VŨ TRỤ VÀ EM (THUYẾT MINH) - MỘT CÂU CHUYỆN TÌNH YÊU LÃNG MẠN VÀ SÂU SẮC BẠN NÊN XEM | PHIM MỚI 2024
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Short filmTranscript
00:00:00Since 2009, the Kepler telescope has discovered more than 4,000 planets in the solar system,
00:00:09of which life may exist.
00:00:17The launch of NASA's TESS and GemWeb telescopes will revolutionize this search
00:00:24for life and potential.
00:00:54NASA's Kepler Telescope
00:01:13Sorry about that.
00:01:16Yesterday we were talking about the Fermi Probe.
00:01:25Right, the Fermi Probe.
00:01:29Of course, the contradiction of having a high probability of life existing elsewhere in the universe
00:01:37having no actual evidence to prove it.
00:01:42The Drake equation gives us every reason to believe that life should be common in our galaxy.
00:01:51It's exciting, right?
00:01:54So why haven't we found it?
00:01:56There's over 100 billion stars in the Milky Way.
00:02:00The vast majority of which is planets. Many of those planets gave people life.
00:02:05And still, we have found nothing.
00:02:09There's no sign of anyone or anything else.
00:02:12And believe me, we're looking.
00:02:18Night after night after night, we're staring up at the sky,
00:02:22we're burying ourselves in mountains of data,
00:02:25all because we know one day we will grasp this fact.
00:02:31And if we don't, you will, right?
00:02:39Yeah, go ahead.
00:02:41Didn't NASA predict that we'd have evidence of something like this beyond Earth within the next decade?
00:02:46After you've been in this field a while, you must take those predictions with a grain of salt.
00:02:50Okay, but the game is changing now.
00:02:52The TESS and the James Webb Telescope are coming soon.
00:02:55We stand a much better shot at finding something.
00:02:57It just seems like you're...
00:03:01Oh, please, don't stop.
00:03:03It was just getting interesting.
00:03:05If you're frustrated that you personally haven't found anything,
00:03:09then it gives points for you to keep going.
00:03:14I'm curious. Is that a fact, or is it just your opinion?
00:03:16Look, I just think they've got your opinion.
00:03:19Yeah, if this is a dead-end thing that wastes your time,
00:03:23might as well do other things.
00:03:26What other things could be more important to humanity than answering questions like,
00:03:29why are we alone?
00:03:31Reproduction?
00:03:33Or, like, love, even?
00:03:38Love. That's pretty good.
00:03:41Remind me of your name.
00:03:42Kiefer.
00:03:43Nice.
00:03:44Kiefer.
00:03:45You seeing anyone here?
00:03:49No, not really.
00:03:50Okay.
00:03:51Why don't we do what science do?
00:03:53Let's take a look at the data.
00:03:56All right.
00:03:57L is the value of love.
00:04:00Now, we have 250 students in this classroom.
00:04:06At least enrolled in this class.
00:04:09Four out of every five of these, statistically, will get married.
00:04:14So that's 200 students in there.
00:04:17Now, last year, according to two out of every five marriages,
00:04:23we'll end in divorce.
00:04:25Which gives us 120.
00:04:29120 of you will fall in love and stay married.
00:04:33That's less than half the people in this class.
00:04:36That's just marriage.
00:04:37You're absolutely right.
00:04:38Let's talk about the 85% of relationships that ended in breakups,
00:04:41or the 20% of breakups that lead to traumas,
00:04:43or the 3% that lead to suicide.
00:04:45But wait, let's talk about the 56% of people who admit to a history of infidelity in relationships.
00:04:50Those are just random statistics.
00:04:52They don't actually prove anything.
00:04:54Proof.
00:04:56Good.
00:04:58I want to ask you guys something, and be honest.
00:05:02Raise your hand if you've ever been hurt in love.
00:05:21Plug-in values and address equation.
00:05:23I'm sure as hell I'll get a number higher than zero.
00:05:26You get to choose what you're going to spend your time on, Kiefer.
00:05:31Outer space is safer.
00:05:34Is that a fact?
00:05:39Excuse me?
00:05:41Is that a fact, or was that just your guess?
00:05:45It's an education.
00:05:49Open book page 237.
00:06:14I was reading this article about life skills.
00:06:17The red one is just saying,
00:06:18increase productivity and maximize your health
00:06:21with a 30-minute bike ride every morning.
00:06:23And I'm like, that's not a life skill.
00:06:25It's just something you can do.
00:06:27It's just exercise.
00:06:31Hey.
00:06:32Those aren't people who are in the middle of exercise.
00:06:34Those are people who are in the middle of love.
00:06:36Love.
00:06:37Love.
00:06:38Love.
00:06:40Love.
00:06:41Love.
00:06:42Love.
00:06:43Not the galactic sun.
00:06:44Nope.
00:06:46Isaac.
00:06:47You can't just be shifting the telescope to fish for earth.
00:06:49This is training.
00:06:50This was granted by your English.
00:06:52That's what you're doing.
00:06:53It did.
00:06:54It's not.
00:06:55Go there.
00:06:55I'm trying to get the latest.
00:06:56Is that time stream data here?
00:06:57It says one minute.
00:07:00I don't know why you're constantly waiting for the test election to release.
00:07:02I'm just getting a heads-up.
00:07:05While every citizen is asking to see if God would give that data,
00:07:08I think we need a more grabbable planet.
00:07:10Come on, you just want another guy to see how you can keep testing us from nowhere?
00:07:16Actually, yes. That's a life hack.
00:07:19I might go for that. Just a robe. Nice breeze coming.
00:07:23Hey!
00:07:24Oh, Joel, hi.
00:07:25Shitting. We were just talking.
00:07:27Doesn't matter.
00:07:28Um, just sit there.
00:07:31Um, I think we can...
00:07:33Alright.
00:07:34Alright, now, your error calculation was great, but, uh, you mislabeled the X.
00:07:38I've already fixed that.
00:07:40Just be careful when you're writing your report.
00:07:42Okay?
00:07:43Okay?
00:07:44You should be happy. You did well.
00:08:34What were you thinking, Isaac?
00:08:55What were you thinking?
00:08:58Mr. Korani, tell the screenwriter that.
00:09:00It's not acceptable.
00:09:02I know.
00:09:03You'll be replaced.
00:09:04No need for that.
00:09:06That won't be necessary.
00:09:07Look, I've been detected many times in my own time, and it was never my intention to sabotage anyone else's project.
00:09:13Right now, we insist that you take a break.
00:09:18What happened to yesterday's lecture? There were complaints.
00:09:21Nothing. It's a bad day.
00:09:23It's been more than one day.
00:09:24You're right. It's been over two years.
00:09:29I know that things are tough.
00:09:31But I have to draw the line somewhere.
00:09:34Use your break to spiral these things out of your system.
00:09:37I'd still like to be here for a couple more weekends.
00:09:39You aren't listening.
00:09:41This is good for you.
00:10:11I'm sorry.
00:10:41Three, two, one.
00:10:56Lift off.
00:10:58Falcon 9 test rocket.
00:11:00Dr. Conroy, would you please join us?
00:11:02Yes, sir.
00:11:03Falcon 9 test rocket.
00:11:06Dr. Conroy, would you please join us?
00:11:08Yes, sir.
00:11:09We're inviting astronauts from around the world to participate in this effort.
00:11:13Data is our talent.
00:11:15Anyone I can give what I believe will be the greatest discoveries of our time.
00:11:22The same test will observe hundreds of thousands of stars during this extraordinary mission.
00:11:28This means a huge amount of information.
00:11:30And we're going to need your help to analyze everything.
00:11:39Jimmy, I need access to a cluster of web applications.
00:11:41If you don't have a laptop, you can use this data sensor.
00:11:46There's a lot.
