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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,168 --> 00:00:04,003 Mars. 2 00:00:04,162 --> 00:00:08,257 A glowing red orb in the night sky. 3 00:00:08,416 --> 00:00:14,263 A desert planet that could hold signs of extraterrestrial life. 4 00:00:14,347 --> 00:00:17,975 A new frontier for the future of humanity. 5 00:00:20,678 --> 00:00:24,681 For centuries, Mars has been an enigma in the night sky, 6 00:00:24,774 --> 00:00:27,434 beckoning us to unravel its mysteries. 7 00:00:27,527 --> 00:00:30,362 Now, as a new era of space exploration begins, 8 00:00:30,447 --> 00:00:32,008 we have never been closer to setting foot 9 00:00:32,032 --> 00:00:34,107 on its desolate surface. 10 00:00:34,200 --> 00:00:37,369 But what will we discover when people are finally able 11 00:00:37,454 --> 00:00:39,371 to explore the Red Planet? 12 00:00:39,456 --> 00:00:44,126 And could we possibly find evidence that life exists there? 13 00:00:44,210 --> 00:00:47,963 Well, that is what we'll try and find out. 14 00:00:49,000 --> 00:00:55,074 Support us and become VIP member to remove all ads from www.OpenSubtitles.org 15 00:01:07,141 --> 00:01:08,809 Scientists and engineers 16 00:01:08,902 --> 00:01:11,487 working at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory... 17 00:01:11,571 --> 00:01:13,655 celebrate, 18 00:01:13,740 --> 00:01:16,992 as some 245 million miles away from Earth, 19 00:01:17,077 --> 00:01:19,820 the Perseverance Mars rover lands 20 00:01:19,904 --> 00:01:22,915 on the surface of the Red Planet. 21 00:01:28,755 --> 00:01:30,839 I am a participating scientist 22 00:01:30,924 --> 00:01:32,916 on the Perseverance mission. 23 00:01:33,009 --> 00:01:36,586 Landing on Mars is a really complex operation. 24 00:01:36,679 --> 00:01:38,680 We had been thinking about this mission 25 00:01:38,840 --> 00:01:41,433 for a decade before landing, 26 00:01:41,592 --> 00:01:44,678 building the rover, building the instruments, 27 00:01:44,771 --> 00:01:46,605 designing everything about it. 28 00:01:47,690 --> 00:01:49,108 It had been flying to Mars 29 00:01:49,192 --> 00:01:52,686 for just over seven and a half months. 30 00:01:52,779 --> 00:01:56,448 To watch Perseverance being lowered by a sky crane 31 00:01:56,607 --> 00:02:01,278 in the Mars atmosphere, I-I was speechless. 32 00:02:01,362 --> 00:02:04,039 That incredible engineering is so inspiring. 33 00:02:04,198 --> 00:02:07,868 Perseverance is now on the surface of Mars, 34 00:02:07,961 --> 00:02:10,620 looking around for habitability, 35 00:02:10,713 --> 00:02:12,455 the potential for life, minerals. 36 00:02:12,549 --> 00:02:14,958 And so Perseverance is going to be 37 00:02:15,051 --> 00:02:18,795 a tremendously valuable scientific enterprise. 38 00:02:18,888 --> 00:02:22,465 Many scientists believe that the data being collected 39 00:02:22,559 --> 00:02:25,886 by Perseverance will be a giant leap forward 40 00:02:25,979 --> 00:02:28,471 in our understanding of Mars. 41 00:02:28,565 --> 00:02:31,057 But this mission is just the latest chapter 42 00:02:31,151 --> 00:02:33,810 in humanity's long quest 43 00:02:33,895 --> 00:02:36,321 to unravel the secrets of the Red Planet. 44 00:02:36,406 --> 00:02:43,078 In fact, our fixation with Mars dates back thousands of years. 45 00:02:43,237 --> 00:02:46,832 Mars has been an obsession since ancient times. 46 00:02:46,991 --> 00:02:49,835 And one could ask, why is Mars such an obsession? 47 00:02:49,919 --> 00:02:53,413 I would suggest that it's sort of a mysterious planet. 48 00:02:53,506 --> 00:02:54,673 It's a red planet. 49 00:02:56,259 --> 00:02:58,418 Red is a very important color 50 00:02:58,502 --> 00:03:00,587 for ancient and indigenous cultures. 51 00:03:00,680 --> 00:03:03,173 It's the color of blood. 52 00:03:03,257 --> 00:03:06,343 It's a sacred color. It's the color of life. 53 00:03:06,427 --> 00:03:09,429 It's the color of fearsomeness, 54 00:03:09,513 --> 00:03:11,940 the color of the warrior. 55 00:03:12,025 --> 00:03:16,361 It was just all really tantalizing for ancient people. 56 00:03:18,189 --> 00:03:20,083 The Babylonians named the planet 57 00:03:20,107 --> 00:03:24,036 after Nergal, their god of war. 58 00:03:24,120 --> 00:03:27,539 Similarly, the Greeks named the planet 59 00:03:27,698 --> 00:03:31,293 after their god of War Aries; it was the star of Aries. 60 00:03:31,377 --> 00:03:33,629 And of course, the Romans called the planet 61 00:03:33,713 --> 00:03:35,505 after their god Mars. 62 00:03:37,124 --> 00:03:39,542 And Mars's astrological significance 63 00:03:39,636 --> 00:03:41,378 is quite interesting and revealing. 64 00:03:41,471 --> 00:03:43,713 The astrological symbol for Mars 65 00:03:43,798 --> 00:03:47,976 is a circle with an arrow coming out of it. 66 00:03:48,061 --> 00:03:51,396 That's the modern symbol for maleness, for masculinity, 67 00:03:51,481 --> 00:03:54,733 virility, warfare, solidity. 68 00:03:54,892 --> 00:03:58,061 So, as far back as our history goes, 69 00:03:58,145 --> 00:04:03,825 it's clear that Mars always had particular connotations 70 00:04:03,985 --> 00:04:07,579 built into human understandings 71 00:04:07,664 --> 00:04:09,990 of the planet's significance right from the beginning. 72 00:04:10,083 --> 00:04:12,075 We have been fascinated 73 00:04:12,159 --> 00:04:14,253 with Mars for a long time 74 00:04:14,337 --> 00:04:18,423 because there's no planet we can see as well as we can see Mars. 75 00:04:18,582 --> 00:04:20,750 Venus is obscured by clouds, and everything else 76 00:04:20,843 --> 00:04:23,503 is too far away, but Mars is there. 77 00:04:23,587 --> 00:04:26,172 Before we had telescopes to be able to reveal 78 00:04:26,266 --> 00:04:29,268 anything on the surface, it was the red dot in the sky. 79 00:04:29,427 --> 00:04:32,271 And it, actually, if you observe it from Earth, 80 00:04:32,355 --> 00:04:36,683 seems to move backwards in its orbit every once in a while. 81 00:04:36,767 --> 00:04:39,861 It confounded scientists, and people were moved to study it. 82 00:04:40,021 --> 00:04:45,784 Although humanity's fascination with Mars began in antiquity, 83 00:04:45,868 --> 00:04:50,947 the development of telescopes ushered in a new era 84 00:04:51,040 --> 00:04:54,367 of investigation of the Red Planet. 85 00:04:54,460 --> 00:04:58,204 In the 1600s, here comes Galileo Galilei, 86 00:04:58,289 --> 00:05:01,458 a brilliant inventor, scientist, artist. 87 00:05:01,542 --> 00:05:03,793 He builds an early telescope 88 00:05:03,886 --> 00:05:06,305 and starts looking at the planets. 89 00:05:06,389 --> 00:05:09,141 And he's wondering, why are these stars different? 90 00:05:09,300 --> 00:05:11,885 And this is really when it began to become clear 91 00:05:11,969 --> 00:05:13,562 that these were places. 92 00:05:13,646 --> 00:05:15,305 They weren't deities, they weren't stars. 93 00:05:15,389 --> 00:05:16,973 They were places. 94 00:05:17,058 --> 00:05:19,651 They were other rocky worlds like Earth. 95 00:05:19,736 --> 00:05:21,903 And this was a revelation. 96 00:05:22,063 --> 00:05:27,067 Once human beings realized that Mars was another planet, 97 00:05:27,160 --> 00:05:30,236 we were really curious now, because we wanted to know, 98 00:05:30,321 --> 00:05:32,489 do we have neighbors out there in space? 