1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:01,020 [MUSIC PLAYING] 2 00:00:01,020 --> 00:00:02,478 ANNA FREBEL: Have you ever wondered 3 00:00:02,478 --> 00:00:06,120 how all the chemical elements are made? 4 00:00:06,120 --> 00:00:08,640 Then join me as we are lifting all this data 5 00:00:08,640 --> 00:00:11,630 secrets to understand the cosmic origin of the chemical 6 00:00:11,630 --> 00:00:12,130 elements. 7 00:00:16,020 --> 00:00:18,435 Let's look at the early chemical evolution. 8 00:00:26,040 --> 00:00:28,260 Some 14 billion years ago, everything 9 00:00:28,260 --> 00:00:31,605 started with a big bang. 10 00:00:31,605 --> 00:00:33,450 A big bang. 11 00:00:33,450 --> 00:00:35,700 And it left behind a universe that 12 00:00:35,700 --> 00:00:38,292 was made from just hydrogen and helium gas. 13 00:00:38,292 --> 00:00:40,500 I mentioned before, there's a tiny, tiny little trace 14 00:00:40,500 --> 00:00:43,210 of lithium, but we're not going to worry about that. 15 00:00:43,210 --> 00:00:46,920 So we had a universe, but there were no stars yet. 16 00:00:46,920 --> 00:00:48,910 So it was actually dark. 17 00:00:48,910 --> 00:00:53,350 And some people call that the cosmic dark ages. 18 00:00:53,350 --> 00:00:57,760 But structure began to form, and gas began to clump. 19 00:00:57,760 --> 00:01:00,730 And so eventually, in a gas cloud, 20 00:01:00,730 --> 00:01:03,890 the very first stars formed. 21 00:01:03,890 --> 00:01:06,970 Here are two of the first stars. 22 00:01:06,970 --> 00:01:12,370 And they were made just from hydrogen and helium, 23 00:01:12,370 --> 00:01:15,820 because the gas was just hydrogen and helium. 24 00:01:15,820 --> 00:01:18,790 But for energy generation purposes, 25 00:01:18,790 --> 00:01:21,460 these stars needed to have nuclear fusion go 26 00:01:21,460 --> 00:01:25,220 on in their cores to produce energy. 27 00:01:25,220 --> 00:01:29,050 And so the first elements heavier 28 00:01:29,050 --> 00:01:32,170 than hydrogen and helium were created inside of these stars. 29 00:01:32,170 --> 00:01:34,270 And later, when they exploded in supernovae, 30 00:01:34,270 --> 00:01:37,600 they were expelled into this gas cloud. 31 00:01:37,600 --> 00:01:41,980 So we had the first elements here. 32 00:01:41,980 --> 00:01:47,698 And of course, they also gave the first light. 33 00:01:47,698 --> 00:01:50,500 So they lit up the universe for the first time 34 00:01:50,500 --> 00:01:53,000 and changed it in a number of ways, 35 00:01:53,000 --> 00:01:56,800 not just by bringing in light, but also by producing 36 00:01:56,800 --> 00:01:58,420 the first heavier elements. 37 00:01:58,420 --> 00:02:01,180 And that set in motion the chemical evolution 38 00:02:01,180 --> 00:02:05,050 of the elements that's an ongoing process until today. 39 00:02:05,050 --> 00:02:06,970 Now, these stars here, because they're 40 00:02:06,970 --> 00:02:09,199 formed from just hydrogen and helium gas, 41 00:02:09,199 --> 00:02:11,470 they're very massive. 42 00:02:11,470 --> 00:02:13,540 Rather large. 43 00:02:13,540 --> 00:02:16,540 Maybe something like 100 solar masses. 44 00:02:16,540 --> 00:02:19,120 So we use the unity of solar mass-- 45 00:02:19,120 --> 00:02:22,330 this is the symbol for the sun here-- 46 00:02:22,330 --> 00:02:23,120 as a unit. 47 00:02:23,120 --> 00:02:27,010 So 100 times more-- a ton of times as heavy as the sun. 48 00:02:27,010 --> 00:02:30,700 And the reason for that is that hydrogen and helium 49 00:02:30,700 --> 00:02:36,100 gas has trouble getting really cold, making small stars. 50 00:02:36,100 --> 00:02:37,720 The important thing with massive stars 51 00:02:37,720 --> 00:02:40,060 is that they have really short lifetime. 52 00:02:40,060 --> 00:02:46,870 So they have a short lifetime of maybe a few million years only. 53 00:02:46,870 --> 00:02:51,310 A few million years is not much on a cosmic timescale. 