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English, Sciences, 1 season, 119 episodes, 23 hours, 16 minutes
About
The Museum of Science brings you a podcast dedicated to answering your science questions.
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Who Imagines/Builds/Tests the Museum's Exhibits?

Mike Horvath, the Director of Exhibits at the Museum of Science, details the process of imagining and creating an exhibit and how it can lead to wearing a wookiee costume on the mound at Fenway Park.
7/8/202412 minutes, 27 seconds
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What Should I Do with My Extra Eclipse Glasses?

We chat about all of the options that you have for keeping, donating, or recycling eclipse glasses after April's total solar eclipse.
5/13/20248 minutes, 10 seconds
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When Is the Next Eclipse? 2024-2026 Edition

With the Great American Eclipse of 2024 in the rear view mirror, we look ahead to the next three years of solar and lunar eclipses visible from Boston and around the globe.
5/6/202422 minutes, 38 seconds
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How Do You Tag a Great White Shark? What Does The Tag Tell Us?

Dr. Greg Skomal, a shark expert with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries, discusses the incredible data that shark tags can give us as well as the process of finding and tagging great white sharks off of Cape Cod.
4/29/202416 minutes, 46 seconds
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What Dinosaurs Lived in New England?

Our triceratops fossil, Cliff, did not live in New England. So what kind of dinosaurs did? We ask two local experts, Mark Agostini and Dr. Mark McMenamin, to tell us what fossils have been recovered from our own backyard.
4/16/202413 minutes, 39 seconds
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What Is It Like to Experience a Total Solar Eclipse?

With a total solar eclipse coming up on April 8th, 2024, we ask planetarium educator Talia what it feels like to actually witness the moon totally blocking the sun.
2/29/20248 minutes, 22 seconds
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How Was the Hubble Telescope Fixed?

We celebrate the 30th anniversary of a daring Space Shuttle mission that fixed the Hubble Space Telescope by chatting about the experience with astronaut Jeff Hoffman.
12/18/20239 minutes, 32 seconds
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What Kind of Space Research Happens Here in Massachusetts?

Dr. Supriya Chakrabarti, the Director of UMass Lowell's Center for Space Science and Technology, explains some of the exciting space research and engineering that is happening right here in our backyard.
11/13/202313 minutes, 5 seconds
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Why Do Narwhals Have Tusks?

We ask marine mammal odontologist Dr. Martin Nweeia about one of the most amazing teeth anywhere in the animal kingdom and get the full story of the narwhal and its ten-foot tusk.
10/30/202313 minutes, 57 seconds
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What Is It Like to Look Down at the Earth from Space?

One of the more hopeful results of human spaceflight has been the Overview Effect, when astronauts feel the awe in looking down at our home planet while orbiting above. NASA Astronaut Bob Hines details his experience earthgazing from the International Space Station in 2022.
10/16/20237 minutes, 21 seconds
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How Can I Help Fight Climate Change?

Maybe the most frequent questions we have gotten this century at the museum is what people can do personally to mitigate the effects of climate change. Frank Lowenstein from Rare's Climate Culture Boston gives a short list of big-impact actions.
10/2/202312 minutes, 15 seconds
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How Smart Are Ants?

There are an astonishing number of ant species living on our planet. One of the world's foremost experts on ants, Dr. Susanne Foitzik, explains how their society is different from ours in many ways.
9/18/202314 minutes, 48 seconds
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Are Sci-Fi Authors Scientists or Writers?

There are so many amazing writers of science fiction. When they were young, did they dream of bring famous authors, or amazing scientists? Author Katie Slivensky shares her journey through the worlds of science and fiction.
7/27/202314 minutes, 34 seconds
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How Do Scientists Make Discoveries?

Last month, MIT's Kishalay De published the first ever observations of a star destroying a planet. Hear about the detective work it took to realize what some of the world's largest telescopes were seeing as this cataclysmic event unfolded.
7/3/202314 minutes, 33 seconds
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What Do You Mean, That Isn’t a Dinosaur?

The word 'dinosaur' refers to a specific group of animals. Many animals get included under the dinosaur umbrella when they are actually from different groups. Becca from our programs team helps us set the fossil record straight.
6/12/202313 minutes, 58 seconds
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How Do Spacecraft Move Around the Solar System?

