Daniel and Kelly’s Extraordinary Universe - What did the early Universe sound like?
Episode Date: November 9, 2023Daniel and Jorge take you back to the early Universe and the sound bubbles that seeded everything.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an IHeart podcast.
Every case that is a cold case that has DNA.
Right now in a backlog will be identified in our lifetime.
On the new podcast, America's Crime Lab, every case has a story to tell.
And the DNA holds the truth.
He never thought he was going to get caught.
And I just looked at my computer screen.
I was just like, ah, gotcha.
This technology is already solving so many cases.
Listen to America's Crime Lab on the
IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Tune in to All the Smoke Podcast, where Matt and Stacks sit down with former first lady, Michelle Obama.
Folks find it hard to hate up close.
And when you get to know people and you're sitting in their kitchen tables and they're talking like we're talking.
You know, you hear our story, how we grew up, how I grew up.
And you get a chance for people to unpack and get beyond race.
All the Smoke featuring Michelle Obama.
To hear this podcast and more, open your free IHeart Radio app, search all the smoke and listen now.
The U.S. Open is here and on my podcast, Good Game with Sarah Spain.
I'm breaking down the players, the predictions, the pressure, and of course, the honey deuses, the signature cocktail of the U.S. Open.
The U.S. Open has gotten to be a very wonderfully experiential sporting event.
To hear this and more, listen to Good Game with Sarah Spain, an IHeart women's sports production in partnership with Deep Blue Sports and entertainment on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast.
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Brought to you by Novartis, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports Network.
Why are TSA rules so confusing?
You got a hood of you. I'll take it all!
I'm Manny. I'm Noah.
This is Devin.
And we're best friends and journalists with a new podcast called No Such Thing,
where we get to the bottom of questions like that.
Why are you screaming?
I can't expect what to do.
Now, if the rule was the same, go off on me.
I deserve it.
You know, lock him up.
Listen to No Such Thing on the I Heart Radio.
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
No such thing.
Hey, Jorge, are you a fan of Boba Tea?
You mean like Bubble Tea?
Yeah, is that what the kids are calling it?
I think they call it Boba, but I think maybe most people might not know what that is.
But yeah, I'm a fan.
My kids are really into it, so I've grown to like it.
Well, my daughter loves it, but,
Personally, I can't get over the fear of being choked by a floating blob every time I take a sip.
Oh, well, first of all, they don't float, which tells me maybe you don't drink boa very often.
Busted.
The other thing is they're not that big.
I think they're pretty much smaller than your throat.
I think maybe these new trends are just not for the faint of heart.
So do you not like bubbles in general?
No, I'm pro-bubbles in the universe, just not in my tea, not as a choking hazard.
I see.
What about economic bubbles?
Those are bad news.
I'm hoping to ride the podcast bubble until it pops.
Yeah, there you go.
Not all bubbles are bad.
Hi, I'm Horam and Cartoonist and the author of Aller's Great Big Universe.
Hi, I'm Daniel.
I'm a particle physicist and a professor at U.S.
Irvine, and I'm actually fascinated by the mathematics of bubbles.
Oh, yeah?
Isn't it just a sphere?
Some bubbles are spheres, but you can also get bubbles of all sorts of different shapes,
which solve really complicated sets of mathematical equations to, like, minimize surface area.
Now, is that math or is that physics?
It's using physics to solve math.
It's like using the universe as a computer.
Whoa.
Bubble computers, man.
That sounds like an awesome topic for a podcast episode,
but I'm guessing that's not what we're talking about today.
we are not talking about my new bubble computer startup which will be serving bubble tea in the lobby but we are talking about bubbles you're going to ride that tech bubble but anyways welcome to our podcast daniel and horhe explained the universe a production of iHeard radio in which we want you to ride the bubble of understanding as human thought expands further and further into the universe we understand more and more about this incredible and crazy cosmos we decode the messages that come to us from all these distant places and
trying to piece them together into a fragile bubble of understanding.
Because it is an awesome universe inflating every day with more and more awesomeness.
We like to inflate your brain here on the podcast until it pops with an epiphany about how the universe works.
I don't want anybody's brain to pop, man.
We want to very gently inflate it.
I said with an epiphany.
Ooh, that sounds terrifying.
But you're right.
We do want listeners to have that moment of understanding where suddenly things click into place and you go,
Oh, I get it.
This thing I used to hear, and that bit I thought I understood,
those actually fit together into a holistic idea about how the universe works.
And that in the end is the goal of this podcast.
Yeah, we like to tackle the big mysteries about the universe from its large scale
and what kinds of amazing things you can find out there in the reaches of space,
but also in the smallest of scales down at the atomic and particle sizes
from the beginning of the universe to the end of the universe.
Exactly.
And those little bubbles at the particle level in the early universe
turn out to have a ripple effects that create bubbles in our universe
billions of years later and millions of light years across.
It turns out that bubbles are not just the core idea
between my future billion-dollar bubble computing startup
or the drinks that my daughter enjoys.
They are also fundamental to understanding the early universe
and the structure of the universe today.
But you mean you can tie the big band to boba?
The big bang was basically just a boba bubble.
Big boba bubble bang.
Boom.
Yes, Daniel said. A lot of things that happen at the beginning of the universe, even small microscopic things that were going on, have a huge impact in what the universe looks like today. And maybe even might have tip things in our favor for us to be created and for our galaxy to be the way it is now.
One of my favorite things in physics is figuring out a way to sift through the clues that are left to us about what happened in deep time, what happened in the very early universe. If we can figure out the signs and signals by those early events left for us, we can actually.
reconstruct a complete history of what happened in the universe.
It's like the biggest detective game ever.
I don't think they can even trace how Boba was invented.
So that would be an amazing feat if we can, you know, trace our origin back to the Big Bang.
Are you saying it just organically bubbled up from nothing?
I don't know.
That's the mystery.
Maybe it was aliens.
Maybe it was aliens.
I knew that NASA had secret alien technology.
I just didn't realize it was Boba technology.
Well, not NASA.
That's this from Earth.
I'm saying the conspiracy runs deeper.
Oh, my gosh.
Wow, intergalactic boba bubble conspiracy.
Yeah, there you go.
That's what the world needs.
More conspiracy theories.
But we are here on this podcast,
breaking down conspiratorial nonsense
and telling you the truth about what we do
and do not know,
how we trace back to the history of the early universe
and how it affects our lives today.
