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The Life Scientific

Andy Fabian on black holes

The Life Scientific

BBC

Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Science

4.61.4K Ratings

🗓️ 11 August 2020

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Professor Andrew Fabian from Cambridge's Institute of Astronomy has spent his career trying to unravel the mystery of how some of the most dramatic events in the universe can profoundly influence its evolution. For over 50 years he’s been examining our universe using X-ray satellites orbiting way above earth’s atmosphere . He’s built up compelling evidence that supermassive black holes at the heart of galaxies are the engines that drive the movement of energy through the universe and provide the building blocks for the formation of new galaxies. They're extraordianry insights, for which he’s now been awarded the 2020 Kavli Prize in Astrophysics, one of the world's most prestigious science prizes.

Jim Al-Khalili hears how Andy gets to capture epic galactic events in motion to build up a picture of this vast ecosystem - and also how he earned a place in the Guinness Book of Records for discovering the deepest note in the universe – a B flat , 57 octaves below middle C.

Producer Adrian Washbourne

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're about to listen to a BBC podcast and trust me you'll get there in a moment but if you're a comedy fan

0:05.2

I'd really like to tell you a bit about what we do. I'm Julie Mackenzie and I commission comedy

0:10.2

podcast at the BBC. It's a bit of a dream job really.

0:13.0

Comedy is a fantastic joyous thing to do because really you're making people laugh,

0:18.0

making people's days a bit better, helping them process, all manner of things.

0:22.0

But you know I also know that comedy is really

0:24.4

subjective and everyone has different tastes so we've got a huge range of comedy on offer

0:29.6

from satire to silly shocking to soothing profound to just general pratting about. So if you

0:36.2

fancy a laugh, find your next comedy at BBC Sounds.

0:40.3

Hello and welcome to the podcast of the Life Scientific. I'm Jim a I'm on a mission to interview as many of our leading scientists as I can to find out what they're up to and what makes them tick.

0:52.0

Hello, today we're in for an exciting journey into deep, deep space.

0:58.0

My guest is Cambridge astronomer Andrew Fabian, who spent his career studying some of the most dramatic and violent events

1:05.1

in the universe, taking place hundreds of millions of light years from Earth.

1:09.8

And is one of the most prolific and influential astronomers of our time. In particular he scrutinized the x-ray

1:15.7

light emitted from the centres of very bright galaxies, revealing the intriguing supermassive

1:21.4

black holes hiding within, and which play a vital role in the way

1:25.1

galaxies evolve over cosmic timescales. These black holes are, he says, the engines at the heart of

1:31.5

galaxies, redistributing energy throughout the universe and providing

1:35.8

the building blocks for future galaxy formation.

1:39.0

And he became hooked on astronomy at the age of seven, when he read in a children's encyclopedia that astronomers

1:44.6

could work out what a star is made of by studying the light it gives off. That

1:50.0

seemed wonderful he says. By the age of 15 he built his own telescope.

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