[MUSIC PLAYING] [Andrea Banzatti] Now everything in nature interests us. Fundamentally, we don't even know why. And also, it can be flowers. It can be planets. But everything interests us just because it exists. [Will Rocha] So, when we look outside for these new planets and the stars, we can understand ourselves. [Andrea Banzatti] To understand who we are and where we come from, we can not just rewind. It would be fantastic if we could see the movie of our history and just go back. But we cannot. So, the way to do it is to look at other systems that are forming. [Szanna Zsiros] Webb has a unique sensitivity, and it's really important to see those details that have never been captured by any other spacecraft. [Will Rocha] The reason I study complex organic molecules is because we want to understand how the chemical environment evolved from the simple molecules like water, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, to more evolved systems. [Andrea Banzatti] So, I work on observations related to fundamental processes that happen in planet formation, especially pebble drift theory, as a process for forming planets in disks. [Szanna Zsiros] Dust grains are basically the fundamental building blocks of our universe. And they participate in a lot of astronomical processes, from forming molecules to the evolution of galaxies. But its sources are still not clearly known. [Will Rocha] We can combine together physics, we can combine chemistry, and also biology, in order to understand how simple chemical systems evolve into complex chemical systems, and how this promotes, somehow, the origin of life. [Andrea Banzatti] I believe that JWST has a unique potential to tell us the story, and I think it really will come in the next few years.