1 00:00:00,040 --> 00:00:02,040 Speaker 1: You hear me mention just a moment ago about this 2 00:00:02,279 --> 00:00:07,080 Speaker 1: interstellar comet three I Ford slash Atlas And apparently it's 3 00:00:07,080 --> 00:00:10,760 Speaker 1: capturing imaginations around the world, and it's making its closest 4 00:00:10,760 --> 00:00:14,960 Speaker 1: approach to Earth today and apparently offering astronomer as a 5 00:00:15,040 --> 00:00:19,120 Speaker 1: narrow window to observe the rear visitor from a different galaxy. 6 00:00:19,880 --> 00:00:22,959 Speaker 1: And scientists are saying it poses no danger to Earth 7 00:00:23,040 --> 00:00:25,279 Speaker 1: or any other planets as it passes through the Inner 8 00:00:25,320 --> 00:00:28,680 Speaker 1: Solar System. It was spotted in the first of July 9 00:00:29,160 --> 00:00:33,280 Speaker 1: and Chile, as I understand it, And there's a whole 10 00:00:33,320 --> 00:00:37,160 Speaker 1: lot of theories, different theories that are getting around about 11 00:00:37,159 --> 00:00:41,920 Speaker 1: this particular comet, one being that it was sent by aliens. 12 00:00:42,720 --> 00:00:46,840 Speaker 1: Joining me now is somebody who knows all about the cosmos, 13 00:00:46,960 --> 00:00:49,680 Speaker 1: Dave Rennick Astro Dave, A very good evening to you, 14 00:00:49,800 --> 00:00:51,920 Speaker 1: and seasons greetings as well. Dave, thanks for coming on 15 00:00:51,960 --> 00:00:53,080 Speaker 1: the program tonight. 16 00:00:54,600 --> 00:00:56,400 Speaker 2: With you again. 17 00:00:57,320 --> 00:01:00,360 Speaker 1: Yeah, no, thank you very much and making yourself able 18 00:01:00,400 --> 00:01:02,520 Speaker 1: to such your notice too, because I read the article 19 00:01:02,560 --> 00:01:04,600 Speaker 1: and I thought I've got to speak to Dave about 20 00:01:04,600 --> 00:01:07,280 Speaker 1: this because the different theories that are getting around. 21 00:01:07,319 --> 00:01:10,560 Speaker 2: What do you know, oh, what would we do? Without face. 22 00:01:12,240 --> 00:01:16,120 Speaker 2: What would we do without all the face of Andrew. 23 00:01:16,160 --> 00:01:20,800 Speaker 2: You know, you're being in the business a long time, 24 00:01:20,880 --> 00:01:22,480 Speaker 2: you would have heard it all too. Look, it's not 25 00:01:22,560 --> 00:01:27,280 Speaker 2: a spaceship. God's sake. These things really get my guard. 26 00:01:27,800 --> 00:01:31,520 Speaker 2: I fight people on on. I've got to stop doing it. Look, 27 00:01:32,240 --> 00:01:35,319 Speaker 2: it's a comment, it's simply a commet. But the good 28 00:01:35,360 --> 00:01:38,960 Speaker 2: thing about this is it's from somewhere else. This is 29 00:01:39,000 --> 00:01:41,960 Speaker 2: the first time we've ever seen anything like this come 30 00:01:42,000 --> 00:01:44,119 Speaker 2: close to us. It is a third object to pay 31 00:01:44,160 --> 00:01:47,120 Speaker 2: a little visit to us, and it's called thirty one atrios. 32 00:01:47,760 --> 00:01:51,000 Speaker 2: Thirty one means as third confirmed or three I if 33 00:01:51,000 --> 00:01:54,560 Speaker 2: you want, third confirms interstellar object is seen passing through 34 00:01:54,560 --> 00:01:58,600 Speaker 2: our solar system. This is from somewhere else. The amazing 35 00:01:58,680 --> 00:02:02,560 Speaker 2: part about this is we're seeing some part or a 36 00:02:02,600 --> 00:02:07,560 Speaker 2: piece of somebody else's solar system two hundred and seventy 37 00:02:07,720 --> 00:02:11,840 Speaker 2: million kilometers from here. Isn't that amazing? That's how far 38 00:02:11,919 --> 00:02:12,080 Speaker 2: we are. 39 00:02:12,080 --> 