Feeling Small
I stopped liking amusement park rides a long time ago. Back when I was a kid, I loved getting spun around and hung upside down, but my inner ears must have changed since then. Now, those rides feel like torture.
Anyway, who needs thrill rides when you have the Cosmos? It’s kicky enough just letting your mind wander through the bizarreries of the Universe. Like a Tilt-a-Whirl for the mind.

The Omega Nebula in the constellation Sagittarius. A nebula is a giant dust and gas cloud in interstellar space. The different colors correspond to different chemical elements or temperatures. This picture shows a 3-light year wide area.
Image: NASA, ESA, J. Hester (ASU)
I think many people find things like the sheer size of the universe too unsettling…it makes them feel small and insignificant. But, I find it energizing. I like to ponder how small I really am: one person on a planet of 7 billion people, among millions of other species, in a galaxy with billions of stars, in a universe with billions of galaxies.

Also known as “The Pillars of Creation”, this is a picture from the Hubble Telescope of the Eagle Nebula in the constellation Serpens. These towers of cold gas and dust are light-years long.
Image: NASA/ESA/STScl
Last week, on Cosmic Sightseeing 3, I gave you a puzzle: to figure out what a series of images had in common. The answer was so easy it was hard! Everything I showed you was composed of matter.
Oh, duh, right?

The Cat’s Eye Nebula. This image shows a star experiencing the phase of stellar evolution similar to what our Sun will experience in a few billion years. This is a combination of an optical image from the Hubble Telescope, and an X-ray image from the Chandra X-ray Observatory.
Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO; Optical: NASA/STScl
But, as with most things, if you look closer—matter gets more interesting. Consider that you and I and the moon and all the stars are made of the same basic ingredients—the same 12 particles of matter—just combined in different ways. Take 12 miniscule particles, mix them up in various ways with the 4 Forces of Nature, add the elusive and mysterious Higgs Boson, and voilá…you’ve got everything from a fruit fly to the planet Jupiter.
And most of matter is—by far—empty space. If you could look close enough, with a microscope more powerful than anything we can dream of, you would see tiny particles surrounded by vast oceans of empty space.
And, the particles themselves—the very ones inside you and me right now—were almost certainly once part of something else very different…a tree, a dinosaur, a rock, or the inside of a distant star.
Stars are the furnaces where most matter is forged, after all.
I’ll never forget my favorite quote by Carl Sagan: “We are all made of star-stuff.”

The Hourglass Nebula, with its central star in its last throes as it becomes a white dwarf. This is a picture from the Hubble Space Telescope.
Image Credit: NASA, WFPC2, HST, R. Sahai and J. Trauger (JPL)
And, another thing about matter: it’s everything and practically nothing at the same time. Only about 5% of the mass of galaxies is actually composed of matter. The rest is either Dark Matter, or Dark Energy: stuff that is a complete unknown. We know it’s there, but we have no idea what it is.
95% of the Universe is made of stuff that is “not us”.
Feel like crawling back into bed and hiding under the covers? Not me. I’m going to keep sightseeing as long as I can.

The Boomerang Nebula, about 5,000 light years from Earth in the constellation Centaurus. This incredibly cold nebula has two symmetrical cones of matter that are being ejected from the central star. Another great image from the Hubble.
Image credit: NASA, ESA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
FOR MORE DIZZYING FUN:
A wonderful and amusing explanation of matter and the Higgs Boson
The BBC’s very awesome “Wonders of the Universe”
Next week…we’ll take a break from the Cosmos and dive into the Pacific Ocean. I’ll be pondering ancient sea creatures and I’ll also feature some wonderful student artwork by Miranda Andersen, guest artist to next week’s blog!
And, I’m giving you another few days to solve the TIME AND LIFE AND THE UNIVERSE puzzle from Cosmic Sightseeing 4.
Here’s a review. Just to be nice, I’ll make it easier this time:
Life in the Universe is possible for only a short period of time, relative to the total duration of the Universe itself. The numbers are astronomical, so I want to get a visualization of them by drawing a timeline.
But, I want the timeline to be to-scale. Timelines are just bogus if they’re not to-scale
I’ll show the entire duration of the universe (from the Big Bang at zero, to the time in the distant future when the Universe dissipates into nothingness) as a red bar, and the time period during which the universe is hospitable to life as a blue bar. I’m setting the size of the blue bar to be 1 centimeter. How wide does my paper need to be to fit the entire red bar?
Blue is one-thousandth of a billion billion billionth, billion billion billionth, billion billion billionth, of one percent of red.
So, how wide does my paper need to be?
Select the closest width:
a. 10 meters
b. 10 kilometers
c. 10,000 kilometers
d. 1 million kilometers
e. Fuggeddaboudit…the paper would not fit into the observable Universe (10 to the 27th power meters – give or take)
It’s a Tilt-a-Whirl for the mind.
I believe the paper would need to be wider than the gulf between Mitt Romney and the government-teat-sucking slackers that comprise 47% of America.
Oh, Jim…it’s not really such a wide gulf! I just heard the other day that the so-called “one percenters” at that fundraising dinner were in fact eating $50,000 plates of cheesy grits! So you see, we’re all connected after all.
Denise –
I still believe that “42” was the correct answer. Such a daisy chain of computers working for years could not be wrong. But who knows: when those same computers decipher ’42’, that answer might possibly be ‘matter’.
Very interesting postings ! Beautiful art work.
Noel
Thanks, Noel! And, who knows? Maybe as the Universe dwindles down, it’ll spell out “42” in the last dying embers!