Talia from our planetarium team talks about calculating the most efficient trajectories for spacecraft in order to get to interesting places from Mercury to Pluto and beyond.
5/29/202311 minutes, 35 seconds
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How Many Moons Are There In The Solar System?

With 62 new moons announced last week, Talia from our Charles Hayden Planetarium tells us how Saturn is once again the grand champion of the solar system in terms of natural satellites.
5/15/202313 minutes, 58 seconds
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Where Do Volcanoes Come From?

Volcanoes are incredibly powerful, but what causes one to form? Becca from our programs team talks about the origins of these explosive entities.
5/8/202311 minutes, 43 seconds
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What Counts As Artificial Intelligence?

With so many stories in the news about the new capabilities of artificial intelligence, Emily from the museum's programs team explains what that term means and how AI works.
4/24/20237 minutes, 35 seconds
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Why Is It Important To Look For Life On Mars?

Dr. Michael Meyer has been the lead scientist for NASA's Mars Exploration Program for over 25 years. He tells us what the possibility of life on the red planet would mean for science and our understanding of the universe.
4/10/202313 minutes, 51 seconds
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I Found This Strange Rock...Is It A Meteorite?

We ask Dr. Ben Weiss, an MIT expert on meteorites, how to spot the difference between rocks that formed on Earth and ones that fell from space.
3/27/202315 minutes, 7 seconds
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I Think I Saw a Right Whale! Who Should I Call?

North Atlantic Right Whales are critically endangered. We chat with Tim Cole and Lieutenant Christopher Licitra from NOAA Fisheries about efforts to identify, track, and conserve this fragile population.
3/13/202315 minutes, 16 seconds
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Do Vampire Bats Really Drink Blood?

In part two of our conversation with evolutionary biologist Dr. Nancy Simmons, we discuss the astonishing diversity of bats and how they came to dominate Earth's night skies.
11/14/202214 minutes, 15 seconds
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How Did Bats Evolve Flight?

Bats are the only mammals in Earth's history to achieve powered flight. We ask evolutionary biologist Dr. Nancy Simmons how bats gained this ability and why.
10/31/202210 minutes, 9 seconds
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What’s a Typical Day Like for a Mars Rover?

Kim Steadman, an engineer who operates the Perseverance Mars rover, details the how, when, what, and why behind our incredible discoveries on Mars.
10/17/202216 minutes, 4 seconds
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Boston Has A City Archaeology Program? What Does It Do?

Joe Bagley has been Boston's City Archeologist for over a decade. He shares some of the historic science that his department uncovers all around Beantown.
10/3/202216 minutes, 4 seconds
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What’s So Special About Gold, Anyway?

The metal gold has been highly valued by humans throughout our history, but what makes it so unique? Museum educator Colin gives us insight into its amazing properties, from its cosmic origins to its use in some of the most advanced technology humans have ever created.
9/19/202210 minutes, 16 seconds
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Hurricane Hunters Part Three: Why Fly Though A Hurricane?

For the exciting conclusion of our series on NOAA's Hurricane Hunter aircraft, we ask meteorologist Nikki Hathaway how flights through tropical storms can give us insight into their origins, mechanics, and perhaps most importantly, their trajectories.
9/6/202216 minutes, 1 second
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Hurricane Hunters Part Two: How Do You Study A Hurricane From Inside Of It?

We continue our series on NOAA's Hurricane Hunter aircraft with aerospace engineer Nick Underwood, who flies on missions through hurricanes and collects data to study their behavior and predict their movement.
8/22/202210 minutes, 48 seconds
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Hurricane Hunters Part One: Can A Plane Really Fly Through A Hurricane?

NOAA aircraft scout out hurricanes that may threaten the United States by flying aircraft over and even right through them. We ask Lieutenant Commander Kevin Doremus what it's like to pilot an airplane through the eyewall of a massive storm.
8/8/202214 minutes, 35 seconds
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What’s Next for the Museum of Science?

