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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:00Hey everyone
00:01Haven't we finished with this story?
00:03We're saying 12 secs, the same problem persists.
00:07So focus on the task you were entrusted with.
00:09Save the planet
00:11Oh doctor, the summary of what I'm sending is...
00:13Every day I'll look at your face
00:14Every day snoring
00:16Every day, vanilla, in a style like yours, you see?
00:19Tell me what to do, I'm tired
00:21In short, my sister, go to your mother.
00:22Your mother
00:23Your mother
00:24This formula is great.
00:25Oh, look, Doctor
00:26Every time he gets upset, he tells me to go to my mother.
00:28Because I know I don't know how to get there
00:30Why, my sister, didn't I get to know you?
00:32You know how to make my life miserable every day
00:34It's not because of the 140 million mile distance, you ignorant fool.
00:38We're on Mars and she's on Earth.
00:39I'll go to her, she's balanced
00:40What is this a bigger reason for you to stay on good terms?
00:43Yes, I pray on the authority of the Prophet.
00:45You are in a foreign land, you don't know what's best for each other.
00:47when
00:48The man doesn't know me or you.
00:51You said it yourself, Dr. Gharba
00:53Exile means the woman takes care of her private parts.
00:56Isn't that right, Doctor?
00:57naturally
00:58So, what do you want me to say, doctor?
00:59You're a man with no charisma
01:01Oh, you're not being intentional.
01:03She meant that space has no gravity.
01:05I don't mean him, he's the one who sees.
01:07zero charisma
01:08I see the clothes you're wearing in the person he's wearing.
01:10He wore a t-shirt all night and day
01:12This is what space ministers are doing.
01:13So you're the one who's Monica Bloch with the swaddling clothes you're wearing?
01:16any?
01:17It's my fault, my friends.
01:19The one added to your daily routine
01:20Did you hear that, doctor?
01:22I hear, I hear
01:23Six hours of cleaning
01:24And when he came back, he took a breath and said to me
01:26What kind of space are you in?
01:27Oh Madam Faten
01:28I'm definitely not reaping it from you.
01:30He harvested the space that was yours
01:32From the stars and planets
01:35The needs, I mean
01:36What do I gain from it?
01:38This is space
01:39And her brain is space
01:41The daytime countries that you are in the man on TV series
01:43And I spoke of its draws
01:44They grow up together on the phone
01:45This is called space
01:48What is this, guys?
01:49No, these planets will hit Earth too, disasters.
01:51Disasters?
01:52Disasters?
01:53Hearer of terms and nobility
01:54With him, whether it's a truck
01:55This isn't the right time, Faten.
01:56This is nonsense.
01:58Are there planets that will hit Earth in half an hour?
02:00No, no, no
02:01Thank God
02:02They thought he was a man of upbringing
02:04any?
02:04They said, "My Lord
02:06Congratulations, the truck has benefited
02:08Tell me, you bad Ahmed, do something for me?
02:10My aunt doesn't deprive my son
02:11Guys, this isn't the time for brains.
02:13Act, the land will belong
02:16What do you say, you know?
02:18What is Mima, brothers?
02:19Guys, this isn't the time, you'll die.
02:20Doctor, I've already fallen asleep in it.
02:22No more chatter, let's get stuffed now.
02:23You are our destiny, my dear
02:25By the way, the pot is specially made for you, my friend.
02:27By God
02:27Guys, this isn't the time for brains.
02:29No contrast, Wasak
02:31twist
02:32Oh you who cry
02:32By the way, the pot is specially made for you, my friend.
02:38And the lady noticed that she entered a little
02:40The moment the lady entered a little
02:41The one who is beautiful to you, so you see the one who is beautiful.
02:51Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you, and welcome to a new religious episode of the Al-Dahiyya program.
02:54I want you, my dear, to imagine with me a huge Tang full of fuel.
02:58Say, "We'll destroy you, come here, we'll put you in the little capsule."
03:00And we'll stick you in this Tango that's full of fuel
03:03We'll attach this small capsule to the Tang and light the Tang
03:06Oh Abu Hamid, what are you going to do?
03:09We're going to take off our Tang to send you to a place humans have never been before.
03:14Will you agree, my dear?
03:15No, of course not, I'm red now.
03:16So, my dear, let's introduce you to the first astronaut in history.
03:19Look at these ordinary people!
03:20Soviet pilot Yuri Gagarin
03:22April 12, 1961
03:24Yuri Gagarin launched aboard a Phostoquan rocket
03:27To pack a sad picture for the first time for a human being in history
03:31To ascend into space
03:32No human being had gone into space before this man before 1961.
03:35You might think, my dear, that this is a great human achievement.
03:39And the truth is, it is.
03:40But it is also a psychological achievement
03:43Not even with myself, my dear
03:44They were amazed by the most beautiful trip
03:45Think about it
03:46We'll lock you in a capsule attached to a missile.
03:48Fuel and fire
03:50Look up
03:51And when he reached the edge of the planet
03:53Look out into space
03:54How many times do you take two planetary field turns?
03:56And the first thing you'll tell us when you get back is, "What's the envy about?"
03:58There were concerns that the need might affect mental faculties.
04:01You send someone to the location
04:02No human being has ever been like this before.
04:03To the point that there was a suggestion that they disable any manual control of the aircraft's flight path.
04:08Because if he hopes to go crazy, God forbid
04:10Any crazy thing he does will remain.
04:12He couldn't implement it
04:13And there was a question, of course.
04:14Of course, communication with him was cut off.
04:15How will he be able to control the vehicle like that?
04:17The suggestion was that they write it down in an envelope containing a password.
04:19This password is what will unlock his ability to control the vehicle's rotation.
04:23Provided that they only open them when communication with the ground is severed
04:26The truth, my dear, is that when Yuri didn't experience the full adventure
04:29He was exposed to something unique
04:31Microgravity or zero gravity
04:33Yuri Gagarin felt for the first time that he had no weight
04:35This is something that no human being out of 100 billion humans has ever experienced.
04:39Those who have lived on this planet feel it
04:41Imagine being the first of your kind to have this experience without ever having tried the Frivole gap.
04:46Without ending up touching the ground too quickly
04:50Throughout our lives as humans, we've become accustomed to gravity pulling us downwards.
04:53His gravitational pull disappeared as if it never existed at all.
04:55Am I being silly, Muhammad? How could he be subject to the Earth's gravity by rotating around it?
05:00But nothing attracts him
05:01My dear, the issue isn't simply about gravity.
05:03When any space object is launched, it is via a rocket at a very high speed until that rocket reaches a great height and passes through
05:10Distance 300 km
05:11At that point, the spacecraft will stop rising and, after 300 km, will begin to fall to Earth.
05:16But because it also moves around the Earth and falls, its high speed allows it to escape every time.
05:21So it remains as it is, not falling to the ground, but because it is high it falls like this, then it falls like this, then it falls like this
05:33The elevator's cables break, so it falls and enters a state called free fall.
05:37You're inside the elevator that's slowing down free fall, and you've started flying inside it.
05:42Instead of falling in the elevator, you moved quickly out of the elevator and escaped from falling to the ground.
05:46If this happens, you'll remain in this state of free fall and won't feel your balance at all.
05:50And that's what happened to Yuri during Yuri G. Garin's trip; many questions arose.
05:54The accuracy showed that the human body was subjected to gravitational destruction.
05:58Continuous Freeful
05:59Could this affect his body or his psyche? Will Yuri G. Garin's body organs function with the same efficiency?
06:04For her, my dear, from the journey of Yuri G. Garin, came the first stop on a very long journey to find these answers.
06:10Through our experiences in space
06:11I'll answer, my dear, from the trip's distractions and come to you soon.
06:14On September 12, 1962, US President John F. Kennedy went bald.
06:19And you don't get the body
06:21Not because it's easy, easy, easy
06:24Why this difficulty?
06:24He told them, "Give me 8 years from now and I'll have figured it out."
06:28Even if you put me in a burlap sack and threw me behind the sun, I'd understand.
06:30Kennedy was saying that this would be a response to the Soviet Union when Yuri Garin went into space.
06:34Let me tell you, my dear, there is a very important problem that you must think about if you want to inform the person about the matter.
06:40Hey Abu Hamid, are you going to build a missile to get to the bottom of this?
06:43No, my dear
06:44My dear friend, the difficult thing isn't going to do it, the difficult thing is coming back from it.
06:48To the point that some specialists at the time suggested sending an astronaut and leaving him there until they found a way to bring him back.
06:54You stay there, we'll sort things out and call you.
06:56Imagine, my dear, waking up and finding yourself in this situation?
06:59The nearest person to you is 300,000 kilometers away.
07:02Imagine the extent of the isolation, and they tell you, "It'll be sorted out, and we'll contact you."
07:04God willing, we will find a way to bring you back.
07:07Of course, my dear, you might hear this and react
07:09But we lament when they start thinking about this kind of isolation.
07:12They found that it could cause a phenomenon called
07:14The pool effect or Earth Auto in Nomel
07:16The Earth is beyond sight, you can't see your planet.
07:20Astronauts might experience fear and a feeling of being thrown off due to their distance from Earth.
07:23This could cause them to behave unpredictably.
07:26And who knows? They might refuse and cooperate with the control rooms on the ground.
07:29They are putting themselves or the journey at risk.
07:31Thank God the suggestion to leave the astronaut to his own devices was rejected.
07:35How can we consider this a triumphant journey when the astronaut hasn't returned yet?
07:38That's why the engineers designed a very precise task.
07:41She explained that she would send three astronauts for the task and bring them back.
07:45Apollo 11 was the most difficult mission in the history of going to space.
07:49On a missile named Saturn V or Saturn V
07:51I can bear on the surface of this rocket
07:53lunar vehicle
07:55Service vehicle
07:57The command module where the astronauts spent most of the journey
08:00And when the center of the vehicle orbits around the matter
08:02Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin went inside the Lunar Model
08:05Michael Collins preferred the Command Model
08:07The Command Module separated from the Lunar Module
08:11Armstrong and Aldrin gave the order
08:14This, my dear, was one of humanity's greatest achievements.
