 It is really great, you know, to actually be in here and to see every instrument, instrument details. Lysai Deng is a professor and principal investigator at the National Astronomical Observatories in China. Today is an exciting day for Professor Deng on the island of Tenerife. I've been following the whole process, but it's really amazing. I mean, this is the first note. The small telescope behind the Chinese astronomer is the first and brand-new note in the Danish-led Song Network, a global stellar research project that aims to bring us even closer to the stars. Professor Deng is the leading scientist in building the second Song Telescope in China. The Chinese note started about two years later than this one, but because taking all the designs from Danish group, we actually made it in a short time. We didn't have a mirror cover. We probably need to make one. You don't have this? Yeah, we don't. This network can get, for the first time, direct information about the internal structure of stars. The network is designed to follow, let's say, the oscillation of stars continuously without stop. So it's 24 hours. That can be only, let's say, made possible by a network. The second goal of Song is to discover exoplanets, especially the solar-like, high-beautiful exoplanets. And we have a special instrument on this telescope which is capable of doing that.