Primordial Black Holes, Murchison Upgrades & the New Space Race
Space Nuts: Astronomy Insights & Cosmic DiscoveriesSeptember 12, 2025
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Primordial Black Holes, Murchison Upgrades & the New Space Race

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Cosmic Discoveries: Primordial Black Holes, Murchison Breakthroughs, and the New Space Race
In this captivating episode of Space Nuts, hosts Andrew Dunkley and Professor Fred Watson dive into the latest astronomical revelations. From the potential discovery of primordial black holes to exciting developments at the Murchison Wide Field Array and the evolving landscape of the space race, this episode is packed with insights and discussions that will spark your curiosity about the universe.
Episode Highlights:
- Primordial Black Holes: The hosts discuss a groundbreaking study suggesting the existence of primordial black holes formed shortly after the Big Bang. Andrew and Fred Watson explore the implications of this discovery, including the characteristics of these black holes and their potential role in the early universe.
- Murchison Wide Field Array Update: Exciting news from Western Australia as the Murchison Wide Field Array completes its phase three upgrade. Fred Watson explains how this enhancement doubles the number of antennas and increases the array's sensitivity, allowing astronomers to probe the epoch of reionization and potentially detect fast radio bursts.
- China's Ascendancy in the Space Race: As the US and China compete for lunar supremacy, Andrew and Fred Watson evaluate the implications of recent statements from former NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine regarding the challenges facing the Artemis programme. The discussion delves into the differences in objectives between US and Chinese lunar missions and the potential consequences of a changing space landscape.
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Stay curious, keep looking up, and join us next time for more stellar insights and cosmic wonders. Until then, clear skies and happy stargazing.
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00:00:00 --> 00:00:00 Professor Fred Watson: Hi there.

00:00:00 --> 00:00:03 Andrew Dunkley: Thanks for joining us again for Space Nuts.

00:00:03 --> 00:00:05 My name is Andrew Dunkley, where we, uh, are,

00:00:05 --> 00:00:07 uh, talking astronomy and space science every

00:00:07 --> 00:00:09 week with Professor Fred Watson Watson.

00:00:09 --> 00:00:12 Coming up on this episode, have we discovered

00:00:12 --> 00:00:14 a primordial black hole? I believe this has

00:00:14 --> 00:00:16 been up for discussion before, but we might

00:00:16 --> 00:00:19 have some new information for you. Good news

00:00:19 --> 00:00:22 from the Murchison Wide Field Array

00:00:23 --> 00:00:26 and, uh, Mark two of the space race

00:00:26 --> 00:00:28 could see China in the lead. We'll tell you

00:00:28 --> 00:00:31 all about that on this episode of space

00:00:31 --> 00:00:32 nuts. 15 seconds.

00:00:32 --> 00:00:35 Voice Over Guy: Guidance is internal. 10,

00:00:35 --> 00:00:38 9. Ignition sequence start.

00:00:38 --> 00:00:41 Space nuts. 5, 4, 3, 2. 1, 2,

00:00:41 --> 00:00:44 3, 4, 5, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

00:00:44 --> 00:00:47 Space nuts. Astronauts report it feels

00:00:47 --> 00:00:47 good.

00:00:48 --> 00:00:51 Andrew Dunkley: Yes. And this episode, proudly supported by

00:00:51 --> 00:00:53 SpaceX. Uh, it's like trying to land an

00:00:53 --> 00:00:56 unmanned rocket back on a floating

00:00:56 --> 00:00:59 pad is how it feels at the moment.

00:01:00 --> 00:01:02 Ah, Very unstable Internet connection. And,

00:01:03 --> 00:01:05 um, yes, this is take two. Believe we did the

00:01:05 --> 00:01:07 whole show and had to start again, didn't we,

00:01:07 --> 00:01:08 Fred Watson?

00:01:08 --> 00:01:09 Professor Fred Watson: Something like that, yeah.

00:01:10 --> 00:01:13 Andrew Dunkley: I think we got 10 seconds in. T

00:01:13 --> 00:01:15 minus 10 and the whole thing went.

00:01:16 --> 00:01:17 How are you, Fred Watson?

00:01:18 --> 00:01:20 Professor Fred Watson: I'm very well, thank you. Uh, it's great to

00:01:20 --> 00:01:21 see you, Andrew. Uh, good to see you looking

00:01:21 --> 00:01:24 a bit less jazz, like we were together.

00:01:24 --> 00:01:25 Yeah.

00:01:25 --> 00:01:27 Andrew Dunkley: And I'm wearing my DART T shirt.

00:01:27 --> 00:01:28 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah.

00:01:28 --> 00:01:31 Andrew Dunkley: Um, which Mari Claire sent me from the Dart

00:01:31 --> 00:01:33 mission when she witnessed the impact moment.

00:01:33 --> 00:01:36 Ah, at NASA. Um, yep.

00:01:36 --> 00:01:38 And Jordy. Hello, Jordy.

00:01:38 --> 00:01:40 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah, Jordy's still there. Uh, um, he's, um.

00:01:41 --> 00:01:44 He's kind of, um. Well, he howls at things

00:01:44 --> 00:01:46 when it. When he. When he gets a surprise, he

00:01:46 --> 00:01:49 starts howling. Yeah. And he's surprised at

00:01:49 --> 00:01:51 the moment because, um, I've got washing

00:01:51 --> 00:01:52 outside on the line and every time the wind

00:01:52 --> 00:01:55 blows, he thinks it's a threat, so he

00:01:55 --> 00:01:58 howls. And, uh, it's quite a windy day, so

00:01:58 --> 00:01:58 we're probably.

00:01:58 --> 00:02:00 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, it is here too.

00:02:00 --> 00:02:00 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah. Yeah.

00:02:01 --> 00:02:04 Andrew Dunkley: Yes. Uh, well, um, dogs and

00:02:04 --> 00:02:06 cats living together. That's the world we're

00:02:06 --> 00:02:09 in at the moment. Um, we'll get

00:02:09 --> 00:02:10 straight to it, Fred Watson.

00:02:10 --> 00:02:13 Uh, now, there's been a lot of, uh, movement

00:02:13 --> 00:02:16 in the news about the, uh, potential

00:02:16 --> 00:02:18 discovery of a primordial. Primordial black

00:02:18 --> 00:02:21 hole that may have formed not long after

00:02:22 --> 00:02:24 the. The Big Bang itself, which is

00:02:24 --> 00:02:27 something that, uh, was predicted by

00:02:27 --> 00:02:30 Stephen Hawking. And look,

00:02:30 --> 00:02:33 they have not exactly confirmed it. In

00:02:33 --> 00:02:35 fact, uh, that might be very difficult. But,

00:02:36 --> 00:02:39 um, if it's real, this is a very exciting

00:02:39 --> 00:02:41 discovery indeed. But there's. There's a bit

00:02:41 --> 00:02:42 more going on than that. I know you've

00:02:42 --> 00:02:45 probably talked to Heidi about this, um, but

00:02:45 --> 00:02:48 this one came up in, in Facebook discussions

00:02:48 --> 00:02:51 and so uh, we thought we'd bring it up on the

00:02:51 --> 00:02:51 show.

00:02:53 --> 00:02:55 Professor Fred Watson: Definitely Andrew. Uh, because there's a new

00:02:55 --> 00:02:57 paper as well which is um,

00:02:58 --> 00:03:01 actually Science Alert describes it as

00:03:01 --> 00:03:04 a dazzling new paper which is pretty good

00:03:04 --> 00:03:06 coming from the University of Cambridge. Uh,

00:03:06 --> 00:03:08 I used to know all the people in Cambridge

00:03:08 --> 00:03:10 who are working on this stuff but that's a

00:03:10 --> 00:03:11 long time ago and I don't know them anymore.

00:03:11 --> 00:03:14 I don't know Ignace Jordz

00:03:14 --> 00:03:17 Balis I think is their

00:03:17 --> 00:03:20 name. Uh, and that is a lead

00:03:20 --> 00:03:23 author of this paper. Uh, what we talked

00:03:23 --> 00:03:26 about in your absence uh Andrew

00:03:26 --> 00:03:29 while uh, Heidi was in the hot seat was uh,

00:03:29 --> 00:03:32 these little red dots, which is

00:03:32 --> 00:03:34 becoming the official name for

00:03:35 --> 00:03:37 uh, targets that the

00:03:37 --> 00:03:40 James Webb Telescope has identified

00:03:41 --> 00:03:43 as uh, little red dots because that's what

00:03:43 --> 00:03:46 they look like. But

00:03:47 --> 00:03:50 you can measure their redshift and it turns

00:03:50 --> 00:03:53 out the reason they're red is

00:03:53 --> 00:03:55 that their light has been stretched so much

00:03:55 --> 00:03:57 because they are uh. Actually

00:03:58 --> 00:03:59 we're seeing them at a look back time of

00:03:59 --> 00:04:02 something like 13.2 billion

00:04:02 --> 00:04:05 years. Remember the universe we think is

00:04:05 --> 00:04:07 30.8 billion years old. So we're seeing

00:04:07 --> 00:04:10 these 600 million years after the Big Bang.

00:04:10 --> 00:04:12 So no wonder they look like little red dots.

00:04:12 --> 00:04:14 They're little because they're so far away

00:04:14 --> 00:04:16 and they're red because they're highly

00:04:16 --> 00:04:18 redshifted. And the dots because basically

00:04:18 --> 00:04:20 you can't see any structure. Uh, and that's

00:04:20 --> 00:04:22 the interesting part of this because

00:04:23 --> 00:04:25 um, they are assumed to be galaxies. Uh

00:04:26 --> 00:04:28 and uh, in fact you know the, all the

00:04:28 --> 00:04:31 evidence is that they are indeed galaxies but

00:04:31 --> 00:04:33 they're galaxies with

00:04:34 --> 00:04:36 not um, many stars, um, stars,

00:04:37 --> 00:04:40 um, you know, at a much lower density

00:04:40 --> 00:04:42 than we find in stars today.

00:04:43 --> 00:04:45 And so the um,

00:04:46 --> 00:04:48 most notable feature of them

00:04:49 --> 00:04:51 is a central black hole.

00:04:51 --> 00:04:54 Uh, and how do we know that there's a black

00:04:54 --> 00:04:57 hole there? Because uh, you can sense

00:04:57 --> 00:04:59 the rotation. If I remember rightly, you're

00:04:59 --> 00:05:01 seeing velocities of well over a thousand

00:05:01 --> 00:05:04 kilometres per second of material,

00:05:04 --> 00:05:06 uh, which is going around in orbit around

00:05:06 --> 00:05:08 something and that something has to be a

00:05:08 --> 00:05:10 black hole because there's nothing else could

00:05:10 --> 00:05:13 fit into the uh, squeeze into the small

00:05:13 --> 00:05:16 space that it's occupying. So what

00:05:16 --> 00:05:18 they've basically discovered and uh, they're

00:05:18 --> 00:05:20 talking, this is Cambridge University group

00:05:20 --> 00:05:23 is talking specifically about one

00:05:23 --> 00:05:26 um, particular object. It's called QSO.1 uh,

00:05:26 --> 00:05:29 it's a, odd name because QSO

00:05:29 --> 00:05:31 is um, a standard

00:05:32 --> 00:05:35 contraction of quasi stellar Ah Object

00:05:35 --> 00:05:37 qso quasi stellar object. Something that

00:05:37 --> 00:05:40 looks like a star but isn't. I suppose it is.

00:05:40 --> 00:05:42 It does look like a star, but isn't. But we

00:05:42 --> 00:05:45 now identify QSOs with quasars.

00:05:45 --> 00:05:48 And this may be a quasar,

00:05:48 --> 00:05:50 but we're not seeing the outbursts of X

00:05:50 --> 00:05:52 radiation that we normally get from quasars.

00:05:52 --> 00:05:55 So what uh, is being suggested

00:05:55 --> 00:05:58 is that what we have here is

00:05:59 --> 00:06:02 a uh, black hole. Yes. Uh, apparently

00:06:02 --> 00:06:05 50 million solar masses, something like that,

00:06:06 --> 00:06:08 which is big compared with our poor uh,

00:06:09 --> 00:06:12 little 4.1 million solar mass black

00:06:12 --> 00:06:14 hole at Sagittarius, a star in the centre of

00:06:14 --> 00:06:17 our galaxy. Uh, so, so it is a supermassive

00:06:17 --> 00:06:19 black hole. I mean it's not the, you know,

00:06:19 --> 00:06:21 the, the behemoths that have billions um,

00:06:22 --> 00:06:25 of, of solar masses. It's not that big.

