Synopsis
Hear stories about the alien moons orbiting other planets, of cold stars, and the future of space exploration. Dr. Carrie Nugent chats about an amazing part of our universe with a scientist or engineer. Spacepod is the podcast that gives you an inside look into space exploration and astronomy.
Episodes
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109: To attack that darkness once again with Dr. Hunt
08/10/2017 Duration: 19minDr. Cindy Hunt returns to the show to talk about the upcoming 100th anniversary of the 100 inch Hooker Telescope on Mount Wilson. She explains why this telescope looks like a battleship and tells us how it “completely upended our understanding of the universe”. Also: poetry!
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108: End of mission blues with Dr. Storrie-Lombardi
24/09/2017 Duration: 25minDr. Lisa Storrie-Lombardi returns to the show to discuss NuSTAR, Spitzer, and what it feels like to end a mission you’ve been working on for decades. Cassini’s Grand Finale has us reflecting on the upcoming demise of the Spitzer Space Telescope.
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107: Loose rocks and soft bots with Dr. McMahon
10/09/2017 Duration: 29minProfessor Jay McMahon stops by the show to explain the YORP effect and how it changes asteroid spins and shapes. He also describes his NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) project that is investigating the use of soft robots to explore rubble-pile asteroids.
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106: Sample the mantle with Dr. Peterson
27/08/2017 Duration: 29minDr. Mary Peterson tells us about basaltic glasses from the Galápagos Islands, and why they might have originated deep within the Earth’s mantle. She also describes her lab work, which involves cool lab coats, security badges, and meticulous sorting of samples.
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105: Tectonic fabric with Dr. Donnellan
13/08/2017 Duration: 19minDr. Andrea Donnellan stops by the show to talk about GeoGateway, a website that combines different datasets to help geologists. She explains how rocks move like silly putty, and recounts the time a lone cloud masqueraded as tectonic motion. Bonus music at the end is “Glorious Dawn” by Colorpulse. Hear more rad science tunes at www.symphonyofscience.com.
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104: Occultation vacation with Dr. Kramer
30/07/2017 Duration: 27minDr. Emily Kramer stops by the show to try some tea and talk about her trip to South Africa to observe the next New Horizons target, 2014 MU69. She was one of several astronomers and planetary scientists who flew to other countries to watch this object pass in front of a star in the hopes of measuring its diameter.
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103: Meteor showers and “broom stars” with Dr. Ye
16/07/2017 Duration: 26minDr. Quan-Zhi Ye tries an unusual frappuccino and explains how meteor showers are related to comets. He tells the story of how he became interested in comets and asteroids, and fills us in on some of his recent research.
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102: A thrilling tale of discovery with Dr. Christiansen
02/07/2017 Duration: 14minDr. Jessie Christiansen returns to the show to talk about newly discovered exoplanets! She explains why this planetary system was devilishly difficult to observe with ground-based telescopes, and how one of the planets poses a puzzle.
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101: The best geologist on Mars with Dr. Francis
18/06/2017 Duration: 23minDr. Raymond Francis talks about a rock-vaporizing laser and the software that controls it. He describes how he and colleagues programmed a computer to make choices like a geologist would, allowing the Curiosity rover to do more science on Mars.
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100: The gauntlet is thrown- explain the ammonia! with Dr. Ehlmann
04/06/2017 Duration: 17minDr. Bethany Ehlmann returns to talk about Ceres. She tells us what certain types of silicates have in common with phyllo dough, and explains how traces of ammonia on Ceres hint at unusual history for this dwarf planet.
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99: Photons from exoplanets with Dr. Meshkat
28/05/2017 Duration: 19minDr. Tiffany Meshkat describes direct imaging of exoplanets, which astronomers have used to discover enormous, young planets. She also talks about WFIRST, a mission under development that would be able to find and characterize exoplanets.
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98: A place on Earth as dry as Mars with Dr. Azua-Bustos
21/05/2017 Duration: 20minDr. Armando Azua-Bustos talks about how he discovered the driest place on Earth— a region in the Atacama Desert not far from where he grew up. He explains how he collects and studies microbial life that live in these extremely dry regions.
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97: If a glacier falls in a fjord… with Dr. Koppes
14/05/2017 Duration: 22minDr. Michele Koppes stops by to talk about her glacier research on planet Earth. She describes how a melting glacier triggered a staggeringly large landslide in 2015, and how glaciers can match even humans in their ability to transform the landscape.
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96: Vega, dust, and a giant inflatable bumblebee with Dr. Ciardi
07/05/2017 Duration: 17minDr. David Ciardi talks about Vega, a bright star that’s “been a part of human lore forever.” Dr. Ciardi and his colleagues discovered that Vega has a nearby ring of dust, implying the presence of planets. He also describes an encounter with a giant inflatable bumblebee at Palomar Observatory.
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95: Asteroid hunting software with John Dailey
30/04/2017 Duration: 16minJohn Dailey explains how he uses his software engineering skills to discover asteroids at IPAC/Caltech. He helps solve problems inherent to working with astronomical data, such as the challenge of reading in and out huge volumes of data from hard drives.
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94: Seven hundred new craters on Mars with Dr. Daubar
23/04/2017 Duration: 14minDr. Ingrid Daubar stops by to talk about HiRISE, a camera on a Mars-orbiting spacecraft that takes amazing images of the Martian surface. She explains how she uses these images to search for fresh craters, and how you (yes you!) suggest areas of the planet for this camera to image. (Correction to episode: Mars’ atmosphere is 0.6% that of Earth, not 6%)
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93: Companionable Jupiters with Marta Bryan
16/04/2017 Duration: 21minMarta Bryan shares her new results on exoplanets! She explains how she tested a theory of hot jupiter formation, and how she figured out that planet rotation rates are likely set early on in the planet’s lifetime.
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92: When there’s dust there’s planets with Dr. Patel
09/04/2017 Duration: 15minDr. Rahul Patel describes his search for undiscovered disks of dust around other stars. He explains how looking for fainter and fainter debris disks may bring us closer to discovering a planetary system similar to our own.
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91: Tectonic hazard on Phobos with Dr. Curren
02/04/2017 Duration: 11minDr. Ivy Curren talks about Mars’ moon Phobos, and how grooves on its surface indicate that the interior may be fractured. This small, mysterious moon is covered in faults, making it a dicey place for future missions to land.
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90: The universe is full of water with Dr. Paladini
26/03/2017 Duration: 18minDr Roberta Paladini talks about the space-based Herschel Space Observatory, which was the largest infrared telescope ever launched. It looked at the sky in the far infrared, and discovered an abundance of water in star-forming regions.