Instructional Video14:27
PBS

Does Axionic Dark Matter Bind Galaxies Together?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewQuantum mechanics is our best theory of the fundamental nature of reality, but it's usually only distinguishable from familiar classical mechanics on the smallest scales. But it’s also possible that our entire galaxy is filled with a...
Instructional Video16:22
PBS

Do We Need a New Dark Matter Model?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewWe have no idea what dark matter is, other than it’s some source of gravity that is completely invisible but exerts way more pull that all of the regular matter. More than all of the stars, all of the gas, all of the black holes…unless...
Instructional Video14:59
PBS

What If Space is Not Empty?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewSpacetime on its smallest scales is a seething ocean of black holes and wormholes flickering into and out of existence—or so many physicists think has to be the case. But why should we take this spacetime foam seriously if we’ve never...
Instructional Video15:08
PBS

What New Science Would We Discover with a Moon Telescope?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewIn order to see the faint light from objects in deepest space, astronomers go to the darkest places on the planet. In order to listen to their quite radio signals, they head as far from any radio-noisy humans as possible. But there’s...
Instructional Video16:35
PBS

Are Many Worlds and Pilot Wave The Same Theory?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewIt’s hard to interpret the strange results of quantum mechanics, though many have tried. Interpretations range from the outlandish—like the multiple universes of Many Worlds, to the almost mundane, like the very mechanical Pilot Wave...
Instructional Video12:06
PBS

Why Did Attosecond Physics Win the Nobel Prize?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewWhenever we open a new window on the universe we discover something new. Whether it's figuring out how to see to greater distances like with telescopes, or down to smaller size-scales like with microscopes, or perhaps expanding our...
Instructional Video17:53
PBS

What If There's A Black Hole Inside The Sun? (Hawking Stars)

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewA fun nightmare sci-fi scenario is the sun being consumed by a black hole. Fortunately the chance of a black hole randomly wandering into our solar system is pretty tiny. That’s good news. But what if it’s already here, hiding in the...
Instructional Video14:45
PBS

What if Singularities Do Not Exist?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewIt's not too often that a giant of physics threatens to overturn an idea held to be self-evident by generations of physicists. Well, that may be the fate of the famous Penrose Singularity Theorem if we're to believe a recent paper by Roy...
Instructional Video15:13
PBS

What Happens If We Nuke Space?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewEMPs aren’t science fiction. Real militaries are experimenting on real EMP generators, and as Starfish Prime showed us, space nukes can send powerful EMPs to the surface. So what exactly is an EMP, and how dangerous are they?
Instructional Video14:12
PBS

Dark Forest: Should We Not Contact Aliens?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewIn 1974 we sent the Arecibo radio message towards Messier 13, a globular cluster near the edge of the Milky Way, made up of a few hundred thousand stars. The message was mostly symbolic; we weren’t really expecting a reply. Yet surely...
Instructional Video14:29
PBS

Does Space Emerge From A Holographic Boundary?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewSpace seems fundamental. To build a universe, surely you need something to build it on or in. Many, maybe most physicists now think that the fabric of space emerges from something deeper. And perhaps the most existentially disturbing...
Instructional Video15:02
PBS

What If Gravity is Not A Fundamental Force?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThere are four fundamental forces - the strong and weak nuclear forces, electromagnetism, and gravity. Except maybe gravity is no more fundamental than the force of a stretched elastic band. Maybe gravity is just an entropic byproduct—an...
Instructional Video15:07
PBS

How Eclipses Revealed Our Solar System

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewOf all the astronomical phenomena you can witness, the total solar eclipse has to be the most visceral--the most in-your-face reminder that our reality consists of giant balls of rock spinning around stars. It's also the eclipse and...
Instructional Video17:26
PBS

Is It Impossible To Cross The Event Horizon? (Black Hole Firewall Paradox)

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewSo you’ve decided to jump into a black hole. Good news: as long as the black hole is big enough you can sail through the event horizon without harm and get to experience the interior of the black hole before you’re annihilated by the...
Instructional Video15:17
PBS

What Supernova Distance Would Trigger Mass Extinction?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe deaths of massive stars results in one of the most beautiful and violent events in the universe: the supernova. But if these explosions occur too close to Earth their radiation can impact life and even trigger mass extinctions.
Instructional Video16:24
PBS

Did AI Prove Our Proton Model Wrong?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe humble proton may seem simple enough, and they’re certainly common. And protons are each made of three up or down quarks. Simple stuff, right? All except for that last part. Protons are actually made of many, many quarks that happen...
Instructional Video11:49
PBS

What If The Speed of Light is Not Constant?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewOne of the most fundamental physics facts is that the speed of light in a vacuum is constant for all observers. But can we really be sure that the speed of light wasn’t different in the past, or perhaps in other parts of the universe? In...
Instructional Video16:00
PBS

JWST Discovered The Farthest Star Ever Seen!

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewTo understand where we came from—how earth, the solar system, the galaxy became what they are today—we need to understand the beginning of time. For example, how did the first galaxies pull themselves together from the dark...
Instructional Video18:32
PBS

How Will We (Most Likely) Discover Alien Life?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe first discovery of extraterrestrial life will almost certainly NOT be when it visits us, nor when we visit it. It won’t be when we see it’s stray TV signals. It’ll be in the excruciatingly faint changes in the color of alien sunsets...
Instructional Video16:30
PBS

Does Antimatter Create Anti-Gravity?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewFrom hoverboards to flying cars to cloud cities, anti-gravity is a staple of science fiction and our dream of a less Earth-bound future. But in the real universe gravity appears to be a purely attractive force. Feels like its main MO is...
Instructional Video14:33
PBS

Did JWST Solve The Mystery of Supermassive Black Hole Origins?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThis is what we astronomers call a blob, or a smudge, if you want to get really technical. It may not look like much from here, but what do you expect for something near the literal edge of the observable universe. If you were there when...
Instructional Video15:37
PBS

Why Is The World Rushing Back To The Moon?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe Moon has been one of the most important theoretical stepping stones to our understanding of the universe. We’ve long understood that it could also be our literal stepping stone: humanity’s first destination beyond our atmosphere.
Instructional Video13:28
PBS

Can Black Holes Unify General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewBlack holes are inevitable predictions of general relativity—our best theory of space, time and gravity. But they clash in multiple ways with quantum mechanics, our equally successful description of the subatomic world. One such clash is...
Instructional Video12:52
PBS

What’s The Universe’s Strongest Particle Accelerator?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewCern's Large Hadron Collider routinely collides particles at energies equivalent to a fraction of a second after the Big Bang. If this worries you, then the following fact will either put you at ease or scare the hell out of you. And...