The future of space exploration

every kid

loves space i mean how could you not

when you first see images like this

you’re suddenly confronted with the

grandeur of our home planet this

big blue marble floating through space

looks nothing like what we might naively

expect earth to look like

this one picture right here teaches us

how our view of the world can be very

different from different perspectives

and then you see pictures like this

taken more or less from the furthest

point that humans have ever been away

from earth

the earth looks to the moon just like

the moon looks to us

waxing and waning over time as the sun

illuminates different parts of the

surface

this process of the moon orbiting the

earth and the earth orbiting the sun

started long before we were around and

will continue for a long time yet

completely oblivious to the life on

earth’s surface

and then you see pictures like this

taken by the cassini spacecraft in its

orbit around saturn

where our entire lives literally

everyone we know

and love is just there captured within

this distant speck

from the vantage point of the outer

solar system and we can zoom out even

further

until eventually we become that pale

blue dot

an insignificant pixel in the vastness

of space

as a kid that pale blue dot both scared

and excited me

it was humbling to know how little we

were on the cosmic scale

and it made me eager to learn about the

rest of the universe and what was in it

from its exotic exoplanets to its

mind-bending black holes

but as i grew older my childlike

fascination with space

slowly dwindled space was still

interesting sure

but it didn’t really excite me like it

once did i was born too late to

experience the space fever of the apollo

missions

and i was born far too early to witness

us colonize of the planets and venture

out into the cosmos

also i thought but then i saw this

[Applause]