08:17The first humans to take steps on the matter
08:20It's funny, my dear, that we know Armstrong but not Aldrin.
08:23Because Armstrong didn't know how to give him a seven-step slap
08:26I want to know the details of the history of this story.
08:28He told him to check the valves, and he was distracted and lowered it so that he would be the first person
08:32This isn't that easy either.
08:33Mommy, my dear dragon, these preferred to remain on the surface of the matter.
08:35They are exposed to the Earth's gravitational pull for 21 hours.
08:38Here, of course, you might think I have a problem.
08:40You'll surely imagine that they are very light and can perform any jump for long distances.
08:45They will all be for Bron James
08:46They may also have difficulty controlling their movement.
08:49But the truth is that this was in their best interest.
08:51Because their suit weighs over 96 kilos
08:54Let the gravitational execution help us a little.
08:56Let me tell you, if its gravity were like Earth's
08:59It remained an impossible task
09:01The situation was like throwing your brother into the water
09:02So, you know, it's light and you can carry or carry your father in the water.
09:05But on the ground it's difficult to lift anyone there
09:07After they finished the 21 hours, they returned the Lunar Module.
09:09The Luner Module de Rta performed in the Command Module
09:12Check, check
09:12They returned to planet Earth in peace, and the miracle was fulfilled.
09:16Regarding feelings of isolation and refusal to cooperate
09:18No, what I'm saying didn't happen. 11
09:20I haven't been assigned another task yet.
09:22The psychologists were a little overly concerned.
09:24Or the person turned out to be more beautiful than the other person expected.
09:27He told you that if God is perfect, the world is beautiful without feet.
09:31The strange human wanted to ask me
09:32I know he's alone and needs people.
09:34He sits with Nasi, wanting to be alone.
09:35People can't stand him anyway.
09:36Honest Russian space thunder
09:38Sergei was saying
09:39It is the anxiety of the period of widespread railway lines.
09:42They were worried
09:43The passengers, who are Rajab Al-Qatari, tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick
09:46When they see the trees moving quickly past them
09:48They are alarmed by the sight, they are frightened, and they go crazy.
09:50They also decided to build walls along the road next to the train.
09:54Of course, Aziz, I don't need to tell you that this didn't happen and no one went crazy or anything.
09:57The passengers, despite all the noise and disturbing sights, wanted to sleep.
10:00But while the soul is determined to think about these things and worry
10:02This happens with every new human experiment.
10:04Will a person's psychology differ under different circumstances?
10:07Are there different physiological and psychological experiments?
10:10Will human psychology and human physiology be affected?
10:14Dear viewer, let me tell you that the bet is on the human element.
10:18A dangerous gamble
10:19They got the human element, Abu Ahmed
10:21Dear viewer, you are wonderful, but unexpected.
10:23No matter how excellent a vehicle we build, not just anyone can take it to space.
10:26For example, the process of selecting astronauts is difficult and complex.
10:29Every space agency has its own standards.
10:31I say, Abu Ahmed, I've been wanting to be an astronaut for a long time.
10:33So they can say, "The Major General is gone, the Major General is gone."
10:35For example, the Japanese space agency selects ten candidates.
10:38And they are being held for a week in an isolated facility.
10:41They fear them and see who possesses the qualities of an astronaut.
10:44Qualities, for example, like, will they be able to ignite the team?
10:47Or they can be leaders and be able to resolve conflicts.
10:49Difficult qualities he learned from the interview
10:51Hey Abu Ahmed, these are the things they test astronauts on.
10:54They don't test their physical knowledge
10:56or their spatial knowledge
10:57Natsu Hiko and Ino
10:58The psychiatrist responsible for the selection says
11:01It's easy to be a good person for a car period.
11:04But it's difficult to be a good person for a long time.
11:07She's staying with a relative during a family visit.
11:08Decorating the clock
11:09But imagine being locked away with them in a capsule for three years
11:12They'll set each other on fire and manage an expensive space trip
11:15If this keeps suffocating me and he is disgusted by this
11:17And I won't do that kind of work.
11:18And I did it to please everyone.
11:20You do it next time
11:21This week they are subjecting them to strange tests
11:23For example, they ask them to cook for them.
11:25A thousand origami papers in the shape of a bird
11:27They connect them in order in a long line
11:29Those who don't understand these are astronaut tests and they love us
11:31And they don't punish them in school
11:32He makes a hundred drawings for me.
11:33And he writes to me, "You're wrong a hundred times over."
11:34And the leader who doesn't do his duty, we'll extend his life, my dear.
11:37The line that connects a thousand origami pieces
11:39It is sent to a psychiatrist's office.
11:41To analyze the shape of the origami
11:43Therefore, they know who among the candidates is.
11:45Fadl performed with the same level of skill.
11:47As the deadline approached, the pressure increased.
11:48And which one of them got bored and their performance changed?
11:50And whoever rushed, the quality of their work was affected by the time.