99 00:05:32,573 --> 00:05:35,408 We long had a suspicion that it's gonna look like Earth, 100 00:05:35,501 --> 00:05:38,661 it's gonna feel like Earth, and we hoped that it would be 101 00:05:38,746 --> 00:05:40,839 the kind of planet we might be able to go to someday, 102 00:05:40,998 --> 00:05:43,425 and there might actually be living things there. 103 00:05:43,509 --> 00:05:46,503 During the second half of the 19th century, 104 00:05:46,587 --> 00:05:48,597 fascination with Mars and the possibilities 105 00:05:48,681 --> 00:05:52,675 of life on Mars really takes off. 106 00:05:52,760 --> 00:05:55,512 The American astronomer Percival Lowell 107 00:05:55,605 --> 00:05:57,773 enthusiastically takes up this search 108 00:05:57,932 --> 00:06:02,352 for evidence of civilization on Mars. 109 00:06:02,445 --> 00:06:04,196 So he establishes his own observatory, 110 00:06:04,355 --> 00:06:07,357 the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, 111 00:06:07,441 --> 00:06:11,778 carries out detailed examination of the Martian surface, 112 00:06:11,862 --> 00:06:16,032 and then publishes a number of books in 1895 113 00:06:16,125 --> 00:06:17,700 describing what he's seen. 114 00:06:17,794 --> 00:06:20,537 And this really strikes a chord. 115 00:06:20,630 --> 00:06:26,301 And then, of course, famously, just a few years later in 1898, 116 00:06:26,386 --> 00:06:30,138 H.G. Wells writes The War of the Worlds. 117 00:06:30,297 --> 00:06:34,134 Wells chooses Mars as the home of the alien civilization 118 00:06:34,218 --> 00:06:37,137 that's going to be invading Earth 119 00:06:37,230 --> 00:06:40,723 precisely because Mars was already in the public eye. 120 00:06:40,808 --> 00:06:44,310 Mars has become synonymous 121 00:06:44,404 --> 00:06:47,823 with the idea of aliens and sometimes alien invasion. 122 00:06:47,907 --> 00:06:52,485 We get movies like Mars Attacks! And others. 123 00:06:52,578 --> 00:06:55,155 So, there is this idea 124 00:06:55,248 --> 00:06:57,249 that if there are other life-forms out there, 125 00:06:57,333 --> 00:06:58,917 particularly in our own solar system, 126 00:06:59,001 --> 00:07:01,578 Mars is where they might come from. 127 00:07:01,662 --> 00:07:05,081 The idea of Martians invading our planet 128 00:07:05,174 --> 00:07:07,259 makes for entertaining science fiction. 129 00:07:07,418 --> 00:07:10,095 But scientists believe they are closer than ever 130 00:07:10,254 --> 00:07:14,174 to finding evidence that some form of life did, in fact, 131 00:07:14,267 --> 00:07:17,269 once exist on the Red Planet. 132 00:07:17,353 --> 00:07:21,848 But why do experts think that a barren planet like Mars 133 00:07:21,932 --> 00:07:27,112 could have, at one time, given birth to life? 134 00:07:27,196 --> 00:07:30,690 Imagine for the moment, being a Martian explorer 135 00:07:30,783 --> 00:07:32,859 three to four billion years ago. 136 00:07:32,952 --> 00:07:34,619 What would we see? 137 00:07:34,778 --> 00:07:37,539 Instead of seeing this dead planet with craters 138 00:07:37,698 --> 00:07:39,699 and-and gigantic mountain ridges, 139 00:07:39,783 --> 00:07:42,627 we see riverbeds, oceans. 140 00:07:42,712 --> 00:07:49,209 We see a blue planet that looks ripe for the creation of life. 141 00:07:49,302 --> 00:07:53,213 Today, Mars still has a large amount of water ice 142 00:07:53,297 --> 00:07:54,797 just below the surface. 143 00:07:54,891 --> 00:07:56,475 And on Earth, wherever we find 144 00:07:56,559 --> 00:07:59,561 that kind of ice, there is life in it. 145 00:07:59,645 --> 00:08:02,722 So, it's quite likely that if Mars, uh, generated life 146 00:08:02,815 --> 00:08:05,391 four billion years ago, it is still there today, 147 00:08:05,476 --> 00:08:08,069 and we almost certainly know where to go looking for it. 148 00:08:08,154 --> 00:08:11,239 And in fact, the Perseverance rover that's on the surface now 149 00:08:11,398 --> 00:08:13,325 is looking at places on Mars 150 00:08:13,409 --> 00:08:16,328 where life might have been in the past. 151 00:08:16,487 --> 00:08:20,332 In their search for evidence of life on Mars, 152 00:08:20,491 --> 00:08:22,742 NASA scientists have sent the Perseverance rover 153 00:08:22,835 --> 00:08:26,588 to investigate a particular area of the Red Planet 154 00:08:26,747 --> 00:08:30,675 that is known as the Jezero crater. 155 00:08:30,834 --> 00:08:33,920 Jezero crater was formed by a large impact 156 00:08:34,013 --> 00:08:38,183 sometime around 3.8 or 3.9 billion years ago. 157 00:08:38,342 --> 00:08:41,594 Now, we know that at some point, that this was a lake 158 00:08:41,687 --> 00:08:45,815 about the size of Lake Tahoe in the Western United States. 159 00:08:47,527 --> 00:08:49,194 And so Jezero crater is great, 160 00:08:49,353 --> 00:08:51,771 because we know the right ingredients are there 161 00:08:51,855 --> 00:08:53,532 to preserve ancient life. 162 00:08:53,691 --> 00:08:56,034 We know that there was ancient water, 163 00:08:56,193 --> 00:08:59,779 and we know that Jezero crater was ancient enough 164 00:08:59,872 --> 00:09:02,040 that it was active 165 00:09:02,199 --> 00:09:04,534 in the time when life might have formed on Mars. 166 00:09:04,618 --> 00:09:08,213 And so, because of that, I am more optimistic 167 00:09:08,372 --> 00:09:10,799 that with Perseverance, we might be able to find 168 00:09:10,958 --> 00:09:12,467 some of these organic materials 169 00:09:12,552 --> 00:09:16,045 and some of the possible evidence for ancient life. 170 00:09:16,138 --> 00:09:19,224 Could NASA's Perseverance rover 171 00:09:19,308 --> 00:09:21,968 actually find evidence of microscopic Martian life 172 00:09:22,061 --> 00:09:23,970 in the Jezero crater? 173 00:09:24,054 --> 00:09:26,147 We'll soon find out. 174 00:09:26,232 --> 00:09:29,150 But what will happen if we do 175 00:09:29,310 --> 00:09:33,896 discover signs of life on Mars? 176 00:09:33,990 --> 00:09:36,241 It's a very exciting mission, 177 00:09:36,325 --> 00:09:40,570 because if we find evidence for life on Mars, 178 00:09:40,654 --> 00:09:42,405 it means that when the conditions are right, 179 00:09:42,489 --> 00:09:44,499 life can start, 180 00:09:44,584 --> 00:09:46,743 and that means it's all over the universe. 181 00:09:46,836 --> 00:09:50,338 That changes our understanding of what we are, 182 00:09:50,497 --> 00:09:52,665 are we alone, where do we come from? 183 00:09:52,758 --> 00:09:57,837 So, that kind of revolutionary possibility of understanding 184 00:09:57,930 --> 00:10:00,673 is worth a lot of exploration. 185 00:10:00,758 --> 00:10:04,352 If the current missions succeed, 186 00:10:04,437 --> 00:10:07,439 and if there is life on Mars, then, well, 187 00:10:07,598 --> 00:10:10,933 it will be a different world for all of us. 188 00:10:11,018 --> 00:10:13,770 The implications of finding evidence of life on Mars 189 00:10:13,854 --> 00:10:16,948 are, frankly, staggering. 190 00:10:17,033 --> 00:10:20,026 But if it's true that Mars was once a blue planet, 191 00:10:20,110 --> 00:10:24,781 teeming with microbial life, then how did it turn 192 00:10:24,865 --> 00:10:28,460 into the lifeless red desert it is today? 193 00:10:28,619 --> 00:10:32,464 There are those who believe a clue may be found 194 00:10:32,623 --> 00:10:35,634 in an ancient cataclysm that was so devastating 195 00:10:35,718 --> 00:10:39,763 it left a giant scar across the surface of the planet. 196 00:10:46,720 --> 00:10:48,730 The United Arab Emirates 197 00:10:48,814 --> 00:10:50,482 becomes the first Arab nation 198 00:10:50,641 --> 00:10:54,727 to send a space vehicle to the Red Planet. 199 00:10:54,812 --> 00:10:58,239 The state-of-the-art satellite, named Hope, 200 00:10:58,324 --> 00:11:00,733 will spend two years collecting information 201 00:11:00,826 --> 00:11:05,246 on how sunlight, dust and temperature have affected 202 00:11:05,331 --> 00:11:08,333 the Martian atmosphere in the past and present. 203 00:11:08,492 --> 00:11:11,661 Astronomers hope this mission will bring answers 204 00:11:11,745 --> 00:11:15,832 to one of the most enduring mysteries of Mars: 205 00:11:15,925 --> 00:11:20,253 how did it become the Red Planet? 206 00:11:20,337 --> 00:11:22,839 When you look at Mars tonight, 207 00:11:22,923 --> 00:11:26,434 in the night sky, for example, you see this red dot. 208 00:11:26,519 --> 00:11:29,262 Why red? Ferric oxide. 209 00:11:29,355 --> 00:11:30,847 It's the Rusty Planet. 210 00:11:30,931 --> 00:11:32,941 It's iron rust. 211 00:11:33,025 --> 00:11:35,026 But it wasn't always that way. 212 00:11:35,185 --> 00:11:37,696 Billions of years ago, it was very similar 213 00:11:37,780 --> 00:11:41,607 to what the Earth looks like today. 214 00:11:41,701 --> 00:11:44,703 The data coming from the Hope weather satellite 215 00:11:44,862 --> 00:11:47,455 could be essential for us to piece together 216 00:11:47,614 --> 00:11:49,198 this jigsaw puzzle. 217 00:11:49,283 --> 00:11:53,044 We had a lush planet, a blue planet, 218 00:11:53,129 --> 00:11:55,455 teeming with the possibilities of life. 219 00:11:55,548 --> 00:11:59,968 And then we have this dead, barren planet of today. 220 00:12:00,127 --> 00:12:01,469 What happened in between? 221 00:12:01,554 --> 00:12:05,807 Scientists have theorized that Mars was changed 222 00:12:05,891 --> 00:12:10,061 by some kind of massive cataclysm in the distant past, 223 00:12:10,220 --> 00:12:13,473 causing it to become barren and lifeless. 224 00:12:13,557 --> 00:12:15,984 But it's well-known that Earth has endured 225 00:12:16,068 --> 00:12:18,153 numerous global catastrophes, 226 00:12:18,237 --> 00:12:21,406 and our planet is still teeming with life. 227 00:12:21,490 --> 00:12:25,151 So, what was different about Mars? 228 00:12:25,235 --> 00:12:26,995 Natural disasters happened 229 00:12:27,079 --> 00:12:29,330 rather regularly on the planet Earth. 230 00:12:29,490 --> 00:12:32,417 We have volcanic activity, 231 00:12:32,501 --> 00:12:34,919 gigantic earthquakes, 232 00:12:35,004 --> 00:12:39,090 meteor impacts blanketing out the Sun, 233 00:12:39,175 --> 00:12:43,336 collapsing agriculture, causing chaos. 234 00:12:43,420 --> 00:12:46,172 So, in other words, planet-killing events. 235 00:12:46,256 --> 00:12:50,101 But we are here, the Earth is teeming with life, 236 00:12:50,260 --> 00:12:54,764 and Mars turned out to be a dead planet. 237 00:12:54,848 --> 00:12:56,941 We don't know for sure, but we think the culprit 238 00:12:57,100 --> 00:13:00,612 is Mars has a very low atmospheric density, 239 00:13:00,771 --> 00:13:03,439 only one percent the atmospheric density 240 00:13:03,524 --> 00:13:05,608 found on the planet Earth. 241 00:13:05,692 --> 00:13:08,620 Mars once had that dense atmosphere, 242 00:13:08,779 --> 00:13:11,289 but somewhere around three billion years ago, 243 00:13:11,373 --> 00:13:13,875 that atmosphere was stripped away. 244 00:13:13,959 --> 00:13:16,294 And as the atmosphere thinned, 245 00:13:16,453 --> 00:13:18,546 liquid water became less and less stable 246 00:13:18,705 --> 00:13:19,872 and would have evaporated. 247 00:13:19,957 --> 00:13:22,875 So, if there was life on Mars, 248 00:13:22,968 --> 00:13:26,796 it lost one of the key ingredients for habitability. 249 00:13:26,880 --> 00:13:30,049 We think the atmosphere on Mars 250 00:13:30,133 --> 00:13:33,886 was initially eroded by impact. 251 00:13:33,971 --> 00:13:38,307 That is, meteorites, asteroids, 252 00:13:38,392 --> 00:13:40,977 physical impactors on the Martian surface 253 00:13:41,070 --> 00:13:45,323 stripped away the atmosphere of Mars. 254 00:13:46,742 --> 00:13:48,303 When you look at Mars you realize 255 00:13:48,327 --> 00:13:51,746 that the northern hemisphere looks more like plains, 256 00:13:51,905 --> 00:13:54,249 and it's very flat. 257 00:13:54,408 --> 00:13:58,253 But the southern hemisphere of Mars is heavily cratered, 258 00:13:58,337 --> 00:14:02,081 and that suggests that there are a lot of impacts there 259 00:14:02,165 --> 00:14:05,501 that could actually have destroyed the atmosphere 260 00:14:05,594 --> 00:14:07,420 and everything else on Mars. 261 00:14:07,513 --> 00:14:11,257 Without the atmosphere to preserve 262 00:14:11,350 --> 00:14:15,344 the integrity of the planet, as the solar wind from the Sun 263 00:14:15,437 --> 00:14:18,690 hits Mars, water would boil by itself, 264 00:14:18,774 --> 00:14:23,194 would vaporize by itself, and be lost into outer space. 265 00:14:23,279 --> 00:14:26,439 And as a consequence, liquid water 266 00:14:26,523 --> 00:14:29,525 cannot remain liquid on the surface of Mars. 267 00:14:29,618 --> 00:14:34,789 Did ancient asteroid impacts destroy the atmosphere of Mars? 268 00:14:34,874 --> 00:14:36,532 Perhaps. 269 00:14:36,625 --> 00:14:39,035 But some scientists suggest there was 270 00:14:39,119 --> 00:14:42,455 an even more powerful disaster that was responsible. 271 00:14:42,539 --> 00:14:45,550 And as evidence, they point to a curious feature 272 00:14:45,634 --> 00:14:49,211 of the planet's surface known as the Valles Marineris, 273 00:14:49,296 --> 00:14:54,350 or as many like to call it, the scar on Mars. 274 00:15:18,250 --> 00:15:20,660 The Valles Marineris looks as if 275 00:15:20,753 --> 00:15:23,663 something just gouged out of the surface of Mars. 276 00:15:23,747 --> 00:15:26,424 And the question is, did it occur naturally? 277 00:15:26,508 --> 00:15:30,762 Because we don't really understand what happened. 278 00:15:30,846 --> 00:15:34,849 One theory that I've been exploring recently 279 00:15:34,934 --> 00:15:37,677 is that the Sun has major solar outbursts 280 00:15:37,761 --> 00:15:41,522 that spread out throughout the solar system 281 00:15:41,607 --> 00:15:44,776 traveling at very high speeds. 282 00:15:44,860 --> 00:15:48,112 Electrically charged particles, 283 00:15:48,271 --> 00:15:51,616 protons, electrons, other charged ions. 284 00:15:51,775 --> 00:15:55,536 And when these hit planets, you can imagine them 285 00:15:55,621 --> 00:15:59,290 as huge lightning bolts, hitting the surface of the planet. 286 00:15:59,375 --> 00:16:02,368 And this can gouge out what look like canyons. 287 00:16:02,461 --> 00:16:06,205 And this may have been a major contributing factor 288 00:16:06,289 --> 00:16:08,290 to the loss of the atmosphere. 289 00:16:08,375 --> 00:16:11,719 We have lots of theories as to the geologic 290 00:16:11,804 --> 00:16:14,889 and atmospheric profile of Mars, 291 00:16:14,974 --> 00:16:17,058 but to be certain, we have to go there 292 00:16:17,142 --> 00:16:20,052 and actually touch and feel and analyze these things. 293 00:16:20,137 --> 00:16:22,722 From a distance, from millions of miles away, 294 00:16:22,815 --> 00:16:26,308 we can only speculate about what could be causing 295 00:16:26,393 --> 00:16:30,146 these unexplained surface features on Mars. 296 00:16:30,239 --> 00:16:32,064 Will we ever know what caused Mars 297 00:16:32,149 --> 00:16:34,242 to become so dry and desolate? 