Sinopsis
The KGNU Science Show
Episodios
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Climate-health link//Smart grid
03/05/2011 Duración: 23minOn this How On Earth show we explore how climate change is taking a toll on human health, and then how "smart grid" technology can help reduce the carbon footprint of electrical power generation. Co-host Susan Moran interviews Paul Epstein, associate director of the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School; and Dan Ferber, co-authors of the new book "Changing Planet, Changing Health: How the Climate Crisis Threatens Our Health and What We Can Do About It." Then reporter Tom McKinnon interviews Davin Lim of Tendril, a Boulder-based company that is building the electronic pipelines to make the smart grid work. Producer: Susan Moran Co-hosts: Susan Moran, Joel Parker Engineer: Ted Burnham
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Virtual power plants//Wildfires and climate change
26/04/2011 Duración: 23minTom McKinnon interviews, via phone, Peter Asmus of Pike Research about Virtual Power Plants. This emerging information technology may help to integrate more renewable power onto the gird. And even save money for customers who are willing to turn down their energy demand when the grid is stressed. At the recent Conference on World Affairs, Susan Moran sat down with Peter Hildeband, the director of the Earth Sciences Directorate at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. He talked about how climate change will impact wildfires in the West. Producer: Tom McKinnon Co-Hosts: Tom McKinnon and Susan Moran Engineer: Ted Burnham Listen to the show:
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Natural Gas Boom//BP Oil Spill’s Human Toll
20/04/2011 Duración: 24minWe discuss the environmental and human costs of natural gas drilling practices, and then the human toll of the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico one year after the disaster. On natural gas drilling practices, Susan Moran interviews Steve Torbit, regional executive director of the National Wildlife Federation's Rocky Mountain Center; and Steven Hall, communications director for the Colorado Bureau of Land Management. Ted Burnham interviews Liesel Ritchie, assistant director for research at the Natural Hazards Center, about the BP oil disaster's social costs. Click here for details of the study. Producer: Tom McKinnon Co-hosts: Tom McKinnon and Susan Moran Engineer: Ted Burnham Headlines: Breanna Draxler
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Extended interview with Anjali Bhatara
12/04/2011 Duración: 16minHere's a longer version of my interview with Anjali Bhatara, which aired on today's program. Dr. Bhatara is with the Laboratory of the Psychology of Perception at the University of Paris, where she studies the interactions between music and the brain, the mind and the emotions. She has published several papers on music perception in people with autism—especially their ability to pick up on the emotional cues in a song, and how it might be related to their ability to detect emotional cues in speech. I began by asking her which aspects of sound are relevant to musical perception. Listen to the interview:
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Theme Song Contest // Science of Music
12/04/2011 Duración: 23minToday we announce a contest to find new theme music for How On Earth! Our current theme has served us well for more than 20 years, but we feel it's time to change our tune. We're looking to local musicians for that new "How On Earth" sound. Check out our Contest Page for more information, and to listen to and comment on submitted music. Joining us in the studio today is Tom Wasinger, the Grammy-winning producer of our long-standing theme. We talk with him about the history and creation of that theme, and about his hopes for this new theme music contest. We also hear from Anjali Bhatara, of the Laboratory of the Psychology of Perception in Paris. She studies the way music affects the brain, the mind, and the emotions (hear an extended version of this interview). And we'll get some advice on selecting a memorable new theme from music expert Don Campbell, author of The Mozart Effect and founder of the Institute for Music, Health, and Education here in Boulder. Hosts: Ted Burnham and Tom Yulsman Engineer: Shel
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Pseudoscience // Conservation
06/04/2011 Duración: 27minWelcome to a special edition of How on Earth, done in conjunction with the Conference on World Affairs, which is being held this week on the University of Colorado’s Boulder campus. Our two guests are participants in the Conference on World Affairs. This first part of the show is Conference Panel 2051 titled “Pseudoscience”, with guest Seth Shostak. Dr. Shostak is a Senior Astronomer at the SETI Institute, in Mountain View, California. Our second guest is Larry Schweiger is president and CEO of the National Wildlife Federation, the largest conservation organization in the U.S. We talk with him about conservation and environmental policy. Hosts: Joel Parker and Susan Moran Producer and Engineer: Joel Parker Listen to the show:
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Ocean thermal energy//Climate and drought in the Rockies
29/03/2011 Duración: 23minOur live guests are consultant Dr. Robert Cohen and CU scientist Kristen Averyt. Dr. Cohen discusses ocean thermal energy -- a method to harvest some of the almost limitless solar energy captured daily by the oceans. Dr. Averyt surveys the future of the Intermountain West as we increase temperature and put increasing population pressure on a dwindling water supply. Producer: Tom McKinnon Co-hosts: Tom McKinnon and Susan Moran Engineer: Breanna Draxler Headlines: Ted Burnham and Breanna Draxler
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Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Reactor Accident
22/03/2011 Duración: 23minIn-studio guests Jeff King, Director of the Nuclear Science and Engineering Program at the Colorado School of Mines, and Len Ackland, Co-Director of the Center for Environmental Journalism at the University of Colorado, discuss the recent nuclear accident in Fukushima, Japan. We look at the accident itself and how it might impact the future of nuclear power in the United States. Producer: Tom McKinnon Co-hosts: Tom McKinnon and Tom Yulsman Engineer: Ted Burnham Listen to the show:
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Moonwalking with Einstein // Pledge Drive Show
16/03/2011 Duración: 24minIn this Spring Pledge Drive Show, we share an update on the crisis in Japan from Kathleen Tierney of CU-Boulder's Natural Hazards Center, and then Joel Parker interviews Joshua Foer, author of the runaway bestseller, Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything. (the full interview can be found here) Hosts: Joel Parker, Ted Burnham, Breanna Draxler, Tom McKinnon, Shelley Schlender Show Producer: Joel Parker & Shelley Schlender Listen to the show:
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Scientific Citizen Astronauts // Scientific Performance Art
08/03/2011 Duración: 25minThis week on How On Earth, we talk with two Boulder researchers, Dan Durda and Cathy Olkin, who are training to become "scientist astronauts" on some of the first suborbital space flights provided by private companies in the post-shuttle era (extended interview available here). We also hear about a show performed by Michelle Ellsworth, and developed in collaboration with scientist Rob Guralnick,that presents science using dance and theater performance art. Hosts: Joel Parker, Breanna Draxler Producer: Joel Parker Listen to the show:
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Colorado Growth Model is Replacing CSAPs // Boulder Valley Science Fair
02/03/2011 Duración: 23minIn honor of KGNU's Kid's Week, we go to the Boulder County Science Fair with How on Earth's Tom McKinnon. In turns out three of the five students Tom interviewed before the judging began ended up as winners at the science show! Then, we look at CSAPs-Colorado's Student Assessment Program. That style of standardized test for Reading, Writing, Math and Science is being phased out, in favor of The Colorado Growth Model that's so innovative, it's being adopted in several other states. How on Earth's Shelley Schlender interviews cognitive scientist Bill Bonk, who's on the team developing the Colorado Growth Model, which you can see at schoolview.org. Hosts: Joel Parker and Tom McKinnon Producer: Shelley Schlender
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Bioastronautics at CU Bioserve // Boulder County EnergySmart energy efficiency service
22/02/2011 Duración: 23minTed Burnham inteviews CU PhD student Christine Fanchiang on her role in helping the BioServe program prepare experiments for a ride on the Space Shuttle. Tom McKinnon talks to Beth Beckel, an Energy Efficiency and Sustainability Specialist with Boulder County EnergySmart Service. Beth tells us how this new county program can help homeowners and renters save money, increase indoor comfort, and help the environment. Click here for the EnergySmart portion of HOE. Hosts: Ted Burnham and Tom McKinnon Producer: Tom McKinnon Listen to the show:
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CU Medical Professor Shares Love of Science
15/02/2011 Duración: 23minThis week we'll feature CU Medical School Immunologist John Cohen, who has just received the American Association for the Advancement of Science top award for promoting public understanding of Science. In addition to teaching at the Medical School, Cohen is the founder of Mini Med and the lead "disorganizer" of the Denver Cafe Sci. We'll also talk with Emory University researcher Zixu Mao about a new link between Parkinson's disease and the health of the mitochondria within a cell, and we'll hear from BBC Science in Action about some top choices in Europe for new Astronomy pursuits. Hosts: Joel Parker, Susan Moran Producer: Shelley Schlender Listen to the show:
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Front range water / Kepler planet-hunter
08/02/2011 Duración: 23minOur two features for this week's show: Susan Moran interviewed Joel Smith, principal at Stratus Consulting in Boulder, who has been helping the city adapt to climate change—in particular, by smartly managing its water supply; and Tom Yulsman interviewed John Troeltzsch, the Kepler mission program manager for Boulder-based Ball Aerospace, which built one of the key instruments for the mission, as well as the spacecraft itself. Cohosts: Susan Moran, Tom Yulsman Producer: Susan Moran Listen to the show:
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From Jars to the Stars / Plants moving uphill
25/01/2011 Duración: 25minOur guest this week is Todd Neff, who was a science reporter for Boulder's Daily Camera newspaper and is author of a new book, From Jars to the Stars: How Ball Came to Build a Comet-Hunting Machine, about the history of Ball Aerospace. Neff joins us to speak about that history and the challenges Ball faced when designing and building the Deep Impact spacecraft that intentionally collided with a comet in 2005. We also hear from Jon Stewart of the BBC's Science in Action about how climate change is actually driving plants downhill. Hosts: Joel Parker, Ted Burnham Producer: Joel Parker Listen to the show:
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Earthquakes & corruption / Astrology shake-up
18/01/2011 Duración: 23minThis week on How On Earth, University of Colorado earth scientist Roger Bilham joins us in the studio to talk about his latest study, which shows a correlation between the prevalence of corruption in a country and the likelihood of civilian deaths during an earthquake. And Shelley Schlender talks to HOE contributor and astrophysicist Joel Parker about how the science of astronomy can have an impact on the pseudoscientific world of astrology. Hosts: Tom Yulsman, Ted Burnham Producer: Tom Yulsman Listen to the show:
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MAVEN: Mission to Mars // Communicating geophysics
11/01/2011 Duración: 25minOn this week's How On Earth, we're joined by the University of Colorado's Bruce Jakosky, principle investigator on the MAVEN satellite mission that will investigate Mars' upper atmosphere. NASA granted final approval to MAVEN last fall, and the spacecraft is scheduled to launch in 2013. Also, Ted Burnham speaks with Carol Finn, incoming president of the American Geophysical Union, about the need for scientists to communicate better with the public. Hosts: Joel Parker, Ted Burnham Producer: Shelley Schlender Listen to the show: