Everything and Nothing (2011) s01e01 Episode Script
Everything
Imagine that our sun is the size of just a single grain of sand.
Now, our sun is just one of a multitude of stars.
It's surrounded by over 200 billion of them in our own Milky Way Galaxy alone.
Our sun is just a speck in the vast beach of stars.
But the Milky Way Galaxy is in itself just one of 100 billion galaxies, scattered throughout the cosmos.
It's been estimated that there are more stars in the universe than there are grains of sand on all the beaches in all the world.
Just think about that for a moment.
The size and scale of the universe is awe-inspiring.
But, as a scientist, what I find so remarkable is that the human race has managed to deduce so much about what it looks like.
Let me try and put this achievement into context.
From our vantage point, living on a minuscule speck orbiting around this single grain of sand, we've managed to deduce the size and shape of all those beaches.
To my mind, this is one of the human race's greatest accomplishments, and I'd like to tell you the story of how we did it.
This film is the astonishing story of how we gazed upwards from our isolated and unremarkable vantage point and began to deduce the shape, size and origin of everything that there is.
It's the story of how we came to understand reality at the largest scale.
It's the story of everything.
I want you to pause for a moment and think about this one basic question.
Here I am, sitting under the night sky.
Above me is the atmosphere and beyond that the moon, and way beyond that the stars.
But then what? What's the totality of everything there is? It's a question we've all asked at one point or another.
I remember as a kid, growing up in Baghdad, during the summer, we'd take the beds up onto the roof and I remember lying awake at night, looking up at the stars and wondering whether space went on forever or whether the universe had an edge.
Today, we're beginning to understand just how complex this question really is.
But 500 years ago, it seemed like there was a very simple answer.
You see, the prevailing belief was that the Earth was enclosed in a vast but thin shell of rotating stars that were fixed in position.
When you look up on a starry night, it's not difficult to see why people believed we lived within this shell.
But in the 16th century, something happened which would shatter this view of the universe.
It was an event that would set the human race on a journey to uncover the true size and shape of everything.
This is a Type Ia supernova.
An exploding star.
It's an event of almost unimaginable scale.
It shines five billion times more brightly than our own sun.
In 1572, a supernova like this would have become visible on planet Earth.
At the time, it was known simply as the phenomenon.
And to anyone who saw it, it must have been an extremely shocking and mysterious sight.
This new light in the night sky shone more brightly than Venus and even became visible during the day.
It's not surprising then that many sought a religious explanation for this bizarre and troubling event.
One possible interpretation of the new star of 1572, which was put forward by some intellectuals, was that this is the star the wise men saw 1,570 years earlier.
It's the star that shone over Bethlehem, and it's now returned.
So something as cosmically important as the incarnation of God on Earth might be being proclaimed by this new star.
The phenomenon fascinated and mystified many people across Europe.
In England, it fired the imagination of the MP of the sleepy Oxfordshire town of Wallingford.
His name was Thomas Digges.
But just as Digges began to study this mysterious new star, it started to grow dimmer.
Digges' friend, mentor and fellow astronomer, a man named John Dee, reasoned with him that this phenomenon could be a moving star, something previously thought to have been impossible.
Perhaps it had grown brighter as it approached the Earth and faded as it had gone away.
Now, although this theory was wrong, it got Digges thinking about the true nature of the stars that surround the Earth.
It began to seem very unlikely that they were all arranged in a vast, thin shell.
Maybe this apparent shell was just an illusion? It would take Thomas Digges another four years before he published his strange idea.
And when he did, it was in the form of a simple diagram, added to a translation of the works of Nicolaus Copernicus.
The man who'd first argued that the sun was at the centre of the universe.
Have a look at this.
On this side is Copernicus' model.
Absolutely revolutionary.
He has the sun at the centre with the Earth in orbit around it, along with the other planets.
And in the outermost shell is that of the fixed stars - the stellarum fixarum.
On this side is Digges' diagram, included in the English translation.
Exactly the same, but he's taken Copernicus' stars out of their fixed shell and scattered them out into endless space.
Digges' diagram was describing a radical new picture of the cosmos.
One where the stars in the night sky now existed in an infinite space.
Digges shows it, unlike Copernicus, Digges shows it as being infinite.
This is a sphere, he says, of the stars fixed infinitely up.
And that is a moment when perhaps Europeans start to think of the world as unbounded, as infinite, as a world without end.
Digges' new picture of the universe was revolutionary.
Previously, we'd been contained within a small shell of stars.
Now we were suspended within an infinite static universe.
But this picture of everything produced a strange paradox.
If this infinite universe contained an infinite number of stars, then why was it dark at night? In the traditional old-fashioned view of the universe, the universe was infinite and static.
It was very soon recognised that a static infinite universe was ridiculous.
And that is because, in such a universe, there would be an infinite number of stars and every line of sight from us would intercept one of these stars.
The universe - static infinite universe - could not be dark.
It should be glowing as bright as the sun.
And we know that's not our universe.
In our universe, the night sky is dark.
Although Thomas Digges first raised this question, the problem came to be known as Olbers' paradox.
As simple as the question sounds, it would take until the 20th century to find a truly satisfactory answer for why the night sky is not as bright as the day.
Solving Olbers' paradox would require many great scientists, who weren't afraid to think differently.
Radically differently.
You see, solving the paradox is all about understanding the shape, size and origin of everything there is.
Without this understanding, the puzzle would be impossible to solve.
You see, stuck here on Earth, we don't have access to interstellar travel.
So we have to allow our minds to make that intellectual leap.
By simply looking up, Digges and his contemporaries had begun a scientific journey to understand what everything might actually look like.
But, for 200 years after Thomas Digges' insight, little progress was made in understanding the most distant reaches of the cosmos.
At the end of the 18th century, however, all that would change.
Until the end of the 1700s, everything that lies outside the solar system is, for astronomers, pretty uninteresting.
Astronomy until then was the science of our system - of the Earth and the planets, satellites and comets.
The stars were a kind of glorified and rather interesting backdrop.
This changes around 1800.
This small and unremarkable house in Bath was once home to the astronomer William Herschel and his sister, and devoted assistant, Caroline.
Together, they would develop and build a new generation of telescopes that would allow them to see further out into space than any human had ever done before.
William Herschel was born in Hanover, but moved to England in 1761 to pursue a career as a musician and composer.
But he soon developed a passion for astronomy and began building telescopes in his spare time.
Herschel soon perfected a technique for producing telescopes borrowed from Sir Isaac Newton.
The telescopes used metal mirrors that were capable of capturing much more starlight than the glass lenses that were popular among other astronomers.
This tiny room at the back of Herschel's house used to be his workshop.
It was here that he'd smelt various metals together in the furnace to make the reflecting mirrors for his telescopes.
And he would experiment with different metals, different combinations, to get them as reflective as possible.
Then, with his sister Caroline to help him, he'd spend literally hours on end polishing the surface of the mirrors to achieve the precision required.
And you have to remember, this was quite a dangerous, confined environment.
The floor still bears the scars of the molten metal that they'd spilt, cracking the paving stones.
With his powerful telescopes, Herschel and his sister Caroline would scour the heavens, night after night, cataloguing the stars.
The universe they were seeing was revealing itself to be one of dynamic complexity, a universe of natural, organic motion, a place of endless wonder.
