Kgnu - How On Earth

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The KGNU Science Show

Episodios

  • Baseball Vision // Emerald Ash Borer

    30/04/2014 Duración: 23min

    Today, April 29th, we offer two features: Baseball Vision (starts at 5:42): The major league baseball season is now in full “swing.” Fans may  take it for granted that these professional athletes are in top physical condition.  What’s less known is how important it is for baseball players to have perfect eyesight.  Batters in particular have some of the best vision in the world.  To find out how scientists know this, and study it, and even make it better, How on Earth's Shelley Schlender last month headed down to spring training in Arizona.  There, she caught up with two of the nation's top experts on the science of vision, and sports. Emerald Ash Borer (starts at 11:21): It’s been called the most destructive looming pest blight to hit Colorado in ages. The perpetrator in question is the emerald ash borer, a small shimmery green beetle. It is believed to have hitchhiked to the U.S. and Canada on cargo ships, or airplanes, from its native Asia, in 2002. Since then it has wiped out  millions of ash trees in

  • NASA Visit // IPCC Report

    25/04/2014 Duración: 14min

    Earth Day gives us plenty of reason to reflect on the state of the planet and the impact we humans have had on it. This week's show featured Dr. Linda Mearns, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, who is among hundreds of scientists who produced the latest report on global climate change. She’s a lead author of a chapter on regional climate change in the Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) of the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. She also co-authored previous IPCC assessments – in 1995, 2001, and 2007. Dr. Mearns talks with How On Earth host Susan Moran about the science and implications of the IPCC report, including what it means for Colorado and the broader U.S. West. Unfortunately, due to a technical glitch at the station, the recording of that live interview was lost. But we still have audio from our second feature. Charles Bolden, the top administrator at NASA, was here in Boulder last week, touring the classrooms and facilities that earn th

  • Space Dust

    15/04/2014 Duración: 24min

    Dr. Mihaly Horanyi and his colleagues at the University of Colorado are on the brink of watching an instrument they developed crash into the moon. It’s okay—it’s designed to. In the meantime, the instrument, LDEX, is measuring impacts from dust particles a fraction of the width of a human hair on NASA’s LADEE mission. It’s measured more than 11,000 of these tiny impacts since falling into orbit in October. How On Earth's Beth Bartel is on her own mission to figure out just what is so interesting about space dust. Think: space colonization, geologic mapping, and searching for signs of extraterrestrial life. Hosts: Beth Bartel, Joel Parker Producer: Beth Bartel Engineer: Joel Parker Additional Contributions: Jane Palmer Executive Producer: Joel Parker Click below to listen to the show:

  • Space Dust – Extended Version

    15/04/2014 Duración: 15min

    For the patient and interested listener, here's more of How On Earth host Beth Bartel's conversation about space dust with University of Colorado's Mihaly Horanyi. We talk about why we should colonize the moon, how Dr. Horanyi got into studying dust in the first place—which is a very interesting Cold-War-era story—how space dust may give us hints about climate change ( via the phenomenon of "night-shining" or noctilucent clouds), and what zodiacal light is.

  • Conquering the Energy Crisis

    10/04/2014 Duración: 24min

    Welcome to this special edition of How on Earth.  This week, the 66th annual Conference of World Affairs is happening on the campus of CU-Boulder, and today’s show is one of the events.  The speaker and guest in our studio today is Maggie Koerth-Baker.  She writes a monthly column, "Eureka," for The New York Times Magazine and is also the science editor at BoingBoing.net.  She enjoys exploring the intersection between science and culture, and you can “Find your daily dose of Maggie science” through her website at maggiekb.com, and her pages on Facebook and Twitter.   She has co-authored a book titled: “Be Amazing: Glow in the Dark, Control the Weather, Perform Your Own Surgery, Get Out of Jury Duty, Identify a Witch, Colonize a Nation, Impress a Girl, Make a Zombie, Start Your Own Religion.”  Her recent book, and with a shorter title, is called: “Before the Lights Go Out: Conquering the Energy Crisis Before It Conquers Us.”  And that is the topic that brings her here today. Host, Engineer, Producer: Joel Par

  • Quantum Computers

    01/04/2014 Duración: 25min

    Quantum Computers [starts at 7:05] Dr. David Wineland has worked at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado, for 38 years. In 2012, he shared the Nobel Prize in Physics with France’s Dr. Serge Haroche for “ground-breaking experimental methods that enable measuring and manipulation of individual quantum systems”.  Dr. Wineland and his colleagues use electromagnetic fields to trap individual ions for long periods of time, and lasers to place the ions in quantum superposition states. Superposition is like being both here and there at the same time. Superposition, if taken literally (as many physicists believe it should, although some disagree), results in some very strange behaviors, like in a thought experiment designed by Erwin Schrodinger. Schrodinger’s thought experiment describes how a cat in a box can both dead and alive at the same time.  Dr. Wineland talks with How On Earth’s Jim Pullen about the connection between his work and Schrodinger’s famous cat. He says quantum co

