Astrotalkuk » Podcast Feed
- Autor: Vários
- Narrador: Vários
- Editora: Podcast
- Duração: 47:02:35
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Sinopse
Hosted by an amateur astronomer, AstrotalkUK is podcast looking at the role, activities and achievements of amateur astronomers in the UK. Mostly a prerecorded mp3 audio file but occasionally accompanied by a video too. The internet being what it is, content will not be limited to the UK nor will the contributors always be amateur astronomers.
Episódios
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Episode 111 – Chandrayaan-3
30/11/2023 Duração: 36minFollowing the successful landing of @isro #Chandrayaan-3, Associate Project Director Kalpana Kalahasti was the first female to speak at the ISRO live stream event. As a seasoned engineer, Kalahasti contributed to numerous projects including SARAL in 2013. Here she talks about her journey with ISRO which began in 1999 as a radar engineer.
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Episode 110 – Humanity’s spiritual destiny and the 100 year starship
10/11/2023 Duração: 34minThe 100 year starship project @100YSS aims to get humanity to develop the capability to travel to the stars in one hundred years time. It started in 2012 headed by Dr Mae Jemison the first woman of colour to fly in to space in STS 47 in 1992.
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Episode 109 – The Antikythera Mechanism with Prof Xenophon Moussas
16/12/2022 Duração: 45minI first came across the Antikythera Mechanism just over a decade ago. It is still the most incredible artefact from history. It is as out of place in our time as William Shakespeare using an Iphone or Vasco De Gama travelling in a speedboat. The Antikythera Mechanism is a complex mechanical (clockwork) device that can determine the position of the planets and phases of the Moon and predict when solar and lunar eclipses will occur. Constructed about two thousand years ago, it was discovered in 1901.
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Episode 108 – NASA’s Europa Clipper Mission
25/11/2022 Duração: 25minThe Clarke Exobelt is the name that Dr Hector Socas-Navarro has given to perhaps the largest structure humans have built. A collection of satellites in earth orbit (geosynchronous) 36,000 km radius. All circling the earth at the same speed in the same direction. The density of this orbit has been increasing since the 1960s but is not yet sufficiently dense for detection from interstellar distances. But in 200 years it may be. In the meantime, this concept works the other way around too. SETI researchers can search for these megastructures or Tecno Signatures to look for extraterrestrial intelligence
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Episode 107 – SETI’s new tool – Technosignatures
18/11/2022 Duração: 40minThe Clarke Exobelt is the name that Dr Hector Socas-Navarro has given to perhaps the largest structure humans have built. A collection of satellites in earth orbit (geosynchronous) 36,000 km radius. All circling the earth at the same speed in the same direction. The density of this orbit has been increasing since the 1960s but is not yet sufficiently dense for detection from interstellar distances. But in 200 years it may be. In the meantime, this concept works the other way around too. SETI researchers can search for these megastructures or Tecno Signatures to look for extraterrestrial intelligence
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Episode 106 – ESA’s new science missions
11/11/2022 Duração: 43minEuropean Space Agency's Dr Paul McNamara was studying low-frequency gravitational waves just before they were discovered in 2015. Now he is the astronomy and astrophysics coordinator for the European Space Agency. In this interview, recorded in Athens during Cospar2022, he speaks about some of the exciting science missions that ESA will be launching later this decade.
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Episode 105 – Return to Titan – Dragonfly
04/11/2022 Duração: 44minDr Ralph Lorenz speaks about Dragonfly, a return mission to land on Titan. This mission, for which he is the mission architect, is like no other. It is not really a lander or rover but a quadcopter that will sample different regions near the landing site during its 3.3-year lifetime.