00:06:25 --> 00:06:28 Uh, but it's, it is big. And the fact

00:06:28 --> 00:06:30 that it's 50 million solar masses and we're

00:06:30 --> 00:06:33 seeing it as the universe as it

00:06:33 --> 00:06:36 was 600 million years after the Big Bang

00:06:36 --> 00:06:38 begs the question, how did it get so big?

00:06:38 --> 00:06:41 Yeah. And so uh, basically

00:06:42 --> 00:06:44 the uh, the bottom line is

00:06:44 --> 00:06:47 that uh, it's, it could

00:06:47 --> 00:06:50 be that we are seeing, as you said,

00:06:50 --> 00:06:53 primordial black holes, which indeed were,

00:06:53 --> 00:06:56 were um, predicted by Stephen Hawking, uh,

00:06:56 --> 00:06:59 among others. Uh, these things should

00:06:59 --> 00:07:00 develop after the Big Bang.

00:07:01 --> 00:07:03 Um, and

00:07:05 --> 00:07:07 there are subtleties here. Um, and I might

00:07:07 --> 00:07:10 quote one uh, of the

00:07:10 --> 00:07:13 authors. Uh, it's actually this is a quote

00:07:13 --> 00:07:16 from the paper itself. Um, uh,

00:07:16 --> 00:07:19 and we're talking now about something that's

00:07:19 --> 00:07:21 got high mass but not many

00:07:21 --> 00:07:24 stars. The only scenarios that can account

00:07:24 --> 00:07:27 for such a system are those invoking

00:07:27 --> 00:07:30 heavy seeds. And that's in, in uh,

00:07:30 --> 00:07:32 inverted commas such as direct

00:07:32 --> 00:07:35 collapse black holes, which are called

00:07:35 --> 00:07:37 dcbhs. Direct

00:07:37 --> 00:07:40 collapse black holes resulting from the

00:07:40 --> 00:07:42 direct collapse of massive pristine cloud. So

00:07:42 --> 00:07:44 that, what's that set that is saying is

00:07:44 --> 00:07:47 you've got a cloud of gas, it collapses. It

00:07:47 --> 00:07:49 doesn't form stars, it just collapses

00:07:49 --> 00:07:52 straight into a black hole. And you and I

00:07:52 --> 00:07:53 have talked about that some years ago. The

00:07:53 --> 00:07:56 idea of these direct collapse black holes.

00:07:57 --> 00:07:59 So that's one possibility for what this is.

00:08:00 --> 00:08:02 Or primordial black holes

00:08:02 --> 00:08:05 formed in the first second after the Big

00:08:05 --> 00:08:08 Bang. Um, now

00:08:08 --> 00:08:10 what they say is, uh, in fact this is the

00:08:10 --> 00:08:12 article reading it from Science Alert. It's a

00:08:12 --> 00:08:14 very nicely written article. I should uh,

00:08:14 --> 00:08:17 name the author. It is Michelle Starr. What a

00:08:17 --> 00:08:19 name for somebody who writes about astronomy.

00:08:20 --> 00:08:23 Michelle. Um, Starr says both scenarios would

00:08:23 --> 00:08:26 need further investigation. On the one hand,

00:08:26 --> 00:08:28 direct collapse black holes would be

00:08:28 --> 00:08:30 accompanied by ultraviolet light not seen in

00:08:30 --> 00:08:32 QSO1. On the other hand,

00:08:32 --> 00:08:35 PBHs primordial black holes are

00:08:35 --> 00:08:38 considerably smaller than 50 million solar

00:08:38 --> 00:08:41 masses. It is possible, however, that

00:08:41 --> 00:08:44 the object is the product of rapid growth

00:08:44 --> 00:08:47 both through accretion that's just gathering

00:08:47 --> 00:08:50 stuff up and collisional processes that's

00:08:50 --> 00:08:51 black holes colliding, making

00:08:51 --> 00:08:54 QSO1 potentially the first

00:08:54 --> 00:08:57 direct evidence for the existence of

00:08:57 --> 00:08:59 primordial black holes. And so,

00:08:59 --> 00:09:02 you know, uh, it's now, that's where

00:09:02 --> 00:09:05 the situation lies now that we

00:09:05 --> 00:09:08 don't have, um, a

00:09:08 --> 00:09:11 definite answer. Uh, and once

00:09:11 --> 00:09:13 again Michel says the paper remains to be

00:09:13 --> 00:09:16 peer reviewed and it is quite an

00:09:16 --> 00:09:18 extraordinary claim. So we'll be waiting to

00:09:18 --> 00:09:20 see how this line of inquiry develops. So

00:09:20 --> 00:09:22 will Jordy. Whatever the outcome though,

00:09:22 --> 00:09:24 we're sure that little red dots are going to

00:09:24 --> 00:09:26 tell us something really fascinating about

00:09:26 --> 00:09:29 the birth of the universe. So it's an ongoing

00:09:29 --> 00:09:31 story, Andrew, and uh, it's an evolution of

00:09:31 --> 00:09:33 what we talked about with Heidi. But I think

00:09:33 --> 00:09:35 you and I will be talking about this again

00:09:35 --> 00:09:36 quite soon probably.

00:09:36 --> 00:09:39 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, I don't doubt it. And it'll spawn a lot

00:09:39 --> 00:09:42 of questions too, I'm sure. When you think

00:09:42 --> 00:09:44 about it though, if it's been around for

00:09:44 --> 00:09:47 13.2 billion years, it's had plenty of

00:09:47 --> 00:09:49 time to get

00:09:49 --> 00:09:52 its stuff together, you know, to grow and

00:09:52 --> 00:09:55 to um, develop,

00:09:55 --> 00:09:58 I suppose. Um, you know, 50, what was

00:09:58 --> 00:09:59 it, 50 million.

00:09:59 --> 00:10:02 Professor Fred Watson: 50 million solar masses. But remember, we're

00:10:02 --> 00:10:04 seeing that, we're seeing that

00:10:04 --> 00:10:06 13.2 billion years ago.

00:10:07 --> 00:10:09 So what's it like? Who knows what it would

00:10:09 --> 00:10:11 look like now? That's right, yeah, yeah.

00:10:11 --> 00:10:14 Andrew Dunkley: Ah, fascinating story. Yes, plenty, uh, of

00:10:14 --> 00:10:16 places where you can, um, read up on that,

00:10:16 --> 00:10:18 phys.org or

00:10:18 --> 00:10:20 sciencealert.com and

00:10:21 --> 00:10:23 many others, uh, carrying this story because

00:10:23 --> 00:10:25 if it turns out to be what we think it is, it

00:10:25 --> 00:10:27 is, uh, certainly quite a discovery.

00:10:28 --> 00:10:30 This is Space Nuts. Andrew Dunkley here with

00:10:30 --> 00:10:32 Professor Fred Watson Watson.

00:10:32 --> 00:10:35 Speaker C: Three, two, one.

00:10:35 --> 00:10:38 Andrew Dunkley: Space Nuts. Now Fred Watson, uh, a little

00:10:38 --> 00:10:40 closer to home. Western Australia to be

00:10:40 --> 00:10:43 exact. Good news coming out of the merchants.

00:10:43 --> 00:10:45 Murchison, uh, Wide Field

00:10:46 --> 00:10:46 Array.

00:10:47 --> 00:10:50 Professor Fred Watson: Uh, yes, that's right. Um, this is a story I

00:10:50 --> 00:10:52 like, um, a lot because I've always been a

00:10:52 --> 00:10:54 big fan of the Murchison Wide Field Array.

00:10:54 --> 00:10:56 It's a Curtin University operated

00:10:57 --> 00:10:59 set of antennas, um, at,

00:11:00 --> 00:11:03 uh, the observatory is called in Yarimana

00:11:03 --> 00:11:05 Garibundara, the CSIRO Radio

00:11:05 --> 00:11:07 Murchison Radio Astronomy Observatory. That's

00:11:07 --> 00:11:10 its full name. Uh, in

00:11:10 --> 00:11:13 Yarimana Il Ghari Bundara is Wajiri

00:11:13 --> 00:11:15 language, uh, and it means sharing sky and

00:11:15 --> 00:11:18 stars. And the Wadji people ah, are playing a

00:11:18 --> 00:11:20 big role actually in the development of the

00:11:20 --> 00:11:22 Square Kilometre Array, uh, low

00:11:22 --> 00:11:25 frequency, uh, arm, um, if you put it that

00:11:25 --> 00:11:28 way, which is also being built there. Uh, and

00:11:28 --> 00:11:30 in many ways the Murchison Widefield Array,

00:11:30 --> 00:11:32 the one we're talking about now, was the

00:11:32 --> 00:11:34 precursor to that um, Square

00:11:34 --> 00:11:37 Kilometre Array telescope. Because unlike the

00:11:37 --> 00:11:39 traditional steerable dishes, and in fact one

00:11:39 --> 00:11:42 of the pathfinders for the Square Kilometre

00:11:42 --> 00:11:45 Array was steerable dishes here in

00:11:45 --> 00:11:47 Australia, again at Murchison, um,

00:11:48 --> 00:11:51 um, unlike those steerable dishes, uh, these

00:11:51 --> 00:11:53 antennas uh, look like something

00:11:53 --> 00:11:56 different. So in the case of the Square

00:11:56 --> 00:11:57 Kilometre Array, and we've discussed this

00:11:57 --> 00:12:00 many times, it's paddocks full of um,

00:12:00 --> 00:12:03 Christmas trees, metal Christmas trees, uh,

00:12:03 --> 00:12:05 131 of them. Uh, that's

00:12:05 --> 00:12:08 still work in progress. We talked recently

00:12:08 --> 00:12:10 about the images received from the first

00:12:10 --> 00:12:13 thousand of those antennas. Uh, but the

00:12:13 --> 00:12:16 Merchant Wide Field Array uh, is a

00:12:16 --> 00:12:19 different style of thing but it's the same

00:12:19 --> 00:12:21 kind of idea except their antennas look

00:12:21 --> 00:12:24 different. They are not

00:12:24 --> 00:12:26 2 metre tall Christmas trees, they're about

00:12:26 --> 00:12:29 half a metre tall and about three quarters of

00:12:29 --> 00:12:31 a metre wide reed yards

00:12:32 --> 00:12:34 for that if you're not in metre land.

00:12:35 --> 00:12:38 Um, um, but they look like. Well the first

00:12:38 --> 00:12:39 time I've saw them and I have visited this

00:12:39 --> 00:12:41 site, first time I saw them I thought they

00:12:41 --> 00:12:43 just look like a, a field full of coat

00:12:43 --> 00:12:46 hangers that somebody's thrown away. They've

00:12:46 --> 00:12:48 just sort of assembled themselves in a

00:12:49 --> 00:12:51 peculiar way. Uh.

00:12:51 --> 00:12:53 Andrew Dunkley: Oh yeah, yeah. I'm looking at a photo now

00:12:53 --> 00:12:53 and.

00:12:53 --> 00:12:55 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah, do you see what I mean?

00:12:55 --> 00:12:58 Andrew Dunkley: My first impression was um,

00:12:58 --> 00:12:59 metallic spiders.

00:12:59 --> 00:13:02 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah, that's right. They've got that about

00:13:02 --> 00:13:04 them as well. Yeah. Um, the, the reason,

00:13:05 --> 00:13:07 um, I, uh, I was, I

00:13:07 --> 00:13:10 remember being really impressed. Um, so

00:13:10 --> 00:13:12 they're like. So each one of these, as I said

00:13:12 --> 00:13:15 it's half a metre wide, it's made of metal,

00:13:15 --> 00:13:18 it's shiny, uh, it's um, it's got

00:13:18 --> 00:13:20 basically four legs. So it's a four legged

00:13:20 --> 00:13:22 spider. Uh, but it's got these structures

00:13:22 --> 00:13:24 that are look just like bits of bent coat

00:13:24 --> 00:13:27 hanger. It sort of spells its own name

00:13:27 --> 00:13:30 because you can make uh, each one of those

00:13:30 --> 00:13:32 antennas give you an M M, a W

00:13:33 --> 00:13:35 and if you look sideways an A, which is the

00:13:35 --> 00:13:38 Murchison Widefield Array. I thought that was

00:13:38 --> 00:13:40 very clever. I think that was completely

00:13:40 --> 00:13:42 accidental because when I talked to the

00:13:42 --> 00:13:43 Murchison people they never thought of that.

00:13:43 --> 00:13:45 They thought it was crazy actually.

00:13:47 --> 00:13:50 Um, so uh, it is uh, in the

00:13:50 --> 00:13:52 news because the

00:13:53 --> 00:13:55 uh, um, uh,

00:13:55 --> 00:13:57 phase three of the development

00:13:58 --> 00:14:01 has now been completed. And phase

00:14:01 --> 00:14:04 three was uh, doubling the number

00:14:04 --> 00:14:06 of antennas. It was originally 4,

00:14:06 --> 00:14:09 4, uh, uh,

00:14:10 --> 00:14:13 within a 20 square kilometre area,

00:14:13 --> 00:14:16 quite a large area, uh, but it's gone up

00:14:16 --> 00:14:19 now to a uh, total of

00:14:20 --> 00:14:22 uh, 8, uh, I can't remember the exact

00:14:22 --> 00:14:25 number. It's just over 8.

00:14:25 --> 00:14:27 Andrew Dunkley: 8.

00:14:27 --> 00:14:29 Professor Fred Watson: I should have done it because it's double.

00:14:29 --> 00:14:32 4 could have probably done that in

00:14:32 --> 00:14:34 my head but never mind, I couldn't. It's been

00:14:34 --> 00:14:37 a long day. It's out to 30 square

00:14:37 --> 00:14:40 kilometres and that actually. So

00:14:40 --> 00:14:43 doubling the, the, you know, doubling the

00:14:43 --> 00:14:44 number of antennas basically doubles the

00:14:44 --> 00:14:47 sensitivity, at least at some level. Uh,

00:14:47 --> 00:14:50 expanding its footprint from 20 to 30 square

00:14:50 --> 00:14:53 kilometres actually increases what

00:14:53 --> 00:14:56 we call the baseline of the array. And that's

00:14:56 --> 00:14:58 sort of the equivalent to the, the width of a

00:14:58 --> 00:15:00 mirror. If you were thinking of a visible

00:15:00 --> 00:15:02 light or optical telescope, the diameter of

00:15:02 --> 00:15:05 the mirror, uh, is what tells you how much

00:15:05 --> 00:15:07 detail you can see. And

00:15:08 --> 00:15:10 in a way what they've done is they've

00:15:10 --> 00:15:12 expanded that footprint out to 30 square

00:15:12 --> 00:15:15 kilometres and so it will let you

00:15:15 --> 00:15:18 see more detail. Higher uh, resolution

00:15:18 --> 00:15:21 is the technical term. Basically it lets you

00:15:21 --> 00:15:22 see finer detail in whatever you're looking

00:15:22 --> 00:15:25 at. And so they've done all

00:15:25 --> 00:15:28 that. It's not just the coat hangers that you

00:15:28 --> 00:15:31 have to expand all the uh,

00:15:32 --> 00:15:35 software, the hardware, uh, things called the

00:15:35 --> 00:15:37 correlators which are the basically

00:15:37 --> 00:15:40 supercomputers that combine the image,

00:15:40 --> 00:15:43 sorry the signal from each coat hanger

00:15:43 --> 00:15:46 to turn it into um, a coherent

00:15:46 --> 00:15:49 image. Uh, that's all new

00:15:49 --> 00:15:50 as well. And so um,

00:15:52 --> 00:15:54 it's a really significant increase

00:15:55 --> 00:15:58 in the capabilities of the MWA

00:15:58 --> 00:16:00 and what they're. Sorry, go ahead.

00:16:01 --> 00:16:03 Andrew Dunkley: Now you're probably about to answer the

00:16:03 --> 00:16:05 question I was about to ask because uh,

00:16:06 --> 00:16:09 um, I've, it said,

00:16:09 --> 00:16:11 um, one of the primary focus areas of this

00:16:11 --> 00:16:14 effort was the epoch of reionization. What

00:16:14 --> 00:16:15 does that mean?

00:16:15 --> 00:16:18 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah, so that's the time, um, effectively

00:16:19 --> 00:16:20 uh, not long after the Big Bang, when the

00:16:20 --> 00:16:23 universe became transparent. Uh,

00:16:23 --> 00:16:25 and um, so

00:16:26 --> 00:16:28 you know, one of the reasons why we build

00:16:28 --> 00:16:31 these huge radio telescope arrays is to

00:16:31 --> 00:16:33 probe an era, um,

00:16:34 --> 00:16:36 after the Big Bang, but before the first

00:16:36 --> 00:16:39 stars and galaxies lit up,

00:16:39 --> 00:16:42 where um, basically the universe was just

00:16:42 --> 00:16:45 full of cold hydrogen. And uh, cold

00:16:45 --> 00:16:48 hydrogen curiously does emit radio waves.

00:16:48 --> 00:16:50 It emits them at a frequency of

00:16:50 --> 00:16:52 uh, 14, 20

00:16:53 --> 00:16:55 megahertz if I remember rightly. We used to

00:16:55 --> 00:16:58 call it the 21 centimetre line because that's

00:16:58 --> 00:17:00 its wavelength. But I think these days we

00:17:00 --> 00:17:02 talk in frequencies and I think it's 14, 20

00:17:02 --> 00:17:04 megahertz. I'm not a radio astronomer, so I

00:17:04 --> 00:17:07 have to try and remember these numbers. Um,

00:17:07 --> 00:17:09 they don't come intuitively, although 21

00:17:09 --> 00:17:11 centimetres does, because I think a lot of

00:17:11 --> 00:17:13 astronomers know about that stuff. Anyway,

00:17:13 --> 00:17:16 that's the, uh, wavelength or the frequency

00:17:16 --> 00:17:19 that cold hydrogen emits. Um, and that's very

00:17:19 --> 00:17:21 convenient because it means that you can find

00:17:21 --> 00:17:24 cold hydrogen in the universe and your radio

00:17:24 --> 00:17:26 waves pass through the dust of the universe

00:17:26 --> 00:17:28 as if it was, it wasn't there. That's why

00:17:28 --> 00:17:30 with visible light telescopes we can't see

00:17:30 --> 00:17:32 the spiral arms of our galaxy. But you can,

00:17:33 --> 00:17:35 uh, with the radio telescope because you can

00:17:35 --> 00:17:37 see, you could trace out where the cold

00:17:37 --> 00:17:40 hydrogen is. Cold hydrogen hangs around on

00:17:40 --> 00:17:42 spiral arms of galaxies. But it was also

00:17:42 --> 00:17:44 there in the early universe. The cold

00:17:44 --> 00:17:46 hydrogen was the raw material of the first

00:17:46 --> 00:17:49 stars and galaxies. Um, so that epoch

00:17:49 --> 00:17:52 of Rhiannon's, ah, reionization

00:17:53 --> 00:17:55 corresponds to a time when the first stars

00:17:55 --> 00:17:58 and galaxies switched on and the radiation

00:17:58 --> 00:18:00 that they spread out into the universe

00:18:00 --> 00:18:03 basically made the universe transparent.

00:18:03 --> 00:18:06 That's the bottom line. So, um,

00:18:06 --> 00:18:08 that can be detected, the signal of that can

00:18:08 --> 00:18:11 be detected by radio telescopes and the

00:18:11 --> 00:18:14 mwa. I think, if I remember rightly

00:18:14 --> 00:18:16 talking to my radio astronomy colleagues, I

00:18:16 --> 00:18:18 think it was built specifically for that, to

00:18:18 --> 00:18:21 look for the epoch of reionization, the

00:18:21 --> 00:18:23 time when the universe started to transmit

00:18:23 --> 00:18:26 light. So, fantastic stuff.

00:18:26 --> 00:18:29 Um, it's a five and a

00:18:29 --> 00:18:32 half million Australian dollar upgrade. Uh,

00:18:32 --> 00:18:35 but I think that we like money well spent.

00:18:35 --> 00:18:35 Yeah.

00:18:35 --> 00:18:36 Andrew Dunkley: 10 bucks US.

00:18:37 --> 00:18:37 Professor Fred Watson: So,

00:18:37 --> 00:18:40 um, soon

00:18:40 --> 00:18:42 to be a million bucks US.

00:18:44 --> 00:18:47 Andrew Dunkley: Oh boy. Um, is that all it's

00:18:47 --> 00:18:49 going to do? I mean, no. Um, Is it a case

00:18:49 --> 00:18:51 if you had one job?

00:18:52 --> 00:18:54 Professor Fred Watson: No, that's right. And you

00:18:54 --> 00:18:57 didn't do it? Um, I mean, people have

00:18:57 --> 00:18:59 been telling me that all my life.

00:19:01 --> 00:19:04 Anyway, um, uh, no, look, there's,

00:19:04 --> 00:19:07 there's a lot of other things. Um, now one of

00:19:07 --> 00:19:09 the things that it should be able to detect

00:19:10 --> 00:19:13 is fast radio bursts. Um,

00:19:13 --> 00:19:16 but my recollection from

00:19:16 --> 00:19:19 talking to MWA scientists

00:19:20 --> 00:19:22 was that the, the original version,

00:19:22 --> 00:19:25 the 4096 antenna version,

00:19:25 --> 00:19:28 never did detect a fast radio

00:19:28 --> 00:19:31 burst. And that's interesting because,

00:19:31 --> 00:19:34 um, fast radio bursts, um,

00:19:35 --> 00:19:37 perhaps it's telling you that they, they

00:19:37 --> 00:19:40 don't emit in the

00:19:40 --> 00:19:43 lower frequencies, which, um, the

00:19:43 --> 00:19:46 mwa, the Murchison Wide Field Array is

00:19:46 --> 00:19:48 tuned to. It's A, it's a low frequency

00:19:48 --> 00:19:51 array and it's a higher frequencies where the

00:19:51 --> 00:19:54 fast radio bursts have been discovered so

00:19:54 --> 00:19:57 far. But um, I think the

00:19:57 --> 00:19:58 improvement in sensitivity

00:19:59 --> 00:20:02 um, will actually allow fast

00:20:02 --> 00:20:05 radio bursts to be detected and then we might

00:20:05 --> 00:20:07 start finding very large numbers.

00:20:07 --> 00:20:10 Because the trick that I didn't mention that

00:20:10 --> 00:20:13 the MWA is able to employ is it can look

00:20:13 --> 00:20:15 at the whole sky at once. Oh yeah, Pretty

00:20:15 --> 00:20:18 impressive. Good trick. Uh, yeah, that's

00:20:18 --> 00:20:21 um, that's what you can do with um, with a,

00:20:21 --> 00:20:23 you know, an array of coat hangers rather

00:20:23 --> 00:20:25 than a dish that you've got to point in a

00:20:25 --> 00:20:27 particular direction. These coat hangers are

00:20:27 --> 00:20:30 bringing signals in all the time and it's

00:20:30 --> 00:20:33 just how you, how you interrogate them. If I

00:20:33 --> 00:20:35 put it that way, uh, that tells you where

00:20:35 --> 00:20:37 you're pointing and you can interrogate many,

00:20:37 --> 00:20:39 many different directions at once.

00:20:39 --> 00:20:41 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, quite amazing. So, and, and how much

00:20:41 --> 00:20:44 bigger are they going to make the

00:20:44 --> 00:20:45 um, Mwax?

00:20:48 --> 00:20:51 Professor Fred Watson: I think, I think phase

00:20:51 --> 00:20:54 three might be the final thing. I

00:20:54 --> 00:20:55 remember them talking about phase three. I

00:20:55 --> 00:20:58 visited there uh, in 2018.

00:20:58 --> 00:21:01 Um, I visited the site and saw the

00:21:02 --> 00:21:05 ah, array antennas, the Cortana like things.

00:21:05 --> 00:21:07 But a bit later than that I also visited

00:21:07 --> 00:21:09 their headquarters which are in Perth in

00:21:09 --> 00:21:11 Western Australia. And this is

00:21:12 --> 00:21:13 probably five years ago now, five to six

00:21:13 --> 00:21:15 years ago. They were talking then about

00:21:16 --> 00:21:19 uh, the next phase, but I think that was

00:21:19 --> 00:21:22 where their horizon lay. And it may well be

00:21:22 --> 00:21:24 that that's the end of the story for the nwa.

00:21:25 --> 00:21:28 But I'm, I'm gonna preface that or not

00:21:28 --> 00:21:30 preface it, but qualify it by saying that

00:21:30 --> 00:21:33 could be just based on information that was

00:21:33 --> 00:21:36 probably good six years ago but not, might

00:21:36 --> 00:21:36 not be good now.

00:21:37 --> 00:21:39 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, well that's the way it goes sometimes.

00:21:40 --> 00:21:42 Professor Fred Watson: Certainly does it. Yes.

00:21:43 --> 00:21:45 We're always out of day. Yeah, well that's,

00:21:45 --> 00:21:47 that's only a few.

