Pythagorean Astronomy artwork

Pythagorean Astronomy

119 episodes - English - Latest episode: about 2 months ago - ★★★★★ - 2 ratings

Astronomy news and interviews with scientists involved in the discoveries. Hosted by Dr Chris North (Cardiff University) and Dr Edward Gomez (Las Cumbres Observatory).

Natural Sciences Science space astronomy news science research
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Episodes

Water on Mars – Again!

October 29, 2015 12:00 - 25 minutes - 23.5 MB

In October 2015 we had news of the discovery of water on Mars – again! Almost a perennial story now, but is this discovery any different to previous discoveries, some of which stretch back to the 1970s? To find out more about this particular story, I spoke to UCL planetary scientist Peter Grindrod. Originally broadcast on 29th October 2015 as part of Pythagoras’ Trousers on Radio Cardiff.

AstroCamp and Galaxies

September 28, 2015 19:54 - 31 minutes - 28.6 MB

AstroCamp (credit PhysicistPat@Flickr) The arrival of Autumn means one thing to astronomers: darker skies. Every spring an autumn, astronomers gather along with their telescopes, campervans and tents for “star parties”. One such meet-up is AstroCamp, held near Cwmdu in the Brecon Beacons. At just an hour or so north of Cardiff it’s not too far, and I’ve been going along to these meetings for the last few years. The weather can be unpredictable, and while that can put a stop to observing the s...

In conversation with Mark McCaughrean

August 27, 2015 21:00 - 33 minutes - 30.7 MB

67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (ESA/Rosetta/NavCam) On Monday 24th August, Cardiff was treated to a public talk by Prof Mark McCaughrean, Senior Science Advisor in the European Space Agency’s Directorate of Science and Robotic Exploration. Mark spoke about the Rosetta mission, which has been studying comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko for the past year, including the landing of Philae on the comet’s surface amid huge media attention. In this month’s Pythagorean Astronomy, I had a fascinating chat wi...

New Horizons at Pluto

July 30, 2015 20:00 - 33 minutes - 30.5 MB

On 14th July 2015 the New Horizons probe whizzed past Pluto, providing our first ever close-ups of this tiny world at the edge of our Solar System. This month, Edward Gomez and I discuss why Pluto is so fascinating, and what the first few images have told us. We also chatted about this month’s other big story, the discovery of another Earth-like planet, and why it’s a bit early to get too excited about future holiday plans! And Hugh Lang tells us about August’s Perseid meteor shower. To get a...

Radio astronomy close-up

June 28, 2015 19:22 - 26 minutes - 24.5 MB

Radio telescopes are normally used for looking at very distant objects thousands, millions, or possibly even billions of light years away. But to do that, they have to look through the Earth’s atmosphere. For some radio astronomers the distorting effects of our atmosphere are an annoyance, but earlier this year Australian astronomers using the Murchison Widefield Array found something theorised to exist but never before seen: tubes of ionised plasma tracing our planet’s magnetic field. I spok...

Solar System round-up

May 28, 2015 21:02 - 18 minutes - 17 MB

It’s a busy year in the Solar System for robotic explorers, with New Horizons on the way to distant Pluto, Dawn orbiting Ceres in the outer asteroid belt, and Rosetta and Philae accompanying comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko as it makes its closets approach to the Sun. This month Dr Edward Gomez and I chat about these missions, as well as some recent results about exploding stars way across the cosmos! Originally broadcast (in edited form) on 28th May 2015 as part of Pythagoras’ Trousers on Ra...

End of the Messenger

April 30, 2015 21:00 - 30 minutes - 27.5 MB

The Messenger probe arrived in orbit around Mercury in March 2011, after a 7 year journey to the innermost planet in our Solar System. It mapped the entire surface of this tiny planet, of which we’d seen less than half from the previous mission back in the 1970s. Far from being a dry, inert ball of rock, Messenger has showed that the surface of Mercury has been changing in the very recent past (where “recent”, to a planetary scientist, means tens of millions of years). But what goes up, must ...

Pythagoras’ Trousers: Making the Invisible, Visible

April 02, 2015 21:00 - 29 minutes - 13.4 MB

In this special documentary as part of the Pythagoras Trousers radio series, Rhys Phillips visits his alma mater, Cardiff University’s School of Physics & Astronomy, to find out about a new generation of detectors being developed to help see things in the far infra-red part of the spectrum. With contributions from Chris North, Peter Hargave, Simon Doyle and Ken Wood. Originally broadcast on 2nd April 2015 as part of Pythagoras’ Trousers on Radio Cardiff.

Eclipses and the nature of Gravity

March 26, 2015 21:00 - 21 minutes - 19.7 MB

In March 2015 there was an eclipse of the Sun. Those who saw the total eclipse from the North Atlantic witnessed one of the most awesome sights imaginable. From more southerly locations we saw a partial eclipse, and in Cardiff we were joined by over 1000 people on the steps of the National Museum of Wales. But eclipses aren’t just a pretty sight, and they can be used for scientific purposes. As well as showing us the outer atmosphere of the Sun, they are also able to tell us about the fabric ...

