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I'm here to tell you about
the real search
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for alien life.
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Not little green humanoids
arriving in shiny UFOs,
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although that would be nice.
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But it's the search for planets
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orbiting stars far away.
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Every star in our sky is a sun.
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And if uur sun has planets --
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Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, etc.
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Surely those other stars should
have planets also
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-- and they do.
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And in the last two decades,
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astronomers have found
thousands of exoplanets.
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Our night sky is literally
teeming with exoplanets.
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We know, statistically speaking,
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that every star has at least one planet.
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And in the search for planets,
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and in the future, planets
that might be like earth,
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we're able to help address
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some of the most amazing
and mysterious questions
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that have faced humankind for centuries.
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Why are we here?
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Why does our universe exist?
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How did earth form and evolve?
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How and why did life originate
and populate our planet?
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The second question
that we often think about
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is are we alone?
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Is there life out there?
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Who is out there?
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You know, this question
has been around
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for thousands of years,
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since at least the time
of the Greek philosophers.
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But, I'm here to tell you
just how close we're getting
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to finding out the answer
to this question.
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It's the first time in human history
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that this really is within reach for us.
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Now when I think about
the possibilities
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for life out there,
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I think of the fact that our sun
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is one but many stars.
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This is a photograph of a real galaxy,
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we think our milky way
looks like this galaxy.
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It's a collection of bound stars.
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But our milky way is one of
hundreds of billions of stars
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and our galaxy is one of upwards
of hundreds of billions of galaxies.
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Knowing that small planets
are very common,
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you can just do the math.
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And there are just so many stars
and so many planets out there,
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that surely, there must be life
somewhere out there.
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Well, the biologists get furious
with me for saying that,
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because we have absolutely
no evidence
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for life beyond earth, yet.
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Well, if we were able to look
at our galaxy from the outside
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and zoom in to where our sun is,
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we see a real map of the stars.
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And the highlighted stars
are ones with known exoplanets,
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this is really just
the tip of the iceberg.
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Here, this animation is zooming in
onto our solar system.
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And you'll see here some planets
as well as some spacecraft
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that are also orbiting our sun.
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Now if we can imagine
going to the west coast
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of North America and looking out
on the night sky,
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here's what we'd see on a spring night.
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And you can see
the constellations overlaid
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and again, so many stars with planets.
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There's a special patch of the sky
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where we have thousands of planets.
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This is where the Kepler Space Telescope
focused for many years.
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Let's zoom in and look at
one of the favorite exoplanets.
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This star is called Kepler 180-6F.
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It's a system of about five planets.
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And by the way, most of these exoplanets,
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we don't know too much about.
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We know their size, and their orbit
and things like that.
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But there's a very special planet
here called Kepler 180-6F,
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this planet is in a zone that is not
too far from the star,
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so that the temperature may be
just right for life.
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Here, the ar