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Opowiadamy o bakteriach, wychodząc od oczerniania wiewiórek i wybielania szczurów w kontekście przyczyn dawnych epidemii, a kończąc na domniemanych mikroorganizmach żyjących niegdyś na Marsie, co przybliża nas do bodaj największego kosmicznego odkrycia, jakie może nas czekać w ciągu kolejnych lat. To odcinek z cyklu “Nauka na czasie”, czyli lżejsza wersja naszego podcastu, w której omawiamy dwa wybrane naukowe newsy. Cykl ten publikujemy co drugi tydzień, na przemian z dłuższymi odcinkami. Rozważcie wsparcie nas na Patronite - dzięki Waszym wpłatom będziemy mogli utrzymać cotygodniowy rytm ukazywania się nowych odcinków: https://patronite.pl/crazynaukaJeśli wolisz jednorazowo postawić nam kawę, to super. Dzięki!
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
The Space, Astronomy and Science Podcast. SpaceTime Series 27 Episode 44 *New Clues About Mars' Ancient Water NASA's Mars Curiosity rover has arrived at an area in Gale Crater's Mount Sharp that may show evidence liquid water flowed on the red planet for much longer than previously thought. *NASAs new Moon buggies NASA has selected three companies to help it develop its proposed new Moon buggy --- the lunar terrain vehicle or LTV. *The largest digital camera ever built for astronomy After two decades of work, scientists and engineers at the US Department of Energy's Stanford Linear Accelerator Centre's National Accelerator Laboratory have finally completed the Legacy Survey of Space and Time Camera -- The largest digital camera ever built for astronomy. *The Science Report A new study shows that high blood pressure is the leading risk factor for death. The Persian Plateau identified as pivotal for Homo sapiens migration out of Africa. Volcanoes could hold the clues to how the first building blocks of life were formed. Alex on Tech more controversy for Google https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com https://bitesz.com Listen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen and access show links via https://linktr.ee/biteszHQThis episode is brought to you by NordPass...your password manager that will relieve password stress in your life. Get organised for not very much money...visit www.bitesz.com/nordpass and check out our very special deal.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/spacetime-with-stuart-gary--2458531/support.
On August 5th, NASA's Curiosity rover marked eleven years on the Red Planet.
i’ve been in my summer home for a week. it’s cool, it’s just quiet. i’ve gotten so used to a crowded house. but maybe it makes sense to hibernate a bit during the summers here. lay low. ride around sometimes after the sun goes down. and during the day you keep the blinds drawn to keep the cool in. maybe in that darkness i could try making my own sounds, practice drawing, etc. i hope the quietude allows for some creative moments that just didn’t have a chance against the constant activity in the old house. i wouldn’t trade the past year at all, but i could perhaps work towards more of a balance moving forward.DOWNLOAD/STREAM RECORDING00:00 (intro by omar)00:20 Soakie “What’s Your Gender” Soakie02:04 Too Free “ATM” Love in High Demand06:43 SEABLITE “High-Rise Mannequin” High-Rise Mannequins10:25 bb slugs “at ur apartment” had we met any earlier, it would’ve been too soon13:41 Man Made Hill “Preferential Treatment” Mass Wasting16:55 WUT “Daily Chores” NOW18:51 Mount Sharp “Domes” That Shadow22:12 Quality Cable “Bug on the Wall” Channel Fever26:10 Parlor Walls “Violets” Heavy Tongue28:45 Lee Baggett “Always Something” Uncanned32:18 Purr “Giant Night” Like New36:30 Spinning Coin “Avenues Of Spring” Hyacinth39:42 Launderette “Mannequin Man” Brain Wash (Demo)42:08 DEAN CERCONE “Wandering Feeling” TREBLE SCULPTURES COMPILATION (selections from the vault 13’-18’)46:44 BOOSEGUMPS “Perfect Autumn Day” 5 Demos48:45 Jay Som “A Thousand Words” A Thousand Words51:58 OOF “Does Anyone Live In This Town Anymore?” EGO53:10 chemical club “are you alone are you upset” mutual psychosis55:05 Modern Needs “Secondhand Embarrassment” Survey of the Animal Kingdom57:18 VACANT GARDENS “OPEN AIR” UNDER THE BLOOM
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
SpaceTime Series 26 Episode 26 *The Mars Curiosity rover finds surprising clues to the red planet's watery past Among other discoveries being made by NASA's Mars Curiosity rover as it continues to explore the foothills of Gale Crater's Mount Sharp are strange rippled rock textures suggestive of lakes beds. *A monster attacks at the galactic centre Astronomers are watching a massive cloud being pulled apart as it accelerates toward the supermassive black hole at the centre of our Milky Way galaxy. *Japan aborts the maiden flight of its new H3 rocket The Japan aerospace exploration agency JAXA was forced to abort the maiden flight of its new H3 rocket. *The Science Report The melting of Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier could raise sea levels by half a metre. New warnings about a rise in Bird flu. Claims AI could cut household chores by 38 percent. Alex on Tech: People bullying Microsoft's Chat GPT's Bing AI. Listen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ If you love this podcast, please get someone else to listen to. Thank you… To become a SpaceTime supporter and unlock commercial free editions of the show, gain early access and bonus content, please visit https://bitesz.supercast.com/ . Premium version now available via Spotify and Apple Podcasts. For more podcasts visit our HQ at https://bitesz.com Your support is needed... SpaceTime is an independently produced podcast (we are not funded by any government grants, big organisations or companies), and we're working towards becoming a completely listener supported show...meaning we can do away with the commercials and sponsors. We figure the time can be much better spent on researching and producing stories for you, rather than having to chase sponsors to help us pay the bills. That's where you come in....help us reach our first 1,000 subscribers...at that level the show becomes financially viable, and bills can be paid without us breaking into a sweat every month. Every little bit helps...even if you could contribute just $1 per month. It all adds up. By signing up and becoming a supporter at the $5 or more level, you get immediate access to over 350 commercial-free, triple episode editions of SpaceTime plus extended interview bonus content. You also receive all new episodes on a Monday rather than having to wait the week out. Subscribe via Supercast (you get a month's free trial to see if it's really for you or not) ... and share in the rewards. Details at Supercast - https://bitesznetwork.supercast.tech/ Details at https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com or www.bitesz.com
The 365 Days of Astronomy, the daily podcast of the International Year of Astronomy 2009
Data and images from NASA's Curiosity rover found evidence that wind played a key role in erosional processes on the red planet, despite the lower atmospheric volume. Plus, astrophysics and cosmology news, a baby exoplanet, and this week in space history, we look back at an uncrewed lunar mission from Japan. We've added a new way to donate to 365 Days of Astronomy to support editing, hosting, and production costs. Just visit: https://www.patreon.com/365DaysOfAstronomy and donate as much as you can! Share the podcast with your friends and send the Patreon link to them too! Every bit helps! Thank you! ------------------------------------ Do go visit http://www.redbubble.com/people/CosmoQuestX/shop for cool Astronomy Cast and CosmoQuest t-shirts, coffee mugs and other awesomeness! http://cosmoquest.org/Donate This show is made possible through your donations. Thank you! (Haven't donated? It's not too late! Just click!) ------------------------------------ The 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast is produced by the Planetary Science Institute. http://www.psi.edu Visit us on the web at 365DaysOfAstronomy.org or email us at info@365DaysOfAstronomy.org.
Mission scientists are anxious to begin analyzing the salty substances found in this treacherous terrain, using instruments onboard Curiosity's roving lab.
After journeying all summer, NASA's Curiosity Mars rover recently arrived in a region of Mount Sharp enriched with salty minerals, which scientists hope will provide tantalizing clues as to how and why the Red Planet's climate changed from Earth-like to the frozen desert it is today.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
SpaceTime Series 25 Episode 118*Curiosity reaches a key targetNASA's Mars Curiosity Rover finally arrived at a long sought after target on its journey to climb the red planet's Mount Sharp.*NASA orders more Orion SpacecraftNASA has ordered three more Orion Crew capsules from Lockheed Martin for future manned missions to the Moon.*A food run to the space stationA Russian Progress cargo ship has successfully docked to the International Space Station's Poisk module two days after launching aboard a Soyuz 2.1a rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Central Asian republic of Kazakhstan.*Skyrora fails in first space launch attemptThey say space is hard and Scottish company Skyrora has learnt that lesson the hard way after the maiden test flight of their new Skylark L suborbital rocket failed to reach space.*November SkywatchThe constellation of the winged horse Pegasus, the giant galaxy M31-Andromeda barrelling towards us, and three meteor showers in one month are among the highlights of the November night skies on SkyWatch…Listen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ If you love this podcast, please get someone else to listen to. Thank you…To become a SpaceTime supporter and unlock commercial free editions of the show, gain early access and bonus content, please visit https://bitesz.supercast.com/ . Premium version now available via Spotify and Apple Podcasts.For more podcasts visit our HQ at https://biteszhq.com Your support is needed...SpaceTime is an independently produced podcast (we are not funded by any government grants, big organisations or companies), and we're working towards becoming a completely listener supported show...meaning we can do away with the commercials and sponsors. We figure the time can be much better spent on researching and producing stories for you, rather than having to chase sponsors to help us pay the bills.That's where you come in....help us reach our first 1,000 subscribers...at that level the show becomes financially viable and bills can be paid without us breaking into a sweat every month. Every little bit helps...even if you could contribute just $1 per month. It all adds up.By signing up and becoming a supporter at the $5 or more level, you get immediate access to over 280 commercial-free, double, and triple episode editions of SpaceTime plus extended interview bonus content. You also receive all new episodes on a Monday rather than having to wait the week out. Subscribe via Supercast (you get a month's free trial to see if it's really for you or not) ... and share in the rewards. Details at Supercast - https://bitesznetwork.supercast.tech/ Details at https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com or www.bitesz.com
The 365 Days of Astronomy, the daily podcast of the International Year of Astronomy 2009
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WU-8iVkMXO8 Streamed live on Sep 28, 2022. Host: Fraser Cain ( @fcain )Special Guest: On August 5, 2022, a plucky little rover named Curiosity celebrated its 10th Anniversary on the surface of Mars. Since being lowered on Mars that summer day it has continued to exceed all mission expectations. For ten years, Curiosity has called Gale Crater and the foothills of Mount Sharp "home," all while wandering around the name of science and traveling nearly 18 miles (29 kilometers) and ascending 2,050 feet (625 meters). What have we been able to learn about Mars during this decade? And what lies ahead for the "Little Rover that Could?" Join us tonight as Dr. Ashwin Vasavada brings piques our "Curiosity" and answers these questions. Dr. Ashwin Vasavada is a planetary scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. Currently he is the Project Scientist for NASA's Curiosity rover that began development in 2003 and just completed its tenth year on the surface of Mars. He now leads the international team of scientists as they explore Gale Crater. He also has participated in the operation and analysis of data from several other NASA spacecraft missions, including the Galileo mission to Jupiter, the Cassini mission to Saturn, and the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. He holds a B.S. in Geophysics and Space Physics from UCLA and a Ph.D. in Planetary Science from Caltech. You can stay up to date with Curiosity by visiting the project's web site https://mars.nasa.gov/msl and by following it on both Twitter (https://twitter.com/MarsCuriosity) and Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/marscuriosi.... Regular Guests: Dr. Nick Castle ( @PlanetaryGeoDoc / https://wanderingsci.com/ ) Allen Versfeld ( http://www.urban-astronomer.com & @uastronomer ) Pam Hoffman ( http://spacer.pamhoffman.com/ & http://everydayspacer.com/ & @EverydaySpacer ) This week's stories: - New information from Perseverance in Jezero Crater. - The DART Mission. Obviously! - What to see in the fall skies. - Looking at lunar glass to understand Earth's impact record. - SLS doesn't launch because of hurricane Ian. We've added a new way to donate to 365 Days of Astronomy to support editing, hosting, and production costs. Just visit: https://www.patreon.com/365DaysOfAstronomy and donate as much as you can! Share the podcast with your friends and send the Patreon link to them too! Every bit helps! Thank you! ------------------------------------ Do go visit http://www.redbubble.com/people/CosmoQuestX/shop for cool Astronomy Cast and CosmoQuest t-shirts, coffee mugs and other awesomeness! http://cosmoquest.org/Donate This show is made possible through your donations. Thank you! (Haven't donated? It's not too late! Just click!) ------------------------------------ The 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast is produced by the Planetary Science Institute. http://www.psi.edu Visit us on the web at 365DaysOfAstronomy.org or email us at info@365DaysOfAstronomy.org.
On August 5, 2022, a plucky little rover named Curiosity celebrated its 10th Anniversary on the surface of Mars. Since being lowered on Mars that summer day it has continued to exceed all mission expectations. For ten years, Curiosity has called Gale Crater and the foothills of Mount Sharp "home," all while wandering around the name of science and traveling nearly 18 miles (29 kilometers) and ascending 2,050 feet (625 meters). What have we been able to learn about Mars during this decade? And what lies ahead for the "Little Rover that Could?" Join us tonight as Dr. Ashwin Vasavada brings piques our "Curiosity" and answers these questions. Dr. Ashwin Vasavada is a planetary scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. Currently he is the Project Scientist for NASA's Curiosity rover that began development in 2003 and just completed its tenth year on the surface of Mars. He now leads the international team of scientists as they explore Gale Crater. He also has participated in the operation and analysis of data from several other NASA spacecraft missions, including the Galileo mission to Jupiter, the Cassini mission to Saturn, and the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. He holds a B.S. in Geophysics and Space Physics from UCLA and a Ph.D. in Planetary Science from Caltech. You can stay up to date with Curiosity by visiting the project's web site and by following it on both Twitter and Instagram. **************************************** The Weekly Space Hangout is a production of CosmoQuest. Want to support CosmoQuest? Here are some specific ways you can help: Subscribe FREE to our YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/c/cosmoquest Subscribe to our podcasts Astronomy Cast and Daily Space where ever you get your podcasts! Watch our streams over on Twitch at https://www.twitch.tv/cosmoquestx – follow and subscribe! Become a Patreon of CosmoQuest https://www.patreon.com/cosmoquestx Become a Patreon of Astronomy Cast https://www.patreon.com/astronomycast Buy stuff from our Redbubble https://www.redbubble.com/people/cosmoquestx Join our Discord server for CosmoQuest - https://discord.gg/X8rw4vv Join the Weekly Space Hangout Crew! - http://www.wshcrew.space/ Don't forget to like and subscribe! Plus we love being shared out to new people, so tweet, comment, review us... all the free things you can do to help bring science into people's lives.
Data and images from NASA's Curiosity rover found evidence that wind played a key role in erosional processes on the red planet, despite the lower atmospheric volume. Plus, astrophysics and cosmology news, a baby exoplanet, and this week in space history, we look back at an uncrewed lunar mission from Japan.
The data Curiosity continues to send home have scientists anxiously waiting to see what Perseverance might discover as well.
Street Wannabes interviewed Marta DeLeon of Weekend Lovers about their upcoming single Larvae Love out on Totally Real Records 9/16! We also discussed the upcoming album "I Love U In Real Life” (out 11/6 on Totally Real Records), the past single “Big As The Dark” 6/22, living in Tucson, AZ, playing in bands in NYC, recording with Matt Rendon at Midtown Island, having the music mastered at Spot On Sound by Patrick Haight, the artwork by Ed Beltran, the rest of the band (Danny Perez, Gabriela Lisk, Brandon), working on a music video in AZ, making a NPR Tiny Desk video “Moon On Mars”, covering a Mount Sharp song “Bones” for the record “That Shadow” out on Dadstache Records, surviving the pandemic, upcoming live stream through Univ. of Arizona (in a couple weeks) & 10/16 stream through Habitation Realty, living in Seattle, her friendship with Bryan Bruchman of TRR, merch/ shirts design by Ed Beltran, the promo vid for Larvae Love by Christine Greer and much more!www.facebook.com/weekendloverszwww.weekendloversaz.bandcamp.comwww.instagram.com/weekendloversazwww.totallyrealrecords.com/artists/weekend-loverswww.instagram.com/streetwannabes
Street Wannabes interviewed Bryan Bruchman of Totally Real Records/ Senior video producer & Art Director at BTRtoday/ host of “The Subliminal Inevitable Show” & “The Music Digest”! We also talked about The New Restaurants record Wrong Place At Wrong Time out 9/4 on Totally Real Records (2 singles out now), Weekend Lovers “Larvae Love" single out 9/16 on Totally Real Records, the Mount Sharp albums (Bryan is in Mount Sharp) “That Shadow” out on Dadstache Records 2/21 & “Those Shadows” 7/3 (That Shadows remixed/covers by musicians/friends), Superorder’s VHS/USB "Excellent Systems" record, the rest of the Totally Real Records lineup, interviewing record labels for his podcast “The Subliminal Inevitable” on BTR (episode 200 with Misra Records!), working at/with BTR, doing illustrations for BTR, some of the mutual friends at BTR (Elena Childers, Jeanette D. Moses, Jen Meller) and much more! Totally Real Records line up:The New Restaurants, Jane Migraine, Weekend Lovers, SUPERORDER, Mount Sharp, Marie Stella and announcing a new artist soon!www.totallyrealrecords.comwww.facebook.com/totallyrealrecswww.instagram.com/totallyrealrecswww.mountsharp.bandcamp.com/album/those-shadowsmountsharp.bandcamp.com/album/that-shadowwww.btrtoday.com/listen/subinevwww.instagram.com/subinevwww.btrtoday.com/listen/themusicdigestwww.instagram.com/streetwannabeswww.streetwannabes.com
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
The astronomy, technology and space science news podcast.SpaceTime with Stuart Gary Series 23 Episode 71*Dead stars in the galactic centreAstronomers have discovered a stellar graveyard near the centre of the Milky Way galaxy containing the corpses of 27 stars.*Curiosity on the move to its next locationAfter more than a year exploring the so-called clay-bearing unit of Gale Crater, NASA's Mars Curiosity rover has started a new journey that will take it higher up through the foothills of Mount Sharp.*Israel launches new spy satelliteIsrael has successfully launched a new reconnaissance satellite to monitor the growing nuclear threat posed by an ever more militant Iran.*The Science ReportFears the world’s tropical plant species may struggle to germinate by 2070 because of global warming.Patients with COVID-19 may also be at heightened risk of stroke.Growing calls to ban TikTok and other Chinese apps because of security concerns.A new study into doggy years.Anti-vaxxers better at getting their message across than doctors and medical authorities. For more SpaceTime visit https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com (mobile friendly). For enhanced Show Notes including photos to accompany this episode, visit: http://www.bitesz.com/spacetimeshownotesGet immediate access to over 200 commercial-free, double and triple episode editions of SpaceTime plus extended interview bonus content. Subscribe via Patreon or Supercast....and share in the rewards. Details at www.patreon.com/spacetimewithstuartgary or Supercast - https://bitesznetwork.supercast.tech/RSS feed: https://rss.acast.com/spacetime Email: SpaceTime@bitesz.comTo receive the Astronomy Daily Newsletter free, direct to your inbox...just join our mailing list at www.bitesz.com/mailinglist or visit https://www.bitesz.com/astronomy-dailyHelp support SpaceTime: The SpaceTime with Stuart Gary merchandise shop. Get your T-Shirts, Coffee Cups, badges, tote bag + more and help support the show. Check out the range: http://www.cafepress.com/spacetime Thank you. Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/spacetime. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
The astronomy and space science news podcast.Stream podcast episodes on demand from www.bitesz.com/spacetime (mobile friendly). SpaceTime with Stuart Gary Series 23 Episode 27*Quasar Tsunamis rip across galaxiesAstronomers using NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope have discovered massive tsunami-like energy outflows from distant quasars tearing across interstellar space and wreaking havoc on the galaxies in which they originate. *The Mars Curiosity rover’s climb up the red planet’s Mount SharpNASA’s Mars Curiosity rover is preparing for the next stage in its accent of Gale Crater’s Mount Sharp.https://spacetimewithstuartgary.tumblr.com/post/184908211673 *NASA gets the Mars Insight Lander’s drill to start working againWell, after spending almost a year trying to get the drill aboard NASA’s Mars Insight Lander to work – mission managers may have fixed the problem – the old-fashioned way – by giving it a good bash with a shovel. *New Australia rocket engine test-firedValiant Space has successfully test-fired its new locally developed liquid-fueled rocket engine. *Long March-3B launches new BeiDou-3 satelliteChina has successfully launched another BeiDou-3 navigation satellite into geostationary orbit. *Soyuz launches GLONASS-M navigation satelliteRussia has launched a new Glonass-M navigation satellite. *The Science ReportNew study shows 95% of COVID-19 deaths could have been avoided.A 5th Wuhan doctor arrested by Beijing after trying to warn the world about COVID-19 has died.A sudden loss of smell could be the first sign that you’ve been infected with COVID-19.East Antarctica’s Denman Glacier has retreated 5 kilometres in the past 22 years.Boys hitting puberty at an early age are more likely to develop type 2 diabetes as adults. For enhanced Show Notes including photos to accompany this episode, visit: http://www.bitesz.com/spacetimeshownotes Get immediate access to over 175 commercial-free, double episode editions of SpaceTime plus extended interview bonus content. Subscribe via Patreon or Supercast....and share in the rewards. Details at www.patreon.com/spacetimewithstuartgary or if you’re not a fan of Patreon, go to Supercast - https://bitesznetwork.supercast.tech/ RSS feed: https://rss.acast.com/spacetime Email: SpaceTime@bitesz.com To receive the Astronomy Daily Newsletter free, direct to your inbox...just join our mailing list at www.bitesz.com/mailinglist Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/spacetime. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Podcast for audio and video - NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
NASA Curiosity Project Scientist Ashwin Vasavada guides this tour of the rover's view of the Martian surface.
NASA Curiosity Project Scientist Ashwin Vasavada guides this tour of the rover's view of the Martian surface.
Destroyer, a band formed in Vancouver, British Columbia in 1995, released their 12th studio album, Have We Met, this past January . I'll be playing one of my favorite tunes from that release today on the show. Plus, new music from Purr, Mount Sharp, Cuesta Loeb, Country Westerns, Bee Appleseed and more! Stay tuned. 00:00 - The Jaunt on BTR 00:44 - Hear Me Calling - Christopher Paul Stelling 03:46 - Gentle Soul - Country Westerns 06:35 - Bleed - Butte 09:26 - Cherry Barb - Mapache 11:19 - Barbecue Hands - Chance Wiesner 15:28 - Another Time - Bee Appleseed 20:36 - Lasso - Arbor Labor Union 23:49 - The Jaunt on BTR 24:16 - Ask Me Again - Tall Tall Trees 28:22 - Dream Awhile - Bonnie "Prince" Billy 31:50 - Whiskey Pyramid - Aaron Beckum 35:30 - The Moon - Andy Shauf 39:05 - Companion Rises - Six Organs of Admittance 42:20 - Piltdown Man - Frances Quinlan 45:35 - The Jaunt on BTR 46:03 - Siwanoy - Nik Freitas 49:13 - Tara The Android - Dustin Lovelis 53:23 - Take You Back - Purr 56:57 - Godzilla - Mount Sharp 59:51 - Charades - Shadow Show 63:36 - Body Clock - Shopping 65:54 - The Jaunt on BTR 66:31 - Motherfucker - Frazey Ford 70:21 - o clever one - Son Little 73:56 - Rush - Squirrel Flower 76:57 - Game - Parlor Walls 80:53 - The Fool - Kedama 85:53 - Grass It Grows - Cuesta Loeb 90:12 - Who Knows - Alice Boman 93:05 - The Jaunt on BTR 93:46 - Two of Everything - Torres 98:28 - Southwark - Yumi Zouma 101:47 - Lull - Hamerkop 106:42 - Sifting - Post Animal 110:25 - Silver + Gold - Elliot Moss 113:38 - Belt Notch - Cassowary 117:13 - The Jaunt on BTR 118:16 - The Man in Black's Blues - Destroyer 121:57 - Finish
The February 15th edition of Look At My Records! features an interview with Sarah Wood of Mount Sharp. Tune in to hear all about the band's brand new album, "That Shadow," which is out now on Dadstache Records! Plus, Swood performed two classic Mount Sharp songs live in the studio. We also played three new songs from "That Shadow" and played some records by Atlas Sound and Yo La Tengo. The episode kicks off with three brand new songs from Atlas Engine, Color Collage, and JW Francis. You can purchase "That Shadow" on vinyl or cassette via Dadstache Records.
Do you like prog and kraut rock? Bands from the 1970's? Well, Kedama is for you! Castle Face recently re-released music from the German -Swiss outfit that formed in 1971. You can hear a track from The Complete Collection on the show today. Plus, tunes by Arlo Parks, Hamerkop, Mount Sharp, Bee Appleseed, Frazey Ford and more! Stay tuned. 00:00 - The Jaunt on BTR 00:53 - about her. again. - Son Little 04:33 - Nearly Lost My Mind - Mariya May 07:36 - Hey You - Katy J Pearson 11:10 - Let's Start Again - Frazey Ford 14:52 - Domes - Mount Sharp 18:12 - The Alchemist - Shadow Show 20:54 - Diamond Girl - RED MASS 26:14 - The Jaunt on BTR 27:09 - Lucky Stars - Christopher Paul Stelling 30:43 - This Is Far From Over - Bonnie "Prince" Billy 33:24 - Poonchie - Luke Lalonde 34:56 - Visions - Loving 38:45 - Now That I'm Back - Frances Quinlan 42:01 - Celebrate Your Body - Bee Appleseed 46:26 - The Jaunt on BTR 46:53 - Sylvia - Mr. Elevator 49:22 - Singing A Single Song Of Satan - Nolan Potter's Nightmare Band 55:24 - Squid - Chance Wiesner 58:00 - Feelin' Finite - Legal Vertigo 61:04 - Where Are You Judy - Andy Shauf 64:21 - When Will Death Come - Sarah Mary Chadwick 68:36 - Cue Synthesizer - Destroyer 72:20 - Deep Feels - Tall Tall Trees 76:58 - The Jaunt on BTR 77:32 - Pipers Play’d - Arbor Labor Union 79:16 - Siwanoy - Nik Freitas 82:27 - Stark Raven - The Deer 87:07 - A Few Blue Flowers - Torres 90:53 - Eugene - Arlo Parks 94:30 - The Jaunt on BTR 94:43 - Mellow (feat. Shygirl) - Georgia 98:19 - never was mine - flor 102:45 - Egg - Hamerkop 106:22 - Bodyintoshapes - Elliot Moss 110:32 - Reticent - M.T. Hadley 113:02 - calico - glass beach 115:12 - The Jaunt on BTR 116:00 - Acid - Kedama 120:34 - Finish
remind me to pay rent tomorrow.DOWNLOAD RECORDINGsubscribe to the podcast here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/5432fun(intro by omar)Bloody Show “bell hooks” from Root NerveThe Hecks “The Thaw” from The HecksKISSING IS A CRIME “Nervous Conditions” from Kissing Is A CrimeSLOTHRUST “Rotten Pumpkin” from Everyone ElseTick Boss “We Belong to the Sun” from Let Go Let Tick BossPile “leaning on a wheel” from A Hairshirt of PurposeJoy Again “Mistakes” from EPYou’ll Never Get To Heaven “Images” from Imagesthanks for coming “i h8 florida” from welcome to the post-dadcore revolutionDois “Dinosaurio” from Está BienSneaks “Look Like That” from It’s a MythMono Lisa “Jump Off A Bridge” from New World SimulatorBENT “Mattress Springs” from mattress springsTURN TO CRIME “Secondary” from SecondaryMount Sharp “Whiskey Ginger” from Weird FearsThe Groans “Lives On The Line” from Everything For EveryoneJOEL JASPER “Impression” from Spring-BodyBaby Jessica “Perfect Yawn” from Jeans to Scream inxenon superstar “it happens” from dreams are for babiesGuy Capecelatro III “Such Possibility” Hope is the Thing with Feathers
The weather outside is chilly. We're in the middle of winter, unfortunately. No matter the season, the locals don't stop delivering great tunes. In this ice cold episode of Look At My Records!, you'll hear new tracks from Johnny Dynamíte, Jelly Kelly, The Wants, Ashjesus, Bambara, The Bobby Lees, Shadow Year, SUO, Green and Glass, JW Francis, Soviet Girls, Mount Sharp, PYNKIE, and Andy Cook. Stay warm while you're listening to this all New York playlist!
The planet Mars boasts the most dramatic landscapes in our solar system. Kevin Fong embarks on a grand tour around the planet with scientists, artists and writers who know its special places intimately- through their probes, roving robots and imaginations. As we roam Mars' beauty spots, Kevin explores why the Red planet grips so many. Beyond its alien topographic grandeur, Mars inspires the bigger questions: are we alone in the cosmos, and what is the longer term destiny of humanity? Was there more than one life genesis? Will humans ever live on more than one planet? The itinerary includes the solar system's greatest volcano - Olympus Mons. It is an ancient pile of lavas more than twice the height of Everest, with a summit crater that could contain Luxembourg. The weight of Mars' gargantuan volcanic outpourings helped to create the planet's extreme version of our Grand Canyon. Vallis Marineris is an almighty gash in the crust 4,000 kilometres long and seven kilometres deep. That is more than three times the depth of Earth's Grand Canyon. In some place the cliffs are sheer from top to bottom. A little to the east lies an extraordinary region called Iani Chaos, a vast realm of closely spaced and towering rock stacks and mesas, hundreds to thousands of metres high. One researcher describes it as Tolkienesque. This unearthly shattered terrain was created billions of years ago when immense volumes of water burst out from beneath the surface and carved another giant canyon, known as Ares Valles, in a matter of months. Imagine a hundred Amazon rivers cutting loose at once, suggests Professor Steve Squyres. The catastrophically sculpted landscapes are part of the plentiful evidence that in its early days, Mars was, at time,s awash with water and, in theory, provided environments in which life could evolve and survive. That is what the latest robot rover on Mars - Curiosity - is exploring at the dramatic Gale Crater with its central peak, Mount Sharp. Expert Mars guides in the programme include scientists on the current Curiosity mission, and on the preceeding rover explorations by Spirit and Opportunity. Kevin talks to hard sci-fi novelist Kim Stanley Robinson whose rich invocations of Martian landscapes form th narrative bedrock of his Mars Trilogy. He also meets Bill Hartmann, a planetary scientist since earliest generation of Mars probes in the 1960s and 1970. Bill has a parallel career as an artist who paints landscapes of the Red Planet. Planetary scientist Pascal Lee of the Mars Institute begins Kevin's tour with a painting he created - an imagined view of Mars from the surface of its tiny moon, Phobos. Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker, BBC Radio Science Unit
Visit agreatbigcity.com/support to learn how to support New York City local news and allow us to keep bringing you this podcast. If you are a New York-based business and would be interested in sponsoring our podcasts, visit agreatbigcity.com/advertising to learn more. The goats brought in to clean up Riverside Park are taking a summer vacation! The original flock brought to the park in May was narrowed down from 24 to 18 after they cleaned out the weeds too quickly, and now the group will be meeting back up at their farm in Rhinebeck, NY while the weeds are allowed to regrow a bit on the steep slopes of Riverside Park that they were maintaining. As part of their going-away party, the Riverside Park Conservancy honored Massey the goat with an award for receiving the most votes in an online contest. The 166-pound, 10-year-old goat is the oldest of the bunch and received a bouquet of edible flowers as a prize. Watch for the goats to return later in the summer when they will be back for a second round of snacking on the invasive plants that will further weaken them and ensure they don't have the energy left to regrow again. In July, one day before the anniversary of Eric Garner's death, the Department of Justice, now overseen by Trump-appointed Attorney General William Barr, announced that they will not pursue civil rights charges against officer Pantaleo, who was seen in video putting Garner in a chokehold. Immediately after, the NYPD was quick to point out that their own internal disciplinary case against Pantaleo was still underway, and on August 2nd, an NYPD judge ruled that the officer should be fired due to his use of a chokehold when attempting to arrest Eric Garner, a tactic that is prohibited by NYPD policy and was listed by the city medical examiner as a contributing factor in Garner's death. Although the ruling is preliminary, Pantaleo was suspended effective immediately, after being kept employed in administrative duty during the five years since Eric Garner's death. The announcement came days after de Blasio was heckled by protesters demanding he fire Pantaleo during the second Democratic Presidential primary debates in Detroit. In response, he continued to claim that justice would be served in the next 30 days. Fellow Democratic candidate Kirsten Gillibrand had a more decisive answer. nn De Blasio has been polling between 0% and 1% among likely voters. nn The NYPD judge's decision will now make its way to NYPD Commissioner O'Neill, who will decide whether to fire Pantaleo in the upcoming weeks. City Council Speaker Corey Johnson released a statement saying: This decision is long overdue. It should not have taken five years to determine what the public clearly understood in five minutes: Officer Pantaleo used an illegal chokehold on Eric Garner, which ultimately led to his death. nn Now Police Commissioner O'Neill must act. Pantaleo must be fired immediately. Nothing will bring back Mr. Garner, but I hope this decision gives the Garner family some peace 15 years ago on August 3, 2004 — The pedestal of the Statue of Liberty reopens for the first time since the September 11th attacks You may not think of the city as harboring invasive insects, but arborists from the national Department of Agriculture have been inspecting trees in Brooklyn and Queens for Asian longhorn beetles. The beetles are thought to have originally traveled to the United States in 1996 in wooden shipping pallets, and now they threaten trees across the city. Inspectors search for the telltale signs of round holes in the wood of a tree, where the adult beetles emerge in late July. nn Keep an eye out for the signs of beetle infestation on your local trees: They create deep round holes big enough for a pencil to fit in and leave a collection of sawdust below the holes. The beetles themselves are about one and a half inches long, mostly black with white specks, and have distinctive blue stripes on their legs and long striped antennae. If you find a tree or piece of wood that may be infested, call the Asian longhorned beetle tip line at 1-866-702-9938 or email foresthealth@dec.ny.gov. 9 years ago on August 9, 2010 — Upon landing at JFK, a JetBlue flight attendant announces that he is quitting his job and exits the jet via the emergency evacuation slide, taking two beers with him 42 years ago on August 10, 1977 — David Berkowitz is taken into custody 3 years ago on August 10, 2016 — A man partially climbs Trump Tower And finally, thanks go out to Eric Boyo, an MTA subway operator for 27 years who stopped his train to help a woman on the tracks this week. As he approached Fulton Street on the G Train line, he noticed people on the platform waving their arms. Seeing that something must be wrong, he slowed his train early and then spotted a woman on the tracks. He stopped the train and opened the door at the front of the train to speak with the woman, and ended up helping her back onto the platform. Whether the woman intended to be struck by the train or had just fallen was unclear, but onlookers praised Eric for remaining calm and showing compassion during the rescue. According to the MTA, the recommended way to flag down an oncoming train during an emergency situation is to light your cellphone's flashlight and wave it side to side while facing the train. A Great Big City has been running a 24-hour newsfeed since 2010, but the AGBC News podcast is just getting started, and we need your support. A Great Big City is built on a dedication to explaining what is happening and how it fits into the larger history of New York, which means thoroughly researching every topic and avoiding clickbait headlines to provide a straightforward, honest, and factual explanation of the news. Individuals can make a monthly or one-time contribution at agreatbigcity.com/support and local businesses can have a lasting impact by supporting local news while promoting products or services directly to interested customers listening to this podcast. Visit agreatbigcity.com/advertising to learn more. AGBC is more than just a news website: Our