Get Sleepy: Sleep meditation and stories - The Sleepy History of the Universe
Episode Date: May 24, 2023Narrator: Thomas Jones 🇬🇧 Writer: Laila Weir ✍️ Sound design: cosmic space sounds 🛰️ Includes mentions of: Outer Space, Science & Nature, History. Welcome back, sleepyheads. Tonight'...s episode takes us through perhaps the greatest historical journey that there is - the story of our universe - from it's fascinating, ever-speculated origins, to the miraculous evolution of life as we know it. 😴 Watch, listen and comment on this episode on the Get Sleepy YouTube channel. And hit subscribe while you're there! Enjoy various playlists of our stories and meditations on our Slumber Studios Spotify profile. Support our Sponsors Check out the great products and deals from Get Sleepy sponsors: getsleepy.com/sponsors/ Support Us - Get Sleepy’s Premium Feed: https://getsleepy.com/support/. - Get Sleepy Merchandise: https://getsleepy.com/store. - Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/get-sleepy/id1487513861. Connect Stay up to date on all podcast news and even vote on upcoming episodes! - Website: https://getsleepy.com/. - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/getsleepypod/. - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/getsleepypod/. - Twitter: https://twitter.com/getsleepypod. Get Sleepy FAQs Have a query for us or need help with something? You might find your answer here: Get Sleepy FAQs About Get Sleepy Get Sleepy is the #1 story-telling podcast designed to help you get a great night’s rest. By combining sleep meditation with a relaxing bedtime story, each episode will guide you gently towards sleep. Get Sleepy Premium Get instant access to ad-free episodes, as well as the Thursday night bonus episode by subscribing to our premium feed. It's easy! Sign up in two taps! Get Sleepy Premium feed includes: Monday and Wednesday night episodes (with zero ads). The exclusive Thursday night bonus episode. Access to the entire back catalog (also ad-free). Exclusive sleep meditation episodes. Discounts on merchadise. We’ll love you forever. Get your 7-day free trial: https://getsleepy.com/support. Thank you so much for listening! Feedback? Let us know your thoughts! https://getsleepy.com/contact-us/. That’s all for now. Sweet dreams ❤️ 😴 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello, and welcome to Get Sleepy. When we listen, we relax and we get sleepy.
I'm your host Tom. Thank you for listening tonight. Shortly, I'll be telling you the story of, well, everything. This is the history of
our universe, how it began, and how everything around us came to be. Our story was beautifully
written by Leila, and it draws on current scientific thinking translated into lay persons terms
and sleepy language.
We've allowed ourselves some poetic license, but we've stayed as close as possible to predominant
scientific thought, and hope we haven't lost much in translation.
That said, we should bear in mind that nothing in science is ever set in stone.
Every theory and scientific tenet is fair game for revision-based new information or innovative
explanations. As an example, the web space telescope launched into orbit in 2021 has sent back new observations
with implications for the timeline of the universe.
There are many open questions about the history of our universe, and no doubt there will
continue to be for many years to come. But I really hope
you enjoy this interpretation tonight.
If you're enjoying the show and would like to hear even more episodes, the best place
to listen is on our supporters' feed, Get Sleepy Premium. Everything is completely add free. You get access to our entire catalog of over 500 full-length episodes, and you'll receive a brand-new bonus episode every single week. When we have a beautiful story about a lady named Charlotte who enjoys a simple day
tending to her cottage garden.
So be sure to join us on Get Sleepy Premium tomorrow night.
You get a 7 day free trial when you first sign up.
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information you need.
Thanks everyone.
Okay my friends, we're about to go on perhaps the greatest historical journey that there
is. But for now, let's just ground ourselves in the present moment, appreciating the comfort of your bed, the
support of the pillow under your head, and the stillness of the space around you. Allow your breathing to gently slow and deepen.
And if there is any lingering tension in some areas of your body, bring your focus there
for the next few breaths.
And use the healing properties of the breath to soften and pacify that tension. Breathe in, calm and peace.
Then release tension with the exhale. While you listen along tonight, remember that you can fall asleep anytime you like.
It's okay if you're still feeling wide awake for now.
Allow yourself as much time as you need to unwind.
Reassuring yourself that sleep will come without any force.
And now that you're a little more relaxed and settled, let's travel back to the likely origins of the universe. In the beginning, perhaps we were all one, or rather it was all one.
Since there were no humans, or other creatures, or even matter as we know it.
