

Big Picture Science
Big Picture Science
The surprising connections in science and technology that give you the Big Picture. Astronomer Seth Shostak and science journalist Molly Bentley are joined each week by leading researchers, techies, and journalists to provide a smart and humorous take on science. Our regular "Skeptic Check" episodes cast a critical eye on pseudoscience.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Dec 17, 2012 • 54min
Before the Big Bang
It’s one of the biggest questions you can ask: has the universe existed forever? The Big Bang is supposedly the moment it all began. But now scientists wonder if there isn’t an earlier chapter to our origin story. And maybe chapters before that! What happened before the Big Bang? It’s the ultimate prequel.Plus – the Big Bang as scientific story: nail biter or snoozer?Guests• Roger Penrose – Cosmologist, Oxford University• Sean Carroll – Theoretical physicist, Caltech, author of The Particle at the End of the Universe: How the Hunt for the Higgs Boson Leads Us to the Edge of a New World• Simon Steele – Astronomer, Tufts University• Andrei Linde – Physicist, Stanford University• Jonathan Gottschall – Writer, author of The Storytelling Animal: How Stories Make Us Human• Marcus Chown – Science writer and cosmology consultant for New Scientist magazine Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Dec 3, 2012 • 54min
Doomsday Live, Part 2
If there is only one show you hear about the end of the world, let it be this one. Recorded before a live audience at the Computer History Museum on October 27th, 2012, this two-part special broadcast of Big Picture Science separates fact from fiction in doomsday prediction.In this second episode: a global viral pandemic … climate change … and the threat of assimilation by super-intelligent machines.Presented as part of the Bay Area Science Festival.Find out more about our guests and their work.Guests:• Kirsten Gilardi – Wildlife veterinarian at the University of California, Davis. leader of the Gorilla Doctors program, and team leader for the US-AID Emerging Pandemic Threats PREDICT program• Ken Caldeira – Climate scientist, Carnegie Intuition for Science at Stanford University• Luke Muehlhauser – Executive Director of the Singularity Institute• Bradley Voytek – Neuroscience researcher at the University of California, San Francisco Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 26, 2012 • 59min
Doomsday Live, Part I
If there is only one show you hear about the end of the world, let it be this one. Recorded before a live audience at the Computer History Museum on October 27th, 2012, this two-part special broadcast of Big Picture Science separates fact from fiction in doomsday prediction. In this episode: Maya prophesy for December 21, 2012 … asteroid impact and cosmic threats …. and alien invasion.Presented as part of the Bay Area Science Festival.Find out more about our guests and their work.Guests:
Guy P. Harrison – Science writer and author of 50 Popular Beliefs That People Think Are True
Andrew Fraknoi – Chair of the Astronomy Department at Foothill College, Los Altos Hills, California
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Nov 19, 2012 • 54min
No Expiration Date
We all have to go sometime, and that final hour is the mother of all deadlines. But scientists are working to file an extension. Discover how far we can push the human expiration date.Plus, the animal with the shortest lifespan and the chemistry that causes your pot-roast to eventually clothe itself in fuzzy green mold.Also, a clock that won’t stop ticking (for 10,000 years) and our love-hate relationship with that long-lived hydrocarbon that keeps our snack cakes fresh: plastic!Guests:
Martin Bucknavage- Senior Food Safety Extension Associate, Department of Food Science at Penn State
Leonard Guarente – Biologist, Laboratory for the Science of Aging, M.I.T.
