Luyện nói tiếng Anh bằng Shadowing qua video: What space telescopes teach us about the universe | Amber Straughn | TEDxCapeMay

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So imagine
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for a moment that you're on my family's farm in rural Arkansas.
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It's a beautiful summer night.
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You can hear the crickets,
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and you can smell the honeysuckle.
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and the sky is filled with thousands of stars.
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Those stars called my name as a kid,
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and I spent countless nights outside looking up and asking some of the same questions that humans have been asking for millennia.
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Where did we come from?
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How did we get here?
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Are we alone?
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A dark night sky full of stars has always been an open invitation to ask big questions.
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across languages, across time, across culture,
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the universe invites us to look up and to wonder.
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I was really fortunate as a kid that I had parents that supported my curiosity.
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I distinctly remember one time I asked my mom some outlandish question,
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and she looked at me and she said,
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I don't know the answer to that,
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but someday you can figure it out.
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That gave me the courage to start to follow my dreams,
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Today I'm an astrophysicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.
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When I was in the fifth grade,
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NASA launched the Hubble Space Telescope and I was hooked.
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Those beautiful images of stars and galaxies really spoke to my soul.
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And Hubble has been in space now for over three decades and is still incredibly productive.
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And it certainly paved the way for what was to come next.
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The James Webb Space Telescope is by far the biggest and most complex telescope that we've ever sent to space.
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Projects like these take decades of focus.
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The iconic gold mirrors were one of the first technologies we started working on over 20 years ago.
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This giant mirror is polished so smoothly that if you stretched it out to be the size of the continental US,
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the biggest mountain would only be a few inches high.
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The telescope has a giant sunshield the size of a tennis court
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that basically serves to protect the mirrors from the heat and the light of the sun.
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It's basically a giant beach umbrella and it provides an SPF of about a million.
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Decades of work on something that's never been done before,
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I don't have to tell you that this was difficult.
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It was impossible when we got started.
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We had to invent 10 new technologies just to get started building the telescope.
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And we had engineering difficulties along the way.
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We had problems with our detectors,
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we had problems with the sunshield, with the electronics.
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We had over 300 single point failures.
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Individual things that had to go perfectly or the telescope would fail.
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we would be too far away to go and fix it.
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Before launch, people used to ask me, are you scared?
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And I knew that our brilliant engineers had done everything they could to ensure mission success.
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I knew it, but still.
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300 single-point failures.
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I was terrified.
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And then, on Christmas Day 2021, we launched into space.
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I was originally supposed to watch the launch or work the launch from the Mission Ops Center,
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but as it started to slip into the holidays,
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I decided, along with several others,
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to work the launch remotely.
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A lot of us have been working remotely for a long time.
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It's still incredible to me that the two years leading up to launch were done during a global pandemic.
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So in a true full circle moment for me,
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I worked the launch from my mom's couch in Arkansas.
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This incredible video shows real footage of the telescope separating from the rocket shortly after launch.
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In this view, you're seeing the bottom of the folded up telescope.
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You can see little bits of ice floating off,
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and of course the beautiful earth in the background.
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Launch was a moment of true celebration for our team.
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But remember what I said about all those single point failures?
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We had six months of intense work to unfold the telescope and to get it into working order
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before we released the science images to the world.
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it all went perfectly
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and then in july of 2022 we released those images to
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the world for the first time using some of these new
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images i want to tell you a cosmic story our collective
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cosmic story starting with our backyard of the solar system how many of you have seen saturn through a telescope
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It's memorable, right?
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The first time I saw Saturn through a telescope,
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I thought it looked fake,
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almost like somebody was holding out a cardboard cutout at the end of the telescope.
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This view of Saturn from JWST shows us a whole new view of the ringed planet.
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JWST sees the universe in infrared light that's completely invisible to our eyes.
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Light is light that's a little bit more red than what your eyes can see.
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In this view, the methane gas on the planet's atmosphere is absorbing a lot of the infrared sunlight that hits it,
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whereas the icy rings are reflecting it.
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And of course, in addition to planets in our own solar system,
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we now know that there are planets orbiting other stars outside of our solar system,
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what we call exoplanets.
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JWST is allowing us to start to look at the chemical
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signatures in the atmospheres of these planets orbiting other stars in a way that's never been possible before.
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Another one of my favorite images is the Pillars of Creation.
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Here we see stars being born out of gas and dust.
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To set the scale for this image,
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every point of light that you see here is a star like our Sun.
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The pillars of creation lie about 6,500 light years away.
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That means that the light that we're seeing has been traveling through space for 6,500 years until it got to our telescope.
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In this sense, telescopes are time machines.
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They literally allow us to see into the past.
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And that's due to the simple nature of the way light travels through space.
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It takes time to travel.
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So light from the sun takes about eight minutes to reach the Earth.
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So in essence, we're seeing the sun as it was eight minutes ago.
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You can think about stepping out to objects that are further and further away,
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and we're seeing them as they were in the distant past.
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This gives us an incredible ability to study the universe.
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The pillars of creation still lie within our Milky Way galaxy.
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Now I want to step a little further out and show you another galaxy.
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So first, to take you back to middle school science class for a moment,
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a galaxy is just a collection of stars held together by gravity.
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If you go outside tonight,
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look up at the stars,
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all the stars you'll see in the nighttime sky are part of our home galaxy of the Milky Way.
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This galaxy is similar to our Milky Way in that it's a spiral galaxy defined by its shape.
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In the center here, the bluish light is showing us an older population of stars,
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whereas new stars and gas and dust are radiating out in spiral arms from the center.
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The Hubble view of the same galaxy in the lower right
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shows us immediately why having different types of telescopes in space is so important.
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Hubble sees the universe in visible light like your eyes see,
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whereas JWST sees in infrared light.
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And And having these different types of light helps us to put together a more complete picture of how the universe works.
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These telescopes have shown us that the universe is filled with galaxies.
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This is one of my personally favorite images because this is part of a project that I work on myself.
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I study how stars and black holes form in distant galaxies,
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and these deep fields of the universe are helping us learn about those processes.
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And again, scale is always important in astronomy.
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In this image, we're looking through and past our Milky Way galaxy to the deep, distant universe.
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Almost every point of light that we see here is not a star,
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but an individual galaxy itself filled with hundreds of billions of stars.
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And in this view, we see 10,000 galaxies.
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And so you might think,
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okay, it's a big picture of the sky, right?
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But no. If you hold out your pinky finger at arm's distance,
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you can cover up this tiny patch of sky.
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10,000 galaxies under your pinky.
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Images like this have shown us that the universe is filled with hundreds of billions,
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perhaps a trillion other galaxies.
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These deep-filled images from JWST are doing exactly what they were meant to do.
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They're allowing us to look back in time over 13.5 billion
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years into the past to help us learn how it all got started.
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And what we're finding is incredible and a little puzzling.
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We're finding many more of these early galaxies than we expected,
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and they seem to be bigger than our theories predicted,
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and their black holes are growing faster than we expected.
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And we don't yet understand why.
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It's a really exciting place to be in science.
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In this view, we've zoomed way out, far back.
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Now I want to take you back a little bit closer to home,
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back within our own Milky Way galaxy.
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So before launch, when people used to ask me what my favorite image was,
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I would usually point to a deep field like this.
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But not anymore.
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These are the cosmic cliffs of the Carina Nebula.
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Here we see over 100 new stars for the very first time.
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Near the top of the image,
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hot young stars are giving off massive amounts of radiation and carving out the beautiful vista below.
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And it is beautiful, right?
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But why?
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Why do we find these images beautiful?
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It's a bit strange, actually.
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It's completely normal that we would find images of sunsets or oceans or mountains beautiful.
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Those things are part of our experience as humans.
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But nebulae and galaxies aren't.
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Why is it we find these images beautiful?
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I don't think I know the answer to that.
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But I wonder if it might be that on some deep level,
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we realize when we look out at the universe,
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we're looking back at ourselves, back at our origins.
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Something about this feels like home.
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Of all the astounding things that we've learned from JWST over the past few years,
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there's still something incredible.
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Everything that we can see and measure,
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all the hundreds of billions of galaxies,
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trillions of stars, countless planets,
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all of that stuff only makes up 5% of the universe.
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The rest, the other 95%, we have no idea.
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Of this 95%, we think about 5% is normal matter,
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25% about is what we call dark matter,
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and a little over two-thirds is dark energy.
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So first, dark matter.
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Dark matter is like normal matter in that it has mass and takes up space.
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but we only know it exists because we can see its effect on other objects.
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We've never seen it directly,
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and it doesn't seem to interact with light or itself or anything else.
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It's weird.
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It might be some subatomic particle that we haven't identified yet,
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but we don't really know.
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If you think dark matter is strange,
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let me tell you about dark energy.
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We've known for a long time,
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almost 100 years now, that the universe is expanding.
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But in the late 90s,
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we learned something truly unexpected.
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The universe is expanding faster and faster all the time.
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It's accelerating in its expansion.
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This was something that we never dreamed of,
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and we call this property of the universe dark energy.
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And you guessed it, we have no idea what's causing it.
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We have some theories as to what it might be.
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We think it's probably intrinsic to space itself,
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but really it's one of the biggest mysteries in science overall.
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So there you have it.
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Almost all of everything that is,
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and we don't know what it is.
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But we're building a telescope to help us find out.
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The Nancy Grace Roman Telescope,
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NASA's first astrophysics mission named after a woman,
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is being built right now,
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and one of its primary goals is to help us unravel the dark universe.
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It will launch in early 2027.
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Another one of our cosmic unknowns is a question that's central to our very existence as human beings.
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Are we alone?
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Right now at NASA, we're developing the technologies
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that will ultimately enable a telescope that's specifically designed to find life on an Earth-like planet.
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We're calling it the Habitable Worlds Observatory.
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These telescopes are not just for me and my astronomer friends.
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They're yours too.
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In a very real sense,
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if you're a taxpayer in the US,
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Canada, or Europe, they are very much yours.
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You made them possible.
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But even beyond that, anyone in the world can go and download these images and data and use them.
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These telescopes belong to all of us.
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We're in a difficult time on our planet right now.
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I believe that these telescopes give us more than just answers to science questions.
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They help us think outside of ourselves,
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they remind us of the beauty of the universe,
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and they show us our connectedness of me to you and you to me.
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We've got each other.
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We're not in this alone.
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And that gives us reason to hope.
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The hope that any little girl or little boy can achieve their dreams with the support of their family and community.
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The cosmic hope that if we live our lives with all-filled wonder and curiosity,
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and if we put our hearts and our minds together to work for something good,
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that we truly can achieve the impossible.
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It's worth it.
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Can you imagine learning the answers to all of these questions?
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Finding out what the 95% is.
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Finding out if life exists in the universe.
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Don't you want to know?
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Thank you.

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Video "What space telescopes teach us about the universe" của Amber Straughn không chỉ mang đến cho người xem cái nhìn sâu sắc về sự khám phá vũ trụ, mà còn là một công cụ tuyệt vời để luyện nghe nói qua video. Khi bạn theo dõi video, bạn sẽ có cơ hội nghe thấy cách diễn đạt của một nhà khoa học thực thụ, từ đó giúp bạn cải thiện khả năng phát âm và ngữ điệu trong tiếng Anh. Video này mở ra những câu hỏi lớn về vũ trụ, như “Chúng ta từ đâu đến?” và “Liệu chúng ta có đơn độc không?”, khuyến khích bạn phát triển khả năng suy nghĩ và diễn đạt ý tưởng một cách tự tin hơn.

Cấu trúc & Biểu thức ngữ pháp trong bối cảnh

Trong video, Amber sử dụng nhiều cấu trúc ngữ pháp và biểu thức thú vị giúp mở rộng vốn từ vựng và sự hiểu biết của bạn. Dưới đây là một số điểm nổi bật:

  • “I don’t know the answer to that, but someday you can figure it out.” - Câu này cho thấy cách diễn đạt khuyến khích, bạn có thể học cách sử dụng để truyền cảm hứng cho người khác.
  • “We had to invent ten new technologies just to get started building the telescope.” - Cấu trúc “had to” trong câu này diễn tả sự cần thiết của hành động.
  • “The telescope has a giant sunshield the size of a tennis court.” - Câu này là một ví dụ về cách mô tả và so sánh để làm cho thông tin trở nên trực quan hơn.
  • “We had over 300 single point failures.” - Cấu trúc này thể hiện sự đếm được và quan trọng trong ngữ cảnh kỹ thuật.

Những cấu trúc này không chỉ giúp bạn hiểu rõ hơn về ngữ pháp tiếng Anh, mà còn cung cấp cho bạn các biểu thức mà bạn có thể áp dụng trong giao tiếp hàng ngày.

Các bẫy trong phát âm thường gặp

Khi xem video, bạn có thể nhận thấy một số từ và cụm từ có thể gây khó khăn cho việc phát âm tiếng Anh chuẩn. Dưới đây là các từ mà bạn nên chú ý:

  • “telescope” - Lưu ý cách phát âm âm tiết và nhấn âm.
  • “universe” - Đặc biệt chú ý đến âm “u” và “vers” để tránh phát âm sai.
  • “solar system” - Đây là một ví dụ hay về việc phát âm liên tục giữa các từ.

Bằng cách luyện tập với video này, bạn có thể cải thiện khả năng shadow speak của mình, giúp tăng cường sự tự tin và khả năng giao tiếp của bạn trong tiếng Anh.

Phương Pháp Shadowing Là Gì?

Shadowing là kỹ thuật học ngôn ngữ có cơ sở khoa học, ban đầu được phát triển cho chương trình đào tạo phiên dịch viên chuyên nghiệp và được phổ biến rộng rãi bởi nhà đa ngôn ngữ học Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Nguyên lý cốt lõi đơn giản nhưng cực kỳ hiệu quả: bạn nghe tiếng Anh của người bản xứ và lặp lại to ngay lập tức — như một "cái bóng" (shadow) đuổi theo người nói với độ trễ chỉ 1–2 giây. Khác với luyện ngữ pháp hay học từ vựng bị động, Shadowing buộc não bộ và cơ miệng phải đồng thời xử lý và tái tạo ngôn ngữ thực tế. Các nghiên cứu khoa học xác nhận phương pháp này cải thiện đáng kể phát âm, ngữ điệu, nhịp điệu, nối âm, kỹ năng nghe và độ lưu loát khi nói — đặc biệt hiệu quả cho người luyện IELTS Speaking và muốn giao tiếp tiếng Anh tự nhiên như người bản ngữ.