Astrophiz Podcasts

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 146:14:28
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Synopsis

Astrophiz podcasts by Brendan O'Brien. @Astrophiz on Twitter.Brendan gets how and why science works, and conducts in-depth interviews with leading astro and space researchers. In each episode we feature Astrophysicists, Space Scientists, Particle Physicists, Instrument scientists, optical & radio astronomers, Satcomm engineers, project leaders and aurora hunters. For Astrophotographers, we also hear from Dr Ian Astroblog Musgrave who tells us when, where and what to look for in the sky over the coming weeks and explains astronomical phenomena in Ians Tangent.This ongoing series has taken us through the history, theory and practice of radio astronomy from Faraday to Gravitational waves. Each episode includes the latest news roundup in this golden age of astrophysics. Enjoy!

Episodes

  • Astrophiz 34 – Dr. Anthony Horton – 'Huntsman' & 'Space-Eye' + Dr. Ian Musgrave

    18/05/2017 Duration: 36min

    Our feature interview is with Dr. Anthony Horton – Instrument Scientist at the AAO who tells us all about life as an Instrument Scientist for AAO and the Huntsman Telescope and the Space-Eye CubeSat telescope project. In our regular Astrophotography and observing feature, Dr Ian ‘astroblog’ Musgrave gives us the skinny on the great current conditions for observing our Gas Giants. In the News: 1. Vale Harold Weaver, 99, discoverer of Masers in space. 2. Renegrade Supermassive Black Hole hunted down 3. The smallest (oxymoronic) Supermassive Black Hole 4. The first image of a black hole (almost)

  • Astrophiz33 - Dr Elodie Thilliez - Debris Disks & Big Data - Dr Ian Musgrave “What’s Up Doc?’

    04/05/2017 Duration: 37min

    Our feature interview is with Dr Elodie Thilliez. Elodie is a Data Scientist at the Deakin University Software and Technology Innovation Laboratory in Melbourne Australia, and completed her PhD at the Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing at Swinburne University. Elodie tells us about her research into debris disks and the role of big data in modern astronomy. Follow Elodie on Twitter as @ET_Astro Dr Ian Musgrave in his regular feature “What’s Up Doc” tells us when and where to find our planets, how to catch the Eta Aquariid meteor shower this weekend, exoplanets and rings around asteroids. Check out Ian’s excellent Astroblog (just google it) or follow @ianfmusgrave on Twitter. In the News: With the Cassini mission all over the internet, we instead give you the background on Cassini the scientist. Follow @Astrophiz on Twitter and Astrophiz on Facebook

  • Astrophiz 32: Manisha Caleb Nails Fast Radio Bursts

    20/04/2017 Duration: 31min

    Astrophiz32: Manisha Caleb Nails Fast Radio Bursts ~ Dr Ian Musgrave “What’s Up Doc?" Out now on iTunes and Soundcloud. Our special guest is PhD candidate Manisha Caleb who has just made a wonderful breakthrough by using the revamped Molongo Observatory Synthesis Telescope to bring us breakthrough knowledge about mysterious FRB’s - Fast Radio Bursts In our regular segment, we feature Dr Ian Musgrave of ‘Astroblog’ fame, and he tells us what to look for in the night and morning skies over the next few weeks. Watch for Jupiter, Saturn, Comets and rogue asteroids! And for Australians … get thee to the Warrumbungles. In the News: Supermassive black holes collide revealing baby stars, by guest reporter Lara O’Brien, Dark Matter in the Bullet Cluster, via Cosmos magazine

  • Astrophiz 31: Dr Elisabetta Barberio "Dark Matter" ~ Dr Ian Musgrave "What's up Doc"