So today on the podcast,
we'll be tackling the question.
What did the early universe,
sound like interesting questions about the sound of the early universe.
Yeah.
Did it sound like somebody choking on boba?
Hopefully.
Maybe that is the origin of the universe.
Maybe they're all here because some intergalactic god choked in a giant boba.
Exactly.
He took his daughter out for intergalactic boba and the rest is history.
Yeah.
Maybe black holes are like the boba of, you know, the higher beings.
black hole boba i will definitely sell that in the cafe of my bubble computing startup yeah they are pretty
dense right in a boba drink they're like that's his thing in the drink they're terrifying oh my gosh
oh you're really afraid of boba when i take a sip of a drink i want to enjoy the fresh liquid
and not worry that something is going to shoot down my throat yeah i think we've established the boas is
not for you but i am a big fan of bubbles including sound bubbles in the early universe
People don't usually think about what the universe sounds like
because they think about space is being mostly empty
and so diffuse that sound waves can't effectively travel through it.
But that wasn't always the case.
Yeah, so this is an interesting question.
And it sounds like the early universe sounds are related to bubbles.
Like bubbles popping or bubbles forming?
Bubbles forming and sloshing around and even oscillating.
In physics, this whole field goes by the fancy name of
Barion Acoustic Oscillation, B-A-O, or
bow oh well we should be talking about bows then
not boba
bubble bow those you can't probably
choke on if you try to eat a whole one at once
don't put those in your drinks folks
yeah that that well that's an interesting idea
danu you might have just invented the newest trend
is that going to start a whole new universe maybe yeah
somebody will struggle to swelling one
and originate a whole new universe of lawsuits
I'm guessing but anyways it's an interesting
question. What did the early universe sound like? And it sounds like it's related to something
called the barion acoustic oscillation. And so as usual, we were wondering how many people
had heard of this concept? Do they know what it is? Do they want to know what it is?
How could they live so long without hearing about it? So thanks very much to everybody who
answers these questions for the podcast. If you'd like to join the crew, please don't be shy.
Write to me to questions at danielanhorpe.com or contact us on Twitter or join our discord. We'd be
happy to send you these questions.
So think about it for a second.
Do you know what Barion Acoustic Oscillations are?
Here's what people have to say.
I have no idea, but it reminds me of something in a video game I used to play.
Oscillation is kind of like a ring of something, I guess.
Because in my video game, there's like a big, like, circling ringy boss called the
Oscillator.
Acoustic is kind of like antiqueish, I think.
I'm sorry. I'll pass. Never heard about it.
I believe this is pressure waves in the cosmic background radiation that is caused, we can see the slight changes in temperature caused by pressure waves.
And because the pressure waves cannot propagate at greater than the speed of light, the size of the acoustic variations gives,
an excellent estimate of the distance to the cosmic background radiation source, and therefore
that in conjunction with the redshift that we observe gives us a very good indication of the Hubble
constant at that one point in time approximately 400,000 years after the Big Bang.
Based purely on the name, I would guess that Berion acoustic oscillation has something to do with
either using sound to cause barons to bump each other or using sound-like properties to study how they behave.
I have it in my head that barion acoustic oscillations has something to do with the beginning of the universe
and how the original quantum fluctuations prior to inflation taking place could be seen as being like waves
through the kind of plasmary stuff at the beginning.
And then when that gets blown out by inflation, you can still detect and see those
acoustic oscillations today.
So Berion is some atomic particle
and probably it has
an acoustic oscillation to it
like having a pattern
repeating over a period of time or something like that.
All right, a lot of interesting answers here.
I like the person who said, I'm sorry, I'll pass.
What do you say to that?
Okay, next.
Or do you try to convince them?
that they want to know what barian acoustic oscillations are.
I don't want to pressure anybody.
I'm just impressed that they decided to record their passing and send it in rather than just
not responding.
Oh, they actually like took the time to record this.
Exactly.
They sat down to record their answers and sent it in even though they were passing.
I love that.
I see.
Do you think what do you think happened?
Do you think they heard the question?
They're like, I don't want to say anything about barian acoustic oscillation.
Yeah.
Well, the rules are no Googling, no looking at the questions ahead of time.
I want people's real spontaneous ideas about.
what these topics are because we want to get a sense for what people out there know before they
look things up and so this person was just reading through the questions in real time and recording
themselves and maybe their brain just had a bubble which popped and they decided i got nothing
okay i see it's more like i got nothing not so much a no thanks next question please well a lot
people seem to sort of intuit or know that it's somehow related to the beginning of the universe
and also i guess to something uh related to waves right and sound and oscillation
nobody gets bowels or boba nobody made the boba connection that's just me all right well let's jump
into it daniel what are barion acoustic oscillations yeah barion acoustic oscillations are really fascinating
sort of like fossilized sound waves from the very very early universe you know like if somebody's
playing an acoustic guitar or like an acoustic recording it refers to the quality and the fabrication of
the sound waves that you're hearing so acoustic there tells you that you're hearing sound waves and the word
Beryon tells you what you're hearing those sound waves in, that you're hearing it as baryons bump against each other.
But I guess maybe not to confuse folks.
In this case, acoustic doesn't mean necessarily sounds you hear through the air.
They can also mean like sound waves you hear in the ocean or maybe through even a solid, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Sound waves can travel through air, but they can also travel through water or they can travel to steel.
They can travel through your body.
They can travel through any kind of gas or plasma.
Sound waves are just pressure waves.
If you have a bunch of molecules that can interact with each other that can push against each other,
then if you push on one side of that blob, then it's going to push on the next layer,
which pushes on the next layer, which it pushes on the next layer,
that's what sound waves are.
You're hearing us right now because the speaker in your ear is making sound waves that push on layers of air,
which push on the next layer of air, et cetera.
I see.
So an acoustic wave or acoustic oscillations, they're just like when things propagate through material
because things are bumping into each other, basically through electromagnetic forces
or can it be other force?
It's almost always electromagnetic forces.
The crucial thing is that they bump against each other.
If they pass right through each other,
then they don't cause pressure waves.
The crucial thing is that they're bumping up against each other,
that one layer pushes the next layer,
which pushes the next layer.
The microphysics of how that pushing happens is electromagnetic.
You have electrons in one atom
are pushing up against the electrons in another atom.
They don't like to overlap.
They resist each other.
It's the same reason why you don't pass through your chair
or when you're leaning against the wall,
the wall pushes back, or the earth is pushing up on you.
Basically, anything structural is built with electromagnetic forces because that's the bond
of chemistry.
Now for those of us who are not particle physicists, can you remind us what a baryon is?
Yeah, baryons are anything made out of quarks.
Basically baryon is shorthand for our kind of matter.
Stuff like protons and neutrons, these are baryons.
We call them baryons mostly to distinguish them from the other kind of matter in the universe,
dark matter, which is some other kind of stuff that's out there.
It feels gravity, it has mass, we think it's made of stuff.
We don't know if it's made of particles, but we're very sure that it's not made of our kind
of particles.
And so when we talk about the very early universe, we have a few components to sort of like
that very early universe smoothie.
There's baryons, there's photons, there's dark matter.
And so we talk about baryon acoustic oscillations because it's the sound waves in those early
universe protons mostly that we're thinking about.
Does that include electrons as well or electron something else?
So electrons are not technically baryons because they're not made out of quarks.
Barions are particles that are made out of three quarks.
Quarks are these incredible particles that feel the strong force.
In order to have a neutral particle in the strong force and that it doesn't have an overall strong
force charge.
The way, for example, a proton and an electron can make a neutral atom with no overall
electric charge, and or for quarks to come together to make an object that doesn't feel
the strong force.
It's overall neutral.
You need either three of them or two of them.
If you put three of them together, you get a baryon, like a proton or a neutron, or there are other more exotic baryons.
So technically an electron is not a baryon, but it is included when you talk about baryonic matter, which is like atoms made out of a beryon and an electron.
I see.
That makes not a lot of sense.
I know.
Yeah, the short answer is you can lump electrons in with baryonic matter, even though technically they are not baryons.
Okay, I see.
So it's really just regular matter.
You're using that shorthand for regular matter, or at least a matter that we're made out of.
Exactly.
The matter that really matters.
So then this is the, we're talking about the Big Bang.
This is the early moments of the universe.
And now what was going on there?
When we talk about the Big Bang, it's also important to clarify what we really mean by the Big Bang.
If you say that to a lot of people, they imagine some very dense dot in space, which then exploded to make our universe.
But when physicists talk about the Big Bang, they really have a different idea in mind.
first of all, we don't go all the way back to the creation of the universe. We don't know how the
universe was created, if it was created, if it existed forever, how everything came to be. We only go
back as far as our theories can describe, which is some moment around 14 billion years ago when
the universe was filled with a very, very hot and dense material. Our theories go back that far,
and our observations verify that that happened. Where that stuff came from and how it got there
and all that stuff is all very speculative.
And we have theories about that inflation, etc.
But really the Big Bang, when physicists describe it,
starts from that very hot, dense state
and then watches it expand and form our universe.
So the Big Bang is not like a singularity at some point.
It's a moment in time when the universe was very hot and dense
and filled with plasma.
Well, part of it was that there was a lot less space back then
in those early moments of the universe,
or at least what we call the early moments of the universe.
Like space expanded a lot since then from then,
to now. And so basically maybe a way to think about it is just like all space was more compressed,
but it had the same amount of stuff in it. So everything was hot and dense. Yeah, it's tricky
if you think about size and use words like smaller because we don't know the size of the universe.
It might always have been infinite and might still be infinite today. What we do know is about the
density. So as you say, it's more compressed. So you should think about a universe, whether
it's infinite or not, just as filled with really hot, dense stuff. And then space expands.
That's the big bang as we think about it today and makes everything more dilute.
So things are cooling down and getting more dilute, there's more space per bit of stuff.
That doesn't really tell you anything about whether the universe was infinite or not.
We obviously don't know.
And so I think the early universe went through a lot of different phases, right?
Like at some point there weren't even maybe quantum fields or the quantum fields were still trying to figure it out.
And then things started to change.
But as you said, at some point in that history, everything was basically a hot plasma.
Exactly.
Things started out so hot and dense that we can't even really use the physics of today to describe it.
You can't even really talk about particles because the fields were so filled with energy.
But eventually things cooled down and particles formed and you got quarks and you've got electrons.
Those quarks then cooled down to make protons.
And it's really that moment that we want to zero in on today.
The moment when we had protons and electrons and photons and also dark matter in this big hot plasma.
But that hot plasma is not uniform.
It's not like everywhere in space has exactly the same hot plasma.
There's little ripples in it.
Some parts are denser than others.
And the baryon acoustic oscillation describes how the baryons in that hot plasma were sloshing around and ringing with sound waves.
Well, I think maybe a good way to think about plasma is that it's basically just the gas.
The only difference between the plasma and a regular gas is that the atoms are broken up, right?
Like in a regular gas, like the air we're breathing, the electrons are tied together with the protons and neutrons into atoms.
But in the plasma, things are so heated up that they break apart.
But it's still basically a gas, right?
Like it's just things flying around space.
Yeah, exactly.
It's a gas of charged particles.
And it's sort of a natural evolution of matter.
You know, as things get colder, they form more structure because they don't have the energy to escape the power of those bonds.
So you think about an individual electron, if it has a lot of energy, in other words, if it's in a really hot gas, then it's going to have too much energy to be captured by a proton.
But as things cool down, then those electrons are susceptible to being captured by the proton.
And then you get neutral hydrogen.
So as the universe cools, you go from having charged plasma, like you say a charged gas, to having a neutral gas.
And so, yeah, plasma is just a charged version of a normal gas.
Right.
It's a gas made out of ions, right?
Electrons and protons are flying around on their own.
And so like any gas, it would have sound waves in it.
Exactly.
So that hot plasma was not a quiet place, right?
It was also super duper dense, which means that sound propagated through it at shockingly high speeds.
All right.
Well, let's get a little bit more into this hot plasma, how it works, and how those early sound waves in that plasma led to the universe we see today, Boba included.
So let's dig into that. But first, let's take a quick break.
A foot washed up a shoe with some bones in it. They had no idea who it was.
Most everything was burned up pretty good from the fire that not a whole lot was salvageable.
These are the coldest of cold cases.
But everything is about to change.
Every case that is a cold case that has DNA right now in a backlog will be identified in our lifetime.
A small lab in Texas is cracking the code on DNA.
Using new scientific tools, they're finding clues in evidence so tiny you might just miss it.
He never thought he was going to get caught.
And I just looked at my computer screen.
I was just like, ah, got you.
On America's crime lab, we'll learn about victims and survivors.
and you'll meet the team behind the scenes at Othrum,
the Houston Lab that takes on the most hopeless cases
to finally solve the unsolvable.
Listen to America's Crime Lab on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Your entire identity has been fabricated.
Your beloved brother goes missing without a trace.
You discover the depths of your mother's illness,
the way it has echoed and reverberated throughout your life,
impacting your very legacy.
Hi, I'm Danny Shapiro.
And these are just a few of the profound and powerful stories
I'll be mining on our 12th season of Family Secrets.
With over 37 million downloads,
we continue to be moved and inspired by our guests
and their courageously told stories.
I can't wait to share 10 powerful new episodes with you,
stories of tangled up identities,
concealed truths, and the way in which family secrets almost always need to be told.
I hope you'll join me and my extraordinary guests for this new season of Family Secrets.
Listen to Family Secrets Season 12 on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Imagine that you're on an airplane and all of a sudden you hear this.
Attention passengers. The pilot is having an emergency and we need someone, anyone,
to land this plane.
Think you could do it?
It turns out that nearly 50% of men
think that they could land the plane
with the help of air traffic control.
And they're saying like, okay, pull this,
do this, pull that, turn this.
It's just...
I can do it my eyes close.
I'm Manny.
I'm Noah.
This is Devon.
And on our new show,
no such thing.
We get to the bottom of questions like these.
Join us as we talk to the leading expert
on overconfidence.
Those who lack expertise
lack the expertise they need.
to recognize that they lack
expertise. And then, as we try
the whole thing out for real,
wait, what? Oh, that's the
run right. I'm looking at this thing. See?
Listen to no such thing on the
Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, sis, what if I could promise you
you never had to listen to a condescending finance
bro? Tell you how to manage your money again.
Welcome to Brown Ambition. This is the hard part
when you pay down those credit cards. If you
haven't gotten to the bottom of
why you were racking up credit or turning to credit cards,
you may just recreate the same problem a year from now.
When you do feel like you are bleeding from these high interest rates,
I would start shopping for a debt consolidation loan,
starting with your local credit union,
shopping around online,
looking for some online lenders because they tend to have fewer fees
and be more affordable.
Listen, I am not here to judge.
It is so expensive in these streets.
I 100% can see how in just a few months
you can have this much credit card debt
and it weighs on you.
It's really easy to just like stick your head in the sand.
It's nice and dark in the sand.
Even if it's scary, it's not going to go away
just because you're avoiding it.
And in fact, it may get even worse.
For more judgment-free money advice,
listen to Brown Ambition on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
All right, we're talking about the early
these sounds of the universe. Now, Daniel, what genre of music do you think the universe sounded
like at the beginning? Was it like elevator music? Was it like rocking, banging music? What do you
think? K-pop? I think it sounded mostly like white noise and screams. I see. That's right.
That's right, because it was some deity choking on a giant black hole. Exactly. It was
not a pleasant sound. But yeah, you were saying that the universe was basically, at some point,
it evolved into basically all hot plasma in it. And there were sound waves in it. And there were sound waves in it.
and ripples in it, because I guess it's just the gas.
And so even the air we see around us is not perfectly, totally, completely uniform, right?
That's right.
There are pressure waves everywhere.
As you talk, you're making pressure waves.
As the wind blows, it makes pressure waves.
As there are temperature variations, you've had pressure waves.
And so nothing around you is really totally uniform.
So then what made those waves in the early universe?
Like if I just have a room here and I leave it alone, the gas is going to basically all equalize,
isn't it?
Exactly.
So to get sound in the early universe, you need a couple of things.
First of all, you need some initial over densities.
You need some spots be a little hotter and a little denser than others.
Then you need a way for it to propagate or for it to ring.
So what do those initial over densities come from?
Because if we're imagining the early universe is just this big hot plasma and we say everywhere
in the universe is the same.
There's no like special location to the universe.
There's no reason why the universe would put more stuff here than there.
Then there, then it's hard to imagine like where.
any sort of really initial ripple might come from.
And that comes just from quantum fluctuations
in the very, very early universe.
So way back before the plasma even formed,
much earlier on, you had just some quantum fluctuations,
particles popping in and out of the vacuum,
just true quantum randomness.
It is true that everywhere in the universe
follows the same laws of physics,
but if quantum mechanics really is random,
then it can do different things in different spots.
And that's how you get little tiny fluctuations.
But then inflation or whatever caused the universe to expand dramatically blew those tiny little quantum ripples up to tiny little macroscopic ripples, big enough that gravity could do something with them.
Well, you call them tiny microscopic quantum fluctuations, but I wonder if back then when the universe was a lot smaller, basically like all of the quantum particles and fields were basically more on top of each other.
And, for example, the size of an electron today would seem huge back then.
Is that a good way to look at it?
It's definitely true that everything was much more compressed back then.
Like you had the same amount of stuff with less space between them.
But those electrons probably weren't even born yet when these ripples that we're talking about were made.
Eventually that same energy did cool down and spread out into specific particles.
But the ripples we're talking about are probably pre-particle.
They're just like ripples in the frothing quantum fields before you can even really identify them as particles.
Right, right.
I didn't mean to say that there were electrons back then.
But I just mean like the scale of things was very different back then.
Like what we might ignore today as a quantum fluctuation because it's so small.
Back then, maybe a quantum fluctuation was huge, right?
Yeah, it's a really interesting comparison.
I guess really the only meter stick we have to compare today with back then is the speed of light.
And so you do have this sense of like the horizon that an electron could see, like what fraction of the universe
an electron could interact with.
And then that did later get blown up.
And so back then the electron was sort of in a smaller pond of the universe, it's sort of a bigger deal.
Then, as you said, these small ripples kind of got stretched out as the universe expanded.
So maybe take us through a little bit of what was happening as the universe started to expand,
like what was going on with dark matter?
Yeah, so you have these initial ripples which create over densities, mostly in the dark matter.
Remember that there's more dark matter than anything else.
And so if your mental image, you're imagining some like hot, bright plasma,
add a layer to that, an invisible layer of dark matter,
which is most of the mass of the matter in the universe at the time.
Not most of the energy.
Most of the energy in the universe at this time is still in photons.
It's mostly radiation dominated.
But most of the stuff in the universe is dark matter.
So now you have these little ripples.
