Skip Channel4 main Navigation

|Powered By Google


Stephen Hawking: Master of the Universe header image

Programme two: The Future

Stephen Hawking's 'A Brief History of Time'
    Next 

In 1988, Stephen Hawking promised that he and his colleagues would soon answer the big question – how did the Big Bang happen? Twenty years on and this is still the hot potato of physics. The answer requires that the two major theoretical bases of physics are brought into cohesion. These are the physics of the very tiny (quantum theory) and the physics of the very large (Einstein's relativity).

Stephen Hawking's 'A Brief History of Time'A little magnet easily picking up a paper clipSuper symmetryString theory
String theory brings together Einstein's relativity and quantum mechanicsGreen and Schwarz's calculations showed that 11 dimensions must existDoughnut shapes could represent two dimensions curled up togetherIf gravity does seep into our world through extra dimensions, then it will produce lots of tiny exploding black holes around the points of entry
The LHC (Large Hadron Collider) in Switzerland, the biggest particle accelerator in the worldIf they do exist, Hawking's tiny exploding black holes will show up in the particle accelerator like the lights of a Christmas tree
Master of the Universe: Video Clips
Watch Master of the Universe on 4oD
String Theory and how the universe works
Are we alone? Why are we here? Are we real?
Discover the truth behind time travel
Black holes, asteroid collision and much more...