00:02:13,560 Speaker 1: I'm amazing, right, Yeah, but. 40 00:02:13,960 --> 00:02:18,240 Speaker 2: That's relatively close in astronomical terms. Why I say that, one, 41 00:02:18,280 --> 00:02:21,120 Speaker 2: I'm excited about it. If we could have grabbed a 42 00:02:21,120 --> 00:02:23,600 Speaker 2: little piece of this comet, and we can't because it's 43 00:02:23,639 --> 00:02:26,079 Speaker 2: already moving too quickly, and we found it too late. 44 00:02:26,680 --> 00:02:30,120 Speaker 2: We would have a sample of somebody else's solar system, 45 00:02:30,520 --> 00:02:33,880 Speaker 2: and maybe in that sample, because comments are the bringers 46 00:02:33,880 --> 00:02:36,880 Speaker 2: of life, maybe in that sample maybe little bits and 47 00:02:36,880 --> 00:02:39,120 Speaker 2: pieces of life from another system, another world. 48 00:02:40,440 --> 00:02:41,920 Speaker 1: But unfortunately would never know. 49 00:02:42,800 --> 00:02:45,960 Speaker 2: We're never going to know. It'll never return. It's on 50 00:02:46,160 --> 00:02:48,720 Speaker 2: a one way journey. And do you know what this 51 00:02:48,840 --> 00:02:52,799 Speaker 2: object leftist destination before human beings existed on this planet. 52 00:02:52,840 --> 00:02:53,639 Speaker 2: It's not amazing. 53 00:02:53,760 --> 00:02:56,720 Speaker 1: That is amazing, That is amazing. What a journey, what 54 00:02:56,800 --> 00:03:00,000 Speaker 1: an incredible journey. 55 00:03:00,320 --> 00:03:03,079 Speaker 2: Much Unfortunately, you know you're going to ask me where 56 00:03:03,080 --> 00:03:05,080 Speaker 2: can I have a look? Book? The best best time 57 00:03:05,160 --> 00:03:07,720 Speaker 2: is late evening to around midnight. 58 00:03:07,600 --> 00:03:09,639 Speaker 1: Right, and where would you look? Where would you look? 59 00:03:09,919 --> 00:03:12,000 Speaker 1: Or can you go live stream somewhere? 60 00:03:12,720 --> 00:03:15,400 Speaker 2: Yeah? Probably will if you want to go on trail 61 00:03:15,440 --> 00:03:19,680 Speaker 2: on the internet, you probably do that. But I must 62 00:03:19,680 --> 00:03:21,440 Speaker 2: say it's the only way you're going to do it, Andrew, 63 00:03:21,480 --> 00:03:23,800 Speaker 2: because it might be really visible to you. Even if 64 00:03:23,800 --> 00:03:25,360 Speaker 2: you had a pair of anos. You've got to know 65 00:03:25,400 --> 00:03:28,480 Speaker 2: exactly where to have a look. And you know, once 66 00:03:28,520 --> 00:03:30,440 Speaker 2: the sky is duck, you got to know exactly And 67 00:03:30,480 --> 00:03:33,040 Speaker 2: I don't have any details on that. I don't think 68 00:03:33,120 --> 00:03:35,600 Speaker 2: many people would, and even if you did, you'd only 69 00:03:35,640 --> 00:03:38,720 Speaker 2: see a tiny little dot moving. But that's not the point. 70 00:03:38,840 --> 00:03:41,800 Speaker 2: This is another comet, a comet and a piece of 71 00:03:41,920 --> 00:03:45,080 Speaker 2: another solar system that we've never seen before. It's a 72 00:03:45,120 --> 00:03:49,640 Speaker 2: third one and unfortunately now from a Harvard professor and 73 00:03:50,480 --> 00:03:53,600 Speaker 2: Abby Lowe who has become the joke of the entire 74 00:03:53,680 --> 00:03:57,840 Speaker 2: scientific world by proposing that this is possibly a spacecraft 75 00:03:58,240 --> 00:03:59,560 Speaker 2: inside an asteroid. 76 00:04:01,360 --> 00:04:05,320 Speaker 1: Anyway, chevity has been chbody's been watching too many movies. 