You have like a little bit more dark matter here and a little bit more dark matter there.
And dark matter has gravity, of course.
And so it starts to pull things in because you have a little bit more dark matter.
It means it has more gravity than everything around it.
It's going to start to pull stuff in, which gives it more density, which gives it more gravity.
So dark matter is starting to form clusters.
clusters, it's starting to amplify those initial quantum fluctuations.
Well, I guess a big question is, what do we know about dark matter in those early moments?
Like, we know that regular matter started to dissociate into protons and electrons,
and before that it, they dissociated even more.
Did dark matter break down to, or did it also have quantum fluctuations, or does it even
have quantumness to it?
Yeah, wow, I wish I knew the answer to any of those questions.
We don't know, right?
because we don't know what particles dark matter is made out of,
if it's even made out of particles.
In this theory, instead, we treat dark matter
sort of as like a collisionless fluid,
some that has no interactions other than gravity.
We think just about its mass density
and the gravitational impact of that.
We don't try to break it down into the microphysics
because we don't have that story at all.
We don't know if dark matter is 10 different kind
of dark particles that are all turning into each other
and back or not.
But because it doesn't interact with the baryons,
Except for gravity, we don't really need to know those details.
I mean, we'd love to know.
Who wouldn't want to know?
But it doesn't change the story of the baryon acoustic oscillations that we're focused on today.
I see.
At this point, we're just squinting at dark matter.
We're sort of waving our hands.
We're like, well, I don't care what's happening at the microscopic level of dark matter.
It could be anything.
But you just sort of treat it as, like you said, like a cloud or liquid of stuff.
Yeah.
It's not that we don't care.
We deeply care.
And we'd love to know, but the game of physics is trying to make progress even when you don't know things.
And so here's a question we can focus on even without knowing what's going on with the dark matter.
We can still think clearly about what's going on with the Berions because we think we do understand their interactions.
Okay, so then you're saying that the dark matter was influenced by the quantum fluctuations of the regular matter.
But could dark matter itself have had its own quantum fluctuations?
No, they had their own quantum fluctuations for sure.
Dark matter and regular matter both come out of these.
initial quantum fluctuations.
So one spot in the universe
where you have like an over density of energy
that turns into more dark matter
and more normal matter.
And it's mostly the quantum fluctuations
in the dark matter itself
that spur everything we're talking about
because it's the gravity of the dark matter
that triggers everything.
Right, because there's more dark matter
than regular matter.
But then are you assuming that like
the dark matter fluctuations
and the regular matter fluctuation
were somehow in sync in the early universe?
The quantum fluctuations we're talking about
again predate the formation
of the particles themselves and this division of energy into dark matter and normal matter,
which frankly we don't understand.
And to understand it, we'd have to have a better idea of like what particles there are
and how this quantum fields sort of filter out into the dark matter.
So we just say that there's an initial quantum fluctuation.
And then at each point, if you have more stuff or less stuff, you get about 80% of it
into dark matter and 20% of it into normal matter.
So from that point of view, they are correlated because they come from the same initial quantum
fluctuations, which are independent from the dark matter or the normal matter nature.
I see. You are sort of imagining a point in the universe when even dark matter was maybe
dissociated or didn't exist. Exactly. Those are where the quantum fluctuations are happening
before we even have dark matter or normal matter. And then down the road, tiny fractions of a second
later, when we do have matter, some of that energy has gotten into dark matter and some of it
into normal matter. Okay. So then both dark matter and regular matter have these
expanding fluctuations, ripples,
which, as you said, create pockets of the higher density,
dark matter and regular matter,
which then, I guess, is what creates the soundways, right?
Because when you have something more dense in one side,
it tends to try to go to the other side.
Exactly.
And sort of a push and a push back here.
So dark matter is creating these over densities.
It's like gravitationally collapsing things.
And that's fine for dark matter.
Dark matter doesn't really care.
It's happy to get pulled in by gravity and overlap with itself, whatever.
But baryons are different.
Barions and photons interact with each other.
And so if you squeeze them down, then they're going to push back.
Like you squeeze a bunch of baryons together, they push against each other and they push back out.
And remember that there's a huge number of baryons, but also an enormous number of photons.
So as you squeeze these protons together, then they're effectively squeezing on the photons, which push back out.
So it's sort of like a mini version of what happens in a star where you collapse it,
gravitationally and then it creates fusion and that radiation pressure from the fusion keeps the star from collapsing.
Here you have dark matter pulling blobs of baryons and photons together and then those photons and baryons interacting when they get squeezed to push back out.
And that's what creates these ripples in the baryons.
Sort of like it's like the dark matter collects all of the other, the regular matter, tries to squeeze it down, but then it bounces back.
Exactly.
It bounces back.
sort of like a mini weaker version of a supernova, you know, gravitational collapse, which then
bounces back out in implosion, which leads to an explosion. Something I want to get clearing
people's minds, which is sort of crazy to imagine is the ratio of different particles. Like,
there's about a billion photons for every proton and every electron at this point at the universe. Like,
the universe is mostly light. So there's a huge number of photons pushing against these
barons. Now, are you sweeping electrons and protons into,
radiation here or do you actually mean real photons that later got transformed into electrons?
Totally fair question because you're right that if things are moving near the speed of light,
we just call it radiation. But here we're talking about real radiation. We're just talking about
photons. We're treating electrons, protons, and photons separately. And it really is mostly photons.
But those photons, they push on the barons. They push on the protons. They push on the electrons.
In a way that they, of course, don't push on the dark matter. So the dark matters,
lapsing into the center and the barions get pushed back out because they have this electric
interaction that dark matter doesn't have.
But the photons are not being pulled together by gravity, are they?
Photons are affected by gravity, right? Photons bend around the sun or can bend around a black
hole. So as dark matter curved space, photons are also gathered into that well together with
the protons. But then they push back and there's so many protons, so many photons,
that you get a sound, right? This is the sound of the early universe, is this
pressure wave in the baryons created by the baryons and the photons being squeezed down by dark matter.
It's the sound of regular matter being uncomfortable.
You're like, whoa, whoa, whoa.
I don't want to be so close to my neighbors.
Exactly.
It's stoop right here.
Exactly.
It's the sound on the subway when another 10 people get on and squeeze you into the back.
And you're like, hell, I can't breathe back here.
It's the groan of a million introverts, what you're saying.
Yeah, another one rides the bus.