11:53All these are crucial factors
11:55In choosing an astronaut
11:56Because with every task they carry out
11:58The topic is turning into short, routine tasks.
12:01Sometimes to the point of being boring
12:02Be aware that you are in a state of Yazidism and oneness
12:04Everything you could do, you've probably done already.
12:07I did it a lot in a mission
12:08Apollo 17 astronaut Eugene Kerman
12:11When they asked him if anything funny had happened to him
12:13In your Apollo mission
12:14Tell them there's no need, it's just that he brings it with him.
12:16Disjointed words to entertain myself
12:18Also, among the tests that the Japanese space agency was conducting
12:20Those who used to perfume the bathroom or delay the meal by half an hour
12:23This revealed some of the characteristics of the candidates that they didn't want to reveal.
12:27Will he get angry quickly and might become irritated when something goes wrong?
12:30He will not remain calm and act wisely.
12:32From here they can sense his intelligence
12:34What might happen if this happened in space?
12:36If a problem occurs, a malfunction occurs, or a dispute arises
12:39NASA geologist Ralph Harvey said
12:41NASA, as usual, spoke to the candidates late.
12:50No, he might postpone it with me.
12:52This also shows them other things about the candidate's qualities.
12:54Like a serious person, he'll drop everything to join them.
12:57It's not just those whose tests stop at an important point.
12:58My dear, you might be becoming extreme for a very trivial reason.
13:01And of course, it's not very trivial for the person who sleeps next to you.
13:03Because the reason I'm talking about is Al-Shuqair
13:05But yeah, you might not become an astronaut.
13:07Because you snore while you're playing the flute
13:08Your colleague doesn't know what's going on in his name, and you're busy listening to the Voice of the Arabs.
13:11Of course, you might imagine that lack of sleep is a normal thing.
13:13We're all melting and taking our share of sleep
13:14But again, in a cramped place
13:16And there are people you've been with for a long time
13:18With a busy work schedule
13:20Lack of sleep can cause major problems.
13:22Based on your performance at your job
13:24Which is secondly, you are in a spaceship that followed
13:26Kilometers from planet Earth
13:28After the astronauts are selected, the training process begins.
13:30Intensive training prepares them for missions
13:32The first thing to do is define the task and practice it.
13:34Spectware is designed to simulate this task.
13:37And they train on a flight simulator
13:39For those who want to know, don't say
13:41They sit for about 200 hours, then they make them sit.
13:42In a large water tank for them to exercise
13:44You will train in zero gravity.
13:46The location of your movements will elicit a different reaction from me.
13:49Sorry, Abu Hamad, but the Japanese...
13:50The world's troublemakers, the Russians, and the Americans have all emerged.
13:53Their favor was Saidi and they worked as a point
13:55NASA in Azizi, not all of them are space missions.
13:57The Apollo 11 analogy is extremely difficult.
13:59You need everything to be
14:01100% marriage
14:02For example, if the text of the expression is missing
14:04The Apollo 8 mission consisted of
14:065 million and 800 thousand pieces
14:09If every part worked efficiently
14:1199.9%
14:13You will have 5800 in front of you
14:14A possible holiday or error
14:17During a long journey you need efficiency
14:19100% because one mistake is possible
14:21It remains very expensive for the task
14:22We saw Aziz Sawarikh explode in the air before it even went out.
14:25Elon Musk's SpaceX rockets
14:27They took three missiles and they failed
14:28So that they can produce a successful one
14:30The basic principle in space is that you fail, at least for a period of time.
14:32For example, in the Apollo 13 mission
14:34The team was surprised by a pressure explosion during their flight.
14:36She was the astronaut at the time, Jim Lovell
14:38His famous terrifying phrase
14:41That explosion, my dear, was Tang's.
14:43It is supposed to provide them with the required oxygen.
14:46What he will breathe throughout the journey
14:47Oxygen is your air
14:49Hassan al-Hoss was there
14:51The oxygen is enough for them until they recover.
14:52But the problem is not the lack of oxygen.
14:55The problem was that they didn't know how to get rid of them.
14:57From the secret of carbon dioxide
14:58If it keeps gathering, gathering, gathering
15:00But thank God, my dear, there was rapid communication with the Earth
15:03They were able to solve the problem step by step
15:04And every step they took was documented on the ground.
15:07First, before they did it above
15:08And they make sure it's a successful endeavor.
15:10When they conducted an investigation into this mistake, they discovered
15:12What happened wasn't due to one mistake.
15:14But behind a series of mistakes, a society was formed.
15:17The vehicle's design is what helped it reach this cup.
15:20And sadness and luck follow her
15:21Unfortunately, this isn't always the case.
15:23For example, in April 1967
15:24The one who feels Soviet decided to do
15:26A space maneuver in which the astronaut
15:28Vladimir Komarov, who will go into space in a spacecraft called
15:31Swiss 1 will then be launched
15:32The Swiss 2 spacecraft will carry three astronauts.
15:35And when they reach the same orbit
15:36They will connect with each other, and her name will be...
15:38Two of the astronauts in Suez 2
15:40They will go out and count in space
15:42They go to Swiss 1 and leave their colleague alone.