77 00:04:05,920 --> 00:04:09,160 Speaker 2: I think, so it did las the imagination of people 78 00:04:09,280 --> 00:04:11,520 Speaker 2: love that, you know. With the wild we've got today 79 00:04:11,520 --> 00:04:13,400 Speaker 2: and the stuff that's going on around there, it's a 80 00:04:13,400 --> 00:04:16,320 Speaker 2: little bit of escape as if you will. But look 81 00:04:17,200 --> 00:04:19,120 Speaker 2: it is nice. I mean in the job that I have, 82 00:04:19,320 --> 00:04:21,640 Speaker 2: what I do here, and why I'm up to talk 83 00:04:21,680 --> 00:04:24,880 Speaker 2: about this stuff is that we're learning more. We're able 84 00:04:24,880 --> 00:04:27,440 Speaker 2: to see more than you've ever thereon before. And we've 85 00:04:27,480 --> 00:04:30,520 Speaker 2: got telescopes now, and you know, computerized systems now that 86 00:04:30,600 --> 00:04:33,640 Speaker 2: work those telescopes that allow us to see these sort 87 00:04:33,720 --> 00:04:36,360 Speaker 2: of things. When we say a comet, comets are interesting, 88 00:04:37,200 --> 00:04:40,800 Speaker 2: they we think are the things that seeded life here 89 00:04:41,240 --> 00:04:43,800 Speaker 2: because when the Earth was warming, the Earth was bombarded 90 00:04:43,839 --> 00:04:47,039 Speaker 2: by comets. Now, these comets come from outside the Solar 91 00:04:47,080 --> 00:04:50,800 Speaker 2: system in a ringy rocky material around called the Kayper 92 00:04:50,839 --> 00:04:54,160 Speaker 2: build and further out the odd Cloud. Now we know 93 00:04:54,320 --> 00:04:57,760 Speaker 2: that by finding samples of the heads of comments over 94 00:04:57,760 --> 00:05:00,440 Speaker 2: the years and meteorized and things are an asteroids. We 95 00:05:00,560 --> 00:05:03,159 Speaker 2: know we found, you know, the basic DNA structure in 96 00:05:03,200 --> 00:05:05,200 Speaker 2: some of these. One of these is in meteor from 97 00:05:05,279 --> 00:05:09,120 Speaker 2: Victoria in the late seventies, the emergency mediaite which I 98 00:05:09,160 --> 00:05:12,000 Speaker 2: had a little bit of something to do with the 99 00:05:12,040 --> 00:05:14,920 Speaker 2: analysis that showed a little bit of DNA structure in there. 100 00:05:14,960 --> 00:05:18,240 Speaker 2: So we think that you know, this comment, if we 101 00:05:18,240 --> 00:05:20,279 Speaker 2: could have grabbed it would have been a very very 102 00:05:20,320 --> 00:05:24,240 Speaker 2: scientific prize, very very valuable scientific prize if we could 103 00:05:24,279 --> 00:05:27,039 Speaker 2: analyze it. But we'll never see it again us on 104 00:05:27,040 --> 00:05:30,279 Speaker 2: a one way journey. So we're seeing for the first time, 105 00:05:30,480 --> 00:05:33,800 Speaker 2: you know, one of three objects that were never ever 106 00:05:33,880 --> 00:05:36,680 Speaker 2: part of our solar system from some of the sols. 107 00:05:36,480 --> 00:05:40,280 Speaker 1: A right, what time period have the three come into 108 00:05:40,480 --> 00:05:41,880 Speaker 1: our solar system? 109 00:05:42,240 --> 00:05:45,080 Speaker 2: Only in the last few months. These things don't travel 110 00:05:45,080 --> 00:05:48,760 Speaker 2: all that quickly relative terms of our moving fairly fast 111 00:05:49,360 --> 00:05:52,120 Speaker 2: and You've got to understand that the solar system is 112 00:05:52,120 --> 00:05:55,320 Speaker 2: pretty big. It takes a while for them to go. 113 00:05:55,720 --> 00:05:58,400 Speaker 2: Comets usually head towards the Sun, spin around the stun 114 00:05:58,480 --> 00:06:01,120 Speaker 2: and come back shoot the cat into space, and then 115 00:06:01,160 --> 00:06:03,880 Speaker 2: they return again. These are the ones we know about. 