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Tim Vicary

Space

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A level 3 Oxford Bookworms Library graded reader. Written for Learners of English by Tim Vicary.

Is there anyone who has not looked at the dark sky, and the shining points of light above us, and asked themselves questions about what is out there? Where did our planet come from? When did the universe begin? Could we live on another planet? And one question above all – is there life anywhere else in space? Begin a journey into space – where spacecraft travel at thousands of kilometres an hour, temperatures are millions of degrees, and a planet may be hard rock – or a ball of gas. In space, everything is extraordinary . . .
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94 printed pages
Publication year
2012
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Quotes

  • Beyzanur ÇAMhas quoted3 years ago
    ‘That’s one small step for a man,’
  • Lisset Montalbánhas quoted3 years ago
    The icy surface of Europa

    Scientists are very excited about this. One day, they hope to send a space probe to Europa. When the probe lands, it will use radar to look for water under the ice. ‘We have already done this sort of thing on the Earth,’ says astronomer Chris Chyba. ‘There’s a lake in Antarctica that’s under 4 kilometres of ice. It’s called Lake Vostok – and it was discovered with radar. So that’s what we could do on Europa, and I think we probably will.’

    If they find the ocean, they will send a submarine down into it. And that will be very exciting indeed. When the submarine turns on its lights, what will it see? Huge fish, with no eyes and enormous teeth? Nobody knows. But scientists want to find out.

    Another moon which may have life is Titan. Titan is Saturn’s biggest moon; it is bigger than the planet Mercury. In fact, Titan probably was a planet once, before it came too near Saturn. It is different from all Saturn’s other moons, because it goes around
  • Lisset Montalbánhas quoted3 years ago
    Inside a very large star the temperature gets hotter and hotter. Hydrogen turns to helium, and then into other things – carbon, oxygen, and iron. But then, one day, the star becomes too hot, and there is not enough hydrogen left. Then, very suddenly, the star collapses. As it collapses, it gets even hotter still, and then it explodes. In the explosion, the temperature may reach 100 billion °C.

    This exploding star is called a supernova. One day in the next million years, Betelgeuse, that big red star in Orion, will explode like this. In fact, it is possible that it exploded a hundred years ago, and is already a supernova. But the light from the explosion has not reached us yet, so we cannot see it.

    When the light from a really big supernova does reach the Earth, it is really exciting. Sometimes people can see the supernova in daylight. People in Japan and China saw a supernova like this in 1024 AD, and people in England saw one in 1604 AD.

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