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NASA's Curious Universe

NASA's Curious Universe

Come get curious with NASA. As an official NASA podcast, Curious Universe brings you mind-blowing science and space adventures you won't find anywhere else. Explore the cosmos alongside astronauts, scientists, engineers, and other top NASA experts who are achieving remarkable feats in science, space exploration, and aeronautics. Learn something new about the wild and wonderful universe we share. All you need to get started is a little curiosity. NASA's Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast hosted by Padi Boyd and Jacob Pinter. Discover more original NASA shows at nasa.gov/podcasts

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Episodes

Earth, Through NASA's Eyes

There?s one planet NASA studies more than any other: Earth. With our unique vantage point from space, NASA collects information about our home in ways nobody else can. In this podcast miniseries, celebrate our home planet by learning how NASA studies Earth?including unique views of ocean color and sea level, land data that help farmers improve crop production, and researching our atmosphere from the air we breathe to layers high above us that protect every living thing on the planet.
2025-04-08
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Curious Universe Live: Art and Science with Astronaut Matthew Dominick

NASA has a long history of bringing together science, engineering and art. Space exploration is a human endeavor?one that requires creativity. In this special live episode, NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick and comedian and musician Reggie Watts talk flow states, aircraft ejector seats and more. Plus, a new NASA tool that lets you make music from iconic Hubble Space Telescope imagery. 
2025-04-02
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Inside the Team That Keeps Hubble Flying

When it launched in 1990, NASA expected the Hubble Space Telescope to last for about 15 years. Thirty-five years later, Hubble is still showing us the universe as no other telescope can. Go behind the scenes with Morgan Van Arsdall, deputy operations manager for Hubble, on an audio tour of Hubble?s control center. Morgan?s team keeps Hubble operating smoothly, and when something goes wrong, they snap into action to fix it. Plus, hear how Hubble tag-teams with newer observatories?including the James Webb Space Telescope?and continues to push the frontiers of astronomy.
2025-03-14
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How NASA Found the Ingredients For Life on an Asteroid

How did life begin? It?s one of science?s biggest questions, but it?s impossible to answer on Earth, where ancient clues have been buried by the planet?s shifting surface. Instead, scientists are looking beyond our own planet, to asteroids like Bennu, a distant fragment of a lost world. In 2023, NASA?s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft collected a sample of Bennu?s surface and brought it back to Earth. Ever since, scientists have been hard at work studying the fragments of asteroid Bennu. Now, they?re ready to reveal the results?our best look yet at a time capsule from the early solar system that once fostered the ingredients for life. 
2025-01-29
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Why the Moon?s Icy South Pole is a Hot Target for NASA

The Moon?s South Pole is a bizarre landscape. Mountain ridges glow in perpetual sunlight while deep craters freeze in billion-year-old shade. Yet hidden in the depths of those shadowed craters, under temperatures almost three times colder than the frostiest day in Antarctica, lurks something familiar?water ice. In the future, that ice could sustain human explorers or be broken apart into hydrogen and oxygen to refuel rockets. Join Brett Denevi, Artemis III geology team lead, to learn why NASA plans to land astronauts on the Moon?s South Pole later this decade. Then with Michelle Munk, NASA space technology chief architect, meet the robot Moon landers scouting ahead of Artemis which will drill beneath the regolith and test technologies designed to help future human explorers survive the Pole?s extreme conditions.  
2025-01-21
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The Mind-Bending Math Inside Black Holes

Black holes are mysterious, far away, and can bend the fabric of reality itself?but we're learning more about them all the time. Ronald Gamble, a NASA theoretical astrophysicist, uses math, computer coding, and a dash of creativity to peer inside some of the universe's most extreme objects. We'll explore what it would feel like to get pulled into a black hole and what people get wrong about black holes. And we'll answer questions from curious listeners, including, "What would happen if a black hole ate nothing but magnetized material?" 
2024-12-17
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How Open Science and AI Are Advancing Hurricane Research

As climate change drives more frequent and intense tropical cyclones and hurricanes, coastal communities desperately need better tools to predict how bad storms will be and when and where they?ll strike?and to assess the damage afterward. From the air and in space, NASA and NOAA collect critical data as storms roll in. But what happens next? Fly directly into the eye of the storm with daring hurricane hunter pilots, meet meteorologists and data scientists building AI models to improve hurricane prediction, and join the disaster response experts helping cities pinpoint their hardest-hit neighborhoods. Plus, learn how NASA is making data open to everyone?including you, with Transform to Open Science.
2024-11-12
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Europa Clipper's Voyage to Jupiter's Ocean Moon

