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00:07Privisli un mass
00:09We have reached
00:10Yet our journey had only just begun.
00:13not banned
00:14I understood the comard
00:17Mars kept us going every step of the way
00:21It is said that science and trust are incompatible.
00:26if they fail
00:27So no matter how much you invest
00:29But when every step starts saying this
00:31that we have lost
00:32if they fail
00:33So we can do nothing but trust.
00:38We ignored the horizontal entrance.
00:40Because it is blocked due to breakdown devices
00:43So we made another move in the dark
00:49hoping that at the bottom of the deep abyss
00:52Shad light will be found
00:54to a lava tube
00:57Idea of ​​connecting to Tectonic Cape
00:59It was really amazing
01:01We are deploying Dom
01:03The flag is placed
01:04This officer
01:06Man built a house on meat
01:35This officer
01:38And the festival has begun
01:41Medical lag has started working
01:43Our first peshune was
01:45via dilgato
01:46He explained the symptoms of a cold.
01:48which was strange
01:49Because I didn't see any problem with that.
01:56Ye Tujan Thutifo
01:58Preparing for the Vega Crew's Arrival
02:01It's like a mission in itself.
02:03another ship, Vega
02:04She brought all her things and personals with her.
02:07What we need from our hurt
02:09Domed Habitat on Mars
02:11The first human outpost was to be built
02:13These two people are those five
02:16I survived by cutting my suit with a laser wielder.
02:21The greenhouse is finally complete.
02:24Making the settlement and taking responsibility for the safety of your crew
02:41Both the solar array and the nuptial fission went fully online at 8 am today.
02:54IMSF loved my sister June's work at MMC
02:58And he was given a post there.
03:00We both believed that the best way to surf the emission was
03:04He accepted the post.
03:05So that the gap between nations and private industry can be reduced.
03:09Within two years she became Secretary General
03:12Year 2037
03:14We are experiencing some drops in the lines
03:18When did the poet leave because of this?
03:20To meet the MMC schedule
03:23No matter how hard we worked
03:25Grine wanted even faster expansion
03:28This greenhouse will take my life away.
03:30I have reached him till now accustomed eel
03:33Where I should have reached
03:35And there are only two weeks left for Cygnus to arrive.
03:37The third largest ship brought with it those expers
04:00Settlements expansion was being handed over to a group of experts who knew nothing about Mars
04:09Maybe it was necessary
04:10Let us continue to pursue our visions of what might be possible on Mars.
04:15Riding on a dream that some of us have dreamed all our lives, but with every ship coming
04:21A new vision of Mars arrives and it doesn't take long for those visions to collide with each other.
04:45It will be sent to the first quarter of 2041, meaning we are two full years ahead of schedule.
04:51Have been.
05:15Which starts with power.
05:19With MMC's new composite nanowire technology, our power efficiency from nuclear fission will double.
05:28No, no, no, you're coming from the cooling line, the power goes to the east wall, east wall, just
05:35stand by.
05:36Electrical engineering team please order best equipment of the profile to report and follow further instructions.
05:42Concentration, initiative, this is what they lack, it will take 20 years and now when I have come here, I have to take everything upon myself.
05:49It has to be done, waiting for so many years has no meaning now.
05:52This power upgrade will be handled by the most capable people to support our settlers in Olympus Town.
05:59The necessary water, oxygen and physical infrastructure will be ready for this.
06:05And world-renowned nuclear physicist Leslie Richardson is entering the atmosphere of Mars, and the phase
06:152 will play the role of director of MMC expansion.
06:38It's ready, I've brought you the report, Commander Sang. Thank you, Jay.
06:53It took the Vega crew a full month to clear the EVA, but now we have plenty to share.
06:57We have experience, so now we will do whatever we can to make adjustments to the third team.
07:01Listen, good luck welcoming the committee. I can't come with you. Ta-ta!
07:11So I said, astronauts must be the smartest people around, I mean, just think about how many people can handle 88 tons of high explosives.
07:17But you can keep your mind cool even while sitting.
07:20Ideal sequence engages. Just five minutes and Ava, then Dub and Oliver get home.
07:37Luckily, Dr. Richard Sun has decided to bring her husband with her.
07:46Nobel Prize-winning expert Paul Reichert Son will personally oversee parallel agriculture expansion and present his findings.
07:54They will also work on hybrid space technology, which aims to reach Mars by 2048.