Space time itself was uniform and infinite then. There was no separate time or space or dimensions or matter or
forces like gravity. And then time began. And with the start of time came the beginning of change, separation, differentiation.
At first, there was just an unimaginably hot, dense, bound together by some kind of super force.
Today scientists recognize four fundamental forces in nature, which include gravity and the electromagnetic force that causes magnets to stick to a
refrigerator. But as I've said in the beginning there were no separate forces.
Instead the fundamental forces we experienced today would have been all unified into a single superforce.
Then came the Big Bang, when the universe was less than a second old, much less. In fact, it was perhaps a hundredth of a billionth of a trillionth of a trillionth
of a second-old, and maybe ten billion degrees Fahrenheit. That's when the universe exploded in size, doubling and doubling over and over again,
all in less than the blink of an eye.
We tend to think of the big bang as an explosion, but it's probably better described as an expansion.
Scientists talk about this super rapid expansion as inflation, and that's a very telling term.
Because the big bang and its aftermath can be envisioned more like the inflating of
a balloon than like an explosion outward from a single point.
In this analogy, the universe is the surface of the balloon.
There is nothing else, no air in the middle or outside.
The surface of the balloon is the sum total of existence.
In other words, the inflating universe didn't inflate into anything.
There was nothing outside of the universe, and it didn't inflate around anything.
So now, in your mind's eye, just picture what the surface of a balloon goes through when
it inflates. Like the surface of a balloon stretching, that tiny, newborn universe swelled and stretched
everywhere at once, rather than growing outward from some central point. To think about this, imagine you're an ant on the surface of a balloon.
As the balloon inflates, the whole thing stretches.
Any two points become farther and farther away from one another.
There's no middle on the surface of the balloon.
Everywhere stretches away from everywhere else
at the same time, with no starting or ending point.
with no starting or ending point.
Of course, there were no ants or humans to experience that early inflation of the cosmos.
There was no one and nothing. Or, there was everything all combined as one, depending on how you look at it.
But at any rate, there were no creatures like us to observe it all. So we have to deduce what happened in those early times. We can do that using the remaining evidence and the best scientific theories humans have put together, drawing on the combined efforts of scientific minds
from Albert Einstein to so many others.
But back to that change, separation, and differentiation. In that first instant, that first fraction of a second of the universe,
the super force began to break apart. Gravity disconnected and broke free, becoming its own separate force.
And the universe ballooned out so rapidly that we can hardly even conceive of how fast it was,
because the time period was so short.
And still, only the tiniest fraction of a second passed, before that incredible inflation
slowed down a little bit.
Like an explosion whose force diminishes over time.
The universe continued to expand mind you, just at a slightly more sedate pace.
And as it expanded, it also called just a little. As it called, matter formed, tangible stuff,
at least in its tiniest, most microscopic form. But here's the most incredible thing. Matter formed, but not just matter.
Matter and anti-matter is, it's just what it sounds like.
Matter and anti-matter are two partners equal and opposite as it were. When particles of matter and antimatter encounter one another, they annihilate each other, meaning
they destroy each other in a burst of energy. Or perhaps we might see it another way, as the matter and antimatter combining to form pure
energy.
It's also considered possible that more subatomic particles could have formed, like quarks and neutrinos, becoming the building blocks for more matter and
anti-matter.
But back to pure energy.
As an analogy, imagine a rainbow. A rainbow is formed when sunlight separates out into the different
parts of the spectrum. If light passes through a prism, for example, it's scattered into bands of colour, rainbows.
Those colours of the rainbow are the different parts of the spectrum of light.
When the colours combine, say if we remove the prism, the rainbow goes away, and we're left with regular sunlight again.
We could say, in a sense, that when the colours join, they annihilate each other.
They disappear into pure white light, leaving an absence of colour.
So it is with matter and anti-matter.
When they meet, they disappear into a burst of energy, like light or heat. Therefore, in that earliest fraction of a second after
the Big Bang, matter and anti-matter appeared annihilated one another and disappeared. But, incredibly, it seems that the matter and
anti-matter somehow became out of balance. For some reason, the matter slightly outweighed the anti. Just slightly, perhaps one particle of matter survived for every
billion that met their anti-matter particle and was annihilated. This was an astonishing and wonderful occurrence. Because the universe as we know it was born from this imbalance.
After the matter and antimatter annihilated each other, that little bit of excess matter was left over, with no more antimatter to make
it disappear. This leftover matter is the basis of all the stuff in the universe. That stuff has changed and evolved exponentially since that time.
It has reformed in ever more complex patterns, becoming stars and planets and seas and people and everything else there is.
But let's get back to that first instant after the birth of the universe.
Back to the first appearance of matter.
After most of the matter and antimatter was annihilated, the leftover matter was concentrated
in little pockets, scattered around the expanding cosmos.
Those pockets of early matter were nothing most of us would recognise today of course.
There was no air or water or gas or dust, much less planets or seas or people. There were not even molecules or atoms.
There were just infinitesimally tiny particles of matter that scientists call quarks. These unbelievably minuscule particles now make up
the protons, electrons and neutrons that form atoms. But at the time, it was still too hot and too dense for these tiny quarks to come together
to form more complex matter.
Instead, they'd collide and destroy one another, once again creating radiation.
As that so young universe kept expanding and calling though,
it soon became cool enough for the quarks to actually stick together,
vibrating in complementary and resonant ways.
And so, they could form into the parts of atoms that we're a little more used to hearing
about.
They combined into protons, electrons and neutrons. Still incredibly tiny, but a little
more complex, just a step closer to the world we know. Now, everything we've talked about so far happened within the first seconds of the universe's
existence.
And as more seconds passed, the cosmos kept expanding and cooling, and more early particles of matter coalesced.
Until finally, possibly around three minutes into the life of the universe, though this timeline has been hotly debated, the Cosmos had called to perhaps a bit less than
2 billion degrees Fahrenheit. And at that point, the coalescing protons and neutrons
could start joining to form the next level of complexity in the development of matter as we know it.
The nucleus of an atom.
So these particles came together to create the nuclei of the very first elements, hydrogen and helium.
At that point, it was a foggy universe, for it was still so hot that these beginning atoms constantly smashed together and broke apart into a haze of particles.
This foggy universe has been described as an opaque but very bright environment.
A bit like driving through a pea soup fog, where your headlights are reflected back to you from all around.
Tremendously bright, but you can see nothing.
And still, the universe was expanding and cooling and aging.
And now time began to pass in earnest.
It sat this point in the story that we can stop speaking in terms of seconds and minutes, and begin to think in terms of years.
Many, many years.
In fact, hundreds of thousands of years passed before the fog thinned and the universe became transparent.
When the universe cooled, to maybe somewhere around a toasty 2000 degrees Fahrenheit, conditions
were favourable enough for electrons to bind to those first nuclei.
And so, they formed the first atoms.
These initial atoms were hydrogen and helium.
and helium. Gases that, to this day, remain the most common elements in the universe. Other elements, like those necessary for life, still hadn't formed, however. And they However, and they wouldn't form for millions of years to come.
But the haze of particles became bound into atoms of hydrogen and helium and the fog thinned, and light at last could shine.
You see, in of the universe,
light and matter finally became decoupled.
In other words, they separated. Our telescopes today can still pick up that earliest light drifting to us across
the vast distances of space. Over time, that first light has cooled into microwave radiation.
Scientists call it the Cosmic Background Radiation.
This radiation gives us important clues about the early universe and its powerful evidence to support the theory of the big bang.
When our instruments detect this ancient light, it essentially allows us to see back in time
to see back in time to the early universe. But we can see no farther back than the time of the first light.
Before that time, after all, there was no separate light to linger on for us to see.
Still, even after that dawning of first light, in that newly transparent universe, it remained
very dark, devoid of stars and suns. For this reason, the next period in the history of the
cosmos can be referred to as the Dark Ages before the dawn of stars. It would have appeared to humanize, like the calm of an endless night, stretching on
and on, silent and unwavering, the same in every direction. There were no burning lights in space as there are today.
Just microscopic particles drifting and colliding here and there.
So tiny, we humans couldn't even have seen them if any had been around.
Nevertheless time went on and that mostly dark universe continued to grow and to cool
and change.
Eres and ages passed and accumulated.
At this point in our story, time stretches to periods that are hard to imagine because of their length.
In contrast to the start of the universe, when things happen so fast, it's hard to comprehend
just how quickly. So, the dark ages stretched on and on, and the universe stretched and expanded.
A hundred million years passed, and then another hundred million. And still, in the scale of all time, the universe was very, very young.
Then by the time it was, say, a few hundred million years old, that young universe held drifting clouds of gas.
And these clouds of gas began to feel their own weight.
Their gravity poured to the clouds tighter and tighter together,
until they started to collapse in on themselves.
At last, these collapsing balls of gas became furnaces, dense and hot enough to cause nuclear reactions as hydrogen atoms fused together in their centers.