00:11:47It's going to take me about an hour to load and work through.
00:11:54We would like everyone involved
00:11:56in this community to come together to go ahead and reach out to us.
00:12:03No matter what level of the world we are,
00:12:05professionals like me can spend humans and humans can contribute to the research
00:12:09from our home, company, wherever you are.
00:12:14So we're encouraging you to get yourself on your calendar
00:12:18because in the coming weeks, we're releasing the first segment of data.
00:12:26And I want to remind everyone that the series will enter a second phase
00:12:30when the James Webb Telescope launches next year.
00:12:33It is 100 times more powerful than Hubble
00:12:36and will allow us to see into the atmosphere of galaxies
00:12:39that were put in this for scientific purpose.
00:12:44You have no new information.
00:12:46So we're looking forward to a very exciting future for the planet on Mars.
00:12:51And as soon as it's out there,
00:12:53we'll soon have the capability to find it for you.
00:13:10So, nobody wants to be an unpaid intern, huh?
00:13:14It's better than dealing with people who spend so much money all day.
00:13:18Okay.
00:13:19First of all, you're the best person I know.
00:13:23Thank you.
00:13:26Second, we get to teach people what's space.
00:13:29I mean, what's bigger than that?
00:13:31Literally, that's the biggest thing there is.
00:13:33All we get to do is teach people.
00:13:36And in a small tiny amount of time,
00:13:38they go through a regular research.
00:13:40What are we supposed to do with that?
00:13:42It's not enough time to make significant discoveries.
00:13:45Who said we had to give no one a degree?
00:13:48Don't you want to?
00:13:51Who gives?
00:13:52Charlie, we want to be able to push the boundaries of everything we know.
00:13:58I'm sorry, I told you like you could do that in a classroom.
00:14:01Oh, that's a great way to talk about the thing that I love doing.
00:14:05That's not what I meant.
00:14:07See, I really mean it.
00:14:08You know that's not what I meant.
00:14:11Charlie, you and I both know that there is something out there.
00:14:17You can't just stop looking.
00:14:21Okay.
00:14:24And besides, if someone doesn't do their job,
00:14:26they don't have anything to teach.
00:14:31See?
00:14:32Pretension.
00:14:41Hey, you want to ride?
00:14:45No, I'm good. I'll walk.
00:14:47Sure.
00:14:49Listen, um, do you have any interest in helping me out with my data?
00:14:53Would you?
00:14:54It could be like old times,
00:14:57some grad labs.
00:14:59I think I'm a super good returner.
00:15:01It's not gonna be a lot of fun.
00:15:04I'm sorry.
00:15:05No, don't be.
00:15:08Anyway, thanks for the drink.
00:15:11Yeah.
00:15:12Hey, are you sure you're okay?
00:15:15Yeah.
00:15:18I will be.
00:15:20See you around, Charlie.
00:15:24We should do this more often, huh?
00:15:26Call me back whenever you want.
00:15:38Governor.
00:15:39Stay, stay.
00:15:41How do you know I live here?
00:15:43Uh, oh, I, um,
00:15:45I was hoping to apply for your researcher position.
00:15:51What's your name?
00:15:53Clara.
00:15:55Clara.
00:15:57It's late.
00:15:58Great, I'm sorry.
00:15:59I will come back tomorrow if I don't want to bother you.
00:16:02But this is my job.
00:16:04I'm sorry.
00:16:05I will come back tomorrow if I don't want to bother you.
00:16:07But this is Eva.
00:16:09And I was just wondering if I could ask for a glass of water.
00:16:17Please.
00:16:19Alright, so, uh,
00:16:22what level of post-secondary education do you have?
00:16:27Wait, you did go to school?
00:16:29Yes.
00:16:30I did go to high school here and there,
00:16:32but I moved around a lot.
00:16:34I moved around a lot,
00:16:36but I moved around a lot,
00:16:38but I moved around a lot,
00:16:40but I moved around a lot,
00:16:42but I moved around a lot,
00:16:44but I moved around a lot,
00:16:46but I moved around a lot.
00:16:48Okay, so you're not a student.
00:16:50Have you worked professionally,
00:16:51and have you built a science before?
00:16:53I haven't.
00:16:54No.
00:16:55Can you program?
00:16:56Write data?
00:16:57Do you have any data?
00:16:58Do you have any qualifications at all?
00:17:00Look, I'm underqualified,
00:17:03for sure,
00:17:04but I'm a fast learner,
00:17:05and I work very hard,
00:17:07especially when it comes to things I care a lot about,
00:17:09and I'm always wondering what else could be out there.
00:17:13Happen to you?
00:17:17Okay.
00:17:21Well, I guess I'm going to need some time to consider this.
00:17:24Yeah.
00:17:26I'll give you a call tomorrow.
00:17:27What's your phone number?
00:17:31I don't have a cell phone,
00:17:33or a landline.
00:17:35I'm guessing you're trying to have room available for my advisor.
00:17:40Do you have any other applicants?
00:17:44Are you fielding a lot of other options?
00:17:47You know what, I'm sorry,
00:17:48but I don't think this is going to work out.
00:17:51Wow.
00:17:54That is an incredible vinyl collection.
00:17:56I'm going to have to go back and get it.
00:17:58Okay.
00:17:59Okay.
00:18:00Okay.
00:18:01Okay.
00:18:02Okay.
00:18:03That is an incredible vinyl collection.
00:18:06Thanks.
00:18:08Can I?
00:18:10Just flick my song card.
00:18:12Okay.
00:18:13Okay.
00:18:35Did you paint the helix art?
00:18:38That mural in school?
00:18:43Yeah.
00:18:53You like Ellen?
00:18:54Yes.
00:18:56Is this an original?
00:18:57It's one of my favorites.
00:19:00Why is it empty?
00:19:01We lost it when we moved in.
00:19:03Who's we?
00:19:04My wife and I.
00:19:09Where is she?
00:19:11She's gone.
00:19:13What?
00:19:30Oh, thank you.
00:19:32Yeah.
00:19:33For everything.
00:19:36Come on, Eva.
00:19:40Would you be able to start first thing tomorrow?
00:19:44Yeah.
00:19:48Good.
00:19:51I'll show you your room.
00:20:13Shh.
00:20:14You'll wake me up.
00:20:44Before we start, a couple of ground rules.
00:20:47Okay?
00:20:48We're going to keep this objective and professional.
00:20:50We're not roommates.
00:20:52We're not friends.
00:20:53We're being about research.
00:20:54Alright?
00:20:55Got it.
00:20:56Good.
00:20:57So, I think we should start with what we're going to do.
00:20:59A three-action black coffee.
00:21:01And a warm honey water.
00:21:03Thank you.
00:21:04You.
00:21:05Thank you.
00:21:06Thanks.
00:21:07You sure?
00:21:08That's all you want?
00:21:09Yeah.
00:21:10That's it.
00:21:11Sorry.
00:21:12I was just saying.
00:21:13Basics.
00:21:14Basics.
00:21:15Do you know what the chandelier method is?
00:21:17Hopefully I will soon.
00:21:18It's a good place to start.
00:21:19Let's start.
00:21:23Alright.
00:21:24Let's pretend that this is a star.
00:21:28Now this is a chandelier.
00:21:32Anything that passes in front of the star, in this case a planet,
00:21:35it dims the light that we receive from the star.
00:21:38This is the light dimming while the transiting object passes in front of the star.
00:21:43Then we measure the brightness over time so that we can determine the different qualities of that planet.
00:21:49The size.
00:21:50The temperature.
00:21:51Just by analyzing curves of light.
00:21:53Okay?
00:21:54Okay.
00:21:55Okay.
00:21:56So.
00:22:00Go.
00:22:01Find the chandelier.
00:22:05Here.
