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NOVA 31

2003-09-30 | Documentary | 18 episodes
Overview

52 Seasons

Episode

Infinite Secrets (2003)

A battered manuscript turns up after 1000 years revealing the mind of the Greek genius Archimedes

Infinite Secrets poster

Directed By

Liz Tucker

Who Killed the Red Baron? (2003)

Forensic experts investigate the most famous aviation mystery of World War 1.

Who Killed the Red Baron? poster

Directed By

Peter Nicholson

The Elegant Universe: Einstein's Dream (1) (2003)

Part 1, "Einstein's Dream," introduces string theory and shows how modern physics—composed of two theories that are ferociously incompatible—reached its schizophrenic impasse: One theory, general relativity, successfully describes big things like stars and galaxies, while another, quantum mechanics, is equally successful at explaining small things like atoms and subatomic particles. Albert Einstein, the inventor of general relativity, dreamed of finding a single theory that would embrace all of nature's laws. But in this quest for the so-called unified theory, Einstein came up empty-handed, and the conflict between general relativity and quantum mechanics has stymied all who've followed. That is, until the discovery of string theory.

The Elegant Universe: Einstein's Dream (1) poster

Directed By

Joseph McMaster

The Elegant Universe: String's the Thing (2) (2003)

Part 2, "String's the Thing," opens with a whimsical scene in a movie theater in which the history of the universe runs backwards to the Big Bang, the moment at which general relativity and quantum mechanics both came into play, and therefore the point at which our conventional model of reality breaks down. Then it's string theory to the rescue as Greene describes the steps that led from a forgotten 200-year-old mathematical formula to the first glimmerings of strings—quivering strands of energy whose different vibrations give rise to quarks, electrons, photons, and all other elementary particles. Strings are truly tiny, being smaller than an atom by the same factor that a tree is smaller than the solar system. But, as Greene explains, they are able to combine the laws of the large and the laws of the small into a proposal for a single, harmonious theory of everything.

The Elegant Universe: String's the Thing (2) poster

Directed By

Joseph McMaster

The Elegant Universe: Welcome to the 11th Dimension (3) (2003)

Part 3 of "The Elegant Universe” with host Brian Greene shows how Edward Witten of Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study, aided by others, revolutionized string theory by successfully uniting the five different versions into a single theory that is cryptically named "M-theory," a development that requires a total of eleven dimensions. Ten...eleven...who's counting? But the new 11th dimension implies that strings can come in shapes called membranes, or "branes" for short. These have truly science fiction-like qualities, since in principle they can be as large as the universe. A brane can even be a universe—a parallel universe—and we may be living on one right now.

The Elegant Universe: Welcome to the 11th Dimension (3) poster

Directed By

Joseph McMaster

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