for me there’s something so mesmerizing

and futuristic about watching these two

rocket boosters

land autonomously simultaneously after

being on the edge of space just minutes

before

when i watch that video i feel all

fascination

but also hope this photo right here

summarizes what is possible

when humans come together and decide

that they do want to go to space

for centuries now we’ve had a distant

dream of being able to venture to the

stars at light speed

and forge a galactic empire the small

step

that neil armstrong took 50 years ago on

the surface of the moon

was meant to be that giant leap which

propelled us into the future of space

exploration

nasa even had a plan to land people on

mars in the 1980s

but obviously that never came to be then

the space shuttle was meant to

dramatically bring down the cost of

space travel

and inspire the post-apollo generation

but huge expenses

and the two fatal disasters of

challenger in 1986

and colombia in 2003 meant that the

support for the space program

declined there’s also the start stop

culture at organizations such as nasa

nasa is a government agency and as such

there’s been a distinctive cycle over

the last few decades

of one president setting up an

initiative and a goal for nasa to work

towards

only for the next president to scrap

that goal and establish a new aim

instead

this politics is exactly why astronauts

never made it to mars in the 1980s

and why there seems to be a new

objective for nasa every few years

so why be optimistic why am i so

confident that we’re now living through

a space revolution

and that by the end of this century will

not only have set foot on mars

but have accomplished so much more some

things which are probably unthinkable to

us now

well the answer is one word competition

everyone knows that what predominantly

drove the space race in the 50s and 60s

was cold war competition

between the soviet union and the united

states once the moon had been reached

there was much less incentive for

governments to invest in long-term goals

for space exploration

but we live in a new age of competition

not only between nations but also

between companies the privatization of

space means that companies are competing

with each other

to drive down the cost of getting to

space as well as rethinking the best way

to do it

a government has a lot of things to

worry about and a lot of priorities to

take care of

whereas a company can be a lot more

focused some

may solely focus on optimizing getting

satellites into lower low earth orbits

for example

whereas others may do that as a stepping

stone to ultimately get to mars

when one person or several people take

leadership of a company for a sustained

period of time

that can drive forward progress towards

a specific goal

now it’s important to remember that

space isn’t about to become entirely

private

governments can and will still have an

important role to play

as demonstrated by the recent missions

to mars from the us uae

and china space exploration is becoming

more and more of an international

enterprise

and governments will be at the heart of

that not least to figure out the gray

area of

the law in space but we have now reached

a point where it’s the healthy

competition between companies

which is driving innovation and progress

in space exploration

towards the future but what is that

future

well that’s kind of the beauty of

competition there is no

linear path the future ought to take we

live in a time where different companies

and agencies have different views of

what that future should be

the result is that a lot of people are

working simultaneously on different

projects

and the space sector is steadily growing

as more and more people join in

for some the key project for the future

is establishing a permanent base on the

moon

nasa’s artemis program named after the

twin sister of apollo

is a mission which aims to get the first

woman and next man

on the moon by 2024 it’s a great example

of the international cooperation that

space exploration can generate

with nasa partnering up with

organizations from canada to europe to

japan

the secondary aim of the programme which

is to establish a long-term presence on

the moon by the end of this decade

would give nasa crucial information and

experience before their eventual human

trip to mars by the end of the 2030s

and whilst nasa is obviously a

government agency they’re also

collaborating with commercial companies

to actively encourage this private

competition and speed up development

the artemis program will include a base

camp at the lunar south pole

which would initially house astronauts

for weeks at a time as well as the

gateway

an outpost orbiting the moon which

astronauts will dock to first

before landing on the lunar surface now

a lot of people have the goal of getting

to mars but in terms of how best to do

that

well there are two main schools of

thought some think we should be putting

all our efforts into getting to mars

now and that will learn the necessary

lessons along the way

others believe in a moose moon first

mars later approach

where establishing a moon base is a

vital first step in the process of

getting to the red planet

nasa clearly believes in the second

option and it does have quite a few

benefits

the moon is a perfect stop-off point for

travel from earth to both the inner and

outer solar system

it’s small so it has a low surface

gravity that

and the lack of atmosphere means that

