ABOUT THE SPEAKER
James Green - Space physicist
James Green leads NASA's solar system exploration and astrobiology research.

Why you should listen

Dr. James Green began his career at NASA 35 years ago at the Marshall Space Flight Center, where he developed and managed the Space Physics Analysis Network. It provided scientists all over the world rapid access to data and resources. As NASA's Director of Planetary Science he leads NASA's solar system exploration and astrobiology research.

Green received his Ph.D. in Space Physics from the University of Iowa in 1979 and began working in the Magnetospheric Physics Branch at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in 1980. At Marshall, Green developed and managed the Space Physics Analysis Network that provided scientists all over the world with rapid access to data, to other scientists, and to specific NASA computer and information resources. In addition, Green was a Safety Diver in the Neutral Buoyancy tank making over 150 dives until left MSFC in 1985.

From 1985 to 1992 Green was the head of the National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC) at Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC). The NSSDC is NASA's largest space science data archive. In 1992, he became the Chief of the Space Science Data Operations Office until 2005, when he became the Chief of the Science Proposal Support Office. While at GSFC, Green was a co-investigator and the Deputy Project Scientist on the Imager for Magnetopause-to-Aurora Global Exploration (IMAGE) mission. He has written over 100 scientific articles in refereed journals involving various aspects of the Earth's and Jupiter's magnetospheres and over 50 technical articles on various aspects of data systems and networks.

In August 2006, Green became the Director of the Planetary Science Division at NASA Headquarters. Over his career, Green has received numerous awards. In 1988, he received the Arthur S. Flemming award given for outstanding individual performance in the federal government and was awarded Japan's Kotani Prize in 1996 in recognition of his international science data management activities.

