thick,
composed mainly of carbon dioxide.

681
00:42:00,566 --> 00:42:03,660
There's some nitrogen, a little
water vapor and other gases...

682
00:42:03,869 --> 00:42:07,134
...but only the merest trace
of hydrocarbons.

683
00:42:07,539 --> 00:42:09,973
The clouds turn out to be,
not water...

684
00:42:10,175 --> 00:42:13,736
...but a concentrated solution
of sulfuric acid.

685
00:42:22,854 --> 00:42:24,617
Even in the high clouds...

686
00:42:24,823 --> 00:42:28,520
...Venus is a thoroughly nasty place.

687
00:42:36,701 --> 00:42:39,465
The clouds are stained yellow
by sulfur.

688
00:42:39,671 --> 00:42:41,468
There are great lightning storms.

689
00:42:41,673 --> 00:42:43,971
As we descend, there are
increasing amounts...

690
00:42:44,175 --> 00:42:46,143
...of the noxious gas sulfur dioxide.

691
00:42:46,812 --> 00:42:49,975
The pressures become so high
that early Venera spacecraft...

692
00:42:50,182 --> 00:42:52,776
...were crushed like old tin cans...

693
00:42:52,985 --> 00:42:55,613
...by the weight
of the surrounding atmosphere.

694
00:42:58,423 --> 00:43:01,449
Beneath the clouds
in the dense, clear air...

695
00:43:01,659 --> 00:43:04,219
...it's as bright as
on an overcast day on Earth.

696
00:43:04,430 --> 00:43:08,059
But the atmosphere is so thick
that the ground seems to ripple...

697
00:43:08,266 --> 00:43:09,756
...and distort.

698
00:43:10,002 --> 00:43:13,904
The atmospheric pressure down here is
90 times that on Earth.

699
00:43:14,173 --> 00:43:19,110
The temperature is 380 degrees
centigrade, 900 degrees Fahrenheit.

700
00:43:19,510 --> 00:43:22,138
Hotter than the hottest
household oven.

701
00:43:22,346 --> 00:43:24,906
This is a world
marked by searing heat...

702
00:43:25,117 --> 00:43:27,677
...crushing pressures,
sulfurous gases...

703
00:43:27,886 --> 00:43:30,548
...and a desolate, reddish landscape.

704
00:43:30,756 --> 00:43:34,749
Far from the balmy paradise
imagined by some early scientists...

705
00:43:34,960 --> 00:43:39,226
...Venus is the one place
in the solar system most like hell.

706
00:43:45,137 --> 00:43:47,628
But today, as in ancient tradition...

707
00:43:47,840 --> 00:43:52,436
...there are travelers who will dare
a visit to the underworld.

708
00:43:52,678 --> 00:43:55,476
Venera 9 was the first spacecraft
in human history...

709
00:43:55,681 --> 00:43:58,411
...to return a photograph
from the surface of Venus.

710
00:43:58,617 --> 00:44:01,347
It found the rocks curiously eroded...

711
00:44:01,920 --> 00:44:03,547
...perhaps by the corrosive gases...

712
00:44:03,755 --> 00:44:06,053
...perhaps because
the temperature is so high...

713
00:44:06,258 --> 00:44:09,955
...that the rocks are partly molten
and sluggishly flow.

714
00:44:10,162 --> 00:44:14,929
The Soviet Venera spacecraft,
their electronics long ago fried...

715
00:44:15,133 --> 00:44:18,569
...are slowly corroding
on the surface of Venus.

716
00:44:18,769 --> 00:44:20,828
They are the first spaceships
from Earth...

717
00:44:21,039 --> 00:44:23,803
...ever to land on another planet.

718
00:44:28,580 --> 00:44:30,480
The reason Venus is like hell...

719
00:44:30,682 --> 00:44:33,810
...seems to be what's called
the greenhouse effect.

720
00:44:34,019 --> 00:44:37,716
Ordinary visible sunlight penetrates
the clouds and heats the surface.

721
00:44:37,923 --> 00:44:40,653
But the dense atmosphere
blankets the surface...

722
00:44:40,859 --> 00:44:43,521
...and prevents it from
cooling off to space.

723
00:44:43,729 --> 00:44:46,459
An atmosphere 90 times
as dense as ours...