As NASA?s Europa Clipper spacecraft leaves Earth, it carries a message: we, too, are made of water. Europa?one of Jupiter?s moons?is a top candidate to support life, thanks to its ocean of liquid, salty water capped by a layer of ice. Lynnae Quick-Henderson, a planetary scientist at NASA, explains how Clipper will search Europa for the building blocks of life. The mission is also a message in a bottle, bringing a greeting from one ocean world to another. Hear how Ada Limón, the Poet Laureate of the United States, used NASA?s mission as inspiration for her poem ?In Praise of Mystery: A Poem for Europa? and why she thinks everyone?even space nerds?should step back and appreciate our connections to the universe and each other. 
2024-10-01
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An Asteroid by Any Other Name With Special Guest Latif Nasser

The idea of an asteroid from outer space crashing into Earth has captured the imaginations of science fiction directors for decades. But here at NASA, we take potentially hazardous near-Earth objects seriously. We have a planetary defense office that plans for every scenario?we?ve even practiced nudging an asteroid off course with spacecraft. But there are tens of thousands of objects in near-Earth space, and the first step in protecting against potential impacts is spotting, tracking and managing every single one of them. Learn how NASA does just that from Joe Masiero, a scientist on the asteroid survey mission NEOWISE. Then, join friend of the show Latif Nasser, co-host of the podcast Radiolab, to untangle the mystery of a strange space rock that?s not quite a moon but not quite a normal asteroid, either.
2024-09-17
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Sun Series: Bonus: Dispatches from the Path of Totality

On April 8, 2024, North America experienced its last total solar eclipse until the 2040s. As the Moon?s shadow fell across the U.S., NASA sent Curious Universe producers out into the field across the path of totality to talk to space nerds and eclipse scientists. In this special bonus episode of our Sun Series, we?ll relive the special day together.
2024-05-03
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Sun Series: Soaring Toward the Sun

For the first time, a NASA spacecraft is flying through the Sun's atmosphere. Nour Raouafi, project scientist for Parker Solar Probe, explains why the Sun's corona is the source of one of the biggest mysteries in all of space science. So, what does it take to build a probe that can touch the Sun?including surviving temperatures of 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit and barreling through sudden eruptions of solar plasma?and live to tell the tale? We'll also go inside the fleet of NASA spacecraft studying the Sun from many angles, including the rescue mission to save a wildly spinning observatory before it became lost in space forever.
2024-04-23
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Sun Series: What is Space Weather?

From Earth, the Sun can seem steady and predictable. But when you look at our star close up, there?s a lot going on. Go behind the scenes with NASA?s Moon to Mars Space Weather Analysis Office, a team monitoring space weather?eruptions of radiation and plasma from the Sun that can wreak havoc on spacecraft and pose dangers to astronauts. We?ll also revisit the most powerful geomagnetic storm on record, an 1859 event that produced northern lights visible in the tropics and made electrical systems go haywire. This is episode fiof the Sun and Eclipse series from NASA?s Curious Universe, an official NASA podcast.
2024-04-16
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Sun Series: Minisode! Countdown to Total Solar Eclipse 2024

It?s time. On April 8, 2024, millions of people across North America will see a total solar eclipse. Get the most out of totality with this special bonus episode. Listen up for safety tips, learn how to make your own pinhole projector to safely view the eclipse and learn how anyone?including you!?can contribute to NASA research through citizen science. And if you?re not in the path of totality, watch NASA?s live broadcast starting at 1 p.m. EDT. NASA?s Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. See when the eclipse starts where you are with NASA?s Eclipse Explorer: go.nasa.gov/EclipseExplorer
2024-04-06
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Sun Series: You (Yes, You!) Can Help NASA Study the Sun

How often do you think about your nearest star? Though it may not seem like it from here on Earth, our trusty Sun is a place of mystery. Take a good look at its influence on our planet ? through the otherworldly experience of eclipse, maybe, or the aurora ? and you might get "sucked" in... to a citizen science project, that is. Join NASA Sun scientists like Liz Macdonald and volunteers like Hanjie Tan to listen to crickets fooled by the false night of an eclipse, discover new colors in the aurora, and hunt for comets hiding in the plasma of our Sun?s atmosphere. And learn how you can get involved in NASA science while experiencing our nearest star firsthand. This is episode three of the Sun and Eclipse series from NASA?s Curious Universe, an official NASA podcast.
2024-04-02
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Sun Series: How to Experience a Total Solar Eclipse