    06/04/2017 Duration: 32min

    Astrophiz 31 is out now on iTunes and Soundcloud. Our feature interview is with Dr Elisabetta Barberio who explains a new Dark matter Experiment deep in a goldmine in South Eastern Australia. Elisabetta is a member of the Experimental Particle Physics Group at the University of Melbourne. Previously, she was a staff researcher at CERN, the European laboratory of Particle Physics. She was involved with data analysis in the OPAL experiment at the Large Electron Positron Collider at CERN, and has worked on the Higgs Boson and ATLAS, which is a particle physics experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. Dr Ian Musgrave in our regular feature, ‘What’s up Doc?’ tells us what to look for in the night sky this week using naked eye, binoculars or telescopes, and Jupiter is ruling our skies. In the news: Dr Brad Tucker and ANU astronomers launch a Citizen Science project and public search of the southern skies for the elusive 'Planet Nine’ using data from the Skymapper telescope at Siding Springs in Austra

  • Astrophiz30: Dr Elizabeth Tasker Debunks Earth 2.0 Trappist1 system, Dr Ian Musgrave “What’s Up Doc"

    23/03/2017 Duration: 28min

    Astrophiz30: Out now on iTunes and Soundcloud. Dr Elizabeth Tasker Debunks Earth 2.0 is in the Trappist1 system, Dr Ian Musgrave “What’s Up Doc" Our feature interview is with Dr Elizabeth Tasker who gives a reality check to the claims that ‘7 earth-like planets' have been found around TRAPPIST-1, a small star about 40 light years away, and in her most recent paper, calls for a more accurate definition of our use of the term ‘habitability'. Elizabeth is a British astrophysicist who works at JAXA, the Institute of Space and Astronomical Science, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. Our regular segment features Dr Ian Musgrave of ‘Astroblog’ fame, and he tells us what to look for in the night and morning skies over the next few weeks. In the news: 1. The Explosive beginnings of a supernova spotted for the first time (via Amy Middleton reporting for cosmosmagazine) and she writes about a new paper in Nature Physics about the spectacular transformation of a star, assumed to have been a red supergiant, into

  • Astrophiz 29: 'Star forming galaxies' ~ Dr Ángel López-Sánchez, ‘What’s Up Doc’ ~ Dr Ian Musgrave

    09/03/2017 Duration: 59min

    Our feature interview is with Dr Ángel López-Sánchez, who is originally from the beautiful city of Córdoba in Spain, and now with the Australian Astronomical Observatory and Department of Physics and Astronomy of Macquarie University, Sydney”. He researches galaxies with star-formation activity, and even the features of the very massive Wolf-Rayet stars are detected sometimes. He was the first Spanish astronomer to host an astronomy blog. It is fantastic, and our listers can find it easily just by googling ‘the lined wolf’. It comes up as number one in search results (in Spanish and in English). Ángel is passionate about outreach and amateur astronomy. Dr Ian Musgrave in our regular feature, ‘What’s up Doc?’ tells us what to look for in the night sky this week using naked eye, binoculars or telescopes. This week, Jupiter and Saturn, and a chance encounter with a comet. Just google ‘Astroblog’ to see his fabulous weekly observing blog. In the News: In the News: 1. ‘Big Data’ Updating the supercomputing

  • Astrophiz 28 - Fiona Panther 'Supernovae & Positrons'. Dr Ian Musgrave 'What's up Doc!'

    23/02/2017 Duration: 55min

    Astrophiz 28 is out now on iTunes and Soundcloud. Our feature interview is with Fiona Panther who is a PhD student and the Joan Duffield Scholar at the Australian National University's Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics in Canberra, Australia. Fiona is using computational astrophysics and working on using peculiar supernova to try and understand how positions are created in excess in our Galaxy. Fiona also explains Fermi Bubbles Dr Ian Musgrave in our regular feature, ‘What’s up Doc?’ tells us what to look for in the night sky this week using naked eye, binoculars or telescopes, and all the action is currently down near the horizon. In the news: NASA, working with Spitzer, Hubble and the ESO’s VLT, have just announced that 7 exoplanets have been discovered in the habitable zone around TRAPPIST-1, a dwarf star only 39 light years away. Galaxies being stripped of their star-forming matter

  • Astrophiz 27 - Dr Amanda Bauer - Galactic Evolution & Surveys. Dr Ian Musgrave 'What's Up Doc?'

    08/02/2017 Duration: 40min

    Astrophiz 27 out now on iTunes and Soundcloud. Our first feature interview after our fabulous summer break is with Dr Amanda Bauer, who has just been appointed as the new Head of Education and Public Outreach at the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope which is high up in the mountains in Chile in South America. Amanda has worked at the Max Planck Institute and on the famous Sloan Digital Sky Survey and she now specialises in Galactic Evolution and Astronomical Outreach. Dr Ian Musgrave in our regular feature, ‘What’s up Doc?’ tells us what to look for in the night sky this week using naked eye, binoculars or telescopes. Comet 45P and Vesta observations. In the news: Our Milky Way is being pushed and pulled around every which way, Orphan Black Holes and a ‘Red Nova’ predicted for 2022.

  • Astrophiz 26 (Episode10 REPRISED): Dr Elizabeth Tasker - Proxima b debunked

    05/01/2017 Duration: 37min

    While we are on our summer holiday break we are reprising a few of our previous episodes. Listen as Dr Elizabeth Tasker debunks the over-hyped 'habitability' claim for Proxima Centauri b, and explains what we actually know about this nearby exoplanet. Dr Nadezhda Cherbakov explains the ‘Radio Window’ Part 11 and for Aurora Hunters she plays the sounds of Jupiter's Auroras from NASA's Juno mission. In the news: NASA's JUNO pics of Jupiter's North Pole, Worst Science 'journalism' Ever, Brightest Magnetar detected, NASA designs sub to send to Titan, Another 'Dyson Sphere' star detected.

  • Astrophiz 25: Episode 11 REPRISED - Vera Rubin Special

    29/12/2016 Duration: 12min

    This week over our summer break, on the heels of the sad news of Vera Rubin's passing, we reprise the segment from Episode 11 which features Dr Nadezhda Cherbakov, where she tells us about Vera Rubin’s historic discovery of Dark Matter and how she is still being denied a well-deserved Nobel Prize.

  • Astrophiz 24: Solstice Special & Cuberider Launch with Solange Cunin, "What's Up" with Dr Musgrave

    22/12/2016 Duration: 50min

    Astrophiz 24 is out now on iTunes and Soundcloud. Solstice Special and Cuberider Liftoff. Feature interview: We interview Solange Cunin, CEO of Cuberider, an Edutech company which has just launched 100 experiments up to the ISS via JAXA, stoking the dreams, imagination, hard work and Python coding of hundreds of Australian students and teachers from 54 schools. Congratulations! More info at cuberiderDOTcom Dr Nadeshzda Cherbakov Skypes in from Tver in Russia to tell us more about stellar evolution and explains the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram Dr Ian Musgrave in ‘What’s up Doc?’ tell us what to look for in the night sky this week using naked eye, binoculars or telescopes. In the news: 6 brief items and we elaborate on solstices See you next on February 9 2017. Happy Holidays everyone!

  • Astrophiz 23: Meet Asteroid Hunters Daniel Bamberger & Guy Wells. + Ian Musgrave's ’What’s up Doc’

    15/12/2016 Duration: 48min

    Yay! Astrophiz 23 is out now on Soundcloud or subscribe in iTunes. Meet Asteroid Hunters Daniel Bamberger and Guy Wells. Astrophotographer Dr Ian ‘Astroblog’ Musgrave in ’What’s up Doc’ tells us what to look for in the night sky this week. Feature Interview: Daniel Bamberger & Guy Wells, who have set up the rapidly expanding and recognised Northolt Branch Observatory, explain how they image and verify orbits of asteroids and other NEOs. (Near earth Objects) Dr Nadezhda Cherbakov has been incommunicado, so we will have to wait for next week to look at the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram “What”s Up in the Sky this Week” with Dr Musgrave: The planets of the morning sky, the evening sky and the Geminids meteor shower under a full moon. In the News: 1. The Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR), the antennas are receiving radio signals that have travelled billions of years to get here, from the depths of the cosmos. 