15:44The two vehicles separate and return to Earth
15:46That was the plan, my dear.
15:48But there is an important stage that must happen before launch.
15:50This means that astronauts must inspect the vehicles they use.
15:53And the astronaut is her strength
15:54Vladimir's superior officer was reserve Major Yuri Gagarin.
15:57Yes, my dear, that's the man who's going to space.
15:58They examined the vehicle's systems and found more than 200 faults.
16:01200 and they were going to go out and do that acrobatic stunt in space
16:04This is all before it even comes out.
16:06But of course, you were in a difficult situation, and you had to complete the task somehow.
16:10The space race, especially during the Cold War, was merciless.
16:13And because of that, it was launched
16:14Soya Zone Space
16:16And your eyes see nothing but light.
16:17The problems began with an issue in the installed solar panels.
16:20This causes the vehicle to lose half of its power (50% of the power it's supposed to use).
16:25This malfunction caused them to halt the rest of the mission.
16:27Wafid Al-Kamrouf alone is trying to solve the problems
16:29Every time you solve one problem, another one appears, my dear.
16:32And you entered a space
16:33My dear Ghala, you come to fix your house and then you open your mouth
16:35Another rose problem
16:37And all of this was an opportunity
16:38And all these problems he's trying to get down to earth
16:40It's like you're driving at 200 kilometers per hour on the Suez road, and the tires are punctured.
16:46The lanterns have gone out and you can't see them
16:48And she's trying to reach
16:49It's impossible to stop, you have to reach your destination.
16:51Difficult situation
16:52Kamrov Feder guides the spacecraft to land on Earth.
16:55And indeed, he directs her correctly.
16:57But alas, my dear, before the final holiday
17:00The flap that was supposed to open when he landed didn't open.
17:03The result was that the vehicle crashed into the ground.
17:05The Soviet Union lost one of the most important cosmonauts in its history.
17:09And the last problem
17:10Last problem
17:11It was the brashat that made it dark.
17:13Human ambition, my dear, didn't stop at dangerous maneuvers in space.
17:16February 19, 1986
17:18The Soviet space station Mir was launched
17:21To be the first human settlement
17:23The first scientific experiment laboratory in space
17:25And it was through intense competition
17:27But many countries were sending their pioneers to the Mir station.
17:29The uniforms of France, England, Germany, and Austria
17:32They are all involved in research and experiments on the station's surface.
17:35Who else stopped at Bahid and is dying to learn and study like that?
17:38USN
17:39In the United States of America
17:41Of course, my dear, America doesn't go down
17:43We said a war of giants
17:44They announced that they were strong and would build the space station.
17:46Freedom
17:46What made me tell you was that it remained just an idea because of its difficult design.
17:50And its horrific cost
17:51But America's good fortune means
17:53The Soviet Union collapses
17:54Suddenly there was no more motivation.
17:56If we do our work and don't want to be in the world
17:58We've finished the race, now let's go see Iraq.
18:00What happens in it
18:01Let's see what's happening in Afghanistan.
18:03That's how we get our income and our metro
18:05And space remained with itself.
18:06But otherwise, let's not have any.
18:08One second, Abu Hamid
18:09That means there are no space stations
18:10Actually, like I told you
18:11The United States intended to build its own space station
18:14But the subject was really difficult
18:15That's why in June 1992
18:18America and Russia agreed to build a joint space station
18:20One second, Abu Hamid
18:21How did this happen? The war hadn't even started yet.
18:24Touching the wall, Brilin fell. 91
18:27Remember, my dear, that we are in a new era.
18:30Post-Soviet era
18:31Try and see, he's making ads that are really going viral.
18:33And the year 1994
18:33Construction of the International Space Station has begun
18:36ISS
18:37With the participation of space agencies
18:38American
18:39Japanese
18:39European
18:40Canadian
18:41And Kaman, the Roscosmos agency
18:42Russian
18:43Feel it, my dear, private universities are being created
18:44Nice, Alama, you
18:45You will become my dear station
18:46Joint station for peaceful space research
18:49Let me tell you that building a station in space
18:51It is very complex for humans to live in it.
18:53Space, when you don't know, means there's no air in it.
18:55And you can't rely on getting oxygen from the ground.
18:58The station must be self-sufficient.
19:00Self-reliant
19:01That's why there must be systems in place to produce oxygen.
19:03The first system was through the electrolysis of water.
19:06Electric pilot walks on water
19:08So, H2O is released as oxygen.
19:10and hydrogen
19:11We take oxygen and put it in a tank so we can breathe.
19:14And hydrogen enters another system
19:15It is a system for removing carbon dioxide.
19:18As we said, if the levels of carbon dioxide
19:20The pioneers rose, they were suffocating
19:22And of course, you'll be hanging out with the cool generation.
19:24He sees it as calm and doesn't let it go
19:26He needs to turn it on.
19:26Here's what happened to the hydrogen we got.
19:28It reacts with carbon dioxide
19:30So we get a hundred, what is it?