Alexander Rose – Executive Director and Clock Project Manager, Long Now Foundation
Rick Hochberg – Biologist, University of Massachusetts – Lowell
Susan Freinkel – Author of Plastic: A Toxic Love Story
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Nov 5, 2012 • 54min
Going Global
The Internet is not the only globally-uniting phenomenon. Viruses and bacteria can circle the globe as fast as we can, and the effects can be devastating. Discover what it takes for an animal disease to become a human pandemic. Also, was hurricane Sandy a man-made disaster? The future of severe storms and climate change.Plus, the view of our science from abroad: why Brits have no trouble accepting the theory of evolution but Americans do. And what about a new annex for Silicon Valley – 12 miles out to sea?Guests:• Jerry Meehl – Senior scientist, National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO• Alok Jha – Science correspondent, The Guardian• David Quammen – Science journalist and author, most recently of Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic• Max Marty – Co-founder and CEO of Blueseed Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 22, 2012 • 54min
Space Archaeology
Indiana Jones meets Star Trek in the field of space archaeology. Satellites scan ancient ruins so that scientists can map them without disturbing one grain of sand. Discover how some archaeologists forsake their spades and brushes in favor of examining historic sites from hundreds of miles high.Also, if you were to hunt for alien artifacts – what would you look for? Why ET might choose to send snail mail rather than a radio signal.Plus, the culture of the hardware we send into space, and roaming the Earth, the moon, and Mars the Google way.Guests:• Alice Gorman – Archaeologist at Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia• Christopher Rose – Professor of Computer and Intellectual Engineering, Rutgers University, New Jersey• Robin Hanson – Economist at George Mason University, Virginia• Tiffany Montague – Engineer, and Intergalactic Federation King Almighty, Commander of the Universe, at Google, Inc.• Compton Tucker – Scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 15, 2012 • 54min
As the Worlds Turn
If you’re itching it get away from it all, really get away from it all, have we got some exotic destinations for you. Mars … Jupiter’s moon Europa … asteroids . Tour some enticing worlds that are worlds away, but ripe for exploration.Also, why private spaceships may be just the ticket for getting yourself into space, unless you want to wait for a space elevator.And, why one science journalist boasts of an infectious, unabashed, and unbridled enthusiasm for space travel.Guests:• Cynthia Phillips – Planetary geologist, SETI Institute• Britney Schmidt – Research scientist, University of Texas, Austin• Paul Abell – Planetary geologist, NASA’s Johnson Space Center• Richard Hollingham – Science journalist, producer of Space Boffins podcast, living in the U.K.• Barry Matsumori – Senior vice president for commercial sales and business development, SpaceX Corporation• Peter Swan – Space System Engineer and Vice President, International Space Elevator Consortium Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 8, 2012 • 54min
[Rectangular Container] Thinking
By thinking different, scientists can make extraordinary breakthroughs. Learn about the creative cogitation that led to the discovery of dark matter and the invention of a.c. power grids, disinfectant, and the Greek “death ray.” Also, whether one person’s man of genius is another’s mad scientist.And, the scientist who claims pi is wrong and biopunks who tinker with DNA – in their kitchens and on the cheap.Plus, from string theory to the greenhouse effect – how metaphor sheds light on science. Discover why your brain is like a rain forest (that’s a simile!).Guests:• Anil Ananthaswamy – Corresponding editor for New Scientist magazine in London and author of The Edge of Physics: A Journey to Earth’s Extremes to Unlock the Secrets of the Universe• Marcus Wohlsen – Reporter for the Associated Press, and author of Biopunk: DIY Scientists Hack the Software of Life• John Monahan – Author of They Called Me Mad: Genius, Madness, and the Scientists Who Pushed the Outer Limits of Knowledge• Michael Hartl – Physicist, creator of “Tau Day”• James Geary – Author of I Is an Other: The Secret Life of Metaphor and How It Shapes the Way We See the World Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 1, 2012 • 54min
Skeptic Check: Mysterious Illness
Stuttering speech and facial tics are among the strange symptoms that swept through a New York high school. Discover what’s behind the odd outbreak, and why one sociologist sees parallels to Salem, Massachusetts 300 years ago.Also, an update on the cellphone cancer debate, and why one congressman wants warning labels on all new phones.Plus, the ultimate cleanse: giving up on food to survive on light and air. We investigate the claims of Breatharians.It’s Skeptic Check … but don’t take our word for it!Guests:• Dennis Kucinich – U.S. Representative, Ohio’s 10th congressional district• Joshua Muscat – Epidemiologist, professor of public health sciences, Penn State at Hershey College of Medicine• Michael Wyde – Toxicologist, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences• Robert Bartholomew – Sociologist, Botany College, Auckland, New Zealand, author of Outbreak! The Encyclopedia of Extraordinary Social Behavior• Gordy Slack – Science writer• Benjamin Radford – Deputy editor, Skeptical Inquirer magazine Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sep 24, 2012 • 54min
Big Data
It’s all in the numbers. The trick is, finding what you’re looking for. But that’s the name of the game with big data. We have a giga-gigabyte of information, and combing through it will lead to new cures for disease, new discoveries about the cosmos, or clues to our social and economic behavior.But is big data Big Brother? You leave a little bit of yourself behind with each mouse click. Discover how surveillance and privacy issues bubble out of the mix, as the terabytes keep flowing in.Plus one man’s quest to know himself through the numbers as he records everything – and we do mean everything – about his body.Guests:• Atul Butte – Associate professor, division chief, systems medicine, Stanford University• Larry Smarr – Professor of computer science, University of California, San Diego, director of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology, (Calit2)• Karen Nelson – Microbiologist, director of the Rockville Campus of the J. Craig Venter Institute• Gerry Harp – Physicist, and Director of the Center for SETI Research at the SETI Institute• Deirdre Mulligan – Assistant professor at the University of California, Berkeley School of Information and faculty director of the Berkeley Center of Law and Technology• Ken Goldberg – Professor of engineering, information and art at the University of California, Berkeley Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices


