:02:03
DarIing, that is your usuaI.
:02:06
- WeII, I'II have that, then, thank you.
- OK.
:02:09
- Aha!
- What?
:02:11
It Ioses 1 1 ,000 moIecuIes
per square centimetre, per second.
:02:16
- What does?
- The comet.
:02:20
Now, which one of these
do you Iike best?
:02:24
- Is this a personaIity test?
- It's a sort of surprise.
:02:27
- They're aII the same.
- No, Iook...
:02:30
That's aquamarine,
that's bIue-green and that's aIgae.
:02:35
At the atomic IeveI,
there's no such thing as coIour.
:02:38
Though they did do that study
in BeIgium, or was it Denmark...
:02:43
- BabbIing.
- BabbIing!
:02:45
The point was... What was the point?
:02:48
Since protons are so much smaIIer
than Iight waves...
:02:52
AIgae, thank you.
:02:54
Since protons are smaIIer
than Iight waves,
:02:56
how couId they ever see it to begin with?
:03:01
Oh, James!
:03:05
Or is there a fundamentaI order
underIying aII things?
:03:15
Hey, Captain MarveI. Shazam!
:03:19
Thanks. I was just reading
about Boyd's Comet.
:03:23
- Boyd's what?
- Comet, Iike in the sky.
:03:26
It's gonna be here soon.
We'II be abIe to see it.
:03:29
Know why a comet's taiI
aIways points away from the sun?
:03:33
- Wanna know?
- No.
:03:35
It's not a taiI at aII.
It's bits of gas that the sun Iights up.
:03:40
We earthIings
wiII keep that in mind.
:03:43
Kinda Iike a 500-miIe-Iong Jersey torch.
:03:47
Wow!
:03:49
It must be true!
:03:51
The fact remains that certain events
are strictIy accidentaI.
:03:55
What fact?