00:21:47 --> 00:21:49 Andrew Dunkley: Days but yeah, yeah that's astronomy. We're

00:21:49 --> 00:21:52 13.8 billion years

00:21:52 --> 00:21:54 out of date sometimes.

00:21:55 --> 00:21:56 Professor Fred Watson: Uh, if you would like to read.

00:21:56 --> 00:21:59 Andrew Dunkley: Up on that story, universetoday.com or

00:21:59 --> 00:22:02 spaceconnectonline.com or just do a

00:22:02 --> 00:22:05 search for Murchison Wide

00:22:05 --> 00:22:08 Field Array, uh, on your favourite search

00:22:08 --> 00:22:10 engine. This is Space Nuts, Andrew Dunkley

00:22:10 --> 00:22:11 here with Professor Fred Watson Watson.

00:22:11 --> 00:22:12 Um,

00:22:14 --> 00:22:17 Space Nuts now final story. Fred Watson

00:22:17 --> 00:22:20 uh, is uh, another goodie and

00:22:20 --> 00:22:23 uh, a bit of a controversial one too. Uh, we,

00:22:23 --> 00:22:25 we've talked many times about Artemis and

00:22:25 --> 00:22:28 the, and the race back to the Moon and uh,

00:22:28 --> 00:22:30 there's quite a few missions sort of

00:22:30 --> 00:22:32 trundling around up there. The, the Indians

00:22:32 --> 00:22:35 are having a Crack as well. Um, but

00:22:35 --> 00:22:37 the space race as we

00:22:38 --> 00:22:41 uh, witnessed it through the uh, the 50s and

00:22:41 --> 00:22:43 60s and into the 70s, uh has

00:22:43 --> 00:22:46 sort of got a phase two of its own going on

00:22:46 --> 00:22:48 at the moment between the US and China.

00:22:49 --> 00:22:52 And if you ask some people they're

00:22:52 --> 00:22:54 saying China might win this.

00:22:56 --> 00:22:59 Professor Fred Watson: Um, and in a way

00:22:59 --> 00:23:02 you know, perhaps just coming to maybe what

00:23:02 --> 00:23:05 the, what the reasoning is behind this.

00:23:05 --> 00:23:07 Um, uh, the US

00:23:08 --> 00:23:11 has got a very, very ambitious

00:23:11 --> 00:23:13 vision for the Artemis project.

00:23:14 --> 00:23:16 Um and that's what's taking

00:23:16 --> 00:23:19 astronauts to the moon, uh, by

00:23:19 --> 00:23:21 NASA, uh, their vision and what

00:23:22 --> 00:23:24 you know, the point is uh, it's not

00:23:24 --> 00:23:27 just planting flags and boots on the ground

00:23:27 --> 00:23:30 which is what the Apollo missions were.

00:23:30 --> 00:23:32 That's right. It's much more than that. It's

00:23:32 --> 00:23:35 actually kind of set, setting the stage for a

00:23:35 --> 00:23:38 permanent lunar base. It's

00:23:38 --> 00:23:41 doing things like being able to refuel your

00:23:41 --> 00:23:44 spacecraft in orbit um,

00:23:44 --> 00:23:47 and transfer fuel. It's having the necessary

00:23:47 --> 00:23:49 spacecraft to land you on the moon. Um,

00:23:49 --> 00:23:52 and that's the vision of the, of

00:23:52 --> 00:23:55 NASA, uh, which is a lot different

00:23:55 --> 00:23:58 probably from China's vision

00:23:58 --> 00:24:00 which will be just to get boots on the ground

00:24:00 --> 00:24:03 and plant a flag. Uh, and that

00:24:03 --> 00:24:04 now is something

00:24:05 --> 00:24:08 technologically a lot simpler because it's

00:24:08 --> 00:24:10 what they did in the Apollo era. But it's

00:24:10 --> 00:24:12 technologically a lot simpler than what

00:24:12 --> 00:24:14 Artemis uh, is aiming to

00:24:14 --> 00:24:17 do. So the story comes about because of

00:24:18 --> 00:24:21 uh, it was a U.S. senate Committee on

00:24:21 --> 00:24:24 Commerce, Science and Transportation. Uh

00:24:24 --> 00:24:27 so this uh, uh committee

00:24:27 --> 00:24:30 had testimony from various

00:24:30 --> 00:24:32 individuals and perhaps the most notable

00:24:33 --> 00:24:35 was the former NASA administrator. Remember

00:24:35 --> 00:24:37 the boss of NASA is called the administrator.

00:24:38 --> 00:24:40 Um, his name was Jim

00:24:40 --> 00:24:43 Bridenstine. Uh, he was a very well known and

00:24:43 --> 00:24:46 very well respected, respected NASA

00:24:46 --> 00:24:48 administrator. I think he was followed by

00:24:48 --> 00:24:51 Bill Nelson who's the only one I've

00:24:51 --> 00:24:54 met. Um, um, and Bill too a

00:24:54 --> 00:24:56 very well respected administrator who

00:24:57 --> 00:24:59 basically uh, left his post

00:25:00 --> 00:25:02 at the uh, time of the new government

00:25:02 --> 00:25:05 in the United States. But Jim Bridenstine

00:25:06 --> 00:25:09 making a comment um, that he

00:25:09 --> 00:25:11 considered that uh, because of the

00:25:11 --> 00:25:13 complexity and

00:25:14 --> 00:25:17 perhaps questioning even the feasibility

00:25:17 --> 00:25:20 of NASA's Artemis programme, he

00:25:20 --> 00:25:23 thinks the United States is highly unlikely,

00:25:23 --> 00:25:26 and that's his words, highly unlikely to land

00:25:26 --> 00:25:28 astronauts on the moon before China

00:25:29 --> 00:25:31 because of challenges with

00:25:32 --> 00:25:34 well as it's described orbital refuelling and

00:25:34 --> 00:25:37 an ambitious architecture. So the

00:25:37 --> 00:25:39 architecture is just you know, what, what is

00:25:39 --> 00:25:41 the structure of this mission? How do you do

00:25:41 --> 00:25:43 it? What kind of spacecraft do you use? Where

00:25:43 --> 00:25:45 do you get them? What do you do in orbit?

00:25:46 --> 00:25:48 Um, the, the hearing actually

00:25:48 --> 00:25:51 um, uh has a Provocative

00:25:51 --> 00:25:54 name itself. Um, the hearing

00:25:54 --> 00:25:57 was entitled There's a Bad Moon on the Rise,

00:25:57 --> 00:26:00 why Congress and NASA Must Thwart China in

00:26:00 --> 00:26:03 the Space Race. So it's really quite an

00:26:03 --> 00:26:05 interesting one. And it's got, um, you know,

00:26:05 --> 00:26:07 it's got congressmen, congresswomen from both

00:26:07 --> 00:26:09 sides, from both sides of politics.

00:26:10 --> 00:26:13 Um, I think, um, the

00:26:15 --> 00:26:17 um, issue that uh,

00:26:18 --> 00:26:20 Bridenstine highlights

00:26:21 --> 00:26:24 is, well, there are a few. One is that the

00:26:24 --> 00:26:27 sls, the space Launch System, which you'll

00:26:27 --> 00:26:30 remember has been tested out once with a

00:26:30 --> 00:26:32 robotic fly around the moon. That's probably

00:26:32 --> 00:26:35 was it four years ago now, quite a while

00:26:35 --> 00:26:37 ago. Um, and he describes it as

00:26:37 --> 00:26:40 extraordinarily expensive. And I guess

00:26:41 --> 00:26:44 by the standards of 2025,

00:26:44 --> 00:26:47 that is probably right because we are used

00:26:47 --> 00:26:49 now to a company that

00:26:49 --> 00:26:52 reuses all its um,

00:26:52 --> 00:26:55 all its launch vehicles. I saw that SpaceX

00:26:57 --> 00:26:59 has flown one of its uh, Falcon 9

00:26:59 --> 00:27:02 boosters 30 times. Uh, and

00:27:03 --> 00:27:04 that's amazing. They were talking about

00:27:04 --> 00:27:07 limiting it to 10 times, but this one's done

00:27:07 --> 00:27:09 30 launches. And these of course are for

00:27:09 --> 00:27:12 Starlink, uh, communication satellites.

00:27:12 --> 00:27:15 But the SLS is the sort of Rolls Royce of

00:27:15 --> 00:27:18 launch systems. It is very, very expensive.

00:27:19 --> 00:27:21 But uh, Bridenstine advocates

00:27:22 --> 00:27:24 that for continuing to use it because it's

00:27:24 --> 00:27:27 already there, it's already developed.

00:27:27 --> 00:27:30 Um, but uh, his, his complaints

00:27:30 --> 00:27:33 are twofold. One is that

00:27:33 --> 00:27:36 in order to do what Artemis will do,

00:27:36 --> 00:27:39 uh, you need to be able to refuel spacecraft

00:27:39 --> 00:27:41 in orbit. And this is. These are cryogenic

00:27:41 --> 00:27:43 fuels. You know, the temperature is minus

00:27:43 --> 00:27:46 250Celsius or something that

00:27:46 --> 00:27:48 ridiculously cold. That has never been done

00:27:48 --> 00:27:51 before. Um, and that has to be done

00:27:51 --> 00:27:54 in order to make this work. And the other

00:27:54 --> 00:27:56 complaint is that the lunar lander

00:27:57 --> 00:28:00 is um, basically still

00:28:00 --> 00:28:02 untested. So, uh, um,

00:28:03 --> 00:28:06 There were um,

00:28:06 --> 00:28:09 two contracts awarded for

00:28:09 --> 00:28:11 what's called the HLS, the Human Landing

00:28:11 --> 00:28:14 System, um, to develop two

00:28:14 --> 00:28:16 vehicles. One is the Starship,

00:28:16 --> 00:28:19 SpaceX's Starship, and that's the top end,

00:28:20 --> 00:28:22 you know, Starship itself is, is the

00:28:22 --> 00:28:25 Falcon super heavy booster and what they call

00:28:25 --> 00:28:28 the ship, which is the top end of it. Uh, and

00:28:28 --> 00:28:31 it's. The ship will also be the

00:28:31 --> 00:28:34 lander, the HLS lander, uh, for

00:28:34 --> 00:28:37 Artemis 3 and 4 missions. Now Artemis 3 is

00:28:37 --> 00:28:38 going to be the first mission to land

00:28:38 --> 00:28:41 astronauts back on the moon. Artemis 2

00:28:41 --> 00:28:44 will be a lunar orbit, uh,

00:28:44 --> 00:28:47 mission. But then they also contracted

00:28:47 --> 00:28:49 Blue Origin's Blue Moon Mark two, which is

00:28:49 --> 00:28:51 another landing system for Artemis V.

00:28:52 --> 00:28:55 Uh, now none of these

00:28:55 --> 00:28:57 really have been tried and tested yet.

00:28:58 --> 00:29:00 Uh, SpaceX, uh, is talking about

00:29:00 --> 00:29:03 some upcoming missions, uh, which

00:29:03 --> 00:29:06 they hope will be what is required to prove

00:29:06 --> 00:29:09 the starship, uh, version. Um, I'm not sure

00:29:09 --> 00:29:11 where Blue Origin is, but. So the complaint

00:29:11 --> 00:29:14 is, uh, by Bridenstine, that we're so far

00:29:14 --> 00:29:15 behind with all this, there's a really good

00:29:15 --> 00:29:18 chance that the Chinese will get there, uh,

00:29:18 --> 00:29:21 get there first. Um. Yeah, it's.

00:29:21 --> 00:29:23 Yep. Go ahead.

00:29:23 --> 00:29:25 Andrew Dunkley: Does it matter? Does it really matter? They

00:29:25 --> 00:29:28 have completely different goals, completely

00:29:28 --> 00:29:29 different agendas.

00:29:30 --> 00:29:30 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah.

00:29:30 --> 00:29:32 Andrew Dunkley: Does it really matter if China lands on the

00:29:32 --> 00:29:34 moon and starts walking around before the

00:29:34 --> 00:29:37 United States does? Is there some advantage

00:29:37 --> 00:29:39 in them doing that? Because they're not

00:29:39 --> 00:29:42 trying to achieve the same end as the

00:29:42 --> 00:29:44 United States, as NASA. So, uh.

00:29:45 --> 00:29:47 And the US already proved that they were

00:29:47 --> 00:29:49 first back in

00:29:49 --> 00:29:51 1969.

00:29:51 --> 00:29:54 So it's, it's not

00:29:54 --> 00:29:57 really a race, is it? Not, not, not that kind

00:29:57 --> 00:29:57 of race.

00:29:58 --> 00:30:00 Professor Fred Watson: Um. Uh. Don't you think if,

00:30:00 --> 00:30:03 um. If China landed astronauts on the

00:30:03 --> 00:30:06 moon before the US did, the president

00:30:06 --> 00:30:09 would implode, wouldn't he? Or something

00:30:09 --> 00:30:10 would. Yeah.

00:30:10 --> 00:30:12 Andrew Dunkley: But, you know, are.

00:30:12 --> 00:30:12 Professor Fred Watson: They.

00:30:12 --> 00:30:15 Andrew Dunkley: Are, ah, they. It's just politics, isn't it?

00:30:15 --> 00:30:17 I mean, it's just posturing that

00:30:18 --> 00:30:20 the US has already done it. They don't have

00:30:20 --> 00:30:22 to do it again before China because, you

00:30:22 --> 00:30:24 know, they did it before China.

00:30:25 --> 00:30:27 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah, I, uh. I think national

00:30:28 --> 00:30:29 pride is playing a huge.

00:30:29 --> 00:30:30 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, probably.

00:30:30 --> 00:30:33 Professor Fred Watson: And one that we might not recognise to the

00:30:33 --> 00:30:35 extent that perhaps some of our listeners

00:30:35 --> 00:30:37 will. Um, I think it's.

00:30:37 --> 00:30:40 I think it would be a, ah. I think it would

00:30:40 --> 00:30:43 be a real, um, challenge

00:30:43 --> 00:30:46 to the US if China landed first. I

00:30:46 --> 00:30:48 think it really would, in this year, shape

00:30:48 --> 00:30:51 them to the core. Yes, a little

00:30:51 --> 00:30:53 bit like. A little bit like

00:30:54 --> 00:30:56 when, uh, the Soviet Union put the first

00:30:56 --> 00:30:59 artificial satellite into orbit.

00:30:59 --> 00:31:01 I remember the fallout from that. It was,

00:31:02 --> 00:31:04 you know, I was still a youngster. I was only

00:31:04 --> 00:31:06 10. Was I? No, was 12.

00:31:07 --> 00:31:09 Anyway, um, it was,

00:31:09 --> 00:31:12 um. You know, it was there. It was, it.

00:31:12 --> 00:31:15 It absolutely shook the US to the

00:31:15 --> 00:31:18 core. Uh, that. That the Soviet

00:31:18 --> 00:31:21 Union could put a spacecraft into orbit,

00:31:21 --> 00:31:22 which meant that it could launch a ballistic

00:31:22 --> 00:31:25 missile anywhere on the planet or land one

00:31:25 --> 00:31:26 anywhere on the planet. So that's the

00:31:26 --> 00:31:29 underlying thing. Now that imperative's gone.

00:31:29 --> 00:31:31 Everybody knows that there's half a dozen

00:31:31 --> 00:31:33 countries who could land a ballistic missile

00:31:33 --> 00:31:35 pretty well anywhere on the planet. Um, but I

00:31:35 --> 00:31:38 think it's the national PR issue. I think it

00:31:38 --> 00:31:41 would be seen as an affront almost to

00:31:41 --> 00:31:43 US pride in space. Uh,

00:31:44 --> 00:31:46 what is going to happen about it? I don't

00:31:46 --> 00:31:47 know. I don't know whether this hearing will

00:31:47 --> 00:31:50 actually produce any changes, but

00:31:51 --> 00:31:53 be interesting to see how it goes.

00:31:53 --> 00:31:56 Andrew Dunkley: It will, yes. Uh, you can read all about

00:31:56 --> 00:31:58 it@nasaspaceflight.com.

00:31:59 --> 00:32:01 um, yeah. Very interesting article indeed.

00:32:02 --> 00:32:05 Um, Fred Watson, we've done. That's it.

00:32:05 --> 00:32:06 Professor Fred Watson: Good gracious.

00:32:08 --> 00:32:09 Andrew Dunkley: Just for this episode.

00:32:09 --> 00:32:11 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah. Episode 555. Yes.

00:32:11 --> 00:32:14 Andrew Dunkley: I didn't mention that, did I? Yeah, 555.

00:32:14 --> 00:32:17 Um, I don't know. Is that a lucky number in

00:32:17 --> 00:32:19 China? In China or is it triple A?

00:32:20 --> 00:32:23 I don't know. Um, yes.

00:32:23 --> 00:32:25 Anyway, Fred Watson, thank you so much. It's

00:32:25 --> 00:32:25 always good fun.

00:32:26 --> 00:32:29 Professor Fred Watson: It is. Uh, thank you for having me, Andrew.

00:32:29 --> 00:32:31 Um, I'll be invited back sometimes.

00:32:32 --> 00:32:35 Andrew Dunkley: Maybe in five minutes, five days,

00:32:35 --> 00:32:36 whatever comes first.

00:32:36 --> 00:32:36 Professor Fred Watson: Yes.

00:32:36 --> 00:32:38 Andrew Dunkley: You never know. Thanks, Fred Watson.

00:32:38 --> 00:32:40 Professor Fred Watson Watson, astronomer at

00:32:40 --> 00:32:43 large, part of the team here at Spacenus. Uh,

00:32:43 --> 00:32:45 and of course, uh, thanks to Huw in the

00:32:45 --> 00:32:47 studio, who couldn't be with us today, had to

00:32:47 --> 00:32:50 put his cat Sputnik down. Uh,

00:32:50 --> 00:32:53 unfortunately, I don't know where that came

00:32:53 --> 00:32:55 from. And from me, Andrew Dunkley, thanks for

00:32:55 --> 00:32:57 your company. We'll see you on the next

00:32:57 --> 00:32:59 episode of Space Nuts.

00:33:03 --> 00:33:05 Space Nuts. Hello again. Thanks for joining

00:33:05 --> 00:33:08 us. This is Space Nuts, where we talk

00:33:08 --> 00:33:11 astronomy and space science. And it's

00:33:11 --> 00:33:13 good to have your company on this a Q A

00:33:13 --> 00:33:16 edition. And what are we talking about today?

00:33:16 --> 00:33:18 Oh, uh, something completely different, new

00:33:18 --> 00:33:21 and unchallenged in the annals of

00:33:21 --> 00:33:24 Space Nuts and the wider world of astronomy.

00:33:24 --> 00:33:26 Uh, somebody's got a black hole question

00:33:28 --> 00:33:31 and the next question is a dark matter

00:33:31 --> 00:33:33 question. They just dovetail beautifully,

00:33:33 --> 00:33:36 those two. And then, uh, we've got a bit of a

00:33:36 --> 00:33:38 Dutch treat for you. Uh, Robert from the

00:33:38 --> 00:33:41 Netherlands is asking about the Fermi paradox

00:33:41 --> 00:33:43 and Angela from the Netherlands has,

00:33:44 --> 00:33:46 um, an idea to send bugs into space

00:33:47 --> 00:33:50 on purpose. And joining us again to

00:33:50 --> 00:33:52 solve all of those little riddles is

00:33:52 --> 00:33:53 Professor Fred Watson Watson, astronomer at

00:33:53 --> 00:33:55 large, still wearing the same shirt as he was

00:33:55 --> 00:33:56 last. Hello, Fred Watson.

00:33:58 --> 00:34:01 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah, I only change my shirts

00:34:01 --> 00:34:02 once a week, apparently.

00:34:03 --> 00:34:05 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah. Ah, well, I do that on holidays because

00:34:08 --> 00:34:11 although on our, on our cruise we, um, we

00:34:11 --> 00:34:14 did all our own washing because. Well, they

00:34:14 --> 00:34:16 charge you to do washing on a, on a cruise

00:34:16 --> 00:34:18 ship if you, if you want them to do it. But,

00:34:18 --> 00:34:20 uh, they had laundries on this ship, so we

00:34:20 --> 00:34:22 did our own, which turned out to be a very

00:34:22 --> 00:34:23 good thing.

00:34:23 --> 00:34:26 Professor Fred Watson: So, um, it's sort of where

00:34:26 --> 00:34:28 on. You're on board for 13 weeks, weren't

00:34:28 --> 00:34:31 you? 13 weeks is a little bit long to keep

00:34:31 --> 00:34:31 the same shirt.

00:34:32 --> 00:34:34 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, basically it's pretty tough wearing the

00:34:34 --> 00:34:37 same pair of undies. For 13 weeks and

00:34:37 --> 00:34:39 expecting people to actually sit down and

00:34:39 --> 00:34:40 have dinner with you.

00:34:40 --> 00:34:43 Professor Fred Watson: It's. It's not.

00:34:43 --> 00:34:44 It's not.

00:34:44 --> 00:34:46 Andrew Dunkley: Not advised. Not advised, no.

00:34:47 --> 00:34:49 Professor Fred Watson: You sounds like you tried it, actually.

00:34:51 --> 00:34:54 Andrew Dunkley: No, I haven't. No, I haven't.

00:34:54 --> 00:34:56 Professor Fred Watson: Your wife wouldn't let me do that. No.

00:34:56 --> 00:34:57 Andrew Dunkley: No, definitely not.

00:34:57 --> 00:35:00 Um, now, uh, we've got a bunch of questions

00:35:00 --> 00:35:02 to get through, and we.

00:35:02 --> 00:35:04 Professor Fred Watson: Might as well get the ball rolling.

00:35:04 --> 00:35:06 Andrew Dunkley: With Dave, who has a question

00:35:06 --> 00:35:08 related to black holes.

00:35:08 --> 00:35:11 Speaker C: Hey, Professor Fred Watson Watson,

00:35:11 --> 00:35:13 Andrew and or Heidi, whoever this may be.

00:35:14 --> 00:35:17 Um, got a question about black holes. Like

00:35:17 --> 00:35:20 all my other questions. I've been watching a

00:35:20 --> 00:35:22 lot of documentaries and something

00:35:23 --> 00:35:25 that still questions me is

00:35:26 --> 00:35:29 black holes, do they move or are they

00:35:29 --> 00:35:31 stationary? And if they do move,

00:35:32 --> 00:35:34 do they move through space and time

00:35:36 --> 00:35:38 or space time, like the fabric of space?

00:35:39 --> 00:35:41 And if so, are they eating the fabric of

00:35:41 --> 00:35:44 space or is it just going around the black

00:35:44 --> 00:35:46 hole and then back into place? How come we

00:35:46 --> 00:35:49 don't see trails behind the black holes where

00:35:49 --> 00:35:51 they've just eaten away fabric of space?

00:35:52 --> 00:35:55 Um, not quite sure how that works

00:35:55 --> 00:35:56 or anything like that.

00:35:58 --> 00:36:01 And if, if they all do rotate, which we think

00:36:01 --> 00:36:03 they do, do they

00:36:04 --> 00:36:07 rotationally pull on the fabric of

00:36:07 --> 00:36:07 space?

00:36:08 --> 00:36:09 Professor Fred Watson: Thank you.

00:36:10 --> 00:36:13 Andrew Dunkley: Okay, great. Ah, question. Thank you, Dave.

00:36:13 --> 00:36:16 And we'll get a great answer. Now,

00:36:16 --> 00:36:18 although it's an interesting question, we,

00:36:18 --> 00:36:21 um, from my perspective, and I think we

00:36:21 --> 00:36:23 have touched on this before,

00:36:24 --> 00:36:26 everything moves in space. Nothing is

00:36:26 --> 00:36:28 standing still, is it?

00:36:29 --> 00:36:31 Professor Fred Watson: No, you're right, Andrew. That's exactly the.

00:36:31 --> 00:36:32 That's exactly the answer I was about to

00:36:32 --> 00:36:33 give.

00:36:33 --> 00:36:34 Andrew Dunkley: Oh, okay. Thanks, Dave.

00:36:34 --> 00:36:35 Next question comes from.

00:36:37 --> 00:36:39 Professor Fred Watson: Um, let's just, um, cover

00:36:40 --> 00:36:42 Dave's last part of that question first,

00:36:42 --> 00:36:44 which is trials. Do they.

