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فسيلة - transplant
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Transcript
00:00Oh, the state of our country!
00:01Hey, Abu Al-Fasad
00:03This is their birthday
00:05Hey, Abu Al-Fasad
00:06This is not a threat
00:06Not Harf Alan
00:07Who warned you?
00:08I'm the one you made a fuss about and call out his name
00:10Abu al-Fasad
00:11Be careful
00:12Honsh Abu Al-Fasad is a bird
00:13No, sir.
00:14I am Walid Abu Al-Fasad
00:15Head of the Supply Department at the Arab Company
00:18I remember I was celebrating my birthday
00:19What is the Arab company's money and what is the subject matter?
00:20What are you going to celebrate?
00:22Your age is transfer year
00:23You'll wish for things in the new year that you won't do.
00:25I even saw the cake
00:26Her beauty is truly remarkable
00:27But it's good that people remembered me.
00:28What do they remember about me?
00:30You were not releasing the text of the gift that they brought to you.
00:32Wiki cut
00:33You're right, Mr. Abu Al-Fasad
00:34I'm sorry I upset you
00:35Sir, I don't want you to celebrate.
00:37But don't mess with people's spending.
00:39Sorry
00:39Then I celebrate
00:40Don't hesitate
00:41My brother, Nizar
00:42Nazr Wadih
00:43What's inside me
00:44Sir
00:45Bring the cake
00:46The cake didn't give the cake
00:47I love chocolate
00:48We said, "Dad, we said, Dad, to melt the cake with something, then celebrate, that's it."
00:51Hello
00:52That's beautiful.
00:53What brought the tourists down, my son?
00:55Look, look, this is a hasty, empty thing.
01:05Dear friends, peace, knowledge, and blessings be upon you.
01:07Welcome to two new episodes of Al-Daheeh program
01:10In 1995
01:11Dr. Robert Williams was the director of the Facebook Telescope Science Institute.
01:15Which is the Space Science Institute
01:17This is an institute that operated a space telescope called Hubble.
01:20At that time, this telescope was a source of joy in space research.
01:23A very large number of researchers were working from observations of the Hubble Telescope.
01:26With simple shoes
01:27Go to the institute and ask to work on the telescope.
01:29Telescope
01:30And command, O star
01:32I wanted to do research on a star
01:35Go ahead, star
01:36Many researchers have used this telescope to study stars and planets.
01:39But Robert Williams was thinking about something different.
01:41And my dear friend, was he free or bored?
01:43And the science is shaving it
01:44Williams said, "I'll look for a spot where there aren't any stars nearby."
01:47So that the pressure around it remains that which is impossible
01:50So what is the lighting?
01:51We turn on the telescope and leave it running for a few days.
01:53And we'll see what it says to us.
01:55Williams, my dear, was probably too weak himself for a galaxy so, so far away.
01:59And so, thank God, he discovered another galaxy.
02:02He named it after himself and the Robert Williams Galaxy.
02:04And so, people should remember his name.
02:07But my dear Uncle Williams, no one seemed to realize the problem was very big.
02:11Robert Williams is not known as Moise among Americans.
02:13For example, someone like Edwin Hubble
02:14The telescope was named after him.
02:15Why in America is everyone named Robert William?
02:17That's right, my dear Ahmed Ali, or Mahmoud Ashraf, or Ahmed Walid
02:20It means a name that writes an absence slip
02:22He proposes to your cousin
02:23He makes an appearance on a talk show
02:24And the musician is nicknamed after his name
02:26It's just a catchy name that will impress the world.
02:27No, it's not difficult.
02:28But Robert was determined that nothing would stop him.
02:30And he said that despite this huge problem
02:32He is executing his plan and finding the galaxy that he will name after himself.
02:35And indeed, Hope points the telescope at a silvery moment.
02:37And Birqabs on a very small hill
02:39Let my dear hold the pin
02:40And stretch your hand towards the sky
02:43The area covered by this pinhead from the sky
02:46This is the space Robert Williams sang on
02:48The reason the telescope is working
02:49Filmed for ten days
02:51And after ten days of filming, my dear
02:53And the collection of weaker optical frequencies
02:55The telescope can pick it up
02:57He didn't find another galaxy
02:58Oh my God
02:59Oh, Robert, what a story!
03:00My dear, don't be a coward
03:02Logically, that's why he didn't find another galaxy.
03:03I'll talk about it
03:05for him
03:05The man, my dear, found three thousand galaxies.
03:07Oh my God
03:09Like, my dear, when you're invited to a party, you'll get a taste of something delicious.
03:11Every time you reach for something, you get meat.
03:13Oh God, what's wrong?
03:14The important thing, my dear, is that he discovered three thousand galaxies.
03:17It makes it difficult for one
03:18So he still doesn't know how to name a galaxy after himself?
03:20Glory be to God, my dear
03:21You discover that you have made an amazing discovery
03:24But you won't know what to call the discovery
03:26But my dear, imagine
03:28For a third of a galaxy in the area of ​​the study pin
03:30Galaxy, not a star
03:32My dear, every colored dot inside this picture
03:34Its collection is hundreds of thousands of stars
03:36Stars, my dear
03:37Our sun is so big
03:39Minimize it, my dear
03:40As it also forces the limit
03:41Where you take a bite
03:43Imagine the impact this image had on the scientific community.
03:46Scientists at that time were talking about the universe being in one galaxy, or two, or even ten.
03:51And suddenly he makes a discovery like this
03:53Now imagine, my dear
03:54I couldn't tell what was in this picture
03:55Yes, Hamad, or is there more?
03:56yeah
03:57This image is not of a galaxy; it is an image of several galaxies.
04:00But it's a picture of different galaxies.
04:03Different times
04:05Wow
04:05It was established, O Hamad
04:06Oh yeah
04:07No, Hamad
04:08No, my dear, in magic I say something
04:10It fades, it draws near
04:10We, my dear, can indeed see different times.
04:13And we'll film it too
04:14In fact, my dear, you yourself can see the past.
04:16If you want this to be a little more precise
04:18You don't even know what's going on, look at anything other than the past.
04:20I know your past
04:21Blasoud Deh
04:21You're not managing, look for someone else.
04:22I'll explain to you
04:23You know you see everything
04:25Because there was light falling on it
04:26Then the duke was reversed
04:27And he went to your eye
04:28The duke who reaches your eye
04:30It contains information about the object he hit.
04:31Your brain is a translator day
04:33This information is for an image.
04:34So you want to see anything
04:35Anything
04:36You have to wait until the Duke goes to her.
04:40And it is reflected from it
04:41And it will reach you
04:42And that means
04:43The pen you see on the desk in front of you
04:45You saw it in the past
04:46Because you noticed what you saw.
04:47You saw the image that your brain interpreted.
04:49Information recorded in the Duke
04:50moment place
04:51It fell on him a little while ago
04:53Before it even reaches your eyes
04:54my darling
04:55You can't see me now
04:55You've already seen me.
04:56I'm leaving now.
04:57What am I here?
04:58I'm not trying to make sense of these issues for you.
05:00You know, my dear, when you make a call on Zoom or on Messenger
05:02With your friend who is traveling abroad
05:04The picture is a little behind the sound.
05:06This is it
05:06She is late
05:07Because the Duke hasn't arrived yet
05:09Who is the person you are talking to?
05:10For your mobile phone
05:10But, my dear
05:11In case of a call with your friend
05:12The reason for the delay is that there is no network.
05:14Because the duke, God willing, is very fast.
05:15To the point that this connection
05:16If there are no obstacles
05:18The Duke will reach you in less than a second
05:19Specifically, less than one-seventh of a second
05:22You feel there's a problem
05:23If this is your friend
05:24On the moon
05:24The Duke will pass, my dear
05:26three full seconds
05:26On the pen
05:27Any call you make to someone on the moon
05:29No matter how fast
05:30There has to be a delay.
05:31Three seconds on the heart
05:32It can't get any faster than this.
05:33But that's it
05:33Duke's speed
05:34And the fastest thing we can achieve in the universe
05:36And the further you get away from it
05:37The more you feel this idea
05:39If you are standing on the ground
05:40And I see something happening
05:40Woolen clothes, for example
05:41You think you're watching a commotion?
05:43What's happening right in front of your eyes
05:44Right now, right here
05:45But in reality, this means
05:46He got it and finished with 8 full midwives
05:48But you're still seeing it now.
05:51Dear viewer
05:52I realized where I was taking you.
05:54On Big Bang
05:55If we look at the past
05:56So, we might be a little greedy.
05:58We'll see the Big Bang itself
05:59And the book cover remained ours.
06:00And we can also find out when it happened
06:02Therefore, we know who this is.
06:03Age of the universe
06:04The picture that Robert Williams released
06:06Her name is Hubbles Deep Film
06:08And the galaxies in this picture
06:09There's no time for it, my dear.