More profile about the speaker
James Green | Speaker | TED.com
TED Talks Live

James Green: 3 moons and a planet that could have alien life

James Green: Tres llunes i un planeta que potser tenen vida extraterrestre

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1,837,212 views

Hi ha vida més enllà de la Terra? El director de ciència planetària de la Nasa, James Green, mostra els llocs del nostre sistema solar que poden tenir vida extraterrestre.
- Space physicist
James Green leads NASA's solar system exploration and astrobiology research. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
Is there life beyondmés enllà EarthTerra
in our solarsolar systemsistema?
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Hi ha vida més enllà de la Terra,
al nostre sistema solar?
00:17
WowSorpresa, what a powerfulpotent questionpregunta.
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Caram, quina pregunta més poderosa.
00:20
You know, as a scientistcientífic --
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Com a científics,
00:22
planetaryplanetari scientistcientífic --
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com a planetòlegs,
00:23
we really didn't take that
very seriouslyde debò untilfins a recentlyrecentment.
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no ens ho havíem plantejat
seriosament fins fa ben poc.
00:28
CarlCarl SaganSagan always said,
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Carl Sagan sempre deia:
00:30
"It takes extraordinaryextraordinari evidenceevidència
for extraordinaryextraordinari claimsreclamacions."
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"Les afirmacions extraordinàries
necessiten proves extraordinàries".
00:36
And the claimsreclamacions of havingtenint life beyondmés enllà EarthTerra
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Per afirmar que hi ha vida extraterrestre
00:41
need to be definitivedefinitiva,
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calen proves definitives,
00:43
they need to be loudfort
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que siguin convincents
00:45
and they need to be everywherea tot arreu
for us to be ablecapaç to believe it.
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i han d'estar per tot arreu
perquè ens les creguem.
00:50
So how do we make this journeyviatge?
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Com comencem aquest viatge?
00:54
What we decidedva decidir to do
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El que vam decidir
00:55
is first look for
those ingredientsingredients for life.
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és buscar, primer, els ingredients
necessaris per a la vida.
01:00
The ingredientsingredients of life are:
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Aquests ingredients són:
01:02
liquidlíquid wateraigua --
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aigua líquida,
01:04
we have to have a solventdissolvent,
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hem de tenir un dissolvent,
01:05
can't be icegel, has to be liquidlíquid.
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no pot ser gel, ha de ser líquid.
01:08
We alsotambé have to have energyenergia.
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També hi ha d'haver energia.
01:10
We alsotambé have to have organicorgànic materialmaterial --
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I matèria orgànica,
01:13
things that make us up,
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allò de què estem fets.
01:16
but alsotambé things that we need to consumeconsumir.
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però també el que hem de consumir.
01:19
So we have to have these elementselements
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Per tant, hem de tenir aquests elements
01:22
in environmentsentorns for long periodsperíodes of time
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en entorns durant molt de temps
01:25
for us to be ablecapaç
to be confidentconfiat that life,
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per poder estar segurs que la vida,
01:28
in that momentmoment when it startscomença,
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quan comenci,
01:31
can sparkespurna and then growcréixer and evolveevolucionar.
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pot sorgir, créixer i evolucionar.
01:35
Well, I have to tell you
that earlyaviat in my careercarrera,
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Us he de dir que al principi,
01:39
when we lookedmirava at those threetres elementselements,
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quan observàvem aquests tres elements,
01:41
I didn't believe
that they were beyondmés enllà EarthTerra
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no pensava que existissin fora de la Terra
01:44
in any lengthllargada of time
and for any realreal quantityquantitat.
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durant el temps suficient o
en quantitats significatives.
01:48
Why? We look at the innerinterior planetsplanetes.
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Per què? Fixem-nos
en els planetes interiors.
01:50
VenusVenus is way too hotcalenta -- it's got no wateraigua.
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Venus és massa calent, no hi ha aigua.
01:53
MarsMart -- drysec and aridàrid.
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Mart: sec i àrid.
01:55
It's got no wateraigua.
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Tampoc té aigua.
01:57
And beyondmés enllà MarsMart,
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I més enllà de Mart,
01:58
the wateraigua in the solarsolar systemsistema
is all frozencongelat.
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tota l'aigua del sistema està congelada.
02:03
But recentrecent observationsobservacions
have changedha canviat all that.
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Però observacions recents
ho han canviat tot.
02:07
It's now turningtornejat our attentionatenció
to the right placesllocs
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Ara ens centrem en els llocs adequats
02:11
for us to take a deepermés profund look
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ho observem amb més atenció
02:13
and really startcomençar to answerresposta
our life questionpregunta.
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i podem començar a respondre
la pregunta de si hi ha vida.
02:18
So when we look out into the solarsolar systemsistema,
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Així que, si mirem el sistema solar,
02:21
where are the possibilitiespossibilitats?
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on n'hi podria haver?
02:23
We're concentratingconcentrant-se our attentionatenció
on fourquatre locationsubicacions.
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Ens centrem en quatre llocs.
02:27
The planetplaneta MarsMart
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El planeta Mart
02:29
and then threetres moonsllunes of the outerexterior planetsplanetes:
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i tres llunes dels planetes exteriors:
02:33
TitanTitan, EuropaEuropa and smallpetit EnceladusEncelade.
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Tità, Europa i la petita Encèlad.
02:38
So what about MarsMart?
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Sobre Mart, què?
02:40
Let's go througha través the evidenceevidència.
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Repassem l'evidència.
02:43
Well, MarsMart we thought
was initiallyinicialment moon-likeLluna-com:
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Primer, crèiem que Mart
era similar a la Lluna.