it’s both easier and cheaper to launch

rockets from the moon

than the earth the recent confirmation

of liquid water on the surface

means that there’s the potential of

manufacturing rocket fuel from that

water

making the moon a possible refueling

station and further reducing the cost of

space travel

especially to mars and by first

establishing a moon base scientists can

further understand

how the human body copes in low gravity

for long periods of time

before sending people to mars plus

any astronauts in an emergency have a

much higher chance of potentially being

rescued by someone on earth

than if they were on mars a lot lot

further away

for others the key project for the

future is asteroid mining

there are multiple companies and

startups out there dedicated to

researching and engineering the

technology needed

to go out and extract valuable resources

from asteroids

and this is definitely a worthy goal to

have now

asteroids may look like boring lumps of

rock but they come in different types

with some full of metals like nickel

iron platinum and gold

on earth the majority of heli of heavy

elements like these sunk towards the

core during the planet’s formation

and the small fragments which we managed

to mine on the surface were most likely

deposited there by asteroids themselves

crashing into the planet

millions or billions of years ago

a typical metallic asteroid can may

contain trillions of dollars worth of

precious metals

and they’re estimated to be between 1

and 2 million asteroids in the asteroid

belt alone

not only would it be possible to export

these materials back to earth

but materials such as iron could be

mined in space and used

in space for further construction

projects when building

infrastructure on the moon for example

it would probably be cheaper

to send iron from the asteroid belt over

the millions of miles it takes to get to

the moon

then it would be to mind the iron on

earth and send it up into space

since launching stuff from earth is

still so expensive

and although the gold-filled asteroids

steal the headlines it’s the asteroids

which contain water that are likely to

be the main focus in the near future

since water is the most important

substance in space

not only is it useful as drinking water

but it can also be used to shield us

from radiation

or even make rocket fuel just like the

moon the prospect of using asteroids as

refueling stops would further reduce the

cost of space travel

now there are multiple ideas out there

of how to actually go about mining

asteroids including

harpoons magnetic rakes and even optical

mining

where concentrated sunlight essentially

vaporizes the asteroid surface

but the key thing to take away is that

multiple companies are working on

multiple approaches

and in terms of time scale it’s quite

likely that within 10 years

mining vehicles will have gone out to

asteroids and brought back a significant

amount of resources

now for others obviously the key project

for the future is building a permanent

base

on mars spacex for example aims to

launch their first unmanned mission to

mars in 2024

with their first manned mission to lift

off a couple of years later

whilst nasa with its moon first mars

later strategy

is targeting the late 2030s for human

footprints on the red planet

in any case it’s certainly not

unfeasible for humans to set foot on

mars by the end of this decade

and getting there by 2050 for example is

a very attainable goal

now the idea of getting to mars

certainly captures the imagination the

most

we’ve already been to the moon but the

idea of humanity forging a new martian

civilization

is something which has been dreamt about

for a long time

but going to mars is clearly the most

ambitious of these near future space

projects

traveling there is nothing like going to

the moon and there are a load of

challenges to overcome

first off mars is roughly 600 times

further away than the moon

the three-day trip to the moon is

nothing compared to the six-month

expedition

it takes to reach mars now one of the

main threats during the journey to mars

would be the harmful radiation from the

from the sun in the form of gamma rays

x-rays and uv light for example

on earth we’re protected from this by

two main things our magnetic field and

our atmosphere

but obviously out in the vacuum of space

neither of those things are there to

protect us

now it would be possible to protect

astronauts during the journey by placing

water tanks in the walls of the

spacecraft

which would which would absorb most of

this radiation but mars itself

has no magnetic field and its atmosphere

is very thin

about 100 times thinner than earth’s to

protect yourself from radiation on the

martian surface

you need to make sure your habitats are

either underground or under lots of

layers of dirt

the fact that mars is so far away means

that solar power is only about 40 as

effective as it is here

which is obviously impractical for

powering a settlement

this means that it’s likely that the

first few habitats will be fueled by

nuclear power

mars’s distance from earth also means

that a phone call would be

impossible it would take anywhere

between 3 and 22 minutes for someone on

mars to hear what someone on earth was

saying

it’s important to remember that when we

talk about astronomical distances

the speed of light is actually pretty

slow

i’ve already mentioned the thin

atmosphere and this also poses problems

when landing on mars

atmospheric drag is really important for

