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tv   PODKAST  1TV  May 21, 2023 6:10am-6:56am MSK

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[000:00:00;00] here, the head of the european commission, ursola fund, admitted that she literally dragged zelensky to hiroshima so that he had something to get there, kiev elicited a government plane from france, and then zelensky himself besieged representatives of india in order to get a meeting with the prime minister at a fashion show. in ukraine itself, there is a new outrage of raskolnikov who capture the temples of the canonical church in the chernivtsi region in the village of ryngach. the assault brigade landed from a string of people in masks of the priest of the ascension church, beaten then taken away with him, as reported, there is still no volyn region to seize st. elijah's church in the village of boroche, than e , they forged documents, allegedly from the meeting of the community , in fact, there was no meeting, blatant lawlessness and pechev lavra, there in front of everyone hit the monk. look.
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as the victim himself and the radioton pavel later said, a provocateur attacked him. apparently , in order to provoke a response, in order to later accuse, uh, violation of the law and such provocations do not occur, more and more monks turned to the police without results. one more the ukrainian special services organized a provocation already in russia in volgograd, the detainee admitted that he acted on the instructions of the sbu near the mosque, he burned the koran in order, as he himself said, to provoke conflicts on religious grounds, for which he was quarreled with 10,000 rubles. and the last night in russia 1,000 people spent without sleep in the museum annual events prepared a lot of interesting things the hermitage invited guests to the attic of the main headquarters, where they could listen to lectures, for example, on how doctors treated russians 300 years ago, or how the author alice in wonderland lewis carroll visited, st. petersburg , yekaterinburg, those who wished could be reincarnated
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as historical characters in moscow at the museum reserves. tsaritsyno visitors walked in the rain, we listened to the story of the golden age of the russian empire under catherine ii, and that's all until the meeting. hello, i'm pilot cosmonaut anton shlyaprov , this is a hint of space stories. today we will go out into outer space together with the honored tester of space technology. maxim zaitsev. maxim, we have known each other for a long time , we work together at the cosmonaut training center tell me exactly what it is. nice job, first of all. eh, somehow i already
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correctly said that the preparation of cosmonauts for spacewalks precedes all this. eh, the testing of this technique, and which we then show you everything, this is the whole process that you then perform in space. well, we are testing it first. that is, at the beginning of e, get the job task. yes, on spacewalks, specific, moreover. uh-huh you develop a theory at the beginning of the uh-huh from the moment. yes, the opening of the luke yes, the transition routes, i.e. to the right. yes, look, you yourself are working on completion, right? work it out under water, yes, and after you have brought it to perfection. i mean, uh, reducing the time and effort expended underwater. well, hydrolabs. then you already pass it on to us astronauts. and we are already following the prepared scenario. yes, yes, absolutely right, but it’s not like it’s right according to a ready-made scenario, because an astronaut, when he comes to train
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specifically at our hydrolaboratory, and when we have more than one training session there. it's always a series of workouts. that is, we are one and the same every time we repeat the same. but it's like actually any learning process and, uh, astronaut. he is in the process of these trainings. he also changes something, makes some adjustments. that is, this is such an endless process, it starts everything, in fact, it is very far away from setting up the experiment. that is, on earth. here 's an experiment. uh, then under this experiment e in the enterprises of the space industry. uh, prepare the equipment in order to conduct this experiment and every time every time every experiment every exit in outer space is always something new there are no identical spacewalks, so the equipment and experiments are also always different and the equipment for a particular experiment. it is developed differently every time. well, your job doesn't stop right at the hydrolator. eh, we have worked
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further. and then further you work out these tasks, work out these tasks duplicating the crew. we receive, uh, a certain set of corrective information, that is, from you from understudies from the directors of the experiment, because directors of experiments. they also usually participate in these trainings. and here we are getting all this baggage. here are these, uh, comments, we are all. eh, we're bringing it in. you're leaving, uh, and uh, we 're starting preparations right for the exit. eh, it starts. uh, preparing the equipment of the instrument for the output of the program, in which the radiograms will go in, we will return, step by step documentation and, uh , uh, this whole process. we, too , accompany this entire process, as directly and participants in this entire process. you can make adjustments. uh, well, be in the soup