00:22:07That's a new thing.
00:22:08What?
00:22:09That is amazing.
00:22:10Incredible, right?
00:22:13So, you are going to be pointing to dips.
00:22:16I will be pointing to data.
00:22:17And then how would you know which planets have light?
00:22:21Well, we're the only planet that we know people who are sustaining life.
00:22:24So, let's use this light data to find other planets that are as similar as possible to Earth in mass and temperature.
00:22:33It's an oversimplification, but we find out that Earth, we can find life.
00:22:41Now, next year, the James Webb Space Telescope is going to launch,
00:22:44and we need our planet candidate to be the first follow-up observation.
00:22:48Alright?
00:22:50Good.
00:22:53Can I ask you something?
00:22:56Yeah.
00:22:58Why is finding life out there so important to you?
00:23:02You know what people are scared of most?
00:23:05What?
00:23:06The unknown.
00:23:07Which, unfortunately, this universe is chock-full of.
00:23:12Sure, we've been scoping away for thousands of years, but we still basically know nothing.
00:23:18So, how do we process that?
00:23:21Do what we've always done.
00:23:23Make new data.
00:23:25Create just a labyrinth of stories to explain it all.
00:23:29But if we found something,
00:23:31even in the smallest clue that something else exists out there, something entirely different,
00:23:38we wouldn't be in the dark anymore.
00:23:41We wouldn't have to be scared.
00:23:44So, wait, do you think a human is not always telling stories because we're scared?
00:23:51Terrified.
00:23:52Okay, but what if telling stories is just a part of human nature?
00:23:56I'm done playing pretend. I think we all should be.
00:24:01Okay, okay.
00:24:04What about this?
00:24:06Let's say there is a scientist who is brilliant and very well-respected,
00:24:10who makes ever-changing world-altering advancements in his field,
00:24:14but he's also religious.
00:24:17His driving force is his faith.
00:24:18His belief in God and his bedtime story.
00:24:21But the result of his work is scientific progress.
00:24:24What would you say to him?
00:24:26What would I say?
00:24:27I'd say, skip church and get back to work. You'll get more done faster.
00:24:32I think he did just fine.
00:24:34What?
00:24:35Sir, I think he did just fine.
00:24:51All right, we'll get back to work.
00:24:53These are M-Dwarf stars, smaller, dimmer than ours.
00:24:57The test mainly focuses on brighter, bigger stars like stars,
00:25:00but that means one transit will be every 365 days.
00:25:03But these M-Dwarf stars, we have to orbit them in a matter of weeks.
00:25:08So, less waiting.
00:25:09Exactly.
00:25:10So, if we focus on these stars, we have an advantage for everyone else with the data.
00:25:15That's it.
00:25:16So, is that going to be a good idea?
00:25:18Really?
00:25:19That's so cool.
00:25:20Why the rush?
00:25:21The James Webb Telescope will follow up on planets discovered by TESS.
00:25:24So, if we're the first ones with the perfect candidate,
00:25:26we have a chance to be a part of the big adventure.
00:25:28You mean we're going to find out who won?
00:25:40There.
00:25:41Is that a planet?
00:25:43No.
00:25:44I don't see it.
00:25:45I don't see it.
00:25:46I don't see it.
00:25:47I don't see it.
00:25:48No.
00:25:49I don't see it.
00:25:50It's a sharp drop.
00:25:51It's probably nothing.
00:25:52Keep looking.
00:25:57So, do you ever eat before doing this?
00:25:59That's enough for you.
00:26:02Food?
00:26:03What's that?
00:26:05Hi.
00:26:06Hey.
00:26:07So, that strange dip block is a planet.
00:26:09A promising one.
00:26:10Look.
00:26:11Right there.
00:26:12Unfortunately, TESS's cadence missed before,
00:26:14and it's only going to get a new transit ourselves to help prove it.
00:26:17Which means,
00:26:18we're going to need to tell us how to do it.
00:26:20Thank you.
00:26:23I knew it.
00:26:25No.
00:26:27You're supposed to apply for the telescope timelines in advance.
00:26:31Well,
00:26:33what about that one?
00:26:35We need,
00:26:36we need one like the one that's operating at the university.
00:26:39So, why don't we use theirs?
00:26:42Keep an eye out for security.
00:26:43It's going to take a while.
00:26:44Okay.
00:26:46Okay.
00:26:48Come on.
00:26:50Go.
00:27:05Where are the telescopes from?
00:27:06A lot of our research has been done on them.
00:27:08Where are the telescopes from?
00:27:10A lot of our research is based in the galactic center,
00:27:12which is only visible from the southern hemispheres.
00:27:15The one we use is a remote robotic telescope based in Chile.
00:27:21Normally,
00:27:22it accesses in just a couple of clicks,
00:27:24but given my current employment status,
00:27:28I don't know.
00:27:34Hello.
00:27:35Hi.
00:27:36Hola.
00:27:37My name is Dr. Bruno, Dr. Isaac Bruno.
00:27:41I last accessed this telescope on March 14th at approximately 3 a.m.
00:27:47Si, si.
00:27:48Could I have the telescope's new celestial coordinates?
00:27:52No, no, I have permission.
00:27:55From the,
00:27:57Dr. Charles Duran.
00:28:00Yes, ID number 917836497.
00:28:03No, he's not human.
00:28:05Listen, it's only going to take a couple of hours, okay?
00:28:07Then we'll put the telescope back in the...
00:28:10Hola.
00:28:11Buenas noches.
00:28:12I'm Clara.
00:28:13Soy una asistente de investigación trabajando con el Dr. Bruno.
00:28:16¿Cuál es tu nombre?
00:28:18María.
00:28:19¿Cuándo va el día?
00:28:21Qué bien.
00:28:22¿Es bueno escuchar eso?
00:28:24Yo sé que será difícil por su lado sin autorización.
00:28:29Si, solo unas pocas horas.
00:28:33Bueno.
00:28:34Muchísimas gracias.
00:28:36Hey, no se si será el día, María.
00:28:39Chao.
00:28:41All right.
00:28:42She said it'll take 15 minutes.
00:28:44It'll be fine.
00:28:45What did you say?
00:28:47I asked her how her day was.
00:28:50I was about to get to that.
00:28:52Yeah, hang on.
00:29:05The observatory is processing the images now.
00:29:08It's going to take a while until we get all the data.
00:29:18What are these rocks that you have over there?
00:29:22This is Sia
00:29:24from the Huayhuas Mountain in Peru.
00:29:28Amethyst from Zambia.
00:29:31Celestine from Australia.
00:29:34It's really rare, actually. This is a gift.
00:29:37Pyrite from Navajo.
00:29:40This piece is pretty impure,
00:29:41but I watched them chip them out
00:29:43and claimed that they were designed
00:29:45to be printed with perfect cubes.
00:29:47What about this one?
00:29:48You're going to like this one.
00:29:49It's a meteorite from Antarctica.
00:29:52It's called the Condor.
00:29:54Wow.
00:29:55You know, this is a little bit older than the Sun.
00:29:57Mm-hmm.
00:30:00Why don't you take a look at the Condor?
00:30:03That was actually the one continent that I couldn't get to.
00:30:05But that was my first one.
00:30:07That's what made me want to travel.
00:30:09Why?
00:30:10I grew up around here.
00:30:11Group care, foster homes.
00:30:13Not great for the most part,
00:30:14but they used to always bring us trips
00:30:16to the waterfront or to the island.
00:30:18You know, with me, I would sneak off
00:30:21and I would find this family
00:30:23with really nice beach towels and snacks
00:30:25and I would sort of befriend them
00:30:27and pretend that they were my family.
00:30:30And anyways, when they walked to the pier,
00:30:32when I snuck off,
00:30:33I met this guy who was a sailor.