02:47
fullple of craterscràters, aridàrid and a deadmort worldmón.
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ple de cràters, àrid i desolat.
02:52
And so about 15 yearsanys agofa,
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I fa uns 15 anys,
02:55
we startedva començar a seriessèrie
of missionsmissions to go to MarsMart
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vam començar missions per anar a Mart
02:58
and see if wateraigua existedexistit
on MarsMart in its pastpassat
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i comprovar si havia tingut aigua
03:03
that changedha canviat its geologyGeologia.
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que canviés la seva geologia.
03:05
We oughthauria to be ablecapaç to noticeavís that.
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Havíem de ser capaços de notar-ho.
03:08
And indeeden efecte we startedva començar
to be surprisedsorprès right away.
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I vam quedar sorpresos només començar.
03:11
Our highermés alt resolutionresolució imagesimatges
showespectacle deltasdeltes and riverriu valleysValls and gulleyscarrerades
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Les imatges mostraven deltes,
valls fluvials i fondalades
03:16
that were there in the pastpassat.
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que van existir en el passat.
03:19
And in factfet,
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I, de fet,
03:20
CuriosityCuriositat --
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Curiosity
03:21
whichquin has been rovingmetxa on the surfacesuperfície
now for about threetres yearsanys --
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que ja fa uns tres anys
que recorre el planeta
03:26
has really shownmostrat us that it's sittingassegut
in an ancientantic riverriu bedllit,
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ens ha mostrat que és
en un antic llit d'un riu,
03:31
where wateraigua flowedfluïa rapidlyràpidament.
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en què l'aigua hi fluïa ràpidament.
03:34
And not for a little while,
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I no durant poc temps,
03:35
perhapstal vegada hundredscentenars of millionsmilions of yearsanys.
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potser durant centenars de milions d'anys.
03:39
And if everything was there,
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I si tot hi era,
03:40
includingincloent organicscompostos orgànics,
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també matèria orgànica,
03:41
perhapstal vegada life had startedva començar.
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potser hi va sorgir vida.
03:43
CuriosityCuriositat has alsotambé
drilledperforat in that redvermell soilsòl
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Curiosity també ha perforat el terra
03:46
and broughtportat up other materialmaterial.
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i ha extret altres materials.
03:48
And we were really excitedemocionat
when we saw that.
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Ens vam emocionar,
quan ho vam veure.
03:51
Because it wasn'tno ho era redvermell MarsMart,
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Perquè no era vermell,
03:53
it was graygris materialmaterial,
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era de color gris,
03:54
it's graygris MarsMart.
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el planeta gris.
03:56
We broughtportat it into the roverRover,
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Ho vam portar al vehicle,
03:57
we tastedprovat it,
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vam treure'n mostres
03:59
and guesssuposo what?
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i sabeu què?
04:00
We tastedprovat organicscompostos orgànics --
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Vam trobar-hi matèria orgànica.
04:02
carboncarboni, hydrogenhidrogen, oxygenoxigen,
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Carboni, hidrogen, oxigen,
04:05
nitrogenNitrògen, phosphorusfòsfor, sulfursofre --
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nitrogen, fòsfor, sofre...
04:07
they were all there.
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hi havia tot això.
04:09
So MarsMart in its pastpassat,
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Mart, en el passat,
04:11
with a lot of wateraigua,
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amb molta aigua,
04:13
perhapstal vegada plentymolt of time,
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potser molt de temps,
04:15
could have had life,
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podria haver tingut vida,
04:16
could have had that sparkespurna,
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podria haver-hi sorgit,
04:18
could have growncrescut.
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i haver crescut.
04:20
And is that life still there?
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I aquella vida encara hi és?
04:22
We don't know that.
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No ho sabem.
04:24
But a fewpocs yearsanys agofa
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Però fa uns anys
04:26
we startedva començar to look at a numbernúmero of craterscràters.
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vam començar a mirar alguns cràters.
04:29
DuringDurant the summerestiu,
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A l'estiu,
04:30
darkfosc lineslínies would appearapareixen
down the sidescostats of these craterscràters.
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apareixien línies fosques,
baixant pels costats.
04:34
The more we lookedmirava,
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Com més buscàvem,
04:36
the more craterscràters we saw,
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com més cràters miràvem,
04:37
the more of these featurescaracterístiques.
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més línies trobàvem.
04:38
We now know more than a dozendotzena of them.
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N'hem trobat més d'una dotzena.
04:42
A fewpocs monthsmesos agofa the fairyfada taleconte cameva venir trueveritat.
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Fa uns mesos, l'impossible
es va convertir en realitat.
04:46
We announcedanunciat to the worldmón
that we know what these streaksvetes are.
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Vam fer públic que ja sabíem
què eren aquestes línies.
04:50
It's liquidlíquid wateraigua.
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És aigua líquida.
04:53
These craterscràters are weepingplorant
duringdurant the summerestiu.
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Els cràters ploren a l'estiu.
04:56
LiquidLíquid wateraigua is flowingque flueix
down these craterscràters.
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Baixa aigua líquida pels cràters.
05:00
So what are we going to do now --
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Què farem ara,
05:02
now that we see the wateraigua?
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ara que veiem l'aigua?
05:04
Well, it tellsli diu us that MarsMart has
all the ingredientsingredients necessarynecessari for life.
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Bé, ens diu que Mart
té els ingredients per tenir vida.
05:09
In its pastpassat it had perhapstal vegada
two-thirdsdos terços of its northernnord hemispherehemisferi --
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En el passat, pot ser que,
en dos terços de l'hemisferi nord
05:14
there was an oceanoceà.
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hi hagués un oceà.
05:15
It has weepingplorant wateraigua right now.
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Té aigua líquida ara mateix.
05:17
LiquidLíquid wateraigua on its surfacesuperfície.
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Aigua líquida a la superfície.
05:19
It has organicscompostos orgànics.
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Té matèria orgànica.
05:21
It has all the right conditionscondicions.
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Té les condicions correctes.
05:24
So what are we going to do nextPròxim?
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Què farem ara, doncs?
05:26
We're going to launchllançament a seriessèrie of missionsmissions
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Iniciarem un seguit de missions
05:28
to begincomençar that searchcerca for life on MarsMart.
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per buscar vida a Mart.
05:32
And now it's more appealingatractiu
than ever before.
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I ara la cerca és més atractiva que mai.
05:35
As we movemoure's out into the solarsolar systemsistema,
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Si ens endinsem en el sistema solar,
05:38
here'sheus aquí the tinypetit moonlluna EnceladusEncelade.
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hi trobem la petita lluna Encèlad.
05:41
This is not in what we call
the traditionaltradicional habitablehabitable zonezona,
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No és la zona habitable tradicional,
05:44
this areaàrea around the sunsol.
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aquesta àrea al voltant del sol.
05:46
This is much furthermés lluny out.
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Està molt més allunyada.
05:48
This objectobjecte should be
icegel over a silicatesilicat corenucli central.
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Això hauria de ser de gel
sobre un nucli de silicat.
05:54
But what did we find?
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Però què vam descobrir?
05:55
CassiniCassini was there sincedes de llavors 2006,
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Cassini era allà des del 2006,
05:58
and after a coupleparella yearsanys
lookedmirava back after it flewva volar by EnceladusEncelade
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i després d'uns anys,
va passar per Encèlad
06:03
and surprisedsorprès us all.
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i ens va sorprendre a tots.
06:04
EnceladusEncelade is blastingvoladura sheetsfulls of wateraigua
out into the solarsolar systemsistema
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Encèlad envia capes d'aigua
cap al sistema solar
06:10
and sloshingestenent back down ontosobre the moonlluna.
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que cauen un altre cop sobre la lluna.
06:13
What a fabulousfabulós environmentmedi ambient.
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Quin entorn més fabulós.
06:15
CassiniCassini just a fewpocs monthsmesos agofa
alsotambé flewva volar througha través the plumeplomall,
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Cassini fa uns mesos,
va travessar la columna
06:20
and it measuredmesurat silicatesilicat particlespartícules.
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i va detectar partícules de silicat.
06:23
Where does the silicasílice come from?
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D'on ve el silici?
06:25
It musthaver de come from the oceanoceà floorpis.
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Ha de venir del fons de l'oceà.
06:28
The tidalmarea energyenergia is generatedgenerat by SaturnSaturn,
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Saturn crea l'energia de la marea,
06:31
pullingtirant and squeezingestrenyent this moonlluna --
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atraient i estrenyent la lluna
06:34
is meltingfusió that icegel,
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està desfent el gel,
06:35
creatingcreant an oceanoceà.
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i creant un oceà.
06:37
But it's alsotambé doing that to the corenucli central.
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Però també ho fa al nucli.
06:40
Now, the only thing that we can think of
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Per ara, l'única cosa que sabem
06:42
that does that here on EarthTerra
as an analogyanalogia ...
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que fa això a la Terra,
com a analogia
06:46
are hydrothermalhidrotermal ventsreixetes de ventilació.
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són les fumaroles hidrotermals.
06:49
HydrothermalHidrotermal ventsreixetes de ventilació deepprofund in our oceanoceà
were discovereddescobert in 1977.
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Les fumaroles es van descobrir
al fons de l'oceà al 1977.
06:55
OceanographersOceanògraf were completelycompletament surprisedsorprès.
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Els oceanògrafs es van sorprendre molt.
06:58
And now there are thousandsmilers
of these belowbaix the oceanoceà.
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I ara n'hi ha milers sota l'oceà.
07:03
What do we find?
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Què hi descobrim?
07:04
The oceanographersoceanògraf, when they go
and look at these hydrothermalhidrotermal ventsreixetes de ventilació,
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Les fumaroles hidrotermals,
quan els oceanògrafs les observen,
07:07
they're teemingplena with life,
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desborden vida,
07:09
regardlessindependentment of whetherja sigui the wateraigua
is acidicàcids or alkalinealcalina --
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encara que l'aigua sigui àcida o alcalina,
07:13
doesn't mattermatèria.
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tant és.
07:15
So hydrothermalhidrotermal ventsreixetes de ventilació are
a fabulousfabulós aboderesidència for life here on EarthTerra.
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Les fumaroles són excel·lents
per a la vida a la Terra.
07:20
So what about EnceladusEncelade?
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I a Encèlad?
07:23
Well, we believe because it has wateraigua
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Pensem que com que té aigua
07:26
and has had it for
a significantsignificatiu periodperíode of time,
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l'ha tingut durant molt de temps,
07:29
and we believe it has hydrothermalhidrotermal ventsreixetes de ventilació
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i pensem que té fumaroles,
07:33
with perhapstal vegada the right organicorgànic materialmaterial,
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potser amb la matèria orgànica adequada,
07:36
it is a placelloc where life could existexisteixen.
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és un lloc on hi pot haver vida.
07:40
And not just microbialmicrobiana --
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No només microbiana
07:42
maybe more complexcomplex
because it's had time to evolveevolucionar.
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sinó també més complexa,
perquè hi ha hagut temps per evolucionar.
07:47
AnotherUn altre moonlluna, very similarsimilar,
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Una altra lluna, molt similar,
07:50
is EuropaEuropa.
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és Europa.
07:52
