LIGO, Space, Planets and Stars! – Part 1 Astro-binging! We had the Institute for Astronomy’s Dr. J.D. Armstrong to talk to us about everything from black holes to quasi-moons this show! It was a great two hours with JD, lots of space stories, and your calls! Ready for hour 2? Click here!
Q&A Presents: Maui Online! – Saturday, June 18th – Part 2
LIGO, Space, Planets and Stars! – Part 2 Astro-binging! We had the Institute for Astronomy’s Dr. J.D. Armstrong to talk to us about everything from black holes to quasi-moons this show! It was a great two hours with JD, lots of space stories, and your calls! Did you miss hour one? Click here!
Q&A Presents: Maui Online! – Saturday, April 9th – Part 2
Space X, and what’s next! Hour two was SPACE! Space X, Blue Origin, the ULA, and more! This has been a big week in space flight, and you know the guys were ready to talk about that!
Q&A Presents: Maui Online! – Saturday, March 19th – Part 2
Hour two of our grab-bag show? We talk about a Pair o’ Comets! Astronomy is one of our favorite topics, and we hope our excitement for it will encourage you to go out and stand outside at night as well!
LIGO!
Need more to read about gravitational waves? Did this Saturday’s show merely whet your appetite? Fear not! We have links for you! http://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2016/02/11/gravitational-waves-at-last/ http://www.newyorker.com/tech/elements/gravitational-waves-exist-heres-how-scientists-finally-found-them?currentPage=all http://www.astronomy.com/news/2016/02/pan-starrs-chases-source-of-ligo-gravity-wave-event
Astronomical binge reading!
Did today’s show leave you hungry for more starry stories and celestial tales? Do you have an appetite for things beyond the sight of the naked eye? When you look up, do you wish you could be doing it with the insights of the world’s astronomy community along with you? Well, you’re in luck! http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/info/press-releases/alpha_centauri/ http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2015/10/14/weird_star_strange_dips_in_brightness_are_a_bit_baffling.html http://www.astronomy.com/news/2015/10/hubbles-planetary-portrait-captures-new-changes-in-jupiters-great-red-spot http://www.astronomy.com/news/2015/10/vla-reveals-spectacular-halos-of-spiral-galaxies http://phys.org/news/2015-10-robotic-laser-astronomy.html http://www.sci-news.com/astronomy/science-eso-coalsack-nebula-03338.html http://www.astronomy.com/news/2015/10/hubbles-planetary-portrait-captures-new-changes-in-jupiters-great-red-spot
Q&A Presents: Maui Online! – Saturday, October 17th – Part 1
Astronomical Stuff with Dr. Armstrong! – Part 1 Since its activation in 2009, the Kepler Space Telescope has been scanning the cosmos in search of habitable worlds beyond our Solar System. Kepler observed the star KIC 8462852 for four years starting in 2009. Typically, orbiting planets only dim the light of their host star for a period of a few hours to a few days depending on their orbit. A group of citizen scientists noticed that this star appeared to have two small dips in 2009, followed by a large dip lasting almost a week in 2011, and finally a series of multiple dips significantly dimming the star’s light in 2013. Hmmm. That’s funny… The pattern of dips indicates that the star is orbited by a large, irregular-shaped mass. If it were orbiting a young star, this mass might be a protoplanetary disc, but KIC 8462852 is not a young star. We would also expect to see the presence of dust emitting infrared light, which hasn’t been observed. So what is this orbiting mass? We don’t know. But we have some ideas… ideas that may make you go Hmmmm… So join Jonathan, Sam, and L.D. along with special guest Dr. J.D. Armstrong from the Maui Institute for Astronomy as we ponder the possibilities…
Q&A Presents: Maui Online! – Saturday, October 17th – Part 2
Astronomical Stuff with Dr. Armstrong! – Part 2 Since its activation in 2009, the Kepler Space Telescope has been scanning the cosmos in search of habitable worlds beyond our Solar System. Kepler observed the star KIC 8462852 for four years starting in 2009. Typically, orbiting planets only dim the light of their host star for a period of a few hours to a few days depending on their orbit. A group of citizen scientists noticed that this star appeared to have two small dips in 2009, followed by a large dip lasting almost a week in 2011, and finally a series of multiple dips significantly dimming the star’s light in 2013. Hmmm. That’s funny… The pattern of dips indicates that the star is orbited by a large, irregular-shaped mass. If it were orbiting a young star, this mass might be a protoplanetary disc, but KIC 8462852 is not a young star. We would also expect to see the presence of dust emitting infrared light, which hasn’t been observed. So what is this orbiting mass? We don’t know. But we have some ideas… ideas that may make you go Hmmmm… So join Jonathan, Sam, and L.D. along with special guest Dr. J.D. Armstrong from the Maui Institute for Astronomy as we ponder the possibilities…