00:30:36He was this huge Icelandic guy
00:30:38with big red beard
00:30:39and these glacial blue eyes and ears
00:30:41and he let me help get his boat ready to sail.
00:30:46He taught me all about the proper rigging
00:30:48and even how to signal the worst coast.
00:30:51And I loved that.
00:30:52I was an 8-year-old.
00:30:55And when we were done, he said,
00:30:56thank you, gave me that.
00:30:58And he told me that I wanted it
00:30:59on the other side of the planet.
00:31:02It came from the stars.
00:31:03Meteors aren't stories.
00:31:07It had a story.
00:31:09He had a story.
00:31:11And a life.
00:31:13And I promised myself
00:31:14right when I'm older that when I grow up,
00:31:16I was going to travel the world
00:31:17and I was going to make my own stories.
00:31:21And when I'm done,
00:31:22when I'm moving,
00:31:23I'll throw them in the ocean.
00:31:25Give them back to the Earth.
00:31:28Right now, they're all I've got.
00:31:30They're my pieces of home.
00:31:33So, uh, when did you move back?
00:31:36A year ago.
00:31:38All of the bouncing around
00:31:39was starting to take a toll on me,
00:31:40so I decided to turn it back.
00:31:43And so, when I'm beginning to see that I am...
00:31:46And also, I found Eva,
00:31:47so we've just been taking our pieces of home.
00:31:50Uh-huh.
00:31:51So you speak Spanish.
00:31:52What else you got?
00:31:54Excusez-moi,
00:31:55pouvez-vous me dire
00:31:56si j'ai le droit
00:31:57de faire ce qu'on dit, s'il vous plaît?
00:31:59That's French.
00:32:00Easy.
00:32:06Japanese.
00:32:12German?
00:32:13Afrikaans.
00:32:16We'll pretend that we're all so different,
00:32:18but really everybody just wants the same thing.
00:32:20They all want to hear,
00:32:21thank you.
00:32:22They want to be able to tell their days are.
00:32:25They want to hear, I love you.
00:32:28Sounds like there's a story there.
00:32:29More than one.
00:32:31Oh.
00:32:33But I never really let it get too far.
00:32:36Whenever the conversation
00:32:37between marriage and kids,
00:32:39you know it was my time to go.
00:32:44Not the way I came to live, you know.
00:32:48Yeah.
00:32:50I do.
00:32:59I do.
00:33:13Shit, Clara.
00:33:15Clara, come on.
00:33:16Campus security.
00:33:17We'll have to find a way
00:33:18to get the data later.
00:33:19Go, go, go.
00:33:20Go, go, go.
00:33:21Okay, okay.
00:33:30Don't you ever use my name
00:33:31for something so stupid
00:33:32and irresponsible again.
00:33:33Don't you realize
00:33:34you put my career in jeopardy?
00:33:38Hello.
00:33:40Hi.
00:33:42Charlie.
00:33:43Clara.
00:33:44Clara.
00:33:45Charlie.
00:33:46It's nice to meet you, Charlie.
00:33:47You too.
00:33:48I hope he has a major influence
00:33:49on your health.
00:33:50I hope so.
00:33:51I hope so.
00:33:52I hope so.
00:33:53I hope so.
00:33:54I hope so.
00:33:55I hope so.
00:33:56I hope so.
00:33:57I hope so.
00:33:58I hope so.
00:33:59I hope so.
00:34:00I hope so.
00:34:01I hope he helps you.
00:34:02I hope so.
00:34:03I hope so.
00:34:04I hope he helps you.
00:34:05Thank you.
00:34:06I hope so.
00:34:07I hope so.
00:34:08Is it all dynamic?
00:34:09But.
00:34:10But.
00:34:11It's containing
00:34:12all the stuff I'm not open to.
00:34:13It's containing
00:34:15all the stuff I'm not open to.
00:34:16Plus you gotta expect
00:34:17everything to be mass
00:34:18and a lot of fun stuff.
00:34:19No one's gonna give you
00:34:20all the hustle time anymore
00:34:21unless you get someone
00:34:22with a social crush
00:34:23to help you out.
00:34:24unless you get someone
00:34:25with a social crush
00:34:26to help you out.
00:34:27No.
00:34:29No.
00:34:31We'll find another option.
00:34:33There aren't any geniuses.
00:34:35Sorry, guys, what are we talking about?
00:34:41After Isaac had stunned people all day,
00:34:43I thought, well, what else could I do?
00:34:45I needed a good rep and referrals for that sort of thing,
00:34:47and Isaac just took a dump all over the place.
00:34:49Charlie, you have a friend.
00:34:51Isaac's ex-wife, Rebecca.
00:34:53She's an endowed spirit contact.
00:34:55She was punished when we got to California.
00:34:57As long as you don't put her person at risk, too,
00:34:59she could probably get you time on the tech telescope.
00:35:02I mean, if you're not too hard on yourself,
00:35:04Isaac, let's talk about that.
00:35:06Thanks for the data, Charlie.
00:35:08If you do things right with her,
00:35:09you can cancel the next transit three days from now.
00:35:11Charlie, this is the part where you stay out of it.
00:35:15You're just making this harder for yourself, asshole.
00:35:19Sorry.
00:35:25Believe it or not, he's the smartest guy I know.
00:35:29Was it as bad as I think it was?
00:35:33Or worse?
00:35:44Hey.
00:35:46Hey.
00:35:48Um, do you have any extra pajamas?
00:35:51Anything?
00:35:52And t-shirts.
00:35:54Um...
00:35:56Yeah, should be, uh...
00:35:58Should be something in your closet.
00:36:01Some stuff that Rebecca never wore.
00:36:03Are you sure?
00:36:04Yeah.
00:36:07Okay.
00:36:09Actually, um...
00:36:11Here, I got you this.
00:36:16It's not gonna bite anyone.
00:36:23Thailand music.
00:36:28It's not original, but...
00:36:30It's a memento.
00:36:53Thailand music.
00:37:07If you travel in the north,
00:37:13I wish you'd feel your borderline
00:37:18Remember the woman who lives there
00:37:26She once was all the things you loved, my
00:37:35If you go when the sun goes down
00:37:41When the river is free and the summer ends
00:37:48Please see her as a coat so warm
00:37:56To keep her from being how they used to be
00:38:06Please see her eyes long
00:38:12If her hair grows long down her breast
00:38:19Please see for me that her hair's hanging long
00:38:25Isaac.
00:38:26Isaac.
00:38:27Are you sure this is okay?
00:38:30That's how I remember her.
00:38:35Yeah.
00:38:37Yeah, it's fine.
00:38:38You look nice.
00:38:44Many times I walked around the world
00:38:51In the darkness of my day
00:38:58In the brightness of my day
00:39:03California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California.
00:39:06I'll talk to Dr. Jenkins.
00:39:09Can I help you?
00:39:11No, thanks.
00:39:12Thank you.
00:39:32Isaac.
00:39:37Hey.
00:39:42I have a meeting in a few minutes.
00:39:43I'm just finishing my lunch.
00:39:46Went back to Jenkins, huh?
00:39:53It's new.
00:39:55A little contradictory, don't you think?
00:39:59In our field,
00:40:00you never answer any of my phone calls
00:40:02and then you just show up here out of nowhere.
00:40:05Rebecca, I need your help.
00:40:07I need to prove that the planet I found is habitable
00:40:10and I assume you want that too.
00:40:13Tess just launched.
00:40:15James Webb to follow ground to a sculpture
00:40:17and be fighting for a new one.
00:40:18We're always fighting for a new one.
00:40:19Exactly.
00:40:20Oh, okay.
00:40:21So you're here to help me.
00:40:24You're obsessed, Isaac.
00:40:26You used to want this too.
00:40:28I used to want a lot of things.
