标签:Universe 相关文章
Unit 13 Part B Text 1 The Big Bang! In the 20th century there were two main theories to explain the origin of the universe, the big bang theory and the steady state theory. The former stated that the universe began in a massive explosion at a single
EXPLORATIONS -February 6, 2002: Increasing Hubble’s Power By Paul Thompson VOICE ONE: This is Steve Ember. VOICE TWO: And this is Bob Doughty with the VOA Special English program EXPLORATIONS. Today
ANNOUNCER: EXPLORATIONS -- a program in Special English by the Voice of America. (MUSIC) Today, Richard Rael and Tony Riggs tell the story of American astronomer Edwin Hubble. He changed our ideas about the universe and how it developed. Edwin Hubbl
Language Sense Enhancement 1、Read aloud paragraphs 4-11 and learn them by heart. 2、Read aloud the following poem. An Excerpt from Queen Mab Percy Bysshe Shelley Heaven's ebon vault, Studded with stars unutterably bright, through which the moon's
NO BOUNDARIES Imagine this: you are twenty-one years old and a promising graduate student at one of the top universities in the world. One day, your doctors tells you that you have an incurable diseas
227. The unrestricted universe漫无边际的宇宙 unique-unwieldy The universe is unmatched in its intricacies. Each planet, each star is unique. Though our universe seems anything but unpredictable, with revolutions of planets and comets accuratel
The Use of History There are two ways of thinking of history. There is, first, history regarded as a way of looking at other things, really the temporal aspect of anything, from the universe to this nib with which I am writing. Everything has its hi
A victim of an incurable disease, Stephen Hawking is almost completely paralysed, confined to a wheelchair, and unable to speak. Yet, he has overcome every obstacle and achieved far more than most able-bodied people ever dream of accomplishing and b
EXPLORATIONS -May 8, 2002: Hubble's New Camera By Paul Thompson VOICE ONE: This is Mary Tillotson. VOICE TWO: And this is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English program EXPLORATIONS. Last week, the
We are back at 7:44 and now to the controversy heating up, the international beauty pageant world. A contestant for Miss Universe expelled from competing for the crown because she used to be a man. ABC's Cecilia Vega has the story. Jenna Talackova is
MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST: Scientists announced today that for the first time, they have been able to pinpoint the source of a particle called a high-energy neutrino. It was detected by an observatory at the South Pole. And as NPR science correspondent
Science Editors Take a Closer Look at 125 Great Unsolved Mysteries of Our Time 《科学》杂志编辑关注当今125个重大不解之迷 Science Magazine is celebrating its 125th birthday with a sp
Song:1000 Stars Artist:Natalie Bassingthwaighte I'm Breathing In Pieces Just Tasting The Feeling All Open Suggestions, Unspoken Within And It Takes Me To Another Place The Universe, The Endless Space Above, Above And The World Is Like A Mirror Ba
Dialogue 1 Mark: Well, Jingjing, we lost another celebrity. 马克: 京晶,我们又失去了一位名人。 Jingjing: These past few years, so many famous people have passed away. 京晶: 最近几年有好多名人都去世了。 Jingjing Mark: I
LAKSHMI SINGH, HOST: We're going to hear now about Trenton Doyle Hancock. He's a star in the art world, and he collects dolls. He has so many dolls and toys he needs a studio the size of an airplane hangar in which to store them. Hancock's work is in
The evidence suggested that billions of tons of matter from a massive star had shrunk to nothing.So what we are left with here is this mind-boggling idea of mass contained in zero volume, and that just make your head spin, but that's what we call a b
We now know this light is produced by the rotating disk of matter, spinning round the edge of the black hole at the heart of the Cygnus A galaxy, waiting to be devoured. It means that against all popular expectations, the brightest sources of light i
To walkhere on Earth, to be alive, it thanks to a long chain of cause and effect writtendeep into the structure of the universe. A primordial process so long, and soancient that on the scale of a human life it seems almost incomprehensible. One of th
By Jessica Berman Washington 14 September 2007 Scientists have known for some time that most of the stuff in the Universe is so-called dark matter, material that cannot be seen directly because it does not interact with light. That makes it very diff
Do you appreciate the small things in life? In physics, infinitely small things are problematic. If a structure can be infinitely divided into smaller parts, can there be such a thing as a smallest possible space or does this division go on eternally