Solar Eclipses and Planck results

February 26, 2015 21:00 - 34 minutes - 31.1 MB

Chris North In March 2015 there will be an eclipse of the Sun. From the UK (apart from a couple of very tiny northern parts) it will be visible as a partial eclipse. In this month’s episode Edward Gomez and I chatted about eclipses and their historical significance. February 2015 also saw the release of new data from the Planck Satellite. I spoke to Hiranya Peiris, from University College London, about what the results are telling us. Read more

Beagle 2, and the “Year of the Dwarf Planet”

February 04, 2015 15:23 - 16 minutes - 15.5 MB

Chris North In January it was announced that images from spacecraft orbiting Mars had probably located signs of Beagle 2, the unfortunate UK mission to the red planet which went missing back in 2003. This month I chatted to LCOGT’s Edward Gomez, who has been following proceedings, about what this means – including that the UK now holds the record for Europe’s first soft landing on another planet! But current and future missions have also been in the news. NASA’s Dawn spacecraft is rapidly app...

ExoMars

December 19, 2014 16:25 - 22 minutes - 20.7 MB

It has been announced that the UK will lead the design and build of Europe’s next rover to Mars. Part of the European Space Agency’s ExoMars programme, this robotic explorer will drill down up two metres to search for signs of microbial life beneath the Martian surface. To find out about the rover, its mission, and the challenges involved I spoke to the ExoMars Systems Engineer Paul Meacham, based at Airbus Defence & Space, about the project and the technical challenges involved. Read more

Adventures of Philae

November 27, 2014 21:00 - 27 minutes - 24.9 MB

Chris North On 12th November 2014, the Philae lander separated from its mothership, ESA’s Rosetta spacecraft, and made history by making the first ever soft landing on a comet. It wasn’t quite as soft as hoped, with Philae experiencing more than its fair share of ups and downs, but it provided an nerve-wracking few days for those of us watching from afar. It must have been far worse in the lander control room, with the teams struggling to get as much science as possible out of the lander. One...

MAVEN to Mars

November 05, 2014 16:59 - 25 minutes - 22.9 MB

On of Mars Orbiter Mission’s first images of Mars from orbit In late September, two new missions arrived ion orbit around Mars. One was India’s first mission, the Mars Orbiter Mission, while the other was NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft. MAVEN’s goal is not to study the surface of the planet but its atmosphere, with the aim of determining how it is changing and how it may have changed in the past. One of the leading experts in the Martian atmosphere is Professor Peter Read, based at the University of...

AstroCamp 2014

September 30, 2014 16:54 - 30 minutes - 293 KB

in conversation with Alastair Reynolds

August 18, 2014 21:00 - 29 minutes - 27.3 MB

August marked the arrival Loncon 2014, the annual science fiction convention which visits a different city every year. There’s also a lot of science fact presented at such meetings – we were showcasing the results from Herschel and Planck, for example. In fact there are a lot of places where, to a greater or lesser degree, science fiction meets science fact. It’s not just the stories where the two meet, either, but also the people involved in producing them. For this month’s instalment of Pyt...

National Astronomy Meeting 2014

June 30, 2014 21:30 - 21 minutes - 19.3 MB

Between 23rd and 26th June 2014 over 600 astronomers gathered in Portsmouth for the annual National Astronomy Meeting. This meeting, organised by the Royal Astronomical Society, provides the opportunity for physicists, astronomers, space scientists and cosmologists to discuss the latest developments in their areas of research. It covers a huge range of topics, so cosmologists can find out about what’s happening on the Sun, or planetary scientists can hear about the formation of stars. For thi...

Cambridge Science Festival and Gravitational Waves from Inflation

April 01, 2014 12:40 - 27 minutes - 25.2 MB

For the 31st March episode of Pythagoras’ Trousers, I reported from the Cambridge Science Festival, specifically at the Institute of Astronomy‘s open afternoon. As well as speaking to a number of the exhibitors (and vistors) at the Institute, I also spoke to a few of the cosmologists about the latest results from the BICEP2 experiment (which Cardiff scientists were involved in – read more about that on The Conversation) .  Read more

Asteroids, supernovae and National Astronomy Week

February 28, 2014 09:11 - 16 minutes - 15.3 MB

Once a month, I take a look at some of the latest news in astronomy as part of Pythagoras’ Trousers, a weekly science show broadcast on Radio Cardiff. The show’s main presenter is Rhys Phillips, a research engineer and musician who graduated from the School of Physics and Astronomy in 2008, but once a month he hands the microphone to me to discuss what’s been occurring in the world of astronomy. Read more