2. Another citizen science project turns up remarkable pulsar science via the einstein@home project. 3. D

  • Astrophiz 22: Parkes Dish Chases Gravity Waves, Aliens & FRBs - Nadezhda on Stellar Evolution

    08/12/2016 Duration: 48min

    Astrophiz 22 is out now on Soundcloud or subscribe in iTunes Part II: The Parkes ‘Dish’ interrogates pulsars to expose gravity waves. We interview Operations Scientist John Sarkissian at the CSIRO Parkes Radio Observatory. He explains how the ‘Spider Dipoles’ that make up the Murchison Widefield Array in remote Western Australia contribute to SKA, how Parkes chase down gravity waves and has detected most of the world’s FRBs (fast radio bursts of unknown origin), after being distracted by ‘perytons’ and microwave ovens. And yes, ‘The Dish’ is searching for Extraterrestrial Intelligence in the international SETI ‘Breakthrough Listen’ project. We’re not saying they’re searching for Aliens ….. but Aliens! Dr Nadezhda in Part I of Stellar Evolution explains how the mass of a star determines its evolutionary path, and next week we will look at the Hetsprung-Russell Diagram “What”s Up in the Sky this Week” for Northern Hemisphere observers and astrophotographers, and for Southern Hemisphere Listeners, December is

  • Astrophiz 20: Black Hole Echoes with Natalia Sommer - News + the Astrophotography Challenge

    23/11/2016 Duration: 41min

    Black Hole Investigator and Norwegian-born PhD candidate Natalia Sommer explains her novel technique of interrogating the echoes from active galactic nuclei to develop a standardisable candle to measure the distances to galaxies far far away. Dr Nadezhda Cherbakov Skypes in from Tver in Russia to tell us about Red Shift, Blue Shift and the Doppler Effect. In the News: Fast Radio Bursts and the oldest woman in space and most travelled NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson. What to look for in the night sky this week, the ecliptic explained and the Astrophotography Challenge.

  • Astrophiz 19 'Tribute to Jack' - Stairway to Heaven

    16/11/2016 Duration: 04min

    It is with profound sadness that we announce that Jack, the eldest son of Dr Ian Musgrave, has died as a result of an accident. We will not be presenting our regular podcast this week, and we do not expect Ian will be on the podcast for the foreseeable future. This week’s program is a simple tribute to Jack, in the form of my daughter Lara’s arrangement of the Led Zeppelin classic ‘Stairway to Heaven’ on piano. She is accompanied by her friend Emma Amery on violin, and her brother Tom on Cello. We extend our deepest condolences to Ian and Peta, Mikey and their youngest son, from Astrophiz listeners and the O’Brien family. The message from Ian is a simple one: Parents, hug your kids.

  • Astrophiz 18: The Acceleration of the Expanding Universe with Dr Brad Tucker + "What's Up Doc?

    10/11/2016 Duration: 45min

    Astrophiz 18 out now on iTunes and Soundcloud. ‘The Acceleration of the Expanding Universe’ is beautifully explained by Dr Brad Tucker. Brad is an Astrophysicist/Cosmologist, and currently a Research Fellow and PhD supervisor at the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Mt. Stromlo Observatory at the Australian National University. Dr Nadezhda Cherbakov Skypes in from Tver in Russia to tell us more about the Cosmic Microwave background Radiation. Dr Ian Musgrave in ‘What’s up Doc?’ tell us what to look for in the night sky this week using naked eye, binoculars or telescopes. Oh yes, and he takes down ’Suuupermoons’ In the news: An update on the SKA, the Square Kilometre Array, our planet’s largest and most sensitive radio telescope

  • Astrophiz17- John Sarkissian: Parkes Radio Observatory + Cosmic Microwave Background + What's Up Doc