These were the first stars burning bright in the dark vastness of early space.
These first stars would have been very, very bright and very, very massive, and they would
have endured but a short time before exploding. The first stars must have burned indescribably bright, illuminating the endless
night with their fire, until they essentially burned themselves out. The nuclear fusion reactions in the Star's centers converted hydrogen into helium until
their hydrogen was all gone.
Then their centers contracted and became unstable. Then they grew hotter and hotter, and the atoms inside them fused
into more and more elements. Finally bringing into existence other kinds of matter besides hydrogen and helium for the first time.
Elements like carbon could form, the basis of all life as we know it, and also oxygen,
nitrogen, and finally iron.
When a star reached that point, nuclear fusion stopped inside it.
And within less than a second, it would begin to collapse in on itself again, buckling under the weight of its own gravity.
But as the iron atoms in its core were crushed together, their nuclei would repel each other with such force, such nuclear force, that it overcame gravity.
And then the star would explode outwards in what we call a supernova explosion,
supernova explosion, an enormous shockwave that would propel the elements forged in the stars out into space.
And so, when the stars exploded, those other types of matter spread across the universe.
Slowly but surely, making possible the world we know today.
Then, from the scattered dust of those first stars, more and more complex elements formed.
And as the age of the universe began to be measured in billions of years, that star dust and coalesced, and ever more galaxies and stars were born.
The swirling dust and gas formed into more and more new stars, grouped together into
galaxies. And as more and more galaxies formed, these grouped together into
clusters of galaxies, populating the dark universe with matter and light. Eventually the cluster of galaxies formed that astronomers now call the local group.
Local because it's in our region of space. Within it was born a collection of stars that we call the Milky Way, our galaxy.
Then some 9 billion years after the Big Bang, yet another cloud of gas and dust began to come together and coalesce.
Perhaps triggered by the force of an exploding supernova nearby.
It was one of countless such clouds of dust and gas to come together in this way.
But this one, from our point of view at least, was special.
Because the centre of this collapsing cloud became our sun. And around that center, the outer bits of the
clouds matter clumped together into larger and larger balls spinning through space around the newborn sun. Over time, these collided and joined into bigger
and bigger spheres. And thus, roughly 4.5 billion years ago, the planets of our solar system were born.
And then, at last, life began on one water-rich planet in the inner part of the solar system, only about a hundred million miles from the sun.
The first and only life we know of in the universe. And that life evolved and evolved into more and more complex forms of life.
At first there were microbes, tiny microscopic living things, so small as to be invisible to our eyes.
Over time, more microbes emerged that produced oxygen.
These set the stage for animal life as we know it, slowly producing an oxygen-rich atmosphere,
like that which we breathe every day.
Then eventually simple animals developed at the bottom of the earth's wide oceans, such
as sea sponges, perhaps 800 million years ago.
A short time later, cosmically speaking, just a few hundred million years or so, more and more types of animals
evolved, filling the planet's seas with living things. and those sea animals proliferated and devolved, growing ever more complex and diverse
and differentiated.
And at last some of them crawled from the sea and set up life on land.
And still, those animals evolved and grew,
changing and developing ever more branches of the tree of life. Evermore complex life forms spread into nearly every environment on the globe.
Until one of those life forms gazed at the heavens and wandered. And finally created telescopes and scientific instruments with which to
view distant stars and ancient light. That life form, we humans began to reveal some of what came before.
To unravel some of the mysteries of the universe, all the way back to first light and even before. All the way back to the beginning when all was one.
But with each mystery unraveled we seem to find an even greater mystery lurking beyond. And the secrets of our
cosmos continue to stretch the limits of human comprehension. So that in the end, the more we think we know, the greater the mysteries of existence.
Still, human minds press onward, seeking knowledge and understanding, striving to know the unknowable,
and understand the incomprehensible, to bring light to ideas that drift among us,
like the drifting star dust of space.
the drifting stardust of space. And these ideas, born of myriad minds, join together into even larger and more complex
explanations and understandings. These shared ideas coalesce to form something around us, including our minds themselves.
And so perhaps the circle of existence is more like a spiral building up and up.
Circling, yes, but also reaching ever upwards in a beautiful progression, like a magnificent symphony of the universe. ... ... ... ... ... I'm going to go to the next room. I'm going to go to the next room. I'm going to go to the next room.
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I'm going to go to the next room. I'm going to go to the next room. ... ... ... ...
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