Skip to main content
Back to Show
PBS Space Time

What If Space is Not Empty?

Season 9 Episode 23

Spacetime on its smallest scales is a seething ocean of black holes and wormholes flickering into and out of existence—or so many physicists think has to be the case. But why should we take this spacetime foam seriously if we’ve never seen any evidence of it?

Sign up now for inspiring and thought-provoking media delivered straight to your inbox.
Support Provided By
Season
Does Axionic Dark Matter Bind Galaxies Together?
14:39
Dark matter may be a quantum mechanical wave that literally holds galaxies together.
Did AI Prove Our Proton Model Wrong?
16:24
Has AI proven that the proton is made of 5 quarks rather than 3 quarks?
What Supernova Distance Would Trigger Mass Extinction?
15:16
How close is too close for supernova explosions?
Could We Move Planet Earth Across the Universe?
12:14
Could we turn our solar system into a spaceship and drive the Sun around the galaxy?
Is 'Perpetual Motion' Possible with Superfluids?
16:00
If we want to see quantum weirdness with our eyes, we’ll need Bose-Einstein Condensates.
Could LIGO Find Massive Alien Spaceships?
16:42
Could LIGO find alien spacecraft accelerating to near light speed?
Fermions Vs. Bosons Explained with Statistical Mechanics!
15:51
How can we tell the difference between fermions & bosons? Statistical Mechanics!
New Discovery About Supermassive Black Holes Explained!
13:25
Why has a newly discovered a black hole started pointing directly at us?
How Far Beyond Earth Could Humanity Spread?
15:57
There’s a hard limit to humanity’s expansion in the universe. So, how big can we get?
How Much Of The Universe Can Humanity Ever See?
16:49
Let’s figure out the absolute limit of our future view of the universe!
What If Black Holes Are Dark Energy?
16:34
Let see if Black Holes and Dark Energy are the same thing!
What’s Your Brain’s Role in Creating Space & Time?
16:28
Physics is the business of figuring out the structure of the world. So are our brains.
Active loading indicator