The life of famed astrophysicist Stephen Hawking will launch onto the big screen next week, and the actor that portrays the scientist the new film is touting NASA's legacy of space science discoveries in a new video.
NASA recruited actor Eddie Redmayne, who portrays Hawking in the new biopic "The Theory of Everything," to make a short video honoring Hawking's contributions to science. Set for a Nov. 7 release, "The Theory of Everything" tells the story of Hawking's incredible journey to become one of the greatest cosmologists of all time, despite suffering from a motor neuron disease that has left him paralyzed.
"We've all marveled at the mysteries beyond our planet," said Redmayne in the short. "But with NASA's cutting edge technology, we're discovering the inner workings of our unvierse."
NASA scientists are currently testing some of Hawking's theories with instruments like the Hubble Space telescope, the Chandra X-ray telescope, and the upcoming James Webb Space Telescope, which is expected to launch in 2018 as Hubble's successor.
NASA also featured two videos from Arrow Media, producers of the PBS miniseries "Stephen Hawking's Universe." The videos showcase Hawking's views on space exploration and the need for humanity to become a multi-planet species.
"I fear for our future," Hawking said in one of the NASA videos posted by NASA Monday (Oct. 27). “Our planet Earth is threatened with an ever expanding population, and only finite resources. We need a Plan B."
In recent years, Hawking has used his public pulpit to express the opinion that humans must look beyond Earth for our own survival, but he first made a name for himself with theories about black holes and the early universe.
NASA also posted a video of Hawking speaking with NASA astronaut Rick Mastracchio and Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata during their time on the International Space Station earlier this year. Hawking credits the orbiting outpost with developing space exploration technologies that will be essential if humans are to eventually travel beyond our solar system.
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