298 00:16:34,326 --> 00:16:36,152 Well, there are those who believe 299 00:16:36,236 --> 00:16:38,654 that one way to learn more about the past 300 00:16:38,739 --> 00:16:42,083 is by examining possible evidence that the Red Planet 301 00:16:42,167 --> 00:16:45,670 was once home to an ancient civilization. 302 00:16:51,176 --> 00:16:53,594 The Cydonia Institute, 303 00:16:53,679 --> 00:16:56,848 a group of researchers that investigate strange formations 304 00:16:57,007 --> 00:17:00,092 on the surface of Mars publishes a study 305 00:17:00,177 --> 00:17:05,023 analyzing satellite photographs taken of the planet. 306 00:17:05,182 --> 00:17:07,683 The images show what the researchers claim 307 00:17:07,776 --> 00:17:12,113 look like four and five-sided pyramids 308 00:17:12,272 --> 00:17:15,700 and a series of curious mounds. 309 00:17:15,784 --> 00:17:18,527 This whole idea for The Cydonia Institute 310 00:17:18,620 --> 00:17:22,448 started when NASA announced in 1991 311 00:17:22,532 --> 00:17:25,543 that they were gonna return to Mars with the Mars Observer. 312 00:17:27,370 --> 00:17:29,371 And over the last 30-some years 313 00:17:29,456 --> 00:17:32,625 of our group studying NASA photographs, 314 00:17:32,709 --> 00:17:36,387 we have found an enormous amount of evidence 315 00:17:36,472 --> 00:17:41,142 that led us to believe there are artificial structures on Mars. 316 00:17:41,226 --> 00:17:43,144 What we're trying to do is get 317 00:17:43,228 --> 00:17:45,480 a preponderance of evidence together 318 00:17:45,564 --> 00:17:48,399 so that we can prove the point 319 00:17:48,484 --> 00:17:51,152 that there's ruins all over the planet. 320 00:17:51,236 --> 00:17:53,237 And just as you would here on Earth, 321 00:17:53,322 --> 00:17:55,239 you're gonna look for straight lines, 322 00:17:55,398 --> 00:17:59,494 parallel lines, circles, squares, rectangles, 323 00:17:59,578 --> 00:18:01,153 things of this nature. 324 00:18:01,238 --> 00:18:03,081 And when you find them, 325 00:18:03,165 --> 00:18:05,083 then you can start to zoom in on areas 326 00:18:05,242 --> 00:18:08,252 and look for even, uh, stronger details. 327 00:18:10,339 --> 00:18:12,423 When the Perseverance landed, 328 00:18:12,508 --> 00:18:13,902 one of the first things that I noticed 329 00:18:13,926 --> 00:18:16,335 was a conical pyramid in the distance. 330 00:18:16,428 --> 00:18:19,430 The camera there took a beautiful couple pictures of it. 331 00:18:19,589 --> 00:18:21,076 It doesn't make any sense to me geologically 332 00:18:21,100 --> 00:18:22,424 how that could happen. 333 00:18:22,518 --> 00:18:25,261 That was one of the biggest anomalies that was seen. 334 00:18:25,345 --> 00:18:27,522 We're still gonna get better and better pictures, 335 00:18:27,606 --> 00:18:29,440 we're going to have more to look at, 336 00:18:29,525 --> 00:18:33,277 as NASA releases all of these images from Perseverance. 337 00:18:33,362 --> 00:18:36,272 But we haven't gotten there yet, because the Perseverance, 338 00:18:36,356 --> 00:18:38,774 they landed in the middle of a big lake. 339 00:18:38,859 --> 00:18:41,035 And I think the only thing we're gonna find there 340 00:18:41,120 --> 00:18:44,539 is probably shells, things from an aquatic environment. 341 00:18:44,623 --> 00:18:48,868 I think all of the ruins that people are looking for, 342 00:18:48,952 --> 00:18:51,203 they're gonna be found once they drive a little further, 343 00:18:51,296 --> 00:18:52,964 in the perimeter. 344 00:18:55,208 --> 00:18:59,470 Cities and ruins on the surface of Mars? 345 00:18:59,555 --> 00:19:02,974 Could the remnants of an ancient Martian civilization 346 00:19:03,133 --> 00:19:06,310 have really been hiding in plain sight? 347 00:19:06,469 --> 00:19:09,471 It's a question that researchers have pondered 348 00:19:09,556 --> 00:19:11,473 for more than four decades, 349 00:19:11,558 --> 00:19:14,059 ever since NASA sent the first satellites 350 00:19:14,144 --> 00:19:17,146 into orbit around the Red Planet. 351 00:19:17,239 --> 00:19:19,240 Mars has piqued the curiosity 352 00:19:19,324 --> 00:19:24,236 of scientists and the public for millennia, 353 00:19:24,321 --> 00:19:26,215 but it really wasn't until the dawn of the Space Age 354 00:19:26,239 --> 00:19:27,823 that we started getting an idea 355 00:19:27,908 --> 00:19:29,909 of what the planet was really all about. 356 00:19:29,993 --> 00:19:34,079 Mariner 4 in 1965 flies past the planet, 357 00:19:34,164 --> 00:19:37,258 sends back 22 fuzzy photographs, 358 00:19:37,342 --> 00:19:40,011 and Mars looks just like the Moon. 359 00:19:43,673 --> 00:19:45,174 And then we sent two spacecraft, 360 00:19:45,267 --> 00:19:48,436 Viking 1 and Viking 2, in 1976. 361 00:19:48,520 --> 00:19:51,314 So we got tens of thousands of photographs from orbit. 362 00:19:53,525 --> 00:19:55,776 Since then, as we get better-resolution photographs 363 00:19:55,936 --> 00:19:57,278 from the surface of Mars, 364 00:19:57,362 --> 00:20:01,357 people have thought they saw all kinds of things there. 365 00:20:01,441 --> 00:20:03,451 There is a not insignificant group of people 366 00:20:03,535 --> 00:20:05,513 that think that we've already discovered life on Mars, 367 00:20:05,537 --> 00:20:06,862 that there are structures there, 368 00:20:06,955 --> 00:20:09,040 that there are buildings, obelisks, 369 00:20:09,199 --> 00:20:11,792 some kind of indicator of ancient cultures 370 00:20:11,952 --> 00:20:12,952 that is being covered up. 371 00:20:14,963 --> 00:20:16,789 You look at images of this, 372 00:20:16,882 --> 00:20:21,961 and people are spotting all sorts of strange shapes 373 00:20:22,054 --> 00:20:24,463 and pyramids, 374 00:20:24,556 --> 00:20:27,299 structures of some kind, on the Martian surface. 375 00:20:27,384 --> 00:20:31,562 Is it something left by a lost civilization 376 00:20:31,721 --> 00:20:33,481 as maybe a-a monument to themselves 377 00:20:33,565 --> 00:20:34,732 and their achievement? 378 00:20:36,643 --> 00:20:38,483 For some, the most compelling evidence 379 00:20:38,561 --> 00:20:41,397 that an ancient civilization once existed on Mars 380 00:20:41,481 --> 00:20:43,482 can be found in a photograph 381 00:20:43,566 --> 00:20:46,410 which shows what appears to be a large structure, 382 00:20:46,569 --> 00:20:51,999 that has come to be known as the Face on Mars. 383 00:20:52,158 --> 00:20:55,160 In Viking lander photographs, 384 00:20:55,245 --> 00:20:58,506 it was discovered that there was this weird-looking structure 385 00:20:58,590 --> 00:21:00,424 that looks, for all the world, 386 00:21:00,583 --> 00:21:02,927 in the Viking photos, like a face. 387 00:21:04,170 --> 00:21:05,530 Everything is proportional. 388 00:21:05,597 --> 00:21:08,757 The-the face is a mile and a half, two miles long. 389 00:21:08,842 --> 00:21:10,843 The eyes are a quarter mile. 390 00:21:10,927 --> 00:21:12,845 The nose about a half a mile. 391 00:21:12,938 --> 00:21:16,181 So it's not a small structure, it's a very large structure. 