For our hundredth episode, we're joined by the Museum of Science's president, Tim Ritchie, to answer one of the most common questions we are asked: what exciting things are coming up in the museum's future?
7/25/202214 minutes, 53 seconds
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What’s Your Favorite Unsolved Space Mystery?

Sometimes the most exciting thing to talk about is what scientists don't know...yet. Georgia from our programs team tells us about the mystery of fast radio bursts, and how scientists are getting closer to explaining their origin.
7/11/202216 minutes, 15 seconds
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How Do We Know What Extinct Animals Ate?

We can learn a lot about animals that lived millions of years ago from studying their fossils. Morgan from our education team explains how we can analyze fossil teeth to tell us amazing things about ancient diets.
7/5/202213 minutes, 43 seconds
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Will Any Stars In Our Sky Explode Soon?

We chat with astronomy graduate student Daisuke Taniguchi about his clever method of looking back in time at the peculiar behavior of the star Betelgeuse, which will explode and disappear from our skies (relatively) soon.
6/27/202210 minutes, 19 seconds
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Do You Get To Choose Which Animals to Work With?

We have over one hundred species of animals living at the museum. Visitors often ask our educators: are you assigned an animal for a live show, or do you get to pick your partner? Lauren from our programs team tells us more about the process of selecting and getting to know our live animal co-stars.
6/13/202214 minutes, 20 seconds
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What’s The Most Powerful Rocket Ever?

 We ask NASA's Jay Hollenbeck about the Space Launch System, a towering new rocket that will soon launch humans on a path back to the moon while claiming the title of most powerful rocket ever built.
5/30/202213 minutes
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Do Snakes Have Tails?

Are snakes all tail? Or do they not even have tails? We ask museum educator and snake superfan Becca about snake anatomy as well as some of our most frequently received snake questions, such as: Why is that snake sticking its tongue out? And: Is that snake venomous?
5/9/20229 minutes, 36 seconds
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Can Ancient Sea Level Rise Prepare Us for the Future?

We talk with geologist and climate scientist Dr. Patrick Nunn, who has studied the history of sea level rise and its effect on human civilizations.
4/5/202211 minutes, 59 seconds
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What Happens When the Sun Runs Out of Fuel?

We talk with astronomer Dr. Joshua Blackman about the fate of the Earth at the very end of our solar system, when the sun will render our planet quite uninhabitable.
3/21/202212 minutes, 14 seconds
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Where Do the Museum‘s Animals Come From?

With over 100 species of animals living here at the museum, visitors are always asking how they got here. We chat with Stacy, the Curator of our Live Animal Care Center, to get the whole story.
1/17/202211 minutes, 17 seconds
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What Happens If You Stick Your Finger in a Venus Fly Trap?

Carnivorous plants exist all around the world. People sometimes ask us, why do they need to eat bugs? And...what happens if I stick my finger in one?
1/3/202210 minutes, 50 seconds
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Will We Ever Cure Food Allergies?

Allergies to food are becoming more common and more severe in modern times. We talk with members of the Food Allergy Science Initiative to discuss why that is, as well as the scientific work being done right now that may one day lead to a cure for food allergies.
12/20/20219 minutes, 14 seconds
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What is the Fastest Animal?

Marcus from our education team gives us the scoop on all of the speed records in the animal kingdom - land, sea, air, and more.
12/6/202112 minutes, 59 seconds
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Could the Earth Be Destroyed by a Black Hole?

If a black hole came wandering through the solar system, would we notice? We're joined by the Bad Astronomer, Dr. Phil Plait, to chat about the possibility of Earth meeting its end via gravitational catastrophe.
11/22/20218 minutes, 49 seconds
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Why Are Flowers So Brightly Colored?

We get tons of questions about plants - what's the biggest one? The largest flower? Why do leaves change color in the autumn? We go to Sue from our education team to dig up the answers.
11/8/202110 minutes, 5 seconds
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How Can Artificial Intelligence Help Us Learn?

We ask Dr. Sidney D'Mello, a cognitive and computer scientist, about his AI-assisted research on the connection between our emotions and how we learn.
10/25/202113 minutes, 13 seconds
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How Often Do You Brush a Triceratops Fossil’s Teeth?