Herschel's revolutionary telescope design made him famous.
With it, he'd discover a new planet, Uranus, a discovery that would earn him the job of the King's astronomer.
This new role gave him the time and resources to start a much grander task, to try and map all the stars in the universe, in an attempt to draw a picture of everything.
In 1785, Herschel published this remarkable image.
It shows an approximation of the Milky Way, with our sun residing at the centre.
Herschel had seen that we are part of a vast disc of stars, a huge galaxy of suns that seemed to have a clear boundary.
It appeared as though Herschel's craftsmanship had actually allowed him to see to the edge of everything.
But soon a nagging problem began to emerge.
Dotted around the sky, Herschel and others had been observing strange cloud-like objects, known as nebulae.
Some of these nebulae seemed to have distinctive form and complex structure.
Some astronomers began to suggest a radical idea.
Perhaps the Milky Way was not everything that there was.
Perhaps some of these nebulae were in fact themselves gigantic galaxies of stars, just like ours, that actually existed in deep space.
Unfortunately, there was no way to answer this question satisfactorily.
The problem was that for all Herschel's great technological achievements, and for all of those long, cold nights that he spent with Caroline outside, gazing painstakingly at the heavens, there was one problem they couldn't solve.
They had no way of accurately measuring distances in outer space.
It would not be until after Herschel's death that a cunning method was developed to measure the distances to objects deep into space.
The technique was known as stellar parallax.
If you look at an object like your finger from two vantage points, it will shift in your frame of reference.
By observing how much it shifts, you can calculate how far away it is.
My finger is moving a lot more between each frame than the building that is behind it.
Now, an astronomer called Friedrich Bessel worked out that if you took images of stars when the Earth was at either side of its orbit around the sun, it would be possible to actually see the stars shifting.
By observing how much they shifted, you could then work out their distance from us.
Bessel calculated that the relatively close star, 61 Cygni, must be some 100 trillion kilometres away.
But amazing though this technique was, it was still very severely limited.
The diameter of the Earth's orbit is 300 million kilometres.
This means the parallax method can only measure objects out to about 300 trillion kilometres, only a tiny fraction of the size of the Milky Way.
It soon became clear that there was plenty in the heavens that was practically impossible to measure, particularly those mysterious nebulae.
They would remain an enigma until the beginning of the 20th century, when they ignited a great debate.
One group of astronomers agrees that there is only one galaxy, ours, the Milky Way and everything else we see, the globular clusters, the nebulae, are all somehow inside that galaxy.
Then there are other astronomers who argue no, many of these nebulae are themselves giant island universes, unimaginably far away from us.
There was evidence on both sides.
This mystery remained a source of bitter debate until the beginning of the 1920s.
The woman who would help solve the problem is one of the great unsung heroes of science.
She worked at the Harvard College Observatory and her name was Henrietta Leavitt.
Leavitt's job was to count and catalogue the stars producing images from observatories around the world.
She was a brilliant scientist who loved her work.
This is one of the photographic plates of space that Leavitt worked with.
You can see her bright marks highlighting tiny details within the image.
With meticulous care, hundreds of subtle features of stars have been noted.
It was this ability that would help her come up with an ingenious idea, one that would help unravel the true size of the universe.
The idea rested on finding an objective way of defining the true brightness of a star.
Leavitt became fascinated by a type of star known as a Cepheid variable, which pulses in the night sky.
Her breakthrough was discovering that their brightness was precisely related to the speed they blinked.
Let me explain.
These two stars are blinking at the same rate, which means they should be exactly the same brightness.
If one star appears dimmer, you can then calculate how much further away it is than the brighter one.
Leavitt's method meant that she knew the true brightness of the Cepheid variables.
She had found a method to measure the distance to stars that lay far beyond the reaches of parallax.
But without access to a telescope, she could go no further with her work.
She was forbidden from working in the supremely male-dominated world of the observatory.
But her discovery now gave astronomers a tool to measure the distances to the mysterious nebulae.
The idea that our Milky Way might contain everything that existed was about to crumble.
The scale of the universe is really only understood amazingly recently.
In the 1920s, it was absolutely plausible that the universe consists of one galaxy, and some of the best astronomers in the world, in the US for example, seriously held that view, and had good evidence that it was true.
And they were wrong.
The evidence to finally settle the great debate would be found thanks to the powerful new Hooker telescope being built at the Mount Wilson Observatory just outside Los Angeles.
Using this incredible piece of technology, and Henrietta Leavitt's ingenious method for calculating distance, a young astronomer would make a discovery that would change our view of the universe and for ever immortalise his name.
The astronomer was called Edwin Hubble.
Hubble was a very different kind of scientist to Leavitt.
He was a larger-than-life character, extrovert, with a huge ego.
But he was still a hugely talented and visionary scientist.
He was born and grew up in America but spent some time in England, and this seems to have had a lasting impression because he would be heard walking around the observatory shouting things like, "By Jove!" and "What-Ho!" in a completely over the top British accent.
The talented, passionate and eccentric Hubble rapidly gained a name for himself in the world of astronomy.
But it wouldn't be until 1923, that he would discover something in what was then known as the Andromeda Nebula that would reveal the true scale of our universe.
I've come to the University College London Observatory to meet astronomer Dr Steve Fossey, to see for myself just what Hubble's revelation was.
We're going to key in the co-ordinates of Andromeda to the console here.
So zero hours 43 minutes 'For Hubble and his assistant, Milton Humason, 'studying Andromeda was a long and painstaking process.
'But today, we can quickly locate and photograph it in great detail.
' This is an image that we took a couple of weeks ago.
Right.
If I zoom in, you'll see just there is the Hubble Cepheid, the first Cepheid that he found that unlocked the whole problem.
Because presumably that is when he could use Leavitt's method of working out how far away it is.
Exactly.
Once he had seen this and identified it as a variable, he then had the key to determining just how bright that object was.
And worked out that it couldn't have been in our own galaxy.
It had to be millions of light years away.
Absolutely, that is exactly it.
You see the nuclear region, but as we adjust the contrast here, I can stretch the contrast just to bring out some of the detail in the galaxy.
Oh, wow! Spiral arms.
You see the dust lanes in silhouette against the billions of stars that are within Andromeda.
By finding one of the variable stars in Andromeda, and measuring exactly how long it took to pulse, Hubble was able to use Leavitt's work to calculate exactly how far away it was.
This is the photographic plate where Hubble marked his new Cepheid variable star.
Using it, he calculated that Andromeda was many, many times more distant than the furthest reaches of the Milky Way.
Andromeda was indeed an island universe, a vast galaxy of stars.
We now know that Andromeda is over 2.
5 million light years away.
This means that the light that reaches us from Andromeda today, left on its journey before modern humans had evolved.
That's our neighbour.
That's our neighbour, our nearest large, galactic neighbour.
I have to remember that what I am looking at here is the real thing.
These are photons that have travelled millions of years to reach my eye.
Exactly.
These are photons directly from Andromeda that are arriving in my eye.
Today, we have the power to see Andromeda as Hubble had only dreamed of.
We now estimate that Andromeda contains over a trillion stars.
And it is just one of a vast multitude of galaxies scattered throughout our universe.
In 1923, the universe had been the size of the Milky Way.
By 1924, the space that surrounds us had been revealed to be billions of times bigger and home to almost unimaginable cosmic complexity.