slowing spacecraft down before landing

but this effect on mars is a lot less

powerful so any attempt at landing on

the surface has to be thought through

carefully

this is why spacex for example are

considering a belly flop approach

which maximizes the effect of

atmospheric drag and slows the

spacecraft down as much as possible

before it engages retrorockets to slow

itself down even further

and ultimately land safely there’s also

the issue of growing food in space

as well as dealing with the low gravity

environment and its effects on the human

body

but scientists on the international

space station have been hard at work on

both of these issues

planters plants have been successfully

harvested and eaten by crew on the iss

and we continue to learn more every day

about how they behave in microgravity

there’s also research ongoing into

aquaponics which combines raising fish

and tanks

with growing plants in water without

soil and this will likely be the primary

way of feeding martian astronauts

the way humans react to spending

prolonged periods of time outside of

earth’s gravity

is still being understood but this month

marks 20 years of a continual human

presence in the space station

and we have learned a lot of lessons in

that time about how to keep humans safe

in space and it’s important to point out

these numerous challenges facing an

expedition to mars

because it’s easy to dream of

terraforming mars tomorrow and making it

a second home planet

whilst that won’t happen for a very long

time these challenges facing us now

are surmountable with more and more

people dedicating their lives to

tackling them

so what is the future of space

exploration well

it’s all of these projects and more

which are being taken on simultaneously

by more and more people every day whilst

it’s hard to predict which of these will

come to fruition first and foresee all

of the potential problems along the way

the fact that the space fever is growing

and more and more people are joining the

new space race

accelerates our progress even more it

creates a positive feedback loop

the more successes we have the more

attention the space sector generates

and the more inspiration there is for

the next generation

there are hundreds if not thousands of

youtube channels

podcasts documentaries books and movies

examining the future of space travel

and what challenges this new chapter in

human history will bring

every day more people are realizing that

the new space age

really has already begun now i’m sure

there are some of you who are still

skeptical about the realities of any of

these projects happening anytime soon

after all futurists are keen to jump

onto the bandwagon and get excitement

going

but in reality there are plenty of

unresolved issues standing between us

and these goals

and some still sound like they belong in

the realm of science fiction

but after watching videos such as

spacex’s successful test flight of the

falcon heavy

after seeing what a collective human

effort is capable of achieving in such a

short space of time

a spark of childlike awe ignites in me

for the first time in years

and i’m not the only one kids are being

inspired by recent missions to learn

about science

understand our place in the cosmos and

to dream big

there are people who spend their lives

working towards the dream of the future

in space

and because of their efforts that future

is approaching us at an ever greater

rate

the space revolution has already begun

and it will only accelerate as time goes

on

people will look back on this time as

the birth of a new era of humans in

space

be grateful for the opportunity to be

alive right now

the most exciting time in human history

as we dare to go

where no humans have gone before thank

you

每个孩子都

喜欢太空 我的意思是,

当您第一次看到这样的图像时,

您怎么会突然面对

我们家园星球的宏伟壮丽,这块

漂浮在太空中的蓝色大大理石

看起来与我们可能天真地

期望地球看起来像

这样的完全不同 这张照片

告诉我们,从不同的角度来看,我们对世界的看法是如何

截然不同的

,然后你会看到这样的

照片或多或少是从人类离地球最远的地方拍摄

的,地球看起来就像月球一样

当太阳照亮表面的不同部分时,月亮在我们看来随着时间的推移会变得盈亏

,这个月球绕

地球运行和地球绕太阳运行的过程

早在我们出现之前就开始了,

并将持续很长时间,但

完全没有注意到

地球表面的生命

,然后你会看到这样的

照片,卡西尼号宇宙飞船在

围绕土星的轨道上拍摄

我们知道

和爱就在

这个遥远的斑点中,

从外太阳系的有利位置捕捉到

,我们可以进一步缩小,

直到最终我们变成那个淡

蓝色的点

,在浩瀚

的太空中

,一个微不足道的像素,就像一个苍白的孩子一样 蓝点让我既害怕

又兴奋,知道我们在宇宙尺度上是多么渺小,这让我感到羞愧

,它让我渴望了解

宇宙的其他部分,以及

从奇异的系外行星到

令人费解的黑洞,其中有什么,

但是 随着年龄的增长,我

对太空的孩童般的迷恋

慢慢减少了,当然,太空仍然

很有趣,

但它并没有像

以前那样真正让我兴奋 目睹

我们殖民行星并

冒险进入宇宙,

我也想,但后来我看到了这个

[掌声]

对我来说,

观看这两个火箭助推器会让人着迷和充满未来感

s

在几分钟前在太空边缘后自主降落

当我观看那个视频时,我感到

非常着迷,

但也希望这里的这张照片

总结了

当人类聚集在一起并

决定他们确实想去太空

几个世纪时可能发生的事情 现在我们有一个遥远的

梦想,能够以光速冒险到

星星上

,建立一个银河帝国

尼尔·阿姆斯特朗 50 年前在月球表面迈出的一小步,

注定是推动我们前进的巨大飞跃

进入太空探索的未来 美国国家航空航天局

甚至在 1980 年代曾计划将人们

送上火星,

但显然这从未实现过,

当时航天飞机

旨在显着降低太空旅行的成本

并激励后阿波罗一代,

但巨大 费用

以及

1986年挑战者

和2003年哥伦比亚的两次致命灾难意味着

对太空计划的支持

下降了还有

organi的起停文化 nasa 等

国家机构是一个政府机构,

因此在过去几十年中存在一个独特的循环,

一位总统制定一项

倡议和一个目标,让 NASA 努力

实现,

只有下一任总统放弃

该目标并建立一个新的

取而代之的是,

这种政治正是为什么宇航员

在 1980 年代从未登上火星的

原因,以及为什么美国宇航局似乎每隔几年就会有一个新

目标,

所以为什么要乐观,为什么我如此有

信心,我们现在正在经历

一场太空革命

和 到本世纪末,

不仅会踏上火星

,还会完成更多一些

我们现在可能无法想象的事情,

答案是一言以蔽之,

每个人都知道,是什么主要

推动了 50 年代和 60 年代

苏联和美国之间的冷战竞争,

一旦登月

政府投资于长期目标的动力就会

大大减少 r 太空探索,

但我们生活在一个

不仅国家之间而且公司之间竞争的新时代

太空私有化意味着公司正在相互竞争

以降低进入太空的成本

以及重新思考最佳方式

政府有很多事情要

担心,有很多优先事项

要处理,

而公司可以更加

专注,例如,有些公司

可能只专注于优化将

卫星送入低地球轨道

而其他公司可能会这样做

当一个人或几个人

在一段持续

的时间

内领导一家公司时,最终到达火星的垫脚石可以推动朝着

特定目标前进

现在重要的是要记住,

太空不会完全成为

私人

政府

正如美国阿联酋和中国最近的火星任务所证明的那样,能够而且仍将发挥重要作用

越来越多的国际

企业

和政府将成为其中的核心

,尤其是要弄清楚

太空法律的灰色地带,但我们现在已经达到

推动创新和进步的公司之间的良性竞争的地步

面向未来的太空探索中,未来究竟是什么?

