
365 Days of Astronomy - Weekly Edition (Fraser Cain & Dr. Pamela L. Gay)
Explore every episode of 365 Days of Astronomy - Weekly Edition
Pub. Date | Title | Duration | |
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18 Nov 2018 | Ep. 506: It's not Aliens, Unless it's Aliens | 00:31:08 | |
Did you hear that astronomers from Harvard think that the interstellar asteroid Oumuamua was actually an alien solar sail? Is it aliens? Of course it's not aliens. But some day, it'll actually be aliens. | |||
14 May 2018 | Ep 491: Exoplanet Update 2018 | 00:36:43 | |
Finally, a big update. Have there been news in the realm of exoplanets? More news that we can possibly cover. But we'll try our best. | |||
25 Mar 2024 | Ep. 713: Solar System Volcanoes | 01:06:07 | |
Last week was one of the most exciting meetings we’ve seen from the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, with hundreds of announcements and discoveries from various missions. One theme kept coming up, the Solar System is more volcanically active than we thought. Today, we’ll explore volcanism on other worlds. | |||
22 May 2023 | Ep. 682: Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies & Dark Matter | 01:03:35 | |
Astronomers first noticed the strange behaviors of rotating galaxies almost 100 years ago, suggesting there’s an invisible dark matter hold them together with gravity. Or maybe we just don’t understand how gravity works at the largest scales. Observations are much better now, and astronomers have found examples of galaxies that are almost entirely made of dark matter. Does this tell us anything? | |||
09 Dec 2024 | Ep. 736: Gift Guide 2024 | 01:01:33 | |
Streamed live on Dec 2, 2024 Hosted by: Fraser Cain and Dr. Pamela L. Gay It’s time for our Holiday Gift Guide, where we suggest ideas for presents for the space fans in your life! What books are we reading? What games are we playing and what telescopes are we admiring?
SUPPORTED BY YOU !!! This Episode is made possible thanks to our Patrons on Patreon. Join at the Galaxy Group level or higher to be listed in our YouTube videos. https://www.patreon.com/AstronomyCast Thanks to: Andrew Poelstra, BogieNet, Brian Cagle, David, David Truog, Ed, Gerhard, Schwarzer, Jeanette Wink, Siggi Kemmler, Stephen Veit | |||
12 Oct 2020 | Ep. 581: Other Kinds Of Novae | 01:00:40 | |
Don't ever accuse us of not comprehensively covering every kind of exploding star. This week we gather up all the left over ways that stars partially or fully explode or don't. Probably. Enjoy! | |||
27 May 2024 | Ep. 721: Rogue Planets | 00:55:06 | |
Most of the exoplanets we’ve found are around stars, where they belong. But a few have been found free-floating in interstellar space. The evidence is growing that there are a lot of them out there, maybe even more than planets with stars. How do they form and how can we learn more about them? | |||
23 May 2017 | Astronomy Cast Ep. 450: Inflatable Habitats | 01:00:34 | |
In order to live in space, we'll need to live in a habitat that simulates the temperature, pressure and atmosphere of Earth. And one of the most interesting ideas for how to do this will be with inflatable habitats. In fact, there are a few habitats in the works right now, including one attached to the International Space Station. | |||
16 May 2022 | Ep. 642: Is the Sun... Normal? | 01:00:09 | |
We've always assumed that we lived in a perfectly normal star system with a normal star and normal planets. It's all... normal. But with our modern understanding of billions of stars, just how normal is our Sun, anyway? | |||
30 Sep 2024 | Ep. 728: Solar Scientist Eugene Parker | 00:58:10 | |
Streamed live on Sep 23, 2024. Last week, we talked about the Parker Solar Probe. As always, we like to talk about the person who inspired the mission. What makes this amazing and different is that Eugene Parker was there to watch the launch of the mission that shares his name. Why is he so influential on solar astronomy? | |||
15 Jan 2024 | Ep. 704: NASA's Juno Releases New Images | 00:54:12 | |
NASA’s Juno spacecraft has completed dozens of flybys of Jupiter, seeing the planet from many angles and delivering some of the most beautiful images we’ve ever seen of the Jovian world. Now it’s focusing in on Io, sending home images of the tiny volcanic world from just 1,500 km away. And the best is yet to come. | |||
