The summary is:
This is a transcript of a video where French astronaut Thomas Pesquet comments on some scenes from movies about space, such as Gravity, The Martian, and Ad Astra. He compares the movies with his own experience and knowledge of space exploration, and points out some realistic and unrealistic aspects. He also explains some concepts and challenges of space travel, such as debris, black holes, wormholes, and colonization. He says he enjoys watching movies about space, even if they are not completely accurate, because it is his passion.
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- The text is a transcript of a video where Thomas Pesquet, a French astronaut, comments on scenes from various movies about space.
- Pesquet talks about the realism, the challenges and the future of space exploration, drawing from his own experience and knowledge.
- Some of the movies he reviews are Gravity, The Martian, Interstellar and Ad Astra.
- Some of the topics he covers are space debris, black holes, wormholes, lunar bases, space stations, space suits, space walks and space tourism.
- Some of the facts he mentions are:
- The core of the Sun has a temperature of 15 million degrees kelvins.
- A sol is a unit of time on Mars that is slightly longer than a terrestrial day.
- The space station has a robotic arm of 17 meters that can move astronauts around.
- There are laws that prevent nations from appropriating resources on the Moon.
- Space agencies try to avoid leaving debris behind in orbit and plan to clean up some of them in the future.
- Space exploration works in small leaps, with explorers followed by settlers.