Is there a center of the universe Marjee Chmiel and Trevor Owens

What is at the center of the universe?

It’s an essential question

that humans have
been wondering about for centuries.

But the journey toward an answer

has been a strange one.

If you wanted to know
the answer to this question

in third century B.C.E. Greece,

you might look up at the night sky

and trust what you see.

That’s what Aristotle,

THE guy to ask back then, did.

He thought that since we’re
on Earth, looking up,

it must be the center, right?

For him, the sphere of the world

was made up of four elements:

Earth,

water,

air,

and fire.

These elements shifted around a nested set

of solid crystalline spheres.

Each of the wandering stars, the planets,

had their own crystal sphere.

The rest of the universe
and all of its stars

were on the last crystal sphere.

If you watch the sky change over time,

you could see that this idea worked fine

at explaining the motion you saw.

For centuries, this
was central to how Europe

and the Islamic world saw the universe.

But in 1543, a guy named Copernicus

proposed a different model.

He believed that the sun

was at the center of the universe.

This radically new idea

was hard for a lot of people to accept.

After all, Aristotle’s ideas made sense

with what they could see,

and they were pretty flattering to humans.

But a series of subsequent discoveries

made the sun-centric model hard to ignore.

First, Johannes Kepler pointed out

that orbits aren’t perfect
circles or spheres.

Then, Galileo’s telescope caught

Jupiter’s moons orbiting around Jupiter,

totally ignoring Earth.

And then, Newton proposed the theory
of universal gravitation,

demonstrating that all objects
are pulling on each other.

Eventually, we had to let go of the idea

that we were at the center
of the universe.

Shortly after Copernicus, in the 1580s,

an Italian friar, Giordano Bruno,

suggested the stars were suns

that likely had their own planets

and that the universe was infinite.

This idea didn’t go over well.

Bruno was burned at the stake
for his radical suggestion.

Centuries later,
the philosopher Rene Descartes

proposed that the universe
was a series of whirlpools,

which he called vortices,

and that each star
was at the center of a whirlpool.

In time, we realized there
were far more stars

than Aristotle ever dreamed.

As astronomers like William Herschel

got more and more advanced telescopes,

it became clear that our sun is actually

one of many stars inside the Milky Way.

And those smudges we see in the night sky?

They’re other galaxies,

just as vast as our Milky Way home.

Maybe we’re farther from the center
than we ever realized.

In the 1920s, astronomers
studying the nebuli

wanted to figure out how they were moving.

Based on the Doppler Effect,

they expected to see blue shift

for objects moving toward us,

and red shift for ones moving away.

But all they saw was a red shift.

Everything was moving away from us, fast.

This observation
is one of the pieces of evidence

for what we now call the Big Bang Theory.

According to this theory,

all matter in the universe

was once a singular,
infinitely dense particle.

In a sense, our piece of the universe

was once at the center.

But this theory eliminates
the whole idea of a center

since there can’t be a center
to an infinite universe.

The Big Bang wasn’t just
an explosion in space;

it was an explosion of space.

What each new discovery proves

is that while our observations
are limited,

our ability to speculate and dream

of what’s out there isn’t.

What we think we know today
can change tomorrow.

As with many of the thinkers we just met,

sometimes our wildest guesses

lead to wonderful and humbling answers

and propel us toward even more
perplexing questions.

宇宙的中心是什么?

是人类
几个世纪以来一直在思考的一个基本问题。

但通往答案的旅程

是一段奇怪的旅程。

如果你想知道

公元前三世纪这个问题的答案。 希腊,

你可以仰望夜空

,相信你所看到的。

这就是

当时要问的那个人亚里士多德所做的。

他想,既然我们
在地球上,向上看,

它一定是中心,对吧?

对他来说,世界的范围

是由四种元素组成的:

土、

水、

空气

和火。

这些元素围绕一组嵌套

的固体晶体球体移动。

每个流浪的恒星,行星,

都有自己的水晶球。

宇宙的其余
部分及其所有恒星

都在最后一个水晶球上。

如果你观察天空随时间的变化,

你会发现这个想法很好

地解释了你看到的运动。

几个世纪以来,这
是欧洲

和伊斯兰世界如何看待宇宙的核心。

但是在 1543 年,一个名叫哥白尼的人

提出了一个不同的模型。

他相信太阳

是宇宙的中心。

这个全新的想法

让很多人难以接受。

毕竟,亚里士多德的想法对

他们所见的东西来说是有意义的,

而且它们对人类来说是相当讨人喜欢的。

但随后的一系列发现

使得以太阳为中心的模型难以忽视。

首先,约翰内斯·开普勒

指出轨道不是完美的
圆或球体。

然后,伽利略的望远镜捕捉到

木星围绕木星运行的卫星,

完全忽略了地球。

然后,牛顿提出
了万有引力理论,

证明所有物体
都在相互拉扯。

最终,我们不得不放弃

我们处于宇宙中心
的想法。

哥白尼之后不久,在 1580 年代

,意大利修道士佐丹奴·布鲁诺(Giordano Bruno)

提出,恒星是太阳

,可能有自己的行星

,宇宙是无限的。

这个想法并不顺利。

布鲁诺
因为他的激进建议而被处以火刑。

几个世纪后
,哲学家勒内·笛卡尔

提出宇宙
是一系列漩涡

,他称之为漩涡

,每颗恒星
都位于漩涡的中心。

随着时间的推移,我们
意识到星星

比亚里士多德梦想的要多得多。

随着像威廉赫歇尔这样的天文学家

拥有越来越先进的望远镜,

很明显我们的太阳实际上

是银河系内众多恒星之一。

我们在夜空中看到的那些污迹?

它们是其他星系,

就像我们的银河系一样广阔。

也许我们离中心的距离
比我们意识到的要远。

在 1920 年代,
研究星云的天文学家

想弄清楚它们是如何移动的。

基于多普勒效应,

他们希望看到

向我们移动的物体会出现蓝移,而远离我们的物体会出现

红移。

但他们看到的只是红移。

一切都离我们越来越远,很快。

这一观察

我们现在所说的大爆炸理论的证据之一。

根据这个理论,

宇宙中的所有物质

都曾经是一个奇异的、
无限致密的粒子。

从某种意义上说,我们所在的宇宙

曾经处于中心位置。

但是这个理论消除
了中心的整个想法,

因为
无限宇宙不可能有中心。

大爆炸不仅仅是
太空爆炸,它还包括宇宙爆炸。

那是空间的爆炸。

每一项新发现都

证明,虽然我们的观察
是有限的,但

我们推测和梦想

外面有什么的能力却没有。

我们今天认为我们知道的东西
明天可能会改变。

与我们刚刚遇到的许多思想家一样,

有时我们最疯狂的猜测

会导致奇妙而谦卑的答案,

并将我们推向更
令人困惑的问题。