10 Feb 2020 | Ep. 558: Supernova SN 2006gy | 00:53:11 | |
We've been following this story for more than a decade, so it's great to finally have an answer to the question, why was supernova 2006gy so insanely bright? Astronomers originally thought it was an example of a supermassive star exploding, but new evidence provides an even more fascinating answer. | |||
30 Sep 2019 | Ep. 540: Weird Issues: How Do (or Don't) Planets Form? | 00:58:49 | |
As astronomers started to discover planets orbiting other stars, they immediately realized that their expectations would need to be tossed out. Hot jupiters? Pulsars with planets? We're now decades into this task, and the Universe is continuing to surprise us. | |||
23 Dec 2019 | Ep. 552: Boyajian's star (and other strange stars) | 00:52:47 | |
Huge surveys of the sky are finding more and more planets, stars and galaxies. But they're also turning up strange objects astronomers have never seen before, like Boyajian's star. Today we're going to talk about some unusual objects astronomers have discovered, and why this number is only going to go way way up. | |||
07 Dec 2020 | Ep. 587: The Artemis Accords | 01:09:39 | |
So the Moon is about to become a very busy place with multiple countries and private companies planning missions in the next few years. It's been decades since the Outer Space Treaty was negotiated. It's time for the Artemis Accords! | |||
22 Apr 2019 | Ep. 527: Ancient Astronomy of the American Southwest | 01:01:13 | |
Ancient peoples had no light pollution, and they knew the night skies very well. In fact, they depends on them to know when to plant and when to harvest. Today Pamela talks about the archeoastronomical sites of the American Southwest. | |||
10 Sep 2018 | Ep. 499: What is the proposed Hubble-Lemaitre Law? | 01:01:43 | |
We started out Astronomy Cast with the controversal decision to de-planet Pluto. And here we are, more than a decade later, at the brink of recording our 500th episode when another big decision is coming down from the IAU: whose name goes on the concept that our Universe is expanding: Hubble or Lemaître? It’s a big deal and Pamela knows all about it. | |||
10 Jun 2019 | Ep. 533: Indigenous South African Astronomy | 00:36:20 | |
Let's move to another continent this week, and look at the astronomy that was going on in southern Africa in ancient times. | |||
22 Oct 2018 | Ep. 502: No Touching: Determining Composition of Worlds Remotely | 00:50:48 | |
How do you know what something is made of if you can't reach out and touch it? How do we know what planets lights years away have in their atmosphere? What about the rocks all around Curiosity? Or the geysers coming out of Europa and Enceladus? Scientists have a few handy tricks. | |||
16 Dec 2024 | Ep. 737: Weird Science Stories From 2024 | 00:57:49 | |
Streamed live December13, 2024. Hosted by: Fraser Cain and Dr. Pamela L. Gay. 2024 was a strange year! I’ll let your imagination take flight and consider how 2024 was weird for you. But, for space and astronomy we had some interesting, revolutionary, unsettling and downright weird stories pop up. Today let’s talk about them. | |||
03 Jun 2019 | Ep. 532: Modern Astronomy of Australia | 01:00:57 | |
Last week we talked about how well the indigenous Australians followed the night sky. Well, it turns out, Australia is still an amazing place for astronomy. There are so many powerful observatories in Australia, and even more in the works. | |||
08 May 2017 | Astronomy Cast Ep. 449: Robots in Space! | 00:59:44 | |
When you think of a robot, you're probably imagining some kind of human-shaped machine. And until now, the robotic spacecraft we've sent out into space to help us explore the Solar System look nothing like that. But that vision of robots is coming back, thanks to a few new robots in development by NASA and other groups. | |||
21 Feb 2022 | Ep. 631: All The Uses Of Pulsars (Including Murder) | 00:56:32 | |
Pulsars are the rapidly spinning degenerate husks of dead stars, turning hundreds of times a second. But they're also handy clocks, spinning with such certainty and accuracy that astronomers can use them for all kinds of stuff. We might even use them to navigate the cosmos. | |||
28 Jan 2019 | Ep. 515: Space Radiation | 00:55:35 | |