On April 8, 2024, the Moon will pass in front of the Sun, casting a shadow across Mexico, the United States, and Canada. Total solar eclipses have fascinated human beings for thousands of years. Watching the Moon eclipse the Sun is a surreal, multi-sensory experience that you?re not likely to forget. But Eclipses also offer unique opportunities for NASA to study the relationship between our star and home planet. Join current and former NASA sun scientists Kelly Korreck, Fred ?Mr. Eclipse? Espenak and Cherilynn Morrow on a journey through time and space to solve eclipse mysteries.
2024-03-26
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Sun Series: The Sun, Our Star

The Sun is our closest star. Billions of years ago, it shaped the formation of our home planet and the beginning of life on Earth. Today, it provides the heat and energy that powers our civilization, but it can also disrupt our technology and spacecraft through explosive outbursts of radiation. Join NASA Sun scientist Joe Westlake on a journey from the surface of Earth to the Sun?s core to learn how intricately we?re connected to our star and the progress we?ve made unraveling its mysteries. This is episode one of the Sun and Eclipse series from NASA's Curious Universe, an official NASA podcast.
2024-03-19
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Here Comes the Sun Series

Meet the Sun. Even if you think you know our star, our new mini series from NASA?s Curious Universe will show you why Sun science is heating up in 2024?and why NASA experts have so much more to discover. Get ready for the hair-raising experience of a total solar eclipse, and learn how anyone can pitch in through citizen science. See the vibrant and sometimes chaotic close-up details of the Sun, and hear how NASA keeps astronauts and spacecraft safe from solar outbursts. And go inside a pioneering mission to touch the Sun?s atmosphere and investigate some of its biggest unanswered questions. NASA?s Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. Discover more adventures with NASA experts at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse
2024-03-11
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Planet Hunting with Host Padi Boyd

In this special episode, we turn the tables and put host Padi Boyd in the interview seat. Padi shares stories from her time with NASA?s groundbreaking Kepler mission, which showed us many more exoplanets?planets orbiting other stars?than we had previously discovered. She also tells us about her dream astronomical dinner companion and her go-to karaoke song. Plus, we'll wrap up another season of wild and wonderful adventures by answering questions from listeners like you and sharing behind-the-scenes tidbits from Season 6 episodes. For the first time, this episode of Curious Universe is also available as a video podcast. Check it out at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse and NASA?s YouTube channel: youtu.be/h0wLZJeYGxw
2024-02-21
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A Year in Mars Dune Alpha

To prepare for the day when humans travel to Mars, NASA is conducting a one-year experiment in a Mars simulation environment. So what?s it like to spend a year in CHAPEA, the Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog? In this season finale episode, travel through the airlock with voice recordings made by the four-person crew, including what it feels like?and smells like?inside their realistic 3-D printed habitat and how virtual reality gives them the sensation of walking on the Red Planet. NASA's Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. Discover more adventures with NASA astronauts, engineers, scientists, and other experts at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse
2023-12-19
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Exploring the Early Universe with Webb

The James Webb Space Telescope promised to show us ?baby pictures? of the universe. Now in its second year of science, Webb is fulfilling that promise?and more. NASA scientists Jane Rigby, Taylor Hutchison, and Gerónimo Villanueva explain how they use Webb to peer back to the earliest stages of the universe and examine stunning plumes of water in our own solar system. NASA's Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. Discover more adventures with NASA astronauts, engineers, scientists, and other experts at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse
2023-12-12
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Special Delivery from Outer Space

On September 24, 2023, a capsule from space parachuted down into the Utah desert. Tucked inside it were 4.5-billion-year-old bits of rock and dust from a faraway asteroid named Bennu collected by the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. These pristine space rocks, which contain carbon and other building blocks of life, could rewrite scientists? understanding of our solar system. In this episode, sit in mission control and ride aboard helicopters with asteroid mission leaders like Dante Lauretta and Mike Moreau for a behind-the-scenes look at the OSIRIS-REx sample return mission?s epic conclusion. NASA's Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. Discover more adventures with NASA astronauts, engineers, scientists, and other experts at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse
2023-12-05
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Tiny but Mighty

What do air pollution, thunder clouds and climate change have in common? Aerosols! These tiny particles, generated by everything from desert dust storms to car exhaust, play a huge role in our atmosphere, affecting our health when we breathe them in and even changing the weather. Globally, they play an even bigger role, changing how much sunlight gets through to Earth?s surface and heating or cooling our entire planet. Through new satellite missions, NASA atmospheric scientists like Kirk Knobelspiesse and public health experts like Susan Anenberg are working together to untangle aerosol mysteries. NASA's Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. Discover more adventures with NASA astronauts, engineers, scientists, and other experts at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse
2023-11-28
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How You (Yes, You!) Can Do Science With NASA

Anyone can participate in the process of NASA science and engineering through what we call citizen science, regardless of your citizenship. You might have heard it called ?participatory science? or ?community science.? It all means that thousands of people around the world are helping the professionals make discoveries about our planet, our solar system, and our universe at large, through these projects. Meet three volunteers whose perspectives have changed by participating in citizen science. NASA's Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. Discover more adventures with NASA astronauts, engineers, scientists, and other experts at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse
2023-11-21
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Hum of the Sun

What does space sound like? It?s a question that has fascinated composers and scientists alike throughout history. Through a process called data sonification, heliophysicists are using NASA satellites like audio recorders to listen to the electromagnetic symphony our Sun plays, and making new discoveries along the way. NASA's Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. Discover more adventures with NASA astronauts, engineers, scientists, and other experts at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse
2023-11-14
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Welcome to the Dark Side

Normal matter?the kind that makes up our home planet and everything we can see?adds up to just five percent of the known universe. The other 95 percent is dark matter and dark energy, a tag team that ranks among the biggest mysteries in all of science. NASA astrophysicists Jason Rhodes and Ami Choi explain how we study this dark side and why it?s making scientists reconsider what we think we know about the universe. NASA's Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. Discover more adventures with NASA astronauts, engineers, scientists, and other experts at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse
2023-11-07
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Introducing Season Six

In season six, meet researchers who are using sounds from the Sun to unlock new details about our star, explore the ?dark side? of the universe with scientists who study dark matter and dark energy, and get a behind-the-scenes look at the first NASA mission to deliver an asteroid sample to Earth. A new episode drops every Tuesday. NASA's Curious Universe is an official NASA podcast. Discover more adventures with NASA astronauts, engineers, scientists, and other experts at nasa.gov/curiousuniverse
2023-10-31
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To the Stars with Jessica Watkins

In this special season five finale episode, join NASA astronaut Jessica Watkins, self-proclaimed ?rock nerd? on a journey to the stars.
2023-04-11
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Suiting up for Space

Spacesuits are more than just garments ? in the airless vacuum of space or on the freezing surface of the moon, they keep astronauts alive. Explore how NASA engineers like Amy Ross and Paromita Mitra have contributed to the development of the next generation of spacesuits.
2023-04-04
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Field Notes: Nhulunbuy, Australia

Tropical rainforests, snowy mountain peaks, even the Australian outback ? NASA experts travel to a wide range of environments right here on Earth to better understand our universe. Miles Hatfield, NASA heliophysics science writer, recaps a recent reporting trip to cover a sounding rocket launch in Australia?s remote Northern Territories.
2023-03-28
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How to Build A Spacecraft

Spacecraft go through a lot - exploring dangerous worlds across the cold expanse of space. Not to mention the chaos of a launch! So how do we build a mission that can take on dangerous environments and the harrowing trip to reach them? Explore the world of mission-building with scientists from Venus? DAVINCI mission.
2023-03-21
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Stargazers Welcome

The night sky isn?t just for experts, it belongs to all of us! And we here at NASA love to encourage people to go out and take a look. Amateur astronomer Kevin Hartnett, Hubble Social Media Lead Elizabeth Tammi, and the Astronomical Society of Greenbelt take us on a tour of the stars and share how you can join from your own backyard.
2023-03-14
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Wildfires from Space

Wherever you live on Earth, wildfires touch your life. Explore how NASA scientist Doug Morton and Canadian firefighter-turned-researcher Josh Johnston use satellites to track the changing landscape of wildfires from space.
2023-03-07
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The Invisible World of Gravitational Waves

Information about the universe is all around us. But there?s more than meets the eye! Gravitational waves are the invisible ripples in spacetime caused by supermassive interstellar activity. Join astrophysicists Ira Thorpe and Judy Racusin on an exploration of how NASA studies these unseen bends in time and space.
2023-02-28
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Defending the Planet from Asteroids

Our solar system contains millions of asteroids, orbiting our sun and rocketing through the night sky! Join scientists Kelly Fast, Tom Statler, and Davide Farnocchia as we discover what we can learn from these building blocks of the universe, and how NASA would respond if one were ever headed our way.
2023-02-21
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Introducing Season Five

In season five, join us as we fight wildfires, defend the Earth from asteroids, and explore the invisible world of gravitational waves! New episodes every Tuesday.
2023-02-13
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Bonus: Happy Holidays from NASA!