    03/11/2016 Duration: 43min

    Astrophiz Podcast 17 is out now for Space lovers, Sciencers, Aurora Hunters, and Astrophotographers on iTunes and Soundcloud. We talk with John Sarkissian, who is the Operations Scientist at the CSIRO Parkes Radio Observatory. It’s a sensational interview celebrating 55 years of amazing observations from the iconic dish that bought the Apollo moon landings to 600 million viewers in 1969 Dr Nadezhda Cherbakov tells us about Cosmic Background Radiation. Dr Ian ‘Astroblog’ Musgrave in 'What's Up Doc?' tells us what to look for up in the sky this week and how to temper your discovery of new rogue planets Next Week: We talk about the accelerating universe controversy with the Mt Stromlo Research Fellow, Cosmologist and Type Ia Supernovae researcher Dr Brad Tucker.

  • Astrophiz16: Neumann Space's Ion Space Drive, Synchrotron Radiation with Nadezhda + What's Up Doc

    27/10/2016 Duration: 40min

    Astrophiz Podcast 16 is out now for Space lovers on iTunes and Soundcloud. At the Australian Space Science Conference we talk with Ian Whitechurch, CEO of Neumann Space, which has just secured a contract to test their solid state ion space drive on the International Space Station. Dr Nadezhda Cherbakov is back from her dacha and talks from Russia to tell us about Synchrotron Radiation. Dr Ian ‘Astroblog’ Musgrave in 'What's Up Doc?' tells us what to look for up in the sky this week, the ‘blue’ new moon, earthshine, trans-neptunian object Sedna, Planet 9, how to use Heavens-above and Calsky to get email alerts for overhead satellites, Iridium flares, the ISS, comets and novas as they become visible over your own house. In the news: 1. Schiaparelli Lander wrap up 2. Eta Carinae imaged in incredible detail 3. Proxima Centauri’s 7 year ’starspot’ cycle discovered Next Week: We talk with John Sarkissian, who is the Operations Scientist at the CSIRO Parkes Radio Observatory. It’s a sensational interview.

In

  • Astrophiz15 - Glen Nagle/Canberra Deep Space Communications Complex + What's Up Doc

    19/10/2016 Duration: 41min

    Glen Nagle describes how the Canberra Deep Space Communications Complex listens to and sends commands to 40 spacecraft actively on missions throughout our solar system and beyond. Dr Ian ‘Astroblog’ Musgrave in 'What's Up Doc?' tells us what to look for up in the sky this week, auroras and astrophotography of the moon. In the news this week; 1.Successful ESA Mars Exo mission orbit insertion, TGO spacecraft sciencing successfully but possible LOS for Schiaparelli lander 2. Congratulations to Chinese Taikonauts for successful docking with their new space station 3. There are at least 10 times more galaxies than we thought The number of galaxies in the observable universe is 2 x 10^12 galaxies. This is roughly a factor of ten more than previous estimates and This also implies that we have yet to detect a large population of faint distant galaxies. 4. ESO’s VISTA finds a dozen ancient RR Lyrae stars at the heart of the Milky Way that were previously unknown, and indicates that remnants of ancient globular clust

  • Astrophiz Podcast 14 - Dr Alina Donea sees right through our sun - Dr Ian Musgrave - Photometry

    12/10/2016 Duration: 28min

    Our feature interview is from the Australian Space Research Conference where we spoke with Dr Alina Donea from Monash University who is using maths and solar satellite data to detect sun quakes and using phase shifting can accurately predict the appearance of active regions appearing around the eastern limb of our sun as it rotates, In ‘What’s Up Doc?’ this week, Dr Ian ‘Astroblog’ Musgrave tells us about viewing Venus, Mars and Saturn, a brief report on the Orionid Meteor Shower and in ‘Ian’s Tangent’ he tells us about using photometry to do meaningful research on variable stars. In the news this week: 1. The Max Planck Institute releases a paper and stunning images of a protoplanetary disk captured by the Atacama Large Millimeter/ submillimeter Array (ALMA), which has profound implications for our understanding of planet formation around young stars 2. The National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) uses ALMA to explore the Hubble Ultra Deep Field and also releases amazing images and uncovers insights i

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