06:10As for the house, do you need something, Abu Hamad?
06:11No, dear
06:12She disappeared, she died.
06:13Yes, my dear, it used to be like that.
06:15It looked like this
06:16Not only that
06:16Each one of them is from a different time.
06:18It depends on how far it is from us.
06:20Imagine a picture of you
06:21Look at it 3-4 times
06:22Once when you were two years old
06:23Once, when you were 10 years old
06:2415 times
06:25once 20 years
06:26And all of them distort the image
06:27And what can I tell you about how we were able to do this?
06:29We understand how galaxies are formed.
06:31Because we simply
06:32We are able to see her past
06:33This image contains galaxies from 12 billion years ago.
06:35A billion, my dear, not a million.
06:36And of course, through the fact that we look at the past
06:38We were able to understand how stars are formed.
06:41And how did the entire universe come into being?
06:43Actually, my dear
06:44The subject of the universe
06:45An interesting and complex topic
06:46Because we're only 100 years old
06:47Our idea of ​​the universe was completely different
06:49Time was imagined to be a fixed universe.
06:51With the same thing
06:52Since the beginning of time, the night of the needles
06:54Or, in Buzz's words in Toy Story
06:55To infinity and beyond
06:57Contrary to the idea we have today
06:59It is that the universe began at a certain moment
07:01And in a specific place
07:02So, Abu Hamad, if the universe began
07:03The question will be, what was there before the universe?
07:07Of course, and why? Where exactly did it start?
07:09It means there was a place where the universe began.
07:11Before it was even that it was
07:13Every place is there
07:14Dear Fernoa, one by one
07:16This is a large position
07:17And I, as a person, am telling you this situation is difficult.
07:19Let's keep it simpler.
07:20The most important of the two times
07:20We know that the universe began
07:22And it was all concentrated in a very small point.
07:24And then this very small point
07:25The Big Bang
07:27And all of this universe that you see around us is supported by it.
07:30But this is what happened in the past, right?
07:32It produced light
07:33Light is still reaching us even now
07:35And how wonderful it would be if we could appreciate the point of this light
07:36We will be able to see with our own eyes and take pictures
07:38How did what we're imagining now begin?
07:41It is the entire universe
07:42The more we look
07:43The bigger the issue gets
07:44Just a hundred years ago
07:45We thought that our galaxy, the Milky Way,
07:48She is the entire universe
07:49The Milky Way, my dear, is what you see.
07:50When you go to Sin or Al-Wahaq
07:52Just because she's staying away from Noor Al-Badeena
07:53So you see it, and it's all lit up in the sky.
07:55See it, my dear, with your own eyes.
07:56So you think that this is the only thing that exists
07:58And that's it, we're done here.
07:59But we, my dear, after that
08:00We saw other strange things outside of it
08:02German philosopher Immanuel Kant
08:04He said that our universe
08:06It consists of many stars
08:07It revolves around each other
08:08And those things outside
08:09Her name
08:11It was roughly translated as "island universes".
08:13Which means it's like you have a small island in the sea
08:15Next to our original universe
08:17But we are the foundation
08:18We prefer our situation as it is, my dear.
08:19Until 1923
08:20Less than 100 years old
08:21Edmond Hubble proved
08:23What we've brought in
08:24The entire universe
08:25Look at just one galaxy
08:27And it contains many other galaxies.
08:28We are both here, my dear.
08:30I don't need any three to prove
08:31It's perfectly normal
08:31I'm not going to bring the whole universe to the end of today.
08:33We discover that there is another one of them.
08:35And what we are seeing now
08:36Don't be everything or anything
08:38Those who are gone
08:38What's coming next might be something completely different.
08:40the important
08:411990
08:41We launched the Hubble Telescope
08:43Which was the first space telescope
08:45I mean, my dear, a space telescope
08:46I mean, my dear
08:47Yes
08:48The telescope in space
08:49My dear, can't you open your mind a little?
08:51We made a telescope
08:52And we launched into outer space
08:53And we left a bird here
08:54Like an industrial order
08:55Okay, where are the pilots and the pilots?
08:57What we put next to us here on the ground
08:58Be careful, my dear, the sun you see
09:00The one who lights up our planet
09:01Just 8 minutes away from us
09:02But the stars of the night
09:03The one that barely appears is a white dot in the sky
09:06Thousands of years ago
09:07And we, my dear son, don't want to pick up on its details properly.
09:10Without it, it enters and disperses in the atmosphere.
09:13And there's a distraction, and we don't catch it.
09:15Or it interferes with the sun's beating
09:17Or even be affected by our light on the planet
09:19You want to get raw flour from your imported source
09:22Because the lamps you have in this room
09:24Pressing the telescopes' power button
09:25Turn off the lights, my dear, and save electricity.
09:27And from you, astronomers are helped.
09:28Of course I'll issue it with you, my dear.
09:29But what about sleep?
09:30The lights present interfere with the lights coming from the stars.
09:32What do we need? This is light.
09:34So we
09:35Why do we build telescopes on Earth?
09:36We go into the middle of the desert
09:37or on a mountaintop
09:38So that we keep the greatest possible distance from the light by making it more complex.
09:41But in the Hubble telescope
09:43People said he didn't extend it
09:44One of the lamentations of the other
09:45And we put it far away from the planet in the first place.
09:47He is the noble stallion
09:47We took out the telescope
09:48And we let it fly in space
09:49It is approximately 550 kilometers away
09:52my dear
09:52Hubble was put in his place from here
09:54And the doors of space opened for us to the sea from here
09:56And I didn't do it again
09:57The Hubble Telescope is the most important and largest space telescope.
10:01We made history
10:02It is the primary telescope
10:04We still use it to this day
10:05Every researcher in the field of space
10:06Or in space costumes
10:07Or anything related to it being space
10:09He himself works on his observations
10:10But my dear, there's one bigger and cooler.
10:12Take the picture from him
10:13But it's still a little further on in the episode.
10:14Wait, not now.
10:16What kind of work did he do?
10:16It has received over 1.3 million views
10:19To surpass Abu Julia, Hamdi, and Wafaq in the rankings
10:21Every enthusiastic researcher looks at the star that appeals to them.
10:23The telescope is pointed at it.
10:24He sees it and equals it
10:25A researcher works on it and publishes it.
10:26Fifteen thousand researchers whose work is research
10:28They used the telescope directly
10:30And what we learned in Qadilon prison is that we understand many other calamities.
10:33It happens in a space of a hundred years
10:34We had no idea it even existed.
10:36I don't know, my dear, whether you have any information or not.
10:37But we discovered
10:38Our galaxy revolves around
10:41A very large black hole at its center
10:43Oh Levi
10:43You know, my dear, they're like the water at the end.
10:45And she's coming, circling around the drain.
10:47So, my dear, if you lived forever
10:48Your fate is the sewer
10:49This is the first black hole
10:50It's no use
10:51We are young and we will get even younger
10:53Stay with me, my dear, this episode will make you look younger
10:55For my dear, May 12th
10:56We took the first picture of this drain
10:59Using a telescope called
11:00Event Horizon Telescope
11:02This future is a mess.
11:04We can predict it
11:05Based on telescope observations
11:07Like Hubble's
11:08Because we see, for example
11:09How do galaxies evolve?
11:11What if they collide with each other?
11:12What's happening?
11:13There are many questions like this.
11:14We appreciate the use of this information
11:15We know our galaxies now
11:17I am a stage
11:17Where are we going?
11:18Where are they coming from?
11:19For this reason
11:20Nasa decided
11:21It won't stop at Hubble alone.
11:23Hubble allows us to see galaxies
11:24After a billion years
11:25The Big Bang
11:26Well, we're alive, let's see what's older now.
11:27Let's look at the memories of the universe.
11:29When he was watching over him at the preparatory stage
11:31After the Big Bang
11:32three million years
11:33Hubble could barely see like that
11:34At the first galaxies in the universe
11:36But what about us, my dear?
11:38We're living to see the first stars
11:39Not galaxies
11:40Galaxies means we're way behind.
11:42We're not living to see this, that's all.
11:43No, we're living and seeing it more clearly.
11:44And Precision Higher
11:45And also, the image quality is better.
11:46And in order for NASA to do this
11:47A constructive woman decided to spend her life savings
11:49On a second telescope
11:50Ten billion dollars, my dear
11:52Aref, my dear, how many gigs do they make?
11:54My country's life
11:54Five billion loaves
11:56Three and a half billion if Hoshi Iskandarani
11:58Twenty billion if you keep dogs
11:59Announcing my dear
12:00The important thing is
12:01NASA is a garbage dump
12:02The two-piaster coin on a second telescope
12:04It was released on December 25th by Li Fan
12:06Its name is the James Webb Telescope
12:08Ashish Mashhad
12:09What's the deal with this web thing now?