392 00:21:16,266 --> 00:21:17,942 I believe that the Face on Mars 393 00:21:18,101 --> 00:21:21,946 was created from, uh, possibly an existing mesa. 394 00:21:22,030 --> 00:21:25,274 It's not just the face, but on top of that, 395 00:21:25,358 --> 00:21:28,452 people saw what they called the D&M Pyramid, 396 00:21:28,611 --> 00:21:31,447 which is this weird five-sided structure 397 00:21:31,540 --> 00:21:34,709 that looks like a five-sided pyramid. 398 00:21:34,793 --> 00:21:38,787 People were claiming this had to be artificial structures. 399 00:21:38,872 --> 00:21:42,216 The D&M Pyramid is a five-sided structure. 400 00:21:42,301 --> 00:21:45,553 The five faces have all this very symmetrical geometry 401 00:21:45,637 --> 00:21:48,714 of 30 degrees, 60 degrees and 90 degrees. 402 00:21:48,798 --> 00:21:51,050 It's just a remarkable out-of-place artifact 403 00:21:51,134 --> 00:21:52,143 on the surface of Mars. 404 00:21:52,227 --> 00:21:55,054 What researchers looking at this found 405 00:21:55,138 --> 00:21:57,973 is that because of its exquisite geometry, 406 00:21:58,058 --> 00:22:01,560 there's no way that this could be created naturally. 407 00:22:01,653 --> 00:22:05,239 Decades after the famous photograph was taken, 408 00:22:05,324 --> 00:22:07,983 the Face on Mars continues to inspire 409 00:22:08,068 --> 00:22:11,162 both fascination and debate. 410 00:22:11,246 --> 00:22:15,333 Many researchers believe it and other curious formations 411 00:22:15,417 --> 00:22:19,745 on the Red Planet merit further study and discussion. 412 00:22:19,838 --> 00:22:24,008 Some of this may just be a trick of the light, 413 00:22:24,167 --> 00:22:26,761 funny-shaped rocks, that sort of thing. 414 00:22:26,920 --> 00:22:29,671 But only one of these things has got to be the real deal, 415 00:22:29,756 --> 00:22:33,008 and we're in game-changing territory. 416 00:22:33,093 --> 00:22:36,929 Was there once an advanced civilization on Mars? 417 00:22:37,013 --> 00:22:39,348 Some of the features on the planet's surface 418 00:22:39,432 --> 00:22:41,600 definitely make you wonder. 419 00:22:41,684 --> 00:22:44,945 But there are those who claim that we don't need 420 00:22:45,030 --> 00:22:47,189 to send probes millions of miles away 421 00:22:47,273 --> 00:22:50,034 to search for signs of Martian life. 422 00:22:50,193 --> 00:22:53,028 They believe that Martian life-forms 423 00:22:53,113 --> 00:22:55,706 have already traveled here to Earth. 424 00:23:02,872 --> 00:23:05,383 President Bill Clinton announces 425 00:23:05,467 --> 00:23:07,960 that NASA scientists have made a remarkable discovery. 426 00:23:08,053 --> 00:23:09,220 Good afternoon. 427 00:23:09,304 --> 00:23:10,888 The scientists examined 428 00:23:11,047 --> 00:23:13,724 an ancient Martian rock that fell to Earth 429 00:23:13,809 --> 00:23:16,802 as a meteorite in the distant past 430 00:23:16,895 --> 00:23:20,305 and found evidence which suggests that the meteorite 431 00:23:20,399 --> 00:23:25,811 once contained microscopic Martian life inside it. 432 00:23:25,895 --> 00:23:28,981 More than four billion years ago, 433 00:23:29,065 --> 00:23:31,066 this piece of rock was formed 434 00:23:31,151 --> 00:23:33,577 as a part of the original crust of Mars. 435 00:23:33,662 --> 00:23:36,989 After billions of years, it broke from the surface 436 00:23:37,082 --> 00:23:39,667 and began a 16-million-year journey through space 437 00:23:39,751 --> 00:23:41,335 that would end here on Earth. 438 00:23:41,420 --> 00:23:44,913 It speaks of the possibility of life. 439 00:23:44,998 --> 00:23:47,666 If this discovery is confirmed, 440 00:23:47,759 --> 00:23:50,002 it will surely be one of the most stunning insights 441 00:23:50,095 --> 00:23:54,014 into our universe that science has ever uncovered. 442 00:23:54,099 --> 00:23:56,600 Its implications are as far-reaching 443 00:23:56,685 --> 00:23:59,178 and awe-inspiring as can be imagined. 444 00:23:59,271 --> 00:24:02,857 This asteroid, called the Allan Hills asteroid, 445 00:24:02,941 --> 00:24:04,525 was found in Antarctica. 446 00:24:04,684 --> 00:24:06,685 It proved really valuable 447 00:24:06,778 --> 00:24:08,414 because we've never been able to bring samples back, 448 00:24:08,438 --> 00:24:10,939 but now we have this piece of Mars to study 449 00:24:11,024 --> 00:24:13,451 in a lab on Earth, which is really important, 450 00:24:13,535 --> 00:24:15,527 because as our instruments get better, 451 00:24:15,612 --> 00:24:18,030 we can continue to study it and learn more. 452 00:24:18,114 --> 00:24:19,684 So when they crack the meteorite open, 453 00:24:19,708 --> 00:24:21,033 they looked inside, 454 00:24:21,126 --> 00:24:25,204 and they saw what looked like fossilized life-forms. 455 00:24:25,288 --> 00:24:27,882 They look like little tiny worms 456 00:24:28,041 --> 00:24:32,211 and other bits of potentially fossilized biological matter. 457 00:24:32,295 --> 00:24:34,129 And these were really small. 458 00:24:34,214 --> 00:24:36,192 They were smaller than even a single-celled creature 459 00:24:36,216 --> 00:24:37,391 would be on Earth. 460 00:24:37,476 --> 00:24:39,551 But they looked like life-forms. 461 00:24:39,636 --> 00:24:41,947 And there are other indicators, in terms of the composition 462 00:24:41,971 --> 00:24:43,898 and the makeup and the distribution of them, 463 00:24:43,982 --> 00:24:46,043 that led them to think that they might be life-forms. 464 00:24:46,067 --> 00:24:48,319 It was so remarkable-looking, 465 00:24:48,403 --> 00:24:50,479 that it merited an announcement to the public, 466 00:24:50,563 --> 00:24:52,481 and it caused a major stir. 467 00:24:52,565 --> 00:24:54,825 Allan Hills meteorite 468 00:24:54,984 --> 00:24:58,412 really changed the field of astrobiology. 469 00:24:58,497 --> 00:25:01,156 There was a bunch of lines of evidence 470 00:25:01,241 --> 00:25:03,575 that appeared to us to suggest the possibility 471 00:25:03,668 --> 00:25:08,497 that this had something to do with primitive life. 472 00:25:08,590 --> 00:25:10,674 According to experts, 473 00:25:10,833 --> 00:25:13,260 it's possible that the Allan Hills meteorite 474 00:25:13,345 --> 00:25:17,181 actually brought microscopic evidence of Martian life 475 00:25:17,265 --> 00:25:19,925 to our planet when it landed here. 476 00:25:20,009 --> 00:25:22,928 And the idea that any form of life can travel 477 00:25:23,021 --> 00:25:26,524 from Mars to Earth has caused many scientists to consider 478 00:25:26,683 --> 00:25:29,935 an even more profound possibility: 479 00:25:30,028 --> 00:25:36,358 what if life on Earth was seeded from Mars? 480 00:25:36,442 --> 00:25:40,621 There's an idea in the field of astrobiology called panspermia, 481 00:25:40,705 --> 00:25:42,873 and the essence of the idea is this: 482 00:25:42,958 --> 00:25:45,033 four billion years ago, there may have been life 483 00:25:45,118 --> 00:25:47,035 on Mars... microbial... But something. 484 00:25:47,120 --> 00:25:50,130 A rock slams into Mars, you know, some asteroid, 485 00:25:50,215 --> 00:25:53,384 it kicks up a big clod of Martian dirt. 486 00:25:53,468 --> 00:25:55,803 Some of it gets kicked up fast enough 487 00:25:55,887 --> 00:25:59,298 to just leave Mars altogether, wanders around the solar system, 488 00:25:59,391 --> 00:26:02,384 but some of it, by chance, would fall on the Earth 489 00:26:02,468 --> 00:26:04,562 and might infect the Earth. 490 00:26:06,898 --> 00:26:10,058 The panspermia theory cannot be dismissed. 491 00:26:10,151 --> 00:26:12,820 And one reason is as follows. 