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

Texas Teens Take Rocket Title

Three teenage Texas model rocketeers beat out teams from France and the U.K. to claim top honors at this year's International Rocketry Competition. John Matson reports

Jun 25, 20131 min

Primordial Galaxy Shows How to Make a Big One

Looking at the Himiko Galaxy as it was just 800 million years after the big bang offers a glimpse at how the most massive galaxies took shape. John Matson reports

Jun 20, 20131 min

Galaxy of a Thousand Stars

Segue 2, one of dozens of "companion" galaxies that orbit the Milky Way, is now the smallest galaxy known. Michael Moyer reports

Jun 13, 20131 min

Earth and Moon Had Same Water Source

Isotopic analysis of water trapped in volcanic glass in lunar samples show that the moon has more water than thought, and the water there and on Earth had the same origins. Karen Hopkin reports

May 28, 20131 min

Mars Rover Sets Distance Record

After nine (Earth) years of slowly traversing Mars, Opportunity broke the U.S. off-world rover record held by Apollo 17's lunar buggy since 1972. John Matson reports.

May 22, 20131 min

Exoplanet Building Blocks Found around White Dwarfs

Silicon-rich rocky material was found around white dwarfs in the Hyades star cluster by the Hubble Space Telescope, despite the fact that almost no known planets exist in star clusters. John Matson reports

May 14, 20131 min

Milky Way Makes Small Massive Gain

Based on the Milky Way's effect on the motion of a nearby dwarf galaxy, our galaxy seems to have more mass than we previously thought. John Matson reports

May 03, 20131 min

Space Scope Spots 3 Possibly Habitable Planets

NASA's orbiting Kepler telescope recently spotted three exoplanets in or near their stars' so-called habitable zones, the temperate region where a planet could accommodate liquid water. John Matson reports

Apr 22, 20131 min

Amateur Astronomers Spot Missing Russian Mars Lander

Using imagery taken by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter in 2007, amateur astronomers located an object that could be a Russian lander that went dark after a few seconds on Mars in 1971. John Matson reports

Apr 15, 20131 min

Water Ice Found across Saturn System

Saturn's rings and moons contain a uniform distribution of water ice, which seems to reflect their common origins billions of years ago. John Matson reports

Apr 08, 20131 min

Universe May Be a Titch Older

New data from the European Planck satellite indicate that the universe is 13.8 billion years old rather than a mere 13.7 billion years old. John Matson reports

Mar 25, 20131 min

Nearby Star Came In with the Bang

A study of the star HD 140283, only about 190 light-years away from us, finds that it formed in short order after the big bang. John Matson reports

Mar 14, 20131 min

Third Van Allen Belt Came and Went

The Van Allen Probes recently found a third belt of charged particles circling Earth, which was then destroyed by a solar shock wave. John Matson reports

Mar 05, 20131 min

Shoo Away Asteroids with a Coat of Paint

Heat radiating from an asteroid imparts a tiny push to the rock, meaning that we could subtly steer an asteroid by changing its reflectance. John Matson reports

Feb 26, 20131 min

Meteor Shocks Russian City

The Russian city of Chelyabinsk was awakened on February 15 when a meteor exploded overhead, with an energy equivalent to about 300 kilotons of TNT

Feb 15, 20131 min

Curiosity Drills Mars for Answers

Even as a few of its sensors cause problems, the Curiosity rover became the first robotic visitor to bore into the Martian surface. John Matson reports

Feb 12, 20131 min

Past-Prime Star May Still Produce Planets

The star TW Hydrae should be too old to still have planets forming around it, but its gas and dust indicate it still has planetary potential. John Matson reports

Feb 04, 20131 min

Gamma-Ray Burst Fingered for Carbon 14 Spike in A.D. 774

Tree-ring data from A.D. 774 show a sudden spike in radioactive carbon 14, pointing to a burst of charged particles or high-energy radiation that struck Earth. A relatively nearby gamma-ray burst could be the culprit. John Matson reports

Jan 21, 20131 min

Civilian Spacefarers Face Medical Hurdles

Opening the door to the paying public means that less healthy individuals will soon have access to space--if their doctors approve. John Matson reports

Jan 03, 20131 min

Titan Sports Hydrocarbon Nile

The Cassini orbiter spotted a river system on Titan that NASA likens to a miniature version of the Nile River, but flowing with liquid ethane and methane. John Matson reports

Dec 17, 20121 min

Should Mars Get Another Rover?

NASA has plans for another Mars rover, but no trips scheduled for exotic places like Titan or Europa. John Matson reports

Dec 10, 20121 min

Thicker Atmosphere Still Would Have Left Mars Cold

Global 3-D climate simulations for plausible Martian atmospheres show that even with a much thicker CO2 layer, the greenhouse effect could not have warmed Mars above freezing. John Matson reports.

Nov 28, 20121 min

Galaxy Might Be Most Distant Seen Object

Thanks to gravitational lensing by a cluster of galaxies, the light emitted by a small galaxy 13.3 billion years ago has reached Earth. John Matson reports

Nov 20, 20121 min