12:10What's the difference between them?
12:11And between Hubble exactly
12:12I'll tell you
12:12But before he tells you
12:13Let me tell you the first secret
12:14If you want to talk to someone from space
12:15or space physics
12:16And he felt that you meant more cool than him
12:18He said GW Esty instead of James Webb
12:20He'll know that you understand.
12:21Let's go
12:21Now let's go back to your uncle Web.
12:22NASA did the same thing they did with Hubble.
12:24She said, "Let's leave him on the ground."
12:26Keep him away from the noise
12:27We place it at a distance of 550 kilometers
12:29In space
12:29But Abel, my dear, is in this place.
12:31He sweeps the earth's children
12:32And that means
12:33Every now and then he goes into the shade of the earth and flashes
12:35And then the sun will rise and become ridiculous.
12:36We have to cool it
12:38Besides, my dear, this sunshine
12:39Not good for space images
12:40Or it proves to you the weakness of the engagement.
12:42But there's a problem in space.
12:43Where do we put the web?
12:45In order to overcome this problem
12:46There are certain types in space
12:47Its name is Langranjan Point
12:49This is my type, my dear, Earth's gravity
12:51It balances the sun's gravity
12:53If we put the telescope in it
12:54It won't go around the Earth
12:55No, it will spin with the ground.
12:56Around the sun
12:58Oh son of the one who is thirsty, oh you!
12:59And the point where we put Web
13:00It was 1.6 million kilometers away
13:10Chukob Beqeen, an older woman
13:11It's the one the light falls on.
13:13Hubble's woman
13:14Its diameter was two and a half meters, but
13:16Web woman
13:16Qatar, my dear
13:17six and a half meters
13:18That's three times bigger than Hubble.
13:20But all these things
13:21It's not just her who will make Web
13:22He sees sharper and better images
13:23There is another point
13:24In the raid of importance
13:25This is that Webbeschoffs light frequencies
13:27The one under the red
13:28So how is this beneficial?
13:29It's useful because something strange is happening in the universe.
13:31That is,
13:32In the name of God, what God wills, it is expanding
13:33The entire universe is expanding
13:35Building a habit
13:36All the distances between stars and planets
13:38It increases
13:38When light comes from a distance
13:40Like what we want to see
13:41It also expands
13:43And here, something called red shifting happens.
13:45It means it comes from its source.
13:46blue light, for example
13:47And he prefers to stretch while he's on his way
13:50And here his hesitation continued to shift
13:51One by one
13:52red light frequency
13:54Karf remains on the red
13:55This means
13:56If the telescope
13:57They can't find these frequencies
13:58Welcome to the light coming from afar
14:00You won't even be able to find that.
14:01and the Hubble Telescope
14:01They were receiving frequencies of visible light.
14:04The light we see with our eyes
14:05With low infrared frequencies
14:08It means he'll give me a tiny bit of that infrared light.
14:10But he still has a name on him
14:12It covers all infrared frequencies.
14:14Oh, my river is drowning
14:15This allows us to see more clearly.
14:17Galaxies while they are still forming
14:18We will understand better where our galaxies came from.
14:20And our planet
14:21How to form
14:22And the water on it
14:23Where did it come from?
14:24Pay attention to this matter, my friend.
14:25You have printed a puzzle so far
14:26What do you say, dear ones? We are very young.
14:27They don't even know where the water came from.
14:29I'm here, you know.
14:30The boy didn't learn with the number testament
14:32My dear, we are working on a telescope.
14:34Through it we can see a past billions of years old
14:36So we know
14:37The sea where you go splashing
14:38Where are you from?
14:39Jahreni asks, "Oh, my camel and my protector, are you from Adshan or where?"
14:40Why the center in the 100
14:41It's normal, I mean
14:42She didn't come anywhere, she didn't come
14:43my darling
14:44We're looking for something next.
14:47This is the slogan for this phase for the planet Calk
14:49We want another planet to live on
14:50If we understand this question
14:51We can look for another planet that has a diet.
14:54Therefore, it has the potential for life.
14:57We can live on it in the future
14:59He said, "I mean, Abu Hamid, we really like the life here."
15:01So we can go and look at it outside
15:02Take it easy, my dear, because this topic might allow us to discover the resort more.
15:05Why is Aziz at your summer resort? He's going to study.
15:06Zakir goes, and then summer remains.
15:07This triscope isn't just for measuring the age of the universe.
15:10Actually, my dear, we know how to measure the age of the universe now.
15:12But our calculations are always inaccurate
15:14And James Webb will make it narrower
15:16But I still won't follow the ending.
15:17For each day, we can calculate his age in different ways.
15:20And it gives us results ranging from 13.2 billion years
15:24Up to approximately 14.5 billion
15:26Imagine, my dear, that there's a difference of less than a billion years.
15:28Generally, the stable number that people deal with
15:30Until God makes things easier, God willing.
15:32It is approximately 13.8 billion years
15:34Will this number change?
15:36Of course
15:36Is it possible that we might discover that everything we call "being" is actually true?
15:39Does it turn out to be just one thing that needs something bigger?
15:41There's nothing stopping it.
15:42The one who made it happen in the universe is the one who makes it happen in the universe.
15:44I witnessed scenes that left me speechless and amazed.
15:48From all this effort, money, and energy
15:50What humans put into giant projects
15:52Zee Telescope Web
15:53I want to tell you, my dear, we've been planning its launch for twenty years.
15:57And every now and then, we postpone this decision.
15:58It was supposed to stay in space from 2007
16:00And every now and then, I'll postpone it.
16:01And no workers for the ring, by God
16:03Rather, the origin of twenty years
16:04Hey NASA
16:04Every time I speak to Luli, he says, "Wait a minute, Abu Hamid!"
16:06The mirror isn't working properly.
16:07So we waited three years
16:08God said
16:09Hey NASA, do you want to remove the earring?
16:11Sorry, Abu Hamid, it's been five years and I'm supposed to reply to him now?
16:13And you will say, Abu Hamid
16:13So why are they really late?
16:14my darling
16:15All this delay has a very simple reason
16:17The truth is, there's a big problem with the location of this telescope.
16:19Because it's very far away
16:21And as we agreed from the first episode
16:23We are two sheep, unlike
16:24If something appears on the remote web, this is powerful
16:26There's no way we can go and fix it.
16:28Come on, Wantine, just once
16:29Ten billion dollars, there's nothing else.
16:31Dear, think about it calmly.
16:32This is ten billion dollars
16:33When you go down to buy Flemish cheese
16:34You convince yourself fifteen times
16:36The Quraysh are sweeter
16:37Countries containing two billion kilograms of Flemish mango
16:39Why, my dear, do you eat with such large marbles?
16:41Just to simplify it for you
16:42Either my dear, a large, strong vulture
16:43and a powerful remote telescope
16:44If you're going to produce something
16:46You need to be squeezed
16:47I need it now
16:48Because it fell on top of
16:50Thanks
16:50With hearing web
16:51We're working with fools, what can we do?
16:53There's nothing you can fix or correct after that.
16:55Every cent must be used correctly.
16:56Live in it with one mistake
16:57My dear imagination, all this effort, money, and these years
17:00So we know where we came from and where we're going
17:03Humans since the day they were created
17:04They are looking at the sound
17:06And they are looking for the answer to a question.
17:07Where did we come from?
17:08And they didn't spend a single moment of their entire lives
17:10They put their effort and money into answering this question.
17:12Back then, we used to gaze intently at the sun, the sea, and the stars.
17:15Then we made telescopes
17:16Then we buried the telescopes
17:18We placed it on a mountain value
17:19Then we launched it into space
17:21And we still don't know
17:22What are we going to do next?
17:23I wonder
17:23What's a telescope?
17:24He's here for us
17:25I hope he shows us the previous episode
17:26And the next episode
17:27He goes down and looks at the sources
17:28What will we do with the company?
17:29So, Muhammad, you're just stuffing everything into telescopes?
17:31Do you know, my dear, that it's like a blind person in relation to the universe?
17:33You know, my dear, when you love someone older than you
17:35She sees you as a child
17:36You know when you accidentally swear in front of the family?
17:37Small Fishofouk
17:38You know when you go and tell one of your friends about me?
17:40Then he apologizes and belittles you in front of people.
17:42Gather all of this
17:43Divide it by ten, for example, thirty stories.
17:45And he put a lot of power in Zoom, very strong.
17:46We are younger than you
17:47We didn't come, Sisi
17:48Come on, my dear, when astronauts play ball together
17:50What is the commentator saying outside?
17:51And be and be and be and be and be
17:53Hello, hello, hello, hello
17:55It came on the web

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