fireworks page monitors the city's announcements of upcoming fireworks, lists them on our site, and automatically sends out a notification just before the fireworks begin, so that you can watch the show or prepare your pet for the upcoming sounds of explosions. Visit agreatbigcity.com/fireworks to see the full calendar and follow @agreatbigcity on social media to receive the alerts Park of the day Half-Nelson Playground — 1631 NELSON AvNUE, the Bronx — Named for being halfway down Nelson Avenue, this park features playground equipment built to resemble optical illusions! Parks Events The Department of Transportation's Summer Streets will close streets in Manhattan from 7am to 1pm from 72nd Street down Park Avenue and to the Brooklyn Bridge. The streets will be emptied out and made available to bicycles and pedestrians, with events and activities all along the route. At Foley Square downtown, a large group will attempt to break the Guinness World Record for simultaneous people doing a handstand, which currently stands at 399 people, at 51st Street, the Asia Society will be offering free temporary tattoos, and along Centre Street downtown, you can take a ride on a 30-foot-tall zipline! Concert Calendar Barbra Streisand is playing Madison Square Garden on Saturday, August 3rd. Rebelution is playing The Rooftop at Pier 17 on Saturday, August 3rd. Soccer Cousins, Hurry, and Mount Sharp are playing Trans-Pecos on Saturday, August 3rd. Steve Gunn and Hand Habits are playing Industry City Courtyard on Saturday, August 3rd. MONSTA X WORLD TOUR 'WE ARE HERE' and MONSTA X are playing Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden on Saturday, August 3rd. Bad Religion and The Explosion are playing Brooklyn Steel on Saturday, August 3rd. Jenny Kern at Rockwood Music Hall and Jenny Kern are playing Rockwood Music Hall on Saturday, August 3rd. Krish Live At The Knitting Factory Brooklyn, Lucid, Corteez, Jovian, Kash, Siik Miind, and VENNESSY are playing Knitting Factory Brooklyn on Sunday, August 4th. Barry Manilow is playing Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in Midtown on Sunday, August 4th at 7pm. The Rolling Stones and Lukas Nelson and Promise of the Real are playing MetLife Stadium on Monday, August 5th. Tyler Childers is playing Webster Hall on Monday, August 5th. The Rolling Stones with Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real (Rescheduled from 6/17) is playing MetLife Stadium on Monday, August 5th at 8pm. BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn!, Ex Hex, and Mac DeMarco are playing Prospect Park Bandshell on Tuesday, August 6th. Keane is playing The Bowery Ballroom on Tuesday, August 6th. Hibou and Dolly Spartans are playing Mercury Lounge on Tuesday, August 6th. Barry Manilow is playing Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in Midtown on Tuesday, August 6th at 7pm. Mac DeMarco is playing Prospect Park Bandshell in South Slope on Tuesday, August 6th at 7pm. Queen with Adam Lambert is playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Tuesday, August 6th at 8pm. Queen + Adam Lambert: The Rhapsody Tour, Queen, and Adam Lambert are playing Madison Square Garden on Wednesday, August 7th. Barry Manilow is playing Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in Midtown on Wednesday, August 7th at 7pm. Queen with Adam Lambert is playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Wednesday, August 7th at 8pm. Guster with Rubblebucket is playing Rumsey Playfield, Central Park in Midtown East on Thursday, August 8th at 6pm. The Marked Men, Bugg, Career Suicide, Criaturas, and Savageheads are playing Brooklyn Bazaar on Friday, August 9th. Thunderpussy and Hollis Brown, Thunderpussy, and Hollis Brown are playing Brooklyn Bowl on Friday, August 9th. David Cook is playing Sony Hall on Friday, August 9th. Peter Murphy - Cascade: The Peter Murphy Residency at LPR and Peter Murphy are playing (le) Poisson Rouge on Friday, August 9th. Bryan Ferry is playing United Palace Theatre on Friday, August 9th. DRAB MAJESTY, Body of Light, and Hide are playing Music Hall of Williamsburg on Friday, August 9th. Suicideboys with Trash Talk and Night Lovell and Turnstile are playing Ford Amphitheater at Coney Island Boardwalk in Seagate on Friday, August 9th at 6pm. Bryan Ferry is playing United Palace Theatre in Hudson Heights on Friday, August 9th at 8pm. Barry Manilow is playing Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in Midtown on Friday, August 9th at 8pm. False and Vile Creature are playing Saint Vitus Bar on Saturday, August 10th. Spirit Family Reunion is playing Union Pool on Saturday, August 10th. One Africa Music Fest with Kranium, Burna Boy, Wyclef Jean are playing Ford Amphitheater at Coney Island Boardwalk in Seagate on Saturday, August 10th at 6pm. My Morning Jacket with Warpaint is playing Forest Hills Stadium in Forest Hills on Saturday, August 10th at 7pm. Shawn Mendes is playing Prudential Center on Saturday, August 10th at 7pm. Hootie & The Blowfish with Barenaked Ladies is playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Saturday, August 10th at 7pm. Find more fun things to do at agreatbigcity.com/events. Learn about New York Here's something you may not have known about New York: The striped bass was declared the New York state marine or saltwater fish in 2006, in reference to their seasonal presence in the tidal portion of the Hudson River and coastal waters around Long Island Weather The extreme highs and lows for this week in weather history: Record High: 104°F on August 7, 1918 Record Low: 54°F on August 8, 1903 Weather for the week ahead: Light rain tomorrow through Thursday, with high temperatures rising to 89°F next Friday. Intro and outro music: 'Start the Day' by Lee Rosevere — Concert Calendar music from Jukedeck.com
Podcast for audio and video - NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
After spending the better part of a year exploring Mars' Vera Rubin Ridge, NASA's Curiosity Mars rover has moved to a new part of Mount Sharp.
After spending the better part of a year exploring Mars' Vera Rubin Ridge, NASA's Curiosity Mars rover has moved to a new part of Mount Sharp.
There is a mountain located in the middle of a giant crater on Mars, but how it formed is still a bit of a puzzle for scientists. Investigations of the rocks below the surface of the crater have been helping piece together an answer. The Curiosity Rover currently on Mars has an advanced suite of scientific instruments able to carry out experiments on the Martian surface. Kevin Lewis is a planetary scientist from Johns Hopkins University, who along with help from colleagues, has been able to adapt some of the instruments to work in new ways. Jenny Gracie spoke with him to find out the rover's... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
There is a mountain located in the middle of a giant crater on Mars, but how it formed is still a bit of a puzzle for scientists. Investigations of the rocks below the surface of the crater have been helping piece together an answer. The Curiosity Rover currently on Mars has an advanced suite of scientific instruments able to carry out experiments on the Martian surface. Kevin Lewis is a planetary scientist from Johns Hopkins University, who along with help from colleagues, has been able to adapt some of the instruments to work in new ways. Jenny Gracie spoke with him to find out the rover's... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Shilpa Ray, NO ICE, Crazy Pills, and more are playing ‘Sunday for SAVI: A Thanksgiving Concert’ to benefit the Mount Sinai Sexual Assault & Violence Intervention Program (SAVI). Milagres has new album out called ‘Ziggurat’ and a show at Elsewhere Zone One. Shannon Shaw is playing Brooklyn Bazaar. Mount Sharp is playing East Williamsburg Econolodge. And Operator Music Band is playing Alphaville. 00:00 - // StereoactiveNYC / BTRtoday ID // 00:40 - // Welcome / About SAVI // 03:41 - “Morning Terrors, Nights of Dread” - Shilpa Ray 08:04 - “Add Value Add Time” - Shilpa Ray 13:34 - “Darlin’” - NO ICE 17:09 - “Change Your Mind” - NO ICE 20:36 - “Look Alive” - Crazy Pills 23:03 - “Indictment” - Crazy Pills 26:43 - // Mic Break // 28:09 - “Golden Frames” - Shannon Shaw 30:36 - “Freddies ‘n’ Teddies” - Shannon Shaw 34:01 - “Cryin’ My Eyes Out” - Shannon Shaw 37:02 - “Skin” - Mount Sharp 40:30 - “Whiskey Ginger” - Mount Sharp 43:09 - “Realistic Saturation” - Operator Music Band 46:23 - “Moto Komplete” - Operator Music Band 50:13 - “Slim Spin” (BTR Live Studio, 2018) - Operator Music Band 53:55 - // Mic Break // 58:42 - “Ziggurat Brothers” - Milagres 63:19 - “Flame” - Milagres 67:05 - “Forget the World” - Milagres 71:40 - // Outro + Disclaimer // 72:43 - “Somewhere Deep In NYC” - The Unsacred Hearts 75:48 - // Finish.