That was the sound of the early universe.
Another one gets gathered by dark matter against its will.
Exactly.
And the density of the universe is really, really high,
and the density controls the speed of sound.
Like sound travels faster through water than it does through air
because those molecules are more tightly packed together.
So the sound wave propagates more quickly.
And their bonds are more rigid because they're denser.
So the sound wave propagates faster through denser materials,
like steel than it does through water,
than it does through air than it does through really diffuse gases like the upper atmosphere.
And in the early universe, things are super duper crazy dense.
So the speed of sound in the early universe is like half the speed of light.
Whoa.
Wouldn't you have to call it radiation waves then?
Fair point, fair point.
All right.
So then there were these waves from the material sort of bouncing back.
And that means that like those waves propagated out which made things more.
dense in some places than others, right? Because that's what a wave is. Yeah, exactly. So you have
this dark matter core and then you have this density wave of baryons propagating out. But this doesn't
last forever, right? Things in the universe are happening fast and the universe is expanding and it's
cooling. And at some point, around 380,000 years after this first moment we can describe what we call
the beginning of the universe, or at least the Big Bang, things cooled down enough that the protons
and the electrons did bond together to make neutral hydrogen.
The electrons no longer had enough energy to escape the pull of the protons.
So the universe became transparent to photons instead of opaque.
So now when photons are flying through the universe
instead of interacting with all the protons and the electrons they see,
now they just see neutral hydrogen, so they no longer push on it.
Now they just fly through it.
And so the universe can expand and cool and these photons can dissipate.
And so the sound wave basically got frozen.
It's sort of like if you suddenly froze the ocean, you would see all these water molecules frozen in the shape of a wave.
Yeah, that's right.
Or say you slap your hand in your bathtub and it creates a wave and then you suddenly cool it to freeze it.
You can come back later, you can still see that water wave.
Otherwise, it would have kept propagating and sloshing around, but now it's frozen because your bathtub, the water has cooled so it can no longer propagate.
And the same thing happened in the universe.
The universe became transparent, it became cooler, it became.
less dense and the photons passed through this wave overcame it so now that single ring of sound
is like frozen in the structure of the early universe right but i guess maybe the confusing thing is
that it's like a sound wave in the density of photons right it's like there were sound waves
propagating because the regular matter was interacting with photons and with itself there were waves
in that slosh but then it's almost like you took away the regular matter you took all the protons
and electrons out of it, and now suddenly the light was kind of stuck in these, like, oscillations
of density, and that's what we see today. The light was really powering these oscillations. It's the thing
that was pushing the baryons and the electrons along. Once the electrons and baryons cooled so they became
neutral, they're no longer like riding this wave of the light. So they sort of jump off the train,
they get frozen where they are, and the light continues on, and it just passes right through,
and it diffuses around. And that becomes the cosmic microwave background light that we still see today.
So we see the echoes and the ripples of that light today, and we can measure it.
But the barons, the electrons got left behind after that moment when they could no longer ride the light train because they became neutral.
Right. Yeah, that's kind of what I mean is that it's not like the photons continue to ripple with the sound.
It's more like you took out the regular matter.
And so the photons that were creating those waves stayed in those different layers of density.
So the photons can keep propagating out and rippling.
And they did.
In truth, it's a little bit more complicated.
is like sloshing back and forth.
But basically the picture you should have in your head is like a core of dark matter.
And then these rings of frozen sound waves at the time.
And we're talking about like 500,000 light years across where you should have like more barions,
like a higher density of barons, this barion's frozen sound wave, like a 500,000 light years
across.
And then the light continuing on and sloshing through the whole universe.
Right.
It's almost like the light, the photons were holding the regular matter in these wave patterns.
And then you took away the wave, the water, basically.
And so you have this light kind of stuck in that pattern.
And we think that basically this seeded the structure of the whole universe.
After this point, gravity takes over in places that you have more dark matter and more baryons,
things are going to get clustered together more and more and that's where you're going to end up getting galaxies,
and that's where you're going to end up getting gas clouds and then stars and planets and people and podcasts.
And eventually, Boba.
And boughs as well.
All right.
Well, let's dig into how we can see this cosmic microwave background, what we know about it,
and also what it means about how we ended up here today.
So let's dig into that.
But first, let's take another quick break.
A foot washed up a shoe with some bones in it.
They had no idea who it was.
Most everything was burned up pretty good from the fire that not a whole lot was salvageable.
These are the coldest of cold cases, but everything is about to change.
Every case that is a cold case that has DNA right now in a backlog will be identified in our lifetime.
A small lab in Texas is cracking the code on DNA.
Using new scientific tools, they're finding clues in evidence so tiny you might just miss it.
He never thought he was going to get caught, and I just looked at my computer screen.
I was just like, ah, gotcha.
On America's Crime Lab, we'll learn about victims and survivors,
and you'll meet the team behind the scenes at Othrum,
the Houston Lab that takes on the most hopeless cases
to finally solve the unsolvable.
Listen to America's Crime Lab on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Your entire identity has been fabricated.
Your beloved brother goes missing without a trace.
You discover the depths of your mother.
illness, the way it has echoed and reverberated throughout your life, impacting your very legacy.
Hi, I'm Danny Shapiro, and these are just a few of the profound and powerful stories I'll be
mining on our 12th season of Family Secrets. With over 37 million downloads, we continue to be
moved and inspired by our guests and their courageously told stories. I can't wait to share
10 powerful new episodes with you, stories of tangled up identities, concealed truths,
and the way in which family secrets almost always need to be told. I hope you'll join me and my
extraordinary guests for this new season of Family Secrets. Listen to Family Secrets Season 12
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Imagine that you're
on an airplane and all of a sudden you hear this. Attention passengers. The
Pilate is having an emergency, and we need someone, anyone, to land this plane.
Think you could do it?
It turns out that nearly 50% of men think that they could land the plane with the help of air traffic control.
And they're saying like, okay, pull this, until this.
Pull that, turn this.
It's just, I can do my eyes close.
I'm Mani.
I'm Noah.
This is Devon.
And on our new show, no such thing.
We get to the bottom of questions like these.
Join us as we talk to the leading expert on overconfidence.
Those who lack expertise lack the expertise they need to recognize that they lack expertise.
And then as we try the whole thing out for real.
Wait, what?
Oh, that's the run right.
I'm looking at this thing.
