A riveting ride through the history of astrophysics, this video details how humans have climbed ‘the cosmic distance ladder’ to calculate sizes and distances in the cosmos. The first in a two-part series, this instalment begins with how the ancient Greek polymath Eratosthenes calculated Earth’s circumference way back in the 3rd century BCE, and builds to the ingenious way the 17th-century German astronomer Johannes Kepler determined that Earth moved around the Sun in an elliptical orbit. Presented by Terence Tao, a Fields medalist and professor of mathematics at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the video essayist Grant Sanderson (aka 3Blue1Brown), the piece provides an awe-inspiring look at the ways in which scientific knowledge builds upon itself gradually – albeit sometimes with a swift boost from an extraordinary thinker.
Video by 3Blue1Brown
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History of science
Meet the Quaker pacifist who shattered British science’s highest glass ceilings
14 minutes
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Oceans and water
A stunning visualisation explores the intricate circulatory system of our oceans
5 minutes
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Computing and artificial intelligence
A future in which ‘artificial scientists’ make discoveries may not be far away
9 minutes
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Biology
Butterflies become unrecognisable landscapes when viewed under electron microscopes
4 minutes
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Metaphysics
What do past, present and future mean to a philosopher of time?
55 minutes
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Computing and artificial intelligence
Why large language models are mysterious – even to their creators
8 minutes
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Engineering
From simple motors to levitating trains – how design shapes innovation
24 minutes
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Film and visual culture
Our world has very different contours when a millimetre is blown up to a full screen
8 minutes
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Physics
Groundbreaking visualisations show how the world of the nucleus gives rise to our own
10 minutes