Logo
    Search

    Episode 47 - Arthur C. Clarke, Godfather of Satellites

    enNovember 07, 2020

    About this Episode

    Released: 7 November 2020

    Duration: 57 minutes, 36 seconds

     

    Co hosts Paul Carr and Daniela De Paulis welcome space historian David Skogerboe to talk about the pro-space activism of Arthur C. Clarke.

    Guest Bio:

    David Skogerboe is a space historian and science communicator. He recently earned his MSc in the History and Philosophy of Science from Utrecht University in the Netherlands, where he focused his research on the intersection of space science, science fiction, and science communication. During his masters, he interned at the NASA History Division in Washington DC, where he spent countless hours perusing the most interesting historical reference collections on the planet. He is presently a freelance writer and editor while he awaits the emergence of his first child, and he hopes to soon begin a PhD and a fruitful career as a professional nerd.

    Links:Arthur C. Clarke

    The Godfather of Satellites: Arthur C. Clarke and the Battle for Narrative Space in the Popular Culture of Spaceflight, 1945-1995, David Skogerboe, full master's thesis

    Apollo 12: Why Don't You Know Me? You Should., David Skogerboe, NASA News & Notes

    Wireless World Feb. & Oct. 1945, Scans of Clarke's articles proposing the geostationary satellite

    How the World Was One: Beyond the Global Village, Arthur C. Clarke (1992), Clarke's overview of the impact of communication technology on society

    The Making of a Moon: The Story of the Earth Satellite Program, Arthur C. Clarke (1957), Clarke's pre-history of satellite technology, first published before Sputnik

    The Fountains of Paradise, Arthur C. Clarke (1979), Clarke's sci-fi that features the space elevator and "project clean-up"

    Arthur C. Clarke's official website

    An expansive bibliography of Clarke's work. An impressive reminder of just how hard he pushed to propel humans into space, and keep them there.

    Credits:

    Co-hosts: Paul Carr and Daniela De Paulis

    Music: DJ Spooky and Lloyd Rogers

     

    Recent Episodes from The Wow! Signal Podcast

    Burst 34 - The Mystery of the Nine Transients

    Burst 34 - The Mystery of the Nine Transients

    Interview recorded: 11 July 2021

    Released: 16 July 2021

    Duration: 21 minutes, 33 seconds

    Beatriz Villarroel discusses her latest VASCO paper in Nature Scientific Reports, "Exploring nine simultaneously occurring transients on April 12th 1950."

    Links:

    Villarroel+ , Exploring Nine simultaneously occurring transients on April 12th 1950.

    Burst 19: Our Sky Now and Then (August 2016)

    Episode 41: The Vanishing Sources with Beatriz Villarroel (November 2019)

    The Vanishing & Appearing Sources during a Century of Observations project: I. USNO objects missing in modern sky surveys and follow-up observations of a "missing star

    The Palomar Digital Sky Survey

    Gran Telescopio Canarias

    The United States Nuclear Testing Program

    Credits

    Host and Producer: Paul Carr

    Music: Ahleuchatistas and Erika Lloyd

     

     

    Episode 49 - Existential Risk

    Episode 49 - Existential Risk

    Released: 4 February 2021

    Duration: 58 minutes 44 seconds

    Co-hosts Paul Carr and Daniela DePaulis are joined by author Thomas Moynihan. The subject is the idea of human extinction and how it evolved into our present day understand of Existential Risk.

    Guest Bio:

    I am a writer and researcher from the UK. In 2019, I completed a PhD at Oriel College on the history of human extinction. Currently, I am a visiting Research Associate in History at St Benet's College, Oxford University, and I am working for Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute with a grant from the Berkeley Existential Risk Initiative. 
     
    I am interested in the history of existential risk and of existential hope: that is, how people first came to understand the perils and promises that face us as a species. I see this as the central philosophical drama of the modern world: how we came to appreciate our position—and precarity—as intelligent beings within an otherwise seemingly silent and sterile universe. 
     
    My goal is to reveal how contemporary research into global risks can be seen as part of the wider story of our ‘coming of age’ as a civilisation and a species.

    Links:

    Thomas Moynihan - https://thomasmoynihan.xyz

    X-Risk at MIT Press: https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/x-risk

    Mary Shelley - The Last Man

    Churchill - Shall We All Commit Suicide?

    The Order of the Dolphin

    Frank Drakę: A Speculation on the Influence of Biological Immortality on SETI

    Natural Selection of Stellar Civilizations by the Limits of Growth

    The Jaws of Darkness

    The Ethics of METI

    Credits:

    Co-hosts: Paul Carr and Daniela De Paulis

    Producer: Paul Carr

    Music: Sun Ra and his Intergalactic Solar Arkestra, DJ Spooky

    Episode 48 - Chelsea Haramia on the Ethics of METI

    Episode 48 - Chelsea Haramia on the Ethics of METI

    Released: 28 November 2020

    Duration: 70 minutes, 39 seconds

    Co-hosts Paul Carr and Daniela De Paulis engage philosopher Chelsea Haramia on the ethics of sending signals into space that might be received by intelligent beings in the cosmos.