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during the exit. right we are. e in close proximity. well, if like this is physically close proximity , uh, with the person who passes the exit. if there are any uh questions, and again , uh, spacewalk. eh, this is something new every time, that is, take into account everything. what can happen outside. there , one person cannot keep everything in his head. although basic information yes, after all, it is concentrated in the head of one person, but nevertheless, some nuances and some things and some tips that e. we can give e during the exit, we have them, of course, too. uh, let's be next to a man conducting a spacewalk on his own. yes, that's what alexei arkhipovich leonov was in the sixty-fifth year. eh, did yes, the exit itself was dedicated precisely to, uh, the concept in general, is it possible here, but in general, in the future
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, going into outer space - it always works. and you hmm without uh, some tools without any fixtures. well , you can't do anything in outer space. so yes, we have just what we are working on. well, as soon as we are selected in the detachment. yes we have typical operations etc. it was rightly said that we have, like, uh, operations that make up each spacewalk and missions and exits. yes , and preparation. e to the exit. it starts with practice. here are some typical elements of the skills of moving on the outer surface. dangerous because, well, uh, open space, but it's, let's say, a dead zone for humans. he cannot exist there, and naturally he must to be able to safely, to be there to work safely safety is a huge part that we dedicate to preparing for in preparing for a spacewalk, that
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is, a person. he does not just have to perform this or that task. he also has to do this job safely, because it would seem, yes, here he went into outer space, and here he is all left to himself, but in fact it is safety. e each member of the crew. it directly leads to the safety of the station in general, in principle, well, this is being worked out a laboratory that is designed to reproduce well. yes, yes, on earth it is a little, of course, definitely different. there are nuances, of course, although without hanging a spacesuit. yes it is neutral buoyancy. yes, in principle, you can move, but still there is gravity. if you turn it upside down, you fall on your head, well, there are some nuances in your spacesuit, but i think that without the uh work of ch. it would be much more difficult to work for sure. just definitely, of course, it 's this, well, it's it's like it's like any skill. this
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here is how to give a person some task and not prepare some specific task and not, of course, prepare this task for her. well, here's the app. just look at the hydrotore cosmonaut training center. we see a twelve-meter depth. uh, our pool. uh-huh it's a lab uh-huh well, that's hanging. right now you can see at uh, the depth is the element. well part of the dancing of the russian segment. yep, hydro lab. it was generally built in the eighties in the early eighties. e 's size why is he so 12 m, yes, uh, well firstly, in order not to redesign the uh reservoir. uh, uh , the oil tank was taken as the basis, and uh, it was chosen in this way and it was placed in it. e, the body of the station was placed, which at that time was flying in space, this is the station e of the salyut station. we have a platform that
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rises from the water on the platform , e, models of the e station are installed and we can change them , this is how to play in a cube. yes, we can set one or another configuration depending on the water task. yes, indeed , she said something right here on earth. e others ways of imitation. here weightlessness is long-term, i emphasize its long-term absence. we have the ability to reproduce weightlessness modes on a laboratory plane. and well, he's there it's weightlessness. this is the real one , right there, weightless. which you find yourself, uh, when you fly into space, but unfortunately, it is short-lived , it lasts something like about 22-24 seconds, and the exits, with us, they last uh, as a rule, 6-7 hours. e, and. naturally, on a laboratory plane. we won't work. eh, all the way out. i have all my exits three exits.
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yeah, make your compatriots your colleagues, but i know that we had access to international ones. that is, uh, they went out in our space suits. e russian and our american colleagues, in principle, there is such an opportunity. how to get out of the russian yes segment, even, in my opinion, you can wear two different spacesuits. ah, such an opportunity. you're absolutely right, it's not happening right now , it's not happening right now. let me tell you now, at the very beginning they left at the american airlock. with their modules, they really have that capability. there it was foreseen that they were installed there. you can get out of the equipment from the american airlock in a russian spacesuit in an eagle, and what they do in their spacesuits and mj , that is, you can go out and work on the outside surface of our airlock compartment, you can only get out in a russian spacesuit. well, historically, in general, uh, the construction of the station