116 00:06:03,960 --> 00:06:06,760 Speaker 2: You know, how is ali comment? Is? How this comed 117 00:06:06,839 --> 00:06:09,720 Speaker 2: is one of those It does that. But these are 118 00:06:09,760 --> 00:06:10,919 Speaker 2: on a one way. 119 00:06:10,800 --> 00:06:14,080 Speaker 1: Journey, not. 120 00:06:18,720 --> 00:06:23,640 Speaker 2: Like that. Look just the thing about it, and you said, 121 00:06:23,880 --> 00:06:26,120 Speaker 2: you know, this is just this as a visitor. This 122 00:06:26,240 --> 00:06:29,279 Speaker 2: is from somewhere else. We've never seen it before. And 123 00:06:29,320 --> 00:06:32,600 Speaker 2: it just shows you that, you know, these comments can 124 00:06:32,640 --> 00:06:36,800 Speaker 2: travel around other soul systems. Maybe the life we've got here, 125 00:06:36,880 --> 00:06:39,840 Speaker 2: this is this is really pulling a long though. But 126 00:06:40,000 --> 00:06:42,680 Speaker 2: maybe maybe if one of these comments came by in 127 00:06:42,720 --> 00:06:45,640 Speaker 2: the past and when the Earth was warning and collided 128 00:06:45,680 --> 00:06:48,159 Speaker 2: with the Earth, we may be we may be the 129 00:06:48,200 --> 00:06:51,640 Speaker 2: result of a life from somewhere else that evolved here 130 00:06:52,040 --> 00:06:53,159 Speaker 2: for that reason. You know. 131 00:06:54,600 --> 00:06:57,080 Speaker 1: Wouldn't that we've had this, we've had this conversation in 132 00:06:57,120 --> 00:06:59,160 Speaker 1: the past. Wouldn't that throw a span on the. 133 00:06:59,080 --> 00:07:03,400 Speaker 2: Works we have? And the new shows how life can 134 00:07:03,480 --> 00:07:06,960 Speaker 2: be how called pantheraphomia, How life can be spread throughout 135 00:07:06,960 --> 00:07:11,520 Speaker 2: the universe by these passing objects called collins and asteroids. 136 00:07:11,560 --> 00:07:13,880 Speaker 1: Yeah. Hey, if it had been a few days later, 137 00:07:14,040 --> 00:07:16,600 Speaker 1: maybe the twenty fourth of December, people would have maybe 138 00:07:16,640 --> 00:07:18,680 Speaker 1: speculated that it was going to be fun for Christmas. 139 00:07:19,080 --> 00:07:25,280 Speaker 2: Christmas. Yeah, there's a beautiful businesses in the sky there, 140 00:07:25,320 --> 00:07:30,680 Speaker 2: that's this morning star. But look, I just enjoy the 141 00:07:30,760 --> 00:07:34,080 Speaker 2: nice sky. If you get a telescope Christmas bonds, good 142 00:07:34,080 --> 00:07:36,480 Speaker 2: on your head out for the hills, go where it's 143 00:07:36,520 --> 00:07:39,200 Speaker 2: nice and dark. But if you do get a telescope 144 00:07:39,240 --> 00:07:43,640 Speaker 2: or Christmas, please go down to your amazing observatory down there, 145 00:07:43,640 --> 00:07:47,000 Speaker 2: the one you've got in Adelaide there we've talked about 146 00:07:47,040 --> 00:07:50,520 Speaker 2: sometime before. The planetarium you've got down there, that will 147 00:07:50,560 --> 00:07:51,840 Speaker 2: certainly give us some advice on you. 148 00:07:52,320 --> 00:07:54,640 Speaker 1: Oh beautiful. And I was actually going to ask you 149 00:07:54,680 --> 00:07:57,360 Speaker 1: that question. With Christmas just around the corner, just a 150 00:07:57,360 --> 00:08:01,160 Speaker 1: few days away now, Dave, with a Christmas present for 151 00:08:01,560 --> 00:08:04,880 Speaker 1: a child who's fascinated with the cosmos, with the universe, 152 00:08:05,000 --> 00:08:08,120 Speaker 1: with all things to do with astrology and astronomy and 153 00:08:08,120 --> 00:08:08,440 Speaker 1: all that. 154 00:08:08,360 --> 00:08:11,480 Speaker 2: Sort of business, what are the best you mean? 155 00:08:11,600 --> 00:08:14,320 Speaker 1: Yeah, what would be a good Christmas present for somebody 156 00:08:14,480 --> 00:08:17,040 Speaker 1: is looking for something for a child with an interest 157 00:08:17,120 --> 00:08:19,080 Speaker 1: in space and everything up there. 