Space is a hostile environment in so many ways. But one of its worst features is the various kinds of radiation you can find. When astronauts go back beyond the protective environment of the Earth's magnetosphere, what are the various kinds of radiation they'll encounter. And is there anything we'll be able to do about it? | |||
18 Mar 2019 | Ep. 522: Judging Age & Origins, part 1 - Earth Rocks | 00:40:15 | |
People always want to know how old everything is. And more specifically, they want to know how we know how old everything is. Well, here at Astronomy Cast, it's our job to tell you now only what we know, but how we know what we know. And today we'll begin a series on how we know how old everything is. This is part one of a double episode. | |||
30 Oct 2021 | Ep. 617: Hangout-A-Thon Episode 2 - Crowdfunding Science | 00:43:36 | |
Funding for basic science has always been tricky business, coming mainly from universities, government, companies or wealthy individuals. But who knows how many fascinating discoveries were never made because of a lack of funding. And we now live in an era where regular people can come together to fund scientific discoveries. | |||
17 Oct 2022 | Ep. 657: Astronomical Naming Schemes | 00:57:40 | |
Space is a big place, with lots of galaxies, stars, planets, moons, and that means a lot of names. So how do astronomers name stuff, like comets, asteroids, exoplanets, craters? | |||
20 Apr 2020 | Ep. 566: When Comets Fall Apart | 01:00:41 | |
As everyone knows, the Universe owes us a bright comet. There have been a lot of promising candidates, but in the end, they always fail to live up to our expectations. Comets keep on breaking up with us. | |||
28 Sep 2020 | Ep. 579: White and Black Dwarf Stars | 00:58:56 | |
I've got some bad news for you. Stars die. At some point in the next few billion years or so our Sun is going to start heating up, using up all the fuel in its core, and then eventually die, becoming a white dwarf. It'll then slowly cool down to the background temperature of the Universe, becoming a black dwarf. Let's learn about this fascinating process. | |||
05 Jun 2023 | Ep. 684: Too Big, Too Soon: Massive Early Galaxies Defy Expectations | 00:56:32 | |
One of JWST’s top jobs is to peer deeper into the Universe than ever before, watching as the first galaxies came together. Surprisingly, astronomers found galaxies that seemed much more mature than expected, much earlier than it was believed possible. What’s going on and what does it mean for cosmology? | |||
01 May 2017 | Astronomy Cast Ep. 448: Prepping for the Eclipse | 00:59:48 | |
On Monday, August 21, 2017, there's going to be a total eclipse of the Sun, visible to path that goes right through the middle of the United States. You should be making plans to see this, and we're here to help you know where to go and what to do. | |||
23 Nov 2020 | Ep. 585: Super Earths, Mini-Neptunes & Gas Dwarfs | 01:00:12 | |
Astronomers are finding even more new extrasolar planets and they're starting to discover entirely new categories. There are classes of planets out there that we just don't have any analog here in the solar system. Let's talk about them! | |||
07 Dec 2019 | Ep. 550: Missing Epochs - Observing the Cosmic Dark Ages | 00:38:28 | |
Powerful observatories like Hubble and the Very Large Telescope have pushed our vision billions of light-years into the Universe, allowing us to see further and further back in time. But there are regions which we still haven't seen: the Cosmic Dark Ages. What's it going to take to observe some of these earliest moments in the Universe? | |||
17 Jun 2019 | Ep. 534: Modern South African Astronomy | 00:59:16 | |
Last week we talked about some ancient south African astronomy, so this week we'll talk about the state of modern astronomy in the southern part of Africa, which happens to be a great place with nice dark skies and a great view into the heart of the galaxy. | |||
09 May 2022 | Ep. 641: Can Planets Be Alive? | 00:57:03 | |
The Earth is teeming with life, but the upper atmosphere to kilometers underground. There's no question that our planet has life. But is our planet itself alive? This is a question posed back in the 1970s as the Gaia hypothesis, and it got its share of criticism. Some new ideas have been proposed to bring this hypothesis to the modern era as we search for exoplanets. | |||
19 Apr 2021 | Ep. 601: Unexpected Light Pollution | 00:48:20 | |
Day by day we're loosing our connection with the night sky. Already one third of humanity lives in so much light pollution that they can't see the Milky Way without a drive. And now satellite constellations are adding additional light pollution, even in the darkest skies on Earth. | |||
20 Dec 2021 | Ep. 625: End of the Year Review | 01:01:50 | |
We've reached the end of 2021 and this is the last episode of the year. Let's look back at the big space events of the last year and talk about what we're looking forward to in 2022. | |||
12 May 2019 | Ep. 530: Astronomy of the Andes - Then and Now Pt. 2 | 00:31:20 | |
South America, especially the Atacama Desert in Chile has become one of the best places in the world to put a telescope. It's dry, high, and the nights are clear. Today we'll talk about the monster telescopes already in operation in this region, and the big ones coming soon. | |||
03 Feb 2020 | Ep. 557: Red Dwarfs: Friend or Foe | 00:54:51 | |
On the one hand, red dwarfs are the longest lived stars in the Universe, the perfect place for life to hang out for trillions of years. On the other hand, they're tempestuous little balls of plasma, hurling out catastrophic flares that could wipe away life. Are they good or bad places to live? | |||
13 Apr 2020 | Ep. 565: When Worlds Collide | 00:59:15 | |
So much of our Solar System has been shaped by enormous collisions early on in our history. Seriously, the nature of every planet in the Solar System has some evidence of massive impacts during some point in its history. | |||
01 Jan 2018 | Ep. 472: Best Modern Sci Fi for the Science Lover - Part 4: Bioscience | 00:59:47 | |
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24 Mar 2017 | Ep. 441: Destroy and Rebuild, Pt. 5: Continental Drift | 01:00:13 | |
Want to travel the world but you don't have a lot of money? No problem, your continent is drifting across the surface of the Earth right now. In a few million years, you'll reach your destination. | |||
02 Oct 2017 | Ep. 459: Arecibo Observatory | 00:45:07 | |
The iconic Arecibo Radio Observatory has been a mainstay in science and science fiction. This Puerto Rico-based radio telescope was already in an uncertain level of funding. But now with the damage from Hurricane Maria, it might be shut down forever. | |||
14 Feb 2022 | Ep. 630: Things We Can Look Forward To | 00:57:58 | |
In a rare moment of weakness, Pamela has decided she's open to the possibility that a future exists. That missions, telescopes and spacecraft are going to be built and they're going to do science. Today we'll talk about what we're looking forward to before she changes her mind and my naive optimism for the future. | |||
01 Jul 2024 | Ep. 725: Looking Ahead | 00:52:28 | |
Streamed live on Jun 24, 2024. Normally Pamela refuses to think about the future. But today, on our final episode before hiatus, she’s throwing out those rules. It’s like the PURGE! Here’s what we’re excited about for the future. Especially for the next couple of months until we return in September. | |||
19 Jan 2020 | Ep. 555: Satellite Constellations and the Future of Astronomy | 00:29:58 | |
The other big issue at the AAS was the challenge that astronomy is going to face from all the new satellite constellations coming shortly. There are already 180 Starlinks in orbit, and thousands more are coming, not to mention the other constellations in the works. What will be the impact on astronomy, and what can we do about it? | |||
18 May 2020 | Ep. 570: Discovering Comets | 00:58:46 | |
Streamed live May 15, 2020. Discovering comets is one of the fields that amateurs can still make a regular contribution to astronomy. But more and more comets are getting found by spacecraft, automated systems and machine learning. This week we'll talk about how comets are discovered and how you can get your name on one! | |||
10 Feb 2025 | Ep. 743: What Else Can We Learn From Gravitational Waves? | 01:05:15 | |
Streamed live on Feb 3, 2025. Just a few years ago LIGO detected the first direct evidence of gravitational waves coming from colliding black holes. And there you have it. Boom! Black holes collide! But that wasn’t all we learned from gravitational waves, nor will we learn. Sure, the masses of merging black holes are nice to know, but what else can we learn from gravitational black holes?
Hosted by: Fraser Cain and Dr. Pamela L. Gay
SUPPORTED BY YOU! This Episode is made possible thanks to our Patrons on Patreon. Join at the Galaxy Group level or higher to be listed in our YouTube videos. Thanks to: Andrew Poelstra, BogieNet, Brian Cagle, David, David Truog, Ed, Gerhard, Schwarzer, Jeanette Wink, Siggi Kemmler, Stephen Veit | |||
07 Jun 2021 | Ep. 608: NASA Perseverance, The First 100 Days | 01:00:25 | |
As you all know, Pamela refuses to talk about any missions which aren't actually doing science. Well, Perseverance has crossed the line, from fantasy to an actual working rover, scooping regolith and yeeting helicopters. What has the rover accomplished in its first 100 days? | |||
23 Dec 2024 | Ep. 738: Looking Ahead to 2025 | 01:02:46 | |
What can we hope (or dread) to see in 2025? Last week we talked about the 2024 strangeness. Now we’re gonna talk about the upcoming space stories for 2025 that we’re looking forward to. It’s a nice mix of new rockets, new missions and new fly-bys. Hosted by: Fraser Cain and Dr. Pamela L. Gay | |||
16 Dec 2019 | Ep. 551: Missing Epochs - Observing before the CMBR | 00:43:45 | |
The Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation is the earliest moment in the Universe that we can see with our telescopes, just a few hundred thousand years after the Big Bang itself. What will it take for us to be able to fill in the missing gap? To see closer to the beginning of time itself? | |||
30 Nov 2020 | Ep. 586: Life As We Know It: Habitable Exoplanets & Extremophiles | 00:59:20 | |
As scientists continue to explore the Earth, they're discovering life, surviving and even thriving in extreme environments. What hints can this give us about what we might find as we search for live on other worlds. | |||
24 Apr 2023 | Ep. 678: World Building: Planet Formation, Growth & Ejection | 01:00:12 | |
Okay sci-fi writers, today we’re going to give you a guided tour of building planets. How they form, how they grow, and how things can go horribly horribly wrong. [Editor’s Note: Google HL Tau, click on the Wikipedia link and see planets forming!] | |||
07 Feb 2022 | Ep. 629: The Cost of Delays | 01:02:40 | |
With all the success of James Webb so far, it's looking like science's huge gamble is going to pay off, but there were years of delays and budget overruns. What impacts did these delays have on science, careers, and the future of space exploration? | |||
05 Feb 2024 | Ep. 706: China’s Space Program | 01:02:46 | |
We’re so familiar with NASA’s exploration efforts in space, but you might be surprised to learn that China launches almost as many rockets as the US. They’ve got their own space exploration program that could soon bring humans to the surface of the Moon. Let’s give a brief overview of China’s space exploration plans. | |||
24 Mar 2017 | Ep. 440: Destroy and Rebuild, Pt. 4: Supervolcanoes! | 00:39:50 | |
There are regular volcanoes, and then there are the supervolcanoes. Massive calderas of hot magma of incomprehensible size. Bad news, these things explode randomly and catastrophically. Worse news, there are a bunch around the Earth. | |||
28 Nov 2022 | Astronomy Cast Ep. 660: Runaway! Runaway! Escaping Stars, Planets & Small Bodies | 00:44:19 | |
Moons orbit planets, planets orbit stars, stars orbit within galaxies. It’s orbits all the way down. But occasionally objects can receive a powerful kick that sends them on a journey, never to return. | |||
09 Jan 2023 | Ep. 664: The First Stars | 01:00:25 | |
The Sun is a third-generation star, polluted with metals from long-dead suns. Astronomers have also discovered second-generation stars, with very low metallicity. But theories suggest there must be a first generation, with stars made from only pure hydrogen and helium. Can we ever find them? | |||
09 Apr 2018 | Ep 486: Particle Physics Update | 00:59:33 | |
It's time for a news update. This time from the field of particle physics. It turns out there have been all kinds of new and interesting particles discovered by the Large Hadron Collider and others. Let's get an update from Pamela. | |||
11 Jun 2017 | Ep. 453: Favorite Things We've Done These 10 Years | 00:57:58 | |
10 years of Astronomy Cast... wow. It's been a long, fun journey. What are some of our favorite episodes and adventures over the decade we've been doing this show. | |||
01 Nov 2021 | Ep. 618: Ice Giants | 00:57:18 | |
So we’re learning more & more about the outer planets of the solar system. Uranus & Neptune are Ice Giants, filled with water and other volatiles that we'd consider ice if it was here on Earth. What’s inside these worlds and what can we expect to find across the Milky Way as we find more? | |||
24 Feb 2025 | Ep. 745: How We Know If Asteroids Will Attack | 00:57:34 | |
Streamed live Feb 20, 2025. I’m sure you’ve heard the news, asteroid 2024 YR4 has a tiny chance of hitting Earth in 2032. How do astronomers discover these dangerous asteroids, measure their future impact risk and track the changes over time? When should we panic? New asteroids are found every day, and every day we learn that those asteroids don't have any murderous intentions. But how do we learn that? In this episode we dig into asteroid orbital determination. Hosted by: Fraser Cain and Dr. Pamela L. Gay
SUPPORTED BY YOU This Episode is made possible thanks to our Patrons on Patreon. Join at the Galaxy Group level or higher to be listed in our YouTube videos. Thanks to: Andrew Poelstra, BogieNet, Brian Cagle, David, David Truog, Ed, Gerhard, Schwarzer, Jeanette Wink, Siggi Kemmler, Stephen Veit | |||
28 Oct 2019 | Ep. 544: Weird Issues: Biosignatures | 00:56:33 | |
Once again, another place where the Universe is going to make this difficult for us. Proving, once and for all that there's alien life on another world. It should be straightforward, look for biosignatures, but it looks like there are natural sources that could explain almost any chemical we could hope to search for. | |||
02 Dec 2019 | Ep. 549: Stellar nucleosynthesis revisited: In and on and around dead stars | 00:34:13 | |
Last week we gave you an update on the formation of elements from the Big Bang and in main sequence stars like the Sun. This week, we wrap up with a bang, talking about the death of the most massive stars and how they seed the Universe with heavier elements. | |||
07 Nov 2022 | Ep. 658: Space Exploration Horror Stories | 00:57:49 | |
Streamed live on Oct 31, 2022. We’re recording this episode on Halloween, so how could we resist but take advantage of this opportunity. Space is already terrifying enough, you know, with the vast endless emptiness, the incomprehensible mysteries, and the uncaring coldness. But here are some scary stories to spook it up a notch. | |||
09 Oct 2017 | Ep. 460: Earth from Afar: Remote Sensing | 00:59:02 | |
The space age has given us the ability to look at every corner of the globe in every wavelength. It's revolutionized our ability to predict the weather, keep track of environmental damage, and watch the world change. Today we look at what missions and technologies give us the ability to watch our world from afar. | |||
12 Dec 2022 | Ep. 662 - Looking Ahead at New and Recycled Missions | 00:48:33 | |
Last week we talked about the missions we’re saying goodbye to. This week, we’re going to talk about some upcoming missions to say hello to. Some are brand new ideas, others are, uh, recycled. | |||
19 Oct 2020 | Ep. 582: Building Bigger Black Holes | 01:01:04 | |
Did you hear the news? Nobel prizes for Black Holes! Now, we know there are stellar mass black holes and supermassive black holes, but how do you get from one to the other? How do black holes get more massive? | |||
24 Jun 2019 | Ep. 535: Astronomy-Related Things To Do This Summer | 00:58:32 | |
It's summertime, and time for our annual Astronomy Cast hiatus. But that doesn't mean that the astronomy adventure has to end. Today we'll give you some tips and tricks for astronomy summer adventures. | |||
01 Jun 2020 | Ep. 572: Twists in Planet Formation | 00:56:41 | |
Astronomy Cast Ep. 572: Twists in Planet Formation by Fraser Cain & Dr. Pamela Gay We're all looking to the next generation of exoplanetary research where we get planets directly. But astronomers are already making great strides in directly observing newly forming planets help us understand how our solar system might have formed. | |||
28 Feb 2022 | Ep. 632: Building Images: Optical vs Radio | 00:43:45 | |
A recent image from the South African MeerKAT Telescope blew our minds. It was a high resolution image of the center of the Milky Way showing delicate filaments and other structures. What was so mind blowing is that this was an image from a radio telescope. Today we’re gonna talk about why this was such an accomplishment and what the future holds for radio astronomy. | |||
27 Mar 2023 | Ep. 674: Asteroid Early Warning Systems | 00:58:08 | |
The asteroid apocalypse is one of those existential crises that keep astronomers up at night. But the DART mission showed us that we can push an asteroid off its trajectory if we have enough warning. Today we’ll talk about how humanity is building early warning systems to give us time to respond to a dangerous asteroid. | |||
25 Nov 2019 | Ep. 548: Stellar nucleosynthesis revisited: In stellar cores & atmospheres | 00:41:36 | |
The Universe started out with hydrogen and helium and a few other elements, but all around us, there are other, more proton-rich elements. We believe these heavier elements formed in stars, but which stars? And at what points in their lives? Today we'll update our knowledge with the latest science. | |||
17 Mar 2019 | Bonus Episode: Dust with Dr. Paul Sutter | 00:21:10 | |
Recorded during the Astrotour to Costa Rica, Fraser talks to Dr. Paul Matt Sutter about the nature of dust and BICEP 2's claim of discovering primordial gravitational waves. | |||
23 Jan 2023 | Ep. 666: Solar System References to the Underworld | 01:01:17 | |
Well, we did it. We made it to episode 666, an auspicious number to be sure. What can we do to celebrate this accomplishment? An episode all about things in the Universe that have been named after mythological people and places in the underworld! | |||
07 Apr 2025 | Ep. 750: Supernova Early Warning System | 01:01:26 | |
Streamed live on Mar 31, 2025. Hosted by: Fraser Cain and Dr. Pamela L. Gay When enormous stars detonate as supernovae they release a burst of neutrinos that can be the first sign of a coming explosion. Now, astronomers have built a network to watch for that flash of neutrinos, and help direct their telescopes for when the sky show begins. Supernovae explosions occur in stages, with neutrinos being emitted hours before photons. If we can accurately detect those neutrinos, we might just be able to get on target before the light show even starts.... Maybe.
SUPPORTED BY YOU This Episode is made possible thanks to our Patrons on Patreon. Join at the Galaxy Group level or higher to be listed in our YouTube videos. Thanks to: BogieNet, Stephen Vei, Jeanette Wink, Siggi Kemmler, Andrew Poelstra, Brian Cagle, David Truog, Ed, David, Gerhard Schwarzer, Sergio Sancevero, Sergey Manouilov, Burry Gowen, David Rossetter, Michael Purcell, Jason Kwong | |||
18 Sep 2017 | Ep. 457: Why Did Cassini Have To Die? In Memoriam | 00:40:33 | |
It's time to say goodbye to an old friend, NASA's Cassini spacecraft, which has been orbiting within the Saturnian system since 2004. But why does a seemingly healthy spacecraft and mission need to come to an end? Today we look back at the mission, some of the amazing discoveries, and why its finale was necessary. | |||
30 Apr 2018 | Ep 489: Black Hole Update | 00:53:32 | |
Another update episode, this time we look at what’s new and changed in the research of black holes. And it’s here that we find a lot of substantial new discoveries in the field, so much has been discovered since we first covered black holes a decade ago. | |||
29 Jan 2018 | Ep. 476: The Overview Effect | 00:59:44 | |
After they’ve been to space, many astronauts report that seeing the world from above has given them a totally new perspective on humanity and the state of our planet. It’s called the Overview Effect. Today we’ll talk about this, and what this perspective can teach us all. | |||
24 Oct 2017 | Ep. 462: Modeling the Weather | 00:44:39 | |
Have you noticed that weather forecasting has gotten much better in the last few years? Thanks to weather satellites, weather stations, and better forecasting techniques. How do scientists predict the weather with any kind of accuracy days or even weeks in the future. | |||
04 Oct 2021 | Ep. 613: Pluto’s Demotion: 15 Years Later | 00:51:14 | |
It's been 15 years since Pluto was kicked out of the planet club. It also happens to be the topic of our very first episode of Astronomy Cast more than 600 episodes ago. Are there any updates? Does Pluto have a chance of regaining planethood again? | |||
14 Jun 2021 | Ep. 609: Volcanos With Benefits: Lava Tubes, Hydro Thermal Vents & More | 00:57:09 | |
Volcanos can be some of the worst natural disasters that we can experience here on Earth. But life wouldn't even exist without them. So, what are volcanos good for anyway? | |||
14 Oct 2019 | Ep. 542: Weird Issues: The Age of the Universe | 00:37:27 | |
Our series on Universe weirdness continues, this time we learn how astronomers are struggling to make sense of the age of the Universe. | |||
20 Jun 2022 | Ep. 646: Our Long Term Future in Space | 01:01:39 | |
We always say that we're living in golden age of space and astronomy, but it feels like things are just accelerating. Space travel is happening! What does the long-term future hold for our place in the Universe? | |||
30 Oct 2017 | Ep. 463: Pareidolia and the Moon | 00:57:31 | |
The man in the moon, the pyramids on Mars. Every cloud, ever. Humans have a tendency to pattern match when they're looking around the Universe - it's called pareidolia. What causes this behavior, and how can we use this to debunk some hilarious conspiracy theories? | |||
03 Jul 2023 | Ep. 688: What’s Next? Looking Ahead to Season 17 | 01:01:16 | |
Streamed live on Jun 26, 2023. Once again, we’ve reached the end of a season here on Astronomy Cast, and it’s time for the summer hiatus. But the Universe never takes a break. What can we expect to happen over the summer while we’re catching up on our reading, building our gardens and planning for Season 17? | |||
13 Nov 2023 | Ep. 697: Mission Roll Call Part 6: The Outer Solar System and Beyond | 00:45:32 | |
Finally, we reach the end of our tour through the missions in the Solar System. Out beyond Mars, to Jupiter, the Kuiper Belt and Beyond. | |||
29 May 2023 | Ep. 683: Cosmic Dawn | 01:02:18 | |
After the cosmic microwave background radiation was released, the Universe returned to darkness, cloaked in this clouds of primordial hydrogen and helium. Gravity pulled these vast clouds into the first stars, and then the first galaxies. This is Cosmic Dawn, and JWST will help us probe this mysterious time in the Universe. | |||
01 Apr 2019 | Ep. 524: Judging Age & Origins, part 3 - Beyond Our System | 01:00:41 | |
We learned how to figure out the ages of objects in the Solar System, now we push out into the deeper Universe. What about stars, galaxies, and even the Universe itself? How old is it? This episode is part 3 of a series. | |||
30 May 2017 | Ep. 451: When Can I Buy My Ticket To Space? | 00:59:46 | |
Like most of us, you probably want to know what it would be like to travel to space. Maybe not to live, but just to visit. You want to be a space tourist. Good news, there are a bunch of companies working hard to give you the opportunity to fly to space. How long until you can buy a ticket? | |||
11 Sep 2017 | Ep. 456: Pluto Revisited | 01:00:11 | |
This week, we return to our starting point, where Astronomy Cast began: Pluto. 11 years on, we have a whole new appreciate for the dwarf planet Pluto. We've visited it, probed it and taken pictures. It's time for an update. | |||
18 Dec 2023 | Ep. 702: Moonshot 2024 - Go or No Go? | 00:52:40 | |
Streamed live on Dec 11, 2023. With Artemis 1 completing its robotic flight around the Moon, we know that the SLS works. Next comes Artemis 2, with a crew of astronauts flying past the Moon. If that’s successful, we could see humans set foot on the Moon in December 2025. But there is a long list of challenges to consider that could delay things considerably. Go or no go for launch‽ | |||
07 Mar 2017 | Ep. 442: Destroy and Rebuild Pt. 6: Magnetic Pole Reversal | 01:01:04 | |
If we look back into the geologic record of the Earth, it appears that our planet’s magnetic field flips polarity every few hundred thousand years or so. Why does this happen? When’s it supposed to happen next? Is it dangerous? | |||
10 May 2021 | Ep. 604: Balloon Astronomy | 00:59:11 | |
So when you think about the world's observatories, I'm sure you're imagining huge telescopes perched atop mountain peaks or space telescopes like Hubble. But you might be surprised to learn that some telescopes are carried high into the atmosphere on board balloons. What can they accomplish? | |||
08 Jan 2024 | Ep. 703: Solar Maximum of Doom? Maybe | 00:53:04 | |
Streamed live on Dec 20, 2023. Solar cycle 25 is shaping up to be a doozy, with plenty of flares and coronal mass ejections blasting off the Sun. As the solar activity continues to rise, how are things shaping up? | |||
30 Jan 2023 | Ep. 667: JWST First Science | 01:01:25 | |
Astronomers came together in January to present their newest research. And not surprisingly, the winter AAS meeting was heavy on news from the James Webb Space Telescope. What were some of the new results that were announced? | |||
29 Oct 2018 | Ep. 503: Gravity Mapping | 00:32:41 | |
The Earth looks like a perfect sphere, but down here on the surface we see that there are mountains, rivers, oceans, glaciers, all kinds of features with different densities and shapes. Scientists can map this produce a highly detailed gravity map of our planet. And it turns out, this is very useful for other worlds too. | |||
25 Jun 2018 | Ep. 497: Update on Globular Clusters | 01:03:31 | |
Is it globular clusters or is it globeular clusters? It doesn't matter, they're awesome and we're here to update you on them. | |||
08 Jan 2018 | Ep. 473: Remembering the Best Space Science of 2017 | 00:59:36 | |
2017 was a crazy year for, well, you know. But, it was a great year for space science, a kilonova, extrasolar planets, reusable rockets and more. Let's look back at the year that was and remember our favorite space science. | |||
31 Dec 2018 | Ep. 511: Predictions for 2019 | 00:59:48 | |
We did it, we made it through 2018 in space. Now let’s look forward to the incredible launches, discoveries and astronomical events happening in 2019. |