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  • 00:06

    For four years, the historic planet hunting mission, Kepler, starred at a group of 150,000

  • 00:14

    stars located in a region extending three thousand light years away from earth.

  • 00:23

    The data collected by this spacecraft has brought a turning point in the long search

  • 00:29

    for other planets like earth.

  • 00:36

    Is ours one of countless life-bearing worlds strewn about the galaxy; or is it a rare garden

  • 00:45

    of eden in a barren universe?

  • 00:48

    What are we learning about our place in the cosmos, from the search for earthlike planets?

  • 01:24

    Tens of thousands of years ago, humans began to fan out across the planet, following unknown

  • 01:34

    pathways, crossing unmeasured distances.

  • 01:43

    We traced coastlines, and sailed uncertain seas.

  • 01:49

    We crossed ocean straits drained by an ice age.

  • 01:59

    Into every corner of Earth we ventured, looking for places to put down our roots, to raise

  • 02:06

    our families, or just to see what was there.

  • 02:11

    Today, it’s the final frontier that fires our imaginations.

  • 02:20

    With so many stars in our galaxy, we make a simple extrapolation, that the cosmos must

  • 02:28

    be filled with worlds like ours, with life, even intelligent life.

  • 02:36

    This so-called “many worlds” view goes back to ancient times, to China, India, Greece

  • 02:49

    and Egypt.

  • 02:50

    The Qur’an, the Talmud, and many Hindu texts all imagined a universe full of living beings.

  • 03:01

    It wasn’t until the 16th century that the idea became grounded in concrete notions of

  • 03:07

    the physical universe.

  • 03:12

    Astronomer and mathematician Nikolas Copernicus declared that Earth revolves around the Sun.

  • 03:21

    That opened the way for the Italian friar, Giordano Bruno, a natural philosopher who

  • 03:27

    believed that the universe is eternal and without end.

  • 03:33

    He held that there is a multitude of worlds with diverse life forms, including intelligent

  • 03:38

    beings.

  • 03:40

    Bruno’s outspoken challenges to church doctrine got him executed in the year 1600.

  • 03:51

    His ideas gained support when Galileo Galilei used his telescope to show that our Sun is

  • 03:58

    just one among countless other stars.

  • 04:04

    By the modern era, the “many worlds” view held sway in scientific circles.

  • 04:11

    New telescope technologies gave us a view of vast star populations within our galaxy.

  • 04:19

    As the astronomer and author Carl Sagan noted, given the sheer number and diversity of stars

  • 04:25

    in our galaxy, it’s “far more likely that the universe is brimming over with life.”

  • 04:31

    In 1961, the astronomer Frank Drake sought to lay out the odds of finding advanced alien

  • 04:42

    civilizations.

  • 04:44

    The Drake equation took into account,

  • 04:49

    The rate of star formation in our galaxy.

  • 04:54

    The fraction of stars with planets.

  • 04:59

    Of planets that might support life.

  • 05:04

    That might develop intelligent life.

  • 05:10

    or radio communications, which we could perhaps detect.

  • 05:18

    Even as astronomers began to scour the heavens for alien signals, another view of the galaxy

  • 05:24

    gained momentum.

  • 05:28

    It started with the Greek philosophers Aristotle and Ptolemy.

  • 05:34

    They believed that humanity and Earth are unique.

  • 05:40

    With the spread of Christianity, this Ptolemaic system became embodied in the “rare Earth”

  • 05:48

    hypothesis.

  • 05:50

    In religious doctrine, it was taken to mean that mankind and earth were specially created

  • 05:56

    by God, in his image.

  • 06:02

    In science, it implied that the circumstances that allowed life to unfold on Earth are so

  • 06:09

    particular and fortuitious, that the odds are slim we’ll find another place like it.

  • 06:17

    Where does the debate stand today, with information about Earth and the cosmos pouring in from

  • 06:24

    ever more advanced technologies?

  • 06:28

    On the “many worlds” side, modern theories hold that planet formation is a common byproduct

  • 06:38

    of star formation.

  • 06:47

    As we’ve seen on this planet, life is persistent, adaptable, relentless.

  • 06:57

    Millions of species grace the landscapes and oceans of our planet, from simple one-celled

  • 07:03

    plants to complex mega fauna.

  • 07:07

    In terms of mass and sheer numbers, none of it holds a candle to a simple, hardy form.