158 00:08:19,680 --> 00:08:22,440 Speaker 2: We kids, even now young kids know how to use computers. 159 00:08:22,760 --> 00:08:24,440 Speaker 2: What I suggested is go and have a look at 160 00:08:24,480 --> 00:08:28,520 Speaker 2: the star sends S T S n C. See. There 161 00:08:28,520 --> 00:08:31,840 Speaker 2: are a group of telescopes that are produced now andrew 162 00:08:31,920 --> 00:08:35,120 Speaker 2: that are monecority priced, not real deer. But they've got 163 00:08:35,120 --> 00:08:37,440 Speaker 2: the vision to put your iPhone, your iPad on there 164 00:08:37,840 --> 00:08:39,760 Speaker 2: and it'll dial up on the screen whenever you want 165 00:08:39,760 --> 00:08:41,720 Speaker 2: to look at it. Can't find it for it, So 166 00:08:41,960 --> 00:08:44,760 Speaker 2: when you go to Adelaida Optica will go to help 167 00:08:44,800 --> 00:08:48,040 Speaker 2: you down there. But go to anyone who sells telescopes. 168 00:08:48,080 --> 00:08:50,400 Speaker 2: Don't buy them at the apartment store. Go to a 169 00:08:50,480 --> 00:08:53,400 Speaker 2: camera shop and buy one of these celloscopes. Be careful 170 00:08:53,440 --> 00:08:56,280 Speaker 2: of the price too, Anything under three hundred dollars in 171 00:08:56,320 --> 00:09:00,559 Speaker 2: Australians generally junk. And make sure you get a quality telescope. 172 00:09:00,640 --> 00:09:02,360 Speaker 2: Got a little bit of weight to it. If it's 173 00:09:02,440 --> 00:09:04,960 Speaker 2: two lights going to wabble in the breeze, no good. 174 00:09:05,040 --> 00:09:07,959 Speaker 2: My advice is go down to the planetarium, ask them 175 00:09:08,000 --> 00:09:10,199 Speaker 2: what you think. But there's a new type of telescope 176 00:09:10,240 --> 00:09:12,560 Speaker 2: for young people which has taken the world by storm. 177 00:09:13,160 --> 00:09:16,000 Speaker 2: And I believe I still believe it's all star since 178 00:09:16,600 --> 00:09:19,480 Speaker 2: Michael Worth, while having a look online for that, I 179 00:09:20,280 --> 00:09:24,319 Speaker 2: here in yourself. Well, Ben tell b I n T 180 00:09:24,440 --> 00:09:26,200 Speaker 2: E L. And they do distribute right around the. 181 00:09:26,200 --> 00:09:28,959 Speaker 1: Stret Well, it's come a long way since Galileo, hasn't it. 182 00:09:29,440 --> 00:09:32,600 Speaker 2: Oh you bet? You know the telescopes today. 183 00:09:33,880 --> 00:09:37,760 Speaker 1: Yeah, but even when you think about it, that sort 184 00:09:37,760 --> 00:09:41,199 Speaker 1: of level of technology in Galileos a day too. Just 185 00:09:41,840 --> 00:09:44,160 Speaker 1: to be able to come up with that is quite phenomenal. 186 00:09:44,800 --> 00:09:47,599 Speaker 2: Oh, he was phenomenal. He didn't invent the telescope. He 187 00:09:47,920 --> 00:09:54,000 Speaker 2: picked the idea up from a Dutch optician. There was yeah, yeah, 188 00:09:54,040 --> 00:09:55,360 Speaker 2: he was the first one to put him in a 189 00:09:55,400 --> 00:09:58,439 Speaker 2: tube Andrew. And the funny thing about it very quickly. 