08:11is going to become more
08:22No Live Matter
08:52I want to look into your eyes, I looked into mine and thought of asking how you are feeling, I can guess by writing.
08:58I can
08:59Peace Commander, Hannah Song
09:01This is great, it was nice to meet you, me too, I just felt good
09:07Don't worry, you'll both get used to it in three or four weeks.
09:11You know, I'm so glad I don't have to go to that unused toilet like every time.
09:18Nice Oliver, classy reunion
09:21Dr. Richardson, I look forward to working with you on the expansion of Olympia Town.
09:26And Paul, it's nice to meet you, welcome.
09:29Tenk You
09:30I've read your work, both of your work, we've all read it.
09:35Your research on low temperature super contact casing is amazing.
09:40Tenk You
09:41And Paul, Javier Dalaga Do, I'm curious to know from you the phosphorus levels in our hydrophonic mixtures
09:49You can't even imagine how excited we are to see you.
09:53Okay, so I'd like to see the greenhouse.
09:55Great, take some rest first and settle down here.
09:59The sooner the better
10:00Sure, but we need to run some medical tests on you first.
10:04This is the base protocol.
10:08Let's start with IS
10:10And there you go, fans.
10:13You can subscribe
10:16People call us dreamers.
10:18But without dreams, there is never a chance to see the reality of Mars.
10:28Going to Mars and settling there is a unique idea in itself.
10:33And this is the future in which we will build cities.
10:37We make humans our targets.
10:40And I like to make a plan and activate it to achieve that target.
10:46This has happened repeatedly
10:47whether it was the colonization of the New World
10:50or railroads
10:52Or the beginning of a new West
10:54It all seemed impossible at first.
10:57until we made it a reality
11:07What will life be like in the initial Mars colony?
11:11Let's break down some things to do on Mars into stages.
11:17There will be exploration
11:19Someone will go there and come back
11:22In the next stage, some kind of research station will be built there.
11:31Which will be replenished mostly from Earth
11:34We will send people there on a regular basis.
11:37I think it would look a lot like Antarctica.
11:44Obviously you don't need to go this far to get to Antarctica.
11:48But getting there is not easy and staying alive there is even more difficult.
11:51There's a desolate place at the very bottom of the world.
11:55Where the temperature at night is 125 degrees below zero
11:59And deadly winds blow at a speed of 320 kilometers per hour over the desolate desert like Chan.
12:06Earlier, when we used to sow people's Intactica and they used to go there and come back.
12:11So he would undertake the next expedition only after three or four years.
12:16Then in 1954, a dozen countries decided to build fifty stations across the continent.
12:23Now they are focusing more on science.
12:29But today there are hundreds of people who live at those stations throughout the year.
12:36Today, more scientists from different countries around the world are in Antarctica than ever before.
12:43are working
12:44We need to think at the global level about how we can work together in collaboration with each other.
12:50This is a great model that shows how policy, engineering, and politics work together to produce excellent science.
12:57can
13:06McMurdo Station is, in a way, an analogue of the activities we will hopefully one day be able to do on Mars.
13:13Because McMurdo is actually a city
13:18This is where the infrastructure is, where the power is, and where the supplies are.
13:23We have all kinds of people, from cooks to science cargo preparers.
13:30Includes
13:31We all live and work together and we all have the same goal, which is to study science.
13:36to support
13:40Like what's happening now in the Antarctic
13:42The same is expected to happen on Mars.
13:47We'll create a sort of early version of the community there.
13:52And we want to make sure and understand that.
13:55How will humans face the coming danger?
13:58to live on Mars
14:00Taking care of everyone's food and drink
14:03and taking the next step
14:04We will have to deal with different visions of people.
14:07And to do such work, a different thinking will be required.
14:11We will definitely get there
14:13Every step in the Para has to be taken carefully
14:44God love them
14:46I found Paul Richardson quite intense.
14:52This sarfai
14:54We thought we would build a second facility by now.
14:57But at every step we take, some problem or the other occurs.
15:01How much time will it take to complete it
15:02It is difficult to tame
15:03We are currently using all the power we generate.
15:06That's what keeps our construction schedule going.
15:09Well, we can repair outdated copper lines within 6 weeks.
15:13that will make them like maximizing output from a nuclear fission reactor
15:17And how much time will it take you to take the reactor offline to complete it
15:20My team has been drilling in the sim for several months.
