You can’t save the dark skies without convincing people it matters, and education is crucial to this. Across the world, so many are working on that specific aspect, and we will hear from some of these extraordinary communicators in this episode.
The episode features:
Rayan Khan, founder of Cosmic Tribe
Shweta Kulkarni, founder of AstronERA
Dr John Berentine, Principal Consultant at Dark Sky Consulting LLC
Robert Massey, Deputy Executive Director of the Royal Astronomical Society
Bettymaya Foott, Engagement Associate at DarkSky International
Dr Michelle Wooten, Assistant Professor of Astronomy Education at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
The battle against light pollution goes through policy and legislation. Certain regions of the world are actually in a better situation than you might think. While the road ahead is long, we talked to those who are paving the way.
The episode features:
Yana Yakushina, lawyer at the Space Court Foundation
Rayan Khan, founder of Cosmic Tribe
Dr John Berentine, Principal Consultant at Dark Sky Consulting LLC
Robert Massey, Deputy Executive Director of the Royal Astronomical Society
Jasmine van der Pol, Senior Programme Manager LUCI Association
Dani Robertson, Dark Sky Officer for Eryri National Park and the Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty
Dr Michelle Wooten, Assistant Professor of Astronomy Education at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
For most people, a dark enough sky can only be accessed on holiday, away from cities. There is a growing movement of astrotourism, so we look into what that’s like, and how it helps the fight against light pollution.
The episode features:
Rayan Khan, founder of Cosmic Tribe
Megan Eaves, author of Nightfaring
Shweta Kulkarni, founder of AstronERA
Dani Robertson, Dark Sky Officer for Eryri National Park and the Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty
Carol Redford, Founder & CEO of Astroturism Western Australia
Michael Rymer, Dark Sky Places Program Associate at DarkSky International.
This episode of Starless focuses on the impact of light pollution. How has anthropogenic light changed the world in less than two centuries? The full impact is not completely understood, but what we know makes for a very concerning tale.
The episode features:
Dr Michelle Wooten, Assistant Professor of Astronomy Education at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Dr Mario Motta, Cardiologist and astronomer, whose work has specialized in the effect of light pollution on human health.
Dr Brett Seymoure, Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Biology at the University of Texas at El Paso
Dr Ellen Cieraad, Research Professor at the Nelson-Marlborough Institute of Technology
In this introductory episode, we will be talking about dark skies and light pollution in general, and what some organizations are doing to protect the night sky, as well as some of the misconceptions about reducing light pollution.
Featuring:
Rayan Khan, founder of Cosmic Tribe
Megan Eaves, author of Nightfaring
Shweta Kulkarni, founder of AstronERA
Dr John Berentine, Principal Consultant at Dark Sky Consulting LLC
Robert Massey, Deputy Executive Director of the Royal Astronomical Society
Bettymaya Foott, Engagement Associate at DarkSky International
For the 2024 Christmas Special, we tackle Special Relativity and Chris's issues with time dilation and relativity in general!
Link for Invisible Rainbows
Chris and I decided to find out when humans realized that meteorites came from beyond Earth: it could be a lot older than it was once thought! Egyptologist Dr Victoria Almansa-Villatoro joins us to discuss meteorite artifacts and intriguing hieroglyphs from Ancient Egypt.
We are talking about ancient aliens. (No, not the racist conspiracy theory!) We look into the concept of extraterrestrials over history and how it originated. Who were the first recorded people who pondered about life outside Earth?
In this episode, we tackle the classic concept of sound in space, what can we measure, and why it is important that some sound waves move through the cosmos.
Our position inside the Milky Way doesn't give us an advantageous view of our galaxy. But that doesn't mean we haven't found a way around it. Joined by Dr GyuChul Myeong, we explore how we make sense of the Milky Way and its past collision with the Gaia-Sausage galaxy.
If you are interested in my book, here is a link to the crowdfunding page.
In the last episode, we looked at how stars end up dead. So Chris has an important follow-up: can you find a way to heal and save a dying star?
Our Sun and many other stars will become larger later in life. But is this a condition common to all stars? Guest questioner Francis wonders about the future of stars and their ultimate demise!
In this episode, we tackle the peculiar carbonado diamond, a black diamond that looks very different from the glittering gems we might be more familiar with. And we will discover that its origin might be out of this world!
Planets in sci-fi are often portrayed as having a single climate, but how truthful is that idea? This audience question gets the full treatment from Alfredo & Chris as they deal with the tatooines, hoths, risas, synnaxes of the real universe!
The Astroholic Explains Xmas Special is inspired by Italo Calvino's Cosmicomics on the 100th anniversary of the author's birth. Join us for an imaginative tale, not fantasy nor sci-fi, but one based on science facts: the formation of elements in stars and how they spread across the universe. ✨
And if you are interested in my book, here is a link to the crowdfunding.
I'm writing a book all about the astronomy we do with the light we cannot see with our own eyes. It's called Invisible Rainbows and features astronomers from all around the world.
If you are interested in finding out more and maybe pledge for a copy, click on this link.
In this episode, Alfredo and Chris are joined by cosmologist Professor Peter Coles. Together they explore the limits of the visible universe, whether finite or infinite, why there is no center, and what might be beyond the most distant region we can see.
We don't know and will likely never know what happened before the Big Bang, but Chris is curious about it, so we take a journey in the land before time and space!
Conspiracy theories and misconceptions about the Moon extend far beyond the Moon-landing! In this episode, we take a trip 4.5 billion years into the past to witness how Luna came to be.