190 00:09:58,520 --> 00:10:01,679 Speaker 2: The guy who found this idea was hands Lip. He 191 00:10:01,800 --> 00:10:04,520 Speaker 2: was a Dutch spectacle maker. And the story goes that 192 00:10:05,000 --> 00:10:08,760 Speaker 2: he was grinding two different strength lenses and he's down 193 00:10:09,480 --> 00:10:11,800 Speaker 2: in his house. He's a boratory there, but he held 194 00:10:11,840 --> 00:10:14,199 Speaker 2: them up to the light of the chechnic clarity, and 195 00:10:14,480 --> 00:10:16,319 Speaker 2: he held one in front of the office a low 196 00:10:16,360 --> 00:10:18,680 Speaker 2: street in the high Street, and he noticed that things 197 00:10:18,760 --> 00:10:21,719 Speaker 2: came a lot closer. He approached the Dutch Navy with 198 00:10:21,840 --> 00:10:23,959 Speaker 2: a new invention. They didn't even want to know about it. 199 00:10:24,480 --> 00:10:27,880 Speaker 2: Galileo and Rome heard about it, ordered some of those 200 00:10:28,000 --> 00:10:31,000 Speaker 2: lenses from him and was the first person in history 201 00:10:31,040 --> 00:10:34,520 Speaker 2: to put him into a tube to make the first telescope. 202 00:10:34,520 --> 00:10:36,679 Speaker 2: And do you know what with that little telescope he 203 00:10:36,760 --> 00:10:40,559 Speaker 2: discovered the rings of Saturn, the mers of Jupiter, and 204 00:10:40,880 --> 00:10:43,480 Speaker 2: we realized that the Moon had greatest honor for the 205 00:10:43,559 --> 00:10:46,040 Speaker 2: first time in history. We are a lot to Galileo, 206 00:10:46,559 --> 00:10:47,360 Speaker 2: no doubt about that. 207 00:10:49,480 --> 00:10:51,240 Speaker 1: You would have been You would have been over to 208 00:10:52,160 --> 00:10:55,439 Speaker 1: Gretitch too in the UK, wouldn't you. Yeah, isn't that? 209 00:10:55,600 --> 00:10:58,480 Speaker 1: Isn't that amazing what they've got over there? And again 210 00:10:58,720 --> 00:11:01,320 Speaker 1: go back to the you know, one hundred or two 211 00:11:01,400 --> 00:11:04,000 Speaker 1: hundred years ago, whatever it was that the technology that 212 00:11:04,200 --> 00:11:07,079 Speaker 1: that they were able to discover. Here we are in 213 00:11:07,160 --> 00:11:10,080 Speaker 1: Australia working out why we have fluff on our belly button. 214 00:11:11,520 --> 00:11:16,320 Speaker 2: They did it with no equipment. It was just human engineery. 215 00:11:16,720 --> 00:11:19,079 Speaker 2: And I remember a quote when I was learning my 216 00:11:19,480 --> 00:11:21,880 Speaker 2: physics in the early years. I remember a quote from 217 00:11:24,440 --> 00:11:28,000 Speaker 2: from Newton who said, if I if I've seen more 218 00:11:28,080 --> 00:11:31,480 Speaker 2: than most men, it's because I've stood on the shoulders 219 00:11:31,520 --> 00:11:34,199 Speaker 2: of giants, that that is. 220 00:11:34,280 --> 00:11:42,680 Speaker 1: And yeah, that quote of course attributed to Burt Newton. Sorry, Dave, 221 00:11:42,720 --> 00:11:44,480 Speaker 1: I mean one of those. I mean one of those moods. 222 00:11:44,559 --> 00:11:45,800 Speaker 1: I'm in one of those moods. 223 00:11:47,200 --> 00:11:49,040 Speaker 2: I can't tell, Andrew. But it's good to be able 224 00:11:49,080 --> 00:11:52,320 Speaker 2: to talk to you too, to talk to your audience 225 00:11:52,360 --> 00:11:53,640 Speaker 2: is and have a merry Christmas you. 226 00:11:53,679 --> 00:11:57,280 Speaker 1: Two, Dave, you too, Dave. I look forward to it, 227 00:11:57,320 --> 00:11:59,599 Speaker 1: and thanks again for coming on the program, really appreciate it. 228 00:11:59,640 --> 00:12:03,240 Speaker 1: And next blaming all about this this comment the third 229 00:12:03,320 --> 00:12:05,960 Speaker 1: one of its type to make it through our solar system. 230 00:12:06,040 --> 00:12:08,640 Speaker 1: We don't know where it's come from. We just know 231 00:12:08,840 --> 00:12:09,960 Speaker 1: it's going somewhere. 232 00:12:10,800 --> 00:12:13,240 Speaker 2: Very everything, by bye, bye bye, thank you very 233 00:12:13,320 --> 00:12:15,480 Speaker 1: Much, Astro Dave Dave Rennick