724
00:44:46,664 --> 00:44:49,394
...made of carbon dioxide,
water vapor and other gases...

725
00:44:49,601 --> 00:44:51,398
...lets in visible light
from the sun...

726
00:44:51,603 --> 00:44:55,664
...but will not let out the infrared
light radiated by the surface.

727
00:44:55,874 --> 00:44:57,364
The temperature rises...

728
00:44:57,575 --> 00:45:00,544
...until the infrared radiation
trickling out to space...

729
00:45:00,745 --> 00:45:03,839
...just balances the sunlight
reaching the surface.

730
00:45:07,318 --> 00:45:10,082
The greenhouse effect can make
an Earth-like world...

731
00:45:10,289 --> 00:45:12,723
...into a planetary inferno.

732
00:45:14,959 --> 00:45:18,019
In this caldron, there's not likely
to be anything alive...

733
00:45:18,229 --> 00:45:20,356
...even creatures
very different from us.

734
00:45:20,566 --> 00:45:23,660
Organic and other conceivable
biological molecules...

735
00:45:23,869 --> 00:45:26,667
...would simply fall to pieces.

736
00:45:39,217 --> 00:45:41,913
The hell of Venus is
in stark contrast...

737
00:45:42,120 --> 00:45:45,612
...with the comparative heaven
of its neighboring world...

738
00:45:45,823 --> 00:45:49,224
...our little planetary home,
the Earth.

739
00:45:50,896 --> 00:45:54,889
Here, the atmosphere is
90 times thinner.

740
00:45:55,100 --> 00:45:58,069
Here, the carbon dioxide
and water vapor...

741
00:45:58,270 --> 00:46:00,295
...make a modest greenhouse effect...

742
00:46:00,504 --> 00:46:03,496
...which heats the ground
above the freezing point of water.

743
00:46:03,708 --> 00:46:08,202
Without it, our oceans
would be frozen solid.

744
00:46:08,413 --> 00:46:11,780
A little greenhouse effect
is a good thing.

745
00:46:23,161 --> 00:46:25,823
But Venus is an ominous reminder...

746
00:46:26,031 --> 00:46:28,192
...that on a world
rather like the Earth...

747
00:46:28,399 --> 00:46:30,731
...things can go wrong.

748
00:46:31,270 --> 00:46:35,798
There is no guarantee that our planet
will always be so hospitable.

749
00:46:36,008 --> 00:46:38,169
To maintain this clement world...

750
00:46:38,377 --> 00:46:41,938
...we must understand it
and appreciate it.

751
00:46:45,183 --> 00:46:47,879
The Earth is a place to our eyes...

752
00:46:48,086 --> 00:46:50,987
...more beautiful than
any other that we know.

753
00:46:51,189 --> 00:46:54,647
But this beauty has been
sculpted by change:

754
00:46:54,860 --> 00:46:57,488
Gentle, almost undetectable change...

755
00:46:57,696 --> 00:46:59,994
...and sudden, violent change.

756
00:47:00,198 --> 00:47:04,328
In the cosmos,
there is no refuge from change.

757
00:47:05,070 --> 00:47:08,267
The Sphinx:
human head, lion's body...

758
00:47:08,473 --> 00:47:11,909
...constructed more than
5500 years ago.

759
00:47:12,344 --> 00:47:15,279
That face was once crisp
and cleanly rendered...

760
00:47:15,480 --> 00:47:17,175
...like this paw I am standing on.

761
00:47:17,381 --> 00:47:20,407
The paw has been buried
in the sand until recently...

762
00:47:20,618 --> 00:47:22,779
...and protected from erosion.

763
00:47:23,288 --> 00:47:26,951
The face is now muddled
and softened...

764
00:47:27,159 --> 00:47:30,822
...because of thousands of years
of sandblasting in the desert...

765
00:47:31,028 --> 00:47:32,928
...and a little rainfall.

766
00:47:33,432 --> 00:47:37,232
In New York City, there is an obelisk
called Cleopatra's Needle...

767
00:47:37,436 --> 00:47:38,960
...which comes from Egypt.

768
00:47:39,171 --> 00:47:43,301
In only a little more than a century
in New York's Central Park...

769
00:47:43,508 --> 00:47:47,945
...the inscriptions on that obelisk
have been almost totally obliterated.

770
00:47:48,146 --> 00:47:50,637
Not by sand and water...