492 00:26:12,904 --> 00:26:16,991 In the early Earth, we were hit by meteors and asteroids. 493 00:26:17,075 --> 00:26:21,829 In fact, it turns out that almost 300 meteorites from Mars 494 00:26:21,913 --> 00:26:23,822 have been identified. 495 00:26:23,906 --> 00:26:28,410 This means that perhaps DNA may ride on these meteorites 496 00:26:28,503 --> 00:26:30,838 as it goes from planet to planet. 497 00:26:30,922 --> 00:26:35,083 So if, for example, life were to start on Mars first, 498 00:26:35,168 --> 00:26:38,762 and a rock carrying Martian DNA 499 00:26:38,847 --> 00:26:41,757 were to land on the planet Earth, 500 00:26:41,850 --> 00:26:44,602 then boom, life gets off the ground. 501 00:26:44,686 --> 00:26:48,272 So, one theory is that if you want 502 00:26:48,356 --> 00:26:52,184 to see a Martian, look in the mirror tonight. 503 00:26:52,268 --> 00:26:56,280 Has life migrated possibly from Mars to Earth? 504 00:26:56,364 --> 00:26:57,448 It's possible. 505 00:26:57,607 --> 00:26:59,775 We can't say yes, we can't say no, yet. 506 00:26:59,859 --> 00:27:02,369 Any Mars scientist you talk to, 507 00:27:02,454 --> 00:27:04,863 any planetary geologist will tell you, 508 00:27:04,956 --> 00:27:07,783 they would love to have that dinosaur bone moment, 509 00:27:07,867 --> 00:27:10,035 they would love for the rover to roll up 510 00:27:10,119 --> 00:27:14,206 and find a giant fossilized femur, or even something alive. 511 00:27:14,290 --> 00:27:17,134 We may find these things someday. 512 00:27:17,218 --> 00:27:19,386 But we're not gonna know until we get there 513 00:27:19,471 --> 00:27:21,713 and find life on Mars, 514 00:27:21,806 --> 00:27:24,800 and are able to look at it, get some DNA out of it 515 00:27:24,884 --> 00:27:26,802 and figure out if it ended up on Earth, 516 00:27:26,886 --> 00:27:29,554 or if it's something completely alien to us. 517 00:27:29,639 --> 00:27:32,900 If scientists are someday able to confirm 518 00:27:32,984 --> 00:27:35,819 that life came from Mars to Earth, 519 00:27:35,904 --> 00:27:38,647 then it begs the question, 520 00:27:38,731 --> 00:27:44,328 what would such a discovery mean to humanity? 521 00:27:44,487 --> 00:27:46,405 Mars might hold the key to understanding 522 00:27:46,489 --> 00:27:47,989 the origin of life. 523 00:27:48,074 --> 00:27:51,335 It has a lot of potential to help us understand 524 00:27:51,494 --> 00:27:55,005 where we fit in the biggest-scale picture 525 00:27:55,090 --> 00:27:59,259 of the universe and the history of the Earth, 526 00:27:59,344 --> 00:28:02,846 because we want to understand the history of this planet. 527 00:28:02,931 --> 00:28:08,093 How did we get to a place where humans were here? 528 00:28:08,177 --> 00:28:10,429 Science is based on things that are testable, 529 00:28:10,513 --> 00:28:14,599 falsifiable, reproduceable, and as Carl Sagan once said, 530 00:28:14,684 --> 00:28:18,028 "Remarkable claims require remarkable proof." 531 00:28:18,113 --> 00:28:21,690 But if, if we have one solid piece of evidence 532 00:28:21,774 --> 00:28:24,443 that Mars seeded the Earth, 533 00:28:24,536 --> 00:28:27,621 that would force historians of science to rewrite 534 00:28:27,706 --> 00:28:33,043 all the science textbooks and change our role in the universe. 535 00:28:35,213 --> 00:28:41,051 Did life originate on Mars and then evolve on Earth? 536 00:28:41,136 --> 00:28:45,055 If scientists really believe that it could be possible, 537 00:28:45,214 --> 00:28:48,800 then perhaps one day, we'll find the proof here. 538 00:28:48,885 --> 00:28:53,647 Or maybe it will be revealed when astronauts 539 00:28:53,732 --> 00:28:57,568 set foot on the Red Planet itself. 540 00:29:03,908 --> 00:29:07,736 NASA announces a series of bold new technologies 541 00:29:07,820 --> 00:29:10,247 they are actively developing to help astronauts 542 00:29:10,331 --> 00:29:12,249 eventually reach Mars, 543 00:29:12,408 --> 00:29:15,327 including cutting-edge propulsion systems, 544 00:29:15,411 --> 00:29:20,090 next-generation space suits and nuclear fission generators. 545 00:29:21,593 --> 00:29:24,678 This is such an exciting time to be working on Mars. 546 00:29:24,763 --> 00:29:27,264 There is unprecedented interest. 547 00:29:27,423 --> 00:29:29,600 There are more government space agencies 548 00:29:29,759 --> 00:29:33,187 and scientists around the world working 549 00:29:33,271 --> 00:29:36,774 towards space exploration than there have ever been before. 550 00:29:38,026 --> 00:29:40,861 We have new rockets, 551 00:29:40,945 --> 00:29:42,771 different instruments, 552 00:29:42,855 --> 00:29:44,842 and we're at a time when technology is getting closer 553 00:29:44,866 --> 00:29:47,526 to sending people to Mars. 554 00:29:47,619 --> 00:29:51,112 It's-it's really fun. It's really exciting. 555 00:29:51,197 --> 00:29:53,791 In addition to NASA, 556 00:29:53,875 --> 00:29:56,543 numerous space agencies from around the world 557 00:29:56,702 --> 00:29:59,204 have also stepped up their efforts to send people to Mars. 558 00:29:59,288 --> 00:30:02,382 There are many who believe that this increase in activity 559 00:30:02,467 --> 00:30:05,710 echoes the Space Race from the 1960s, 560 00:30:05,804 --> 00:30:09,473 when humanity strived to land men on the Moon 561 00:30:09,557 --> 00:30:10,724 for the first time. 562 00:30:10,809 --> 00:30:12,634 July 20th, 1969, 563 00:30:12,718 --> 00:30:15,229 Apollo 11 lands on the Moon, 564 00:30:15,313 --> 00:30:20,818 and this is one of the proudest moments in human history. 565 00:30:20,902 --> 00:30:23,645 That's one small step for man, 566 00:30:23,729 --> 00:30:26,323 one giant leap for mankind. 567 00:30:26,407 --> 00:30:30,160 Two men down on the surface, 600 million people 568 00:30:30,245 --> 00:30:31,745 watching around the world, 569 00:30:31,830 --> 00:30:35,499 more listening to their radios, people can barely believe it. 570 00:30:35,658 --> 00:30:38,410 They stayed on the Moon's surface for a day, 571 00:30:38,503 --> 00:30:40,838 they achieved all their goals, and it was just 572 00:30:40,922 --> 00:30:43,748 a watershed moment in Western civilization. 573 00:30:43,833 --> 00:30:45,917 And the next big question 574 00:30:46,010 --> 00:30:49,921 is what are we gonna do after the Apollo landings? 575 00:30:50,006 --> 00:30:52,015 Wernher von Braun, the famed rocket scientist 576 00:30:52,174 --> 00:30:54,593 of German origins, published a book 577 00:30:54,686 --> 00:30:56,928 called The Mars Project, where he actually laid out 578 00:30:57,021 --> 00:31:00,691 the first real technically accurate engineering plan 579 00:31:00,775 --> 00:31:02,359 on how we could do this. 580 00:31:02,443 --> 00:31:05,103 And they wanted to do it by the mid-1980s. 581 00:31:05,196 --> 00:31:07,865 But by the time Richard Nixon came into the office, 582 00:31:07,949 --> 00:31:09,950 we realized it was gonna be a much bigger job 583 00:31:10,034 --> 00:31:12,444 to send humans to Mars than we thought. 584 00:31:12,528 --> 00:31:16,707 But we continued to think about it, and it continues today. 585 00:31:16,866 --> 00:31:18,427 We want to go beyond to Mars and find out 586 00:31:18,451 --> 00:31:20,544 what's happening on that world, 587 00:31:20,703 --> 00:31:22,880 because a human being can do in about 15 minutes 588 00:31:23,039 --> 00:31:25,373 what it takes a robot six months to do. 589 00:31:25,458 --> 00:31:27,208 So you have to send people. 