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  • Welcome to It's Okay To Be Smart. Today we're gonna look at the Big Picture.

  • [music]

  • So I've been preparing for a couple big science conferences recently and I've been thinking

  • a lot about the importance of images to communicating science. Whether it's YouTube, Instagram,

  • Tumblr, so many of the ways that we communicate today highlight images over words.

  • It's not that I think actual words on paper are dying off, in fact those same digital

  • tools are giving science writing something of a rebirth. But the value of images of images

  • as cultural currency is skyrocketing. Of course this is nothing new to us in Science Land.

  • Throughout the history of science photos and illustrations have not only captured key moments

  • IN science, but they've served as first "shots" inw hat Thomas Kuhn would call "scientific

  • revolutions" where paradigms are shifted, theories are realized, new fields of science

  • are born, and minds are generally blown.

  • In that spirit I've collected a few of what I think are the most important images in science

  • history.

  • In 1543 all it took to change the world was seven circles. This is the so-called Copernican

  • model of the solar system in which Nicolaus Copernicus permanently demoted Earth from

  • its position at the center of the universe, in his book De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium,

  • which is just really fun to say.

  • Now this was not actually a very popular book, people did not take to the streets and riot

  • calling for Copernicus' head. But it did change the world, no pun intended. In fact, he wasn't

  • even the first person to think of this idea, that honor goes to a Greek named Aristarchus

  • nearly 2,000 years earlier, which we have talked about before.

  • But the real impact of Copernicus' work was that it changed very way we look at the universe.

  • Not only was our position in it not special, it meant that the laws of nature that we observe

  • here would be the same everywhere else in the universe, and although that sounds simple,

  • that might be the most important scientific principle that we can take from his work.

  • This is a flea. A flea is very small. You'd think it would be too small to change the

  • world on its own, but you'd be wrong. This one did just that, it comes from Robert Hooke's

  • Micrographia, a collection of illustrations he put out in 1665 that became the world's

  • first scientific best-seller. It was hugely popular.

  • About a half a century after people like Galileo were turning lenses to the stars to bring

  • them closer, Robert Hooke turned the telescope around to bring the microscopic world to life.

  • Now this drawing would be a work of art in its own right, but that intricate detail and

  • the perfect matching of form to function on this wee beastie, it began to challenge notions

  • of design in nature, and shattered the idea that humans were the most perfect living form

  • on Earth.

  • That beautiful illustration of a flea inspired naturalists for the next two centuries to

  • begin to ask WHY these forms, at every scale of nature from the smallest bug to the largest

  • tree, matched up so well with the needs of those creatures. One of those scientists was

  • this guy. Worked out pretty well.

  • Einstein's general theory of relativity was a revolutionary concept when he introduced

  • it, but scientists had relatively few ways of actually testing it. One of the consequences

  • of Einstein's theory said that light should be bent by gravity as it approaches an object.

  • Now that means for stars behind the edge of our sun, we could actually see them because

  • their light would be bent around it. Unfortunately our sun is so bright that we can't see those

  • stars around the edge, but in 1919 an eclipse took place that was particularly long and

  • dark. British astronomers Andrew Crommelin and Arthur Eddington went to South America

  • to capture it on film. With the sun blocked out they were able to measure the bending

  • of light waves around a massive object for the very first time, and Einstein's theory

  • of relativity was proven correct, and he became the celebrity know and love today.

  • In their 1953 paper describing the double-helical nature of DNA strands, Rosalind Franklin,

  • with the help of James Watson and Francis Crick, well, they, they changed everything.

  • This simple sketch showing these two ribbons, antiparallel and complementary bases in between,

  • it outlined the molecular nature of genetics and described the universal information carrying

  • molecule for all life on Earth. That's kind of a big deal. I think my favorite part of

  • this one is that it looks like it was sketched on the back of an envelope. Although it was

  • one of the most important scientific findings of all time and it appeared in one of the

  • most prestigious journals on Earth it was so simply drawn that anyone could understand

  • it.

  • This is what you get with 23 days of exposure on the Hubble telescope. You see galaxies

  • one ten-billionth as bright as the limit of the human eye. In this image we can see galaxies

  • nearly 13.2 billion light years away, that light has been traveling since nearly the

  • beginning of time itself. Countless planets and stars might exist inside them, it's time

  • travel in a photograph.

  • On Christmas Eve 1968 as Apollo 8 came out from behind the moon, they saw Earth rising

  • above the lunar horizon. This picture's a role-reversal of sorts. Instead of this barren

  • white moon rising above us, they saw this delicate jewel, a blue, living Earth rising

  • before their eyes. When that image hit the magazines and newsstands and TV screens back

  • on Earth, it changed the way that we view our living planet. Galen Rowell called this

  • "the most important environmental photograph ever taken."

  • So why are pictures so important to science? Our minds seem to be built for images, vision

  • is our primary sense. Words and numbers are invented languages that can enhance our communication,

  • but I think that images are a universal language, something whose meaning and importance we

  • understand from birth. Our minds are also limited. In his book "Cosmic Imagery" John

  • Barrow says that images allow us to capture something memorable without it needing to

  • be remembered. The way I look at it, capturing a moment is just another way of saying "observation"

  • and that's what science has been built on from the very beginning.

  • I only picked a handful of my favorite images from science history, so I know I missed a

  • ton of great ones Why don't you leave me a comment with your favorites. Who knows, maybe

  • I'll feature some of the best over on my Tumblr. Thanks a lot for watching, and stay curious.

  • Thank you all so much for helping to make my science of kissing video the second most

  • viewed video I've ever made. A few commenters pointed out that this kissing research only

  • focused on hetero male-female couples, which is actually something we talked about in the

  • video, but so much psychological research has this bias. We tried to find more to put

  • in the video, but it simply wasn't there. Psychologists, if you're listening, we need

  • to represent more people out there. So we'll keep an eye on that.

  • Thanks to everyone who enjoyed the science fiction as science fact episode from last

  • week. You've already pointed out a bunch of great science fiction that I missed. I hope

  • you've also watched our collaborators' videos over at Idea Channel and the main PBS Digital

  • Studios page. Lots of people left comments saying that some science fiction is so good

  • at predicting actual science because scientists are people too, and they read science fiction,

  • and they might be inspired to make what they see into reality. And I absolutely agree. We actually had a line in

  • the episode exactly about that, but I decided to pull it out so you'll just have to take

  • my word for it. It's one of those unique intersections of science and art that I think feeds into

  • many parts of our brain and helps us create things that we wouldn't be able to do otherwise.

  • We have some really special episodes coming up over the next couple weeks. I ran a marathon

  • for science, and then we've got one that's a little bit Dr. Seuss and a little bit chemistry,

  • so make sure you subscribe so you don't miss those. Links to the email, twitter, tumblr,

  • everything else down below and be sure to leave me a comment if there's something you'd

  • like us to tackle in a future episode.

Welcome to It's Okay To Be Smart. Today we're gonna look at the Big Picture.

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