WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.950 --> 00:00:06.959 Looking back some 13 billion years, NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope offers a glimpse of 2 00:00:06.959 --> 00:00:13.669 the early universe, revealing countless galaxies in a tiny area of sky. 3 00:00:13.669 --> 00:00:18.680 Galaxies are the visible foundation of the universe; each one a collection of stars, 4 00:00:18.680 --> 00:00:24.420 planets, gas, dust, and dark matter held together by gravity. 5 00:00:24.420 --> 00:00:30.250 Hubble’s observations give us insight into how galaxies form, grow, and evolve through 6 00:00:30.250 --> 00:00:31.420 time. 7 00:00:31.420 --> 00:00:37.530 Hubble’s namesake, astronomer Edwin Hubble, pioneered the study of galaxies based simply 8 00:00:37.530 --> 00:00:38.620 on their appearance. 9 00:00:38.620 --> 00:00:44.280 He divided galaxies into three basic forms: ellipticals, 10 00:00:44.280 --> 00:00:45.470 spirals, 11 00:00:45.470 --> 00:00:46.940 and irregulars. 12 00:00:46.940 --> 00:00:51.970 Labeled the “Tuning Fork” diagram, Edwin Hubble’s basic arrangement is still in use 13 00:00:51.970 --> 00:00:54.370 today. 14 00:00:54.370 --> 00:00:59.660 Elliptical galaxies are nearly spherical to egg-shaped groups of old stars that lack the 15 00:00:59.660 --> 00:01:02.910 gas and dust needed to form new stars. 16 00:01:02.910 --> 00:01:05.819 Rotation doesn’t play a big part in their shape. 17 00:01:05.819 --> 00:01:11.689 The movements of their stars, often in long oval orbits, determines an elliptical’s 18 00:01:11.689 --> 00:01:12.759 shape. 19 00:01:12.759 --> 00:01:18.039 Elliptical galaxies are often near the center of galaxy clusters, suggesting they may form 20 00:01:18.039 --> 00:01:21.740 when galaxies merge. 21 00:01:21.740 --> 00:01:25.049 The best known galaxies are spirals. 22 00:01:25.049 --> 00:01:30.779 The center of a spiral galaxy has a large, roughly spherical swarm of stars, called a 23 00:01:30.779 --> 00:01:31.779 “bulge.” 24 00:01:31.779 --> 00:01:36.590 This bulge looks similar to an elliptical galaxy, but spirals differ from ellipticals 25 00:01:36.590 --> 00:01:38.600 because they rotate. 26 00:01:38.600 --> 00:01:44.689 Rotation gives spiral galaxies the flat disk that holds their spiral-shaped arms. 27 00:01:44.689 --> 00:01:49.979 Unlike ellipticals, spirals have a mix of young and old stars. 28 00:01:49.979 --> 00:01:55.049 Star formation in spirals is similar to a traffic jam on the interstate. 29 00:01:55.049 --> 00:02:00.679 Like cars on the highway, slower moving matter in the spiral’s disk creates a bottleneck, 30 00:02:00.679 --> 00:02:05.529 concentrating star-forming gas and dust along the inner part of their spiral arms. 31 00:02:05.529 --> 00:02:12.170 This traffic jam of matter can get so dense that it gravitationally collapses, creating 32 00:02:12.170 --> 00:02:14.390 new stars. 33 00:02:14.390 --> 00:02:17.810 Spiral galaxies are subdivided into “Unbarred” 34 00:02:17.810 --> 00:02:22.720 and “Barred,” and organized by the size of their central bulge and how tightly their 35 00:02:22.720 --> 00:02:24.560 arms are wound. 36 00:02:24.560 --> 00:02:30.480 Bars form in spiral galaxies when star orbits become unstable and stretched out. 37 00:02:30.480 --> 00:02:32.969 As their orbits lengthen, they create a bar. 38 00:02:32.969 --> 00:02:38.569 The bar grows as gravity captures more nearby stars. 39 00:02:38.569 --> 00:02:41.980 Irregular galaxies don’t fit into one of the other categories. 40 00:02:41.980 --> 00:02:46.810 They are shapeless and have no symmetry or ordered structure. 41 00:02:46.810 --> 00:02:52.660 Irregulars may hold old and young stars and often have knots of gas and dust forming new 42 00:02:52.660 --> 00:02:54.730 stars. 43 00:02:54.730 --> 00:02:59.760 Astronomers have expanded Edwin Hubble’s basic tuning fork diagram to include galaxies 44 00:02:59.760 --> 00:03:02.960 that fall between his three categories. 45 00:03:02.960 --> 00:03:10.129 Intermediate spiral galaxies sit between unbarred and barred spirals, and have a small bar. 46 00:03:10.129 --> 00:03:14.120 Lenticular galaxies sit between elliptical galaxies and spirals. 47 00:03:14.120 --> 00:03:19.730 They have a central bulge of stars and a flattened disk, but no spiral arms. 48 00:03:19.730 --> 00:03:25.680 Like ellipticals, lenticular galaxies don’t have much gas and dust, and also have mainly 49 00:03:25.680 --> 00:03:27.370 old stars. 50 00:03:27.370 --> 00:03:33.290 When viewed “edge-on,” their shape resembles a lens, which is why they’re called “lenticular.” 51 00:03:33.290 --> 00:03:37.980 Edwin Hubble’s “tuning fork” was a first step in understanding galaxies and how they 52 00:03:37.980 --> 00:03:39.870 evolve. 53 00:03:39.870 --> 00:03:43.829 Observations by the Hubble Space Telescope will continue to improve our understanding 54 00:03:43.829 --> 00:03:47.560 of galaxies and their role in the evolution of the universe.