WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.020 --> 00:00:04.090 For the first time ever, scientists using NASA's 2 00:00:04.090 --> 00:00:08.180 Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope have found the source of a high-energy neutrino 3 00:00:08.180 --> 00:00:12.380 from outside our galaxy. The neutrino came from the 4 00:00:12.380 --> 00:00:16.580 eruption of a supermassive black hole at the center of a type of galaxy called 5 00:00:16.580 --> 00:00:20.630 a blazar. The eruption jetted out particles moving near the speed of light. 6 00:00:20.630 --> 00:00:24.740 Collisions inside the jet produced 7 00:00:24.740 --> 00:00:28.930 gamma rays, the highest-energy form of light, and neutrinos, 8 00:00:28.930 --> 00:00:32.980 ghostly particles that rarely interact with matter. 9 00:00:32.980 --> 00:00:37.070 3.7 billion years later. they reached Earth. 10 00:00:37.070 --> 00:00:41.120 On September 22, 2017, a single 11 00:00:41.120 --> 00:00:45.300 high-energy neutrino struck an atom in a water molecule in the Antarctic ice. 12 00:00:45.300 --> 00:00:49.460 The crash produced a particle called a muon. 13 00:00:49.460 --> 00:00:53.500 It raced through the ice so fast it emitted a faint blue glow. 14 00:00:53.500 --> 00:00:57.630 When the muon reached the South Pole, it was tracked by the 15 00:00:57.630 --> 00:01:01.680 IceCube Neutrino Observatory. IceCube scientists found 16 00:01:01.680 --> 00:01:05.730 the original neutrino likely came from beyond our solar system. 17 00:01:05.730 --> 00:01:09.910 They alerted astronomers to be on the lookout for cosmic outbursts possibly 18 00:01:09.910 --> 00:01:14.100 associated with it. NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space 19 00:01:14.100 --> 00:01:18.160 Telescope found the source, a blazar it had been watching for some time. 20 00:01:18.160 --> 00:01:22.250 When the neutrino arrived, Fermi saw the blazar 21 00:01:22.250 --> 00:01:26.420 was brighter than it had been over the previous decade. 22 00:01:26.420 --> 00:01:30.430 It's the first time a neutrino could be traced back to a black hole, or to any 23 00:01:30.430 --> 00:01:34.480 source beyond our immediate galactic neighborhood. And it's an important 24 00:01:34.480 --> 00:01:38.550 step forward for a growing field scientists call multimessenger astronomy, 25 00:01:38.550 --> 00:01:42.650 which combines light with new signals like gravitational waves 26 00:01:42.650 --> 00:01:46.770 and neutrinos, to provide new insights on the most 27 00:01:46.770 --> 00:01:50.810 extreme cosmic phenomena. 28 00:01:50.810 --> 00:01:54.890 [Music fades] NASA Astrophysics 29 00:01:54.890 --> 00:01:58.940 [Beeping] 30 00:01:58.940 --> 00:02:03.130 [Beeping] 31 00:02:03.130 --> 00:02:06.193 Goddard Space Flight Center www.nasa.gov/goddard