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B1 Intermediário Inglês 12:06 Educational

Galaxies, part 1: Crash Course Astronomy #38

CrashCourse · 1,695,816 visualizações · Adicionado há 2 semanas

Estatísticas de aprendizado

B1

Nível CEFR

5/10

Dificuldade

Legendas (154 segmentos)

00:03

We live in a pretty cool neighborhood: the Milky Way galaxy. We’re out in the suburbs,

00:08

sure, but it’s still an interesting place, buzzing with activity. Stars, nebulae, stellar

00:13

clusters of various sorts, the occasional supernova. It’s a happening place.

00:17

In the earliest part of the 20th century, astronomers were just starting to figure this

00:21

all out. But there were a handful of objects that were puzzling: Dotting the sky here and

00:26

there were faint fuzzies displaying a variety of shapes. Some were round, some elongated,

00:31

and some even seemed to have spiral arms. Even with big telescopes they looked smoky,

00:36

so they were simply called “nebulae.”

00:38

Their existence was puzzling, though. What were they? How did they form? Were they big,

00:43

small, near, far? Eventually, astronomers had uncovered the key to these objects, and

00:48

in one fell swoop our Universe got a lot bigger.

00:51

A LOT.

01:03

In 1920, there were two competing ideas about the Universe. One was that our Milky Way was

01:09

IT, and that everything we saw was in it. The other was that the “spiral nebulae”

01:14

seen in the sky were also like our Milky Way; “island Universes” in their own right.

01:18

Two astronomers debated this controversy in that year. Harlow Shapley argued that the

01:22

Milky Way was all there is, while Heber Curtis was of the opinion that we were one of many

01:28

galaxies. It wasn’t a debate as such; more of a presentation of ideas. And there was

01:32

no clear winner; both sides had fragmentary data and – we now know – some shaky observational

01:39

evidence that turned out not to be correct.

01:41

For example, Shapley noted that one of the spiral nebulae had been seen to rotate, so

01:45

it must be small. It turns out that was just wrong, dead wrong. On the other hand, Curtis

01:50

noted that if galaxies were as big as Shapley claimed – hundreds of thousands of light

01:55

years across – then other galaxies must be impossibly far away. But, HELLO, galaxies

02:00

really are that big, and they truly are mind-numbingly distant.

02:04

The observation that finally unlocked this mystery was made just a few years later when

02:08

Edwin Hubble and Milton Humason observed the great spiral nebula M31 in Andromeda, using

02:14

what was at the time the largest telescope in the world. They found dozens of pulsating

02:18

stars in it, literally stars that changed their brightness in a regular, periodic fashion.

02:22

These are called Cepheid variables, and they were critically important, because it was

02:26

known that the time it took them to pulse was directly related to their luminosity,

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