WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:07.040 --> 00:00:08.174 That is the most 2 00:00:08.174 --> 00:00:11.144 distant individual star that has been seen so far. 3 00:00:11.945 --> 00:00:14.280 It's so far away that it exists at a time 4 00:00:14.280 --> 00:00:17.317 that the universe was only about 900 million years old 5 00:00:17.617 --> 00:00:21.421 as compared to its current age, which is about 13.8 billion years. 6 00:00:21.721 --> 00:00:25.258 So we're really looking back into a time when the universe was much different 7 00:00:25.258 --> 00:00:26.526 than it is today. 8 00:00:26.526 --> 00:00:30.230 And being able to see an individual star at this time is really exciting. 9 00:00:30.463 --> 00:00:33.433 We've been able to see entire galaxies at this distance, but 10 00:00:33.433 --> 00:00:36.669 that's the light from millions of stars all blended together. 11 00:00:36.903 --> 00:00:40.540 So being able to pick out just this one individual star is really exciting, 12 00:00:40.540 --> 00:00:44.110 and it gives us a really awesome opportunity to study it in a lot of detail 13 00:00:44.344 --> 00:00:47.247 and get a better sense of what stars in the early universe look like. 14 00:00:52.052 --> 00:00:55.255 Hubble was able to see this thanks to its incredible power 15 00:00:55.255 --> 00:01:00.393 and also the assistance from a cosmic telescope known as a gravitational lens. 16 00:01:00.760 --> 00:01:04.531 So there's a very massive cluster of galaxies that's sitting in the foreground, 17 00:01:04.864 --> 00:01:08.068 and that cluster actually bends the space around it. 18 00:01:08.334 --> 00:01:12.639 And as the light from this background galaxy travels through that bend space, 19 00:01:12.939 --> 00:01:16.943 it gets magnified and distorted as it goes through this bend space. 20 00:01:17.444 --> 00:01:20.780 And what that gives us is an image of the galaxy 21 00:01:20.780 --> 00:01:23.716 that's spread out into this long, crescent shaped arc 22 00:01:23.983 --> 00:01:27.353 that's much brighter than we could normally see this galaxy. 23 00:01:27.687 --> 00:01:32.792 And in particular, in one unique spot, the magnification that we get from 24 00:01:32.792 --> 00:01:36.696 this gravitational lensing effect really increases dramatically. 25 00:01:36.696 --> 00:01:39.566 And the star just happens to be sitting right at that point 26 00:01:39.833 --> 00:01:42.435 where it's magnified by a factor of several thousand. 27 00:01:42.769 --> 00:01:46.773 So it's really highly magnified, which is the way that we're able 28 00:01:46.773 --> 00:01:50.743 to pick out the light from just this one individual star among this this 29 00:01:50.743 --> 00:01:51.778 entire galaxy. 30 00:01:57.584 --> 00:01:58.051 So when we 31 00:01:58.051 --> 00:02:02.655 look out at distant objects, because light travels at a finite speed, it 32 00:02:02.655 --> 00:02:06.526 takes that light a certain amount of time to get from its source to us. 33 00:02:06.960 --> 00:02:09.762 And as we look into more and more distant objects, 34 00:02:09.762 --> 00:02:12.699 we're basically looking into the ever more distant past 35 00:02:12.999 --> 00:02:17.103 as we look at things that are emitting light billions of years ago. 36 00:02:17.570 --> 00:02:21.007 So in this particular case, the object is so distant 37 00:02:21.007 --> 00:02:26.112 that if the light came from it only 900 million years after the Big Bang. 38 00:02:26.112 --> 00:02:30.016 So it's been traveling towards us for about 12.8 billion years. 39 00:02:30.850 --> 00:02:33.119 So we're really this really gives us a window 40 00:02:33.119 --> 00:02:37.357 into what the universe was like that back in that early day. 41 00:02:37.357 --> 00:02:40.894 And it looks at the universe we know looks a lot different back at that point. 