60-Second Space - podcast cover

60-Second Space

Scientific Americanwww.scientificamerican.com
Leading science journalists provide a daily minute commentary on some of the most interesting developments in the world of astronomy and space exploration

Episodes

Solar Wind Creates Traces of Lunar Surface Water

A chemical analysis of lunar samples now points to the solar wind being behind the ultrathin dusting of water molecules first detected in 2009 from spacecraft measurements. John Matson reports

Oct 23, 20121 min

Sensor Info Reveals Titan Probe Landing

An analysis of the Huygens probe's sensor data has reconstructed bouncing and skidding, moments before it came to rest on Titan. John Matson reports

Oct 15, 20121 min

Zippy Star Promises to Be Relativity Laboratory

A star orbiting the galactic center's black hole in just 11.5 Earth years should provide data for studying how gravity works near an extremely massive object. John Matson reports

Oct 05, 20121 min

Good Things Come from Small Scopes

Smaller ground-based telescopes produce research results that get more citations per dollar spent than the big guys. John Matson reports

Oct 01, 20121 min

White Dwarf Binary Stars Make Merger Plans

In the J0651 binary system two white dwarf stars orbit each other in less than 13 minutes--and it's getting a little faster all the time. John Matson reports

Sep 17, 20121 min

Probes Will Live in Van Allen Belts

The twin Radiation Belt Storm Probes will fly through the Van Allen Belts for two years, measuring charged particles, plasma waves and magnetic fields. John Matson reports

Aug 20, 20121 min

Curiosity Rover Lands Safely on Mars

After successfully completing its complex series of landing maneuvers, the Curiosity rover is on the Martian surface and ready to begin exploration. John Matson reports

Aug 06, 20121 min

Scopes See Exoplanets and Violent Astrophysics

Palomar Observatory's Project 1640 on the Hale Telescope allows astronomers to directly observe exoplanets, whereas the gamma-ray sensitive HESS 2 in Namibia tracks violent astrophysical events such as supernovae and flaring black holes. John Matson reports

Jul 31, 20121 min

Pioneer Spacecraft Warmth Takes Heat off Relativity

The tiny slowing of the two Pioneer spacecraft, known as the Pioneer anomaly and considered by some to challenge general relativity, is probably due to the heat produced by electronics and radioactive decay. John Matson reports

Jul 23, 20121 min

Magnetic Tornadoes May Heat Solar Corona

The sun's outer atmosphere, or corona, is much hotter than the surface. Giant magnetic tornadoes may be behind the heat transfer. John Matson reports

Jun 27, 20121 min

Super-Earth Exoplanets Could Be Better for Life

Dimitar Sasselov, director of Harvard's Origins of Life Initiative, explains how rocky exoplanets larger than Earth could have greater potential for life than Earth did. Steve Mirsky reports

Jun 20, 20121 min

Astronomers Seek Biggest Stars

Several nearby star clusters could harbor incredibly huge stars, with masses of up to 600 suns. John Matson reports

Jun 11, 20121 min

SpaceX Private Vessel Reaches ISS

The International Space Station received its first commercial visitor with the arrival of the SpaceX Dragon resupply capsule. John Matson reports

May 25, 20121 min

Annular Eclipse Hits U.S. Sunday

Residents of western states will be in position to see the ring of fire of an annular eclipse on May 20th. John Matson reports

May 19, 20121 min

Earth Was Longtime Asteroid Punching Bag

Dozens of asteroid impacts at least as bad as the dinosaur killer occurred long after such impacts were previously thought to have petered out. John Matson reports

May 01, 20121 min

Supernova Turned Star Inside-Out

When the star Cassiopeia A exploded, nearly all the iron from the core was expelled to the outer regions of the supernova. John Matson reports

Apr 02, 20121 min