#52 - October 2016

#52 - October 2016

The Discussion: If you enjoy our attention to scripting, our professional quality audio and our stringent editing, then you're bang out of luck! This show comes from our AstroCamp stargazing event in Wales and we're making it up as we go along.

This month we take you through the delights of dark sky stargazing among friends, Jeni becomes a paid scientist and we get the reactions of the gang as we reveal signed movie poster mock ups that we're emailing to listeners.

The News: Rounding up the space and astronomy news this month we have:

  • Gravity Spy – hunt for gravitational waves in this new citizen science project
  • More details on NASA's Asteroid Redirect Mission
  • The first data from ESA's Gaia spacecraft wows us all

The Interview: This month we welcome back writer, broadcaster and researcher Dr Chris North from Cardiff University to discuss Gravitational Waves: what this means for the future of professional astronomy and what we can expect from this new field of astronomy in the future.

Q&A: Listeners' questions via email, Facebook & Twitter take us on a journey into the astronomy issues that have always plagued our understanding or stretched our credulity. This month we're tackling a question about exoplanet detections with a back of the envelope calculation – and Jeni's making Ralph do the maths. It's fair to say, he's not happy about it:

A big hello from your Antipodean fan from Melbourne to all Martian superior beings in the UK (or something like that)… Whilst listening to your eagerly awaited last instalment of the show I was intrigued by Jeni's (who I believe has been to Australia…) exoplanet research. I am familiar with the concept of observing transits and teasing the dip of brightness out of the data flood. So far so good. That means that we, Earth and Mars of course have to be in the same plane in order to be able to get an observable transit. Is there any data or knowledge if there is a general orientation of planetary systems in relation to us or the galactic plane? Meaning if we know that can we extrapolate somehow how many planets are really out there as we obviously can only observe a fraction of the existing systems? Bit hard to explain but with your superior minds I am sure you will get the idea… :)? Clem Unger, Melbourne, Australia.

Jaksot(362)

Britain's First Astronaut

Britain's First Astronaut

This podcast extra is our full length interview with Dr Helen Sharman, Britain's First astronaut and the first woman to visit the Russian Mir Space Station in 1991.

22 Maalis 202438min

Wet Moons and Tippy landers

Wet Moons and Tippy landers

This month our intrepid crew of the good ship Awesome investigate sub surface oceans on the moons of the solar system, smoking stars, distant blackholes, oversized structures and of course tippy over ...

1 Maalis 20241h 2min

Blasting Soil - Interview with Dr Phil Metzger

Blasting Soil - Interview with Dr Phil Metzger

This month Dr Jen talks to Dr Phil! Dr Phil Metzger, 30 years at NASA where he has worked on various missions and programmes including the ISS snd Space Shuttle, while more recently he has been invest...

17 Helmi 202453min

Awesome Astronomy Episode #140

Awesome Astronomy Episode #140

This month we explore the exciting announcements from the European Space Agency as they outline their new missions for the 2030s. LISA, a space based gravitational wave detector and EnVision, a Venus ...

2 Helmi 20241h 9min

#139 Awesome Astronomy January 2024

#139 Awesome Astronomy January 2024

This episode, it's Jen and a special guest exploring the inexplicable Big Ring, the first proof connecting supernovae to black holes and neutron stars, cyclones on a far-away world, dazzling images of...

15 Tammi 20241h 13min

Awesome Astronomy Panto and Review of the Year 2023!

Awesome Astronomy Panto and Review of the Year 2023!

Festive silliness (bit naughty!), a review of the Space and astronomy year and a look ahead to what 2024 has in store for us. Not forgetting the outakes!

26 Joulu 20231h 9min

#138 Awesome Astronomy December 2023 Pt1

#138 Awesome Astronomy December 2023 Pt1

This month we explore what might have happened to the Planet Theia after it hit the Earth, what Lucy saw on its first asteroid encounter, the mystery of a new double crater on the Moon and what the fi...

1 Joulu 20231h 15min

Astronomy Mythology of Wales

Astronomy Mythology of Wales

This month Jeni talks to Paul. No not our Paul Paul Cornish, planetarium and science outreach extraordinaire at Bristols We the Curious. They chat about one of our favourite topics on Awesome, conste...

19 Marras 202345min

Suosittua kategoriassa Tiede

rss-mita-tulisi-tietaa
tiedekulma-podcast
rss-poliisin-mieli
rss-duodecim-lehti
rss-kasvikutsut
rss-kasvatuspsykologiaa-kaikille
utelias-mieli
docemilia
vinkista-vihia
mielipaivakirja
radio-antro
filocast-filosofian-perusteet
rss-ammamafia
rss-astetta-parempi-elama-podcast
rss-tiedetta-vai-tarinaa
rss-lapsuuden-rakentajat-podcast
rss-lihavuudesta-podcast