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Origins of the Universe 101 | National Geographic

How old is the universe, and how did it begin? Throughout history, countless myths and scientific theories have tried to explain the universe's origins. The most widely accepted explanation is the big bang theory. Learn about the explosion that started it all and how the universe grew from the size of an atom to encompass everything in existence today. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe About National Geographic: National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible. Get More National Geographic: Official Site: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta Origins of the Universe 101 | National Geographic https://youtu.be/HdPzOWlLrbE National Geographic https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

National Geographic

5 years ago

- [Narrator] The universe is everything. From the tiniest particles, to the largest galaxies, to the very existence of space, time, and life. But how did it all begin? The origin of the universe is the origin of everything. Multiple scientific theories plus creation myths from around the world have tried to explain its mysterious genesis. However, the most widely accepted explanation is the Big Bang theory. The Big Bang theory states that the universe began as a hot and infinitely dense point. O
nly a few millimeters wide, it was similar to a supercharged black hole. About 13.7 billion years ago this tiny singularity violently exploded. And it is from this explosion, this bang, that all matter, energy, space, and time were created. What happened next were two major stages of the universe's evolution. Called the radiation and matter eras, they're defined by key events that helped shape the universe. First came the radiation era, named for the dominance of radiation right after the Big Ba
ng. This era is made of smaller stages call epochs that occurred within the universe's first tens of thousands of years. The earliest is the Planck epoch. No matter existed in the universe at this time, only energy and the ancestor to the four forces of nature, the superforce. At the end of this stage, however, a key event occurred in which gravity split away from the superforce. Next came the grand unification epoch, named for the three remaining unified forces of nature. This epoch ended when
one of those forces, called strong, or strong nuclear, broke away. Then the inflationary epoch began during which the universe rapidly expanded. Almost instantly it grew from the size of an atom to the size of a grapefruit. The universe at this time was piping hot and it churned with electrons, quarks, and other particles. Then came the electroweak epoch, when the last two forces, electromagnetic and weak, finally split off. During the next stage, the quark epoch, all of the universe's ingredien
ts were present, however, the universe was still too hot and dense for subatomic particles to form. Then, in the hadron epoch, the universe cooled down enough for quarks to bind together and form protons and neutrons. In the lepton and nuclear epics, the radiation era's last two stages, the protons and neutrons underwent a significant change. They fused and created nuclei. And in doing so, they created the first chemical element in the universe, helium. The universe's new ability to form element
s, the building blocks of matter, queued the matter era. Much as the name suggests, the matter era's defined by the presence and predominance of matter in the universe. It features three epochs that span billions of years. The vast majority of the universe's life span, and includes the present day. The first was the atomic epoch. In this stage, the universe's temperature cooled down enough for electrons to attach to nuclei for the first time. Called recombination, this process helped create the
universe's second element, hydrogen. This hydrogen, along with helium atoms, dotted the universe with atomic clouds. Within the clouds, small pockets of gas may have had enough gravity to cause atoms to collect. These clusters of atoms, formed during the galactic epoch, became the seedlings of galaxies. Nestled inside those galaxies, stars began to form. And in doing so, they queued the latest and current stage of the universe's development, the stellar epoch. The formation of stars then caused
a tremendous ripple effect and helped shape the universe as we know it. Heat within the stars caused the conversion of helium and hydrogen into almost all the remaining elements in the universe. In turn, those elements became the building blocks for planets, moons, life, everything we see today. This ecosystem of everything was only possible because of the many stages in the universe's development. While countless questions about the origins of our universe remain, it's only a matter of time for
some long-sought answers to emerge.

Comments

@NatGeo

Helium and hydrogen are the base for most of the elements, which serve as the building blocks of planets, moons, life and everything we see today. What new facts did you learn about each of the epochs and their crucial roles in the development of the universe?

@contact157

Huge props to the cameraman for existing and recording everything before it even happen just in order for us to see it million of years later.

@davidcuellar4410

After watching videos like this I just want to know how everything began for the beginnings of the beginning 😂

@niftutor7981

I’ve stumbled across this video 3 years ago when I was searching for videos on the Big Bang cosmology and this is by far the most simplest yet informative video on the Big Bang. I love the minimalistic illustrations used. I watch this video even to this day and showed this to many friends and family members to make them understand about the Big Bang theory. Kudos to Nat Geo for this amazing video and every other video in the series. Can’t thank you enough!

@shwoompl922

When she said that the universe expanded to the size of a grape I instantly thought "Am I bigger than the universe once was"

@NathanHarrison7

What a gem you’ve created. Rare to learn about so many new [to me] ideas in one video. Thank you for taking the time to make a perfect video.

@LittleAyahandToshplayshow

The more you know, the more you don’t know

@deanjacobs6998

Everytime she pronounces epoch as "epic" the universe expands a little.

@ws7009

It's fascinating that no other creature can think of such deep questions about the meaning and beginning of our existence. Its only humans.

@innergi5516

17 yrs addicted to escaping reality. 13 yrs living in delusions. One video to reset my scientific mind & rewire my brain back the way it used to be & should be. One video to spark my passion for math, science, & history again. Thank you. I needed this video more then I knew.

@rickyrolls6460

The more you think about this stuff the more it creeps you out. I guess its safe to say that there are some things better left unknown....

@V.E.R.G.I.L

A huge respect to the highly experienced cameraman who recorded the creation of the universe 👽🛸

@kratos909

All this happened and resulted into me worrying for exam tomorrow.

@Carpenters_Canvas

This is the scariest thought I have tried to figure out in my head . It’s so amazing

@srusruthi6354

You guys make my geography lessons so fun and easy!

@bernardbusani9069

My son likes science and he loves your videos

@theebloxinator

huge respect to the cameraman going back in time to record this and surviving the big bang (PRESS READ MORE) This was a test to see how bad copying is. You see, whenever I watch these videos, I see cameraman comments (referring to the other few videos) in every space video I see. So I had to do something about it. I had to get proof. So I set this up, actually I came up with this idea a few years back, and I see now that society really is messed up. Don't judge :|

@bhuvaneeshgrewal9972

Her voice is so calming that it makes these topics SO easy to understand

@MeTaLcOrE1616

What comes before the big bang? Where was the dot floating? What was outside the dot? My brain omg

@photoworkshop6244

I understood everything till 1:09. Nothing was understood further but kept watching. Good video! Thumbs up!