Listen to no such thing on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, Siss, what if I could promise you you never had to listen to a condescending finance,
tell you how to manage your money again.
Welcome to Brown Ambition.
This is the hard part when you pay down those credit cards.
If you haven't gotten to the bottom of why you were racking up credit or turning to credit cards,
you may just recreate the same problem a year from now.
When you do feel like you are bleeding from these high interest rates,
I would start shopping for a debt consolidation loan,
starting with your local credit union, shopping around online,
looking for some online lenders because they tend to have fewer fees and be more affordable.
Listen, I am not here to do it.
judge. It is so expensive in these streets. I 100% can see how in just a few months you can have this
much credit card debt when it weighs on you. It's really easy to just like stick your head in the sand.
It's nice and dark in the sand. Even if it's scary, it's not going to go away just because you're
avoiding it. And in fact, it may get even worse. For more judgment-free money advice, listen to
Brown Ambition on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
All right, we're talking about the sound of the early universe, and it sounded kind of uncomfortable.
It was really hot and crowded.
And the regular matter in the universe did not like it.
Exactly.
Very loud, but very short-lived early universe scream.
And so you're saying that you had these ripples of matter kind of bouncing back from being compressed, things were sloshing around, things had sound waves in it.
But then at some point, the regular matter kind of froze into place.
They got together into atoms, which then let the light.
continue on. Does that mean that at that point, the universe went silent?
Yeah, basically, that's when the universe quieted down. And the speed of sound dropped really,
really fast, right? So things couldn't propagate nearly as fast. Why not? Like, wouldn't regular
atoms carry those waves? Well, regular atoms can still carry waves the way they do today. Like,
the sound we hear today is mostly in neutral atoms in the air, right? So neutral atoms certainly can
bump into each other and can certainly carry sound waves, but the pressure was just a lot lower.
because the photons had decoupled.
And so the density was a lot lower.
And so the speed of sound just dropped very quickly.
And so there still was sound.
It was just much slower moving.
It's no longer anywhere close to the speed of light.
And so it's effectively frozen because sound waves can still propagate,
but just very, very slowly.
So things are not going to change very fast, the way they had initially.
I wonder if you can still measure those waves in the regular matter.
You know what I mean?
Like, I wonder if like collectively all the galaxies in the universe
still have ours kind of sloshing around or,
being you know moved around by those sound waves absolutely you can and we have looked for this and
we have actually seen it we can see these waves in two different ways one we can look back at those
photons from the early universe and see these ripples like there were more photons in some places than
in others we can look back at those photons the ones that were created when the universe just became
transparent that's the cosmic microwave background radiation and we see these ripples and we see
exactly what we expect but we can also see it in the structure of the universe
today. Those rings that were 500,000 light years across, they expanded as the universe expands,
and now we expect them to be about 500 million light years across. So what people have done is
they've looked at the distribution of galaxies and they say, hmm, are galaxies just like sprinkled
randomly everywhere? Or is there a typical distance between the galaxies? How are they clustered?
So they gathered a bunch of galaxies together that did these redshift measurements to see how far
away they are so we could have a 3D map of the galaxies in the universe and then they just like
count it up what is the distance between all the pairs of galaxies is there any preferred distance
and what did they find did they find that there's it's all even or did they find that this distance
varied according to like a sound wave so they found that it was not smooth that there was a bump there
that you were more likely to have galaxies about 500 million light years apart than you were other
distances and this is exactly what they expected to see because the those
rings, the sound horizon from the early universe, was 500,000 light years across at that
time, but the universe has expanded since, right?
We've had deceleration and acceleration.
We know the expansion history of the universe, and we expect those rings to now be 500 million
light years across.
And when you look at the distribution of galaxies, you see many more at that distance apart
than you do it like 400 million or 600 million.
So this is like 20 years ago in 2005, they saw this statistical evidence for the barion
acoustic oscillations, that when you add up all these galaxies and compare their distances,
you tend to see them more at exactly the size of this sound ring.
No, wait, are you saying that somehow this early sound wave got frozen in the distances
between galaxies and the structure of the universe?
Or are you saying this sound wave is still rippling through the structure of the universe?
It got frozen in the early universe, and then gravity took over.
It like seeded the structure.
It's like if somebody sprinkled a bunch of seeds in a circle,
and you came back 100 years later and you found a bunch of oak trees.
You wonder like, why are there oak trees in a circle?
It comes from the initial distribution of seeds.
And so here we're talking about sloshing around the very early universe when things were still very chaotic,
left this over density of barions in these sound rings, which no longer were able to ripple as fast
because the photons had decoupled and weren't pushing them anymore, and things got cooler and less dense.
And those are likely initial seeds which formed galaxies, which grew up to be galaxies.
be galaxies.
Mm.
I see.
So we also see these frozen sound waves out there.
Exactly.
So about 20 years ago, people saw the statistical evidence.
They're like, oh, galaxies tend to be more far apart at this particular distance than other
distances.
And that was evidence that the barrio and acoustic constellations were real, that we were seeing them
in the universe.
But very excitingly, just a few weeks ago, people see an actual single bubble.
When you look out into the universe, you can actually see like a ring, a huge structure,
a ring of galaxies and superclusters.
lined up into a massive bubble.
How big?
This thing is a ring structure
about 250 mega parsecs around
and we're sort of near the center of it.
And at the actual center of it
is this huge supercluster
called the Bouches supercluster
which we think was gathered together
because there's a huge dark matter blob
at the center of this ripple.
And then along the edges
are other superclusters that we found
like the Sloan Great Wall
and other pieces that we've been discovering
of structure here and there
in the universe, turns out they assemble themselves into this incredible enormous ring, 250
megaparsecs across.
Now, it's a bubble because as you said, the early universe, the dark matter brought together
this barren matter.
The barren matter bounced back.
And when it bounced back, I guess it looked like a bubble, right?
That's what you're saying.
And then the universe expanded, things froze, and we still see that bubble today.
Exactly.
And you can look at this paper and you can see in this distribution of galaxies, this sort of faint ring.
It's not crisp and clear.
It's not like there are no galaxy.
Like a way it's a ring or a bubble?
It's definitely a bubble.
It's a sphere.
But, you know, this is a physical paper, which means it's two-dimensional slices.
So if you look at the slices, you know, we don't publish in 3-D yet.
We're not 3-D printing our papers.
But actually, if you look online, they have a really cool animation of it, which you can see
the 3-D version.