Hubble had shown that there are a multitude of galaxies outside of our own and had pushed back the boundaries of the universe.
But he had not seen an edge of space.
He had not seen everything.
There was still no clue as to how big our universe was, or even what shape it might be.
To understand the strange truth about everything would require more than just observations.
It would require mathematics - a powerful new type of mathematics that would be able to describe the bizarre properties of space itself.
When you're trying to understand the universe, it's easy to think, what you do is you make lots and lots of observations, see what's there, and you fit it all together into your grand picture.
But the problem is, unless you have some sort of idea what the picture should be, you don't know what observations to make, you don't know what's significant.
And throughout the history of science, every so often someone has to come up with a new mathematical idea.
The new mathematical ideas about space were so weird, so far removed from common sense, that it would take over 2,000 years and the genius of Albert Einstein to formulate them.
But when they were ready, these strange new types of mathematics would lead to a revolution in our understanding of the space that surrounds us.
OK.
So what is space? We think we know the answer.
I can talk about this room being spacious.
There's a lot of space in here.
Or a confined space.
There's not enough volume, not enough space.
But does space only exist when there's stuff in it? Does space only have a meaning when it's enclosed by walls? Think of the distance between two objects.
Does that gap still exist if you take the objects away? What meaning can we give to distance if it doesn't have a start and end point? Ultimately, the question is this - does space in itself have form? Does it have structure or shape? Or is it just the place where things happen? The properties of space were first described by the mathematician Euclid over 2,000 years ago, in his legendary text, The Elements.
In it, he laid down a set of simple, logical rules about space, in what today, we call Euclidian geometry.
Euclidian geometry is the geometry we see around us every day.
If you're sitting in a room and it's the usual rectangular room, what you see is lots of straight lines, right-angles, you see parallel lines, the window, the two sides of the window are parallel.
If you extended them, they'd stay exactly the same distance apart, they would never meet.
And the other thing you would see if you look a little closer is that any triangle you draw, the angles in the triangle always add up to 180 degrees.
That's characteristic of Euclidian geometry.
And people used to think that this was how geometry was, that nothing else was possible.
For Euclid himself, and for almost all mathematicians for the next 2,000 years, these rules weren't just true mathematically, they were also true statements about physical reality itself.
So they thought that two parallel lines would remain parallel for ever.
That a triangle in real space would always have angles adding up to 180 degrees.
But weird as though this might sound, it's not actually always true.
Almost 250 years ago, in a small town in northern Germany, a mathematician was born who had the ability and originality to start to unravel Euclid's geometry and begin to change our ideas about space.
His name was Carl Friedrich Gauss.
Gauss tackled many great problems in his career, but from a young age, he began to speculate that the rules of Euclid may not be as absolute as everyone had assumed.
Specifically, Gauss began to see that in curved spaces, other types of geometry could exist, with different rules to Euclid's.
For example, on the surface of a sphere, the angles of a triangle can add up to more than 180 degrees.
Many others would refine and develop Gauss's ideas.
But one of his greatest achievements would be to give us a cunning method of accurately measuring curvature.
It would become known simply as the Remarkable Theorem.
Let me explain with this globe.
We can see that it's three-dimensional, because we can stand back and look at it.
But what if you were an ant, stuck on the surface? How would it know that that surface is curved? So, imagine you're the ant, and you start off at the North Pole.
And facing south, you move down towards the equator.
At the equator, you still face south, and you shuffle sideways, along the equator.
Then, you reach a certain point, and then you start walking backwards so you're still facing the same direction, and head back to the North Pole.
Now, look what's happened here.
You've been pointing south all the way round, and yet when you arrive back at your starting point, you're facing in a different direction.
Understanding this gives us a way of calculating the curvature of a surface without ever leaving it.
'This was an amazing insight.
' But it only applies to curved surfaces, which are two-dimensional.
It would take a brilliant student of Gauss's, Bernhard Riemann, to develop these ideas in a way that could be applied to the three-dimensional space that surrounds us.
It would be a daring, outlandish, and to non-mathematicians, absurd-sounding concept.
Aged just 26, Riemann encapsulated his strange new ideas about geometry in a lecture that was to become legendary among mathematicians.
In June 1854, Riemann delivered his lectures to an enraptured audience.
In them, he detailed how he'd taken Gauss's ideas on curved surfaces, and generalised them, so that they applied not only to curved two-dimensional surfaces, but the curvature of space in any dimension.
OK, so I'm sure this all sounds rather complicated.
What exactly do we mean by curved space in any dimension? So let me try and explain.
Here's the thing, Gauss talked about curved two-dimensional surfaces.
Well, here we have a sheet of paper, and it's two-dimensional.
So if I curve it, we can visualise and see this curvature.
But only because it's embedded in three dimensions.
Now, what if we curved three dimensions? Presumably, we'd need a fourth dimension.
But how do you get to this four-dimensional space? It's impossible to step outside of our three-dimensional world.
Wherever you travel in the universe, no matter how far you go, you're always stuck in three dimensions.
The genius of Riemann was to show that you didn't need to stand in a fourth dimension to tell if space was curved.
You could actually do it from the inside.
But for Riemann, this would always remain a purely mathematical idea.
It would take Albert Einstein to tie these mathematical ideas together, and apply bendy, curved, non-Euclidian geometries to the real space that surrounds us.
I think the most important point about the whole story of non-Euclidian geometry is it shows how mathematics and the real world relate.
And it starts out with mathematicians pottering around, asking, "Could there be a geometry different from Euclid's?" and if anyone said, "Why are you studying that?" They'd say, "Haven't got a clue.
" "What's it useful for?" "No idea.
It's just interesting.
" But they pottered around and they found a surprising answer - that different geometries were possible.
And even at that point, nobody had any real applications for this idea.
And then when the moment is ripe, Einstein comes along and says, "That's what I need, that's real physics.
" And suddenly this piece of esoteric mathematics becomes vital to the scientific enterprise.
Einstein would reveal that we live not in the flat world of Euclid, but in the strange, curved worlds of Gauss and Riemann.
In the space of a few, short years, Einstein went from wrestling with some of the most difficult and abstract mathematical ideas to dinner dates with Charlie Chaplin.
And it was all thanks to the pinnacle of his life's work - the general theory of relativity.
In the general theory of relativity, Einstein took the mathematics of Gauss and Riemann and used it to paint a revolutionary picture of the physical world.
He showed that just as Gauss had suspected, the geometry of the space around us isn't always of the regular, flat, Euclidian kind.
'But if space is bent, and warped all around us, 'surely we must be able to observe that this is the case? 'Well, we do - just not in the way you might expect.
'This was Einstein's major insight.
'He showed that it was the ability for space to bend and warp, 'for it to be flexible, and change its geometry, 'that gives rise to the force we call gravity.
' Right.
Now, since Newton's time, gravity was thought to be a force that pulls all objects together.
So if I drop this apple, it's as though there's an invisible rubber band that's pulling it down towards the earth.
But Einstein's general theory of relativity gives us a completely different picture, and a totally new perspective.
So although gravity appears to be a force, it's nothing more than the curvature of space itself.
When an object falls, it's not being pulled by gravity at all, it's just following the simplest path through bent space.
But the equations of general relativity didn't end there.
They revealed that it was the presence of mass that caused space to curve and distort.
The reason we have gravity on Earth is because the Earth is actually bending the space around it.
In Einsteinian theory of the universe, space becomes a dynamic entity that reacts to its contents.
Space knows about the presence of gravitating bodies, and responds to the presence by changing its geometry in really interesting ways.
So what was in the 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th century, a very boring, still object, suddenly in Einsteinian theory, it becomes a dynamic, almost alive body.
Einstein's theory revealed that space itself, the entire universe, everything, wasn't just unimaginably large, it also had a shape, and structure.
It was malleable.
Everything could be bent and warped.
Gauss, Riemann and Einstein, had between them come up with a description of how the space and time we exist in can be warped.
They showed that space and time are not the fixed, unchanging stage on which the actions of the universe are played out.
They are actually part of the performance.
It was soon realised that because the general theory of relativity applied to everything, it gave physicists a way of being able to step outside the universe, and imagine how it might be behaving in its entirety.
And when they did this, they saw something that was extremely disturbing.
The equations were giving a description of the universe that seemed ridiculous.
They were describing something that was actually expanding.
It seemed preposterous that the entire universe could be some sort of moving, organic, expanding entity.
It was such a strange prediction that even Einstein refused to believe it.
Einstein had overturned common sense notions of space and time held by humans over thousands of years.
But he still couldn't accept that the whole universe might be dynamic and changing.
In fact, he was so convinced that it was static, the he was prepared to modify his original equations by adding an extra turn called the cosmological constant that would stabilise the universe.
But Einstein was trying to fix something that wasn't broken.
It's at this point that our story returns to Edwin Hubble.
Armed with the Hooker telescope, Hubble would reveal the truth that Einstein had refused to believe.
After discovering that our galaxy was just one of many, Hubble began to study the ways in which these other galaxies were moving.
Hubble knew that, as a light source approaches us, the light wave would become compressed and appear blue.
If an object was receding, the light waves would become stretched out and appear red.
What he saw was astounding.
All distant galaxies were being red shifted.
They were all moving away from us.
Not only that, but the further away a galaxy was, the faster it was moving away.
Hubble's observations and Einstein's general theory of relativity were in agreement.
But, and this is the crucial point here, it's not that the galaxies are flying away from each other through space.
But rather that the fabric of space itself in between the galaxies is expanding.
So the universe in its entirety is getting bigger.
This is what Hubble and Einstein's work revealed.
Einstein soon visited Hubble to see the data for himself.
He would go on to admit that changing his equations had been his biggest scientific blunder.
So, why was space expanding in this way? Both Hubble and Einstein soon came to agree.
If the fabric of space was expanding it meant, previously, the universe was smaller.
Rewind the clock far enough back .
.
and it appeared as if there was a point when our entire universe began.
The data were pointing towards a moment of creation.
But many scientists were not convinced by this apparent Big Bang.
It seemed like a leap too far.
But there was one piece of evidence that had the power to convince everyone.
It seemed that if the Big Bang had happened, then some time after the instance of creation, a flash of light should have been emitted throughout the universe.
Every part of the cosmos should now be filled with this light.
And it turned out it was.
It just happened to be in a rather unusual form.
As unlikely as it sounds, the relic of the Big Bang fireball was actually visible on television.
Let me explain how this is possible.
Imagine this balloon is our universe.
Here it is just a few hundred thousand years old.
At this point, something very strange happens, because the universe suddenly becomes transparent to visible light as atoms form.
It's as though a fog has lifted and light is suddenly able to travel freely through the universe.
At every point in space, photons began to travel unimpeded and the entire universe is filled with a blinding light.
But this light, released in the hot turmoil of the early universe, didn't stay bright for ever.
As space expanded, it stretched through the spectrum from visible light down into microwaves.
And it's these microwaves that get picked up by television aerials.
Incredibly, almost one per cent of this static is the afterglow of creation itself.
It's the stretched out remnants of the very earliest light in the universe.
Today, with satellites, it's become possible to make an incredibly precise map of the universe at the moment it became light.
This is the fossilised light of the first dawn.
Convincing evidence that the universe had a beginning.
Using the microwave radiation, cosmologists could even date it.
Our entire universe is 13.
7 billion years old.
This beginning of everything would be the final piece of information needed to answer the question Thomas Digges had first posed over 400 years ago.
It would finally give us a satisfactory explanation for why it gets dark at night.
OK, so here it is, here's where I hope this all makes sense.
The further away a star is, the longer it would take for its light to reach the Earth.
So, if the universe has been around forever, then all the light that's out there will have had time to reach us and the night sky would be ablaze with starlight.
But it's not.
And here's why.
Imagine when the universe was much younger and smaller than it is today.
A beam of light on the other side of the universe begins a journey towards our vantage point.
But, as space expands, the distance the light has to cross keeps getting bigger and bigger.
Fast forward to today, and this light still hasn't reached us.
So, no matter how hard we look into the sky, we simply won't be able to see it.
We can only see the stars whose light has had time to reach us in the 13.
7 billion years since the Big Bang.
This region is known as the observable universe.
And there are not enough stars here to light up the night sky.
So, we only ever see the stars and galaxies whose light has had a chance to reach us, and that's why it gets dark at night.
The simplest fact that we take for granted, that the sky at night is dark, is in fact incredibly profound.
It took 200 years of theorising, of thinking, it took the development of general relativity, before we could understand why the sky at night is dark.
By reasoning and observing and imagining, we've found ever better ways to project outside of the confines of our small rock tumbling through space.
We've become ever more skilled at creating pictures of everything.
This is a computer simulation of the universe in its infancy.
Using it, we can see how the force of gravity has shaped the universe over billions of years.
The brightest white and yellow regions in this image show where galaxies and clusters of galaxies form.
You can see how, as the universe evolves, a strange and hidden structure begins to emerge.
This is the cosmic web.
It's our best picture yet of what everything might look like at the largest scales.
It shows massive clusters of galaxies linked together in vast filaments, each one containing trillions of stars.
Its scale is sometimes difficult to appreciate.
But it would take light almost 10 billion years to cross the distance in this image.
But this incredible picture of everything is destined to change.
We are starting to understand that, in the distant future, the universe will become a terrifyingly bleak and desolate place.
In 1998, a team of astronomers published a paper in which they looked at supernova explosions in distant galaxies.
They were hoping to measure very accurately how fast the universe was expanding.
Now, they expected to find that the rate of expansion was slowing down, just because of the pull of gravity of all the matter in the universe.
But they were in for a big surprise.
The universe was getting bigger, faster.
The rate of expansion was accelerating.
There seemed to be some mysterious force pushing everything apart.
We still don't understand its origin, but it's been dubbed dark energy.
There's one fascinating yet disturbing consequence of this.
If the expansion of the universe continues to accelerate then our visible universe will begin to empty.
Let me explain.
Imagine that I'm in a distant galaxy that you can see from Earth.
As the space between us stretches, there will come a time in the future when it is expanding so rapidly that light can't outrun it, and the galaxy will disappear from view.
What this means is that, far into the future, some 100 billion years from now, if intelligent life forms still exist in our galaxy, they'll look out into space and see only the stars in our own Milky Way.
All the other galaxies will have disappeared.
And they will be alone in a vast, dark, empty expanse.
I have here a box.