771
00:47:50,849 --> 00:47:53,317
...but by smog
and industrial pollution.

772
00:47:53,518 --> 00:47:55,509
A bit like the atmosphere of Venus.

773
00:47:56,053 --> 00:48:00,012
Slow erosion wipes out information.

774
00:48:00,225 --> 00:48:01,249
On the Earth...

775
00:48:01,460 --> 00:48:03,792
...mountain ranges are destroyed
by erosion...

776
00:48:03,995 --> 00:48:06,190
...in maybe tens of millions
of years...

777
00:48:06,397 --> 00:48:10,424
...small impact craters in maybe
hundreds of thousands of years.

778
00:48:10,635 --> 00:48:13,399
And the greatest artifacts
of human beings...

779
00:48:13,604 --> 00:48:16,971
...in thousands
or tens of thousands of years.

780
00:48:19,211 --> 00:48:22,669
In addition to such slow
and uniform processes...

781
00:48:22,881 --> 00:48:26,248
...there are rare but sudden
catastrophes.

782
00:48:26,451 --> 00:48:29,215
The Sphinx is missing a nose.

783
00:48:29,421 --> 00:48:33,653
In an act of idle desecration,
some soldiers once shot it off.

784
00:48:33,859 --> 00:48:38,193
If you wait long enough,
everything changes.

785
00:48:56,481 --> 00:49:00,645
Slow, uniform processes,
unheralded events:

786
00:49:00,852 --> 00:49:02,479
The sting of a sand grain...

787
00:49:02,686 --> 00:49:04,711
...the fall of a drop of water...

788
00:49:04,923 --> 00:49:08,586
...can, over the ages,
totally rework the landscape.

789
00:49:29,281 --> 00:49:31,841
And rare, violent processes...

790
00:49:32,050 --> 00:49:35,019
...exceptional events
that will not recur in a lifetime...

791
00:49:35,287 --> 00:49:37,915
...also make major changes.

792
00:49:58,609 --> 00:50:02,739
Both the insignificant
and the extraordinary...

793
00:50:02,948 --> 00:50:06,111
...are the architects
of the natural world.

794
00:50:50,861 --> 00:50:53,887
The destruction of trees
and grasslands...

795
00:50:54,099 --> 00:50:56,533
...makes the surface
of the Earth brighter.

796
00:50:56,735 --> 00:51:00,796
It reflects more sunlight
back to space and cools our planet.

797
00:51:01,705 --> 00:51:03,400
After we discovered fire...

798
00:51:03,608 --> 00:51:06,805
...we began to incinerate forests
intentionally...

799
00:51:07,012 --> 00:51:09,139
...to clear the land
by a process called...

800
00:51:09,548 --> 00:51:12,608
..."slash and burn" agriculture.

801
00:51:12,817 --> 00:51:17,379
And today, forests and grasslands
are being destroyed...

802
00:51:17,589 --> 00:51:21,889
...frivolously, carelessly
by humans who are...

803
00:51:22,093 --> 00:51:26,120
...heedless of the beauty
of our cousins the trees...

804
00:51:26,331 --> 00:51:29,698
...and ignorant of the possible
climatic catastrophes...

805
00:51:29,901 --> 00:51:33,962
...which large-scale burning
of forests may bring.

806
00:51:34,439 --> 00:51:36,805
(TREES BREAKING)

807
00:51:39,544 --> 00:51:42,012
The indiscriminate destruction
of vegetation...

808
00:51:42,213 --> 00:51:43,805
...may alter the global climate...

809
00:51:44,015 --> 00:51:46,950
...in ways that no scientist
can yet predict.

810
00:51:48,453 --> 00:51:50,683
It has already deadened
large patches...

811
00:51:50,889 --> 00:51:53,323
...of the Earth's
life-supporting skin.

812
00:52:05,403 --> 00:52:09,601
And yet, we ravage the Earth
at an accelerated pace...

813
00:52:09,808 --> 00:52:12,140
...as if it belonged
to this one generation...

814
00:52:12,344 --> 00:52:15,939
...as if it were ours
to do with as we please.

815
00:52:24,789 --> 00:52:27,189
The Earth has mechanisms
to cleanse itself...

816
00:52:27,392 --> 00:52:30,725
...to neutralize the toxic substances
in its system.

817
00:52:30,929 --> 00:52:33,523
But these mechanisms work
only up to a point.

818
00:52:33,732 --> 00:52:37,099
Beyond some critical threshold,
they break down.

819
00:52:37,302 --> 00:52:40,533
The damage becomes irreversible.

820
00:53:08,600 --> 00:53:10,534
Our generation must choose.

821
00:53:10,735 --> 00:53:13,829
Which do we value more:
short-term profits...

822
00:53:14,039 --> 00:53:18,032
...or the long-term habitability
of our planetary home?

823
00:53:21,079 --> 00:53:23,047
The world is divided politically.

824
00:53:23,248 --> 00:53:25,682
But ecologically
it is tightly interwoven.

825
00:53:25,884 --> 00:53:29,581
There are no useless threads
in the fabric of the ecosystem.

826
00:53:29,854 --> 00:53:33,688
If you cut any one of them,
you will unravel many others.

827
00:53:35,060 --> 00:53:36,652
We have uncovered other worlds...

828
00:53:36,861 --> 00:53:40,126
...with choking atmospheres
and deadly surfaces.

829
00:53:40,398 --> 00:53:43,731
Shall we then re-create
these hells on Earth?

830
00:53:46,504 --> 00:53:50,406
We have encountered desolate moons
and barren asteroids.

831
00:53:50,608 --> 00:53:55,545
Shall we then scar and crater this
blue-green world in their likeness?

832
00:54:14,099 --> 00:54:16,897
Natural catastrophes are rare.

833
00:54:17,102 --> 00:54:18,535
But they come often enough.

834
00:54:18,737 --> 00:54:22,366
We need not force the hand of nature.

835
00:54:32,016 --> 00:54:36,316
If we ruin the Earth,
there is no place else to go.

836
00:54:36,521 --> 00:54:39,217
This is not a disposable world.

837
00:54:39,424 --> 00:54:43,190
And we are not yet able
to re-engineer other planets.

838
00:54:51,703 --> 00:54:54,228
The cruelest desert on Earth...

839
00:54:54,439 --> 00:54:58,705
...is far more hospitable
than any place on Mars.

840
00:55:00,011 --> 00:55:03,469
The bright, sandy surface
and dusty atmosphere of Mars...

841
00:55:03,681 --> 00:55:07,276
...reflect enough sunlight
back to space to cool the planet...

842
00:55:07,485 --> 00:55:12,422
...freezing out all its water,
locking it in a perpetual ice age.

843
00:55:13,391 --> 00:55:17,953
Human activities brighten
our landscape and our atmosphere.

844
00:55:18,163 --> 00:55:21,394
Might this ultimately
make an ice age here?

845
00:55:22,500 --> 00:55:26,527
At the same time, we are releasing
vast quantities of carbon dioxide...

846
00:55:26,738 --> 00:55:29,468
...increasing the greenhouse effect.

847
00:55:29,674 --> 00:55:32,302
The Earth need not
resemble Venus very closely...

848
00:55:32,510 --> 00:55:35,377
...for it to become
barren and lifeless.

849
00:55:39,017 --> 00:55:42,453
It may not take much
to destabilize the Earth's climate...

850
00:55:42,654 --> 00:55:46,112
...to convert this heaven,
our only home in the cosmos...

851
00:55:46,324 --> 00:55:48,292
...into a kind of hell.

852
00:55:50,829 --> 00:55:54,390
The study of the global climate,
the sun's influence...

853
00:55:54,599 --> 00:55:57,227
...the comparison of the Earth
with other worlds...

854
00:55:57,435 --> 00:56:00,871
These are subjects in their
earliest stages of development.

855
00:56:01,072 --> 00:56:04,235
They are funded poorly
and grudgingly.

856
00:56:04,442 --> 00:56:08,572
Meanwhile, we continue to load the
Earth's atmosphere with materials...

857
00:56:08,780 --> 00:56:13,217
...about whose long-term influence
we are almost entirely ignorant.

858
00:56:14,586 --> 00:56:19,080
There are worlds that began with
as much apparent promise as Earth.

859
00:56:19,290 --> 00:56:22,157
But something went wrong.

860
00:56:22,360 --> 00:56:26,888
Knowing that worlds can die
alerts us to our danger.

861
00:56:28,032 --> 00:56:31,934
If a visitor arrived from another
world, what account would we give...

862
00:56:32,136 --> 00:56:35,401
...of our stewardship
of the planet Earth?

863
00:56:42,614 --> 00:56:47,483
In the history of the solar system,
have worlds ever been destroyed?

864
00:56:48,586 --> 00:56:51,783
Most of the moons in the outer
solar system have craters on them...

865
00:56:51,990 --> 00:56:54,424
...made by cometary impacts.

866
00:56:55,126 --> 00:56:57,060
Some have such
large craters though...

867
00:56:57,262 --> 00:57:00,925
...that if the impacting comets
had been just a little bit bigger...

868
00:57:01,132 --> 00:57:03,225
...the moons would have
been shattered.

869
00:57:05,803 --> 00:57:08,363
What would the results of
such a collision look like?

870
00:57:08,573 --> 00:57:10,507
(EXPLOSION)

871
00:57:11,409 --> 00:57:13,104
Maybe a planetary ring.

872
00:57:15,580 --> 00:57:18,447
The idea has been growing
that little worlds are...

873
00:57:18,650 --> 00:57:21,517
...every now and then,
demolished by a cometary impact.

874
00:57:21,719 --> 00:57:26,281
The fragments then slowly coalesce,
and a moon arises again...

875
00:57:26,491 --> 00:57:27,822
...from its own ashes.

876
00:57:28,026 --> 00:57:32,554
Some moons may have been destroyed
and reconstituted many times.

877
00:57:33,798 --> 00:57:37,564
For our own world,
the peril is more subtle.

878
00:57:38,202 --> 00:57:39,897
Since this series was
first broadcast...

879
00:57:40,104 --> 00:57:42,902
...the dangers of the increasing
greenhouse effect...

880
00:57:43,107 --> 00:57:44,665
...have become much more clear.

881
00:57:44,876 --> 00:57:49,108
We burn fossil fuels, like coal
and gas and petroleum...

882
00:57:49,314 --> 00:57:51,839
...putting more carbon dioxide
into the atmosphere...

883
00:57:52,050 --> 00:57:54,382
...and thereby heating the Earth.

884
00:57:54,585 --> 00:57:57,679
The hellish conditions on Venus
are a reminder that...

885
00:57:57,889 --> 00:57:59,322
...this is serious business.

886
00:57:59,724 --> 00:58:02,022
Computer models that
successfully explain...

887
00:58:02,226 --> 00:58:04,160
...the climates of other planets...

888
00:58:04,362 --> 00:58:07,331
...predict the deaths of forests...

889
00:58:07,532 --> 00:58:10,797
...parched croplands,
the flooding of coastal cities...

890
00:58:11,002 --> 00:58:13,095
...environmental refugees...

891
00:58:13,304 --> 00:58:16,569
...widespread disasters
in the next century...

892
00:58:16,874 --> 00:58:18,466
...unless we change our ways.

893
00:58:18,676 --> 00:58:20,166
What do we have to do?

894
00:58:20,611 --> 00:58:22,238
Four things.

895
00:58:22,447 --> 00:58:25,848
One: much more efficient use
of fossil fuels.

896
00:58:26,050 --> 00:58:30,180
Why not cars that get 70 miles
a gallon instead of 25?

897
00:58:30,388 --> 00:58:34,688
Two: research and development
on safe alternative energy sources...

898
00:58:34,892 --> 00:58:36,587
...especially solar power.

899
00:58:37,195 --> 00:58:40,164
Three: reforestation
on a grand scale.

900
00:58:40,365 --> 00:58:43,857
And four: helping to bring
the billion poorest people...

901
00:58:44,068 --> 00:58:46,195
...on the planet
to self-sufficiency...

902
00:58:46,404 --> 00:58:49,737
...which is the key step
in curbing world population growth.

903
00:58:49,941 --> 00:58:53,843
Every one of these steps makes sense
apart from greenhouse warming.

904
00:58:54,679 --> 00:58:57,147
No one has proposed
that the trouble with Venus is...

905
00:58:57,348 --> 00:59:01,375
...that there once was Venusians
who drove fuel-inefficient cars.

906
00:59:01,586 --> 00:59:04,851
But our nearest neighbor,
nevertheless, is a stark warning...

907
00:59:05,056 --> 00:59:08,457
...on the possible fate
of an Earth-like world.