  • 1964 Alaska Earthquake // Neuroscience of Dying

    25/03/2014 Duración: 24min

    1964 Alaska Earthquake (start time 04:37) This week 50 years ago, in 1964, the Beatles were huge, Alaska had only been a state for a mere five years, and the theory of plate tectonics was in toddlerhood. This Thursday, March 27, also marks the 50th anniversary of the magnitude 9.2 Great Alaska Earthquake of 1964. This earthquake changed our thinking about how the world works by showing us the hard way that tsunamis can arrive before the ground even stops shaking, that we can look in sedimentary records to recognize past great earthquakes offshore in places like the Pacific Northwest, and that these huge earthquakes rip the Earth open along a plane rather than in bits and pieces. What you’ll hear on today’s show is just the tip of the seismic iceberg: How the earthquake confirmed subduction, which is where one tectonic plate plunges under another. Beth Bartel speaks with Dr. Mike West, the Alaska State Seismologist and Director of the Alaska Earthquake Center, about his recent paper, "Why the 1964 Great Alask

  • 1964 Alaska Earthquake – Extended Version

    25/03/2014 Duración: 34min

    Today marks the 50th anniversary of the 1964 Great Alaska Earthquake. To commemorate the quake, we're posting this extended version of the interview we broadcast on March 25, 2014, with Dr. Mike West, the Alaska State Seismologist and Director of the Alaska Earthquake Center. How On Earth host Beth Bartel talked with Dr. West about his recent paper, “Why the 1964 Great Alaska Earthquake Matters 50 Years Later,” published in Seismological Research Letters. To whet your appetite, here are some of the topics we covered: How this earthquake fit in to the still-young idea of plate tectonics. How geodesy--the study of the shape of the Earth and how it changes--helped nail this event down as a subduction earthquake.  (Also: How the simplest explanation is not always the right one.) Monitoring: Where we were then, where we are now. Why we should look to Alaska to test out earthquake early monitoring systems. How this quake led us to see that the same thing could--and has--happened off the coast of the Pacific

  • Mother Nature Is Trying to Kill You

    18/03/2014 Duración: 14min

    Welcome to the Spring Pledge Drive edition of How On Earth. I'm this quarter's Executive Producer, Jim Pullen. We, the How On Earth team, encourage you to take a different take on the world, to examine assumptions, ideas and evidence critically. The great philosopher of science Karl Popper, a champion of the essential role of refutation in science, wrote in The Poverty of Historicism, For if we are uncritical, we shall always find what we want: we shall look for, and find confirmations, and we shall look away from and not see, whatever might be dangerous to our pet theories. Consider our relationship with the rest of the natural world... Do we humans have a special vitality that sets us apart or can we be best understood as just another smart ape? It's an essential question. In our feature interview, our guest scientist, bat biologist and Animal Planet host Dan Riskin, challenges us to reconsider--humorously, disgustingly, creepily, scarily--our perceptions of nature. Dan fields questions like, what's wrong

  • Plants in Space // Relativity

    11/03/2014 Duración: 24min

    Plants in Space (start time 04:36) What would you miss if you were to spend an extended time in space—driving a car? Going to the movies? Hiking? Playing with your dog? Gravity, maybe? Or maybe something as simple as eating good, nutritious vegetables. How On Earth's Beth Bartel speaks with University of Colorado undergraduate researcher Lizzy Lombardi about harvesting healthier veggies for our astronauts. Or, as we like to think about it, plants in space. Relativity (start time 13:30) Albert Einstein published his special theory of relativity in 1905 and his general theory in 1915. Special relativity revealed bizarre and powerful ideas, including the famous equation E=mc2, but the basic theory hinges on a single realization: all observers, no matter how fast they are moving, always measure the same speed of light in space. A decade later, general relativity, the result of Einstein’s “happiest thought” that “the gravitation field has only a relative existence” unseated Newton’s law of gravitation. General r