What would happen if I were to remove everything I possibly could from inside it? What then exists inside the space in the box? Is it really nothing?
Now, our sun is just one of a multitude of stars.
It's surrounded by over 200 billion of them in our own Milky Way Galaxy alone.
Our sun is just a speck in the vast beach of stars.
But the Milky Way Galaxy is in itself just one of 100 billion galaxies, scattered throughout the cosmos.
It's been estimated that there are more stars in the universe than there are grains of sand on all the beaches in all the world.
Just think about that for a moment.
The size and scale of the universe is awe-inspiring.
But, as a scientist, what I find so remarkable is that the human race has managed to deduce so much about what it looks like.
Let me try and put this achievement into context.
From our vantage point, living on a minuscule speck orbiting around this single grain of sand, we've managed to deduce the size and shape of all those beaches.
To my mind, this is one of the human race's greatest accomplishments, and I'd like to tell you the story of how we did it.
This film is the astonishing story of how we gazed upwards from our isolated and unremarkable vantage point and began to deduce the shape, size and origin of everything that there is.
It's the story of how we came to understand reality at the largest scale.
It's the story of everything.
I want you to pause for a moment and think about this one basic question.
Here I am, sitting under the night sky.
Above me is the atmosphere and beyond that the moon, and way beyond that the stars.
But then what? What's the totality of everything there is? It's a question we've all asked at one point or another.
I remember as a kid, growing up in Baghdad, during the summer, we'd take the beds up onto the roof and I remember lying awake at night, looking up at the stars and wondering whether space went on forever or whether the universe had an edge.
Today, we're beginning to understand just how complex this question really is.
But 500 years ago, it seemed like there was a very simple answer.
You see, the prevailing belief was that the Earth was enclosed in a vast but thin shell of rotating stars that were fixed in position.
When you look up on a starry night, it's not difficult to see why people believed we lived within this shell.
But in the 16th century, something happened which would shatter this view of the universe.
It was an event that would set the human race on a journey to uncover the true size and shape of everything.
This is a Type Ia supernova.
An exploding star.
It's an event of almost unimaginable scale.
It shines five billion times more brightly than our own sun.
In 1572, a supernova like this would have become visible on planet Earth.
At the time, it was known simply as the phenomenon.
And to anyone who saw it, it must have been an extremely shocking and mysterious sight.
This new light in the night sky shone more brightly than Venus and even became visible during the day.
It's not surprising then that many sought a religious explanation for this bizarre and troubling event.
One possible interpretation of the new star of 1572, which was put forward by some intellectuals, was that this is the star the wise men saw 1,570 years earlier.
It's the star that shone over Bethlehem, and it's now returned.
So something as cosmically important as the incarnation of God on Earth might be being proclaimed by this new star.
The phenomenon fascinated and mystified many people across Europe.
In England, it fired the imagination of the MP of the sleepy Oxfordshire town of Wallingford.
His name was Thomas Digges.
But just as Digges began to study this mysterious new star, it started to grow dimmer.
Digges' friend, mentor and fellow astronomer, a man named John Dee, reasoned with him that this phenomenon could be a moving star, something previously thought to have been impossible.
Perhaps it had grown brighter as it approached the Earth and faded as it had gone away.
Now, although this theory was wrong, it got Digges thinking about the true nature of the stars that surround the Earth.
It began to seem very unlikely that they were all arranged in a vast, thin shell.
Maybe this apparent shell was just an illusion? It would take Thomas Digges another four years before he published his strange idea.
And when he did, it was in the form of a simple diagram, added to a translation of the works of Nicolaus Copernicus.
The man who'd first argued that the sun was at the centre of the universe.
Have a look at this.
On this side is Copernicus' model.
Absolutely revolutionary.
He has the sun at the centre with the Earth in orbit around it, along with the other planets.
And in the outermost shell is that of the fixed stars - the stellarum fixarum.
On this side is Digges' diagram, included in the English translation.
Exactly the same, but he's taken Copernicus' stars out of their fixed shell and scattered them out into endless space.
Digges' diagram was describing a radical new picture of the cosmos.
One where the stars in the night sky now existed in an infinite space.
Digges shows it, unlike Copernicus, Digges shows it as being infinite.
This is a sphere, he says, of the stars fixed infinitely up.
And that is a moment when perhaps Europeans start to think of the world as unbounded, as infinite, as a world without end.
Digges' new picture of the universe was revolutionary.
Previously, we'd been contained within a small shell of stars.
Now we were suspended within an infinite static universe.
But this picture of everything produced a strange paradox.
If this infinite universe contained an infinite number of stars, then why was it dark at night? In the traditional old-fashioned view of the universe, the universe was infinite and static.
It was very soon recognised that a static infinite universe was ridiculous.
And that is because, in such a universe, there would be an infinite number of stars and every line of sight from us would intercept one of these stars.
The universe - static infinite universe - could not be dark.
It should be glowing as bright as the sun.
And we know that's not our universe.
In our universe, the night sky is dark.
Although Thomas Digges first raised this question, the problem came to be known as Olbers' paradox.
As simple as the question sounds, it would take until the 20th century to find a truly satisfactory answer for why the night sky is not as bright as the day.
Solving Olbers' paradox would require many great scientists, who weren't afraid to think differently.
Radically differently.
You see, solving the paradox is all about understanding the shape, size and origin of everything there is.
Without this understanding, the puzzle would be impossible to solve.
You see, stuck here on Earth, we don't have access to interstellar travel.
So we have to allow our minds to make that intellectual leap.
By simply looking up, Digges and his contemporaries had begun a scientific journey to understand what everything might actually look like.
But, for 200 years after Thomas Digges' insight, little progress was made in understanding the most distant reaches of the cosmos.
At the end of the 18th century, however, all that would change.
Until the end of the 1700s, everything that lies outside the solar system is, for astronomers, pretty uninteresting.
Astronomy until then was the science of our system - of the Earth and the planets, satellites and comets.
The stars were a kind of glorified and rather interesting backdrop.
This changes around 1800.
This small and unremarkable house in Bath was once home to the astronomer William Herschel and his sister, and devoted assistant, Caroline.
Together, they would develop and build a new generation of telescopes that would allow them to see further out into space than any human had ever done before.
William Herschel was born in Hanover, but moved to England in 1761 to pursue a career as a musician and composer.
But he soon developed a passion for astronomy and began building telescopes in his spare time.
Herschel soon perfected a technique for producing telescopes borrowed from Sir Isaac Newton.
The telescopes used metal mirrors that were capable of capturing much more starlight than the glass lenses that were popular among other astronomers.
This tiny room at the back of Herschel's house used to be his workshop.
It was here that he'd smelt various metals together in the furnace to make the reflecting mirrors for his telescopes.
And he would experiment with different metals, different combinations, to get them as reflective as possible.
Then, with his sister Caroline to help him, he'd spend literally hours on end polishing the surface of the mirrors to achieve the precision required.
And you have to remember, this was quite a dangerous, confined environment.
The floor still bears the scars of the molten metal that they'd spilt, cracking the paving stones.
With his powerful telescopes, Herschel and his sister Caroline would scour the heavens, night after night, cataloguing the stars.
The universe they were seeing was revealing itself to be one of dynamic complexity, a universe of natural, organic motion, a place of endless wonder.
Herschel's revolutionary telescope design made him famous.