19:31Carbon dioxide is CO2
19:41God is your friend
19:42I'm focusing on the episode
19:43Hydrogen will now move on to CO2
19:45He asks permission for the oxygen molecules he has with him
19:47And he's still working on the hitchhiker he loves.
19:48So a person takes in oxygen, breathes it, drinks, and enjoys himself.
19:51The hatchett and carbon stand like one dog
19:53It is true that it is a process with fate, but
19:55It utilizes all available resources
19:56If this system fails, there are backup oxygen tanks.
19:59It will work until the problem is solved.
20:01Let me tell you, my dear, that the air in space
20:03He behaves differently
20:04May I explain the subject to you, my dear? (physics)
20:06On our planet, the atmosphere becomes more opaque the closer it gets to Earth.
20:09It will be higher, but
20:10When we raise it, the air gap decreases.
20:12Because of gravity and the nature of our planet
20:15It contains winds that change the air along its length
20:17This is not available on the space station.
20:18There's no one going to do anything to him.
20:20So the air here behaves like liquids.
20:21It clumps together and forms bubbles
20:23But of course we don't see it
20:25What could happen here
20:26It's possible a slightly larger bubble might form.
20:29from carbon dioxide
20:30Our astronaut won't see it.
20:32He breathes it
20:33He fights
20:34He dies bursting
20:35That's why it has a ventilation system and small fans running all day.
20:38To change the air
20:39This makes the sound in the space station very loud.
20:41So I treated her with love, in relation to the air.
20:42He puts the water
20:43For example, steam and sweat
20:45The sweat that comes out of astronauts
20:46It is sterilized
20:47And he'll bring the cap back again
20:48Of course, you know about the bumpers.
20:50They use it to get the champagne back on its own.
20:51I know and you know
20:52So we won't tell him
20:53And I wanted you to not suffer
20:54How can you tolerate a hundred liters of champagne like this?
20:56Does he say, my dear?
20:57The water filtration process is often
20:59On the International Space Station
21:01Cleaner than the cleanest filter
21:03You know him
21:03The subject is real, Syrian.
21:04According to Lynn Carter
21:05Those who worked on the International Space Station
21:07Specifically on water purification technologies
21:09He said they do a better job and that's it.
21:11Water purification plants in any city in the world
21:14And also from time to time
21:16They are sending fresh water to the International Space Station
21:19To find the water that is there
21:20When Muhammad asked about the shower
21:21Now, this wasn't gravity.
21:23The water from the noise when it comes down
21:25What should I download?
21:26What is this, no attraction?
21:34Astronauts currently use alcohol or a cloth dampened with soap.
21:37So they can clean themselves
21:38And so they lose their hair
21:39They use Waterless Shampoo
21:41Shampoo that doesn't need water
21:43The supervisors have a period of work at Mir and ISS.
21:46Space missions were never carried out by just one person.
21:49Rather, a team consisting of two or three astronauts
21:51You can't go alone.
21:52Because if a problem occurs while you are there
21:54And if you were alone, no one would know the truth.
21:55No winch
21:56This is where the need for a complete set comes in.
21:59But this creates a problem
22:00But it is non-physical
22:02psychological problem
22:03No problem, Abu Ahmed
22:04Someone who hates the louses
22:05Psychologists say
22:06When you isolate yourself with someone for more than six weeks
22:09This can cause brain death called
22:13irrational hostility
22:15If you spend more than a month and a half with the person in front of you
22:17You'll find yourself annoyed by him for no reason.
22:18There is no clear rational reason
22:20Most of them are reasons for misunderstanding
22:21Therefore, you might hate
22:22Who is the person in front of you?
22:23He breathes
22:25Two astronauts launched to Mir station
22:27They are Yuri Romanenko
22:29And Alexander Lovekin
22:30On a 326-day mission
22:32And at that time it was a standard crunch
22:34Mir station was bright
22:35And their sleeping quarters were also closer to the telephone booth.
22:38So imagine, with this distance
22:40Any action could spark a fight between them
22:42And this isn't just any fight, my dear.
22:44We are located at an altitude of approximately 300 kilometers above the Earth.
22:47It's so difficult for anyone to intervene between them.
22:48The biggest problem, my dear, is if someone appears to separate them.
22:51Will it be Elian?
22:51Okay Abu Ahmed, surely this problem won't happen at the second station.
22:55On the International Space Station
22:56Because it is newer and larger than the Mir station.
22:58Dear, the topic has nothing to do with space.
23:00Fishermen prefer to shade one of them with their kanafeh
23:03Because if two or three of the feet are gone
23:04This could trigger this erratic state
23:07Antagonism means that the place is not the cause.
23:09But the feeling that you are trapped
23:11And you only have certain people in front of you
23:13The question, my dear, is whether they are compatible with each other, right?
23:15This whole period was completely without any problems.
23:18Di jazi di?
23:18I'm telling you that Alexander was saying that Yuri
23:20Older than him and in the groin
23:22He was the leader on this mission.
23:24This is a very clear font name for dealing with commands.
23:26As for Alexander Viuri, he became the mission leader.
23:28He wasn't angry, he definitely got angry because of things that happened to him.
