Intense stellar winds have sculpted a majestic
castle of gas. Inside these giant columns, stars are being born. Yet for the dying stars that set this process
in motion, the consequences are grim. Supernovae leave in their wake a range of
bizarre objects. Among them, a tiny dense ball of neutrons. You form an object that we call a neutron
star, which is something that has the mass of our sun, but a radius of only about six
miles or so. That is a very compact object. Every centimeter cubed of that mass has a
mass of a hundred-million tons. Because of its intense gravity, a neutron
star is a perfect sphere, with a surface like polished metal. It has the mass of the star, but it only has
the size of a city. And the structure of that matter is that it's like ordinary matter,
where there are electrons and so on orbiting around, ah, ah, nuclei, but with all the electrons
sort of squashed into the nuclei and the particles up close together. So something that we think of as incredibly
dense, like lead, is really mostly empty space. And if you squish all the empty space out
of it and get the nuclei right up next to each other, that's something that has the
density of a neutron star. The existence of neutron stars was first proposed
in the 1930s. It wasn't until the '60s that hard evidence was finally detected. Within the remnants of some supernovae, astronomers
detected a presence that pulsed with radio signals. When these were discovered by a graduate student
in England in the 1960s, the supervisor thought that they should not announce the discovery
for a few months, partly in order to check the -- that it was a genuine astronomic object. But also because of the possibility that this
might be an alien signal. And in fact, the code name for the object in the early days
was LGM, to stand for Little Green Men. Aliens it was not. Strange it was. The Crab Nebula is the shell of the same supernova
that caught the attention of so many cultures in the year 1054. Deep within, astronomers found a pulsar, a
neutron star that spins rapidly, emitting radio waves. Now scientists are using the Hubble Space
Telescope to zero in on the pulsar -- The star on the left. It is spewing waves of radiation
that have etched circular patterns in the surrounding gas. Yet, some dying stars meet a fate that is
stranger still. Nature, it seems, has contrived a monster. Early in this century, Albert Einstein speculated
about a star with such intense gravity that absolutely nothing, not even light, escaped
its grasp. He at once dismissed this prospect as impossible. The notion that you could squeeze something
without limits, you know, right down to a zero size, was considered basically absurd
and offensive. And so there was a sort of temperamental reaction
against this idea of total gravitational collapse right through until the 1950s. What once seemed beyond reason now defines
the frontiers of science. Astronomers believe that when a large star explodes, enough matter
can collapse into its core that it literally exits the known universe. If the mass of that core is large, is larger
than about three times the mass of our sun, nothing at the end can stop the final collapse.
Gravity wins the final battle and the thing collapses to form a black hole. From our vantage on earth, we define our universe
by familiar criteria. But black holes defy discovery. What after all can we detect of
objects that emit no light? The fact is we don't have enough cases where
we really know what's going on to be able to study it in detail. We'd like to know, for example, if the black
holes are a little different from the theory and at the moment we're just at the stage
of finding out whether there are good candidates for black holes, things that we think can't
be neutron stars, can't be white dwarfs, can't be anything else. The usual argument for a black hole is somebody
shrugging and saying, "Well, what else can it be?" In 1991, astronauts placed one of the milestones
of modern science into orbit. The Compton Gamma Ray Observatory monitors high-energy
radiation that pummels our upper atmosphere. In 1994, it picked up a sudden eruption in
the Constellation Scorpius. Astronomers around the world zeroed in on
the source. A network of radio telescopes stretching from the Caribbean to Hawaii recorded
a rare specter. This is the object that came into view. Matter
rushing into it is sending out jets of intense radiation. This week marks the culmination of a year-long
effort to study the object. Teams in eight countries are simultaneously training their
most advanced technology on it, to discover its true nature. From a telescope in the Andes Mountains, in
the heart of Chile, the astronomer Charles Bailyn was the first to pinpoint its location. Now he's venturing back to the observatory
at Cerro Tololo -- to prove once and for all it's a black hole. It's the strange objects that always tell
you the most about, ah -- about the universe and about science. So, if you want to increase
your knowledge of how gravity works, for example, you don't look at things falling on the Earth,
which we understand. You look at the really, really strong gravitational
fields that happen near black holes. Ah, and those are the things where our current theories
might possibly break down. No one has ever proven conclusively the existence
of a black hole. If ever there was an opportunity, this may be it. Looming within the dense star fields of our
Milky Way, 10,000 light years away, this is the brightest and most spectacular object
of its kind. What's more, it's not alone. A normal star circles the object in a dance
of death. Gas from the star flows into the object through a disk, while jets of radiation
shoot from its poles. So powerful is the object's gravity, that
the companion star's shape is being distorted and squashed, causing its appearance to dim,
then brighten as it makes its orbit. As it goes around, ah, the black hole, we're
gonna start seeing the edge-on, rather than side-on, so you can see less of it. So it's gradually going to get fainter because
in the time we're watching it tonight it's going to go, uh, from almost side-on to almost
end-on. Though Bailyn and his team can't view the
object directly, they can study its companion. If you remember in Alice in Wonderland there
is a Cheshire Cat. The cheshire cat disappears from view and only leaves its smile behind
to be seen. Black holes have this property. They disappear from the eye, but they leave
their smile behind. They leave their gravitational force behind and it is by that that we then
see them and are able to infer their properties. To prove that his subject is a black hole,
Bailyn must measure its mass at at least three times our sun. The only way he can do that
is by studying the effect of its gravity on the motion of its companion. It takes two-and-a-half days to make it all
the way around, and in order to get that far, ah, in that amount of time, it's got to go
at several hundred kilometers a second, ah, and so during the time we're going to be observing
it tonight, ah, that's about 15,000 seconds. So it will have gone, ah, over a million kilometers,
ah, travel through space in the time -- in the five hours we watch it tonight... With its every movement, the star reveals
the nature of the object that shadows it. Well the first night, first night, we were
here. Ah and ah, getting brighter. And then, ah, on the second night, we're down here at
the minimum. And sure enough there was a minimum and it
started to turn around right at the end. And, ah, sure enough the first point comes in just
were it's supposed to. Bailyn has studied the companion star before,
but only during a blinding outburst of radiation. Now, the flares have died down -- leaving
it exposed in stark relief. Okay, I see it. It's this. So here's the star,
right where the cross is. And, ah, that's, that star's different from all these other
stars. All these other stars are perfectly ordinary stars just like the sun. And this thing here is a double star with
a black hole eating its companion. That's what we're going to be watching for the whole
rest of the night here. A lot of people have trouble trying to visualize
the nature of a black hole. They know it's something that's, ah, greedily sucking in
material, it's something that if you fall into you can't get out of again... And the question is, how can we make sense
of all this? How can we, ah, human beings, with our limited imagination, ah, try to -- to
get some sort of common sense handle on the nature of the black hole? I think the answer is, ah, you can't. That
these are circumstances where space and time is -- is so warped, ah, that, ah, it's entirely
outside of any sort of human experience. So the only way we can come to understand
objects like black holes is, ah, through mathematical exploration. A handful of numbers. Some morsels of data.
In a scientist's deliberations, one of the strangest phenomena in nature plays out. A
black hole contains the mass of at least three suns collapsed to a point too small to measure. This is a realm gravity has severed from the
rest of the universe. For five painstaking nights, Bailyn has kept
vigil. He has found that the object he's studying
is massive indeed. Weighing in at seven solar masses, it is, with little doubt, a black
hole. I like to see these numbers come out on the
page and, ah, it's a sort of a combination of doing puzzles with, ah, doing a kind of
profound philosophical thing... "What happens inside the event horizon of
a black hole?" is essentially unanswerable in scientific terms because we are talking
about matter falling out of the universe. And so, ah, you come right up against the
edge of what science can tell you about the universe and what it can't. And I think that that boundary, ah, is where
philosophy and religion and, ah, ah, all, ah, these other kinds of thoughts ah, come
into contact with science. And that's an exciting thing for me. The black holes Bailyn studies may number
in the millions in our galaxy alone. But they are by no means the ultimate showcase for
gravity's power. In the heart of the M87 galaxy, 50 million
light years from earth, gas swirls into a truly massive black hole, and glows as it
heats up. Astronomers clocked the speed of the gas as
it circles around, and measured the black hole's mass at more than two billion times
that of our Sun. The ancestors of these giant black holes inhabit
regions at the limits of our vision: a class of objects known as "quasars." They are powerful beacons that take us back
to a time when gravity began to draw gas into the first galaxies. A quasar is the product of a massive black
hole in the center of a galaxy that is swallowing huge volumes of gas and stars. A flood of
blinding radiation erupts. Not only is this an interesting process, the
notion that we could have a black hole of a billion solar masses shining more brightly
than a thousand galaxies. That's pretty wild. But this was -- these
are sign posts. These were, ah, a phase in the lifetime of infant galaxies and we can
see them to great distances. So they are beacons out there at the edge
of the universe showing us when galaxies first began to form. In time, as they consumed their fuel, quasars
like these grew dim. But the black holes that powered them remained. Today, they are thought
to loom at the heart of many a galaxy, including our Milky Way. There are two reasons why black holes are
important. One is because it's increasingly obvious that
they play, ah, a major role in shaping the universe, ah, both at the centers of galaxies
and, ah, as the remnants of burnt out stars. We still have, ah, yet to learn a lot about
them. Ah, but there's a deeper reason, I think, why they're important. The black hole conceals something which is
very profound, which is often given the word singularity. This is like an edge or a boundary to space-time.
It's a point where space and time, so to speak, come to an end. As we look out into space, we probe a universe
we can see -- one whose matter emits light strong enough for our telescopes to record. But there is another side to our universe,
one that has evaded our detection. In fact, fully ninety percent of the universe is unseen,
and unidentified. Astronomers call it, simply, "Dark Matter." Mysterious particles, countless burned-out
stars or black holes. Whatever it is, "Dark Matter" is out there. There's probably more dark matter than there
is visible matter, but we really haven't, ah, much of an idea as to what this dark matter
is. A whole lot of candidates, maybe 30 different
types of things that the dark matter might be and of course it could be more than one
of them. And I think that is the most urgent question
that we must, ah, try to answer. What is the dark matter? Like a black hole, dark matter can be detected
by the influence of its gravity. Astronomers have, for example, measured the
speed galaxies move within clusters, and found that the gravity pulling them along is simply
too great for the amount of matter we can see. So too, spiral galaxies, such as our own,
seem to be enveloped within vast, dark halos of matter. The skies have opened, and now the data begins
to roll in. Well, that's an obvious one at redshift .45.
We're completely, we're completely destroying these things. When the weather is good, no
one can compete with this telescope... Tonight, they're making up for lost time. Supernova should be coming up right about
now. There it is. Ah, it is, it's a supernova! Look at all the undulations. We've got another
one. Oh, man, this is like shooting fish in a barrel, you know. Ah, fantastic. Deep down inside, the reason many of us are
scientists is to experience the thrill of discovery. To sit there one night observing and to come
to a realization that you're the first person in the world to have understood that particular
phenomenon. There's something really gripping about that.
And it's something that all scientists who have made a discovery never forget, ever in
their lives. Okay, there's H and K. Yeah, let's see what
it will turn. Looks pretty high to me. Wow! Let's, ah, see what this give us. Point six-five.
Hot dog! If that's the case, then it beats our point
six one record. The other calcium line gives us the same redshift. So we've got a new record.
This could be an over-luminous supernova. We peer into deep space searching for clues
to its most profound mysteries: the nature of supernovae, the extremes of black holes,
the puzzle that is dark matter. These wonders are steadily yielding to our
gaze. In a way while you're doing the observations,
you have to not think about that or, ah, you'll just blow your own mind and you won't be able
to do all the many detailed things you need to acquire the data. And it's afterwards, at eight in the morning
when you're completely exhausted and finished all -- all the stuff you have to do and written
all the data to some kind of magnetic tape... you take a deep breath and go out and watch
dawn, it hits you what it is you've been doing all night long. And, ah, that's a good feeling
in the morning. We as astronomers can really only study the
light that comes to us from these distant objects. But that doesn't make them any less
real. Yes I have to sometimes set myself aside to
think about the actual giant stars we are studying or the exploding stars. They all look like little dots on the screen,
or a TV screen or on a photograph. But they're much more than that. And when you sit down to think about the implications
of these faint smudges that we see, you think that these are galaxies full of hundreds of
billions of stars. Then they do become very real, and the possibilities
for life and natural phenomena in the universe become almost limitless. The most personal thing that I have taken
out of this is this incredible sense of belonging, of having one great river of time from the
birth of the universe, the quantum fluctuations... the formation of galaxies which made possible
the formation of stars, cooked heavy elements, supernovae that shed heavy elements like carbon
and oxygen into the interstellar medium, later swept up into the solar system... makes Planet Earth, makes organic matter,
makes human beings, makes me -- it's one very beautifully integrated story from beginning
to end. Today that story is unfolding still. Exactly
how it will end remains a mystery. Our own lives are simply too short to witness
the grand transformations of the universe. Often, though, in events visible across the
depths of space, we gain fleeting glimpses into its true nature. We scan the firmament, and brace ourselves
for what it will tell us.