Taking care of our 65 million-year-old Triceratops fossil is a delicate task. We ask Katie from our Collections department how, and how often, it gets cleaned.
10/11/20217 minutes, 36 seconds
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Dr. Ashish Jha, Part Two: When Will the Pandemic End?

We connect live with pandemic expert Dr. Ashish Jha and pose our most asked coronavirus question: when will the pandemic be over?
10/4/202111 minutes, 24 seconds
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Dr. Ashish Jha, Part One: How Did the Pandemic Start?

We feature an 'interview' with our virtual exhibit, Covid Conversations with Dr. Ashish Jha, to discover the origins of the coronavirus pandemic.
9/27/202110 minutes, 43 seconds
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Why is Our Lightning Purple?

The indoor sparks we create in our Theater of Electricity are purple, and visitors often ask what causes the color. We explore the reasons behind different shades of lightning.
9/20/20217 minutes, 49 seconds
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What‘s the Fastest Thing in the Universe? Part Two

Award-winning science fiction author Jack McDevitt discusses how we can imagine a universe where human space travel is not limited to the speed of light, and our civilization can explore the galaxy and beyond.
9/17/20218 minutes, 39 seconds
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What‘s the Fastest Thing in the Universe? Part One

We ask Caity from our Charles Hayden Planetarium what the universe's speed limit is, and how that limits our ability to explore the beyond the solar system.
9/6/20218 minutes, 33 seconds
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Which Mars Rocks Are Best?

Did life ever exist on Mars? The Perseverance rover is working hard to find out by studying rocks on Mars, and we ask NASA geologist Katie Stack Morgan which rocks could tell us definitively that Earth is not the only living planet in the universe.
8/30/202112 minutes, 34 seconds
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What Do You Do When Your Space Station Careens Out of Control?

What happened when inadvertent thruster firing caused the International Space Station to spin completely around in July 2021? And what is the future of this decades-old orbiting laboratory?
8/23/202110 minutes, 8 seconds
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What's the Difference Between a Turtle and a Tortoise?

It turns out that all tortoises are turtles, but not all turtles are tortoises - we go to museum educator Karen to tell us how to spot the difference as well as learn about the amazing adaptations of both.
8/16/202115 minutes, 39 seconds
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What Can Light Tell Us About the Mona Lisa?

We ask Pascal Cotte, an engineer who specializes in light, how his multi-spectral camera has unveiled Leonardo's methods when painting the famous Mona Lisa.
7/26/20219 minutes, 19 seconds
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Why Did Dinosaurs Have Feathers?

We ask leading paleontologist Dr. Jingmai O'Connor to tell us everything she knows about feathered dinosaurs.
6/28/202110 minutes, 59 seconds
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How Do Scientists Choose Their Field of Study?

We talk with graduate student Markia Smith about her research in cancer and genetics, understanding health disparities in historically marginalized populations, and why she chose these areas of study.
5/31/202111 minutes, 34 seconds
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How Is An Ear Like a Fingerprint?

We ask Lauren Etter from Boston University about how efforts to build trust and ensure equitable access to healthcare led to the development of an artificial intelligence system that uses images of ears to identify patients in remote communities.
4/5/202111 minutes, 24 seconds
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What Happened to Megalodon, The Biggest Shark Ever?

Part Two of our conversation with shark researcher Dr. Catalina Pimiento, where we find out why this fifty foot long super-predator disappeared from the oceans.
3/25/20219 minutes, 30 seconds
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A Shark The Size of a School Bus...What Did It Eat?

We ask shark researcher Dr. Catalina Pimiento all of the best questions we've ever received about megalodon, a prehistoric fifty-foot-long shark with teeth the size of a human hand.
3/15/202111 minutes, 23 seconds
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What Do a Honeybee and a Chicken Have in Common?

Graduate student Katie Burns tells us about her adventures in field research and the importance of pollinators in our environment.
3/1/20219 minutes, 34 seconds
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How Big Were the Apollo Moon Landing Computers?

It's National Engineers Week! To celebrate, we talked with Apollo engineer Don Eyles about the challenge of landing humans on the moon.
2/22/20219 minutes, 56 seconds
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What Does Microgravity Feel Like?

