Erika Hamden: What it takes to launch a telescope
艾瑞卡·汉登: 如何建造望远镜
TED Fellow Erika Hamden builds telescopes, with a focus on the ultraviolet, and develops sensor technology to make telescopes more efficient. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
number one, they are awesome.
原因之一是因为它们很棒。
a new thing about the universe,
新的角度来观察宇宙,
from an idea into orbit.
because I live it.
因为我经历过。
都失败,但依然坚持尝试,
almost all the time and still keep going,
red-shifted emission balloon,
to explode at the end of this story.
for more than 10 years
研究已经有10多年了,
of incredible people who built it.
some of the faintest structures known:
非常模糊的结构:
whatever you're thinking of.
flow into and out of galaxies.
is to take our view of the universe
every atom that exists.
of why galaxies look the way they do.
有至关重要的作用。
gets into a galaxy and creates a star.
进而创造一个恒星的。
but on the light sensor,
还有而是光敏元件,
by a team that I joined
喷气式飞机推进实验室加入的小组。
that this sensor would work really well
very, very expensive sensors
the machine I was using
anything electrical that we put in it.
我们放进去的所有电子设备。
there were other challenges,
than the previous state of the art
最新科技好上10倍,
all kinds of new telescopes.
认识宇宙和我们的位置。
to see the universe and our place in it.
as far as telescopes go,
and it's not on the ground.
from a giant balloon
巨型气球的电缆上,
宇宙边缘比真正的宇宙便宜多了。
is much cheaper than actual space.
again and again and again and again;
又一次地重新测试;
least expect them:
降落在我们的光谱仪上,
baby falcon that landed
这是这个项目历史上
this was the greatest day
in the New Mexico desert.
时长六周的连续降雨。
项目工作进入第10年,
许多——我整个生命,
my whole life -- into this project,
that that happened.
接下来发生的事。
right around sunset on that day
these balloons are spherical,
这些气球应该是球型的,
in the New Mexico desert,
I thought to myself,
about why since that day.
has been full of things
of people who built Hubble
heartbreaking failures,
were a reason for them to give up.
is happening in the universe.
what's happening in the universe, too.
with that hydrogen.
that discovery is mostly a process
失败是不可避免的。
you're pushing the limits of knowledge.
built anything before us has done:
and it really does --
的确是一次失败——
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Erika Hamden - AstrophysicistTED Fellow Erika Hamden builds telescopes, with a focus on the ultraviolet, and develops sensor technology to make telescopes more efficient.
Why you should listen
Dr. Erika Hamden is a professor of astrophysics at the University of Arizona. Her observational focus is on measuring and mapping diffuse hydrogen around galaxies and within star forming regions in our own galaxy. Her current projects include FIREBall, a UV balloon-borne telescope; KCRM, a spectrograph for the Keck telescope; and Hyperion, a UV space telescope she is currently developing. Her work is driven by a desire to know and understand more about the universe around us.
Hamden received a bachelor's from Harvard in 2006 and a PhD from Columbia in 2014, both in astrophysics. She has held an NSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellow and the R.A. and G.B. Millikan Prize Postdoctoral Fellow in Experimental Physics at the Caltech. She was awarded a Nancy Grace Roman Technology Fellowship for her detector work in 2016. She worked as a chef for a year before beginning grad school and has a serious yoga practice.
Erika Hamden | Speaker | TED.com