54 00:02:51,310 --> 00:02:58,720 Which means they exploded pretty quickly as gigantic supernovae. 55 00:02:58,720 --> 00:03:03,500 And as already indicated, what happened at a later time, 56 00:03:03,500 --> 00:03:05,050 these stars were gone, but they left 57 00:03:05,050 --> 00:03:10,510 behind all the heavy elements that that created. 58 00:03:10,510 --> 00:03:12,700 And I should be specific here. 59 00:03:12,700 --> 00:03:15,940 These heavier elements were all the elements made 60 00:03:15,940 --> 00:03:18,610 in fusion processes up to iron. 61 00:03:18,610 --> 00:03:25,990 So we have fusion elements in the gas. 62 00:03:25,990 --> 00:03:31,150 And with the onset of these little other elements 63 00:03:31,150 --> 00:03:35,080 being in the gas, now the gas could form a clump much better 64 00:03:35,080 --> 00:03:37,090 and actually make small stars. 65 00:03:37,090 --> 00:03:39,230 So the next generation of stars-- 66 00:03:39,230 --> 00:03:41,640 so this was the first generation. 67 00:03:41,640 --> 00:03:43,420 First generation. 68 00:03:43,420 --> 00:03:45,280 And here now, we have the formation 69 00:03:45,280 --> 00:03:50,170 of second-generation stars. 70 00:03:50,170 --> 00:03:51,790 Here's a second-generation star. 71 00:03:51,790 --> 00:03:53,770 Here's a second-generation star. 72 00:03:53,770 --> 00:03:57,190 So small stars similar to the sun, 73 00:03:57,190 --> 00:04:00,490 and perhaps a little bit less massive than the sun, actually. 74 00:04:00,490 --> 00:04:03,400 But of course, you're not going to make just small stars. 75 00:04:03,400 --> 00:04:05,020 You're also going to make big stars. 76 00:04:05,020 --> 00:04:07,170 So we have a few big stars here again, 77 00:04:07,170 --> 00:04:10,480 and a few intermediate ones. 78 00:04:10,480 --> 00:04:13,720 And the big ones, the massive ones, 79 00:04:13,720 --> 00:04:16,660 will again explode on a pretty fast time scale 80 00:04:16,660 --> 00:04:18,430 and make more elements. 81 00:04:18,430 --> 00:04:20,420 But these little guys-- 82 00:04:20,420 --> 00:04:22,900 and that's the interesting part for us here now. 83 00:04:22,900 --> 00:04:30,820 So the low-mass second-generation stars, 84 00:04:30,820 --> 00:04:33,670 they have very long lifetimes. 85 00:04:33,670 --> 00:04:44,640 Long lifetimes of something like 15 to 20 billion years, 86 00:04:44,640 --> 00:04:46,005 because they have-- 87 00:04:46,005 --> 00:04:47,520 and I can just write that here. 88 00:04:47,520 --> 00:04:50,070 So low mass, they had maybe masses-- or at least some 89 00:04:50,070 --> 00:04:56,530 of them had masses between 0.6 to 0.8 solar masses. 90 00:04:56,530 --> 00:04:59,670 So less massive than our sun. 91 00:04:59,670 --> 00:05:01,800 And as a good rule of thumb-- 92 00:05:01,800 --> 00:05:03,870 I can write this here-- 93 00:05:03,870 --> 00:05:08,250 the sun has, by definition, one solar mass. 94 00:05:08,250 --> 00:05:10,860 And that has a lifetime, or the sun 95 00:05:10,860 --> 00:05:13,220 has a lifetime of 10 billion years. 96 00:05:15,842 --> 00:05:19,550 And so everything that has less mass 97 00:05:19,550 --> 00:05:21,770 will have a longer lifetime. 98 00:05:21,770 --> 00:05:24,600 And everything that is more massive than one solar mass 99 00:05:24,600 --> 00:05:27,600 will have a much shorter lifetime. 100 00:05:27,600 --> 00:05:31,050 Now, what does this imply, having a long lifetime? 101 00:05:31,050 --> 00:05:33,970 It means that these stars are still around. 102 00:05:33,970 --> 00:05:35,190 They're around today. 103 00:05:35,190 --> 00:05:36,690 We can observe them today. 104 00:05:36,690 --> 00:05:39,250 We can see them today. 105 00:05:39,250 --> 00:05:42,270 And that means that we can use them 106 00:05:42,270 --> 00:05:44,890 to study the composition of this early gas 107 00:05:44,890 --> 00:05:47,580 here, because that's when they're formed. 108 00:05:47,580 --> 00:05:51,390 They have incorporated in all their layers 109 00:05:51,390 --> 00:05:53,970 throughout the composition of this gas 110 00:05:53,970 --> 00:05:58,800 cloud, that was enriched by these very first stars. 111 00:05:58,800 --> 00:06:02,730 So we have means to study the first stars, and what came out 112 00:06:02,730 --> 00:06:04,590 of the supernovae explosions, and what 113 00:06:04,590 --> 00:06:06,300 happened at this very early phase here 114 00:06:06,300 --> 00:06:09,720 of star formation, galaxy formation, and the formation 115 00:06:09,720 --> 00:06:12,480 of all the chemical elements. 116 00:06:12,480 --> 00:06:15,540 If you then wind the clock forward, 117 00:06:15,540 --> 00:06:18,090 many things happened after. 118 00:06:18,090 --> 00:06:23,070 Well, of course, more stars formed. 119 00:06:23,070 --> 00:06:24,330 Many, many more stars. 120 00:06:24,330 --> 00:06:25,470 More supernovae. 121 00:06:28,660 --> 00:06:30,990 And with every generation of supernovae, 122 00:06:30,990 --> 00:06:34,920 more of all the elements was provided. 123 00:06:34,920 --> 00:06:38,580 More of all the elements. 124 00:06:38,580 --> 00:06:42,090 Because, as we will see later, in some 125 00:06:42,090 --> 00:06:45,930 of these very early processes-- nuclear physics processes, 126 00:06:45,930 --> 00:06:48,380 all the elements from the periodic table could have been 127 00:06:48,380 --> 00:06:52,170 or were created already at the earliest times. 128 00:06:52,170 --> 00:06:57,270 Then with time, more and more of all of them were created. 129 00:06:57,270 --> 00:07:00,215 It's not like that the universe, because it was just hydrogen 130 00:07:00,215 --> 00:07:01,590 and helium in the beginning, then 131 00:07:01,590 --> 00:07:04,050 it took time to build up all the elements 132 00:07:04,050 --> 00:07:06,660 and march through the periodic table with time. 133 00:07:06,660 --> 00:07:08,820 That is not the case. 134 00:07:08,820 --> 00:07:11,040 Everything was produced from early on, and then 135 00:07:11,040 --> 00:07:14,220 just more and more often. 136 00:07:14,220 --> 00:07:18,720 And so, well, we have more stars and more chemical enrichment. 137 00:07:18,720 --> 00:07:24,351 But also, the formation of the first bigger structures-- 138 00:07:24,351 --> 00:07:36,020 formation of larger structures, including the Milky Way. 139 00:07:36,020 --> 00:07:38,250 Just going to abbreviate it like this. 140 00:07:38,250 --> 00:07:42,600 Because this all happened in small gravitationally-bound 141 00:07:42,600 --> 00:07:43,620 systems. 142 00:07:43,620 --> 00:07:45,600 And they were then gobbled up later 143 00:07:45,600 --> 00:07:47,970 by slightly bigger neighbors. 144 00:07:47,970 --> 00:07:51,330 And then those were maybe gobbled up by the proto Milky 145 00:07:51,330 --> 00:07:53,460 Way, and eventually, the Milky Way 146 00:07:53,460 --> 00:07:57,330 formed, and formed from the remnants 147 00:07:57,330 --> 00:08:00,660 of all these little systems. 148 00:08:00,660 --> 00:08:07,668 And so all of this here happened as time went on until today. 149 00:08:07,668 --> 00:08:09,210 Today, we have a universe that's full 150 00:08:09,210 --> 00:08:11,900 of structure, and full of all the elements. 151 00:08:11,900 --> 00:08:15,360 Well, a whole 2%, but I think we can consider this full, 152 00:08:15,360 --> 00:08:19,080 at least if you're an astronomer. 153 00:08:21,630 --> 00:08:25,153 And chemical evolution is an ongoing process. 154 00:08:25,153 --> 00:08:26,820 So in the following, we're going to look 155 00:08:26,820 --> 00:08:30,390 in more detail at chemical enrichment and chemical 156 00:08:30,390 --> 00:08:31,320 evolution. 157 00:08:31,320 --> 00:08:35,309 And also, stellar archeology, which is the way how we use old 158 00:08:35,309 --> 00:08:38,640 stars to trace these different early stages 159 00:08:38,640 --> 00:08:40,019 of chemical evolution. 160 00:08:40,019 --> 00:08:43,069 [MUSIC PLAYING]