Your body was forged in the spectacular death of stars | Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz

60,571 views ・ 2020-01-15

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Translator: Ivana Korom Reviewer: Krystian Aparta
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We are all atomically connected.
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Fundamentally, universally.
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But what does that mean?
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I'm an astrophysicist, and as such,
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it is my responsibility to trace the cosmic history
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of every single one of your atoms.
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In fact, I would say
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that one of the greatest achievements of modern astronomy
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is the understanding of how our atoms were actually put together.
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While hydrogen and helium were made
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during the first two minutes of the big bang,
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the origin of heavy elements,
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such as the iron in your blood, the oxygen we're breathing,
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the silicone in your computers,
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lies in the life cycle of stars.
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Nuclear reactions take lighter elements and transform them into heavier ones,
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and that causes stars to shine
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and ultimately explode,
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therefore enriching the universe with these heavy elements.
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So without stellar death
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there would be no oxygen
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or other elements heavier than hydrogen and helium,
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and therefore, there would be no life.
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There are more atoms in our bodies
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than stars in the universe.
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And these atoms are extremely durable.
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The origins of our atoms
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can be traceable to stars that manufactured them in their interiors
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and exploded them all across the Milky Way,
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billions of years ago.
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And I should know this,
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because I am indeed a certified stellar mortician.
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(Laughter)
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And today, I want to take you on a journey that starts in a supernova explosion
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and ends with the air that we're breathing right now.
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So what is our body made of?
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Ninety-six percent consists of only four elements:
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hydrogen, carbon, oxygen and nitrogen.
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Now the main character of this cosmic tale is oxygen.
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Not only is the vast majority of our bodies made of oxygen,
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but oxygen is the one element fighting to protect life on earth.
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The vast majority of oxygen in the universe
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was indeed produced over the entire history of the universe
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in these supernova explosions.
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These supernova explosions signal the demise of very massive stars.
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And for a brilliant month,
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one supernova explosion can be brighter than an entire galaxy
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containing billions of stars.
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That is truly remarkable.
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That is because massive stars burn brighter
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and have a spectacular death, compared to other stars.
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Nuclear fusion is really the lifeblood of all stars,
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including the sun,
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and as a result is the root source of all the energy on earth.
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You can think of stars as these fusion factories
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which are powered by smashing atoms together
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in their hot and dense interiors.
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Now, stars like our sun,
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which are relatively small,
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burn hydrogen into helium,
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but heavier stars of about eight times the mass of the sun
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continue this burning cycle
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even after they exhausted their helium in their cores.
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So at this point,
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the massive star is left with a carbon core,
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which, as you know, is the building block of life.
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This carbon core continues to collapse
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and as a result, the temperature increases,
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which allows further nuclear reactions to take place,
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and carbon then burns into oxygen,
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into neon, silicon, sulphur
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and ultimately iron.
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And iron is the end.
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Why?
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Because iron is the most bound nuclei in the universe,
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which means that we cannot extract energy by burning iron.
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So when the entire core of the massive star is made of iron,
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it's run out of fuel.
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And that's an incredibly bad day for a star.
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(Laughter)
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Without fuel, it cannot generate heat,
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and therefore gravity has won the battle.
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The iron core has no other choice but to collapse,
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reaching incredibly high densities.
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Think of 300 million tons
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reduced to a space the size of a sugar cube.
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At these extreme high densities, the core actually resists collapse,
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and as a result,
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all of this infalling material bounces off the core.
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And this dramatic bounce,
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which happens in a fraction of a second or so,
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is responsible for ejecting the rest of the star in all directions,
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ultimately forming a supernova explosion.
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So, sadly, from the perspective of an astrophysicist,
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the conditions in the centers of these exploding stars
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cannot be recreated in a laboratory.
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(Laughter)
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Now, thankfully for humanity, we're not able to do that.
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(Laughter)
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But what does that mean?
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That means that as astrophysicists,
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we have to rely on sophisticated computer simulations
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in order to understand these complex phenomena.
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These simulations can be used to really understand how gas behaves
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under such extreme conditions.
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And can be used to answer fundamental questions
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like, "What ultimately disrupted the massive star?"
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"How is it that this implosion can be reversed into an explosion?"
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There's a huge amount of debate in the field,
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but we all agree that neutrinos,
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which are these elusive elementary particles,
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play a crucial role.
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Yeah?
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I'm about to show you one of those simulations.
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So neutrinos are produced in huge numbers once the core collapses.
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And in fact,
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they are responsible for transferring the energy in this core.
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Like thermal radiation in a heater,
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neutrinos pump energy into the core,
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increasing the possibility of disrupting the star.
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In fact, for about a fraction of a second,
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neutrinos pump so much energy
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that the pressure increases high enough that a shock wave is produced
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and the shock wave goes and disrupts the entire star.
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And it is in that shock wave where elements are produced.
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So thank you, neutrinos.
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(Laughter)
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Supernovas shine bright,
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and for a brief period of time,
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they radiate more energy than the sun will in its entire lifetime.
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That point of light that you see there,
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which was certainly not there before,
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burns like a beacon,
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clearly indicating the position where the massive star has died.
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In a galaxy like our own Milky Way,
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we estimate that about once every 50 years,
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a massive star dies.
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This implies that somewhere in the universe,
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there's a supernova explosion every second or so.
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And thankfully for astronomers,
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some of them are actually found relatively close to earth.
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Various civilizations recorded these supernova explosions
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long before the telescope was invented.
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The most famous of all of them
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is probably the supernova explosion that gave rise to the Crab Nebula.
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Yeah?
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Korean and Chinese astronomers recorded this supernova in 1054,
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as did, almost certainly, Native Americans.
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This supernova happened about 5,600 light-years away from earth.
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And it was so incredibly bright
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that astronomers could see it during the day.
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And it was visible to the naked eye for about two years in the night sky.
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Fast forward 1,000 years or so later, and what do we see?
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We see these filaments that were blasted by the explosion,
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moving at 300 miles per second.
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These filaments are essential for us to understand
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how massive stars die.
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The image that you see there
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was assembled by the Hubble Space Telescope
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over a span of three months.
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And it is incredibly important to astronomers
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because it ultimately carries the chemical legacy
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of the star that exploded.
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The orange filaments that you see there are the tattered remains of the star,
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and are made primarily of hydrogen,
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while the blue and red filaments that you see
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are the freshly synthesized oxygen.
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So studying supernova remnants, like the Crab Nebula,
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allowed astronomers to firmly conclude
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that the vast majority of oxygen on earth was produced by supernova explosions
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over the history of the universe.
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And we can estimate
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that in order to assemble all the atoms of oxygen in our body,
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it took on the order of a 100 million supernova.
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So every bit of you, or at least the majority of it,
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came from one of these supernova explosions.
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So now you may be wondering,
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how is it that these atoms
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that were generated in such extreme conditions
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ultimately took residence in our body?
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So I want you to follow the thought experiment.
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Imagine that we're in the Milky Way, and a supernova happens.
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It blasted tons and tons of oxygen atoms
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almost into empty space.
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A few of them were able to be assembled in a cloud.
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Now, 4.5 billion years ago,
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something unsettled that cloud and caused it to collapse,
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forming the sun in its center and the solar system.
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So the sun, the planets and life on earth
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depend on this beautiful cycle
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of stellar birth, stellar death and stellar rebirth.
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And this continues the recycling of atoms in the universe.
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And as a result, astronomy and chemistry are intimately connected.
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We are life forms that have evolved to inhale the waste products of plants.
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But now you know
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that we also inhale the waste products of supernova explosions.
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(Laughter)
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So take a moment, inhale.
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An oxygen atom has just gone into your body.
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It is certain that that oxygen [atom]
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remembers that it was in the interior of a star
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and it was probably manufactured by a supernova explosion.
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This atom may have traveled the entire solar system
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until it splashed on earth,
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long before reaching you.
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When we breathe,
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we use hundreds of liters of oxygen every day.
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So I'm incredibly lucky to be standing in front of this beautiful audience,
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but I'm actually stealing your oxygen atoms.
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(Laughter)
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And because I'm speaking to you,
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I'm giving you some of them back, that once resided in me.
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So breathing, yeah,
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participates in this beautiful exchange of atoms.
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And you can then ask,
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"Well, how many atoms in our body once belonged to Frida Kahlo?"
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(Laughter)
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About 100,000 of them.
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100,000 more probably belonged to Marie Curie,
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100,000 more to Sally Ride,
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or whoever you want to think of.
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So breathing is not only filling our lungs with cosmic history,
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but with human history.
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I would like to end my talk by sharing a myth
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that is very close to my heart.
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A myth from the Chichimeca culture,
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which is a very powerful Mesoamerican culture.
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And the Chichimecas believe
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that our essence was assembled in the heavens.
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And on its journey towards us,
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it actually fragmented into tons of different pieces.
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So my abuelo used to say,
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"One of the reasons you feel incomplete
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is because you are missing your pieces."
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(Laughter)
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"But don't be fooled by that.
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You've been given an incredible opportunity of growth.
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Why?
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Because it's not like those pieces were scattered on earth
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and you have to go and pick them up.
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No, those pieces fell into other people.
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And only by sharing them you will become more complete.
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Yes, during your life,
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there's going to be individuals that have these huge pieces
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that make you feel whole.
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But in your quest of being complete,
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you have to treasure and share every single one of those pieces."
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Sounds a lot like the story of oxygen to me.
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(Laughter)
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Which started in the heavens in a supernova explosion,
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and continues today,
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within the confines of our humanity.
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Our atoms in our body have embarked on an epic odyssey,
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with time spans from billions of years to mere centuries,
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all leading to you,
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all of you,
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witnesses of the universe.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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