590 00:31:27,293 --> 00:31:31,889 It's not just NASA and other space agencies 591 00:31:31,973 --> 00:31:35,216 that have their sights set on Mars. 592 00:31:35,301 --> 00:31:37,636 Ordinary people are also quite eager 593 00:31:37,720 --> 00:31:40,138 to travel to the Red Planet. 594 00:31:40,231 --> 00:31:43,308 In fact, when it was announced in March of 2020 595 00:31:43,401 --> 00:31:46,820 that NASA would begin recruiting a new generation of astronauts 596 00:31:46,905 --> 00:31:49,489 for its first-ever manned mission to Mars, 597 00:31:49,574 --> 00:31:54,486 200,000 people submitted applications. 598 00:31:54,570 --> 00:31:59,074 I think it's the nature of human beings to try to expand further. 599 00:31:59,158 --> 00:32:03,078 There's a sense of exploration, of-of being an explorer, 600 00:32:03,171 --> 00:32:05,339 of being the first to go somewhere, 601 00:32:05,423 --> 00:32:07,758 and that really motivates a lot of people. 602 00:32:07,917 --> 00:32:09,843 This is a great time in space exploration. 603 00:32:09,928 --> 00:32:12,095 We're at a time when we have pictures of Mars 604 00:32:12,180 --> 00:32:13,922 in our living rooms. 605 00:32:14,006 --> 00:32:15,826 We have pictures of Mars on our computer screens. 606 00:32:15,850 --> 00:32:20,345 We're seeing that-that, yes, we can reach out to Mars. 607 00:32:20,429 --> 00:32:22,439 We can see it, we can touch it. We're so close. 608 00:32:22,523 --> 00:32:24,349 And that's really exciting to see. 609 00:32:24,442 --> 00:32:27,519 One member of the new generation of explorers 610 00:32:27,603 --> 00:32:29,938 that is hoping to be selected to go to Mars 611 00:32:30,031 --> 00:32:33,191 is 20-year-old Alyssa Carson. 612 00:32:33,275 --> 00:32:35,786 She is so driven to be among the first humans 613 00:32:35,870 --> 00:32:38,029 to set foot on the Red Planet that she's been 614 00:32:38,114 --> 00:32:42,367 preparing for such a mission her entire life. 615 00:32:42,460 --> 00:32:45,203 Mars has kind of always been my ultimate goal, uh, 616 00:32:45,296 --> 00:32:47,288 mainly just because of the curiosity of it, 617 00:32:47,373 --> 00:32:48,966 you know, what is on Mars, 618 00:32:49,125 --> 00:32:50,801 no one's been there before, why not go? 619 00:32:52,303 --> 00:32:55,714 So I started out by going to all the NASA space camps, 620 00:32:55,807 --> 00:32:58,725 I then joined a citizen science research organization. 621 00:32:58,810 --> 00:33:03,563 And with them, I've been able to do g-force trainings, 622 00:33:03,648 --> 00:33:05,148 microgravity flights. 623 00:33:05,233 --> 00:33:07,308 Success. 624 00:33:07,393 --> 00:33:12,147 Water survival training, space suit evaluations. 625 00:33:12,231 --> 00:33:14,324 But, you know, I definitely would say that the thing 626 00:33:14,483 --> 00:33:16,043 that I'm most proud of is the experience 627 00:33:16,077 --> 00:33:17,902 of being on the NASA MER 10 panel 628 00:33:17,996 --> 00:33:21,915 with PhDs, scientists, just so many amazing people. 629 00:33:22,000 --> 00:33:23,500 I almost really can't explain 630 00:33:23,659 --> 00:33:25,827 why I have such a passion and drive for it. 631 00:33:25,920 --> 00:33:27,587 If the only option was a one-way trip, 632 00:33:27,672 --> 00:33:29,006 then I would still want to go. 633 00:33:30,258 --> 00:33:31,568 When are we gonna go to Mars? 634 00:33:31,592 --> 00:33:33,501 I get that question a lot. 635 00:33:33,586 --> 00:33:35,072 You know, people who are in the rocket business say, 636 00:33:35,096 --> 00:33:37,681 "Well, certainly within ten years, 637 00:33:37,840 --> 00:33:39,850 we could send somebody to the Red Planet." 638 00:33:40,009 --> 00:33:41,760 And you might say, but why do that, right? 639 00:33:41,853 --> 00:33:43,020 It's dangerous, 640 00:33:43,104 --> 00:33:45,188 uh, getting them there, bringing them back. 641 00:33:45,347 --> 00:33:46,834 There are all sorts of technical problems, 642 00:33:46,858 --> 00:33:48,191 not the least of which 643 00:33:48,276 --> 00:33:51,352 is the fact that the Sun occasionally burps 644 00:33:51,437 --> 00:33:54,865 high-speed particles into space, and those particles 645 00:33:54,949 --> 00:33:57,692 would zip right through the skin of any rocket 646 00:33:57,785 --> 00:33:59,337 and give everybody inside instant cancer, 647 00:33:59,361 --> 00:34:00,537 that kind of thing. 648 00:34:00,621 --> 00:34:02,421 I mean, these are, these are serious problems. 649 00:34:02,457 --> 00:34:05,542 Why are so many people 650 00:34:05,626 --> 00:34:08,036 willing to put their life on the line 651 00:34:08,120 --> 00:34:10,547 for a perilous journey to Mars? 652 00:34:10,631 --> 00:34:12,874 Well, there are those who believe 653 00:34:12,958 --> 00:34:15,376 that we are motivated to go to Mars 654 00:34:15,470 --> 00:34:18,472 because there is a profound connection 655 00:34:18,556 --> 00:34:21,892 between humans and the Red Planet. 656 00:34:21,976 --> 00:34:23,718 And that evidence of this connection 657 00:34:23,803 --> 00:34:26,980 can be found in the human body. 658 00:34:27,139 --> 00:34:30,558 The human body produces a good fat and bad fat, 659 00:34:30,643 --> 00:34:35,155 and the good fat, it turns out, we produce more of 660 00:34:35,239 --> 00:34:38,483 if we're held at an average temperature of 67 degrees 661 00:34:38,567 --> 00:34:43,163 or a little bit lower than that on a regular basis. 662 00:34:43,247 --> 00:34:46,666 I find that an interesting correlation 663 00:34:46,751 --> 00:34:49,836 that the temperature in the summertime on Mars 664 00:34:49,995 --> 00:34:52,247 is 67 degrees Fahrenheit. 665 00:34:52,331 --> 00:34:55,008 Does that suggest that humanity 666 00:34:55,167 --> 00:34:59,003 is more suited to be healthy on Mars than they are on Earth? 667 00:34:59,097 --> 00:35:00,097 I don't know. 668 00:35:02,174 --> 00:35:04,092 There are other aspects of Mars 669 00:35:04,176 --> 00:35:06,603 that is interesting with the human physiology. 670 00:35:06,687 --> 00:35:10,524 When astronauts spend a long period of time in microgravity, 671 00:35:10,608 --> 00:35:14,602 their internal biorhythm clock resets, 672 00:35:14,687 --> 00:35:17,856 not to a day that's as long as a day on Earth, 673 00:35:17,940 --> 00:35:21,109 but in fact it resets precisely to the time 674 00:35:21,193 --> 00:35:24,112 a day is on Mars, which is a little bit different 675 00:35:24,196 --> 00:35:25,288 by a few minutes. 676 00:35:25,373 --> 00:35:26,698 Why does this happen? 677 00:35:26,791 --> 00:35:30,535 Is it telling us that there's something in our DNA, 678 00:35:30,619 --> 00:35:33,872 in our genetic code that is more suitable 679 00:35:33,956 --> 00:35:36,967 for Mars than it is for Earth? 680 00:35:37,126 --> 00:35:39,136 We don't know, but that is a possibility. 681 00:36:09,667 --> 00:36:12,836 Could it really be possible that Mars is in our DNA? 682 00:36:12,920 --> 00:36:14,171 And that by going there, 683 00:36:14,330 --> 00:36:15,964 we would actually be returning home? 684 00:36:18,167 --> 00:36:21,085 There are many who believe it's true, 685 00:36:21,170 --> 00:36:24,756 and feel so strongly that humanity's future lies on Mars 686 00:36:24,840 --> 00:36:26,493 that they're investing everything they've got 687 00:36:26,517 --> 00:36:27,976 to get us back there. 688 00:36:34,767 --> 00:36:36,776 On the 60th anniversary 689 00:36:36,936 --> 00:36:39,437 of the United States' first-ever manned spaceflight, 690 00:36:39,521 --> 00:36:41,773 aerospace company SpaceX, 691 00:36:41,857 --> 00:36:44,367 founded by billionaire Elon Musk, 692 00:36:44,526 --> 00:36:47,946 successfully completes the ninth test flight 693 00:36:48,039 --> 00:36:51,208 of its prototype launch vehicle. 694 00:36:51,367 --> 00:36:55,295 Code-named Starship, the reusable transport 695 00:36:55,379 --> 00:36:57,881 is the latest advance in a new space race 696 00:36:58,040 --> 00:37:01,793 funded by private entrepreneurs competing to see 697 00:37:01,886 --> 00:37:06,214 who will be the first to send humans to Mars. 698 00:37:06,307 --> 00:37:09,717 Elon Musk envisions sending perhaps 699 00:37:09,810 --> 00:37:12,387 a million colonists to the Red Planet. 700 00:37:12,471 --> 00:37:14,564 Is that possible? 701 00:37:14,723 --> 00:37:17,892 Well, from an engineering point of view, yes, 702 00:37:17,977 --> 00:37:20,403 we have the technology. 703 00:37:20,562 --> 00:37:22,730 It's just a question of assembling the resources. 704 00:37:22,815 --> 00:37:26,150 But then the bigger question is, who's gonna pay for it? 705 00:37:26,244 --> 00:37:29,988 And that's why we're entering the second golden age 706 00:37:30,081 --> 00:37:31,581 of space exploration. 707 00:37:31,740 --> 00:37:32,832 Things are changing. 708 00:37:32,992 --> 00:37:35,410 Silicon Valley billionaires 709 00:37:35,494 --> 00:37:38,838 are funding their own fleet of rockets, 710 00:37:38,998 --> 00:37:43,927 paid for not by taxpayer's dime, paid for by their own funds. 711 00:37:44,086 --> 00:37:47,347 Elon Musk is in competition with Jeff Bezos, 712 00:37:47,431 --> 00:37:49,766 the richest man on the planet, 713 00:37:49,925 --> 00:37:54,688 who has funded his own private spaceport in Texas 714 00:37:54,772 --> 00:37:56,764 with a fleet of rockets. 715 00:37:56,849 --> 00:37:59,609 Recently, SpaceX announced plans 716 00:37:59,768 --> 00:38:02,862 to begin the colonization of Mars by the year 2026, 717 00:38:02,947 --> 00:38:05,273 with the goal of establishing a permanent, 718 00:38:05,366 --> 00:38:08,109 self-sustaining city on the Red Planet 719 00:38:08,193 --> 00:38:11,112 by the end of the 21st century. 720 00:38:11,196 --> 00:38:14,866 But what would motivate a billionaire like Elon Musk 721 00:38:14,959 --> 00:38:19,787 to gamble his massive wealth on such a risky endeavor? 722 00:38:19,880 --> 00:38:22,206 Elon Musk is gonna go to Mars. 723 00:38:22,291 --> 00:38:24,301 He's motivated to do so, and the question is, 724 00:38:24,460 --> 00:38:27,462 d-does he see, like, the next big amount of money there? 725 00:38:27,546 --> 00:38:32,475 There's likely oil on Mars, methane on Mars, 726 00:38:32,560 --> 00:38:35,386 there's very likely minerals, rare earth elements 727 00:38:35,479 --> 00:38:37,388 that are very expensive, 728 00:38:37,473 --> 00:38:41,318 and could create a huge economic engine. 729 00:38:41,477 --> 00:38:44,479 But I'm not so sure that that's his pure motivation. 730 00:38:44,572 --> 00:38:47,565 He also seems to be motivated 731 00:38:47,658 --> 00:38:49,576 by the survivability of humanity 732 00:38:49,660 --> 00:38:51,911 by spreading out to the planets and the stars. 733 00:38:53,322 --> 00:38:55,999 Elon Musk had a dream as a child. 734 00:38:56,083 --> 00:38:58,743 He read the Foundation science fiction series 735 00:38:58,827 --> 00:39:02,663 by Isaac Asimov, which talked about a galactic civilization. 736 00:39:02,748 --> 00:39:05,759 So, he thought to himself, "Why not this 737 00:39:05,843 --> 00:39:07,844 "be the destiny for humanity, 738 00:39:07,928 --> 00:39:11,348 to become a multi-planet species?" 739 00:39:48,803 --> 00:39:51,546 Will our journey to Mars be a mission of survival 740 00:39:51,630 --> 00:39:53,390 or exploration? 741 00:39:53,549 --> 00:39:55,383 Only time will tell. 742 00:39:55,467 --> 00:39:56,976 But one thing is certain. 743 00:39:57,136 --> 00:39:59,303 Despite the inherent danger involved 744 00:39:59,388 --> 00:40:01,055 with traveling to Mars, 745 00:40:01,148 --> 00:40:04,058 human beings are compelled to learn more about 746 00:40:04,151 --> 00:40:07,812 and get closer to the Red Planet. 747 00:40:07,896 --> 00:40:09,072 We've been exploring Mars 748 00:40:09,231 --> 00:40:11,408 basically since the beginning of the Space Age, 749 00:40:11,567 --> 00:40:13,901 and we've had a near-constant presence on Mars, 750 00:40:13,994 --> 00:40:16,579 on the surface, since the late 1990s, 751 00:40:16,664 --> 00:40:18,915 but we still don't know too much about the planet. 752 00:40:18,999 --> 00:40:22,743 We've only gone with these rovers and landers 753 00:40:22,837 --> 00:40:25,079 that look for very specific things, 754 00:40:25,164 --> 00:40:27,331 whether it's looking at geology or looking at chemistry 755 00:40:27,425 --> 00:40:28,675 or looking at the atmosphere. 756 00:40:28,834 --> 00:40:31,094 Believe it or not, 757 00:40:31,253 --> 00:40:34,922 we have only scratched the surface of Mars. 758 00:40:35,007 --> 00:40:37,934 We've never been to the ice caps. 759 00:40:38,018 --> 00:40:41,679 We don't know their state, we don't know their consistency. 760 00:40:41,763 --> 00:40:44,607 It's a big mystery, the polar ice caps. 761 00:40:44,692 --> 00:40:46,572 And also, Mars has some of the biggest mountains 762 00:40:46,602 --> 00:40:49,353 and the biggest volcanos in the solar system. 763 00:40:49,438 --> 00:40:51,856 We have never visited them. 764 00:40:51,949 --> 00:40:56,611 And so for all these reasons, Mars is still a hidden universe. 765 00:40:56,704 --> 00:40:59,789 Exploring Mars is so exciting 766 00:40:59,874 --> 00:41:02,950 because there are so many mysteries left to solve. 767 00:41:03,043 --> 00:41:06,287 Each rover mission, each satellite observation 768 00:41:06,380 --> 00:41:10,541 gives us one more little puzzle piece. 769 00:41:10,626 --> 00:41:14,220 All of these developments are-are absolutely thrilling. 770 00:41:14,305 --> 00:41:17,632 Human beings, as a species, 771 00:41:17,725 --> 00:41:19,467 seem to want to go beyond the next horizon. 772 00:41:19,560 --> 00:41:21,469 They want to crest that next mountain, 773 00:41:21,562 --> 00:41:24,305 they want to go over that next ocean. 774 00:41:24,389 --> 00:41:26,733 We're building these remarkable rockets, 775 00:41:26,817 --> 00:41:29,977 these incredible spacecraft to go to Mars. 776 00:41:30,070 --> 00:41:32,563 Once we get there, this is going to be a moment 777 00:41:32,656 --> 00:41:34,824 that's pivotal in human history. 778 00:41:36,994 --> 00:41:38,495 So, what do you think? 779 00:41:38,654 --> 00:41:42,073 Could there have been life on Mars in the past? 780 00:41:42,166 --> 00:41:45,409 And will our destiny lead us to travel there in the future? 781 00:41:45,494 --> 00:41:49,330 Well, while we may be surprisingly close 782 00:41:49,414 --> 00:41:51,424 to uncovering the Red Planet's secrets, 783 00:41:51,509 --> 00:41:54,761 until we can explore the surface firsthand, 784 00:41:54,845 --> 00:41:59,840 the mysteries of Mars will remain unexplained. 785 00:41:59,934 --> 00:42:02,185 >>>>oakislandtk<<<<< www.opensubtitles.org 785 00:42:03,305 --> 00:43:03,768 Please rate this subtitle at www.osdb.link/9wm3y Help other users to choose the best subtitles63726

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