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The John Batchelor Show

FOR MY HUNDRETH BIRTHDAY. #2/2: #Uranus: Voyage to the unknowns of the gas giant. Ken Croswell, PNAS. (ORIGINALLY POSTED November 18, 2022))

The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor

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4.52.8K Ratings

🗓️ 25 August 2023

⏱️ 3 minutes

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FOR MY HUNDRETH BIRTHDAY. #2/2: #Uranus: Voyage to the unknowns of the gas giant. Ken Croswell, PNAS. (ORIGINALLY POSTED November 18, 2022))
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2216692119
"The recent decadal survey from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine recommends that NASA’s next new large planetary mission take aim at Uranus (1). Unlike Voyager 2, which flew past the planet in 1986 (2), this new spacecraft would settle into orbit around Uranus and observe it for many years. At least one such orbiter has studied the five planets closest to Earth, from Mercury to Saturn. Uranus is twice as far as Saturn, yet a billion miles closer than Neptune, making Uranus the easier target. If NASA launches the mission in the early 2030s, it can reach the planet in the mid-2040s.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is CBS I In The World, the proto-galaxy that becomes the Milky Way.

0:09.8

Dr. Ken Croswell, writing at Science News, introduces us to a discovery made by the Gaia

0:14.9

spacecraft whose mission is to chart the Milky Way, finding a proto-galaxy 18,000 light

0:21.7

years across, that right now we're understanding it's where we came from.

0:27.8

We're part of the Milky Way, we're in the thin disk, following the thick disk, somewhere

0:33.3

in relationship to the black hole that's a center, and then the proto-galaxy.

0:37.1

Now Ken, at the close of a piece of science news, you tease about what comes next.

0:42.7

A star that astronomers can now scrutinize or further clues to the galaxy's birth and

0:47.3

early evolution.

0:48.3

What do we want to learn for looking at the red giants that are in the proto-galaxy?

0:54.2

Well, one thing, as I mentioned in the last segment that we've already learned is to

0:58.0

see the Milky Way's initial spin-up, that I think is really exciting.

1:02.4

It's transition from an object that didn't rotate into one that now does.

1:06.6

We can also now look at these stars, especially the most metal poorer of these stars, which

1:11.5

are presumably the oldest, and look at what chemical elements they have, because those

1:17.4

chemical elements, aside from the hydrogen and helium, were made in a previous generation

1:22.9

of stars.

1:23.9

And there are theoretical predictions for how stars of different masses make different

1:30.4

proportions of metals, okay?

1:33.6

So what we'd like to do is measure, say, how much oxygen those exploding stars made, or

1:40.3

magnesium, or calcium, or iron.

1:42.4

And then that will give us clues to what the very first stars in the Milky Way were like.

...

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