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Episode 104 – William Leitch. The forgotten Scottish Rocket Pioneer
28/10/2022 Duração: 01h09minWhen it comes to the pioneers of rocketry, tradition has it that it was Tsiolkovsky, Goddard and Oberth. in this episode, author Rob Godwin talks about William Leitch from Scotland. He was writing about rocketry from the 1850s
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Episode 102 – Martian Geology with Prof Sanjeev Gupta
14/10/2022 Duração: 30minIn 1972, Harrison Schmitt became the first (and so far only), scientist to walk on the surface of the Moon. Since then many scientists have brought their scientific insights to understanding to the solar system and their moons. geologist @sanjeevgupta45 from @imperialcollege talks about Mars
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Episode 102 – Martian Geology with Prof Sanjeev Gupta
14/10/2022 Duração: 35minIn 1972, Harrison Schmitt became the first (and so far only), scientist to walk on the surface of the Moon. Since then many scientists have brought their scientific insights to understanding to the solar system and their moons. geologist @sanjeevgupta45 from @imperialcollege talks about Mars
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Episode 101 UNOOSA – Peaceful Uses of Outer Space
07/10/2022 Duração: 30minNiklas Hedman, the Acting Director of the @UN Office for the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (UNOOSA) talks about @UNOOSA ongoing role in facilitating and promoting the peaceful uses of space in Low Earth orbit and beyond.
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Episode 100 Sandra Benitez Herrera – ESA Education Outreach
18/09/2022 Duração: 27minSandra Benitez-Herrera talks about the opportunities for teachers and students made available by the European Space Agency 's CESAR (Cooperation through Education in Science and Astronomy Research) program. @esa
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Episode 99 Professor Stamatios Krimigis – Exploring the Solar System with Voyager
09/09/2022 Duração: 40minA chance meeting with James van Allen led Stamatios Krimigis to build instruments for Mariner 3 and 4. Eventually became a Principle Investigator for the charged particle instrument on voyager which was initially known as Mariner Jupiter Saturn 77 program
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Episode 98 Astrophotography with Nik Szymanek
18/10/2021 Duração: 01h11sAstrophotographer Nik Szymanek shares his unique perspective on how astrophotography has evolved since the 1980s when he first started. We speak about software and robotic telescopes @telescopelivehq @APinSpain & @astronomynow get a mention.
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Episode 97 Bob Heil’s Moon Bounce Experiment with NASA
08/10/2021 Duração: 53minFollowing an unexpected meeting with USA's first Astronaut, Alan Shepard in around 1962. In this episode he recounts a Moon-Bounce experiments with @Nasa.
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Episode 96 Seti – The search so far with Jill Tarter
01/10/2021 Duração: 35minSince the beginning of human civilisation, people have looked up at the night sky and wondered – are we alone? Science and technology of the 20th century has made it possible to try to address that question. So how is are we doing? With Jill Tarter from @SETIInstitute
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Episode 95 European Space Cooperation DeGaulle to ExoMars with Brian Harvey
24/09/2021 Duração: 01h03minThe latest book from author Brian Harvey @BrianHarveyAut1, this is probably the first English language analysis of the individuals, institutions and early space projects that would eventually lead, not just France, but Europe to its status as a leader in designing, building and operating complex space infrastructure.
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Episode 94 Seti – Techniques and Technology with Jill Tarter
17/09/2021 Duração: 31minHow has the ¢SETI evolved over the last 6 decades and especially what can modern technology allow today that was not possible then? With Jill Tarter from @SETIInstitute
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Episode 93: Exploring the surface of Titan
14/01/2021 Duração: 59minOn 14th January 2005, the Huygens probe landed on Titan. Saturns and the solar systems largest Moon. This was a joint NAS/ESA mission called Cassini-Huygens. Whilst Huygens landed on Titan, Cassini continued to orbit Saturn. Professor John Zarnecki, the prinicpal investigator for the Surface Science Package, recalls the experience of that mission and what we learnt about Titan then and since.
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Episode 92: Revisiting Panspermia with Prof. Wickramasinghe
01/01/2021 Duração: 01h15minThe idea of Panspermia, that life exists throughout the universe and spreads via asteroids, comets and cosmic dust, has been around for a long time. Two of the strongest advocates were Professor Fred Hoyle and Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe.