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Professor Brian Cox explores the laws of the universe. He shows how light holds the key to our understanding of the whole universe, including our own deepest origins.

In the last episode of Professor Brian Cox's epic journey across the universe, he travels from the fossils of the Burgess Shale to the sands of the oldest desert in the world to show how light holds the key to our understanding of the whole universe, including our own deepest origins.

To understand how light holds the key to the story of the universe, you first have to understand its peculiar properties. Brian considers how the properties of light that lend colour to desert sands and the spectrum of a rainbow can lead to profound insights into the history and evolution of our universe.

Finally, with some of the world's most fascinating fossils in hand Brian considers how, but for an apparently obscure moment in the early evolutionary history of life, all the secrets of light may have remained hidden. Because although the universe is bathed in light that carries extraordinary amounts of information about where we come from, it would have remained invisible without a crucial evolutionary development that allowed us to see. Only because of that development can we now observe, capture and contemplate the incredible wonders of the universe that we inhabit.

58 minutes

Last on

Fri 12 May 202315:15

Music Played

  • Jermaine Dupri

    Protector's of 1472 (feat. Snoop Dogg, R.O.C. & Warren G, Jermaine Dupri, Snoop Dogg, R.O.C., Warren G)

Credits

RoleContributor
PresenterBrian Cox
Executive ProducerJonathan Renouf
ProducerChris Holt
DirectorChris Holt
Series ProducerJames Van Der Pool

Broadcasts

  • Sun 27 Mar 201121:00
  • Mon 28 Mar 201101:30
  • Tue 29 Mar 201119:00
  • Fri 1 Apr 201100:00
  • Tue 21 Jun 201100:25
  • Sat 25 Jun 201101:45
  • Mon 11 Jul 201123:00
  • Wed 13 Jul 201101:15
  • Thu 29 Dec 201119:00
  • Fri 30 Dec 201101:30
  • Tue 24 Jan 201223:30
  • Mon 27 Jun 201622:00
  • Mon 4 Jul 201600:30
  • Fri 8 Sep 201700:00
  • Sat 4 May 201909:00
  • Thu 13 Feb 202023:00
  • Sat 10 Oct 202009:00
  • Sat 9 Apr 202208:30
  • Fri 26 Aug 202200:35
  • Fri 12 May 202315:15