So it definitely is a 3-D structure.
But in 2-D slices, you see rings.
I see.
But was the analysis done in rings or was it done in a bubble?
Or is you saying ring because that's how you read it in the paper.
Well, originally they spotted it as a ring.
They were just like, hold on.
Is that a huge.
huge ring. And then they started looking in 3D. They're like, wow, look at that. It really
is kind of a bubble. And then they calculated the size of it. And they were like, this is exactly
the size you would expect from a single baryana acoustic oscillation bubble, which nobody had
ever seen before. And these folks, they weren't looking for this. They were doing some other
studies of galaxies and their distributions. And they just like spotted this visually. And they were
like, hold on a second. This is literally a frozen scream from the early universe.
Whoa. They were like, that's a big boba.
It's a big, that's when you would choke on for sure.
Yeah, maybe they were drinking boba at the time.
They're like, what? What is that?
And I think it's super cool because it gives us a way to understand not just how our universe was formed and why we have galaxies over here and why we have galaxies over there, but also how the universe expanded.
Like, we know how big that sound wave when it was created because it just comes down to like the physics of protons and photons and dark matter, how they push on each other.
and we know how big they are now, we can measure them.
And so that gives us like an independent way to measure the expansion of the universe,
which of course is a big question and a deep mystery,
like the source of dark energy and how that all works.
I guess maybe a question is, why don't we see more of these bubbles?
Like wasn't the universe filled with these soundways and these screams of the early universe?
Why aren't these bubbles more obvious?
Yeah, great question.
We haven't seen that much of the universe.
You know, our precision maps of the locations of galaxies.
basically are just big enough to include one of these.
If you look online and check this thing out,
you see that this one bubble occupies a huge fraction
of the known galaxies we've seen.
We just haven't looked out far enough
to see one of these things before.
Oh, wow, it's that big of a bubble.
Like, it's almost the size of the observable universe, you're saying?
It's almost the size of the set of galaxies
that we have mapped well.
Yeah, as things get further out,
it's harder and harder to map these things.
You need more and more precise measurements.
Like if we could use the James Webb Space Telescope and pointed in every direction for a month,
we would get an awesome map of the galaxies in the universe.
But the map we have is really sporadic and in some places it goes really far,
in some places it doesn't, because we just don't have enough telescopes and enough telescope time
to do these careful surveys.
Well, as you said, it sort of gives us sort of like a marker in the history of the universe
and how it expanded.
And now what's the connection to dark energy?
Well, dark energy is our word for how the universe expanded and how that expansion,
has accelerated. The picture we have is that the early universe was dominated by matter and radiation
early on and it expanded and things cooled. But then that matter radiation started to decelerate
the expansion of the universe, start to slow it down because that's what energy density does. It
curves space and pulls things back together. But at the same time, some new force was waking up.
Something we call dark energy was pushing the other direction and accelerated the expansion of the universe.
And this is something we'd like to understand in detail because we don't understand the mechanism for
it, but we want to understand the history so we can get a better sense for what might have
been causing this. So measuring the precise rate of the expansion and how the universe has grown
over time is very, very valuable. I see, because I guess these bubbles can't just come up
randomly, right? Yeah, these bubbles have a fixed size in the early universe, just determined by
like the physics of acoustic oscillations, which we think we understand. And then they're stretched by
dark energy to a new size, which we can measure. So measuring the size of these bubbles now and
comparing them to the size we knew they had in the early universe gives us a way to say how
much has the universe been stretched, which of course is something we're very interested in.
All right. Well, another interesting exploration into our origins and how much we can and how much
we still don't know about what was happening. To me, it's amazing how cosmology has gone from
a field where it's like mostly hand wavy stories with rough numbers to a field where we can
like measure things and do precise calculations and compare this and that and know things about the
early universe from these calculations. We have filtered through crazy data to get these
stories of the universe, to find these clues to build back this history of what happened and
how we all got here. I see. It's now precision. Hand waving. Baby steps, man, baby steps,
boba steps. You need a thicker straw. What we need are more smart people thinking hard
about how the universe works and asking questions and listening to podcasts. All right. Well, the next time
you're in a crowded subway, think about how the universe felt back then, how it screamed out
in discomfort, and how we still see those screams today in the shape and the distribution of
galaxies and also light. And please continue to enjoy your boba at your own risk. Well, we hope
you enjoyed that. Thanks for joining us. See you next time.
Jorge Explain the Universe is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
America's Crime Lab, every case has a story to tell, and the DNA holds the truth.
He never thought he was going to get caught, and I just looked at my computer screen.
I was just like, ah, gotcha.
This technology's already solving so many cases.
Listen to America's Crime Lab on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Tune in to All the Smoke Podcast, where Matt and Stacks sit down with former first lady, Michelle Obama.
Folks find it hard to hate up close.
And when you get to know people, you're sitting in their kitchen tables, and they're talking like we're talking.
You know, you hear our story, how we grew up, how Barack grew up.
And you get a chance for people to unpack and get beyond race.
All the Smoke featuring Michelle Obama.
To hear this podcast and more, open your free IHeart Radio app.
Search All the Smoke and listen now.
The U.S. Open is here.
And on my podcast, Good Game with Sarah Spain.
I'm breaking down the players, the predictions, the pressure.
And of course, the Honey Deuces, the signature cocktail of the U.S. Open.
The U.S. Open has gotten to be a very wonderfully experiential sporting event.
To hear this and more, listen to Good Game with Sarah Spain,
an IHeart Women's Sports Production and Partnership with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Brought to you by Novartis, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports Network.
Why are TSA rules so confusing?
You got a hood of you. I'll take it all!
I'm Noah.
This is Devin.
And we're best friends and journalists with a new podcast called No Such Thing,
where we get to the bottom of questions like that.
Why are you screaming?
I can't expect what to do.
Now, if the rule was the same, go off on me.
I deserve it.
You know, lock him up.
Listen to No Such Thing on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
No Such Thing.
I'm Dr. Joy Hardin Bradford,
host of the Therapy for Black Girls podcast.
I know how overwhelming it can feel if flying makes you anxious.
In session 418 of the Therapy for Black Girls podcast, Dr. Angela Neal-Barnett and I discuss flight anxiety.
What is not a norm is to allow it to prevent you from doing the things that you want to do, the things that you were meant to do.
Listen to Therapy for Black Girls on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Thank you.