23:30And here Yuri was going back to a brilliant solution
23:33Any mistake that happens
23:34He didn't blame himself or his colleague.
23:36What is this? This is the grave of Abu Habil.
23:38What did he do? He was always blaming
23:40Ground-based aviation garage center
23:41Those below, whom I can't see, are the reason.
23:43Captain, I cut the toilet and the vehicle broke down.
23:46And we'll be miserable here for the rest of our lives.
23:48Oh my God, the garage center is ruined!
23:51correct
23:53According to a study by an American psychologist
23:55Nick Cums in both of them
23:56Not just those who do that
23:57Space missions in long-duration missions, specifically after the sixth week
24:01They start to become more hostile
24:03And it indicates that they are not hostile towards each other.
24:04They go up to the garage center
24:06Ground control
24:08The employees below have to put up with it, they're going home anyway
24:10To please them and their children
24:11Those above are not poor people
24:13On the International Space Station
24:15Pioneers live in a simulation
24:17For a city that protects them
24:18But the station sometimes needs hours of internal maintenance.
24:21And sometimes, my dear, the matter requires risk.
24:24It is a process if I am right
24:25From the outside
24:26Why fix things from the outside while you're in space?
24:28This means you have to do
24:29She walks in space
24:31And in space, they put on their suits and slaughter in space.
24:34So that they can carry out maintenance tasks from outside.
24:36They are tied together at the waist with a safety rope.
24:38Okay, so Abu Hamid goes to space tied up? What if they come back afterward?
24:41Dear, we are in space, not under your house.
24:43We're at a completely different sign.
24:44If this man stays away, I won't be able to get close.
24:46Nothing pulls you under the influence of gravity.
24:48It's almost nonexistent, besides the fact that there's nothing
24:50There's nothing to scratch, so go ahead.
24:53Astronauts are weightless
24:55To the point that even a simple taste like that is
24:57It might keep the astronauts away
24:59To the ends of the earth
25:00But of course at a different speed
25:02There is no air resistance to make
25:04Anything fast will slow down, that's why
25:06Astronauts must remain tethered at all times
25:07If you push him a little, he'll move away.
25:10Hundreds of rains, nothing will stop it.
25:12And also, everything he has needs to be secured.
25:14And Abu Hamid is tied up, I know why.
25:15So that nothing is stolen, my dear, this is in every monastery you have.
25:18Unfortunately, if anything gets out of hand
25:19It's impossible for an astronaut to ever return.
25:21Stephen Shine Pepper escaped her
25:23Tool bag weighing
25:2514 kilograms
25:27At that point, my dear, she had two options.
25:29He lets her go, then she brings him back
25:31But my dear, she made the right decision.
25:33And the bag is fixed, moving in space.
25:36Its price is more than one hundred thousand dollars
25:38one hundred thousand
25:39Hey bag, wait!
25:41Of course, and Hamid
25:43Is it possible, for example
25:46Obedient space, rising into space
25:47Without being tied down, without any restrictions
25:49Or ropes? Why would I tell you?
25:50From February 1984
25:52astronaut Proust McCandless
25:54First Space Walk
25:56Without being tethered to the spacecraft
26:00Arabiyati
26:01Is Bouhamid wearing a costume without a stunt double?
26:02Is it true that he was able to do that?
26:03Because he was wearing a custom-made suit called
26:05Rigid technology
26:09We'll send him back like Bouhamid's puppet in Alexandria
26:11With M-M-U technology
26:12The important thing is this custom-made suit
26:14It is equipped with 24 pressurized nitrogen cylinders.
26:18Senkijou Science Street uses them
26:19The astronaut orients himself in space
26:21On the ground, if you open a fire extinguisher
26:23It won't make you fly, but in space
26:25I'm afraid you're just resisting
26:27Gas pressure coming out of pipes
26:29It is estimated that the astronaut will be supplied with a large distance
26:32Because there is no more room for compromise.
26:33Nothing slows him down.
26:35For something as important as this to succeed, it must be used
26:38Gas pipes and control arms
26:40So that Broz moves himself away
26:42Then it secures itself in place and returns to the vehicle.
26:44And it was a matter of destiny that he directed himself away from the vehicle.
26:48Distance 98 meters
26:50To be the first human to float in space
26:52Without any link and returns
26:56safely
26:57With our constant presence in space
27:00via the International Space Station
27:01As the missions became longer, it began to show
27:04Its effects on the bodies of astronauts
27:06Without their permission, the one who presses on their backs
27:08Their backs start to straighten more
27:10And by widening the spaces between the vertebrae
27:11In my opinion, people's height increases by 3%
27:14But that's often the only thing that increases
27:16In the astronauts' skunks
27:17Let me tell you that our bodies as humans are a product of capitalism.
27:20I don't use anything that isn't necessary.
27:22It's unnecessary
27:23For example, astronauts don't use their leg prosthetics.
27:25So that they can move
27:25The legs' limbs could no longer bear their weight.
27:28On Body Day, it tells you
27:29The medicine prevents the guys from using it.
27:30It remains unnecessary
27:31What's wrong with you, son? This muscle...