    For more information about this episode, include a rich set of links, please see the blog entry for Episode 48 at:

    https://wowsignalpodcast.com

    Guest Bio

    Chelsea Haramia received her PhD in philosophy from the University of Colorado at Boulder, where she specialized in ethics. She is now an assistant professor in the philosophy department at Spring Hill College. She is also co-editor of the online journal 1000-Word Philosophy, which houses a growing set of original 1000-word essays on philosophical questions, figures, and arguments aimed at an audience of philosophers and non-philosophers alike. She has published in the areas of normative ethics, bioethics, animal ethics, aesthetics, feminist philosophy, and astrobiology ethics. Her current work involves ethical and metaethical analyses of space exploration and of the search for intelligent life in particular.  

    Credits:

    Co-hosts: Paul Carr and Daniel De Paulis

    Producer: Paul Carr

    Music: DJ Spooky, Nest, Erika Lloyd.

     

    The Wow! Signal is published under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike license.

    Episode 47 - Arthur C. Clarke, Godfather of Satellites

    Episode 47 - Arthur C. Clarke, Godfather of Satellites

    Released: 7 November 2020

    Duration: 57 minutes, 36 seconds

     

    Co hosts Paul Carr and Daniela De Paulis welcome space historian David Skogerboe to talk about the pro-space activism of Arthur C. Clarke.

    Guest Bio:

    David Skogerboe is a space historian and science communicator. He recently earned his MSc in the History and Philosophy of Science from Utrecht University in the Netherlands, where he focused his research on the intersection of space science, science fiction, and science communication. During his masters, he interned at the NASA History Division in Washington DC, where he spent countless hours perusing the most interesting historical reference collections on the planet. He is presently a freelance writer and editor while he awaits the emergence of his first child, and he hopes to soon begin a PhD and a fruitful career as a professional nerd.

    Links:Arthur C. Clarke

    The Godfather of Satellites: Arthur C. Clarke and the Battle for Narrative Space in the Popular Culture of Spaceflight, 1945-1995, David Skogerboe, full master's thesis

    Apollo 12: Why Don't You Know Me? You Should., David Skogerboe, NASA News & Notes

    Wireless World Feb. & Oct. 1945, Scans of Clarke's articles proposing the geostationary satellite

    How the World Was One: Beyond the Global Village, Arthur C. Clarke (1992), Clarke's overview of the impact of communication technology on society

    The Making of a Moon: The Story of the Earth Satellite Program, Arthur C. Clarke (1957), Clarke's pre-history of satellite technology, first published before Sputnik

    The Fountains of Paradise, Arthur C. Clarke (1979), Clarke's sci-fi that features the space elevator and "project clean-up"

    Arthur C. Clarke's official website

    An expansive bibliography of Clarke's work. An impressive reminder of just how hard he pushed to propel humans into space, and keep them there.

    Credits:

    Co-hosts: Paul Carr and Daniela De Paulis

    Music: DJ Spooky and Lloyd Rogers

     

    Episode 46 - Extraterrestrials

    Episode 46 - Extraterrestrials

    Released: 6 April 2020

    Duration: 53 minutes, 55 seconds

     

    Author and podcaster Wade Roush talks about his forthcoming book from MIT Press, Extraterrestrials. The book covers astrobiology, SETI, the Fermi paradox and more for a literate but non-specialist audience.

    WADE ROUSH, a Boston-based science and technology journalist, is a columnist at Scientific American and the producer and host of Soonish, an independent podcast about the future. He has served as Boston bureau reporter for Science, senior editor and San Francisco bureau chief at MIT Technology Review, chief correspondent and San Francisco editor for Xconomy, and acting director of MIT’s Knight Science Journalism program. He holds a PhD in the history and social study of science and technology from MIT.

    For more information, please visit us at https://wowsignalpodcast.com

    Links:

    The Extraterrestrial page at MIT Press

    Six Strange Facts about Oumuamua

    Sofia Sheikh and the Nine Axes

    The Vanishing Sources

    Where is Everybody?

    Stephen Webb's Book on the Fermi Paradox

    Natalie Cabrol

    Seth Shostak on the Zoo Hypothesis

     

    The MIT Technology Review

    The Hub and Spoke Podcast Network

    The Soonish podcast

     

    The podcast contact page

    Wow! Signal Live

     

    Credits

    Host and Producer: Paul Carr

    Music: Lloyd Rogers and Jason Robinson

     

    The Wow! Signal is released under the Creative Commons Attribution License

    Episode 45 - Among the Space People with Paola Castaño

    Episode 45 - Among the Space People with Paola Castaño

    Released: 31 March 2020

    Duration: 54 minutes, 8 seconds

     

    Co-hosts Paul Carr and Daniela DePaulis welcome Dr. Paola Castaño to talk about her research among the science teams working on the International Space Station.