Spaceflight whiz Kellie Gerardi, author of the new book 'Not Necessarily Rocket Science', tells us about her adventures in the aerospace industry.
2/15/202113 minutes, 11 seconds
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What Were the Top Ten Science Stories of 2020? Part Four

We finish counting down our picks for the ten most exciting, important, and awe-inspiring stories from the world of science in 2020.
2/8/202113 minutes, 34 seconds
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What Were the Top Ten Science Stories of 2020? Part Three

We're back with more of our annual countdown of the ten most exciting, important, and fun stories from the world of science in 2020.
2/1/202116 minutes, 24 seconds
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Who Were the Blackwell Sisters?

Author Janice Nimura details the lives of Emily and Elizabeth Blackwell, who paved the way for women to study and practice medicine in 1800s America.
1/25/202113 minutes, 38 seconds
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What Were the Top Ten Science Stories of 2020? Part Two

We continue our annual countdown of the ten most exciting, important, and fun stories from the world of science in 2020 with #8, #7, and #6.
1/20/202114 minutes, 52 seconds
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What Were the Top Ten Science Stories of 2020? Part One

We kick off our annual countdown of the ten most exciting, important, and awesome stories from the world of science in 2020.
1/18/202114 minutes, 39 seconds
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What is it Like to Get a COVID-19 Vaccine?

With the first COVID-19 vaccines rolling out to frontline healthcare workers, we asked Physician Assistant Amanda Stearns what it was like to receive her first dose.
1/11/20217 minutes, 21 seconds
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Why Do Stars Explode?

We ask Caity from our planetarium all about stars that run out of fuel and go supernova in explosions that can be seen clear across the universe.
1/4/202110 minutes, 3 seconds
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Where Did Eyes Come From?

How do we know how sight first evolved if eyes don't fossilize? For some ancient organisms, they do! Dr. Brigitte Schoenemann shares her research on trilobite fossils from nearly half a billion years ago that tell us about the origins of vision.
12/30/202010 minutes, 8 seconds
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Why Does the Museum of Science Have Monkeys?

We ask one of our animal keepers, Christa, all about our Cotton-Top Tamarin monkeys and how the Museum of Science is participating in the effort to conserve this critically endangered species.
12/21/202013 minutes, 37 seconds
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Can We Restore Mobility to Spinal Injury Patients?

Biomedical Engineer Dr. Parag Gad tells us about a noninvasive technique that can help paralyzed patients regain the use of their extremities as well as other systems of the body.
12/14/202012 minutes, 13 seconds
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How Small Can You Make a Refrigerator?

Physicist Dr. Billy Hubbard tells us how designing the world's smallest 'refrigerator', a thousand times thinner than a human hair, may lead to more efficient cooling of scientific instruments.
12/7/202011 minutes, 38 seconds
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What is Data?

We ask Shilpa Lawande, a Data Engineer at Facebook Boston, all about data and its impact on our lives.
11/30/20209 minutes, 53 seconds
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How Far Away is the Edge of the Universe?

We answer all of your questions about how far away things are from Earth, from the Moon to the very edge of existence, and also discover how we know the distance to objects in space.
11/27/202014 minutes, 10 seconds
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What is a Heart on a Chip?

We chat with Akshita Rao, an undergraduate at Tufts University, about her biomedical engineering research on the human heart.
11/21/202010 minutes, 15 seconds
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What If the Dinosaurs Hadn't Gone Extinct?

We chat with Becca, one of our museum educators, about the driving factors behind the disappearance of the dinosaurs.
11/17/202011 minutes, 13 seconds
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How Can Half a Degree Ruin My Eggs?

Harvard's Dr. Pia Sorensen tells us about her new book, Science and Cooking, and answers your questions about chemistry, physics, and biology in the kitchen.
11/10/202011 minutes, 52 seconds
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What Water Makes the Best Beer?

Shelley Smith, the Brewing Innovation Engineer at Sam Adams, talks about the science that goes into crafting a flawless pint.
11/5/202010 minutes, 9 seconds
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Does the Moon Rotate?

Talia from our planetarium answers some of the most common questions that museum visitors ask about the Earth-Moon-Sun system, covering everything from Moon phases to eclipses.
11/3/202014 minutes, 50 seconds
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Do Spiders Have Personalities?

