
Eponymous Laws Part 2
In a previous episode, I went through a list of eponymous laws. These were laws, general rules, or sometimes even scientific laws that were named after people. However, the eponymous laws I went throu...
12 Nov 202313min

The OMG! Particle
On October 15, 1991, a cosmic ray detector in Utah observed something that had never been seen before or since. It was a cosmic ray with more energy than anything ever observed and more energy than m...
11 Nov 202314min

Constantinople (Encore)
In the year 330, the Roman Emperor Constantine decided that the capital of the entire Roman Empire should be moved. The location he selected was a small Greek town by the name of Byzantium, located i...
10 Nov 202314min

Operation Unthinkable
In the days immediately following the surrender of Germany in May 1945, new concerns gripped the victorious Allied forces. The alliance had always been one of convenience. Diametrically opposing poli...
9 Nov 202314min

The Colosseum (Encore)
In the year 70, the Roman Emperor Vespasian commissioned what would become the world’s largest amphitheater. Approximately ten years later, it opened to great fanfare and 100 days of games. No great...
8 Nov 202313min

Sergei Korolev: The Most Important Russian You've Never Heard Of
In the early 1960’s the Soviet space program was on a roll. They launched the first satellite into space. They launched the first man and woman into space. They conducted the first space walk. Then, ...
7 Nov 202314min

A Brief History of Digital Audio
Right now, you are listening to the sound of my voice on some sort of digital audio device. In fact, almost all of the audio you consume today was digitally recorded or edited at some point in the pro...
6 Nov 202315min

Remember, Remember the 5th of November (Encore)
In 1605, members of the Catholic resistance in England hatched a plot that would have completely changed the political landscape of the country. They wanted to blow up the entire parliament and the ki...
5 Nov 202311min






















