Spacepod show

Spacepod

Summary: Hear stories about the alien moons orbiting our Sun, of cold stars, and the future of space exploration. Every week, scientist Dr. Carrie Nugent chats about an amazing part of our universe with an expert guest. Spacepod is the podcast that gives you an inside look into space exploration. Learn more: http://listentospacepod.com

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  • Artist: Carrie Nugent
  • Copyright: Copyright 2015, Carrie Nugent. All rights reserved.

Podcasts:

 39: A day in the life of a Mars rover with Dr. Litchtenberg | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 13:23

Dr. Kimberly Litchtenburg explains what it is like to explore Mars with the Curiosity rover. It involves daily discussions with scientists, careful programming, and sometimes, fantastic discoveries, like the discovery of a stream bed that once had enough

 38: Mysterious icy travelers with Dr. Fernández | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 11:43

Professor Yan Fernández tells us about several baffling comets, including one comet that has a nearly circular path around the sun. He also talks about comet Hale Bopp, which we’ve got to study now, because it won’t return to our part of the solar system until 7000 AD.

 37: Exploring Pluto with Dr. Singer | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 14:36

Dr. Kelsi Singer and I drink an unusual beverage while she shares some of the incredible discoveries that she and the New Horizons team are making. We also discuss a contentious issue— should Pluto be called a planet?

 36: Using artwork to explain the Universe with Dr. Hurt | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 21:04

Dr. Robert Hurt stops by the podcast to talk about his job making visuals to explain complicated astronomical concepts. We chat about multiverses, gravitational waves, and Cameron Diaz’s love for NASA.

 35: Geology at a distance with Dr. Rivkin | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 08:26

Dr Andy Rivkin and I drink gin and tonics, and Andy explains what spectroscopy is and what it can teach us about minerals on asteroids. He also describes what it’s like to use some of the world’s most powerful telescopes.

 34: Keeping track of asteroids with Dr. Sphar | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 10:51

Dr. Tim Sphar, CEO of NEO Sciences and former director of the Minor Planet Center, stops by the show to talk about how asteroids are cataloged and monitored. He also talks about his experience the day tiny asteroid 2008 TC3 impacted Earth.

 33: Why do we look for water when we look for life? With Dr. Cable | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 14:28

Dr Cable returns to the show to talk about why scientists often assume that water is needed to sustain life. She explains why most life, like us, likely is carbon-based, and talks about where she’d look for lifeforms beyond our planet.

 32: How to build a planet with Dr. Kretke | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 14:00

Dr. Katherine Kretke investigates how planets are formed with computer models. Her new research had a surprising result— that pebbles play a key role in forming terrestrial planets like Earth and Mars.

 31: If we could put Mars in a bottle… with Paulo Younse | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 17:07

Paulo Younse has spent over 5 years studying hermetic seals for tubes. But these aren’t just any tubes— there the tubes that will travel to Mars and carry rocks back to Earth. He describes the challenges of designing the perfect tubes for this ambitious venture.

 30: Space weathering with Dr. Kaluna | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 11:29

Dr. Heather Kaluna talks about space weathering, which changes the surfaces of the moon, asteroids, and Mercury. She studies space weathering in a laboratory, where she can reproduce hundreds of millions of years of weathering in just forty minutes.

 29: Keeping the James Webb Space Telescope cool with Dr. Stone | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:15

The James Webb Space Telescope is the biggest astronomy project in the world right now. It’s an amazingly complex robot, and some of its sensors need to be kept cool. Dr Kris Stone talks about the cooling system, and how it will be tested during the longest continuous test ever conducted at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

 28: Building experiments for the International Space Station with Dr. White | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 17:12

Dr. Lauren White talks about designing and building instruments for the International Space Station (ISS). She shares a secret about designing instruments for the outside of the space station, and also talks about being the first American to command a laser on the ISS.

 27: Searching Iceland’s lava fields for life on Mars with Dr. Cable | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:38

Dr Morgan Cable comes back on the podcast to tell us about how she and a team of scientists searched a fresh lava field in Iceland to look for signs of life. They pretended to see the landscape like a rover would, so that the lessons they learned in Icela

 26: Old, volatile, and gassy: Why comets would make unpleasant but interesting dinner guests with Dr. Bauer | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 14:22

Dr. James "Gerbs" Bauer talks about comets, the icy dirtballs (or dirty iceballs) that orbit the Sun. We talk about the ancient Egyptian term for comets, why you probably shouldn't eat a comet, and an exciting new discovery made by the NEOWISE team.

 25: Why couldn't New Horizons orbit Pluto? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:04

The New Horizons mission revealed Pluto's jaw-dropping vistas and geophysical mysteries. One listener wanted to know why the spacecraft didn't go into orbit around Pluto. Tom Spilker, interplanetary travel expert, tells us the answer.

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