42 00:02:40.894 --> 00:02:44.797 So the opportunity to study this one individual star 43 00:02:44.797 --> 00:02:48.701 at this really early stage of the universe is really exciting and really gives us a 44 00:02:48.701 --> 00:02:52.972 unique view into how the universe worked and how these stars formed and came to be 45 00:02:56.776 --> 00:02:58.244 in the universe. 46 00:02:58.244 --> 00:03:00.446 Hubble and Webb are going to be incredibly complementary. 47 00:03:00.480 --> 00:03:05.018 So Hubble is designed to look at the ultraviolet and optical wavelengths. 48 00:03:05.385 --> 00:03:08.621 That's bluer light than what we can see with our eyes in the ultraviolet. 49 00:03:08.855 --> 00:03:11.624 And then optical is the light that we see with our own eyes. 50 00:03:12.392 --> 00:03:15.461 Meanwhile, the Webb telescope was designed to look into the infrared. 51 00:03:15.461 --> 00:03:18.064 So that's light that's redder than what we can see with our own eyes. 52 00:03:18.331 --> 00:03:21.701 So together they give a really complete picture across this broad 53 00:03:21.935 --> 00:03:26.272 range of wavelengths for all these distant objects that we can look at. 54 00:03:26.272 --> 00:03:30.210 And each both of them together can do a much better job 55 00:03:30.210 --> 00:03:33.246 than either one could do on their own. 56 00:03:36.716 --> 00:03:37.450 You can learn more 57 00:03:37.450 --> 00:03:42.021 at nasa.gov/Hubble or follow on social media @NASAHubble 58 00:03:46.726 --> 00:03:48.795 So we know that this is a very massive star. 59 00:03:48.795 --> 00:03:51.831 We have it at least 50 times the mass of the sun, 60 00:03:52.131 --> 00:03:55.535 which is much larger than a typical star in the local universe. 61 00:03:56.169 --> 00:03:58.972 There are certainly examples of stars of this mass, 62 00:03:58.972 --> 00:04:01.474 but they're not nearly as common as much smaller stars. 63 00:04:02.041 --> 00:04:05.612 We expect that in the distant universe, these massive stars might be a little bit 64 00:04:05.612 --> 00:04:06.279 more common. 65 00:04:06.279 --> 00:04:09.349 So being able to study one directly is going to be really exciting. 66 00:04:09.882 --> 00:04:14.087 We also know that in the early universe, the chemical composition 67 00:04:14.087 --> 00:04:16.923 of stars might look a little bit different than it does today. 68 00:04:17.190 --> 00:04:20.460 So there haven't there hasn't been as much time for multiple generations 69 00:04:20.460 --> 00:04:23.730 of stars to live and die and enrich the surrounding 70 00:04:23.730 --> 00:04:26.666 environment with the heavier elements that they produce. 71 00:04:27.033 --> 00:04:31.771 So being able to study this massive star at a time when the universe was made up 72 00:04:31.771 --> 00:04:34.807 of slightly different materials is going to be really exciting 73 00:04:34.807 --> 00:04:38.478 and a really great way to figure out how these stars are forming 74 00:04:38.478 --> 00:04:41.581 and what they look like and how they live and how they evolve 75 00:04:46.619 --> 00:04:47.720 Hubble is doing great. 76 00:04:47.720 --> 00:04:50.723 It is continuing to make fascinating discoveries. 77 00:04:50.723 --> 00:04:54.861 It's continuing to collect amazing observations of the universe, 78 00:04:54.861 --> 00:04:57.463 and we have a great team of people that's working on it, 79 00:04:57.730 --> 00:05:01.334 and we really do expect it to continue to make groundbreaking discoveries 80 00:05:01.334 --> 00:05:03.002 for years to come 81 00:05:07.206 --> 00:05:10.143 I am definitely most looking forward to my own observations. 82 00:05:10.143 --> 00:05:14.881 So we have Hubble and Webb time as scheduled for this coming year 83 00:05:14.881 --> 00:05:20.119 to look at this lens star though, and it's the combination of the two 84 00:05:20.119 --> 00:05:23.356 is going to be really exciting to get a much better constraint on 85 00:05:23.656 --> 00:05:28.027 what the star looks like and what it was formed from and what type of star it is. 86 00:05:28.027 --> 00:05:30.396 So I'm definitely most excited for those 87 00:05:34.500 --> 00:05:34.967 things. 