Podcast for audio and video - NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
A dust storm continues to envelop the Red Planet and Curiosity's labs are back in action.
A dust storm continues to envelop the Red Planet and Curiosity's labs are back in action.
Curiosity Project Scientist Ashwin Vasavada gives a descriptive tour of the Mars rover's view in Gale Crater. The white-balanced scene looks back over the journey so far.
Podcast for audio and video - NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Curiosity Project Scientist Ashwin Vasavada gives a descriptive tour of the Mars rover's view in Gale Crater. The white-balanced scene looks back over the journey so far.
Local artists are well represented at Brooklyn venues in the last days of November and first days of December, with shows featuring Mount Sharp, Flying Pace, Shilpa Ray, Acid Dad, and gobbinjr. Plus Angel Olsen comes to town. 00:00 - // StereoactiveNYC / BTRtoday ID // 00:16 - // Welcome // 02:15 - “Shut Up Kiss Me” - Angel Olsen 05:31 - “Forgiven/Forgotten” - Angel Olsen 07:29 - “Unfucktheworld” - Angel Olsen 09:33 - “Crazy Eyes” - Mount Sharp 12:20 - “Skin” - Mount Sharp 15:47 - “RUR” - Flying Pace 20:03 - "Centralia" - Flying Pace 24:59 - // Mic Break // 30:17 - “Revelations of a Stamp Monkey” - Shilpa Ray 34:16 - “Rockaway Blues” - Shilpa Ray 37:58 - // Mic Break // 41:58 - “Brain Body” (BTR Live Studio, 2016) - Acid Dad 47:11 - “Grim” (BTR Live Studio, 2016) - Acid Dad 51:19 - “Don'tchya Kno” (BTR Live Studio, 2017) - gobbinjr 54:04 - // Outro + Disclaimer // 55:33 - // Finish.
Five years of Martian discoveries after seven minutes of terror.
The planet Mars boasts the most dramatic landscapes in our solar system. In a programme first broadcast in March, 2013, Kevin Fong embarks on a grand tour around the planet with scientists, artists and writers who know its special places intimately - through their probes, roving robots and imaginations. As we roam Mars' beauty spots, Kevin considers why the Red Planet grips so many. Beyond its alien topographic grandeur, Mars inspires the bigger questions: are we alone in the cosmos, and what is the longer term destiny of humanity? Was there more than one life genesis? Will humans ever live on more than one planet? The itinerary includes the solar system's greatest volcano - Olympus Mons. It is an ancient pile of lavas more than twice the height of Everest, with a summit crater that could contain Luxembourg. The weight of Mars' gargantuan volcanic outpourings helped to create the planet's extreme version of our Grand Canyon. Vallis Marineris is an almighty gash in the crust 4,000 kilometres long and seven kilometres deep. That is more than three times the depth of Earth's Grand Canyon. In some place the cliffs are sheer from top to bottom. A little to the east lies an extraordinary region called Iani Chaos, a vast realm of closely spaced and towering rock stacks and mesas, hundreds to thousands of metres high. One researcher describes it as Tolkienesque. This unearthly shattered terrain was created billions of years ago when immense volumes of water burst out from beneath the surface and carved another giant canyon, known as Ares Valles, in a matter of months. Imagine a hundred Amazon rivers cutting loose at once, suggests Professor Steve Squyres. The catastrophically sculpted landscapes are part of the plentiful evidence that in its early days, Mars was, at times, awash with water and, in theory, provided environments in which life could evolve and survive. That is what the latest robot rover on Mars - Curiosity - is exploring at the dramatic Gale Crater with its central peak, Mount Sharp. Expert Mars guides in the programme include scientists on the current Curiosity mission, and on the preceding rover explorations by Spirit and Opportunity. Kevin talks to hard sci-fi novelist Kim Stanley Robinson whose rich invocations of Martian landscapes form the narrative bedrock of his Mars Trilogy. He also meets Bill Hartmann, a planetary scientist since earliest generation of Mars probes in the 1960s and 1970s. Bill has a parallel career as an artist who paints landscapes of the Red Planet. Planetary scientist Pascal Lee of the Mars Institute begins Kevin's tour with a painting he created - an imagined view of Mars from the surface of its tiny moon, Phobos. Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker
กดฟัง WiTcast ตอนที่ 33.2 download ไฟล์ MP3 (คลิกขวา save link as) PODCAST / iTUNES สำหรับผู้ที่ใช้ iPhone, ipod ท่านสามารถใช้แอ็พ iTunes/Podcasts สมัครเป็นสมาชิกรายการให้โหลดเองอัตโนมัติได้ โดยเสริชหา witcast หรือ subscribe ผ่าน feed นี้โดยตรง http://feeds.feedburner.com/witcast ร่วมบริจาคเงินสนับสนุนรายการได้โดยโอนเข้าบัญชี : ธนาคารไทยพาณิชย์ สาขาบิ๊กซี สะพานควาย เลขบัญชี 0332935256 ชื่อ แทนไท ประเสริฐกุล หรือส่งผ่าน paypal มาที่ yeebud@gmail.com ------------------------------------------------------------- SHOW NOTE เท้าความตอน 10.2 เรื่องปรากฏการณ์ไคเมร่า กระทู้แนะนำ Pantip Teratoma เคสนักศึกษาที่เจอเนื้องอกในสมองหน้าตาเหมือนตัวอ่อน -1,2,3,4 เคสผู้ชายที่มีตัวอ่อนทะลุท้องออกมา -1 เคส teratoma ที่เจอเด็กซ้อนอยู่ในเด็ก -1,2,3 เคสสาวพรหมจรรย์ตั้งท้อง / teratoma ชนิดตัวอ่อนที่สมบูรณ์ที่สุด -1 a small, doll-like body, mostly complete. Like any normal foetus, the body was covered with fine, downy hair, but the homunculus was unmistakably deformed – it had spina bifida (“split spine” in Latin) and its brain failed to divide into two normal hemispheres. In the centre of its forehead was a single soft, spherical, fluid-filled “eye” cloaked by thick, long eyelashes. This strange “foetus” had one ear, all its limbs, a brain, a spinal nerve, intestines, bones, and blood vessels – even a jaw, already ruptured by several teeth, emerging from beneath the skin. It also had what looked like a phallus, positioned neatly between its legs. เหมียว Venus เป็นไคเมร่ารึเปล่า? ปรากฏการณ์ gynandromorph -1 มนุษย์ gynandromorph ? ชื่อ Bobby Kork ในคน การมีสองเพศแบบแบ่งครึ่งชายหญิงตรงกลางตัวเป๊ะๆ ซ้ายขวา เท่าที่เสริชดู เจอแต่รูปนักแสดงที่แต่งตัวโชว์ตามงานวัดฝรั่ง (side show / freak show) คิดว่าไม่น่าใช่ของจริงนะฮะ (นมปลอม?) นักวิทย์บางคนบอกว่าในคนเกิดแบบครึ่งๆ ซ้ายขวาอย่างนั้นไม่ได้หรอก เพราะลักษณะทางเพศกำหนดโดยฮอร์โมนซะมาก ต่อให้ฝั่งนึงโครโมโซมเป็นหญิง ก็ได้รับอิทธิพลจากฮฮร์โมนชายผ่านกระแสเลือดข้ามมาอยู่ดี / ภาวะอวัยวะเพศก้ำกึ่งหรือมีทั้งสองเพศในร่างเดียวที่พบในคน ส่วนใหญ่จะไม่ใช่แบบ gynandromorph แต่เรียกเป็น hermaphrodite หรือ intersex มากกว่า โดยสาเหตุมักเกิดจากโครโมโซมหรือฮอร์โมนไม่ปกติครับ นางแบบ Winnie Harlow เป็นโรค Vitiligo สาเหตุจากระบบภูมิคุ้มกัน คนละอย่างกับ chimera อัพเดทยาน Curiosity แอ่ง Gale crater ที่ยานไปลง เป้าหมาย Mount Sharp กรวดมีความมน บ่งบอกว่าอดีตเป็นลำธาร หรือแม่น้ำ เมื่อก่อนเป็นแหล่งน้ำจืด ตรวจสอบระบบล้อ ด้วยการเช็ครอยเท้า เครื่องตรวจวิเคราะห์อากาศและก๊าซต่างๆ ชื่อ SAM เครื่องตัก ผลวิเคราะห์ X Ray diffraction เครื่องยิงเลเซอร์ เครื่องปัดฝุ่น เครื่องเจาะ ภูมิประเทศ และหินหลากหลายรูปแบบ ลักษณะเส้นยิปซั่มที่แทรกในเนื้อหินบ่งบอกถึงน้ำในอดีต วิเคราห์บรรยากาศ + องค์ประกอบหินแล้วเจอ มีเธน + สารอินทรีย์ แผนที่การเดินทางของ Curiosity ตั้งแต่ไปถึง มอง Mount Sharp จากระยะ 5 Km เมื่อกุมภา 2014 ล้อเป็นรู ลักษณะหินแถวๆ ตีนเขา mount sharp โครงสร้างแร่แปลกๆ ที่ว่าเหมือนรอยตีนไก่ ภูมิประเทศดาวอังคารบ่งบอกถึงอดีตอันชุ่มฉ่ำ ทำไมทุกวันนี้ถึงแห้งไป? ช่วงขาดการติดต่อเวลาดวงอาทิตย์บัง https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ue4PCI0NamI
Episode #2 is the second in a two part series about the people who came into the station during the Gowanus Open Studios on October 18 & 19 of 2014. This episode loosely focuses on music and features: Thomas Piper, Justin Allen, Cyrus Pireh and Alan Courtis, Mount Sharp, and a segment on The Morbid Anatomy Museum.
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The Discussion: Christmas in Cydonia and teaching science to children through astronomy education. The News: Kicking off 2015 we round off the events that concluded 2014: the successful test flight of NASA’s Orion capsule; NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory pieces together the clues that tell us how Mount Sharp (the mountain Mars Curiosity is exploring) was formed; and science findings from ESA’s Rosetta and Philae spacecraft that suggest water was not delivered to Earth by comets like 67P Churyumov Gerasimenko. The 5 Minute Concept: This month Paul delves into the fundamental nature of our universe. We take a look at the Cosmological Principle, which tells us that the universe and the forces within it are the same wherever we look, and explore huge structures that put strain on this accepted model of cosmology. The Interview: Ralph & Paul speak with the creators of the ‘Essex Space Agency’, Matt Kingsnorth and Phil St Pier who are building a high altitude balloon with cameras to photograph the Earth’s curved horizon from the edge of space in their Helium Tears project. Q&A: Listeners’ questions via email, Facebook & Twitter take us on a journey into the astronomy issues that have always plagued our understanding or stretched our credulity. This month Ralph & Paul answer: Are there Van Allen Belts & Aurora on other planets? Any photos from satellites orbiting other planets in our solar system? Mariecor Agravante in San Diego via twitter. Why was the moon so large the other night?Ian Cheale in Cambridgeshire via the Facebook Group.
Holes in its soles – or at least its aluminum wheels, doesn’t stop Curiosity from reaching its primary objective, Mount Sharp.
The Curiosity rover is seeking environments on Mars that could support life—or could have in the past. Earlier Mars missions found signs of water, but not organic carbon—life’s essential building block. Watch the Curiosity team prepare to hunt for carbon at Mount Sharp, which holds a geologic record hundreds of millions of years old.
Fahrplan für Curiosity Meldung als Text :: Der lange Weg zum Mount Sharp File Download (8:05 min / 9 MB)
Kevin Fong concludes his grand tour of the planet Mars, in search of water. Some of the most spectacular Martian landscapes were carved by vast and violent quantities of water in the planet's past. The Tolkienesque terrain of Iani Chaos is one such place as is the great canyon Ares Valles. Kevin also talks to scientists on the current Curiosity Mars rover mission about water in the deep history of Gale Crater and its central mountain Mount Sharp. The journey concludes with gullies on cliffs and craters, suggesting that water still gushes on the surface of Mars today. Could this mean that life exists on the Red Planet today?(Image: Mars Express spacecraft in orbit around Mars Copyright: ESA- Illustration by Medialab)
"And Then I Found Myself in the Taiga" by Norwegian Arms / "Division" by Fiancé / "God Save Mama Coco's" by Ghost Pal / "We're So..." by Happy Lives / "Wildspace" by Soft Cat / "Swiss Cheese" by Lil Kids / "Sunflower" by Christoph El' Truento / "Marigold" by Trails / "We Live at Night" by Teen Commandments / "Skin" by Mount Sharp / "Skugga" by Moustad / "Curtains" by Napoleon / "Peaches" by Mission South / "Breathe" by Jay Prince & Maloon TheBoom / "Some Folk Song in D (Nevermind)" by SHAPES / "Warning" by Dream Sick
After the most daring and complex landing of a robot on another planet, the search for evidence of life on Mars enters a new era. Nasa's Curiosity rover is now sitting inside Gale Crater, a vast depression close to the Martian equator. Also known as the Mars Science Laboratory, the one tonne machine is the most sophisticated science robot ever placed on another world. Over the coming years Curiosity will climb a mountain at the crater's heart, gathering evidence on one of science's greatest questions – was there ever life on Mars? The $2.5 billion project will discover whether Mars once had conditions suitable for the evolution and survival of life. BBC Space specialist Jonathan Amos talks to mission scientists about where Curiosity is going and what it will do as it trundles up Mars' Mount Sharp.(Image: Nasa's Curiosity rover. Credit: Nasa/JPL-Caltech/PA Wire)