With it, he'd discover a new planet, Uranus, a discovery that would earn him the job of the King's astronomer.
This new role gave him the time and resources to start a much grander task, to try and map all the stars in the universe, in an attempt to draw a picture of everything.
In 1785, Herschel published this remarkable image.
It shows an approximation of the Milky Way, with our sun residing at the centre.
Herschel had seen that we are part of a vast disc of stars, a huge galaxy of suns that seemed to have a clear boundary.
It appeared as though Herschel's craftsmanship had actually allowed him to see to the edge of everything.
But soon a nagging problem began to emerge.
Dotted around the sky, Herschel and others had been observing strange cloud-like objects, known as nebulae.
Some of these nebulae seemed to have distinctive form and complex structure.
Some astronomers began to suggest a radical idea.
Perhaps the Milky Way was not everything that there was.
Perhaps some of these nebulae were in fact themselves gigantic galaxies of stars, just like ours, that actually existed in deep space.
Unfortunately, there was no way to answer this question satisfactorily.
The problem was that for all Herschel's great technological achievements, and for all of those long, cold nights that he spent with Caroline outside, gazing painstakingly at the heavens, there was one problem they couldn't solve.
They had no way of accurately measuring distances in outer space.
It would not be until after Herschel's death that a cunning method was developed to measure the distances to objects deep into space.
The technique was known as stellar parallax.
If you look at an object like your finger from two vantage points, it will shift in your frame of reference.
By observing how much it shifts, you can calculate how far away it is.
My finger is moving a lot more between each frame than the building that is behind it.
Now, an astronomer called Friedrich Bessel worked out that if you took images of stars when the Earth was at either side of its orbit around the sun, it would be possible to actually see the stars shifting.
By observing how much they shifted, you could then work out their distance from us.
Bessel calculated that the relatively close star, 61 Cygni, must be some 100 trillion kilometres away.
But amazing though this technique was, it was still very severely limited.
The diameter of the Earth's orbit is 300 million kilometres.
This means the parallax method can only measure objects out to about 300 trillion kilometres, only a tiny fraction of the size of the Milky Way.
It soon became clear that there was plenty in the heavens that was practically impossible to measure, particularly those mysterious nebulae.
They would remain an enigma until the beginning of the 20th century, when they ignited a great debate.
One group of astronomers agrees that there is only one galaxy, ours, the Milky Way and everything else we see, the globular clusters, the nebulae, are all somehow inside that galaxy.
Then there are other astronomers who argue no, many of these nebulae are themselves giant island universes, unimaginably far away from us.
There was evidence on both sides.
This mystery remained a source of bitter debate until the beginning of the 1920s.
The woman who would help solve the problem is one of the great unsung heroes of science.
She worked at the Harvard College Observatory and her name was Henrietta Leavitt.
Leavitt's job was to count and catalogue the stars producing images from observatories around the world.
She was a brilliant scientist who loved her work.
This is one of the photographic plates of space that Leavitt worked with.
You can see her bright marks highlighting tiny details within the image.
With meticulous care, hundreds of subtle features of stars have been noted.
It was this ability that would help her come up with an ingenious idea, one that would help unravel the true size of the universe.
The idea rested on finding an objective way of defining the true brightness of a star.
Leavitt became fascinated by a type of star known as a Cepheid variable, which pulses in the night sky.
Her breakthrough was discovering that their brightness was precisely related to the speed they blinked.
Let me explain.
These two stars are blinking at the same rate, which means they should be exactly the same brightness.
If one star appears dimmer, you can then calculate how much further away it is than the brighter one.
Leavitt's method meant that she knew the true brightness of the Cepheid variables.
She had found a method to measure the distance to stars that lay far beyond the reaches of parallax.
But without access to a telescope, she could go no further with her work.
She was forbidden from working in the supremely male-dominated world of the observatory.
But her discovery now gave astronomers a tool to measure the distances to the mysterious nebulae.
The idea that our Milky Way might contain everything that existed was about to crumble.
The scale of the universe is really only understood amazingly recently.
In the 1920s, it was absolutely plausible that the universe consists of one galaxy, and some of the best astronomers in the world, in the US for example, seriously held that view, and had good evidence that it was true.
And they were wrong.
The evidence to finally settle the great debate would be found thanks to the powerful new Hooker telescope being built at the Mount Wilson Observatory just outside Los Angeles.
Using this incredible piece of technology, and Henrietta Leavitt's ingenious method for calculating distance, a young astronomer would make a discovery that would change our view of the universe and for ever immortalise his name.
The astronomer was called Edwin Hubble.
Hubble was a very different kind of scientist to Leavitt.
He was a larger-than-life character, extrovert, with a huge ego.
But he was still a hugely talented and visionary scientist.
He was born and grew up in America but spent some time in England, and this seems to have had a lasting impression because he would be heard walking around the observatory shouting things like, "By Jove!" and "What-Ho!" in a completely over the top British accent.
The talented, passionate and eccentric Hubble rapidly gained a name for himself in the world of astronomy.
But it wouldn't be until 1923, that he would discover something in what was then known as the Andromeda Nebula that would reveal the true scale of our universe.
I've come to the University College London Observatory to meet astronomer Dr Steve Fossey, to see for myself just what Hubble's revelation was.
We're going to key in the co-ordinates of Andromeda to the console here.
So zero hours 43 minutes 'For Hubble and his assistant, Milton Humason, 'studying Andromeda was a long and painstaking process.
'But today, we can quickly locate and photograph it in great detail.
' This is an image that we took a couple of weeks ago.
Right.
If I zoom in, you'll see just there is the Hubble Cepheid, the first Cepheid that he found that unlocked the whole problem.
Because presumably that is when he could use Leavitt's method of working out how far away it is.
Exactly.
Once he had seen this and identified it as a variable, he then had the key to determining just how bright that object was.
And worked out that it couldn't have been in our own galaxy.
It had to be millions of light years away.
Absolutely, that is exactly it.
You see the nuclear region, but as we adjust the contrast here, I can stretch the contrast just to bring out some of the detail in the galaxy.
Oh, wow! Spiral arms.
You see the dust lanes in silhouette against the billions of stars that are within Andromeda.
By finding one of the variable stars in Andromeda, and measuring exactly how long it took to pulse, Hubble was able to use Leavitt's work to calculate exactly how far away it was.
This is the photographic plate where Hubble marked his new Cepheid variable star.
Using it, he calculated that Andromeda was many, many times more distant than the furthest reaches of the Milky Way.
Andromeda was indeed an island universe, a vast galaxy of stars.
We now know that Andromeda is over 2.
5 million light years away.
This means that the light that reaches us from Andromeda today, left on its journey before modern humans had evolved.
That's our neighbour.
That's our neighbour, our nearest large, galactic neighbour.
I have to remember that what I am looking at here is the real thing.
These are photons that have travelled millions of years to reach my eye.
Exactly.
These are photons directly from Andromeda that are arriving in my eye.
Today, we have the power to see Andromeda as Hubble had only dreamed of.
We now estimate that Andromeda contains over a trillion stars.
And it is just one of a vast multitude of galaxies scattered throughout our universe.
In 1923, the universe had been the size of the Milky Way.
By 1924, the space that surrounds us had been revealed to be billions of times bigger and home to almost unimaginable cosmic complexity.