GalileoGalileu visitedvisitat Jupiter'sDe Júpiter systemsistema in 1996
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Galileo va visitar Júpiter al 1996
07:58
and madefet fabulousfabulós observationsobservacions of EuropaEuropa.
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i va aportar dades sobre Europa.
08:01
EuropaEuropa, we alsotambé know,
has an under-the-icesota el gel crustescorça oceanoceà.
162
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Sabem que Europa
té un oceà sota la capa de gel.
08:06
GalileoGalileu missionmissió told us that,
but we never saw any plumesplomes.
163
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La missió Galileo ho va mostrar,
però no hem vist que expulsés res.
08:11
But we didn't look for them.
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Però tampoc no ho vam buscar.
08:13
HubbleHubble,
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El Hubble,
08:14
just a coupleparella yearsanys agofa,
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fa un parell d'anys,
08:16
observingobservant EuropaEuropa,
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mentre observava Europa,
08:19
saw plumesplomes of wateraigua
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va veure columnes d'aigua
08:21
sprayingpolvorització from the cracksesquerdes
in the southernmeridional hemispherehemisferi,
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que sorgien de l'hemisferi sud,
08:24
just exactlyexactament like EnceladusEncelade.
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igual que a Encèlad.
08:29
These moonsllunes,
171
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Aquests satèl·lits,
08:31
whichquin are not in what we call
a traditionaltradicional habitablehabitable zonezona,
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que no són a la zona habitable habitual,
08:35
that are out in the solarsolar systemsistema,
173
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que són a la zona exterior del sistema,
08:37
have liquidlíquid wateraigua.
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tenen aigua líquida.
08:39
And if there are organicscompostos orgànics there,
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I si hi ha matèria orgànica,
08:41
there maypot be life.
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potser hi ha vida.
08:43
This is a fabulousfabulós setconjunt of discoveriesdescobriments
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Són uns descobriments extraordinaris
08:45
because these moonsllunes
have been in this environmentmedi ambient like that
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perquè aquests satèl·lits
han estat en aquestes condicions
08:50
for billionsmilers de milions of yearsanys.
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durant milers de milions d'anys.
08:53
Life startedva començar here on EarthTerra, we believe,
after about the first 500 millionmilions,
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La vida a la Terra va començar
després dels primers 500 milions,
08:58
and look where we are.
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i mireu on som ara.
09:01
These moonsllunes are fabulousfabulós moonsllunes.
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Aquestes llunes són meravelloses.
09:04
AnotherUn altre moonlluna that we're
looking at is TitanTitan.
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També observem un altre satèl·lit: Tità.
09:08
TitanTitan is a hugeenorme moonlluna of SaturnSaturn.
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Tità és una lluna enorme de Saturn.
09:10
It perhapstal vegada is much largermés gran
than the planetplaneta MercuryMercuri.
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Probablement és més gran que Mercuri.
09:14
It has an extensiveextensa atmosphereambient.
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Té una atmosfera extensa.
09:17
It's so extensiveextensa --
187
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És tan extensa...
09:18
and it's mostlysobretot nitrogenNitrògen
with a little methanemetà and ethaneetà --
188
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i és sobretot nitrogen,
amb una mica de metà i età
09:23
that you have to peercompany
througha través it with radarradar.
189
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que hi has de mirar a través amb radar.
09:25
And on the surfacesuperfície,
CassiniCassini has foundtrobat liquidlíquid.
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A la superfície,
Cassini hi ha trobat líquid.
09:29
We see lakesllacs ...
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Hi veiem llacs
09:32
actuallyen realitat almostgairebé the sizemida
of our BlackNegre SeaMar in some placesllocs.
192
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de fet, en alguns llocs,
gairebé de la mida del Mar Negre.
09:36
And this areaàrea is not liquidlíquid wateraigua;
193
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Aquests llacs no són d'aigua líquida,
09:39
it's methanemetà.
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són de metà.
09:41
If there's any placelloc in the solarsolar systemsistema
where life is not like us,
195
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Si hi ha algun lloc al sistema solar,
on la vida no és com la coneixem,
09:47
where the substitutesubstitut of wateraigua
is anotherun altre solventdissolvent --
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on el substitut de l'aigua
és un altre dissolvent,
09:50
and it could be methanemetà --
197
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potser el metà,
09:52
it could be TitanTitan.
198
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podria ser Tità.
09:54
Well, is there life beyondmés enllà EarthTerra
in the solarsolar systemsistema?
199
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Hi ha vida extraterrestre
en el sistema solar?
09:58
We don't know yetencara,
200
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No ho sabem, encara,
10:00
but we're hotcalenta on the pursuitpersecució.
201
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però ens hi estem apropant.
10:02
The datadades that we're receivingrebent
is really excitingemocionant
202
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Les dades que rebem són fascinants,
10:04
and tellingdient us --
203
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i ens diuen,
10:06
forcingforçant us to think about this
in newnou and excitingemocionant waysmaneres.
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ens obliguen a pensar
de manera completament diferent.
10:10
I believe we're on the right trackseguiment.
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Penso que anem pel bon camí.
10:13
That in the nextPròxim 10 yearsanys,
we will answerresposta that questionpregunta.
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Que en 10 anys respondrem la pregunta.
10:17
And if we answerresposta it,
207
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1936
I si ho aconseguim,
10:19
and it's positivepositiu,
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i la resposta és afirmativa,
10:21
then life is everywherea tot arreu
in the solarsolar systemsistema.
209
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aleshores hi ha vida
per tot el sistema solar.
10:25
Just think about that.
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Penseu-hi.
10:27
We maypot not be alonesol.
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Potser no estem sols.
10:30
Thank you.
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Gràcies.
10:31
(ApplauseAplaudiments)
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(Aplaudiments)
Translated by Agustí Gállego
Reviewed by Elena Pérez Gómez

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
James Green - Space physicist
James Green leads NASA's solar system exploration and astrobiology research.

Why you should listen

Dr. James Green began his career at NASA 35 years ago at the Marshall Space Flight Center, where he developed and managed the Space Physics Analysis Network. It provided scientists all over the world rapid access to data and resources. As NASA's Director of Planetary Science he leads NASA's solar system exploration and astrobiology research.

Green received his Ph.D. in Space Physics from the University of Iowa in 1979 and began working in the Magnetospheric Physics Branch at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in 1980. At Marshall, Green developed and managed the Space Physics Analysis Network that provided scientists all over the world with rapid access to data, to other scientists, and to specific NASA computer and information resources. In addition, Green was a Safety Diver in the Neutral Buoyancy tank making over 150 dives until left MSFC in 1985.

From 1985 to 1992 Green was the head of the National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC) at Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC). The NSSDC is NASA's largest space science data archive. In 1992, he became the Chief of the Space Science Data Operations Office until 2005, when he became the Chief of the Science Proposal Support Office. While at GSFC, Green was a co-investigator and the Deputy Project Scientist on the Imager for Magnetopause-to-Aurora Global Exploration (IMAGE) mission. He has written over 100 scientific articles in refereed journals involving various aspects of the Earth's and Jupiter's magnetospheres and over 50 technical articles on various aspects of data systems and networks.

In August 2006, Green became the Director of the Planetary Science Division at NASA Headquarters. Over his career, Green has received numerous awards. In 1988, he received the Arthur S. Flemming award given for outstanding individual performance in the federal government and was awarded Japan's Kotani Prize in 1996 in recognition of his international science data management activities.

More profile about the speaker
James Green | Speaker | TED.com

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