yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Great scientific discoveries hide in boring places | Michelle Thaller | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

[Music]

So, Daniel, you have actually asked a question that I have never gotten before, and that is: What is the most boring thing in space? Can astronomers agree on what the most boring thing is? I normally get asked about what the most interesting things are in space, but I’ve never been asked about what the most boring thing is.

Actually, this gives me a chance to talk about how science works. We have a saying in science that everybody's data is somebody else's noise, and everybody's noise is somebody else's data. Let me explain what that means.

When you're taking a measurement, say you want to observe a star that's very far away, there's stuff that can get in the way. There's a lot of gas and dust in space between you and the star. So when you observe the light from the star, you need to correct out all that crud that got in the way. You don’t want to look at that; you want to look at the star.

But people who want to study the gas and the dust itself can use the starlight as a probe to actually go through it. Some people will be interested in different parts of the data. Everything you do in science has a bit that's inconvenient, noisy; you want to actually correct it out from your data. Somebody else wants to know about that, and some of the most amazing discoveries in the universe have been what people assumed were noises—things that had to be corrected, things you didn’t want.

Most spectacularly, there's something called the microwave background radiation. Now, there were some astronomers back in the 1960s and 70s that wanted to study the sky in microwave light. The sun emits microwaves, the planets emit microwaves. Everywhere they looked on the sky, there was noise. There was a bit of background noise that they wanted to correct out; they did not want that noise at all.

They thought it was a problem with their telescope at first. Famously, there were pigeons roosting in the telescope, and they thought that the pigeon poop might be generating this noise. So they scrubbed out all the pigeon poop. The noise never went away; it stayed there. Every attempt they had to make it go away… and all of a sudden, people realized that what they had detected, what this noise was, was a signal from the Big Bang itself.

It was actually the farthest observation of the universe we've ever been able to make. It was from light shining from a distance of 13.7 billion light years away—the cosmic microwave background.

So, the answer is that there are plenty of things in astronomy that I’m not interested in. Plenty of things that get in the way of my data that I want to correct out and not know about. But there are other astronomers who want that specific data. Everybody's junk is somebody else's treasure.

[Music]

More Articles

View All
Exploitation: A problematic pejorative
When people use the word “exploitation” in the context of sweatshops, I think they want the word to express a negative judgment. I think that most of the people using the word in this way haven’t thought things through clearly. The greedy capitalist make…
The Banach–Tarski Paradox
Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. There’s a famous way to seemingly create chocolate out of nothing. Maybe you’ve seen it before. This chocolate bar is 4 squares by 8 squares, but if you cut it like this and then like this and finally like this, you can rearrang…
Plessy v. Ferguson | The Gilded Age (1865-1898) | US history | Khan Academy
Long before Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of the bus, Homer Plessy boarded a train car in New Orleans to protest Jim Crow segregation laws. Plessy was arrested and convicted in Louisiana, but his test case for segregated public transportation rea…
Testing a Shark Deterrent | Shark Beach with Chris Hemsworth
I think it’s fair to say, however good we get at keeping humans and sharks apart in the ocean, there will always be moments when we meet. In those worst-case scenarios when sharks bite, is there anything that can be done? Charlie Houveneers is a scientis…
Bobi Wine: The People’s President | Official Trailer | National Geographic Documentary Films
Election [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] This is a message to the government. University, I didn’t know he was a musician. He was different. I didn’t have so many dreams; she impacted my life. She made me realize we had to impact other lives. I’ve …
Types of discontinuities | Limits and continuity | AP Calculus AB | Khan Academy
What we’re going to do in this video is talk about the various types of discontinuities that you’ve probably seen when you took algebra or pre-calculus, but then relate it to our understanding of both two-sided limits and one-sided limits. So let’s first…