Hubble had shown that there are a multitude of galaxies outside of our own and had pushed back the boundaries of the universe.
But he had not seen an edge of space.
He had not seen everything.
There was still no clue as to how big our universe was, or even what shape it might be.
To understand the strange truth about everything would require more than just observations.
It would require mathematics - a powerful new type of mathematics that would be able to describe the bizarre properties of space itself.
When you're trying to understand the universe, it's easy to think, what you do is you make lots and lots of observations, see what's there, and you fit it all together into your grand picture.
But the problem is, unless you have some sort of idea what the picture should be, you don't know what observations to make, you don't know what's significant.
And throughout the history of science, every so often someone has to come up with a new mathematical idea.
The new mathematical ideas about space were so weird, so far removed from common sense, that it would take over 2,000 years and the genius of Albert Einstein to formulate them.
But when they were ready, these strange new types of mathematics would lead to a revolution in our understanding of the space that surrounds us.
OK.
So what is space? We think we know the answer.
I can talk about this room being spacious.
There's a lot of space in here.
Or a confined space.
There's not enough volume, not enough space.
But does space only exist when there's stuff in it? Does space only have a meaning when it's enclosed by walls? Think of the distance between two objects.
Does that gap still exist if you take the objects away? What meaning can we give to distance if it doesn't have a start and end point? Ultimately, the question is this - does space in itself have form? Does it have structure or shape? Or is it just the place where things happen? The properties of space were first described by the mathematician Euclid over 2,000 years ago, in his legendary text, The Elements.
In it, he laid down a set of simple, logical rules about space, in what today, we call Euclidian geometry.
Euclidian geometry is the geometry we see around us every day.
If you're sitting in a room and it's the usual rectangular room, what you see is lots of straight lines, right-angles, you see parallel lines, the window, the two sides of the window are parallel.
If you extended them, they'd stay exactly the same distance apart, they would never meet.
And the other thing you would see if you look a little closer is that any triangle you draw, the angles in the triangle always add up to 180 degrees.
That's characteristic of Euclidian geometry.
And people used to think that this was how geometry was, that nothing else was possible.
For Euclid himself, and for almost all mathematicians for the next 2,000 years, these rules weren't just true mathematically, they were also true statements about physical reality itself.
So they thought that two parallel lines would remain parallel for ever.
That a triangle in real space would always have angles adding up to 180 degrees.
But weird as though this might sound, it's not actually always true.
Almost 250 years ago, in a small town in northern Germany, a mathematician was born who had the ability and originality to start to unravel Euclid's geometry and begin to change our ideas about space.
His name was Carl Friedrich Gauss.
Gauss tackled many great problems in his career, but from a young age, he began to speculate that the rules of Euclid may not be as absolute as everyone had assumed.
Specifically, Gauss began to see that in curved spaces, other types of geometry could exist, with different rules to Euclid's.
For example, on the surface of a sphere, the angles of a triangle can add up to more than 180 degrees.
Many others would refine and develop Gauss's ideas.
But one of his greatest achievements would be to give us a cunning method of accurately measuring curvature.
It would become known simply as the Remarkable Theorem.
Let me explain with this globe.
We can see that it's three-dimensional, because we can stand back and look at it.
But what if you were an ant, stuck on the surface? How would it know that that surface is curved? So, imagine you're the ant, and you start off at the North Pole.
And facing south, you move down towards the equator.
At the equator, you still face south, and you shuffle sideways, along the equator.
Then, you reach a certain point, and then you start walking backwards so you're still facing the same direction, and head back to the North Pole.
Now, look what's happened here.
You've been pointing south all the way round, and yet when you arrive back at your starting point, you're facing in a different direction.
Understanding this gives us a way of calculating the curvature of a surface without ever leaving it.
'This was an amazing insight.
' But it only applies to curved surfaces, which are two-dimensional.
It would take a brilliant student of Gauss's, Bernhard Riemann, to develop these ideas in a way that could be applied to the three-dimensional space that surrounds us.
It would be a daring, outlandish, and to non-mathematicians, absurd-sounding concept.
Aged just 26, Riemann encapsulated his strange new ideas about geometry in a lecture that was to become legendary among mathematicians.
In June 1854, Riemann delivered his lectures to an enraptured audience.
In them, he detailed how he'd taken Gauss's ideas on curved surfaces, and generalised them, so that they applied not only to curved two-dimensional surfaces, but the curvature of space in any dimension.
OK, so I'm sure this all sounds rather complicated.
What exactly do we mean by curved space in any dimension? So let me try and explain.
Here's the thing, Gauss talked about curved two-dimensional surfaces.
Well, here we have a sheet of paper, and it's two-dimensional.
So if I curve it, we can visualise and see this curvature.
But only because it's embedded in three dimensions.
Now, what if we curved three dimensions? Presumably, we'd need a fourth dimension.
But how do you get to this four-dimensional space? It's impossible to step outside of our three-dimensional world.
Wherever you travel in the universe, no matter how far you go, you're always stuck in three dimensions.
The genius of Riemann was to show that you didn't need to stand in a fourth dimension to tell if space was curved.
You could actually do it from the inside.
But for Riemann, this would always remain a purely mathematical idea.
It would take Albert Einstein to tie these mathematical ideas together, and apply bendy, curved, non-Euclidian geometries to the real space that surrounds us.
I think the most important point about the whole story of non-Euclidian geometry is it shows how mathematics and the real world relate.
And it starts out with mathematicians pottering around, asking, "Could there be a geometry different from Euclid's?" and if anyone said, "Why are you studying that?" They'd say, "Haven't got a clue.
" "What's it useful for?" "No idea.
It's just interesting.
" But they pottered around and they found a surprising answer - that different geometries were possible.
And even at that point, nobody had any real applications for this idea.
And then when the moment is ripe, Einstein comes along and says, "That's what I need, that's real physics.
" And suddenly this piece of esoteric mathematics becomes vital to the scientific enterprise.
Einstein would reveal that we live not in the flat world of Euclid, but in the strange, curved worlds of Gauss and Riemann.
In the space of a few, short years, Einstein went from wrestling with some of the most difficult and abstract mathematical ideas to dinner dates with Charlie Chaplin.
And it was all thanks to the pinnacle of his life's work - the general theory of relativity.
In the general theory of relativity, Einstein took the mathematics of Gauss and Riemann and used it to paint a revolutionary picture of the physical world.
He showed that just as Gauss had suspected, the geometry of the space around us isn't always of the regular, flat, Euclidian kind.
'But if space is bent, and warped all around us, 'surely we must be able to observe that this is the case? 'Well, we do - just not in the way you might expect.
'This was Einstein's major insight.
'He showed that it was the ability for space to bend and warp, 'for it to be flexible, and change its geometry, 'that gives rise to the force we call gravity.
' Right.
Now, since Newton's time, gravity was thought to be a force that pulls all objects together.
So if I drop this apple, it's as though there's an invisible rubber band that's pulling it down towards the earth.
But Einstein's general theory of relativity gives us a completely different picture, and a totally new perspective.
So although gravity appears to be a force, it's nothing more than the curvature of space itself.
When an object falls, it's not being pulled by gravity at all, it's just following the simplest path through bent space.
But the equations of general relativity didn't end there.
They revealed that it was the presence of mass that caused space to curve and distort.
The reason we have gravity on Earth is because the Earth is actually bending the space around it.
In Einsteinian theory of the universe, space becomes a dynamic entity that reacts to its contents.
Space knows about the presence of gravitating bodies, and responds to the presence by changing its geometry in really interesting ways.
So what was in the 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th century, a very boring, still object, suddenly in Einsteinian theory, it becomes a dynamic, almost alive body.
Einstein's theory revealed that space itself, the entire universe, everything, wasn't just unimaginably large, it also had a shape, and structure.
It was malleable.
Everything could be bent and warped.
Gauss, Riemann and Einstein, had between them come up with a description of how the space and time we exist in can be warped.
They showed that space and time are not the fixed, unchanging stage on which the actions of the universe are played out.
They are actually part of the performance.
It was soon realised that because the general theory of relativity applied to everything, it gave physicists a way of being able to step outside the universe, and imagine how it might be behaving in its entirety.
And when they did this, they saw something that was extremely disturbing.
The equations were giving a description of the universe that seemed ridiculous.
They were describing something that was actually expanding.
It seemed preposterous that the entire universe could be some sort of moving, organic, expanding entity.
It was such a strange prediction that even Einstein refused to believe it.
Einstein had overturned common sense notions of space and time held by humans over thousands of years.
But he still couldn't accept that the whole universe might be dynamic and changing.
In fact, he was so convinced that it was static, the he was prepared to modify his original equations by adding an extra turn called the cosmological constant that would stabilise the universe.
But Einstein was trying to fix something that wasn't broken.
It's at this point that our story returns to Edwin Hubble.
Armed with the Hooker telescope, Hubble would reveal the truth that Einstein had refused to believe.
After discovering that our galaxy was just one of many, Hubble began to study the ways in which these other galaxies were moving.
Hubble knew that, as a light source approaches us, the light wave would become compressed and appear blue.
If an object was receding, the light waves would become stretched out and appear red.
What he saw was astounding.
All distant galaxies were being red shifted.
They were all moving away from us.
Not only that, but the further away a galaxy was, the faster it was moving away.
Hubble's observations and Einstein's general theory of relativity were in agreement.
But, and this is the crucial point here, it's not that the galaxies are flying away from each other through space.
But rather that the fabric of space itself in between the galaxies is expanding.
So the universe in its entirety is getting bigger.
This is what Hubble and Einstein's work revealed.
Einstein soon visited Hubble to see the data for himself.
He would go on to admit that changing his equations had been his biggest scientific blunder.
So, why was space expanding in this way? Both Hubble and Einstein soon came to agree.
If the fabric of space was expanding it meant, previously, the universe was smaller.
Rewind the clock far enough back .
.
and it appeared as if there was a point when our entire universe began.
The data were pointing towards a moment of creation.
But many scientists were not convinced by this apparent Big Bang.
It seemed like a leap too far.
But there was one piece of evidence that had the power to convince everyone.
It seemed that if the Big Bang had happened, then some time after the instance of creation, a flash of light should have been emitted throughout the universe.
Every part of the cosmos should now be filled with this light.
And it turned out it was.
It just happened to be in a rather unusual form.
As unlikely as it sounds, the relic of the Big Bang fireball was actually visible on television.
Let me explain how this is possible.
Imagine this balloon is our universe.
Here it is just a few hundred thousand years old.
At this point, something very strange happens, because the universe suddenly becomes transparent to visible light as atoms form.
It's as though a fog has lifted and light is suddenly able to travel freely through the universe.
At every point in space, photons began to travel unimpeded and the entire universe is filled with a blinding light.
But this light, released in the hot turmoil of the early universe, didn't stay bright for ever.
As space expanded, it stretched through the spectrum from visible light down into microwaves.
And it's these microwaves that get picked up by television aerials.
Incredibly, almost one per cent of this static is the afterglow of creation itself.
It's the stretched out remnants of the very earliest light in the universe.
Today, with satellites, it's become possible to make an incredibly precise map of the universe at the moment it became light.
This is the fossilised light of the first dawn.
Convincing evidence that the universe had a beginning.
Using the microwave radiation, cosmologists could even date it.
Our entire universe is 13.
7 billion years old.
This beginning of everything would be the final piece of information needed to answer the question Thomas Digges had first posed over 400 years ago.
It would finally give us a satisfactory explanation for why it gets dark at night.
OK, so here it is, here's where I hope this all makes sense.
The further away a star is, the longer it would take for its light to reach the Earth.
So, if the universe has been around forever, then all the light that's out there will have had time to reach us and the night sky would be ablaze with starlight.
But it's not.
And here's why.
Imagine when the universe was much younger and smaller than it is today.
A beam of light on the other side of the universe begins a journey towards our vantage point.
But, as space expands, the distance the light has to cross keeps getting bigger and bigger.
Fast forward to today, and this light still hasn't reached us.
So, no matter how hard we look into the sky, we simply won't be able to see it.
We can only see the stars whose light has had time to reach us in the 13.
7 billion years since the Big Bang.
This region is known as the observable universe.
And there are not enough stars here to light up the night sky.
So, we only ever see the stars and galaxies whose light has had a chance to reach us, and that's why it gets dark at night.
The simplest fact that we take for granted, that the sky at night is dark, is in fact incredibly profound.
It took 200 years of theorising, of thinking, it took the development of general relativity, before we could understand why the sky at night is dark.
By reasoning and observing and imagining, we've found ever better ways to project outside of the confines of our small rock tumbling through space.
We've become ever more skilled at creating pictures of everything.
This is a computer simulation of the universe in its infancy.
Using it, we can see how the force of gravity has shaped the universe over billions of years.
The brightest white and yellow regions in this image show where galaxies and clusters of galaxies form.
You can see how, as the universe evolves, a strange and hidden structure begins to emerge.
This is the cosmic web.
It's our best picture yet of what everything might look like at the largest scales.
It shows massive clusters of galaxies linked together in vast filaments, each one containing trillions of stars.
Its scale is sometimes difficult to appreciate.
But it would take light almost 10 billion years to cross the distance in this image.
But this incredible picture of everything is destined to change.
We are starting to understand that, in the distant future, the universe will become a terrifyingly bleak and desolate place.
In 1998, a team of astronomers published a paper in which they looked at supernova explosions in distant galaxies.
They were hoping to measure very accurately how fast the universe was expanding.
Now, they expected to find that the rate of expansion was slowing down, just because of the pull of gravity of all the matter in the universe.
But they were in for a big surprise.
The universe was getting bigger, faster.
The rate of expansion was accelerating.
There seemed to be some mysterious force pushing everything apart.
We still don't understand its origin, but it's been dubbed dark energy.
There's one fascinating yet disturbing consequence of this.
If the expansion of the universe continues to accelerate then our visible universe will begin to empty.
Let me explain.
Imagine that I'm in a distant galaxy that you can see from Earth.
As the space between us stretches, there will come a time in the future when it is expanding so rapidly that light can't outrun it, and the galaxy will disappear from view.
What this means is that, far into the future, some 100 billion years from now, if intelligent life forms still exist in our galaxy, they'll look out into space and see only the stars in our own Milky Way.
All the other galaxies will have disappeared.
And they will be alone in a vast, dark, empty expanse.
I have here a box.
What would happen if I were to remove everything I possibly could from inside it? What then exists inside the space in the box? Is it really nothing?