-
Not Synced
I'm an astronomer who builds telescopes.
-
Not Synced
I build telescopes because,
number one, they are awesome,
-
Not Synced
but number two,
-
Not Synced
I believe if you want to discover
a new thing thing about the universe,
-
Not Synced
you have to look at the universe
-
Not Synced
in a new way.
-
Not Synced
New technologies in astronomy,
-
Not Synced
things like lenses, photographic plates,
-
Not Synced
all the way up to space telescopes,
-
Not Synced
each gave us new ways to see the universe
-
Not Synced
and directly led to a new understanding
-
Not Synced
of our place in it.
-
Not Synced
But those discoveries come with a cost.
-
Not Synced
It took thousands of people and 44 years
-
Not Synced
to get the Hubble Space Telescope
-
Not Synced
from an idea into orbit.
-
Not Synced
It takes time,
-
Not Synced
it takes a tolerance for failure,
-
Not Synced
it takes individual people
-
Not Synced
choosing every day not to give up.
-
Not Synced
I know how hard that choice is
because I live it.
-
Not Synced
The reality of my job is that I fail
almost all the time and still keep going,
-
Not Synced
because that's how telescopes get built.
-
Not Synced
The telescope I helped build is called
-
Not Synced
the faint intergalactic-medium
red-shifted emission balloon,
-
Not Synced
which is a mouthful,
-
Not Synced
so we call it FIREBall,
-
Not Synced
and don't worry, it is not going
to explode at the of this story.
-
Not Synced
I've been working on FIREBall
for more than 10 years,
-
Not Synced
and now lead the team
of incredible people who built it.
-
Not Synced
FIREBall is designed to observe
some of the faintest structures known,
-
Not Synced
huge clouds of hydrogen gas.
-
Not Synced
These clouds are giants.
-
Not Synced
They are even bigger than
whatever you are thinking of.
-
Not Synced
They are huge,
-
Not Synced
huge clouds of hydrogen that we think
flow into and out of galaxies.
-
Not Synced
I work on FIREBall
-
Not Synced
because what I really want
is to take our view of the universe
-
Not Synced
from one with just light from stars
-
Not Synced
to one where we can see and measure
-
Not Synced
every atom that exists.
-
Not Synced
That's all that I want to do.
-
Not Synced
(Laughter)
-
Not Synced
But observing at least some of those atoms
-
Not Synced
is crucial to our understanding
of why galaxies look the way they do.
-
Not Synced
I want to know
-
Not Synced
how that hydrogen gas
gets into a galaxy and creates a star.
-
Not Synced
My work on FIREBall started in 2008
-
Not Synced
working not on the telescope
but on the light sensor,
-
Not Synced
which is the heart of any telescope.
-
Not Synced
This new sensor was being developed
by a team that I joined
-
Not Synced
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
-
Not Synced
and our goal was to prove
that this sensor would work really well
-
Not Synced
to detect that hydrogen gas.
-
Not Synced
In my work on this,
-
Not Synced
I destroyed several very,
very, very expensive sensors
-
Not Synced
before realizing that
the machine I was using
-
Not Synced
created a plasma that shorted out
anything electrical that we put in it.
-
Not Synced
We used a different machine,
there were other challenges,
-
Not Synced
and it took years to get it right,
-
Not Synced
but when that first sensor worked,
-
Not Synced
it was glorious,
-
Not Synced
and our sensors are now 10 times better
than the previous state-of-the-art
-
Not Synced
and are getting put into
all kinds of new telescopes.
-
Not Synced
Our sensors will give us a new way
to see the universe and our place in it.
-
Not Synced
So, sensors done,
-
Not Synced
time to build a telescope,
-
Not Synced
and FIREBall is weird
as far as telescopes go
-
Not Synced
because it's not in space
and it's not on the ground.
-
Not Synced
Instead, it hangs on a cable
from a giant balloon
-
Not Synced
and observes for one night only
-
Not Synced
from 130,000 feet in the stratosphere
-
Not Synced
at the very edge of space.
-
Not Synced
This is partly because the edge of space
is much cheaper than actual space.
-
Not Synced
(Laughter)
-
Not Synced
So building it, of course, more failures:
-
Not Synced
mirrors that failed,
-
Not Synced
scratched mirrors that had to be remade;
-
Not Synced
cooling system failures,
-
Not Synced
an entire system that had to be remade;
-
Not Synced
calibration failures, we ran tests
again and again and again and again;
-
Not Synced
failures when you literally
least expect them,
-
Not Synced
we had an adorable but super-angry
baby falcon that landed
-
Not Synced
on our spectrograph tank one day
-
Not Synced
(Laughter)
-
Not Synced
although to be fair,
this was the greatest day
-
Not Synced
in the history of this project.
-
Not Synced
(Laughter)
-
Not Synced
I really loved that falcon.
-
Not Synced
But falcon damage fixed, we got it built
-
Not Synced
for an August 2017 launch attempt,
and then failed to launch
-
Not Synced
due to six weeks of continuous rain
in the New Mexico desert.
-
Not Synced
(Laughter)
-
Not Synced
Our spirits dampened, we showed up again,
-
Not Synced
August 2018, Year 10,
-
Not Synced
and the morning of September 22nd,
-
Not Synced
we finally got the telescope launched.
-
Not Synced
(Applause)
-
Not Synced
I have put so much of myself,
my whole life into this project,
-
Not Synced
and I, like, still can't believe
that that happened.
-
Not Synced
And I have this picture that's taken
right around sunset on that day
-
Not Synced
of our balloon, FIREBall hanging from it,
-
Not Synced
and the nearly full moon,
-
Not Synced
and I love this picture.
-
Not Synced
God, I love it.
-
Not Synced
But I look at it,
-
Not Synced
and it makes me want to cry,
-
Not Synced
because when fully inflated,
these balloons are spherical,
-
Not Synced
and this one isn't,
-
Not Synced
it's shaped like a teardrop,
-
Not Synced
and that's because there is a hole in it.
-
Not Synced
Sometimes balloons fail too.
-
Not Synced
FIREBall crash-landed
in the New Mexico desert,
-
Not Synced
and we didn't get the data that we wanted,
-
Not Synced
and at the end of that day,
I thought to myself,
-
Not Synced
why am I doing this?
-
Not Synced
And I've thought a lot
about why since that day,
-
Not Synced
and I've realized that all of my work
has been full of things
-
Not Synced
that break and fail,
-
Not Synced
that we don't understand and they fail,
-
Not Synced
that we just get wrong the first time,
-
Not Synced
and so they fail.
-
Not Synced
I think about the thousands
of people who built Hubble
-
Not Synced
and how many failures they endured.
-
Not Synced
There were countless failures,
heart-breaking failures,
-
Not Synced
even when it was in space,
-
Not Synced
and none of those failures
were a reason for them to give up.
-
Not Synced
I think about why I love my job.
-
Not Synced
I want to know what
is happening in the universe.
-
Not Synced
You all want to know
what's happening in the universe too.
-
Not Synced
I want to know what's going on
with that hydrogen.
-
Not Synced
And so I've realized that discovery
-
Not Synced
is mostly a process
of finding things that don't work,
-
Not Synced
and failure is inevitable when
you're pushing the limits of knowledge,
-
Not Synced
and that's what I want to do.
-
Not Synced
So I'm choosing to keep going,
and our team is going to do
-
Not Synced
what everyone who has ever
built anything before us has done.
-
Not Synced
We're going to try again in 2020.
-
Not Synced
And it might feel like a failure today,
-
Not Synced
and it really does,
-
Not Synced
but it's going to stay a failure
-
Not Synced
if I give up.
-
Not Synced
Thank you very much.
-
Not Synced
(Applause)