00:36:45 --> 00:36:48 It was where if black holes are rotating, do

00:36:48 --> 00:36:51 they. The space time kind of do

00:36:51 --> 00:36:53 they drag it round? And indeed they do. It's

00:36:53 --> 00:36:55 a process called frame dragging. Um, the

00:36:55 --> 00:36:57 Earth does it actually. So any rotating

00:36:57 --> 00:37:00 object drags the framework of space

00:37:00 --> 00:37:02 time around with it. And I think the same

00:37:02 --> 00:37:04 happens with black holes. I think we covered

00:37:05 --> 00:37:07 the story, um, probably

00:37:08 --> 00:37:10 a couple of years ago maybe, Andrew, which

00:37:10 --> 00:37:13 was about a demonstration that black

00:37:13 --> 00:37:15 holes, rotating black holes do,

00:37:16 --> 00:37:19 um, uh, exhibit frame dragging, that

00:37:19 --> 00:37:21 space time does sort of get dragged around

00:37:21 --> 00:37:24 with them. Uh, so, uh,

00:37:24 --> 00:37:27 having said that, um, then

00:37:28 --> 00:37:30 the idea of black holes moving through

00:37:30 --> 00:37:33 space is not, I guess, that difficult.

00:37:33 --> 00:37:35 Uh, and indeed they do exactly as you've

00:37:35 --> 00:37:38 said, Andrew. Everything moves, uh, and it's

00:37:38 --> 00:37:40 twofold. One is that they're being carried

00:37:40 --> 00:37:42 along by space itself, what we call the

00:37:42 --> 00:37:45 Hubble flow, which is Due to the expansion of

00:37:45 --> 00:37:47 the universe. And I think Dave touched on

00:37:47 --> 00:37:50 that by talking about, you know, the fabric

00:37:50 --> 00:37:52 of space time. Yes, the fabric of space time

00:37:52 --> 00:37:54 itself is moving and takes stuff along with

00:37:54 --> 00:37:57 it. Um, but,

00:37:57 --> 00:38:00 uh, uh, galaxies we

00:38:00 --> 00:38:02 know, have what we call peculiar velocities.

00:38:03 --> 00:38:05 Uh, they actually move around, um,

00:38:06 --> 00:38:08 within the moving fabric of space.

00:38:10 --> 00:38:12 Excuse me. The analogue that we often give

00:38:12 --> 00:38:15 is, uh, to liken the expansion of the

00:38:15 --> 00:38:17 universe to a river flowing. And the galaxies

00:38:17 --> 00:38:20 being like people zooming around the river on

00:38:20 --> 00:38:21 boats. They're being carried along by the

00:38:21 --> 00:38:23 river flow, but they still move around with

00:38:23 --> 00:38:26 their own peculiar motion. And galaxies

00:38:26 --> 00:38:29 do that too, not perhaps zipping around quite

00:38:29 --> 00:38:32 like boats do. Uh, but, uh, they're

00:38:32 --> 00:38:33 drawn to one another by their own gravity.

00:38:34 --> 00:38:36 Uh, so they do move through space. And yes,

00:38:36 --> 00:38:39 um, a black hole will move through the space

00:38:39 --> 00:38:42 time that it's in, but it won't leave a

00:38:42 --> 00:38:45 trail behind it. Um, the space

00:38:45 --> 00:38:48 time bends around it, just as Dave suggested.

00:38:48 --> 00:38:50 There, uh, as it goes through, it's

00:38:50 --> 00:38:53 distorting the space time. But, uh, you know,

00:38:53 --> 00:38:55 the space time sort of recovers as it's gone

00:38:55 --> 00:38:58 past. Uh, so it's not like there'll be a

00:38:58 --> 00:39:00 wake that we could look for trailing behind,

00:39:01 --> 00:39:03 uh, supermassive black holes. Interesting

00:39:03 --> 00:39:03 idea, though.

00:39:04 --> 00:39:06 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah. Yeah, it'd be. It'd be so easy to find

00:39:06 --> 00:39:07 them if they left trails.

00:39:08 --> 00:39:10 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah, that's right. It would.

00:39:10 --> 00:39:13 Andrew Dunkley: Let's say you chase snails, you know, if

00:39:13 --> 00:39:14 you're a snail hunter.

00:39:15 --> 00:39:18 Professor Fred Watson: Well, I'm sure you do. Yeah, we get, um,

00:39:18 --> 00:39:21 on damp days, uh, we occasionally get invaded

00:39:21 --> 00:39:23 by slugs in our. In our laundry and

00:39:23 --> 00:39:26 daily trails as well, which are based.

00:39:29 --> 00:39:29 Yeah.

00:39:29 --> 00:39:32 Andrew Dunkley: Where were we the other day? Um, and walked

00:39:32 --> 00:39:33 outside because it had been raining, and

00:39:33 --> 00:39:36 there were slugs the size of sausage dogs.

00:39:37 --> 00:39:39 Uh, they were. They were enormous.

00:39:39 --> 00:39:42 Was in the United States somewhere up in, uh.

00:39:42 --> 00:39:44 Up around Buffalo, I think, somewhere. Oh,

00:39:44 --> 00:39:45 yeah.

00:39:46 --> 00:39:47 Professor Fred Watson: Big boogers.

00:39:47 --> 00:39:50 Andrew Dunkley: Oh, no. Was it Niagara Falls? Niagara

00:39:50 --> 00:39:53 Falls. They were like this, like, you

00:39:53 --> 00:39:54 know, you could wrap them around your head if

00:39:54 --> 00:39:56 you're so inclined, get a decent.

00:39:56 --> 00:39:57 Professor Fred Watson: Meal out of one of them.

00:39:57 --> 00:39:58 Andrew Dunkley: Oh, yeah.

00:39:58 --> 00:39:58 Professor Fred Watson: Yes.

00:39:58 --> 00:40:01 Andrew Dunkley: Yum. Um, although that reminds me,

00:40:01 --> 00:40:03 while we were overseas, I think it was when

00:40:03 --> 00:40:06 we were in Spain. Listen to me. Name

00:40:06 --> 00:40:08 dropping. Um, the, um.

00:40:08 --> 00:40:11 Um. One of the staff on the ship was doing a

00:40:11 --> 00:40:13 presentation about our next stop, and she

00:40:13 --> 00:40:15 said, while you're there, go and get some of

00:40:15 --> 00:40:16 this stuff. And it was. It was like a skin

00:40:16 --> 00:40:19 cream that had snail slime in it.

00:40:21 --> 00:40:24 My wife bought some and is still using

00:40:24 --> 00:40:27 it. Uh, she thinks it's fabulous.

00:40:27 --> 00:40:29 So there you are. There's something to that.

00:40:29 --> 00:40:31 Go and rub snails on your face.

00:40:33 --> 00:40:35 And by the way, that, uh, that still, that

00:40:35 --> 00:40:37 story you referred to from a couple of years

00:40:37 --> 00:40:40 ago, uh, was, uh, about frame

00:40:40 --> 00:40:43 dragging, uh, of supermassive black holes

00:40:43 --> 00:40:45 was, uh. May 2024. There you are.

00:40:46 --> 00:40:48 Professor Fred Watson: Okay. Hm. There you go. The memory's not

00:40:49 --> 00:40:51 quite gone yet, but it will eventually.

00:40:52 --> 00:40:55 Andrew Dunkley: I do recall us talking about it. Uh,

00:40:55 --> 00:40:56 thanks, David, for your question.

00:40:56 --> 00:40:59 Our next question comes from Jared in

00:40:59 --> 00:41:02 Melbourne. Hi, Fred Watson, Heidi, Huw, Dave.

00:41:02 --> 00:41:03 Just kidding, Andrew. Thank you. They haven't

00:41:03 --> 00:41:06 gotten the Dave thing, have they? Haven't let

00:41:06 --> 00:41:08 that one go. So, three months away, that one

00:41:08 --> 00:41:11 would die its natural death. But no, no, it's

00:41:11 --> 00:41:13 just popped itself up again. Um,

00:41:14 --> 00:41:16 we talk about galaxies having halos of

00:41:16 --> 00:41:19 dark matter gravitationally bound to them,

00:41:19 --> 00:41:22 thus affecting their rotational rate

00:41:22 --> 00:41:24 as compared to the predicted rotation

00:41:24 --> 00:41:27 rate's, uh, centre edge.

00:41:28 --> 00:41:30 Yeah. Okay. Uh, so then while. Yeah,

00:41:31 --> 00:41:33 so then while wondering if the sun

00:41:33 --> 00:41:36 has a portion of dark matter gravitationally

00:41:36 --> 00:41:39 bound to it, I read that people think it's

00:41:39 --> 00:41:42 m. Not much of a halo at all for something

00:41:42 --> 00:41:44 like the sun, as dark matter particles are

00:41:44 --> 00:41:47 moving too fast to be captured by the Sun.

00:41:47 --> 00:41:50 I'm very interested to know why people, uh,

00:41:50 --> 00:41:53 might expect dark matter to be moving too

00:41:53 --> 00:41:55 fast to be captured by the sun when we have

00:41:55 --> 00:41:58 so few insights about what it is at all.

00:41:58 --> 00:42:00 How do they conclude it's whizzing around

00:42:00 --> 00:42:03 faster than escape velocity? Keen, uh,

00:42:04 --> 00:42:06 to get your thoughts. Keep up the great work.

00:42:06 --> 00:42:08 Jared from Melbourne.

00:42:10 --> 00:42:13 Professor Fred Watson: And great question. Which, um,

00:42:13 --> 00:42:16 doesn't really have an answer. Okay.

00:42:16 --> 00:42:19 Um, and that's because we know so little

00:42:19 --> 00:42:21 about dark matter. Um,

00:42:21 --> 00:42:24 it's certainly, uh,

00:42:24 --> 00:42:27 the thinking a few years ago

00:42:27 --> 00:42:29 was that dark matter

00:42:30 --> 00:42:33 halos have a minimum size or blobs

00:42:33 --> 00:42:36 of dark matter have a minimum size. And as

00:42:36 --> 00:42:38 Gerard suggests, that would be related to the

00:42:38 --> 00:42:41 velocity of the dark matter particles. Um,

00:42:42 --> 00:42:44 you know what that minimum size would be? Uh,

00:42:45 --> 00:42:47 if the, the faster the particles are moving,

00:42:47 --> 00:42:50 the bigger the blob of dark matter. I

00:42:50 --> 00:42:53 seem to remember a number being touted around

00:42:53 --> 00:42:56 which was about 100 parsecs and a parsec is.

00:42:56 --> 00:42:59 Was it 3.23 light years? I can never

00:42:59 --> 00:43:00 get the exact number. It's about three light

00:43:00 --> 00:43:03 years. So roughly 300 light years.

00:43:04 --> 00:43:06 However, I think there have been more recent

00:43:06 --> 00:43:09 observations that suggest that it might be

00:43:09 --> 00:43:11 clumpier than that it might clump together on

00:43:11 --> 00:43:14 smaller scales. Um, however, having

00:43:14 --> 00:43:17 said that, I think it is probably

00:43:17 --> 00:43:20 unlikely, though, that the sun itself would

00:43:20 --> 00:43:22 have uh, its own lump of dark matter.

00:43:22 --> 00:43:25 I think the, you know, the sun's

00:43:25 --> 00:43:27 neighbourhood and the spiral arms

00:43:28 --> 00:43:30 that were embedded in might,

00:43:31 --> 00:43:34 might have higher density, uh, chunks

00:43:34 --> 00:43:37 of dark matter than perhaps the outer halo

00:43:37 --> 00:43:39 of the galaxy. Uh, but

00:43:40 --> 00:43:41 if it's, you know, if those early

00:43:41 --> 00:43:43 measurements are anything like realistic,

00:43:43 --> 00:43:46 then it would be on a scale of hundreds of

00:43:46 --> 00:43:48 light years rather than um, hundreds of

00:43:48 --> 00:43:50 millions of kilometres, which is what you'd

00:43:50 --> 00:43:53 need for it to be within bound to the

00:43:53 --> 00:43:56 solar system. So uh, we don't really know the

00:43:56 --> 00:43:59 answer to your question, Gerard, but um,

00:43:59 --> 00:44:01 people do think about it. It's one of the

00:44:02 --> 00:44:04 biggest big issues and one of the challenges

00:44:04 --> 00:44:07 is how do you plot, how do you map the

00:44:07 --> 00:44:10 biggest or smallest chunk of dark matter? Um,

00:44:10 --> 00:44:13 when the best way to

00:44:13 --> 00:44:16 see it is um,

00:44:16 --> 00:44:19 to look at the distortion

00:44:19 --> 00:44:22 effect of say a cluster of galaxies in the

00:44:22 --> 00:44:24 foreground and look at how that distorts the

00:44:24 --> 00:44:26 images of galaxies in the background. Because

00:44:26 --> 00:44:28 the distortion is due to all the mass in the

00:44:28 --> 00:44:31 cluster, not just the mass you can see

00:44:31 --> 00:44:33 that allows you to map the dark matter in a

00:44:33 --> 00:44:36 cluster. Um, but it, it doesn't

00:44:36 --> 00:44:39 really, unless you've got some very special

00:44:39 --> 00:44:41 circumstances, it doesn't really make it

00:44:41 --> 00:44:44 easy to say just how big or

00:44:44 --> 00:44:47 small the biggest lump of dark matter, the

00:44:47 --> 00:44:50 characteristic lump size of dark

00:44:50 --> 00:44:52 matter might be. Um, so we're still working

00:44:52 --> 00:44:54 on it, uh, and um, maybe we'll get back to

00:44:54 --> 00:44:55 you when we know the answer.

