Tribute to BBC's Wonders Of The Solar System.
In this spellbinding series Professor Brian Cox visits the
most extreme locations on Earth to explain how the laws of physics carved
natural wonders across the solar system.
1. Empire of the Sun. In the first episode Brian explores
the powerhouse of them all, the sun. In India he witnesses a total solar
eclipse – when the link to the light and heat that sustains us is cut off for a
few precious minutes. But heat and light are not the only power of the sun over
the solar system. In Norway, Brian watches the battle between the sun’s wind
and earth, as the night sky glows with the northern lights.
2. Order out of Chaos. Brian reveals how beauty and order in
earth’s cosmic backyard was formed from nothing more than a chaotic cloud of
gas. Chasing tornados in Oklahoma, he explains how the same physics that
creates these spinning storms shaped the young solar system. Out of this
celestial maelstrom emerged the jewel in the crown, Brian’s second wonder – the
magnificent rings of Saturn. On an ice-choked lagoon in Iceland, he sees the
nearest thing on Earth to Saturn’s rings.
3. The Thin Blue Line. Brian reveals how something as flimsy
as an envelope of gas – an atmosphere – can create some of the most wondrous
sights in the solar system. He takes a ride in an English Electric Lightning
and flies 18 km up to the top of earth’s atmosphere, where he sees the darkness
of space above and the thin blue line of our atmosphere below. In the Namib
desert in south-west Africa, he tells the story of Mercury.
4. Dead or Alive. The worlds that surround our planet are
all made of rock, but there the similarity ends. Some have a beating geological
heart, others are frozen in time. Brian travels to the tallest mountain on
Earth, the volcano Mauna Kea on Hawaii, to show how something as basic as a
planet’s size can make the difference between life and death. Even on the
summit of this volcano, Brian would stand in the shade of the tallest mountain
in the solar system, an extinct volcano on Mars called Olympus Mons, which
rises up 27 km.
5. Aliens. Brian descends to the bottom of the Pacific in a
submarine to witness the extraordinary life forms that survive in the cold,
black waters. All life on Earth needs water so the search for aliens in the
solar system has followed the search for water. Soaring above the dramatic
Scablands of the United States, Brian discovers how the same landscape has been
found on Mars. And it was all carved out in a geological heartbeat by a
monumental flood.
Can't wait for the Wonders of the Universe! ^^
No comments:
Post a Comment