Space Policy Edition: How a Report Can Move Mountains

Space Policy Edition: How a Report Can Move Mountains

How can a simple report—just words on a page—lead to creation of a spacecraft? We explore how a 2019 report on the need for a dedicated, space-based telescope to find threatening near-Earth asteroids motivated NASA to pursue that very mission. We speak with Dr. Jay Melosh, planetary scientist and chair of the National Academies committee behind that report, on how it came together and how the process works behind the scenes. We also check on NASA's budget process in Congress and news from the International Astronautical Congress in Washington, D.C. More resources about this month’s topics are at https://www.planetary.org/multimedia/planetary-radio/show/2019/space-policy-edition-43.html

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Space Policy Edition: Mars via the Nuclear Option

Space Policy Edition: Mars via the Nuclear Option

Can nuclear propulsion fundamentally transform our ability to send humans to Mars? Bhavya Lal, a policy and nuclear engineering expert now working at NASA, helped write a new report on the topic for t...

6 Aug 20211h 10min

Alan Stern Says It’s Time for Suborbital Science

Alan Stern Says It’s Time for Suborbital Science

An experiment rode next to Richard Branson when he rocketed to the edge of space on Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo last month. Planetary scientist Alan Stern says we’ve begun a new era of affordable s...

4 Aug 202146min

Andy Chaikin on Apollo 15 and the lessons of Apollo

Andy Chaikin on Apollo 15 and the lessons of Apollo

Apollo 17 commander Gene Cernan said of Andy Chaikin’s book A Man on the Moon, “I’ve been there. Chaikin took me back.” Andy returns to help us mark the 50th anniversary of Apollo 15 and the first use...

28 Juli 20211h 27min

Amy Mainzer and a New Asteroid-Hunting Space Telescope

Amy Mainzer and a New Asteroid-Hunting Space Telescope

We may finally get the powerful telescope we’ve needed to find almost all of the near-Earth objects that are big enough to destroy a city. University of Arizona professor Amy Mainzer leads the NEO Sur...

21 Juli 202149min

We’re Going Back to Venus

We’re Going Back to Venus

Sue Smrekar and Jim Garvin woke up in June to some of the best news a planetary scientist can receive. Their complementary missions to Venus had just been given the green light by NASA. The VERITAS an...

14 Juli 20211h 2min

Visiting the James Webb Space Telescope

Visiting the James Webb Space Telescope

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is expected to be 100 times as powerful as its predecessor, the Hubble Space Telescope. We talk with three leaders of the effort to build, launch and deploy it as soo...

7 Juli 20211h 18min

Space Policy Edition: The Pentagon's UFO Report, Featuring Sarah Scoles

Space Policy Edition: The Pentagon's UFO Report, Featuring Sarah Scoles

The Pentagon finally released its hotly-anticipated briefing on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. As expected, it provided little new information, saying only that there were a number of unexplainable ob...

2 Juli 20211h 18min

Finding Life by Looking for Complexity

Finding Life by Looking for Complexity

University of Glasgow chemist Lee Cronin and his collaborators have developed a new way to detect life. Their "assembly theory" could give us a reliable method for recognizing life or evidence of past...

30 Juni 202156min

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