15:23Once the lines are connected, we only need one small pocket for each junction box.
15:28I'm sorry, but a sim is not a good substitute for the surface of Mars.
15:31It took us three months to lay the lines.
15:34The duns keep on whispering as the rates move
15:37We are ready for that
15:41I know your people are excellent.
15:42I also believe
15:44But no one is 100% sure about trusting micro G's
15:48I would feel quite comfortable if we could wait until dust storm season passes.
15:53No
15:54That's two months away
15:56There is too little path for me to cross with the ladies
15:59We will never use more than 2% backup power during changeover.
16:05Doctor Richardson, if we
16:07lo i val europeene nai do
16:09And I know you've touched a lot here, but
16:12I have an assignment
16:13And I want you to support me in achieving it.
16:36We have two reasons to go to Mars today.
16:42The first to settle there
16:44Can we create the future of humanity?
16:46And secondly, the science there
16:48To find out if life ever developed there
16:51And if yes, how long and how was it?
16:55According to the history of science for hundreds of years
16:58Our understanding of science on Earth
17:00The same understanding exists regarding the science of the universe.
17:03The physics of the Earth is the same as the physics in the cosmos
17:06controls the motion of planets and stars
17:09The chemistry of Earth is the same as that of galaxies and gas clouds.
17:13And all of those things happen
17:14which forms into stars
17:16But it is a fundamental science
17:19What we don't know is that
17:20It's the same as it is here on Earth.
17:22And that is biology.
17:23The kind of biology we do on Earth
17:26Is that the right way?
17:31We've always talked about life on Mars.
17:36It was featured in movies and shows.
17:38And I think there's still a mystery to it.
17:43A hundred years ago, people all over the world believed this
17:46that there might be life on Mars
17:48will we get yellow farm with vegetable life
17:51Or you will get mechanical robots
17:52Who will be controlled by super intelligent beings
17:55This continued throughout the 1950s.
17:58And then we sent Mariner 4.
18:07When Mariner 4 first flew
18:09So it had very low resolution cameras.
18:12And he took a few dozen pictures.
18:15It was as barren as the moon.
18:18full of holes, completely lifeless
18:22It may be that life is more unique than that.
18:27than we thought
18:31A lot of people were very disappointed by this
18:34who believed that there would be something there
18:36Anything
18:38But we haven't given up on the idea that there's life on Mars.
18:42There is a religious belief that if we keep searching
18:46Then we will surely find life there.
18:48And this is completely based on faith and not on knowledge.
18:51Just like religion is based on faith and not on knowledge
18:59Year 2037
19:00Marta
19:01Mission Entry
19:02Phase 2
19:03Finding evidence of life on Mars
19:31No life matter
19:40I found many more squares where there is no life.
20:00No microbes in the samples
20:08A condition was necessary to live here.
20:12But there's a lot to be done here.
20:17And report
20:23I am working
20:26Dr. Cayman do you have some time
20:29I don't want to interfere with your work
20:31But the work never seems to end.
20:33So if I can help you with anything
20:36Sorry, I forgot myself
20:40I'll offer you tea
20:42But my second cup is broken.
20:47I
20:47It's okay
20:48I need to rebuild muscle after a transfer
20:53You may enjoy our tennis coat
20:57They won't be far away either.
21:00Every beach knows its own time.
21:03I'll start with the big lab.
21:05We can do this
21:08So in a few months we will have this much power
21:10that the size and capacity of your facilities will not be affected
21:14Hanna Upproofed
21:19I have informed him
21:22Your work is important to all of us.
21:25And I want to help you in every way
21:28thank you
21:34came into
21:42Soil
21:43Single Particles
21:46Theatrical
21:52Came to the American Southwest
21:56Spores were spreading from one side to the other after the hunger
22:03And this fungus
22:05Carribean from Africa
22:08It is quite impressive
22:12But I don't see any life in it
22:16not to me too
22:18Mars is Regalit
22:22We have observed radiation resistance pores on Earth.
22:26who can start life
22:28After 25 million years of dormancy
22:32good if
22:35Interstellar Clouds of Dust
22:38transporting molecules
22:40Imagine what would happen if you played the same role.
22:44If the right conditions were prevailing on the surface of the planet
22:47Evolution starts again
22:56am I being silly
23:00But if you were successful
23:03If you find all the secrets of Second Genesis
23:07think again
23:09Whatever we wanted to do here, we would have found the funds for it.