00:44:56 --> 00:44:59 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, well, you never know. Uh, a parsec is

00:44:59 --> 00:45:01 equal to 3.26 light years.

00:45:02 --> 00:45:04 Professor Fred Watson: I think I said 3.23, didn't I? And that's

00:45:04 --> 00:45:07 wrong. Well, it's close. 3.3. It's close.

00:45:07 --> 00:45:09 Yeah. I can never remember the last number in

00:45:09 --> 00:45:12 that 3.26 should be really, it's easy to

00:45:12 --> 00:45:14 remember because three times two is six. So

00:45:14 --> 00:45:16 that should tell you, shouldn't it, on there,

00:45:16 --> 00:45:19 you know, uh, neat. Well, all I've got to do

00:45:19 --> 00:45:20 is remember that.

00:45:20 --> 00:45:21 Andrew Dunkley: Test you next week.

00:45:24 --> 00:45:27 Professor Fred Watson: Thanks. Thanks Dave. Thanks Dave.

00:45:27 --> 00:45:29 I always appreciate your tests.

00:45:31 --> 00:45:34 Andrew Dunkley: Okay, uh, thanks Jared, for your question.

00:45:34 --> 00:45:36 This is Space Nuts Andrew Dunkley here with

00:45:36 --> 00:45:37 Professor Fred Watson Watson.

00:45:38 --> 00:45:41 Space Nuts. Uh, now, uh,

00:45:41 --> 00:45:43 welcome to the Dutch part of our show

00:45:43 --> 00:45:45 where uh, all the questions come from the

00:45:45 --> 00:45:47 Netherlands. And the first one is from

00:45:48 --> 00:45:48 Robert.

00:45:49 --> 00:45:50 Professor Fred Watson: Hey, Professor.

00:45:50 --> 00:45:52 Andrew Dunkley: No, it's not. This one is hello friend

00:45:52 --> 00:45:53 Andrew and.

00:45:53 --> 00:45:56 Professor Fred Watson: Heidi, this is Robert from the Netherlands.

00:45:56 --> 00:45:59 I have a question about the resolution to the

00:45:59 --> 00:46:02 Fermi paradox. What could be the most

00:46:02 --> 00:46:04 credible answer to this conundrum? Is it

00:46:04 --> 00:46:07 because the rare Earth theory that Their

00:46:07 --> 00:46:10 civilizations of aliens are very, very rare.

00:46:10 --> 00:46:12 Are they very hostile? And if they destroy

00:46:12 --> 00:46:14 everything around us, are they simply too far

00:46:14 --> 00:46:17 away and they stop expanding after a couple

00:46:17 --> 00:46:19 of planets? Or are we alone in the

00:46:19 --> 00:46:21 universe? I would love to hear the

00:46:21 --> 00:46:24 professor's opinion this. Thank you so much.

00:46:25 --> 00:46:28 Andrew Dunkley: Thank you Robert. Um, yeah, it

00:46:28 --> 00:46:31 brings up that age old question which I'm

00:46:31 --> 00:46:34 sure you were going to ask question,

00:46:34 --> 00:46:35 where is everybody?

00:46:36 --> 00:46:38 Professor Fred Watson: Well that's right, that was the um, that's

00:46:38 --> 00:46:40 the basis of the Fermi paradox. Yeah, passed

00:46:40 --> 00:46:43 in 1950. And the logic, Enrico

00:46:43 --> 00:46:46 Fermi's logic was if you

00:46:46 --> 00:46:49 have space faring

00:46:49 --> 00:46:52 civilizations, um, which uh,

00:46:52 --> 00:46:55 evolved you know, maybe a few billion

00:46:55 --> 00:46:58 years ago, um, then there should be evidence

00:46:58 --> 00:47:00 for them everywhere. And

00:47:01 --> 00:47:03 we don't see it, we uh, don't see any

00:47:03 --> 00:47:06 evidence. Uh, that evidence might be in the

00:47:06 --> 00:47:08 form of artefacts. If

00:47:08 --> 00:47:11 they've sent things into orbit around, you

00:47:11 --> 00:47:13 know, the solar systems. And there's at least

00:47:13 --> 00:47:15 one person on our planet who thinks that's

00:47:15 --> 00:47:18 happened already. Uh, Avi Loeb with some of

00:47:18 --> 00:47:21 these um, extraterrestrial asteroids and

00:47:21 --> 00:47:23 comet comets, probably all three of them

00:47:23 --> 00:47:26 anyway. Ah so. But we don't have

00:47:26 --> 00:47:29 any real evidence that that's the case. And I

00:47:29 --> 00:47:32 think I would lump together Robert's first

00:47:32 --> 00:47:34 and last options there

00:47:34 --> 00:47:37 where he spoke about the Earth being in

00:47:37 --> 00:47:39 incredibly, or Earth like conditions being

00:47:39 --> 00:47:42 incredibly rare so that

00:47:42 --> 00:47:45 intelligent life might be incredibly rare. Or

00:47:45 --> 00:47:48 his last option, that it's unique, that we

00:47:48 --> 00:47:51 are unique in the universe. Um, those two

00:47:51 --> 00:47:53 are not that different from one another.

00:47:54 --> 00:47:56 Um, because either way, you know, if, if

00:47:56 --> 00:47:58 you've only got one civilization,

00:47:59 --> 00:48:02 communicable civilization per galaxy,

00:48:02 --> 00:48:05 um, and then you might as well forget it.

00:48:05 --> 00:48:07 You're alone in the universe basically.

00:48:08 --> 00:48:11 Um, which I think is, I uh,

00:48:11 --> 00:48:14 think that is disturbing because

00:48:14 --> 00:48:17 it means, you know, if we wipe ourselves

00:48:17 --> 00:48:19 out or if we become extinct through whatever

00:48:19 --> 00:48:22 process, uh, we are,

00:48:22 --> 00:48:25 we are how the universe thinks about itself.

00:48:25 --> 00:48:27 That's um, I think that's a quote from Brian

00:48:27 --> 00:48:30 Cox. Life is what lets the universe

00:48:30 --> 00:48:33 understand itself. Um, and

00:48:33 --> 00:48:35 um, if we, if we're

00:48:35 --> 00:48:38 gone and uh, well and we're the only species

00:48:38 --> 00:48:39 in the universe that can understand it,

00:48:39 --> 00:48:42 what's the rest of it for? Well, it's all

00:48:42 --> 00:48:44 a bit of, a, bit of a pain.

00:48:44 --> 00:48:47 Andrew Dunkley: Well yeah, but it brings about,

00:48:47 --> 00:48:50 um, you know, you can get into areas

00:48:50 --> 00:48:52 of theology then. And um,

00:48:54 --> 00:48:55 then that's one

00:48:57 --> 00:49:00 um, idea that uh, is well documented and well

00:49:00 --> 00:49:02 supported. Um, creationism,

00:49:03 --> 00:49:05 uh, we could just be

00:49:05 --> 00:49:08 one freak accident that.

00:49:09 --> 00:49:09 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah.

00:49:10 --> 00:49:13 Andrew Dunkley: And the universe existing

00:49:13 --> 00:49:16 in itself is the greatest mystery. How is

00:49:16 --> 00:49:18 their existence? I think I've asked that

00:49:18 --> 00:49:20 question before and no one's ever told me the

00:49:20 --> 00:49:20 answer.

00:49:20 --> 00:49:22 Professor Fred Watson: It's a philosophical question, that's what it

00:49:22 --> 00:49:22 is.

00:49:23 --> 00:49:23 Andrew Dunkley: It is, yeah.

00:49:23 --> 00:49:26 Professor Fred Watson: Uh, um, I mean it's uh, you know

00:49:26 --> 00:49:29 there's um, there's a quantum physics answer

00:49:29 --> 00:49:31 to that as well. If, if um, if

00:49:32 --> 00:49:34 we weren't there to perceive the universe,

00:49:35 --> 00:49:38 would the universe still exist? Because um,

00:49:38 --> 00:49:41 in quantum mechanics it looks as though the

00:49:41 --> 00:49:43 observer plays a significant role in the

00:49:43 --> 00:49:46 nature of reality. And that's why scientists

00:49:46 --> 00:49:48 are constantly looking for a theory that

00:49:48 --> 00:49:51 underpins both quantum mechanics

00:49:51 --> 00:49:53 and relativity. Uh,

00:49:55 --> 00:49:57 the grand unifying theory which we haven't

00:49:57 --> 00:50:00 got yet, uh, that might tell us whether the

00:50:00 --> 00:50:03 observer is necessary, uh, in

00:50:03 --> 00:50:06 terms of the well being of the universe. It

00:50:06 --> 00:50:09 raises extraordinary questions. Uh, but I

00:50:09 --> 00:50:11 think it's certainly my thinking, and this

00:50:11 --> 00:50:13 comes from talking to astrobiologists who

00:50:13 --> 00:50:16 think that step from um, from

00:50:16 --> 00:50:19 single celled organisms to multi celled

00:50:19 --> 00:50:22 organisms could be a really rare step.

00:50:22 --> 00:50:25 Uh, then perhaps we are very rare. Perhaps we

00:50:25 --> 00:50:27 are a freak of nature. Um,

00:50:27 --> 00:50:30 it's uh, I would lean towards that

00:50:30 --> 00:50:32 rather than the idea that life is everywhere,

00:50:33 --> 00:50:35 uh, and think that the answer to the Fermi

00:50:35 --> 00:50:37 paradox. Where is everybody? Well, they're

00:50:37 --> 00:50:39 just not there, most of them. Yeah, yeah,

00:50:39 --> 00:50:40 they're not there.

00:50:40 --> 00:50:43 Andrew Dunkley: Well there may not be peoples, but there may

00:50:43 --> 00:50:46 be bacterial life of some kind or.

00:50:46 --> 00:50:48 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah, that's right, but, and that might turn

00:50:48 --> 00:50:51 out to be quite common, but it needn't

00:50:51 --> 00:50:53 necessarily evolve into anything more

00:50:53 --> 00:50:53 substantial.

00:50:54 --> 00:50:57 Andrew Dunkley: No, no, definitely not. And if you're looking

00:50:57 --> 00:50:59 for aliens, as you said, if they've been

00:50:59 --> 00:51:00 around long enough, we should see the

00:51:00 --> 00:51:03 evidence, uh, whether it be a um,

00:51:03 --> 00:51:05 passing spacecraft or a

00:51:05 --> 00:51:08 megastructure of some kind that we

00:51:08 --> 00:51:11 might see around a planet or a star or

00:51:11 --> 00:51:13 a um, uh,

00:51:14 --> 00:51:17 a conspicuous gas in their atmosphere that

00:51:17 --> 00:51:20 couldn't be natural, things like that. But we

00:51:20 --> 00:51:21 haven't found any of that.

00:51:21 --> 00:51:24 Professor Fred Watson: Airport radar, uh, all of that airport

00:51:24 --> 00:51:26 radar, yes. Square kilometre array able to

00:51:26 --> 00:51:29 detect airport radar at 50 light years. So

00:51:29 --> 00:51:32 once it comes on stream we

00:51:32 --> 00:51:34 might know we're alone within 50 light years.

00:51:35 --> 00:51:37 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, well that is it exactly.

00:51:38 --> 00:51:40 Uh, so Robert. No, um, yes,

00:51:41 --> 00:51:43 we're still alone at this point in time. And

00:51:43 --> 00:51:46 um. Yes, and we're feeling it, we really are.

00:51:48 --> 00:51:51 Um, but I'm, I, I sort

00:51:51 --> 00:51:53 of err on the side of caution when it comes

00:51:53 --> 00:51:55 to revealing our presence. I'm, I'm a little

00:51:55 --> 00:51:58 bit with um, Stephen,

00:51:58 --> 00:52:01 Stephen Hawking. Uh, yeah, you don't want to

00:52:01 --> 00:52:03 make Too big a noise. Just in case they go,

00:52:03 --> 00:52:05 oh, that's a lovely place. We'll have that.

00:52:06 --> 00:52:09 So the British and the Portuguese did so.

00:52:09 --> 00:52:12 And the Dutch. And the Dutch. Our last two

00:52:12 --> 00:52:15 people are Dutch. My wife's Dutch, so I can

00:52:15 --> 00:52:16 get away with things like that.

00:52:17 --> 00:52:18 Professor Fred Watson: The, um. Yeah.

00:52:18 --> 00:52:21 Andrew Dunkley: Uh, and the French. I mean, the French did it

00:52:21 --> 00:52:21 too.

00:52:22 --> 00:52:25 Professor Fred Watson: We, we, um. We're already, you

00:52:25 --> 00:52:27 know, we've already given it away because

00:52:27 --> 00:52:29 we've got airport radar.

00:52:31 --> 00:52:33 Andrew Dunkley: Yes, we have. Yes, we have.

00:52:33 --> 00:52:35 Thanks, Robert. Great to hear from you. And

00:52:35 --> 00:52:37 our final question comes from the

00:52:37 --> 00:52:39 Netherlands. And it's, uh, a text

00:52:39 --> 00:52:42 question from Angela. I learned from earlier

00:52:42 --> 00:52:45 episodes that any it sent to space must

00:52:45 --> 00:52:48 be sterile, free of bugs. This is

00:52:48 --> 00:52:50 to prevent contamination of the celestial

00:52:50 --> 00:52:52 bodies. However, could we consider the

00:52:52 --> 00:52:55 opposite? Send bugs, seeds, bacteria,

00:52:55 --> 00:52:58 etc. Out into space on purpose. This

00:52:58 --> 00:53:01 will give life a small chance to

00:53:01 --> 00:53:03 evolve somewhere else and escape

00:53:03 --> 00:53:05 the potential one and only planet in our

00:53:05 --> 00:53:08 Milky Way that contains life. Kind regards,

00:53:08 --> 00:53:11 Angela from Amsterdam. She's sort of going

00:53:11 --> 00:53:14 on from what, um, Robert was talking

00:53:14 --> 00:53:17 about. Um, you know, we've got evidence of

00:53:17 --> 00:53:19 life on one planet, but she's saying, well,

00:53:19 --> 00:53:22 why don't we go seeding the other planets?

00:53:22 --> 00:53:24 Let's, you know, let's not keep our, uh,

00:53:24 --> 00:53:27 spacecraft, uh, clean. Let's

00:53:27 --> 00:53:29 just line people up. You can all hock on the

00:53:29 --> 00:53:32 spacecraft and off

00:53:32 --> 00:53:35 it goes and we see the

00:53:35 --> 00:53:37 universe. Um, look, it worked

00:53:37 --> 00:53:40 in South America. The Spanish took all their

00:53:40 --> 00:53:42 nasties over there and nearly wiped the

00:53:42 --> 00:53:43 people out. So.

00:53:44 --> 00:53:46 Professor Fred Watson: Yes, that's right, yeah.

00:53:47 --> 00:53:50 Uh, so, uh, I mean,

00:53:51 --> 00:53:53 to some extent this has already happened. Uh,

00:53:53 --> 00:53:56 because, uh, the. I think it was the

00:53:56 --> 00:53:59 Beersheba spacecraft, which was a

00:53:59 --> 00:54:02 private Israeli venture

00:54:02 --> 00:54:05 which crashed on the moon, carried

00:54:05 --> 00:54:07 fruit flies, it carried tardigrades,

00:54:08 --> 00:54:10 carried a few of other things. Um,

00:54:10 --> 00:54:13 they presumably perished in the accident.

00:54:13 --> 00:54:15 But the question I would have for

00:54:15 --> 00:54:18 Angela, I mean. Yes, okay, you fill a

00:54:18 --> 00:54:21 spacecraft full of earthly creatures. It's a

00:54:21 --> 00:54:23 bit like Noah's Ark, really. Yeah. Two by

00:54:23 --> 00:54:25 two, um, you

00:54:26 --> 00:54:29 seal it so that it's

00:54:29 --> 00:54:32 not gonna destroy

00:54:32 --> 00:54:35 another planet, uh, or

00:54:35 --> 00:54:37 seed another planet if it crashes. So you

00:54:37 --> 00:54:40 make it crash proof. But then you've got to

00:54:40 --> 00:54:42 sustain these organisms to keep them alive.

00:54:43 --> 00:54:46 And that's a, uh, tricky mission.

00:54:46 --> 00:54:48 Uh, you know, how do you. If you're talking

00:54:48 --> 00:54:51 about, um, lengths of time measured

00:54:51 --> 00:54:54 perhaps in millions or billions of

00:54:54 --> 00:54:57 years, which is how long it might take to

00:54:57 --> 00:55:00 land on another world in another solar

00:55:00 --> 00:55:02 system. Uh, how do you keep things alive

00:55:02 --> 00:55:03 for that long?

00:55:03 --> 00:55:04 Andrew Dunkley: I've got the answer.

00:55:05 --> 00:55:05 Professor Fred Watson: Have you all good?

00:55:05 --> 00:55:07 Andrew Dunkley: I've got the answer. When I was growing up,

00:55:08 --> 00:55:10 they were selling sea monkeys

00:55:11 --> 00:55:13 at toys stores. Yeah.

00:55:13 --> 00:55:14 Professor Fred Watson: Yep.

00:55:14 --> 00:55:15 Andrew Dunkley: You bought the packet?

00:55:16 --> 00:55:16 Professor Fred Watson: Yep.

00:55:16 --> 00:55:19 Andrew Dunkley: You filled, you filled a jar full of water,

00:55:19 --> 00:55:21 you tipped the packet in and then all these

00:55:21 --> 00:55:24 things came to life. Uh,

00:55:24 --> 00:55:25 sea monkeys.

00:55:25 --> 00:55:26 Professor Fred Watson: What were they?

00:55:26 --> 00:55:27 Andrew Dunkley: Dunno. Krill

00:55:29 --> 00:55:32 probably, something like that. There was a

00:55:32 --> 00:55:34 kind of little crustacean. Hang on, I'm going

00:55:34 --> 00:55:36 to look it up. I honestly can't remember what

00:55:36 --> 00:55:37 they were.

00:55:37 --> 00:55:39 Professor Fred Watson: Tardigrades are a bit like that because

00:55:39 --> 00:55:41 tardigrades can dehydrate themselves

00:55:41 --> 00:55:43 completely. That's how they. They've survived

00:55:43 --> 00:55:45 on the outside of the space station.

00:55:46 --> 00:55:48 Um, but once you.

00:55:48 --> 00:55:51 Andrew Dunkley: Brian, I was right. They're shrimp. Brine

00:55:51 --> 00:55:52 shrimp. We're seeing monkeys.

00:55:52 --> 00:55:53 Professor Fred Watson: Yep.

00:55:53 --> 00:55:55 Andrew Dunkley: Uh, they were developed in the United States

00:55:55 --> 00:55:57 in 1957, uh, by

00:55:57 --> 00:56:00 Harold von Braunhutt, uh, and

00:56:00 --> 00:56:03 sold as eggs intended to be added to water.

00:56:03 --> 00:56:06 Um, and you used to buy them and take them

00:56:06 --> 00:56:08 home, put them in the water and they'd hatch

00:56:08 --> 00:56:10 and you'd have sea monkeys. There you, ah,

00:56:10 --> 00:56:10 are.

00:56:12 --> 00:56:13 There's the solution.

00:56:14 --> 00:56:16 Professor Fred Watson: Now, how long did they last once you put them

00:56:16 --> 00:56:17 in water?

00:56:17 --> 00:56:19 Andrew Dunkley: 5 minutes? Usually they did. No.

00:56:21 --> 00:56:23 Professor Fred Watson: I don't know. I didn't last. Yeah, so it

00:56:23 --> 00:56:26 does. Okay. Yes.

00:56:26 --> 00:56:28 So it doesn't really give you much time to

00:56:28 --> 00:56:31 start a new population of species from planet

00:56:31 --> 00:56:34 Earth. Probably not if you find water on

00:56:34 --> 00:56:37 another world. Yeah, I mean, it's. And of

00:56:37 --> 00:56:38 course there's an ethical side to this as

00:56:38 --> 00:56:41 well. Uh, my answer to. Well,

00:56:41 --> 00:56:44 it's the answer to, um, why

00:56:44 --> 00:56:46 we. Why we sterilise spacecraft going to

00:56:46 --> 00:56:48 Mars. Because we don't want to. To

00:56:48 --> 00:56:51 contaminate Mars with earthly microbes. If

00:56:51 --> 00:56:53 there are microbes there of Martian origin

00:56:53 --> 00:56:56 already, you don't want to intermix them.

00:56:57 --> 00:57:00 Andrew Dunkley: See, Angela, he had to do that. He just had

00:57:00 --> 00:57:02 to do the, the ethical thing.

00:57:03 --> 00:57:05 You and I are on a different page, but. Yeah,

00:57:06 --> 00:57:08 well, coming from Angela.

00:57:08 --> 00:57:09 Professor Fred Watson: Yeah.

00:57:10 --> 00:57:13 Andrew Dunkley: But, you know, if, if the Thermi paradox,

00:57:13 --> 00:57:15 Fermi paradox is what it is, then why are

00:57:15 --> 00:57:16 we worried? Anyway?

00:57:16 --> 00:57:18 Professor Fred Watson: It doesn't matter. That's right. It just

00:57:18 --> 00:57:21 doesn't matter. Yes. Can send anything

00:57:21 --> 00:57:23 anywhere. Well, that might be the way it ends

00:57:23 --> 00:57:26 up. If we never find any existence, any

00:57:26 --> 00:57:28 evidence of life somewhere else. But I think

00:57:28 --> 00:57:31 this is a study that's still in its infancy.

00:57:31 --> 00:57:32 Astrobiology has only been around for 30

00:57:32 --> 00:57:35 years or something, so we've still got a long

00:57:35 --> 00:57:36 way to go.

00:57:36 --> 00:57:39 Andrew Dunkley: We have, yes. Um. Uh,

00:57:39 --> 00:57:42 yes, at this stage we're playing it safe.

00:57:43 --> 00:57:45 I think the day will come Angela, where

00:57:45 --> 00:57:47 we'll, we'll load up an arc spacecraft and

00:57:47 --> 00:57:50 we will send them hither and thither

00:57:52 --> 00:57:54 and try to populate another planet.

00:57:56 --> 00:57:58 Who knows? Could happen. Uh, thanks, Angela.

00:57:58 --> 00:58:00 Great question, though. Really enjoyed

00:58:00 --> 00:58:03 mincing that one up. Uh, and,

00:58:03 --> 00:58:05 uh, that brings us to the end of the show,

00:58:05 --> 00:58:06 Fred Watson. Thank you.

00:58:07 --> 00:58:09 Professor Fred Watson: Um, thank you, Andrew. Thanks for your

00:58:09 --> 00:58:11 tolerance and patience and.

00:58:11 --> 00:58:12 Andrew Dunkley: Um, I think it's the other way around,

00:58:12 --> 00:58:13 Fred Watson.

00:58:13 --> 00:58:16 Professor Fred Watson: But anyway, thanks for not dropping

00:58:16 --> 00:58:16 out on me.

00:58:17 --> 00:58:20 Andrew Dunkley: Uh, yes, we've had a golden run today.

00:58:20 --> 00:58:23 Yeah, it's been good after the massive full

00:58:23 --> 00:58:25 start, but, uh, yeah, we were all good.

00:58:25 --> 00:58:27 Thanks, Fred Watson. We'll catch you next

00:58:27 --> 00:58:27 time.

00:58:28 --> 00:58:29 Professor Fred Watson: Sounds great. Thanks, Andrew.

00:58:30 --> 00:58:31 Andrew Dunkley: Professor Fred Watson Watson, Astronomer

00:58:31 --> 00:58:34 Large, with us every week, uh, twice, uh, on

00:58:34 --> 00:58:36 Space Nuts. And thanks to Huw in the studio,

00:58:36 --> 00:58:38 who couldn't be with us today because he's

00:58:38 --> 00:58:39 just putting his Dutch nationality

00:58:40 --> 00:58:43 application in. He's sick of being a Kiwi. He

00:58:43 --> 00:58:45 wants to be Dutch because, you know, they're

00:58:45 --> 00:58:48 so cool. Well, I married one, so they must

00:58:48 --> 00:58:50 be. And from me, Andrew Dunkley, thanks for

00:58:50 --> 00:58:52 your company. Catch you on the next episode

00:58:52 --> 00:58:53 of Space Nuts.

00:58:53 --> 00:58:53 Professor Fred Watson: Bye. Bye.

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