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, uh, evolved in such a way that in order to serve the russian segments in order to go out uh with the goal of, uh, conducting experiments on the russian segment, we go out there in russian space suits americans. naturally, they work in their space suits, but then again, space suits are always safety. and maybe, uh, that is, such a possibility was considered and such a possibility is being considered that suddenly, under some conditions, we will need , either for uh, the american segment to go in a russian spacesuit, or to the russian segments, which was also practiced when also for construction go to in an american space suit and the station is now big now it is there in the area. there they like to compare very much that if you put it on the ground, yes, it will occupy. uh, like a football field, although hermetically sealed volumes. they are much smaller, and construction is at the dawn. it's a modular station. it was built from that is, this is how, too, how
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lego cubes were assembled collected were collected. and so, when at the very beginning it was small, and even then, at the dawn of construction, it was possible to go out in russian. uh, in a russian space suit. uh, she was not from the station, so at the dawn of construction they left in american spacesuits, including on e, the russian segment, and therefore our and our cosmonauts. this was the so-called cross training. that is, uh, cosmonauts cosmonauts went to prepare, uh, with their american colleagues at nasa for spacewalks, and in the countries of american spacesuits, astronauts came here and trained to go out in russian spacesuits, and then they really were such exits, that is, uh in american space suits came out, uh, two people from different countries, that is, an american and uh russian for maintenance of the international space
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station, it is common, therefore, the construction is common, therefore, it was necessary to serve a common station. eh, it’s just that now it’s already big and therefore, uh, this is no longer being done. although, that is, not all astronauts train in american and not all americans train to leave russia, not all, but er, nevertheless, such a need arises regularly. uh, and uh, let's say the american colleagues had problems with the thermal control system. yes, and they were afraid that, well , they had one. the period when they had problems with cooling, uh, their segment, and then they didn’t have ships, uh, on which they could, uh, fly into space on their own, the dragons didn’t have yet. we flew into space only on the unions and the shuttle was gone, so they were afraid that a would happen on the american segment. this is an emergency situation with thermal control
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and there will not be two astronauts there in order to carry out repairs, and just recently, and here, uh, flew in, uh, to our segment. now a multi-purpose laboratory module is being introduced, and there, as part of the module flew in, and the european manipulator and e during its validation, that is, when it was turned on this manipulator. just recently there was, uh, a spacewalk, and i went out on a watering can, uh, with a representative of the european space agency with this samantha cristafaretti, in my opinion, i also flew with her. that's why the cosmos is open only for two yes-yes-yes jumps into outer space. it's always the same here, that is also a very interesting moment. e for the entire history of spacewalks. not together was only two times. the first is when leonov went out to open space, and another case when the americans did not have it together, they were on shuttles, when they flew, they had, uh, a period when they
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flew into space on shuttles, uh, not only the space station. well, just there, that is, flying on a shuttle, and they had a task. e, means e to catch and e to serve the fishing satellite. uh, the so-called this satellite. it, uh, took place with the help of two astronauts who went into outer space. in the payload bay, the shuttles were housed and allowed. uh, i approached this satellite and they had to catch this satellite. uh, they made a special device for catching this satellite. and the two of them failed and an operational decision was made. that is , the next day there or after some time. the three of them went out into outer space, and already the three of them, uh, catch a satellite. uh, i managed to premiere a multi-part film tomorrow after the vremya program meet the new card for life from vtb share free translations and feelings. catch 1,000 rubles. after the first purchase.
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yourself and your partner music clear application. and rose above all so that you communicate. i miss. say them with eye contact. which is now available to all subscribers. go to megafon we continue our conversation about
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spacewalks with maxim zaitsev and me anton shkaplerov. but recently there was a release on may 3. yes , our colleagues dima petelin and sergey prokopiev did it. we've been watching this exit. what was their here, and this is the task, moreover, this was a very interesting exit yes, a very interesting exit. look, a multi-purpose laboratory module has arrived. and yes, it comes from its very name. it tells him about his appointment. there are a lot of scientific experiments there. and as for the equipment that is installed on this e-e module, it is e, like e, any high-tech equipment emits a lot of heat, heat that needs to be removed from the station, that is , ejected into outer space so that the astronauts themselves normally inside. uh, felt not overheated in the first place for the braid i'm worried. after all, i am an astronaut in the training center, they are in the center for training work techniques.
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that's why i'm most worried about you, the module, so it arrived, and a few years before its e-arrival, also when designing on the module past, 1, which, by the way, was the only module of the russian segment that was brought into space. ah, the american bug. eh, and there on this module. uh, in advance, here on earth , two large elements were placed, which then, uh, were supposed to be part of the mlm, this is primarily a radiator. uh, so called uh, the heat exchanger, a and airlock. and on the third day, which means that they, with the help of the era a manipulator with a module past one to the mlm module, transferred this radiator, but the task is yes. eh, it’s been a very non-trivial thing for a long time that we didn’t have such large-scale exits, but it was a serious task. and what kind of interesting unusual exits do you remember interesting ones? well, not what i remember, i uh know from
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a historical uh point of view. well, look at us. uh, hmm, that's it too, coming back. eh, to like this. i don't know, you can call them a record not a record. we have, uh, the first woman to walk in outer space. uh, svetlana savitskaya. but uh, they went out with dzhanibekov, and they had a very interesting experiment, which so far no one has repeated the americans. they wanted to do this experiment. they just didn't work out. that is, they also wanted to conduct this experiment on the shuttle. the experiment was dedicated. e welding in space. uh, have welding for the first time. yes, it's more, besides the fact that it was first made in space, it's yes did it right the first time. uh, the first woman to go into outer space, right? for this flight. yes, they went out twice, but this is, uh, the first exit. eh, he's dedicated. e
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was exactly e welding. uh, in outer space and the experiment went well enough. uh, quite successfully, that is, uh, all the tasks and techniques , uh, the technique that was prepared for this exit worked out. eh, very good and we have this technology today. so we have an opportunity. yes, they often ask the same question. a what is the practical exhaust from astronautics? yes. er, there are actually a lot of things that we do in space. uh, it's just not time for them yet. here's the thing about welding. yes, uh , we have uh, let's put it this way. eh, if you describe this task with such large strokes, then this is the construction of large structures in space, and we are now working on repairs, uh, technologies, uh, that we will need in here we conducted this experiment. it's just that the time has not yet come for him to put this method into practice. so or,
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for example, uh, there were a lot of experiments both in the soviet union and in russia later, and our american colleagues also conducted experiments related to shape memory. uh, shape memory metal. that is, what is it. eh, experiment, because we have the main problem of delivering certain elements into space, this is volume. that is, e is not so not even though the mass. it is also important, but the volume, let's say. we need space. yes, we need to send some into space. uh, a big antenna. yes yes long big or or there, uh diameter or with a large radius, and they came up with such a very interesting method. uh, here on earth they create a structure, and give it a certain shape. eh, well, from metal they give it a shape, and then under e influence. in certain factors, well, let's say, the way origami and it are folded e this design e,
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but folded in such a way that it then independently. eh, the problem also lies in the fact that spacewalks, but this is quite energy-consuming and i would like, of course, that something that we sent into space would come. uh, back to original independently, that is, so that she herself was going to lay out there, therefore , such a method was invented, that is, we folded it like origami into space, this compact design was brought out. uh, they brought it to it, and electricity heated this structure, and it took its original form there in space, which we gave it here on earth. and these are the experiments, in fact, foreigners and the world and americans on their ships. they are such experiments. eh, we did a lot. this is also uh, experiments related to uh technology. construction or and so on? well, i would really like to know about which experiment to tell, here's one
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not with technology, but more with science, because we have a lot of scientific experiments. uh, it's being done in space and right now, uh, we're doing an experiment - it's a very long experiment in time in time. it was you who, among other things , participated in this experiment, you came quite by accident. uh, that is, we have on the outer surface. uh, experts noticed that in the area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe engines. and there is some kind of sediment and they solved this sediment. e study and how to study it, that is, this is the element that is deposited on the outer surface, it needs to be delivered to earth, because although the cosmonauts are ready for a lot of research to conduct experiments, but for a detailed study of certain elements of their don't cook. well , it's just. there are just things, uh, to which well, it's irrational to carry out in space, therefore. it was decided to take a sample of this sediment and deliver it, uh, to the ground,
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and then when they started developing the experiment, it was a very simple experiment. that there is a cotton swab there, which you should come up to anoint on the outer surface. yes, yes, make a smear. uh, wrap it up, uh, in an airtight capsule, and uh, send it to the ground. and then. uh, when this experiment was being developed. eh, so they thought. and what about the station already? we had no experience of finding it before. e such a long time in space. here, uh, such and such constructions, yes, the largest before the nks it was 15 years old, the station of the world flew. and here, and the iss is already flying. uh, over 20 years over 25 have already thought. and what if we are under the screen of vacuum thermal insulation of the station, it is wrapped in an uh fur coat. eh, that's also from a point of view. yes, yes, special fabric is multilayered, yes, it is multilayered so it is
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a vacuum thermal insulation screen. what is going on under it and decided to take it. uh, this swab right here, and there are two swabs, one with one swab. okay, study your chemistry from the engine, and the second donut there, we will take a smear under uh, ift, and that means, when uh it's all sent to the ground, there are chemists with engines. uh, figured out what they have there with fuel, what kind of sediment do they have there. and here is this experiment that we took pdft, he, when we started to explore here on earth. it turned out that in these samples there are viable organisms, bacteria, bacteria, yes, that is, uh, so after all, in our school there, we study that we have a biosphere. that is, this is what is alive, what lives on earth, it is a sphere, it is limited by a height, well, about 80 km. yes, there embroider above 80 km. we used to think
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that nothing lives, and the international space station is a vacuum, yes, a vacuum, there solar radiation. it's the temperature drop. plus 150 minus 150. yes, it’s clear that nothing should be alive there and everyone thought, but there can’t be anything alive, but it turned out that this was an experiment. we are this experiment. i say it again, but we are still doing it, that is, we take these from different places and already more than 20 species of viable organisms. there at an altitude of 400 km, and we managed to identify. that is, we thus we e the biosphere of the earth from 80 km. we have already expanded it to 400 km. and let's move on there are a lot of theories about this. yes, including about e. in the spread of life, and this experiment, for example, he, let's say , confirms the theory of the so-called
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panspermia. what is the theory of panspermia? this is a transfer. e life from one planet to another without any. here are the technical means. that is, she flew there not on a spaceship, but under the influence of all these factors, it is transferred, it can be transferred from planet to planet. and and here is this experiment, he, including he does not claim this. he just says that it is possible that even that life, and in the form in which we u know it, uh, in the form in which it exists on earth, it uh, including could be brought to the ground. that's when he brought it and it was just the hype, uh, the question arose. where did these bacteria come from, that is, it was just scientists, or it was we astronauts, roughly speaking, who brought them in there, sowed them from a destroyed authority or from another planet. here it
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confirms both. that is, here the very first. well, let's say the results of the experiment. they showed that we found organisms there, which on earth are found only in the waters of the baltic sea, that they could be brought there from the earth. it raises no questions at all. and here is the theory that these organisms could be. well, first of all, in interstellar space. er, from some other planet. uh, and the fact that they from interstellar space could, among other things, settle on e, the outer surface of the station, let's say, so they do not deny and do not confirm, let's say so open question. and we just have to uh , understand study if we can do it . the expediency of flights to the moon and mars there are many people who say that why should we fly to mars is expensive. here. what do you think, uh,
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the expediency of flying to mars on the one hand from a pragmatic point of view? yes , i think that, until we don’t, and here i am, speaking there, going over there, somewhere else to speak at some conferences. and i always i tell the audience that it is very important in any business, in general it is not only astronautics. in general, in any business, uh, that we u do in life. and before you start do this or that job or this or that function or do this or that task. we must ask ourselves a question. and why is it from this point of view. and why should we fly to mars, we have not yet answered this question for ourselves, that is, what should we do from a pragmatic point of view on mars well, so far, personally, i have not answered the question myself. i don't know what to do on mars i don't know we have the resources to exist on earth.
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well, some substances or some elements are missing, which, without which we cannot live, which we need on mars. but it's very expensive, and flying to mars is beyond our power. uh, independently make no country no single state. that's how expensive it is, but uh, speaking, uh, here's the other side of this issue. yes, there are a lot of things here. uh quotes, you can spend, but here i am fond of, uh, mountaineering was such a man who, well, also argues there, was the first to climb everest yes and when he was asked. and why are you going to everest , after all, i was there in the mountains, i climbed elbrus there, there are still different mountains, there really is nothing there. it is here that you have risen, you are standing just on top. well, there's nothing there, not even a generation. yes, you got up. goal yes, you climbed to the top , so when they asked him, why are you going to everest, he answered, because he is and now, if you ask from this point of view,
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why do we need to fly to mars from the other side. so with one hand i'll vote no, and with the other hand i'll vote yes because, well, because i'm interested, and it's in the nature of man, in the nature of man. yes in nature, yes in human nature. here is somewhere to go somewhere. here, uh, to achieve something, and from this point of view. yes, it would be interesting for me to see a man on mars there, or there, well, it’s quite fantastic to be there myself. operations i came at the call of my heart over the years, of course, they fit the specialist considered it necessary to be in a difficult time for russia, it was here that i simply took the word of the military registration and enlistment office, it was such a time for russia that i had to again become a system with my former co-servants , the peasants. eh, our fathers, our grandfathers during the great patriotic war stood for our homeland. many even children fled to the front
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to get their hands on weapons and fight this nazism. now nazism is again raising its head, so if anyone doubts doubts, all away, stand in our ranks. take up arms, defend our homeland. victory will always be only for us, until we destroy this nazis, we will not calm down. serve under a money.ru contract and get money right now yota says you can connect 50 gigs and 100 minutes
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, obviously. attraction drink of attraction in the beginning was a word then we were the first to launch sms, we were the first to connect the connection in the subway and rose above all so that you communicate not only with words, but also with pictures , stickers, circles of rice. and if you need words again say them looking into your eyes. meet megaphone 3:0 with high-speed, which is now available to all subscribers. switch to megafon with money on the card immediately deferral of the first payment up to 90 days apply for a cash loan on the tinkoff.ru website color protection technology retains brightness for up to 12 weeks, radiance shine, dyed hair
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profitable. in beeline, you can watch videos endlessly, just choose a dragon in the tariff am beeline on your side, make it to the may tinkov cashback fest, bitch, contacts of seventy percent in popular categories when buying in your favorite stores. checkout any tinkoff card participates in the cashbackfest from may 15 to may 28 and get up to 70% cashback. he is so alone. we continue our conversation with maxim zaitsev. i am anton shlaperov. well, here we were talking about technology experiments. uh, what examples do you have of what was introduced, well, for the first time in space and found practical application here on earth. you know, uh, let's say some high-tech elements of them. uh, actually
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a lot, but they are not that interesting to talk about, but uh, there are all sorts of things, uh, that we are in we use e in everyday life, but we don’t really realize that they came from outer space. well, for example, wet wipes. you, like no one at all, know those present about how, uh, it is difficult to wash in space, yes, it is almost impossible to wash with water. well, because the water in space in sharm was wiped off by the usa, as we understood, yes, that's why it was valid. here are astronauts in space. and uh wash with wet wipes wet towels. yes, we accept water procedures. yes, yes, absolutely right, and then, it means that marketers looked like that. and what is it with the scientists? the cosmonauts have such interesting, m-m wet towels, let's get them on the ground too. uh, on the ground, they'll be very handy too, uh, to use.
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and now we all know about wet wipes , that is, wet wipes, which are now everywhere everywhere no one noticed how they appeared in our lives, because there were quite recently these important wipes. nobody saw them. no one knew, but then they bam at first, like quietly quietly, then, if so, wet wipes are everywhere, well or, uh, we have children, uh, there are babies. yes , they are born, uh, they are, uh, they immediately put diapers in diapers. this is also, uh, means a device that was invented for astronauts, because, uh, how much to wash in space, and even harder to get off. uh, to the toilet in space. here, therefore, from this point of view. uh, that is, solving these problems, empers was invented, and then they also look like that, and what is it that is so interesting here, and we have children there, let's use it for children, so uh
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there are actually a lot of examples. for example, i cite this terem medicine. yes, yes, here we understand that a doctor or a space hospital is in orbit. hmm cannot exist with us, so, of course, we are being prepared for some typical hmm. uh, medical operations uh-huh but still without uh, after all , there is no specialist help on earth, so of course we are always accustomed that if there is some kind of health problem. we must definitely. well, on a closed connection to contact the doctor of the crew of specialists on the ground. e. i don't know photo video show everything that happens, what is the problem. and indeed, at a distance, they can tell us. what tool to take? how to act? now it is widely used, that is , it does not necessarily matter to the great uh physician, what specialty, which is in moscow at some institute, fly to the far east to perform an operation there? no, he
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can also sit in front of the monitor. uh, there will be specialists, in principle, who are prepared for the operation to be in the far east and he can he just assist them and suggest how to do it? well, it's all over the place. yes, anyway. uh, everything that is done in space sooner or later benefits just a little wait. i think, and for many in general , there will be an application, in general, everything that is connected, let's say, with everyday life with the convenience of a person. well , then here are the three important needs. we talked about two of them. and and third. well , probably, uh, too, without which it’s impossible, absolutely impossible to exist. this is a meal. yes and these are the technologies, with through which astronauts in space and astronauts feed on these technologies. they , including, uh, are also used in our everyday life, that is, any instant product
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is here. uh, it all just came from uh space from dasha, so we talked about the past present and i'm usually at the end of the conversation. uh, they asked their guests. uh, here's how you see what a person will do in 50 years in space. well, 50 years, in fact, is not such a long time. we have approximately astronautics in general. roughly about the same so many years. yes, a little more. when i was alone for a long time, when i once told my friend that i live in a starry one. in the town , his first question was there. and that you have cars there on an air cushion around the town flying around the starry one. no, i don't think the driver has anything to do with it? yes, yes, i don't think uh it 's uh hmm it's going to be something that we see in science fiction movies, you know, i don't remember, completely out of my head. uh, who

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