23:19I'm sure you and your husband could write a great book on this.
23:27Thank you very much for being here, Dr. Eckhartson.
23:41He is brilliant, there is no doubt about it, both of them are brilliant.
23:46But there is a difference between intelligence and wisdom.
23:51I know how many SIMs they have made, I am not aware of their age, that is why I am worried.
24:06Mr. Ed Grand is here to see you
24:08Hey
24:10Hi
24:11how are you
24:12how are you big
24:13Good, please
24:15would you like some coffee
24:17No, thanks
24:24Well
24:25The speech was quite good
24:26The committee was very impressed
24:29Will this be of any benefit?
24:31He is already impressed with you
24:34The question arises whether he regrets being a buyer.
24:38How true is what you say?
24:41I have been the most capable and best person in the world.
24:44Yes, you have drenched it
24:49So what is the problem then?
24:52You are already getting ambiguous
24:56well
24:58No one goes to Mars without ambition
25:03Year 2016
25:10Permanent presence on Mars It depends on what kind of permanent presence we're talking about.
25:15Is
25:16Are we talking about such presences?
25:17which is in Antarctica
25:19where the ultimate long term goal is science
25:21Or are people actually living there?
25:23Trying to make a living?
25:26I think there are many reasons to go to Mars,
25:29But I include them in the reasons to explore.
25:32But if you want to settle on Mars,
25:35So you have to grow your own food.
25:37Or it will have to be ensured that its supply is available continuously.
25:42When we first go to Mars,
25:44So we will probably be more dependent on the meaning rather than there.
25:48This is very similar to the McBarrow case,
25:51It is dependent on re-supply coming from other parts of the world.
25:56The problem is that suppose the resupply ship doesn't reach Mahan,
26:00What if he had reached out like he should have?
26:02Today, at the International Space Station, we literally have to wait for hours,
26:07that some supper vehicle will come and bring food,
26:09and bring parts if something breaks,
26:12When you're on Mars,
26:13So you'll have to wait at least a year or two,
26:18This will be very important for the Mars colony,
26:21that it becomes increasingly self-sustaining,
26:23And that's what we do,
26:26Throughout the history of life on Earth,
26:37Until plants on Mars become worthy of their return to Earth,
26:41Their work will be done inside the greenhouse only,
26:44And so there will be a great need for such plants,
26:48Which will be more productive.
26:59On this Plants Mars you can see that this greenhouse is working well,
27:06Greenhouse Sangiller, these plants are adapting better than we expected,
27:23These weren't ready, but the Feet Systems are working great and I'm very happy with my work.
27:37And the only thing that was problematic was our trip.
27:50I was kept under observation for seven months about how I would be affected.
27:58Lending was very bad.
28:05I knew something like this could happen.
28:13Well, I have successfully planted Amar and Ancon and they are growing at twice the speed than expected.
28:21Are.
28:23I have also received pictures.
28:26I have to give you some instructions so please keep some things in mind.
28:32Now let's start with the Majesty plan which is on the third flow and is labeled 15C.
28:38He's in the guestroom and you forgot the Epsom salt.
28:45Now next up is Fatonia, the one Cat loves to chew on.
28:50You will need to remove the flower spikes further from it.
28:53Due to this the live shots become weak.
28:56And finally, the English Ivy, and the one I have the most trouble with, is the Afets, that's still there.
29:04You should make sure that the water in the alcohol has dried before applying it and then spray it under the leaves.
29:12to do.
29:13And then there are the Shukte.
29:16I don't know why this is so difficult, she has only just arrived.
29:22Come on, mom, give my regards to Diet.
29:41Come and give me your regards.
29:42Come and give me your regards.
29:48After a month of living in it together, I forgot how loud everything was.
29:54After a few more weeks you will get used to it.
29:56Thanks
30:01Your amr and ankon are growing so fast I have never seen them before.
30:07This is amazing.
30:09The first crop was grown in Inshin Mesipartemia.
30:14And now look.
30:25What a great coincidence.
30:31Only civilization can exist without agriculture.
30:35Without a plan.
30:38You know, I would stand at the door of the farmhouse where I spent my childhood.
30:42And looking at those crops, I wonder how many people's stomachs these are.
30:47One day there will be lots of greenhouses here.
30:53In which these will be hybrids.
30:55And there must have been fruit pools far and wide.
31:02Without a plan we are nothing.
31:07I love your work.
31:12Thank you.
31:19Ok, I'm leaving.
31:27Misha, now I don't have to do everything myself.
31:32Richertson, Lesley, Festu
31:36We have updated our nanowires to replace the old compliance.
31:40As I wrote in my report, I have divided my team, in which every junction box
31:45But a crew of two people was added, so that efficiency and tonnage could be increased.
31:49Base Commander Sum, Hawi Dilcaro and his construction crew are thankful for their help, report ends.
32:00How old are they, about four, my parents are taking care of him, but I've been taking care of him for about a year before I went to the clinic.
32:09I refused, I did not feel like leaving him.
32:13Afo, it must have been very sad, yes, when I saw him for the first time, he came to the door of his cage
32:22went, and then jumped up, and she looked at me, her ears were like Pictial, the little Nuptial that was waving
32:31When I talk about that
32:34People think I am a fool, but it is very important to know them, you understand, right, you have an attachment to your stomach.
32:42It must be so, there is no doubt about it, really.
32:50Sometimes I wake up at night and feel like I'm talking to her pussy, and then I hear her words.
32:56She hears the sound of a crash, like when she flew for a drink, then she gasps, it's
33:02Then there was the housing of the Sunscrubbers,
33:05Badi, you know for sure that there's no Kiss Panner there, what, Tarsa Panner,
33:20Alivar Kim Anlk Tekteten
33:26Abyaarn alivaaran per sthain engezt
33:32Abdi Samb
33:33To ilni ken ghrelj na.
33:39Warnir per ₲ me charlat kundold and has that e�eg disorder
33:43Catastrophic injury and death
33:45Manical
33:47Prepare for Peakup
33:49Return to a pressurized environment immediately
34:06Shifting control to Alampus Town
34:08Our lack of experience began to show
34:11One has to pay the price for mistakes in the battlefield.
34:22Trying to Build a Survivable Community
34:26Throughout the history of exploration
34:27Many people were either killed completely
34:30or very badly injured
34:31And Mars will be much more difficult than anywhere on Earth.
34:35And maybe just one, except for Antarctica.
34:39This is the coldest place on Earth
34:42It's so cold that 95 percent of the world's snow is here.
34:47At one point, the snow reached 14,000 feet.
34:51No tree or grass grows on the Antarctic continent.
34:56Humidity is as low as temperature.
34:59And the surging winds are like the turbulent winds of the desert.
35:04The marsh is perhaps as unknown to human exploration
35:08As much as Antarctica is for human science
35:10And as soon as you stop paying attention to Antartica
35:14As soon as you stop paying attention to the weather and landscape
35:18Then it becomes dangerous and accidents happen.
35:29So when the cold winds blow
35:31When the temperature is minus 20 or 30 degrees
35:36Then I start thinking I might get frostbite or hypothermia.
35:42Despite the fact that Arctica is very dangerous, it is very cold, there are blizzards, there is danger everywhere.
35:49There are many questions that we can answer here, nowhere else.
35:54It's a combination of cold, dry, salty, and radiating radiation, making it one of the most difficult places on Earth for life.
36:01makes
36:02And my job is to figure out life here.
36:09We are now heading to the water track at Firs Circus in Beacon Valley
36:14We're headed to an Oasis in the middle of the big one
36:18that may support microbial activity
36:21And they are looking for ways to allow life to survive in Antarctica.
36:26Which will help us in finding life on Mars.
36:32Why are we going to Mars?
36:34The first reason is that we are looking for the size of life elsewhere in the solar system.
36:40which is a very amazing thing
36:42Imagine if we found a single-cell microorganism on the surface of Mars.
36:47So what will that thing mean?
36:49Let's say we find life on the surface of Mars.
36:53So we have two ways
36:54The first way is to find out that it is a DNA-based life, like ours.
37:00The other option is that it could be something different.
37:05It may not be DNA-based life, or it may be a completely different DNA-based life form.
37:11And did we have genesis? The creation of life happened independently on two planets.
37:16What does this reveal about the chances of life on the billions of arboplanets throughout our universe?
37:35When I think about our understanding of the universe
37:38And what is that different level of connection that we have to create?
37:42So those people on Mars, okay, that's when we get really surprised.
37:50Wondering what else is out there, how we got there, why we're here.
