Prática de Shadowing: How Large Can a Bacteria get? Life & Size 3 - Aprenda a falar inglês com o YouTube

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In and out.
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In and out.
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In and out.
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Staying alive is about doing things.
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This very second, your cells are combusting glucose molecules with oxygen to make energy available,
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which keeps you alive for another precious moment.
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To get the oxygen to your cells, you're breathing.
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Breathing is an answer to a very hard problem.
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How do you get the resources that your cells need to survive from the outside to the inside of your cells?
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Every living thing has to solve this problem
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and the solution is surprisingly different depending on one of the most important regulators of life, size.
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As we've discussed in other videos,
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at different scales the physical laws of the universe have different consequences for its inhabitants.
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Simple things like temperature, microgravity or surface tension might not matter to you or be a deadly danger,
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depending on how big you are.
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Living things need a lot of different materials to keep themselves going.
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And they somehow need to transport them from the outside to the inside.
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This was a huge problem for the first things on the verge of being alive,
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because doing anything in our universe requires energy.
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And the first living beings on Earth did not have the abundance of tools
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and techniques available that life has today after billions of years of evolution.
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So, at the very beginning,
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life needed to find a way to get good stuff inside and bad stuff outside of itself without using energy.
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Luckily, the very first forms of life were very, very small.
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And because they were so small,
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they were able to use a free form of transport that was based on a physical law called diffusion.
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Diffusion is the rule of the universe that molecules,
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especially in liquids or gases,
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are constantly moving around in all directions.
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And because they move around and bump into each other and other molecules,
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they tend to spread.
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For example, if you drop a sugar cube into water,
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then there is a lot of sugar in one place,
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and in another place, there's none.
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As sugar molecules dissolve in the water,
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they will start randomly bumping against the water molecules and other sugar molecules.
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Slowly, all the sugar molecules will spread out and form multiple phases of different concentrations.
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These random movements continue endlessly until at some point the sugar will be spread evenly in the water.
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The great thing about diffusion is that life can use it for free.
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It doesn't require energy.
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And life loves free things.
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So all life on earth relies on diffusion.
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Let's look at the smallest living being on earth, a bacterium.
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Specifically its surfaces.
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Cell membranes allow for diffusion of certain molecules.
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This specific bacterium consumes oxygen to live while carbon dioxide is produced inside as a waste product.
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So inside the bacterium there isn't a lot of oxygen but a lot of carbon dioxide.
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Because of diffusion these molecules will eventually spread evenly
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so the carbon dioxide diffuses out while oxygen is constantly replenished from the outside.
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But this kind of breathing only works for the very small world,
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for bacteria, amoeba or your cells,
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and a few very small animals.
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Insects, for example, have a fine network of trachea,
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tunnels with a pressure gradient where air very slowly can diffuse in and exchange gases with the insect cells.
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But even insects seem to be able to contract their trachea,
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and at least some even have specialized breathing organs like spiracles and air sacs.
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At certain scales, diffusion is just too slow to keep cells alive.
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The fundamental problem is that the exchange with the environment can only happen at the surface
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and diffusion of materials can only sustain a certain amount of inside.
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Tiny living things have only a little bit of inside or volume and a lot of outside or surface area.
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But what if we wanted to create a bacteria the size of a blue whale and had a very convenient enlargement machine?
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We would sadly be messed up by the square cube law.
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In a nutshell, it means that if you make something 10 times larger,
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its outside or surface would grow by 100,
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but its insides or volume grows by 1000 times.
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If we compare the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa with a blue whale,
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we see that the bacterium has 10 million times more surface in relation to its volume than the whale.
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The bacterium has a lot of outsides,
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while the whale has a lot of insides.
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If we make a bacterium the size of a whale,
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our giant bacteria now has too much insides,
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and most of its inside is now very far from its surface.
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The oxygen our bacterium needs would never reach the inside before it would run out of oxygen.
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Our giant bacterium would just die.
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Still, being bigger has many upsides.
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From making it harder to be eaten to making it easier to eat others.
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But the size of cells is limited by the distance oxygen
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and nutrients can effectively diffuse to provide the inside with enough resources.
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So, life avoided this problem by forming multicellular structures.
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Beings composed of many cells instead of one.
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Because diffusion works better if you have many small units instead of one much bigger one.
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Over time, the cell buddies began to share work and specialize.
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Some cells concentrated on sensing the environment,
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others on digestion, others on movement.
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But that still wasn't enough.
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The problem of diffusion and surface and energy production remained,
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limiting the size these first multicellular forms of life could attain.
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So, in order to become even bigger,
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life solved the diffusion problem by having holes and caves and tunnels and by folding in on itself,
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so diffusion could happen easily in each one of the cells.
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Take yourself.
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What you consider your outside,
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your skin, has a surface area of about 2 square meters.
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But your lungs have a surface area of about 70 square meters.
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They aren't like balloons.
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They're more like sponges filled with many tiny packed tiny balloons surrounded by blood vessels.
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When you breathe in, all these tiny balloons fill up with fresh air.
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Blood filled up with CO2 is pumped around the balloons.
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And then the magic of diffusion happens.
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The oxygen diffuses into the blood where it's picked up by red blood cells.
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And the CO2 diffuses out of the blood and into your lungs where it can be breathed out again.
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Your blood then carries oxygen-rich blood into the furthest corners of your body and picks up the CO2 waste.
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Diffusion in the body is effective at about 1 mm one millimeter
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so every cell in your body is at most one millimeter away from a blood vessel.
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So medium-sized animals like you need a lot of blood vessels to reach every cell in the body.
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Your body has around 100 000 kilometers of capillaries alone,
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the tiniest of your blood vessels,
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with a surface area of around 1 000 square meters.
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This is true for all parts of you that want to exchange something with the outside world.
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Your body needs surfaces to take in nutrients from your food,
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so your gut has the surface area of half a badminton court,
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roughly 40 square meters.
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The larger you are, the more hidden surfaces you need.
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Take a tree.
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Its way to stay alive is to create sugar out of thin air and sunlight.
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So, it needs as much surface area as possible.
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An orange tree with 2,000 leaves has a leaf surface area of 200 square meters.
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But the surface inside the leaves where diffusion actually occurs is 6,000 square meters.
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The same with roots where water diffuses from the soil into countless tiny hairs that maximize the surface area.
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The roots of one square meter of grass add up to around 350 square meters of surface.
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If we look at the breathtaking diversity of life on this planet,
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it seems like everything is pretty different.
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And it is.
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But some basic principles are the same for everybody and have not changed significantly for billions of years.
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If we look at the very,
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very small or the very,
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very big, waste goes out and fresh fuel comes in.
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Big animals just need a lot of complex plumbing to make it possible.
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This bird has magical powers.
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Let's see a demonstration.
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Bring in the latest scientific research.
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Wow, that's a lot of complicated stuff about the immune system and all its cells.
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How could someone possibly understand all of this?
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Incredible!
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This overview is delightful and easy to grasp, but still scientifically accurate.
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Let's make it a bit more difficult.
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Can she make all of evolution visible at a glance?
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This is brilliant!
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You can clearly see the relationships between species and how they evolved.
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And look at those illustrations!
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These posters are ready to be shared with the world.
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These very special pieces of Kurzgesagt are now available on our shop along with many other sciencey products,
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all researched with care and created with love by the Burbs with magical powers.
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Every Kurzgesagt product you buy directly funds another moment we get to spend working on our videos.
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Thank you so much for being a part of our story and for making this channel possible.
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Thank you.

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Sobre Esta Lição

Nesta lição, você irá explorar os conceitos de transporte de moléculas nas células e como esses processos estão relacionados ao tamanho dos organismos vivos. Através do exemplo das bactérias, você compreenderá a importância da difusão e como ela permite que a vida funcione eficientemente, mesmo em escalas muito pequenas. Utilizaremos o vídeo da aula para aprimorar suas habilidades auditivas e de conversação em inglês. Esse enfoque ajudará você a aprender inglês com YouTube de maneira eficaz e envolvente.

Vocabulário e Frases Chave

  • Diffusion - Difusão
  • Cells - Células
  • Oxygen - Oxigênio
  • Carbon Dioxide - Dióxido de carbono
  • Energy - Energia
  • Glucose - Glicose
  • Bacteria - Bactérias
  • Transport - Transporte

Dicas de Prática

Para maximizar sua aprendizagem através do shadowing em inglês, siga estas dicas ao assistir o vídeo:

  • Ouça atentamente: Preste atenção ao ritmo e entonação do orador. A velocidade do discurso é moderada, o que facilita a repetição.
  • Repita em voz alta: Tente vocalizar imediatamente após o orador. Isso ajudará a melhorar sua pronúncia e entonação.
  • Pause e volte: Se você achar que uma parte é difícil, pause o vídeo e volte para ouvir novamente. Isso ajudará a fixar as palavras e frases no seu cérebro.
  • Use os termos de vocabulário: Tente integrar as palavras que você aprendeu em suas próprias frases. Isso ajudará a solidificar seu conhecimento e tornar a prática de conversação mais fluida.
  • Grave-se: Ouça suas gravações enquanto pratica. Isso pode revelar áreas onde você pode melhorar a clareza e a fluência de seu shadow speech.

Com essa prática, você estará mais preparado para se comunicar eficazmente em inglês, aprimorando sua confiança ao falar e entendendo melhor conteúdos científicos e técnicos em inglês.

O que é a Técnica de Shadowing?

Shadowing é uma técnica de aprendizado de idiomas com base científica, originalmente desenvolvida para o treinamento de intérpretes profissionais. O método é simples, mas poderoso: você ouve áudio em inglês nativo e repete imediatamente em voz alta — como uma sombra seguindo o falante com 1-2 segundos de atraso. Pesquisas mostram melhora significativa na precisão da pronúncia, entonação, ritmo, sons conectados, compreensão auditiva e fluência na fala.

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