这就是竞争的美妙

之处 未来应该走的不是直线路径 我们

生活在一个不同的公司

和机构

对未来应该是什么

结果有不同看法的时代 是很多人

同时在不同的项目上工作

随着越来越多的人参与其中,太空部门正在稳步增长,

未来的关键项目

是在月球上建立一个永久基地,以

美国宇航局的双胞胎姐妹命名的阿尔忒弥斯计划

阿波罗计划

是一项旨在到 2024 年让第一位

女性和第二位男性

登上月球的任务,这是国际合作的一个很好的例子

l

太空探索可以

与美国宇航局进行合作

与加拿大、欧洲和

日本等组织合作

该计划的次要目标

是到

本十年末在月球上建立长期存在,这

将为美国宇航局提供重要的信息和

经验 在他们最终

在 2030 年代末人类前往火星之前

,虽然美国宇航局显然是一个

政府机构,但他们也在

与商业公司合作,

积极鼓励这种私人

竞争并加快

发展,阿尔忒弥斯计划将包括

在月球上的大本营 南极

最初将一次容纳宇航员

数周,以及

网关

一个绕月球运行的前哨,

宇航员将首先

停靠在月球表面之前,

现在很多人都有到达火星的目标,

但就 如何最好地做到

一点有两种主要的思想流派,

有些人认为我们应该把

所有的努力都放在 gett 现在去火星

,这将在其他人相信驼鹿月亮的过程中学到必要的

教训,

首先

火星后来的方法

,建立月球基地是

前往红色星球过程中至关重要的第一步,

美国宇航局显然相信第二种

选择 它确实有很多

好处月球是

从地球到太阳系内外旅行的完美中转站

它很小,所以它的表面

重力低,

而且没有大气层意味着

它既容易又容易

从月球发射火箭

比地球更便宜 最近确认

地表有液态水,这

意味着有可能

用这种水制造火箭燃料,

使月球成为可能的加油站,

并进一步降低太空旅行的成本,

尤其是到火星和 通过首先

建立一个月球基地,科学家们可以

进一步

了解人体在派人之前是如何长时间应对低重力环境

去火星和

任何处于紧急情况的宇航员比在火星上的人有

更高的机会被

地球上的人救出,

对于其他人来说,未来的关键项目

是小行星采矿

有多家公司和

初创公司 那里致力于

研究和设计

从小行星中提取宝贵资源所需

技术,这绝对

是一个值得的目标

地球上的铁铂和金像这些重元素的大部分heli

在行星形成期间沉入核心

,我们

设法在地表开采的小碎片很可能是

由小行星本身

撞击地球

数百万或数十亿而沉积在那里的 几年前,

一颗典型的金属小行星可能

含有价值数万亿美元的

贵金属

据估计,仅小行星带中就有 1

到 200 万颗小行星,

不仅可以将

这些材料运回地球,

而且可以

在太空中开采铁等材料,并

在太空中用于进一步的建设

项目。

例如,在月球上建设基础设施

可能会更便宜

,从小行星带送铁

到月球需要数百万英里,

然后考虑地球上的铁

并将其送入太空,

因为发射东西 来自地球的

价格仍然如此昂贵

,尽管充满黄金

的小行星占据了头条新闻,但

在不久的将来,水是可能成为主要关注点的小行星,

因为水是太空中最重要的

物质,

它不仅可用作饮用 水,

但它也可以用来保护我们

免受辐射

,甚至可以像月球一样制造火箭燃料

,使用小行星作为加油站的前景

将进一步

降低太空旅行的成本

现在有多种想法来

说明如何实际开采

小行星,包括

鱼叉磁耙甚至光学

采矿

,集中的阳光基本上会

蒸发小行星表面,

但要消除的关键是

多家公司正在努力 在

多种方法

和时间尺度上,很有

可能在 10 年内

采矿车辆将前往

小行星并

为其他人带回大量资源,显然未来的关键项目

在火星 spacex 上建立永久基地 例如,他们的目标是在 2024 年

启动他们的首次无人火星任务,并

几年后

进行首次载人任务,而美国宇航局的月球首次火星

稍后战略

的目标是在 2030 年代后期

在红色星球上留下人类足迹

人类在本世纪末踏上火星当然不是不可行的

,盖蒂 例如,到 2050 年到达那里是

一个非常可实现的目标,

