TV Release: 2009-10-02 Torrent Release: 28-10-2021 by user
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TV Show Genre:
Drama, Sci-Fi
Runtime:
43 min.
Parental Rating:
Not Rated
Awards:
Nominated for 3 Primetime Emmys. Another 9 wins & 26 nominations.
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No votes yet.
Episode: Light (1x5)
Episode Plot:
As Destiny is flying directly into the sun, unable to change its course, the crew decides to abandon ship and attempt to survive on a nearby planet. However, the shuttle they need to escape can hold only a fraction of the crew on Destiny. Colonel Young decides to hold a lottery to choose who will go on the shuttle, Scott and Johansen are chosen by Young to lead the evacuation and Young and Rush remove themselves from the lottery. Those left on the ship wait for death, but are surprised to find that instead of being destroyed the ship regains power. Relief lasts shortly, however, when they realize that the shuttle is unable to meet up with Destiny again. All is saved by the quick thinking of Colonel Young.
Episode Release:
2009-10-02
Episode Genre:
Drama, Sci-Fi
Runtime:
44 min.
Parental Rating:
Warning: THE EPISODE'S RATING DIFFERS FROM SHOW'S ORIGINAL RATING!
[12+]TV-PG - Parental Guidance Suggested
This program contains material that parents mau find unsuitable for younger children. The theme itself may call for parental guidance and/or the program contains one or more of the following: moderate violance, some sexual sitatuion, infrequent course language, or some suggestive dialogue.
Staff:
Actors: Robert Carlyle, Louis Ferreira, Brian J. Smith Writers: Brad Wright, Robert C. Cooper, Roland Emmerich Directors: Peter DeLuise
Other episode info:
Awards: N/A. Originally recorded in English in United States, Canada.
DESCRIPTION
Rogue planets, fossilised stars, black holes more massive than a million Suns. Huge advances in our understanding of the Universe mean that for the first time the BBC can take you to places we didn’t even know existed just ten years ago.
Across five episodes, Professor Brian Cox roams the vastness of space and time uncovering exquisite moments of sheer drama that changed the Universe forever. Watch the birth of a star in a stellar nursery, experience the power of a supermassive black hole as it consumes an entire planet, and witness the chaos created as another galaxy collides with our own galaxy, The Milky Way.
Season 1 - Episode 5 - The Big Bang: Before the Dawn
Professor Brian Cox asks the ultimate question: how did the Universe come to be? The Universe is daunting in its scale. We live on one planet of eight that orbit just one of the four hundred billion stars in our galaxy. But our galaxy is just one of trillions in the universe. Yet it is amongst those galaxies that we have been able to unravel the story of the universe’s creation. Thanks to a series of discoveries, our most powerful space missions have unravelled 13.8 billion years of cosmic evolution and revealed the story of our universe from its birth all the way to the arrival of our nascent civilisation.
Our guide on this odyssey back to the dawn of time is light. Telescopes are time machines - by looking out into the distant universe they open a window to the past and one telescope more than any other has helped us journey through the history of the Universe: NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope. Over the course of three decades, Hubble has shown us cosmic evolution in action – we’ve seen stars and planets being born and galaxies colliding. Remarkably, Hubble has even found one of the first galaxies ever to exist in the universe some 13.4 billion years ago, a discovery that hints at the beginnings of our own Milky way. Vivid CGI brings this ancient galaxy to life where we witness for ourselves the first dawn. It was the beginning of a relationship between stars and planets that would, on a faraway world, lead to the origin of life - and ultimately to us.
Hubble’s incredible discoveries have allowed scientists to piece together much of our cosmic story. but it cannot take us back to the most important moment in history: the Big Bang. For decades the moment the Universe began was the subject of pure speculation, but by combining astronomy and cosmology, scientists have finally found a way to put their theories to the test and study the momentous events that took place during the Big Bang. They can do this because The European space agency’s Planck space telescope has seen the afterglow of the Big Bang itself – something we call the cosmic microwave background. The unparalleled detail Planck gave us has helped confirm something remarkable: the Big Bang may not be the beginning. There was a time before the dawn – a place beyond anything we can comprehend. Brian transports us back to the fraction of a second before the Big Bang when the seeds of our universe were planted.
The story of our universe origin is a miraculously improbable odyssey, one that helps us understand how ultimately we came to be here, contemplating this vast, beautiful cosmic drama.
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