My father was an architect. Jocelyn Bell Burnell More Quotes by Jocelyn Bell Burnell More Quotes From Jocelyn Bell Burnell There is stardust in your veins. We are literally, ultimately children of the stars. Jocelyn Bell Burnell your veins stars children My thesis project was to identify quasars, which are very distant, very energetic objects and still quite mysterious. Jocelyn Bell Burnell quite project thesis mysterious We still don't know what about 96 per cent of the universe is made of. It is dark matter and dark energy, but we have no idea what it is. Jocelyn Bell Burnell universe energy matter dark In the field of astronomy in the mid-'60s, quasars were very sexy objects - gigantic, star-like masses about which little was known. I was a graduate research student at Cambridge working towards my Ph.D. and chose quasars as the subject for my thesis. Part of my project involved surveying the sky for them using a radio telescope. Jocelyn Bell Burnell student sexy research sky I may not have got the Nobel Prize, but I've won countless other awards, including 'Most Inspirational Living Woman Scientist.' Jocelyn Bell Burnell woman living awards inspirational When I got engaged to be married, it was assumed that I would quit science and be a housewife. It was considered shameful if a married woman had to work - it implied that her husband couldn't earn enough to keep her. Jocelyn Bell Burnell woman husband work science A search for truth seems to me to be full of pitfalls. We all have different understandings of what truth is, and we'll each believe - or we are in danger of each believing - that our truth is the one and only absolute truth, which is why I say it's full of pitfalls. Jocelyn Bell Burnell me truth-is truth believe The universe is very big - there's about 100,000 million galaxies in the universe, so that means an awful lot of stars. And some of them, I'm pretty certain, will have planets where there was life, is life, or maybe will be life. I don't believe we're alone. Jocelyn Bell Burnell alone stars life believe People from different backgrounds approach a subject in different ways and ask different questions. Jocelyn Bell Burnell ask questions different people Science is a quest for understanding. Jocelyn Bell Burnell quest understanding science Radio astronomers are aware in the back of their minds that if there are other civilizations out there in space, it might be the radio astronomers who first pick up the signal. Jocelyn Bell Burnell minds back radio space I'm one of the few women in science. I have pioneered that. One of the things I worry about is what that pioneering has done to me. I have had to fight quite hard most of the way through life. Jocelyn Bell Burnell me women life science Once a star dies, it's gone forever. There are no new stars to take its place. Eventually, there will be no stars, and the universe will turn black. That really will be the end. Jocelyn Bell Burnell place universe black stars Some of the hydrogen in your body comes from the Big Bang, and when you see a kid walking down the street with a helium balloon, you can say, 'There goes some of the primordial universe.' Jocelyn Bell Burnell street you universe walking I was born in Northern Ireland, also known as Ulster, and I'm Scots-Irish, therefore. Jocelyn Bell Burnell i-was-born also northern-ireland born I'm the eldest of four children: a brother next after me and then two sisters. Jocelyn Bell Burnell me next brother children We didn't get television until quite late, the late fifties, but we had radio, and I can remember listening to the Korean War news on the radio with my family and sensing the anxiety of the adults although not understanding it myself, not understanding exactly what was going on. Jocelyn Bell Burnell myself family remember war I didn't always have research jobs. Jocelyn Bell Burnell always research jobs Arguably, my student status and perhaps my gender were also my downfall with respect to the Nobel Prize, which was awarded to Professor Antony Hewish and Professor Martin Ryle. At the time, science was still perceived as being carried out by distinguished men. Jocelyn Bell Burnell respect time men science We live inside our universe and cannot get a bird's-eye view of it from outside. And we cannot even see all of our universe. Distant parts of it are expanding away from us so fast that they are invisible; they go faster than the speed of light. Having bigger telescopes to see fainter stars will not help us here: invisible is truly invisible. Jocelyn Bell Burnell view universe stars light