现在到达火星的想法

肯定会吸引

我们到月球上最多的想象力,但

人类打造新的火星

文明

的想法是人们一直梦想的

事情 很长一段时间,

但去火星显然

是这些近期太空项目中最雄心勃勃的

旅行 没有什么比

去月球更要克服的

挑战

首先火星大约

比月球远 600 倍

  • 与到达火星所需的六个月探险相比,月球一日游算不了什么,

现在前往火星的

主要威胁之一

是来自太阳的有害辐射,

以伽马射线

x 射线的形式 和紫外线,例如

在地球上,我们受到

磁场和大气两个主要因素的保护,

但显然在太空真空中

,这些东西都没有

保护 我们

现在可以

通过在航天器壁上放置水箱来保护宇航员在旅途

中的安全

,这将吸收

大部分辐射,但火星本身

没有磁场,而且它的大气层

非常

稀薄,比地球薄约 100 倍 为了

保护自己免受

火星表面的辐射,

你需要确保你的栖息地

要么在地下,要么在大量的泥土之下。

火星如此遥远的事实

意味着太阳能的效率只有这里的 40 倍左右,

这是 为定居点供电显然不切实际

这意味着

最初的几个栖息地很可能将由

核能提供燃料

火星与地球的距离也

意味着不可能打一个电话

火星

上的人需要 3 到 22 分钟

才能听到 地球上的某个人

所说的重要的是要记住,当我们

谈论天文距离时

,光速实际上是 相当

我已经提到过稀薄的

大气层,这也会

在登陆火星时造成问题

大气阻力对于

在着陆前减慢航天器的速度非常重要,

但这种对火星的影响要小得多,

因此任何登陆

火星表面的尝试都必须

仔细考虑

这就是为什么例如SpaceX公司正在

考虑一种腹部翻转方法

,该方法可以最大限度地发挥大气阻力的影响,

并在

航天器

与逆向火箭接合以

进一步减速

并最终安全着陆之前尽可能地减慢航天器的速度,这

也是问题所在 在太空中种植食物

以及应对低重力

环境及其对人体的影响,

但国际

空间站的科学家们一直在努力解决

这两个问题

iss

,我们每天都

在继续了解它们在微重力下的行为方式,

还有研究 正在进入

鱼菜共生系统,将养鱼

和坦克

与在没有土壤的水中种植植物相结合

,这可能

是喂养火星宇航员

的主要方式人类对

长时间远离

地球重力的反应

方式仍在了解中,但本月

标志着人类在空间站持续存在 20 年,

在那段时间里,我们学到了很多

关于如何保证人类

在太空中安全的经验教训,重要的是要指出

火星探险面临的众多挑战,

因为梦想很容易

明天对火星进行地球化并使其

成为第二个家园星球,

而这在很长一段时间内不会发生,

我们现在面临的这些挑战

是可以克服的

每天都有越来越多的人同时承担所有这些项目以及更多项目

很难预测其中哪些

将首先实现并预见

沿途的所有潜在问题

太空热正在增长

以及越来越多的人加入

新的太空竞赛这一事实

加速了我们的进步 它

创造了积极的反馈 循环

我们获得的成功越多

,太空部门产生的关注

就越多

,下一代的

灵感就越多

人类历史将

每天带来更多的人

意识到新的太空时代

真的已经开始了,我敢肯定

,你们中的一些人仍然

所有未来主义者都热衷于这些项目的现实持怀疑态度。

跳上潮流并获得

兴奋,

但实际上有很多

未解决的问题站在中间 在我们

和这些目标中

,有些听起来仍然

属于科幻小说的领域,

但是在观看了诸如

SpaceX成功试飞

猎鹰重型等视频

之后,在看到人类集体

努力能够在如此短的时间内实现的目标之后

多年来第一次在我心中点燃了童趣般的敬畏之火

,我不是唯一一个孩子

受到最近的任务的启发

了解科学

了解我们在宇宙中的位置

并梦想远大

有些人一生都在度过

朝着太空未来的梦想

努力,由于他们的努力,未来

正以越来越

快的

速度接近我们,太空革命已经开始

,随着时间的推移它只会加速

人们会回顾这段时间作为宇宙

的诞生 人类进入太空的新时代

感谢有机会

在当下人类历史上最激动人心的时刻,

因为我们敢于

去人类从未去过的地方 k