Instructional Video14:32
PBS

Will Wormholes Allow Fast Interstellar Travel?

12th - Higher Ed
From Stargate to Interstellar, wormholes are our favorite method for traveling across fictional universes. But they are also a very serious field of study for some of our greatest minds over the last century. So what’s the holdup? When...
Instructional Video13:43
PBS

Can Future Colliders Break the Standard Model?

12th - Higher Ed
In June, the consortium of Europe’s top particle physicists published their vision for the next several years of particle physics experiments in the EU. A big part of that is the Future Circular Collider, which, if it happens, will...
Instructional Video13:12
PBS

Building Black Holes in a Lab

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are about the worst subjects for direct study in the universe. But at this stage, it’s all we can do to convince ourselves of their existence. Actually studying the physics of real black holes is much, much harder. I mean, we...
Instructional Video12:33
PBS

Is Time Travel Impossible?

12th - Higher Ed
Time travel stories are cool because both the past and future are somehow more interesting that the present and because everyone wants a redo. But so far it appears we’re doomed to live consumed by regret in the eternal, boring present....
Instructional Video12:36
PBS

Why the Muon g-2 Results Are So Exciting!

12th - Higher Ed
When a theory makes a prediction that disagrees with an experimental test, sometimes it means we should throw the theory away. But what if that theory has otherwise produced the most successful predictions in all of physics? Then, that...
Instructional Video11:34
PBS

What If (Tiny) Black Holes Are Everywhere?

12th - Higher Ed
It’s fair to say that black holes may be the scariest objects in the universe. Happily for us, the nearest is probably many light-years away. Unless of course, Planck relics are a thing - in which case they might be literally everywhere.
Instructional Video11:22
PBS

The Boundary Between Black Holes & Neutron Stars

12th - Higher Ed
When we detected the very first gravitational wave, a new window was opened to the mysteries of the universe. We knew we’d see things previously thought impossible. And we just did - an object on the boundary between neutron stars and...
Instructional Video12:23
PBS

Can Space Be Infinitely Divided?

12th - Higher Ed
How many times can I half the distance between my hands? Assume perfect coordination and the ability to localize my palms to the quantum level. 15 halvings gets them to within a cell’s width. 33 to within a single atom, 50 and they’re a...
Instructional Video14:31
PBS

How An Extreme New Star Could Change All Cosmology

12th - Higher Ed
A new white dwarf has been discovered (poetically named: ZTF J1901+1458) that’s doing some stuff that no white dwarf should ever be able to do. In fact, it has multiple properties that are so extreme that it almost certainly did NOT form...
Instructional Video13:04
PBS

Is Dark Matter Made of Particles?

12th - Higher Ed
By the time you've read this, a billion billion dark matter particles may have streamed through your body like ghosts. The particle or particles of the dark sector make up the vast majority of the mass of the universe - so to them, we're...
Instructional Video16:42
PBS

Could LIGO Find MASSIVE Alien Spaceships?

12th - Higher Ed
Whenever we open a new window on the universe, we discover things that no one expected. Our newfound ability to measure ripples in the fabric of spacetime—gravitational waves—is a very new window, and so far we’ve seen a lot of wild...
Instructional Video13:11
PBS

The NEW Warp Drive Possibilities

12th - Higher Ed
That Einstein guy was a real bummer for our hopes of a star-hopping, science-fiction-y future. His whole “nothing travels faster than light” rule seems to ensure that exploration of even the local part of our galaxy will be an...
Instructional Video8:05
PBS

100 Years of Relativity + Challenge Winners!

12th - Higher Ed
The results are in - on this weeks episode of Spacetime we reveal the answer to our Asteroid Challenge, as well as our T-shirt winners! Check out who saved the world!
Instructional Video13:10
PBS

Are Dark Matter And Dark Energy The Same?

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers are the worst at naming things. Dark energy AND dark matter? Who can remember which is which. But perhaps one astronomer has just fixed it, with a theory that says perhaps actually they are they same stuff.
Instructional Video13:21
PBS

Could the Universe End by Tearing Apart Every Atom?

12th - Higher Ed
The universe is expanding, and that expansion is accelerating. We don’t know what’s causing that acceleration, but that hasn’t stopped us from giving it a name. We call this unknown influence dark energy. The observed acceleration is,...
Instructional Video11:10
PBS

The Real Science of the EHT Black Hole

12th - Higher Ed
So, how do you take a picture of a black hole? The beast in question is the supermassive black hole in the center of this – the M87 elliptical galaxy. It has an estimated mass of several billion times that of the Sun, which gives it an...
Instructional Video9:10
PBS

Pulsar Starquakes Make Fast Radio Bursts? + Challenge Winners! | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

12th - Higher Ed
Fast Radio Bursts were puzzling physicist for quite some time. They were thought to be the result of large cataclysmic events such as supernovae, but this theory was proven wrong when it was discovered that they could repeat themselves....
Instructional Video14:35
PBS

What Happens After the Universe Ends?

12th - Higher Ed
Conformal Cyclic Cosmology is a story of the origin and the end of our universe from great mathematical physicist Sir Roger Penrose. It’s goes like this: the infinitely far future, when the universe has expanded exponentially to to an...
Instructional Video13:32
PBS

The Strange Universe of Gravitational Lensing

12th - Higher Ed
Niels Bohr, a Danish Physicist said “Everything we call real is made of things that cannot be regarded .” Is what we see perceived to be real or is it an illusion? In the world of our mind’s eye, light travels in a straight line. In...
Instructional Video11:22
PBS

How Black Holes Kill Galaxies

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are really only dangerous if you get too close. Ha, who am I kidding. It turns out they may be responsible for ending star formation across the entire universe. When we first realized that black holes could have masses of...
Instructional Video10:05
PBS

Should We Build a Dyson Sphere? | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

12th - Higher Ed
The Kepler telescope recently noticed a strange partial eclipse that some have speculated could be a Dyson Sphere. Are Dyson Sphere's possible? Are they practical? What other alternatives to futuristic energy capture do we have to choose...
Instructional Video13:49
PBS

Electroweak Theory and the Origin of the Fundamental Forces

12th - Higher Ed
Our universe seems pretty complicated. We have a weird zoo of elementary particles, which interact through very different fundamental forces. But some extremely subtle clues in nature have led us to believe that the forces of nature were...
Instructional Video8:25
PBS

The Trebuchet Challenge | Space Time

12th - Higher Ed
Kinetic and potential energy are defined as combinations of more basic quantities: position, velocity and mass. These combinations are chosen so that their sum is conserved. It’s actually remarkable that there’s any such combination of...
Instructional Video12:21
PBS

What If Dark Matter Is Just Black Holes?

12th - Higher Ed
It may be that for every star in the universe there are billions of microscopic black holes streaming through the solar system, the planet, even our bodies every second. Sounds horrible - but hey, at least we’d have explained dark matter.