88 00:05:35.868 --> 00:05:38.204 Yeah, we nicknamed the star Earendel, 89 00:05:38.204 --> 00:05:40.907 which is an old English word that means Morning Star. 90 00:05:41.274 --> 00:05:44.243 So this this epic of the universe 91 00:05:44.577 --> 00:05:47.113 is generally referred to as Cosmic Dawn. 92 00:05:47.847 --> 00:05:49.982 Since it's the time when these first stars are starting 93 00:05:49.982 --> 00:05:52.785 to form in the first galaxies or taking shape and sort of the 94 00:05:53.052 --> 00:05:55.955 the first light of the universe is just breaking through. 95 00:05:56.923 --> 00:05:58.891 So we figured that 96 00:05:58.891 --> 00:06:01.861 a morning star nickname would fit in really well. 97 00:06:02.495 --> 00:06:04.764 And I liked the way that Earendel sounded. 98 00:06:05.098 --> 00:06:08.434 It is also the old English word that J.R.R. 99 00:06:08.434 --> 00:06:12.939 Tolkien used as the name of a character from his Silmarillion. 100 00:06:13.306 --> 00:06:16.142 So I'm a huge Tolkien fan as well, 101 00:06:16.142 --> 00:06:19.112 so that symmetry fit in really well, 102 00:06:19.712 --> 00:06:21.914 and it just seemed like a really great choice for the name 103 00:06:27.153 --> 00:06:29.222 we were looking at the galaxy 104 00:06:29.222 --> 00:06:32.425 originally, so the lens galaxy that the star is a part of. 105 00:06:32.725 --> 00:06:33.559 As I mentioned, 106 00:06:33.559 --> 00:06:34.694 with gravitational lensing, 107 00:06:34.694 --> 00:06:37.897 it spreads these galaxies out into these long crescent shaped arcs. 108 00:06:38.231 --> 00:06:41.768 And this particular one was the longest arc that had been seen 109 00:06:42.301 --> 00:06:45.104 of a galaxy that was within the first billion years of the universe. 110 00:06:45.138 --> 00:06:47.940 So it seemed like a really interesting galaxy to study. 111 00:06:47.974 --> 00:06:48.908 And then we just kind of 112 00:06:48.908 --> 00:06:52.845 stumbled on to the star as we were modeling the lensing effect. 113 00:06:52.879 --> 00:06:56.849 It turned out that our models kept predicting that at this one point, 114 00:06:56.849 --> 00:07:01.320 this one bright point on the arc was going to be very highly magnified. 115 00:07:01.921 --> 00:07:03.322 We almost didn't believe it at first. 116 00:07:03.322 --> 00:07:05.391 It seemed almost too good to be true. 117 00:07:05.391 --> 00:07:09.662 But as we kept making more models and double and triple checking, 118 00:07:09.662 --> 00:07:12.231 it just kept holding up that this one particular spot 119 00:07:12.765 --> 00:07:15.067 was only consistent with being a lensed star 120 00:07:20.006 --> 00:07:22.241 I would say it is very unlikely. 121 00:07:22.241 --> 00:07:26.312 So we know from stars in the local universe that we don't tend 122 00:07:26.312 --> 00:07:28.948 to see planets around the most massive stars. 123 00:07:29.549 --> 00:07:32.285 This could partially be an observation effect 124 00:07:32.285 --> 00:07:35.988 because it's harder to spot planets around much larger, much brighter stars. 125 00:07:36.422 --> 00:07:39.792 But it's also possible that these more massive stars 126 00:07:39.792 --> 00:07:43.696 are just too large and the light from them is just too powerful 127 00:07:43.963 --> 00:07:47.900 to allow planets to form Also, back in the early universe, 128 00:07:47.900 --> 00:07:52.472 the materials that you need to make up these planets were much less abundant. 129 00:07:52.839 --> 00:07:55.608 So it would be a lot less likely 130 00:07:55.608 --> 00:07:59.312 that we could actually form a planet at back at this early time. 131 00:07:59.712 --> 00:08:01.013 And as far as life goes, 132 00:08:01.013 --> 00:08:04.650 only 900 million years after the Big Bang is not a whole lot of time. 133 00:08:05.318 --> 00:08:09.388 Cosmically speaking, at least to to form anything as complicated as life. 134 00:08:09.422 --> 00:08:11.891 So I would say that it's pretty unlikely.