  • Beringia // Dolphins & Climate Change // The Ogallala Road

    04/03/2014 Duración: 23min

    Beringia (start time 0:55). We present an excerpt of  Shelly Schlender's  interview with University of Colorado scientist John Hoffecker, lead author of a recent paper in Science magazine about the Beringia land bridge and the people who lived there 25,000 years ago.  The full interview can be found here.   Dolphins & Climate Change (start time 4:40). Dr. Denise Herzing, the founder of the Wild Dolphin Project, has been building relationships with Atlantic Spotted Dolphins for 28 years. Her quest to learn whether dolphins have language, and to learn that language, is notable for its longevity. But her relationship with them is remarkably respectful, too. We last spoke to Dr. Herzing in the spring of 2012, about her book Dolphin Diaries: My 25 Years With Spotted Dolphins in the Bahamas. We're very glad that she's with us again, to help us learn about how large marine mammals may be responding in unusual ways to changes in the oceans. The Ogallala Road (start time 15:15).  We often hear about how the Colora

  • How Native Americans Came to Be – Extended Version – Beringia

    04/03/2014 Duración: 41min

    I'm Shelley Schlender for How on Earth.  Here’s an extended version of an interview about how Native Americans came to be.  It’s about a CU-Boulder study that appeared in Science Magazine in February 2014, and promptly made headlines around the world.  The study involves top-notch detective work that shows how, almost 30,000 years ago, a major Ice Age trapped Asian explorers on a land bridge between Asia and Alaska for 10 THOUSAND years.  Back then, the "Beringia" (bare-IN-gee-ah) land bridge was 30 miles long and 600 miles wide. Glaciers had buried Northern America, but Beringia was just warm enough, the trapped explorers survived and thrived.  They stayed in that pit stop for so many thousands of years, it gave time for the inevitable mutations that can happen in DNA to be concentrated and become distributed throughout the entire Beringian community, which probably included a few thousand people.  When the glaciers finally receded around 15,000 years ago, that DNA signature was with the small band of “Berin

  • Tracing Methane’s Source in Drinking Water // Safe Place for Captive Wolves

    25/02/2014 Duración: 24min

    Methane in Drinking Water (start time 05:36) Flaming water faucets were infamously exposed in the documentaries Gasland and Gasland 2. The water isn't catching fire--methane in the water is. People are deeply concerned that methane, dredged from kilometers down, is leaking into our drinking water supplies through poorly constructed and maintained oil and gas wells, but methane can be produced by living organisms much closer to the surface too. How can we tell where the methane in the water is coming from? One way is to look at stable isotopes of carbon, but the tests are expensive and require a lot of expertise. But our guest Dr. Lee Stanish explains to host Jim Pullen that she is working on much cheaper ways to trace the source of the methane. Lee is a Research Associate in the Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology at the University of Colorado, Boulder. She's trying to raise money for her research through crowd-sourcing--learn more here. Haven for Captive Wolves (start time 14:25) Rig

  • Molecular Gastronomy

    18/02/2014 Duración: 25min

    Welcome to a special Radio Nibbles version of How On Earth. Nibbles' (and pie aficionado) John Lehndorff, chef Ian Kleinman and How On Earth's Jim Pullen set to work making and eating high-tech delicacies. Liquid nitrogen sorbets, strawberries floating above superconducting magnets, and more! Food and tech on the show that makes you smarter. Yum! Host/Producer/Engineer: Jim Pullen Executive Producer: Jim Pullen Listen to the show here:  

  • CO2 from the Amazon // US Smokestacks

    11/02/2014 Duración: 24min

    Amazon CO2 (start time 04:37) The Amazon basin contains the largest tropical rainforest on the planet. It’s been critical not only for its beauty and biodiversity but also for its ability to store more carbon dioxide than it emits. The soil and above-ground biomass of the Amazon makes it one of the largest reservoirs of carbon dioxide. And that has helped to keep climate change from accelerating even faster. But a new study shows that the Amazon’s tropical ecosystems may actually give off more CO2 into the atmosphere than they absorb. To learn what’s shifting in the Amazon basin and the implications of this shift, host Susan Moran speaks with one of the authors of the study. John Miller is a scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Boulder. Specifically, he’s with NOAA’s Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, which is at the University of Colorado. Power Plant Smokestacks (start time 14:43) To understand the global greenhouse gas budgets, it’s critical to c

