Butit's probablystill a simplerlifestylethanyouor I areusedto, andthesedaysitmainlyexiststoprotecttheGreenBankObservatory.
Theobservatoryhashad a lotoftelescopesovertheyears, fromtheworld's firstfullyautomatedoneto a 20-metertelescopecurrentlyrunbytheUniversityofNorthCarolina.
In 1969, GreenBank's 43-metertelescopeevendiscoveredthefirstcomplexmoleculefoundinspace: formaldehyde.
Later, italsofound a bunchofothers, includingcyanoacetylene—a possibleprecursortonucleicacids, thestuffinDNA.
I mean, wedefinitelydidn't discoverDNAinthecenterofthegalaxyoranything, butfindingmoleculesliketheserevealsthekindsofconditionsthesecomplexmoleculesneedtoform.
Specifically, whiletrackingblobsofhydrogenfoundinspiralgalaxies, the 300-FootTelescopefoundthat a galaxy's outerregionsspinjustaboutasfastastheirmiddleregions.
Thatdoesn't soundlike a bigdeal, butunderourcurrentunderstandingofphysics, thatdoesn't happen.
JustlikethemoredistantplanetsinoursolarsystemtakemoretimetogoaroundtheSun, theouterblobsshouldbegoing a lotslowerthanobservationsrevealed.
Wehave a co-workeratSciShowwhogets a littleweepyatparadesbecausetheylovetoseepeopleworkingtogether, andthat's how I feelthinkingaboutthecitizensofGreenBank.