27:32This is where the process of muscle loss begins.
27:35And not just muscles
27:36The bone is also thinning
27:37To the point that astronauts who have missions lasting more than 6 months
27:41They are exposed to a bone loss equivalent to 20 years on Earth.
27:44It means that he has been in public space for 30 years
27:46When his bones grow back, he'll be like a 50-year-old.
27:50Literally, the bone grew
27:51A space sleeper can lose 15% to 20% of their bone mass.
27:54It's good to know that the body rebuilds muscle and bone over time.
27:58The muscles will recover in a few weeks.
27:59Yes, unfortunately, bones don't go back to how they were before.
28:01Even after a full year of recovery
28:03Okay, so what's the solution, Abu Hamad? I don't want to lose my bones.
28:05I tell you that the best exercise for astronauts is weight training.
28:09The problem, my dear, is that weights are not necessary in space.
28:11Because there is no gravity to pull these weights downwards
28:14So when you take it up, you're showing off your effort.
28:16So here they are forced to run on a treadmill
28:18And of course, while they're running, they don't need to shower, so they relax on the treadmill.
28:21So they prefer their place
28:22The only solution is if they are exposed to weights
28:24It is when they resist and counteract their own weight using resistance bands.
28:28Those who are able to train
28:29You know those plastics that you stretch like that?
28:31This is resistance
28:32It builds muscle and strengthens bones
28:33It's like they're pulling weights
28:35But it will be less than their weight
28:36They train for two and a half hours a day.
28:38We don't know yet
28:39The eighties make a big difference
28:41Because there was no experience
28:42What they send is a space flag
28:42And they let him not train
28:43Sorry, Abu Hamid
28:44The topic is complex.
28:45Why are we doing this to ourselves?
28:46We are not passing through planet Earth
28:47From the time and the end
28:48We jump here and then come back down normally.
28:50We jump here and then come back down normally.
28:50We will move you with our freedom
28:51There's nothing in the area that's imprisoned.
28:52Not even 24 nitrogen cylinders
28:54May I tell you, my dear?
28:55Space exploration has given us great inventions
28:57Can I tell you
28:58For example, I would say to him, regarding a project
28:59Contributed in some way
29:00In that we can perform CATScan examinations
29:03Magnetic generation
29:03And some concentrated effort equipment
29:05These were side effects of the trip
29:07This could be a lot
29:08But in response to your question
29:09Because coasts in space
29:10According to the former NASA director
29:12Bickel Griffin
29:13If we were to wake up one day
29:14Because the people disappeared
29:15All the achievements in space are gone
29:16We'll be upset
29:17But he challenged anyone to give a logical reason
29:20For this sadness
29:21Our life on Earth
29:21Mashi Met Flo 14
29:23Don't let the few years we're living through drown us.
29:25But according to Griffin
29:26The sadness that we have
29:27If people disappeared
29:28All research facilities
29:30In the field of space, it disappeared
29:31It will be because
29:32We will improve
29:33For exploration
29:34Our illogical instinct
29:35Those who are ingrained in our genes
29:36We are explorers
29:37According to what I said
29:38I am a Nobel laureate
29:392022
29:40Sevanti Babu
29:41Humans are the only friends
29:42The one who didn't delay exploration
29:43And the source of the estgraph of Civanti
29:44Humans were exploring it
29:46Even when they are in a place
29:47Balyan Resources
29:48There's no need for them to leave him.
29:50The unknown to humans
29:51His temptation
29:52It is irresistible
29:53And that's what made our human race
29:54In fifty thousand years only
29:56It covers every spot on the ground
29:57We saved the earth
29:58We will find the Wright brothers
29:59Masters 1903
30:00When they tried to fly
30:01They said that we will renew the legacy of our ancestors.
30:03Those who explored the Earth
30:03We will explore the sky
30:04We take humanity to the heavens
30:05And then we meet
30:06Space science pioneer
30:07Konstantin Tslyukovsky
30:09I'm saying that our planet
30:10baby cradle
30:11But there is no child
30:12He lives in his cradle
30:13forever
30:13You will find the little child
30:14engraved in it
30:15Spirit of Exploration
30:16Go away, he's going outside
30:17His years
30:18Go try it.
30:19The elders told their stories
30:19Even though you're a child, Yasta
30:21Enjoy your childhood, my friend.
30:22Maroush's ambition ends
30:23And it won't end when we reach a certain place.
30:25Because, as NASA's director Dan Golden said
30:27Summarize the topic
30:27The goal of every exploration
30:29Not the destination itself
30:30And we are the journey
30:31The real treasure is in the journey.
30:32The one in which the human
30:33I throw myself into the unknown countries
30:34That's why
30:35Everything that reaches a person when they were furthest away
30:36He will search for a new unknown to explore.
30:38Because in exploring the journey
30:39He rediscovers himself
30:40In the end, my dear
30:41The one who will help you to explore yourself
30:43Here are the previous episodes
30:44Upcoming episodes
30:44Sources listed under the video
30:46Subscribe to the YouTube channel
30:47I promise you
30:52I'll make it easy for you