Before we return with season five in 2023, celebrate the holidays with us! Join Goddard news chief Rob Garner, NASA social media lead Stephanie L. Smith, and astronaut Shannon Walker on this special, holiday-themed bonus episode.
2022-12-13
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Webb?s First Images

On July 12, 2022, a fundamentally new era of exploring our universe begins. This special season finale episode features an overview of the James Webb Space Telescope?s first detailed cosmic images. Learn what this historic moment means from astronomer Michelle Thaller.
2022-07-12
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Field Notes: Astronaut Shannon Walker

From dusty deserts to icy mountain tops, NASA experts visit incredible places along their career path. But what about our explorers who take their work off the Earth? Join astronaut Shannon Walker on a look back at her excursions into space.
2022-07-05
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Up & Away with Sounding Rockets

Explore sounding rockets, and the experiments they take to the skies, with space physicist Alexa Halford and sounding rocket program assistant chief Cathy Hesh.
2022-06-28
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The Search For Life: Are We Alone?

Are we alone in the universe? It's a question studied in science fiction, but also by teams here at NASA. Join us as we search for signs of life outside of Earth with scientists Aki Roberge, Ravi Kopparapu, and Shawn Domagal-Goldman.
2022-06-21
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How to Grow Plants in Space

As humanity sets its sights on longer-term life in space, we?re going to need ways to sustain ourselves. That?s where plants come into play! Take a tour of Kennedy Space Center?s lush Plant Processing Area with Ray Wheeler, Ralph Fritsche, and Gioia Massa - the scientists studying how to grow food in space!
2022-06-14
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Going Supersonic!

When a plane flies faster than the speed of sound, you get a sonic boom! But what if we could change those physics? Join NASA test pilot Nils Larson and aerospace engineer Lori Ozoroski to hear how we?re flying faster than the speed of sound, and making that supersonic flight quieter, too.
2022-06-07
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Earth?s Weather Watchers

Planets throughout the universe are full of fascinating weather, including Earth! Hear how NASA and NOAA work together to predict, monitor, and respond to Earth?s ever-changing weather. Explore Earth?s weather with Dalia Kirschbaum, Marangelly Fuentes, and Dan Lindsey.
2022-05-31
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Mysteries of the Moon

The Moon is our constant cosmic companion and the only planetary body outside of Earth where humans have set foot. As we prepare to head back to the Moon with the Artemis program, let's take a look at what we know about this wonderful and mysterious natural satellite.
2022-05-24
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Introducing Season Four

In season four, explore the lifesaving systems of space suits, break through the sound barrier, and search for life among the stars. First-time space explorers welcome.
2022-05-17
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Bonus: Still Curious?

At NASA, we are driven by curiosity, and we know you are too! Join us as we hear from our previous episode experts about what they?re interested in and answer some questions from listeners like you. What are you still curious about?
2022-03-29
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Webb Space Telescope: Go for Launch with ESA Expert

After years of preparation and anticipation, it?s time to send the world?s most powerful telescope to space. Ariane 5 rocket expert Rudi Albat (ESA) takes you through launch day and describes why the launcher that will carry Webb to its final destination is one of a kind.
2021-12-14
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Webb Space Telescope: The Global Village

A scientist from Italy who studies baby stars. A Californian spacecraft refrigeration pioneer. A Dominican-American engineer who saw space as her refuge from a tough life at home. Meet three people who represent a small slice of the thousands who have worked on Webb worldwide.
2021-12-07
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Webb Space Telescope: Building the Next Discovery Machine

Webb is preparing for a million-mile journey to its lookout point over the universe. Engineers have been hard at work designing, installing, and testing the world?s next discovery machine that will change astronomy for years to come. Join Kenneth Harris, Joe Sprofera, and Rene Doyon as they explain what it took to engineer Webb
2021-11-30
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Webb Space Telescope: Into the Unknown

The James Webb Space Telescope is going to open a new window into the universe. It will show us stars, galaxies, planets, and other objects as we?ve never seen them before. In the first of four episodes of our mini-series, we focus on the great science that Webb will do.
2021-11-23
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