37:58These are all the questions that I think come to everyone's mind at some point or the other.
38:04And this is a great opportunity to explore.
38:09Our societies value exploration
38:12values ​​overcoming difficulties
38:15Values ​​giving difficult answers in difficult ways
38:20And this is the story of exploration.
38:23The first explorers to Antarctica faced many difficulties.
38:27Many people lost their lives
38:29These are the big steps that have brought us to where we are today.
38:39I believe that geology is destiny.
38:42Wherever there is the right combination of rocks, water, nutrients, and atmosphere
38:47You'll create a livable environment and there will be something there.
38:53What we're trying to find in the dry valleys of Antarctica
38:57That's a very short period at the end of summer.
39:00When the sun sends just enough heat to melt a little ice
39:05And a little bit of a living environment should be created.
39:08before it goes away again in the winter
39:12The climate of Mars also goes through similar extreme swings.
39:17Indeed, making Murdo Drive Alys is a lot like landing on Mars.
39:21That too without a spaceship.
39:24I noticed a change in the texture.
39:26I think this might be the spillway for the pond.
39:29The real challenge is a little further ahead where the water track starts.
39:37Some recent research is that if you look at the entire Deacon Valley
39:41So there is no trace of microbial respiration or cellular processes.
39:46And we're here because we think that's probably not the case.
39:51Yes, tell me
39:5277.79763
40:01We are collecting soil samples here.
40:03So that they can take them to Techsis and answer whether this soil is suitable for living.
40:08And is there evidence of microbial activity in this soil?
40:15Meaning, this research couldn't be more basic than this.
40:18What is the limit of the thing that is most important to us?
40:23I think respect for life and interest in life are fundamental human values.
40:29Look at this sample, I'll take it.
40:33And that's why it's so important to explore the farthest reaches of our planet.
40:38It matters and it serves the needs of society.
40:42Not only for scientific answers but also for frontiers in which to work
40:47Sometimes people search the space for him.
40:50And sometimes they look south to Antarctica, and that's the frontier.
40:54Antarctica is a place where you can say, if only we could do this
40:59So you can do anything
41:09I look at the Earth from the perspective of a living organism.
41:13And we humans mean we have reproductive organs
41:19Meaning and blooming
41:21And the reason for this is the desire to explore.
41:26Desire to gather resources
41:28The desire to know the unknown
41:29Because it is a part of our human soul.
41:33And there's no shortage of such people here.
41:36who is ready to risk his life
41:38Part of the Mars Citizen Raid or be the first people there
41:47There is no doubt that the first expeditions to Mars
41:50There will be a very strong scientific agenda.
41:53But once we cross the McMurdo Station stage
41:57So this Mars Space can be transformed into a bonafide human settlement.
42:04In a new civilization
42:06And if we do decide, I'll let you know.
42:09that not only will we bring life to Mars
42:12Rather, we will breathe life into Mars.
42:23This is 2037
42:26Sang Hana Mission Entry Phase 2
42:29Avi Talgado and Oliver Lee expansion orders
42:31were doing as they were told
42:33Then an accident happened
42:35At this time, Emily is treating both of them.
42:40Transformer 013 is broken
42:50If it had been ten seconds late, Oliver would have folded his arms.
42:53If you were Bhaani, she would be here
42:55Commander Sam, Doctor Foucault is calling for you.
42:59I just came
43:03you need rest
43:07No
43:08Yes
43:11We have to go back outside
43:13and those lines need to be turned on
43:15Robert and I can go now.
43:17You are exhausted and dehydrated
43:20You need bed rest and fluids.
43:23Don't feel so tense and heavy
43:25Bus
43:29The subject is full
43:34Jaraj Matona please
43:36Prez Manny Ho
43:39Please don't give me any rest
43:40This is pass
43:43I don't care about father
43:45do it
44:16Robert, I know there's no power without lines, but one crew member is a jerk.
44:22This is not correct
44:25We may not even get a chance to bring that reactor back online.
44:39We traded for the worst case scenario
44:43Thousands of hours spent in simulations
44:44We have very capable people working together on the Earth, ready to help us overcome any difficulties.
44:50Was doing
44:50But this did not give meaning
44:52If you do two ends, and from the ends there is argor and gossip, there is someone left who will remain, that
45:15Drown it in the egg
45:49Jhal Jhal
45:52Jhaal
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