00:40:31I'm sorry.
00:40:33She's a bad idea.
00:40:34I'm gonna go.
00:40:37Isaac.
00:40:44Finding something in life doesn't bring the kid back.
00:40:49I know that.
00:40:52I'm sorry.
00:40:55I'm sorry.
00:40:58I'm sorry.
00:41:01But it's all I have.
00:41:11I can give you three hours of cat.
00:41:15That's the best I can give you.
00:41:18Rebecca, honestly, it stops after this.
00:41:22For you.
00:41:25Yeah.
00:41:31Here.
00:41:33I know you.
00:42:00Okay.
00:42:30I'm so done.
00:43:01I'm sorry.
00:43:27No one will be able to find anything out of you.
00:43:31I'm sorry, Isaac.
00:43:32Look.
00:43:36Oh, my gosh.
00:43:40It was right on time.
00:43:45Mag 13.5.
00:43:47Just right where James Webb fell off.
00:43:49And the planet's diameter is...
00:43:5012,800 kilometers.
00:43:53Sounds familiar.
00:43:55With a density of 5.4 grams per centimeter cubed.
00:43:57It's definitely Isaac's.
00:43:59Yeah.
00:44:00And the planet's distance to the star?
00:44:020.5 astronomical kilometers,
00:44:04which gets me around 303 Kelvin.
00:44:07Inside the habitable zone.
00:44:1012 light years away, Isaac.
00:44:21We've just discovered our second home.
00:44:23I know.
00:44:28Thank you, Rebecca.
00:44:39Okay.
00:44:40All right.
00:44:41We need to send this to NASA immediately.
00:44:44Of course.
00:44:46You owe me a sandwich.
00:44:53Okay.
00:45:10Oh, my God.
00:45:11Oh, my God.
00:45:20I want to show you something.
00:45:24I found our star.
00:45:28It's a little hard to see with the city light, but...
00:45:32It's there.
00:45:46You got an idea?
00:45:53Sorry, the resolution's not right.
00:45:57There's software that's going to virtually catalog
00:46:01all of the stars discovered by TESS.
00:46:03It'll be like a map of the galaxy.
00:46:07This is just a Hubble field image.
00:46:11We'll have to do for now.
00:46:15Yeah, it'll do.
00:46:17It seems too beautiful to just be random.
00:46:22It's beautiful because it's random.
00:46:25Doesn't it seem like there's so much intention behind all of it?
00:46:29Like somebody painted this canvas?
00:46:33If some god was trying to paint the planet universe,
00:46:38it'd be pretty shitty, huh?
00:46:40Just look at the way things happen.
00:46:43Supremely unintelligent design.
00:46:46Oh, I know that I feel a connection to all of this.
00:46:50People use all different kinds of words for it,
00:46:52but there is something else.
00:46:55Something that reaches out to me.
00:46:58Clara, that connection you feel
00:47:01makes me feel a connection to you.
00:47:04I feel a connection to you.
00:47:07I feel a connection to you.
00:47:10It's just a release of chemicals in the brain, like serotonin.
00:47:14There's more to it than that.
00:47:15There really isn't.
00:47:21Look, if some incredibly advanced machine out there
00:47:24confirmed some metaphysical connection to everything that exists,
00:47:28then maybe I'd take a look at the data.
00:47:31But for now, it's just unproven human-made concepts.
00:47:36Wouldn't you want there to be something more than all of this?
00:47:42Wouldn't you want that comfort?
00:47:44The certainty of knowing that we're going to be okay
00:47:46or that we don't just fade away into darkness when all of this is over?
00:47:52It's not how I want it.
00:47:56And I can't just choose to believe otherwise.
00:48:00I'm sorry.
00:48:05Well, I've always had the feeling that the universe can surprise us.
00:48:13You can't prove something to yourself, can you?
00:48:30Did you feel that?
00:48:35Prove it.
00:48:48Wait.
00:48:53I'm sorry.
00:48:55I'm sorry.
00:49:25Why do you keep reading those around?
00:49:28Um, it just helps me figure out what I'm going to do next.
00:49:35What do you mean?
00:49:36You said it yourself.
00:49:37We're not friends. We're not roommates.
00:49:39We're research partners.
00:49:40And we came here because everybody said that.
00:49:42Exactly.
00:49:43Finding the planet candidates is the first step.
00:49:45I mean, there's still plenty of analysis to do.
00:49:52And you don't have to believe.
00:49:55I'm sorry.
00:50:10I'm sorry for last night.
00:50:12I shouldn't have done that to you.
00:50:13I made you uncomfortable.
00:50:14No, you didn't.
00:50:22Okay, then.
00:50:24We should go talk to Charlie about this.
00:50:26Charlie?
00:50:27He's mid-lecture right now.
00:50:29Okay, so we'll crash it.
00:50:31I don't really want to be seen from campus.
00:50:36Let's crash it.
00:50:41You only look up from your phones.
00:50:42We've been looking for information from you all semester, let alone this.
00:50:46Data.
00:50:48Data is everything to us.
00:50:50Yes.
00:50:51Without data, we wouldn't understand what we're looking at.
00:50:53But if you're like me, and staring at your phones all day is not what amuses you,
00:50:57well, here's a way to make you fun.
00:51:03Sonification is the process of converting data into sound.
00:51:08What we're listening to right now are vibrations from Saturn's rings.
00:51:13Consider what you're actually listening to.
00:51:18It's pretty trippy, isn't it?
00:51:20Let's switch it up.
00:51:21Okay.
00:51:24Listening to data is very useful for detecting patterns.
00:51:27If you think about it, basically every song on your radios, on your streaming devices,
00:51:32can be broken down into data.
00:51:34Now, I've put the MP3 of this sonified track on E-Class.
00:51:38What I want you to do is go home and reverse this sonification process.
00:51:43Convert the sound back into data.
00:51:47That's it.
00:51:48Get out of here.
00:51:54So, this is how you mean college students dress?
00:51:58You look like you're about to play a really, really obnoxious song.
00:52:02Hey, Dr. Rickman from Texas is coming.
00:52:04I'd give him like 10 minutes.
00:52:05Why don't you two take the bags off?
00:52:07I recommend dressing exactly like this.
00:52:08We need to talk to him a little sooner.
00:52:10What are you talking about?
00:52:13We found our planet.
00:52:16Seriously?
00:52:17Yeah.
00:52:18Are you kidding me?
00:52:19Hang on a second.
00:52:21Hello?
00:52:22Hello?
00:52:23Now?
00:52:24Like, right now?
00:52:26Yeah, yeah, okay, I'll come, I'll come.
00:52:30I'm having a baby.
00:52:36Hi, my wife is having a baby.
00:52:38My baby, it's Maya Durant, M-A-Y-A.
00:52:41Well, of course she's having a baby.
00:52:53Oh, my God.
00:53:04Microprocessor, please call 810.
00:53:22Isaac.
00:53:39Isaac.
00:53:43You're going to be a father.
00:53:45He's not breathing.
00:53:47He's not breathing.
00:53:49He's not breathing.
00:53:51He's not breathing.
00:53:53Give her some space.
00:53:55Focus on me.
00:53:56Heartbeat.
00:53:57No, I'm sorry.
00:53:59Isaac.
00:54:10Isaac.
00:54:21Isaac.
00:54:44What do you think about that?
00:54:48That it's all just a lie.
00:54:52All of us.
00:54:58It's just a total cosmic accident.
00:55:05It's just one minuscule variation.
00:55:09A slight shift one way or another,
00:55:11and in the last 13.8 billion years,
00:55:14could have gone a different way.
00:55:16But here we are.
00:55:26Recycled matter.
00:55:30Dust.
00:55:39So many things have to go right to make anything.
00:55:44An atom.
00:55:45A star.
00:55:50A tiny person.
00:55:57He was ours.
00:56:01Less than a minute, he was ours.
00:56:07And then...
00:56:13It wasn't.
00:56:17Isaac.
00:56:19I wish I could hope that I won't keep coming back to people.
00:56:23I'd like to just stop living.
00:56:28But I can't.
00:56:32All we know is that the universe went our way.
00:56:35And we're here.
00:56:37And so was he.
00:56:39He was here.
00:56:40His atoms were here.
00:56:43And they're not common.
00:56:45They've only changed.
00:56:50I read somewhere that once two atoms come in contact with one another,
00:56:53they can link, intertwine,
00:56:55and then no matter how far they're separated,
00:56:58they still know one another's state.
00:57:01Instantly.
00:57:02Okay, but yes.
00:57:03Quantum entanglement.
00:57:04Yeah.
00:57:08You're still connected to him.
00:57:10I'm not sure that's how that works.
00:57:12Yeah, but you feel connected to him, don't you?
00:57:18And you're his son.
00:57:19You're his son.
00:57:20He's still connected to you.
00:57:42I'm still connected to him.
00:58:06I feel like I have the parts of the Earth.
00:58:13This one will love us.
00:58:18Maybe if you can stay.
00:58:32Stop looking and just feel it.
00:58:36Feel it?
00:58:37Just draw the bite out of it.
00:58:40It's beautiful.
00:58:46Now you've got to wait for it to come off.
00:58:48Yeah, fire.
00:58:49And that's Earth.
00:58:50And this is air.
00:58:51My tooth is going through my mouth.
00:58:54It's kind of wonderful.
00:59:09It's beautiful.
00:59:39It's beautiful.
01:00:10Hello?
01:00:12Yeah, it's me.
01:00:17What are you talking about?
01:00:18That doesn't make any sense.
01:00:19No, we gave you all of our data.
01:00:21It's been...
01:00:23Go back.
01:00:24Take a look.
01:00:25Hello?
01:00:26Hello?
01:00:28What's going on?
01:00:31Somebody discovered our communication using test data and they sent it a week before us.
01:00:36Some guy from a dark India is going to be credited with our discovery.
01:00:40Not us.
01:00:41Okay, but we still found it, right?
01:00:43I mean, it doesn't really matter whose name goes on the site.
01:00:46Yes, it does.
01:00:47It really does.
01:00:48It means that we're not going to be a part of the next couple of years of analysis.
01:00:51What do you mean the next couple of years?
01:00:53And if they find signs of life, then we're definitely not going to be a part of that.
01:00:56Okay.
01:00:58Well then, why don't we just find another candidate?
01:01:00No, no.
01:01:01Stop.
01:01:02Stop.
01:01:03At this point, finding a better planet candidate in time to save the web is basically impossible.
01:01:09Isaac.
01:01:11It's over.
01:01:14It's over.
01:01:22We made our own interesting discovery.
01:01:24So far, test 421A.
01:01:27And 421A, it works.
01:01:29It's in the Goldilocks zone, where the temperature in there is just right for living water.
01:01:35It's about 20 light years away and its size is closer to Earth than any other planet recorded.
01:01:41Has TESS found any evidence to suggest that there is life on this planet?
01:01:46No, that's not the primary objective of TESS.
01:01:49I mean, we're doing a survey mission.
01:01:52The search for Earth-like planets.
01:01:55Webs will determine the components of Earth-like planets.
01:02:10Wait, everyone is looking for Earth-like planets, right?
01:02:15They're all looking for circumstances that are right.
01:02:17But what if...
01:02:19What if we look for things that are wrong?
01:02:22What do you mean?
01:02:23Even if the planet has life, it could just be a microbe.
01:02:27It would be too small, we wouldn't be able to see it.
01:02:29The only way to truly know if we find an advanced species is to see the result of their existence.
01:02:33Atmospheres affected by fossil fuels or large megastructures that are big enough to make a transit,
01:02:38or solar energy harbors, like footprints.
01:02:42The older and more evolved civilizations are bound to have produced unnatural phenomena.
01:02:48Anomalies.
01:02:50How do we even start?
01:02:52We download the next batch of TESS data,
01:02:55and we go through all of it.
01:02:57Process for elimination.
01:02:59Search for 2846.
01:03:15Okay.
01:03:17I'm done being a chemist. You have to get out of here.
01:03:20Oh, I'm working.
01:03:22Come on, just get out of here.
01:03:23Sorry, I can't.
01:03:30Okay.
01:03:36What?
01:03:37I'm going out.
01:03:38Where?
01:03:39Dancing.
01:03:59Oh, my God.
01:04:59Do you need a towel?
01:05:00No.
01:05:01Okay.
01:05:05What are you doing?
01:05:09Drawing evolution.
01:05:12Oh.
01:05:13Nice.
01:05:18What's that?
01:05:20I don't know.
01:05:21I don't know.
01:05:22I don't know.
01:05:23I don't know.
01:05:24I don't know.
01:05:25I don't know.
01:05:26I don't know.
01:05:27Oh!
01:05:32You know, Eva's much closer to the stage.
01:05:36Oh, yeah?
01:05:37When I found her, she was a stranger.
01:05:40Just wandering around.
01:05:44Maybe she found me.
01:05:49And I'm still here.
01:05:52Holy shit.
01:05:55I think I found you.
01:05:57I found something.
01:06:01What are you looking at? You'll see it.
01:06:05This is bad data.
01:06:08What are you talking about? Look at this.
01:06:11The data captured over these days.
01:06:13Look at this strange periodic dimming of the light.
01:06:15That suggests strategically scattered objects orbiting the stars.
01:06:19This is too intriguing.
01:06:20To put it in a degree, this could be some sort of crucial Dyson sphere,
01:06:22some advanced civilization harvesting their stars' energy.
01:06:25Charlie, would you look at this?
01:06:27Do you realize that aliens are always the last thing to search on?
01:06:29This is not natural, man.
01:06:31It's bad data.
01:06:33There was movement on the spacecraft.
01:06:34This batch is filled with errors.
01:06:36I'm surprised you don't know that.
01:06:37Oh, shit.
01:06:40I think you might be too close to this.
01:06:43Everything okay?
01:06:45Hey, I heard you were under the weather.
01:06:47You look like you're ill.
01:06:49Oh, not really.
01:06:50But I just came in here to get a glass of water.
01:06:53I'm going to go back to bed.
01:06:58How's Maya?
01:06:59Uh, good, good.
01:07:00I mean, Maya's a little lost, you know?
01:07:02It's kind of hard to get any sleep,
01:07:03and the baby's crying every seventh minute.
01:07:05Uh-huh.
01:07:06Come on, Mom.
01:07:07She's got to go down and pay for the kids' foreheads
01:07:09this season with the Puerto Plata.
01:07:11She was never really into that at all.
01:07:13Come on.
01:07:15But besides that, we're good.
01:07:18Well, if she needs a poor guy,
01:07:21just toss her by the way.
01:07:23Sometimes I miss being on the road.
01:07:25Good night, you guys.
01:07:26Hey, good night.
01:07:33Hey.
01:07:34What the hell's the matter with you?
01:07:36Charlie, come on, please.
01:07:38She's sick, and you're looking at shit, David.
01:07:41You should be making her soup.
01:07:43You spend all your time looking up at the stars,
01:07:45you're going to miss a train in front of you again.
01:07:48All right, this whole hiatus thing,
01:07:50you bore fruit right when you met Rebecca.
01:07:52You get that closure with Rebecca,
01:07:53it means she's moving on with her life.
01:07:55You deserve that, too.
01:07:58What do you mean by that?
01:08:00She got in touch with Maya to say congratulations
01:08:04to our baby.
01:08:06And she asked her how she can use it
01:08:09to get the best on my baby registries.
01:08:20All right.
01:08:21All right.
01:08:48You don't have to stop.
01:08:50It's fine.
01:08:59How are you doing?
01:09:03You don't have to worry about me.
01:09:08But I do.
01:09:16It's for you.
01:09:19It's not great.
01:09:23I tried to do everything you told me.
01:09:26I got charcoal all over my hands.
01:09:32I just figured you were never in any of your sketches.
01:09:36You're always busy observing everything else.
01:09:41I just wanted to let you know that...
01:09:45I see you.
01:09:54And I know I've been distracted lately.
01:10:02I've been thinking about that look on Charlie's face when he...
01:10:08When he was holding his baby for the first time.
01:10:12Everything just made sense to him.
01:10:15And I realized that all this time...
01:10:21I've just been chasing that look.
01:10:26I thought that this, you know, all of this, you know, would work.
01:10:29I thought maybe if I could find life somewhere,
01:10:34if I could just find something living,
01:10:36then maybe Isaac...
01:10:42I think it's time to give up.
01:10:45I tried, but I failed.
01:10:47You have to help.
01:10:49Come on.
01:10:50What?
01:10:51Come on, get up.
01:10:53Look, we are going to put a fine-smear to him because he's hiding more data.
01:10:56I need you to trust him more than you trust your eyes.
01:10:59I don't understand.
01:11:00You said that there was a virtual map that you could test there, right?
01:11:03Yes.
01:11:04Only two batches of data, then at least send it over.
01:11:07Only two batches of data, then at least send it over.
01:11:15We're going to pick a star.
01:11:19A random?
01:11:21No, not a random.
01:11:24Give me your hand.
01:11:28Here.
01:11:33I want you to see what I see.
01:11:36What?
01:11:37You said it yourself.
01:11:38We're dust.
01:11:39We're made up of the same stuff that this universe is.
01:11:42We're not just analyzing it in you.
01:11:44So find it.
01:11:46Use it.
01:11:47This is crazy.
01:11:49Trust me.
01:11:54All right.
01:11:56I'll try.
01:11:59Close your eyes.
01:12:01Come on, close them.
01:12:05Okay.
01:12:13Let yourself go.
01:12:21To where you've been.
01:12:23And where you can go next.
01:12:53To where you can go next.
01:13:24To where you can go next.
01:13:44Turn it off.
01:13:54Isaac.
01:13:56I can't believe I let you tell me that.
01:14:01I said you feel something.
01:14:03It just means to try and it works.
01:14:04What are you putting in your head?
01:14:07You want the world to be this magical connected place, but you know that it's not.
01:14:11And so you're sugarcoating this bullshit philosophy.
01:14:14Because the truth is, you can't stand it.
01:14:16Just like the rest of us.
01:14:17Isaac, I saw you feel something back here.
01:14:19I saw you feel something inside of yourself that you couldn't explain.
01:14:22So what do you do?
01:14:23You reject it because you can't prove it.
01:14:25No, because you trust your data more than you trust your cause.
01:14:28Because you're lost.
01:14:34And I care about you.
01:14:36And all I wanted to do was...
01:14:38What, you wanted to make me another chapter in your story?
01:14:40Come on.
01:14:41You wanted to have some great experience and then not leave just like you always do?
01:14:45No.
01:14:46But it's like you said, you miss being on the move, right?
01:14:49You want to talk about trust?
01:14:55I trusted you.
01:14:57Right up until the moment that I realized that I was pitched up on your waste of words.
01:15:04Isaac.
01:15:16Eva!
01:15:18Come on, girl. I wanna go.
01:15:20Eva!
01:15:23Where is she?
01:15:24Clara, she's there.
01:15:25I don't know.
01:15:28Eva!
01:15:30What's going on?
01:15:31Eva!
01:15:32Clara!
01:15:33Clara!
01:15:34Eva!
01:15:35Hey, hey, hey!
01:15:36What is it? What is it?
01:15:37What's happening?
01:15:38I don't know where to go.
01:15:39Clara, stop!
01:15:40No, no, no!
01:15:41No, no, no!
01:15:42Clara!
01:15:43Clara!
01:15:44Help!
01:15:45Help!
01:15:46Clara!
01:15:47Clara!
01:16:00Mr. Bruno.
01:16:01She's awake.
01:16:07What's wrong?
01:16:09We...
01:16:12We think it's some sort of rare autoimmune disease.
01:16:16Her skin is being affected.
01:16:17Her muscles are actually failing.
01:16:19Her connective tissues are breaking down and organs,
01:16:22such as her heart, lungs, her gaze,
01:16:25they've been failing for some time now.
01:16:27No, no, this doesn't make any sense.
01:16:32She...
01:16:33She's been tired.
01:16:34She's been a little under the weather,
01:16:36other than that, she's been fine.
01:16:38Fine.
01:16:40The state that she grew up in, I'm surprised she can walk and talk.
01:16:44The cortical steroid she was taking might have alleviated her symptoms, but...
01:16:50Mr. Bruno, it's only a matter of time.
01:16:54We'll do what we can for Clara.
01:16:56Clara.
01:16:58I'm sorry.
01:16:59Clara.
01:17:13Why didn't you tell me?
01:17:16It wouldn't have changed anything.
01:17:20I was always going to end up here.
01:17:44I brought you this.
01:18:04I don't want to go.
01:18:10I really want to stay.
01:18:14I want to stay.
01:18:16I'm going to stay.
01:18:18I'm not going anywhere.
01:18:23Because there's nowhere for you to go, right?
01:18:29I didn't mean it like that.
01:18:35I'm sorry.
01:18:37I'm sorry.
01:18:47Pretty radical, huh?
01:18:55Right.
01:19:02I'm sorry.
01:19:08Clara.
01:19:11What are you doing?
01:19:13I don't need to see them anymore.
01:19:17What?
01:19:38You've got to rest, okay?
01:19:42Just remember them like that.
01:19:45For me.
01:19:48Yeah.
01:19:49I will.
01:20:07I'm sorry.
01:20:27Clara.
01:20:30Isaac.
01:20:33No, no.
01:20:35Something's wrong.
01:20:36What's wrong, nurse?
01:20:37Hey, nurse!
01:20:38Nurse!
01:20:39Hey.
01:20:40Hey, it's okay.
01:20:41I'll be right back.
01:20:42Don't go, Clara.
01:20:46I wish I could see you.
01:20:51What?
01:20:53You're going to have to step aside.
01:20:56You're going to have to step aside.
01:20:58Clara.
01:20:59Clara.
01:21:00Clara, can you hear me?
01:21:02Clara.
01:21:03Clara.
01:21:18Mr. Bruno.
01:21:20Mr. Bruno.
01:21:25Remember those things?
01:21:30I'm so sorry.
01:22:00I'm so sorry.
01:22:30Shh.
01:23:00Shh.
01:23:31I'm sorry.
01:23:33I'm sorry.
01:23:35I'm sorry.
01:23:37I'm sorry.
01:23:39I'm sorry.
01:23:41I'm sorry.
01:23:43I'm sorry.
01:23:45I'm sorry.
01:23:47I'm sorry.
01:23:49I'm sorry.
01:23:51I'm sorry.
01:23:53I'm sorry.
01:23:55I'm sorry.
01:23:57I'm sorry.
01:23:59I'm sorry.
01:24:29I'm sorry.
01:25:00I'd like to thank Dr. Rickman for coming to speak with us today, please.
01:25:04A round of applause.
01:25:06It really means a lot to me.
01:25:08Let's go outside.
01:25:09Let's get together, all right?
01:25:11Let's do that.
01:25:13Um, can you excuse me for a second, Dr. Rickman?
01:25:16I'll be right back.
01:25:18Hey.
01:25:19Isaac, what are you doing here?
01:25:21You didn't return any calls.
01:25:23What's going on?
01:25:24I need to speak to Rickman.
01:25:26I need to speak to Rickman right now.
01:25:28He says you look like you have a slump.
01:25:29Are you okay?
01:25:30I'm fine.
01:25:31What did they figure out when she...
01:25:32Charlie, I'm serious.
01:25:33I need to speak to Rickman now.
01:25:35I don't think that's a good idea.
01:25:37Charlie, Isaac, you need to stop this.
01:25:39You're not thinking.
01:25:40This is real.
01:25:43Please.
01:25:56Please.
01:26:07They said my wife really likes you and so do I.
01:26:11Ah, Dr. Rickman, Dr. Bruno,
01:26:15I thought you two should meet.
01:26:17Gentlemen, I have to leave for a trip at 7.
01:26:19I'm very busy.
01:26:20Dr. Rickman, please, I found an anomaly in the latest batch of testing.
01:26:26What kind of anomaly?
01:26:28Ah, it's a nearby system. Orange dwarf star with a chromatic value arranged on the outside.
01:26:33We're not interested in geometries. They're uninhabited, I guess.
01:26:36But I think you might be interested in what I found on the orbit.
01:26:39Okay.
01:26:42This thing, right here.
01:26:46Algorithms are probably over it, but I...
01:26:50I got lucky. Happened in no time.
01:26:53It's most likely an exo-moon, which is a nice finding, Dr. Bruno.
01:26:58But it's nothing unusual. That's what I found.
01:27:02Then I accessed the online database of Kepler, and I found this.
01:27:07And this.
01:27:09And this.
01:27:11And this.
01:27:14Multiple travels from this star within the same period.
01:27:18And this step, it's in the exact same spot on the planet.
01:27:24It's not a planet.
01:27:27I checked. And double-checked.
01:27:30And triple-checked.
01:27:32It's good testing.
01:27:35Hmm. Hmm.
01:27:39Looks like I missed a flight.
01:27:52You know, that whole aliens in the past, the conservative business is getting harder by the minute.
01:27:58Yep.
01:28:01Charlie, I got another favor to ask you.
01:28:06If this thing's your job,
01:28:10I want you to take the lead on it.
01:28:13What the hell are you talking about?
01:28:15This could save your career. This is your big discovery.
01:28:18No, it doesn't belong to me.
01:28:20It's hers.
01:28:23Well, that's why you should share it.
01:28:26I just did.
01:28:30I'll see if I can do it.
01:28:35Besides, it would look a lot better on a print paper than I did.
01:28:44Well, there is definitely something in there.
01:28:50But we vet the data with full attention.
01:28:53But for now, we cannot draw any vile conclusions.
01:28:58With all due respect, Dr. Rickman.
01:29:01Yes, we can.
01:29:04Here. Look.
01:29:11This planet is orbiting the star just outside the habitable zone.
01:29:17Now, this object is orbiting with the planet closer to the star than inside the habitable zone.
01:29:24Now, if we take gravitational pull and the gradient points into consideration,
01:29:28it seems fairly obvious that wherever this object is, it's stuck at the L1 position.
01:29:32The L1 is unstable.
01:29:34I mean, if it ended up there, why doesn't it drift at all?
01:29:37So when we launch the James Webb, it's very earthed at our L2 point,
01:29:41which is also unstable.
01:29:44It's just going to drift off.
01:29:46No. I mean, everything we have at L1 and L2 is an artificial satellite.
01:29:50They all have thrusters there.
01:29:55They're all under control.
01:29:59So, something is keeping them there.
01:30:16What?
01:30:25Two years later.
01:30:31Good morning, everyone.
01:30:33Good afternoon and evening to many of you who are watching this around the world.
01:30:38Fifty years ago, we sent astronauts to the moon as the whole world watched.
01:30:44And then after that, we stopped watching.
01:30:47We stopped tracking.
01:30:50Well, not everyone, but we as species, we lost interest in what was above us.
01:30:56But in recent years, that has begun to change.
01:31:00Finding a flowing water on Mars, soon sending men and women to live there,
01:31:05space has once again united us as curious human beings.
01:31:10Well, today, our curiosity has paid off.
01:31:16Ladies and gentlemen, let me present first TESS 1417.
01:31:22It's 200 light years away.
01:31:25It's home to four exoplanets, one of them a Jupiter mass.
01:31:30And then this.
01:31:33It's a large object.
01:31:35It orbits within the planet, within the habitable zone.
01:31:42For the past two years, SETI has monitored the constant radio signal created by the object.
01:31:48Although nothing the signal suggests communication,
01:31:52there are frequent shifts that indicate the object's movements.
01:31:56It adjusts itself to the utmost precision.
01:32:01And therefore, we have concluded that this artificial object,
01:32:06it's the result of intelligent life.
01:32:09Over here. Over here.
01:32:12I will not take questions.
01:32:15Can you elaborate on what you mean by this artificial object to be?
01:32:20We cannot begin to comprehend the architecture of an object this large,
01:32:24but that does not change the fact that this megastructure is being commandeered.
01:32:30We believe it to be some sort of space station.
01:32:40Isaac finally makes it, and it's on all of a sudden.
01:32:44It's crazy, right?
01:32:46He still never told me how he did it.
01:32:49I guess he just knew where to look.
01:33:00What are you thinking about?
01:33:03It's all just luck.
01:33:07This is just a total cosmic accident.
01:33:16What are these rocks that you're holding?
01:33:23They're my pieces of home.
01:33:32Oh my God!
01:33:37It seems to be enough to kiss your right hand.
01:33:44This one will be ours.
01:33:53Isaac.
01:33:55Isaac.
01:34:04I wish I could see his face when he finds out.
01:34:25Isaac.
01:34:55Isaac.
01:35:25Isaac.
01:35:56Isaac.
01:36:02How are you?
01:36:03Good.
01:36:04How's your son?
01:36:05Great.
01:36:06Paul will be here in a couple of weeks.
01:36:08He's getting big.
01:36:10Wow.
01:36:14What are you doing here?
01:36:16I'm here to see my son.
01:36:18Oh, I see.
01:36:20He's getting big.
01:36:22Wow.
01:36:25Sorry for being so quick to come and find you.
01:36:28First contact isn't something you can talk things about on an open line.
01:36:33They made contact.
01:36:35That's what it seems.
01:36:37Two weeks ago, an electron spin attack at Los Alamos was observing a particle from an unrelated object.
01:36:43The particle started spinning bizarrely.
01:36:46Soon it wasn't being violated.
01:36:49To get our attention,
01:36:51they must have exploited the time holding to instantly send us data to an unrelated state.
01:36:55Wait, wait, wait.
01:36:56I don't understand.
01:36:57What kind of data can you send to an unrelated object?
01:37:00The particle would vary between two specific transformations,
01:37:02only 0 and 1.
01:37:03So we assign 0 to the first spin and 1 to the other.
01:37:06What is that?
01:37:07Not just that.
01:37:08The origin ones were names, code patterns.
01:37:10It's beyond us how.
01:37:12They must have found a way to probe us relatively recently if they're using our system to message.
01:37:16But what did the message say?
01:37:36I don't understand.
01:37:38Somehow they know all about us.
01:37:41About you.
01:37:43We figured they could anticipate your spin for the next message.
01:37:48Let's find out.
01:37:52How?
01:37:56Stand up, Isaac.
01:38:04Los Alamos is detecting transformations again.
01:38:12It's not a Morse code.
01:38:14Maybe they're building a file?
01:38:17Then we need a format.
01:38:19Okay, try a text format.
01:38:28Try an audio format.
01:38:35Okay.
01:38:42Okay.
01:38:55Play it.
01:39:11Okay.
01:39:41Okay.
01:40:11Okay.