  • 07:19

    Bacteria have been documented in fossils dating back some three and a half billion years.

  • 07:33

    Bacteria are found in habitats ranging from hot springs and volcanoes,. the digestive

  • 07:41

    systems of animals, the soil, or the sulfurous environments of deep sea hydrothermal vents.

  • 07:57

    They are part of a much larger global ecosystem that suffuses the Earth’s crust, down where

  • 08:10

    heat and chemicals from Earth’s interior fuel their growth.

  • 08:17

    Not even the worst climate catastrophes of the past could dislodge this biological storehouse,

  • 08:25

    from widespread volcanic eruptions to episodes of global glaciation.

  • 08:35

    It’s easy to imagine life gaining a foothold on a wide variety of worlds.

  • 08:47

    Comets and asteroids, for example, have been found to deliver a steady rain of interplanetary

  • 08:53

    dust to Earth, including organic compounds and water, that could have supplied the building

  • 09:00

    blocks of life.

  • 09:09

    Analyzing a type of carbon-rich meteorite, researchers have found amino acids, molecules

  • 09:16

    used to make proteins.

  • 09:18

    They also found components used to make DNA, along with sugar-related organic compounds

  • 09:25

    that are a basic part of living cells.

  • 09:29

    But primitive life forms don’t necessarily evolve to more advanced forms.

  • 09:38

    The rare earth view points to a complex, and fortuitous, chain of circumstances on this

  • 09:44

    planet.

  • 09:48

    It began when simple bacteria gave rise to one-celled organisms called eukaryotes.

  • 09:58

    They evolved specialized internal organs to regulate processes such as photosynthesis.

  • 10:07

    These organisms began to regulate surface temperatures by taking in carbon dioxide,

  • 10:12

    a greenhouse gas, while releasing oxygen.

  • 10:24

    Volcanism and other geological processes released more CO2 in the air.

  • 10:31

    Ocean and land plants, along with chemical reactions in rocks called weathering, pulled

  • 10:37

    CO2 back out of the air.

  • 10:41

    A global carbon cycle developed that kept surface temperatures within a relatively narrow

  • 10:48

    range.

  • 10:52

    A stable climate allowed the planet to retain its stores of water.

  • 10:57

    Water, in turn, has helped drive the movement of earth’s crustal plates, a process that

  • 11:05

    releases and buries CO2.

  • 11:11

    There were other factors as well, a nearly circular orbit has helped keep seasonal extremes

  • 11:19

    in check.

  • 11:23

    The moon stabilized the day-night cycle.

  • 11:27

    Earth is also at a distance from the sun that allows surface temperatures to hover between

  • 11:35

    the freezing and boiling points of water, the so-called “Habitable Zone.”

  • 11:45

    Some scientists also believe we live in a “Galactic Habitable Zone.”

  • 11:50

    We’re close enough to the galactic center to be infused with heavy elements generated

  • 11:58

    by countless stellar explosions over the eons,

  • 12:04

    But far enough away from deadly gamma radiation that can roar out of the center.

  • 12:12

    At the same time, Earth has been able to survive a range of other natural hazards.

  • 12:21

    Some researchers, for example, have linked mass extinctions in the past to the Sun’s

  • 12:27

    passage through one of the spiral arms, where gamma radiation sources lie in wait.

  • 12:35

    So too, we’ve made it through asteroid impacts, climate changes, and solar eruptions.

  • 12:54

    Now we wonder, are there kindred spirits, somewhere out there, to share our survival

  • 13:00

    stories with?

  • 13:04

    Or is Earth alone amid the wastelands of a barren galaxy?

  • 13:14

    This image shows, in stark relief, the biggest obstacle faced by planet hunters.

  • 13:20

    We’re looking at Earth, as photographed by the Voyager spacecraft, from a distance

  • 13:28

    of 3.7 billion miles.

  • 13:33

    Our mighty world occupies only about one tenth of one pixel.

  • 13:42

    Try seeing something this small at hundreds of thousands of times that distance.

  • 13:50

    And try seeing it through the bright glare of a star.

  • 13:56

    Still, astronomers have made extraordinary progress.

  • 14:01

    In 1995, Swiss astronomers announced the discovery of a planet orbiting the star, 51 Pegasi.

  • 14:10

    They found it by carefully charting the star’s wobble, caused by the gravitational tug of

  • 14:18

    an orbiting planet.

  • 14:22

    What they found is no Earth.

  • 14:24

    It has about half the mass of Jupiter, but orbits at a distance closer than our own Mercury

  • 14:31

    is to the Sun.

  • 14:35

    Most of the planets discovered with this method are gas giants, so called hot jupiters that

  • 14:41

    swing in close to their host star.

  • 14:45

    51 Peg is a G-type dwarf star, like our sun.

  • 14:54

    It is brighter and more massive than 85% all other stars in the galaxy.

  • 15:02

    But there are only about 500 others like it within a hundred light years of Earth.

  • 15:15

    Scientists have turned their wobble method on a more plentiful breed, called M Stars.

  • 15:24

    One of them, 20 light years from Earth, is too dim to see with your naked eye.

  • 15:31

    Gliese 581, in the southern constellation Libra, is a red dwarf with 31% of the Sun’s

  • 15:42

    mass, but only 1.3% of its luminosity.

  • 15:50

    Using the wobble method, the Swiss team detected an entire solar system, with up to six rocky

  • 15:57

    planets, ranging from 2 to 18 times the mass of Earth.

  • 16:04

    The most enticing is Planet G, whose presence is still unconfirmed.

  • 16:10

    It’s within the life zone.

  • 16:16

    But a star like this gives off so little energy that a planet would have to orbit close just

  • 16:22

    to get enough heat to power its climate.

  • 16:26

    That subjects it to solar flares, common in small stars.

  • 16:32

    So too, a close orbit increases the tendency of the star’s gravity to halt any spinning

  • 16:40

    motion.

  • 16:42

    That makes it more difficult for heat and moisture to circulate, and a habitable climate

  • 16:48

    to form.

  • 16:53

    If planet hunters operating on ground-based observatories have told us anything, it’s

  • 16:58

    that planets and solar systems are highly diverse.

  • 17:04

    The search for earth-like planets requires a larger sample.

  • 17:13

    Enter the Kepler space telescope, launched in the year 2009.

  • 17:22

    For nearly four years, astronomers aimed its precision instruments at a tiny patch of sky,

  • 17:29

    with 150,000 stars at a distance of up to 3,000 light years away from Earth.

  • 17:41

    Kepler used what’s called the transit method, to record subtle dips in the star’s light

  • 17:47

    caused by a planet passing in front of it.

  • 17:52

    By analyzing the light as it dipped, scientists are able to estimate the planet’s mass,

  • 17:58

    radius, and the distance from its parent star.

  • 18:05

    Combining Kepler and ground-based observations, there are now 3,841 planetary candidates.

  • 18:15

    1075 have been confirmed by further telescope or computer analysis.

  • 18:29

    The vast majority of candidates orbit in the hot zone of their parent star, and most have

  • 18:37

    a mass equivalent to Neptune or Jupiter.

  • 18:43

    There is a smaller cadre of planets out in the warm or habitable zone.

  • 18:47

    These too are mostly large gas planets.

  • 18:56

    About a dozen, though, have masses that are smaller than Neptune but larger than Earth,

  • 19:05

    At the higher end of this range, they are known as mini-Neptunes or gas dwarfs.

  • 19:16

    At the lower end, are rocky worlds called Super Earths.

  • 19:24

    How Earth-like are they?

  • 19:29

    Most super earths are thought to have dense, inhospitable atmospheres.

  • 19:33

    That’s because their intense gravity is able to hold onto stores of gas drawn to it

  • 19:40

    in the early days of solar system formation.

  • 19:43

    If a slightly smaller planet can avoid this fate, it may succumb to another.

  • 19:54

    Consider the star Kepler 62, a relatively sun-like star with 69% the mass of our sun.

  • 20:03

    Two of its five known planets are most likely solid like Earth, but with large amounts of

  • 20:11

    surface water.

  • 20:14

    62F, on the outer rim of the habitable zone, could well be frozen over.

  • 20:23

    62E, farther in, is likely inundated.

  • 20:33

    The thinking is that the density and internal heat of a planet this size prevents surface

  • 20:38

    water from migrating down into the mantle.

  • 20:44

    With land areas kept to a minimum, a super earth would not develop the carbon cycle necessary

  • 20:51

    for regulating a climate.

  • 20:57

    It may be too early to write these worlds off.

  • 21:00

    A recent study showed that the weight of their oceans may be enough to push large amounts

  • 21:07

    of water down into the mantle, where it could help fuel volcanism and plate tectonics.

  • 21:16

    These geological processes would create land masses, allowing a carbon cycle and a climate

  • 21:23

    to take hold.

  • 21:28

    So far, we have not seen what we’re looking for, Earth 2.0.

  • 21:38

    A malfunctioning gyroscope on the Kepler satellite ended its observations after four productive

  • 21:47

    years in space.

  • 21:50

    The data it captured remains a mother lode that scientists continue to mine.

  • 22:02

    Based on a statistical analysis of all the Kepler observations, a new study says, one

  • 22:08

    in five sun-like stars do have planets about the size of Earth, with surface temperatures

  • 22:15

    conducive to life.

  • 22:21

    Given that about 20 percent of stars in the galaxy are sun-like, that would amount to

  • 22:26

    several tens of billions of potentially habitable, Earth-size planets.

  • 22:36

    And there may well be a whole other population of habitable worlds we haven’t considered.

  • 22:43

    620 light years away, in the constellation of Cygnus the swan, is a star that’s slightly

  • 22:51

    cooler and smaller than our sun,

  • 22:56

    Kepler 22 has a planet squarely in the habitable zone.

  • 23:01

    But at around 6 times the mass of Earth, it’s probably enshrouded by a dense atmosphere.

  • 23:14

    Its large enough that it could have pulled another planet into orbit, one that’s large

  • 23:19

    enough to maintain an atmosphere and liquid water on its surface.

  • 23:28

    If any of the confirmed exoplanets do have a moon, it would leave a subtle but distinctive

  • 23:34

    imprint on the star’s light.

  • 23:41

    Kepler came on line in a new age of massive data gathering and supercomputer analysis.

  • 23:49

    That will define future planet-finding missions as well.

  • 23:56

    The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, TESS, for example, is scheduled for launch

  • 24:03

    in 2017.

  • 24:07

    It will focus on about half a million bright sunlike G and K stars, looking for telltale

  • 24:14

    dips in their light as orbiting planets pass.

  • 24:22

    The James Webb Space Telescope, in active development since 1996, is currently slated

  • 24:29

    for launch in 2018.

  • 24:36

    Astronomers hope to use it to peer into planetary atmospheres to detect carbon dioxide, oxygen,

  • 24:45

    methane, and other indicators of climates or even life.

  • 24:53

    Optimism that we’ll find other worlds like ours is driving these increasingly sophisticated

  • 24:59

    efforts.

  • 25:03

    It’s tempered by what we’ve learned of our own world and solar system, that there

  • 25:11

    are so many factors that can derail a planet’s evolution.

  • 25:25

    In the future, if our itch to explore becomes unbearable, or if somehow things don’t work

  • 25:37

    out on this planet,

  • 25:41

    There is bound to be some available galactic real estate out there.

  • 25:47

    We’ll have to develop advanced transport to get there, twenty, a hundred, a thousand

  • 25:55

    light years away.

  • 26:00

    We may find that we’re not exactly adapted to its gravity, its mix of land and water,.

  • 26:14

    its atmosphere.

  • 26:19

    We may not prefer its climate.

  • 26:24

    The question is, will it be worth the trip?

  • 26:31

    7

All

The example sentences of SUFFUSES in videos (1 in total of 1)

they personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present part noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner much adverb larger adverb, comparative global adjective ecosystem noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction suffuses verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner earth proper noun, singular s proper noun, singular crust noun, singular or mass , down adverb where wh-adverb

Use "suffuses" in a sentence | "suffuses" example sentences

How to use "suffuses" in a sentence?

  • One day, a daughter of Aristotle, Pythias by name, was asked what color pleased her most. She replied, "The color with which modesty suffuses the face of simple, inoffensive men.
    -Joseph Joubert-

Definition and meaning of SUFFUSES

What does "suffuses mean?"

/səˈfyo͞oz/

verb
To spread or cover with liquid, light or emotion.

What are synonyms of "suffuses"?
Some common synonyms of "suffuses" are:
  • permeate,
  • cover,
  • bathe,
  • pervade,
  • wash,
  • saturate,
  • imbue,
  • fill,
  • load,
  • charge,
  • impregnate,
  • inform,
  • steep,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.