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  • [♪INTRO]

  • The universe today is pretty well-organized.

  • Planets orbit stars, stars fill galaxies, and galaxies drift in huge clusters.

  • But it wasn't always like that: in the aftermath of the Big Bang, everything was pretty evenly

  • distributed throughouteverywhere.

  • And with the discovery of an enormous black hole that's older and farther away than

  • any we've ever seen, we've taken another step toward figuring out how that early universe

  • turned into what we know today.

  • In a paper published this week in the journal Nature, an international team of astronomers

  • described J1342+0928, a type of active black hole known as a quasar.

  • It has 800 million times the mass of our Sun, is more than 29 billion light-years away,

  • and we're seeing what it looked like just 690 million years after the Big Bang.

  • Quasars are some of the brightest objects in the universe, which might seem pretty weird

  • since at their centers are gigantic black holes.

  • They form when gigantic black holes gorge themselves on a nearly-endless supply of gas,

  • dust, and stars.

  • As this material rushes into the abyss, it gets ripped apart and piled up into what's

  • known as an accretion disk — a disk of matter swirling around the black hole.

  • All that ripping apart and smashing together produces an unimaginable amount of heat, which

  • glows white-hot and shoots out in a super bright beam perpendicular to the disk.

  • This particular quasar shines about 400 trillion times brighter than our Sun.

  • Even so, it wasn't easy to find.

  • The team had to search three different telescope surveys to find an object with just the right

  • characteristics and then double check their work with yet another observation.

  • One of the mysteries of the early universe is how these enormous black holes could get

  • so big, so quickly.

  • And this one is a new piece to that puzzle.

  • Even gobbling up material as fast as astronomers think could be theoretically possible wouldn't

  • be enough to build something this large in 690 million years, which tells them that one

  • of two things must've happened.

  • Either the black hole was somehow able to bypass this theoretical limit, or when it

  • started its life, for some reason it already had more than a thousand times the mass of our Sun.

  • Either way, there was definitely something weird and different going on with black holes

  • in the early universe.

  • And that's not even all the clues this quasar has to offer.

  • By measuring how certain colors of light are absorbed by gas surrounding the quasar, the

  • researchers found that a lot of that gas is electrically neutral.

  • Today, there's very little neutral gas in the universeit's mostly plasma, which

  • is made of electrically charged particles.

  • And it's been that way since what's known as the epoch of reionization, the period from

  • about 400 million to a billion years after the Big Bang, when the neutral hydrogen atoms

  • that filled the universe started to lose their electrons.

  • Every ancient quasar like 0928 provides a data point to help scientists track that transition

  • and figure out what the universe was like back then.

  • All in all, it's a really good find!

  • Unfortunately, that same level of success wasn't in the cards for the Russian space

  • agency Roscosmos last week.

  • In what must be the absolute worst nightmare of any mission controller, they launched a

  • rocket into space, only to watch it turn around and fly right back down.

  • And as it burned through the atmosphere, it took the 19 satellites it was carrying down with it.

  • Making all this feel even worse is that this seems to have been the result of a simple

  • programming error of a kind that should've been caught before liftoff.

  • The flight's first stage, powered by Russia's reliable Soyuz rocket, went off without a hitch.

  • Which is good because it's also used to send people to space.

  • The problem came from what was on top of the rocket.

  • After separating from the Soyuz, the Fregat upper stage was supposed to fire its engine

  • twice to put the satellites into their exact orbits.

  • And it did try.

  • Except, it was facing down, toward the Earth.

  • Which is really not what you want when you're trying to get to space.

  • So what happened?

  • For decades, the Soyuz has launched from a spaceport in Baikonur, Kazakhstan, but this

  • mission marked the second launch from Vostochny, a new location in Russia's far east.

  • Although the Soyuz had been reconfigured for this new launchpad, the Fregat upper stage

  • was still programmed to assume the flight came from Kazakhstan, which left the control

  • computer totally confused about how it was oriented.

  • What's worse, this is the fourth failure for the Fregat in the last eight years.

  • And back in 2013, a different Russian rocket flipped completely upside down shortly after liftoff.

  • An accident investigation later revealed that critical sensors in that rocket had been installed

  • upside down, despitethis end uparrows painted on each part.

  • So, here's hoping they can get their quality control problems sorted out.

  • Okay, so exciting announcement in a happy way: We here at SciShow put together and a

  • site of very special finds that we think you'll love.

  • It's called, SciShow Finds.

  • These are cool, weird things that will help you learn, experiment on yourself, or display

  • your enthusiasm for the universe.

  • You're bound to have friends or family who would love these Mars Socks or this space

  • shuttle lapel pin.

  • And we'll keep adding new finds as wefindthem throughout the year, but these are only

  • available for a limited time, so check 'em out now!

  • Thanks for supporting SciShow and for being excited about science with us!

  • [♪OUTRO]

[♪INTRO]

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