Bats! Owls! Creepy-crawlies! For Halloween, we asked Liz from our Live Animal Care Center some of the best questions we've heard at the museum about spooky species.
10/27/202011 minutes, 1 second
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What's Your Favorite Molecule?

We asked two MIT graduate students in chemistry, Jessica Beard and Angela Lee, how they got into science and what they are looking forward to in the future.
10/22/202010 minutes, 8 seconds
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How Can I Explore Chemistry at Home?

We chat with Dr. Bassam Shakhashiri from the University of Wisconsin-Madison about his decades of experience creating safe, fun, and illuminating chemical experiments.
10/20/20208 minutes, 23 seconds
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Had a Bad Day? Check Your Teeth

Social and psychiatric epidemiologist Dr. Erin Dunn explains how stressful events leave a permanent record on our teeth and how we can potentially use our molars and canines to predict future mental health.
10/15/202013 minutes, 12 seconds
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How Can Artificial Intelligence Help Create Maps?

Benjamin Clark and Saikat Basu from Facebook tell us about their initiative to help identify roads using satellite images and deep learning.
10/8/202014 minutes, 4 seconds
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Who Gets to Drive the Mars Rover?

How do you drive a rover from 40 million miles away? In part two of our conversation, we asked NASA engineer Rich Rieber about how the newest robot to explore Mars will get around.
10/2/202016 minutes, 55 seconds
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Mars Helicopter? Really?

Part two of our look at Perseverance, the next Mars rover. We asked NASA engineer Rich Rieber what the mission hopes to accomplish on the red planet - searching for signs of ancient life, analyzing the geology of Mars, and even testing out a small helicopter.
9/30/202012 minutes, 24 seconds
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How Do You Land a Robot on Mars?

NASA's newest rover is on its way to Mars. We asked engineer David Way, who designed the landing system, how it will touch down safely on the red planet.
9/25/202010 minutes, 42 seconds
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How Many Colors Are in the Rainbow, Really?

You had lots of questions about our perception of color, and so we asked Zoe to tell us about rainbows, matching shades of black, and more.
9/19/202010 minutes, 3 seconds
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How Do You Explore An Underwater Forest?

We ask Dan Distel, a marine biologist at Northeastern, about an amazing discovery off the coast of Alabama: an ancient underwater forest.
9/8/202013 minutes, 37 seconds
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How Do Astronomers Search for Exoplanets?

Dr. Rob Zellem of NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab answers questions about using citizen science to discover exoplanets.
9/1/202013 minutes, 2 seconds
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Do Woodpeckers Get Headaches?

One of the museum's resident birding enthusiasts returns to answer more questions all about our feathered friends.
8/25/20209 minutes, 18 seconds
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How Do Scientists Predict Tornadoes?

We talked with Elizabeth Smith, a meteorologist from the National Severe Storms Laboratory, to find out more about tornadoes.
8/18/202010 minutes, 7 seconds
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How Can We Protect the Endangered Birds of Hawai'i?

Biologist Hanna Mounce describes her team's efforts to conserve the native forest ecosystems of Hawai'i.
8/14/202010 minutes, 55 seconds
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How Do You Sculpt a Bronze Heron?

You can see bronze animal sculptures by artist Michael Alfano in the museum's exhibit halls. We asked him your questions about the intersection between science and art.
8/11/20209 minutes, 54 seconds
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Food Insecurity During a Pandemic

Sara Bleich, Professor of Public Health Policy at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health discusses the impact COVID has had on food insecure populations around the country, and our best steps forward to ensure an equitable recovery.
8/4/202012 minutes, 27 seconds
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The Future of Accessible Learning

Dr. Christine Reich, the museum's Senior Vice President of Exhibits and Research, sits down with Universal Design pioneer Dr. Richard Jackson to discuss inclusive education in the museum world.
7/31/202015 minutes, 22 seconds
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How Do We Test Treatments for COVID-19?

We ask Dr. Fiona Garner, a scientist working on testing treatments for COVID-19, to explain the important steps of that process.
7/28/202010 minutes, 25 seconds
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What Makes an Axolotl So Super?

We asked Fallon Durant, an axolotl researcher, all your questions about these amazing animals and their superpowers.
7/21/202010 minutes, 5 seconds
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Does Astronaut Food Taste Good?

We chat with Food Technologist Michelle Richardson about engineering healthy and appetizing meals for astronauts bound for Mars.
7/14/20207 minutes, 27 seconds
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Why Do Wombats Poop Cubes?

Museum educator Meghan tells us all about excrement, from the biggest to the most frequent to the strangest poop in the animal kingdom.
7/10/20208 minutes, 18 seconds
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How Bumpy is My Exoplanet?

Exotopography is the study of mountain ranges on worlds beyond our solar system. We talked to the field's creator, Moiya McTier, to find out more.
7/7/202010 minutes, 18 seconds
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Spacewalking with Astronaut Jeff Hoffman

We talked to a veteran spacewalker, astronaut Jeff Hoffman, and asked him your questions about extra-vehicular activity.
7/3/202010 minutes, 39 seconds
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Why Do Dogs Smell Each Others' Butts?

Hear a canine authority, museum educator Mayra, tackle some of the amazing questions we've received about dogs.
6/30/202011 minutes, 12 seconds
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Which Homemade Bread Does It Better?

Museum educator Zoe answers audience questions having to do with chemistry in the kitchen, from how to make the best fluffy and chewy cookie, to which homemade breads are superior (chemically speaking).
6/26/202011 minutes, 34 seconds
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Thinking Like an Engineer to Combat COVID-19

We talk to Ranch Kimball, a high school senior, who is applying the engineering design process to help his community through the COVID-19 pandemic.
6/23/20207 minutes, 10 seconds
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The Floor is Lava

Lava comes in all shapes, sizes and forms. Becca, our geology specialist, answers some of the question that our listeners have asked about lava.
6/19/202010 minutes, 2 seconds
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Meet a Polio Pioneer

Listen in on a conversation with Heather and her mother Kathy, who was just 8 years old during the polio epidemic in the 1950s. Kathy became part of the ground-breaking study to find a polio vaccine, a first step in leading to the near-eradication in the US of this terrible disease.
6/16/202011 minutes, 35 seconds
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Staying Safe in a Lightning Storm

Karen is one of our educators that presents in our Theater of Electricity. Hear her answer your questions about lightning safety.
6/12/202010 minutes, 27 seconds
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How Do You Catch a Meteor Shower?

Chuck from our planetarium answers questions about meteor showers, what causes them, and useful tips for catching the next one.
6/9/20208 minutes, 36 seconds
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Did T. rex Eat Stegosaurus?

Our own paleontology whiz, Katie, answers some of the many dinosaur questions we've received. Hear about feathered fossils, the swimming spinosaurus, and more.
6/5/20209 minutes, 41 seconds
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What is the Biggest Animal?

We chat with Marcus from our education team about the largest animals in many different categories, from the longest reptile to the heaviest mammal.
6/3/20209 minutes, 53 seconds
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WCVB's Harvey Leonard on Predicting the Weather

Harvey Leonard has over 40 years of experience predicting New England weather. He tells us about the technology involved in making a forecast.
5/29/202010 minutes, 40 seconds
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Glaciers: Tortoise or Hare?

We tend to think of glaciers as changing extremely slowly, but geophysicist Brent Minchew tells us how they can change by the hour.
5/26/20209 minutes, 53 seconds
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Our Fine Feathered Friends

Sue, a longtime Museum educator who also helped develop our popular A Bird's World exhibit, answers questions about birds, from the color of eggs to the habits of hawks.
5/22/20209 minutes, 2 seconds
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The Future of Insects

Our very own invertebrate animal keeper, Cori of the Butterfly Garden, tells us more about the reasons — including climate change — behind recent declines in insect populations.
5/19/20209 minutes, 35 seconds
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What is Synthetic Biology?

Dr. Natalie Kuldell, director of BioBuilder and affiliate of MIT's Department of Biological Engineering, answers questions about biological engineering and its applications. Learn about manipulating DNA to produce new drugs, inserting genes into bacteria to produce biofuels, and much more.
5/16/202012 minutes, 12 seconds