Ah, ah. What is the do space trade with launch successfully . Mid april after one day delay a good. Never before has the European Space agency sent a probe on such a long journey. It will travel around 6000000000 kilometers. Its mission to find out where the life is possible on to get his means. I am the i see moons of jupiter. Strong candidates for extra terrestrial life. What are they hiding beneath their surfaces . Could life really exist there . Lee that you space probe needs to Gain Momentum with several fly buys before getting on course. After 8, use an orbit it should reach its destination, the largest planet in the solar system. Jupiter planetary researchers are interested in 3 of jupiters moons, icy worlds, where there could have also developed life at some point. Wanted to see the written lee find in life out there in joanne system is even more exciting than find in life. Lets say a marse nichols marson earth could have had exchange of bacteria was the meteorites. So if we wo
Hello, im matthew amroliwala, welcome to verified live, three hours of breaking stories and checking out the truth behind them. The us soldier travis king who was being held in north korea is back in us custody. Us Media Reports say he is now in china. Hours earlier, north korea said it would deport private king who ran into the country across the Demilitarized Zone injuly. He had been due to be flown to the us to face military Disciplinary Proceedings when he escaped his escort and entered north korean territory. Live now to our washington correspondent gary odonoghue. In terms of the very latest, take us through what we have learned over the last few hours . We now know that the last few hours . We now know that the United States has travis king in its custody. We dont know where he is at this moment in time. There are plenty of Media Reports here saying that he exited north korea via china. We cannot confirm that officially at that point in time. We are waiting to hear, i think perh
Morning, good belarus, good morning country , a new day and a new week on the belarus tv channel, one of the satellite channels belarus 24, we meet you Ekaterina Antonova and tatyana motoseevich. Well, today we have a beautiful summerlike warm monday waiting for us, but in general the whole week promises to be warm, because the Weather Forecast tells us that summer has decided to linger a little longer. Yes, this is great news. Friends, lets start before the morning. Cheerfully, brightly beautiful and, of course, to good music, wake up. By the end and the road of lies, instead of paradise, we came to the edge. Give us a break of love for a moment and give me your hand. Give in your breath, justification, i catch again and let go, i wont break down, i wont give in. Slava forgot in the eyes screamed. I love goodbye on the edge. Im not afraid of losing someone elses role, know the empty forgotten paradise, i remain in you , the unsolved mystery sign in your breath is justification, i catc
Texas. Thank you jim. Id like to start by explaining how i came to write this and why i came to write this. And to that purpose ill read from, initial part of the preface. Im a physicist not a historian but over the years ive become increasingly fascinated by the history of science. My own handwriting is touch on history, its been mostly the modern history of physics and astronomy, roughly from the late 19th century to the present. Although in this era we learned many new things. The goals and since the physical size have not materially changed. The physicist of 1900 were somehow taught todays standard model of cosmology or of elementary particle physicist, they wouldve found much to amaze them at the idea of seeking mathematically formulated and experimentally validated impersonal principles that explain the wide variety of phenomena would have seen quite familiar. A while ago i decided i needed to dig deeper to learn more about an earlier era in the history of science and the goals a
She discusses her latest book, the new better off. First up here is astrophysicists [applause] thank you welcome to the American Museum of natural history. Im your host for the evening and coauthor of this book talk, i am Neil Degrasse tyson. I serve as the frederick t rowes director of the Hayden Planetarium, a place we all went to as a kid. I was never the same after that. Come back and actually become director. I also want to welcome cspan into this event, they are recording it for book tv, so cspan is in the house. [applause] tonights book is called welcome to the university and i love saying that, welcome to the universe would go to planetarium director school they teach you how to speak like that. Let me immediately and reduce my coauthors, first, Michael Strauss. [applause] and richard, the third, these are my two coauthors. [applause] so just a bit of introduction, i taught for ten years at Princeton University from 1994 through 2003, before i transferred all of my activities h