  • Arctic Thaw // Methane Study // Bonobo Conservation

    06/02/2014 Duración: 23min

    Today's show offers three features: Arctic Dispatch: (start time: 1:02) Co-host Susan Moran returns from Tromso, Norway, with a dispatch from the Arctic Frontiers conference, which addressed the human health and environmental impacts of a rapidly thawing Arctic. Lars Otto Reierson, executive secretary of the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program within the Arctic Council, discusses the transport and impacts of  contaminants on the Arctic food web and the indigenous people who depend on it. And Michael Tipton, a physiologist at the University of Portsmouth in the U.K., speaks about the risks of and physiological responses to extreme cold environments. Read Susan's article in Popular Science for more about the thawing Arctic. Atmospheric methane spikes: (start time: 9:39) Dr. Ed Dlugokencky, an atmospheric chemist with NOAA’s Earth Systems Research Laboratory, speaks with co-host Jim Pullen about a paper he co-authored in Science about a recent spike in atmospheric concentrations of methane, which is

  • Newton’s Football // Strontium Clock

    28/01/2014 Duración: 22min

    Newton's Football (start time 5:45)  This Sunday the Denver Broncos face the Seattle Seahawks in the Super Bowl, so we thought we'd bring you a scientific perspective on the game of football. How on Earth's Ted Burnham talks with the co-authors of the book Newton's Football: The Science Behind America's Game, journalist Allen St. John and science evangelist Ainissa Ramirez.   Strontium Clock (start time 14:10) We've got a full-house of physicists in the studio today to help us understand the new timepiece and why it's important. Travis Nicholson and Sara Campbell are graduate students on the team led by Professor Jun Ye. Dr. Ye is a Fellow of JILA, a Fellow of NIST, and Adjoint Professor with CU's Department of Physics. Hosts: Ted Burnham, Jim Pullen Producer: Joel Parker Engineer: Joel Parker Executive Producer: Jim Pullen Additional contributions:  Kendra Krueger, Beth Bartel, Joel Parker, Jim Pullen Listen to the show:

  • Rosetta Wakes Up // Jelly Sandwich Earth // Hospital Acquired Infections // Microbes Reduce Autism in Mice

    21/01/2014 Duración: 24min

    Outsourcing Pollution (01:08) What's sent to China comes back to the good old U S of A. Arctic Frontiers (02:03) How on Earth's  Susan Moran flies to Norway Conference Wake Up, Rosetta!   (3:00) As project manager for the Rosetta Alice UV Spectrometer, How on Earth's  Joel Parker shares tense moments, waiting for  Rosetta to wake up. Jelly Sandwich Earth  (5:40) CU-Boulder's Peter Molnar wins the world’s most prestigious prize for Geoscience -He speaks with How on Earth's Jim Pullen Hospital Acquired Infections (8:00)   When Americans go to the hospital, they don’t expect to leave with a brand new illness.  But one out of every 20  receives a hidden time bomb during these visits -- it’s a healthcare associated infection.   How on Earth's Shelley Schlender visits Longmont United Hospital to see how ICU staff reduce infection risks.   If you want to compare how your hospital or clinic compares with the nation, and other Colorado hospitals, when it comes to infections, here are Colorado's Latest Infection Ra

  • Quitting smoking//Smoke and children’s health

    14/01/2014 Duración: 23min

    Quitting smoking (start time 4:39) 50 years ago, the U.S. Surgeon General began a campaign against cigarettes that has saved million of lives. Cohost Jim Pullen talks with Dr. Amy Lukowski about proven strategies to stop smoking and a special quitting campaign for women who are pregnant. Dr. Lukowski is the Clinical Director of the Health Initiatives Programs for National Jewish Health. If you'd like to learn more about kicking the habit, visit the Colorado Quitline.   Smoke and children's health (start time 13:36) It’s been known for some time that breathing in smoke from wildfires -- or wood stoves, for that matter -- is bad for your health. Many studies have shown that when children are exposed to inhalable particulate matter early in life, their lungs don’t function properly. And the effect on the lungs from inhaling smoke persists as children grow older. But what has not been well understood is precisely what is happening in a person’s body that causes the harmful effects -- the biologic mechani

  • 2013 Was a Good Year, in Science!

    31/12/2013 Duración: 24min

    The team considers noteworthy science on the last day of 2013. What's worth mentioning? Too many people, too much carbon, and way too much fun in astronomy! Biology and Health (start time 00:56). This year marked the passing of long-time Boulder resident, Al Bartlett. Bartlett was one of the world's most eloquent voices calling for population control. He will be missed. One of the champions picking up the torch is New York Times bestselling author, Alan Weisman. Weisman offers exciting solutions to population growth in Countdown:  Our Last, Best Hope for a Future on Earth. How on Earth's Shelley Schlender reports that this is a hard book to read, because it's long, and thorough, and urgency of the need for population reduction worldwide is often not a happy topic. She admits that sometimes, she even switched to a detective novel before reading more of Countdown. But she kept at it because Countdown provides some exciting solutions to population growth. One of the most compelling is to provide women with edu

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