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Discovering the Universe’s best kept secrets 水下望遠(yuǎn)鏡探索宇宙奧秘
有關(guān) “science(科學(xué))” 的詞匯
Which Russian lake is this telescope being dropped into?
This is the world’s biggest underwater telescope – plunging into the world’s deepest waters to discover some of the tiniest particles known to man.
這是世界上最大的水下望遠(yuǎn)鏡,潛入世界上最深的水域,探索人類(lèi)已知的最小微粒。
This massive space telescope is what it takes to detect the Universe’s best kept secrets – neutrinos – also nicknamed ‘ghost particles’.
科學(xué)家們需要用這臺(tái)大型太空望遠(yuǎn)鏡來(lái)探測(cè)宇宙中最隱蔽的秘密,即中微子,別名 “幽靈粒子”。
Made of strings, glass and stainless steel, Russian scientists are plunging it more than 700 metres into Russia’s Lake Baikal.
這臺(tái)望遠(yuǎn)鏡由細(xì)線(xiàn)、玻璃和不銹鋼制成,俄羅斯的科學(xué)家們正在把它投入俄羅斯貝加爾湖700多米深的地方。
Bair Shaiybonov, Senior Researcher, Joint Institute for Nuclear Research
Lake Baikal is perhaps the only lake where a neutrino telescope can be deployed due to its depth. We need the greatest possible depth, over a kilometre. Fresh water is also important for its transparency. And we also have an ice covering lasting two to two and a half months, which is very important for the deployment of the telescope.
拜爾·沙伊博諾夫???? 杜布納聯(lián)合核子研究所高級(jí)研究員
“貝加爾湖可能是唯一一個(gè)可以安置中微子望遠(yuǎn)鏡的湖泊,因?yàn)樗苌?。我們需要盡可能深,超過(guò)一千米深。淡水也很重要,因?yàn)樗耐该鞫雀?。此外,貝加爾湖面一年中有兩到兩個(gè)半月被冰層覆蓋,這對(duì)望遠(yuǎn)鏡的安置來(lái)說(shuō)非常重要?!?/p>
So why go to all this effort? Neutrinos are subatomic particles, and while there are plenty in the Universe, they’re very hard to detect.
為什么要如此大費(fèi)周折?中微子是次原子粒子,雖然宇宙中有大量中微子,但它們很難被探測(cè)到。
Scientists are hoping that by capturing the elusive neutrinos, they’ll be able to better understand the Universe – finding out how it came to be and how it’s evolved to what we know today.
科學(xué)家們希望,通過(guò)捕捉這些難以找到的中微子,他們能夠更好地了解宇宙,并探索宇宙的誕生及演變至今的過(guò)程。
It seems some of the Universe’s biggest secrets are locked in a tiny package.
宇宙中的一些最重大的秘密似乎就藏在毫厘之間。
particles 微粒,粒子
detect 探測(cè),檢測(cè)
capturing 捕捉,采集信息
evolved 逐步演變
Russian scientists are plunging the telescope more than 700 metres into Russia’s Lake Baikal.