    For more information, please visit our blog at https://wowsignalpodcast.com

    Guest Bio

    Paola Castaño is a sociologist of science. She recently completed a Newton International Fellow funded by The British Academy at Cardiff University and is working on a book about the meanings and valuations of scientific research on the International Space Station. On the basis of ethnographic work following the life course of experiments sent to the station, the book examines the fields of particle physics, plant biology and biomedical research. She has a PhD in sociology from the University of Chicago, and has been a postdoctoral researcher at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum in Washington DC, the Free University of Berlin, and Waseda University in Tokyo.

    Links:

    The International Space Station goes under the microscope

    Human Research Program Investigators’ Workshop 2020: Day 1

    Cosmic-ray positron fraction measurement from 1 to 30 GeV with AMS-01

    Scott Kelly’s genes and NASA’s twin study on him, explained

    Keyworkers

     

    Daniela De Paulis on the Unseen Podcast

    Daniela De Paulis discusses Cogito in Episode 35.

    Cogito in Space

    Castaño's article on Cogito

     

    The Wow! Signal podcast on Reddit

    Our YouTube Channel

    Credits:

    Co-hosts: Paul Carr and Daniela De Paulis

    Producer: Paul Carr

    Music: DJ Spooky, Blue Dot Sessions, Lee Maddeford, and Lloyd Rogers

    Burst 33 - Astronomer David Blank Comments on Episode 41

    Burst 33 - Astronomer David Blank Comments on Episode 41

    Released: 20 March 2020

    Duration: 31 minutes, 42 seconds

     

    Astronomer David Blank responded to our invitation to comment on the Villarroel+ paper we covered in Episode 41, which he describes as "very fascinating."

     

    Links

    The VASCO project: I. USNO objects missing in modern sky surveys and follow-up observations of a "missing star"

    Dorrit Hoffleit  and her autobiography: Misfortunes as Blessings in Disguise

    Bradley Schaefer and the Harvard Plates

    Josh Grindlay, PI of DASCH

    The Very Large Array Sky Survey

    The VASCO Citizen Science Project

     

    Credits:

    Host and Producer: Paul Carr

    Music: Lloyd Rogers

     

     

     

    Episode 44 - The Night Watch

    Episode 44 - The Night Watch

    Released: 22 January 2020

    Live recording: 20 January 2020

    Duration:  66 minutes 45 seconds

    Thread: Astronomy and Astrophysics

     

    Host Paul Carr along with Daniela De Paulis and Ciro Villa welcome astronomer Stella Kafka, director of the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO). We talk about the recent and possibly unprecedented dimming of Betelgeuse, among many other astronomy topics. 

    For complete show notes, please visit https://wowsignalpodcast.com

     

    Credits:

    Host and Producer: Paul Carr

    Panelists: Daniela De Paulis, Ciro Villa

    Music: Claudio Nuñes, Felipe Sarro (playing Ravel)

    Software: Zoom, OBS, Auphonic, Reaper, OS X Mojave

    Hardware: Apple, Shure, Focusrite, Cloud, Elgato, Logitech

     

    The Wow! Signal Podcast
    enJanuary 22, 2020

    Episode 43 - Adam Dipert Moves in Zero G

    Episode 43 - Adam Dipert Moves in Zero G

    Released: 

    Duration: 55 minutes, 36 seconds

     

    Adam Dipert is a veteran circus performer and dancer who recently received his PhD in physics from Arizona State University.  Her has brought his various interests together by researching human movement in microgravity. We are going to let him tell you all about that.

    Adam will be presenting about this work at the Conference for Research on Choreographic Interfaces in Providence, Rhode Island, USA at Brown University, March 5-7 2020.  Link to conference here: http://www.choreotech.com/vision

    Links:

    Flower Sticks

    Zero G

    Kitsou Dubois

    Orienting Beyond Gravity: Training with Kitsou Dubois

    Partner Stilting Acrobatics

    A video of Adam in Zero G

    Skylab Astronauts Doing Gymnastics in Zero G

    The Froude Number

    Kristina isabelle

     

    Credits:

    Co-hosts: Daniela DePaulis and Paul Carr

    Producer Paul Carr

    Music: DJ Spooky

     

    This podcast is released under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike license.

    Episode 42 - Moon bouncing with Julia DeMarines

    Episode 42 - Moon bouncing with Julia DeMarines

    Released: 11 December 2019

    Duration: 48 minutes, 30 seconds

     

    Co-hosts Daniela DePaulis and Paul Carr welcome Julia DeMarines (@LifeNSpace) to talk about bouncing radio signals off the moon. Julia is involved in a moon bounce research project for Berkeley SETI, and Daniela has used moonbounce in her art projects, including Cogito.

    We also get into a discussion of METI, and the importance of message composition to humans.

    For more information, please visit https://wowisgnalpodcast.com

    Guest bio:

    Julia DeMarines is an Astrobiologist and science communicator working at the UC Berkeley SETI Research Center and with Blue Marble Space. She is a 2019 National Geographic Explorer and 2018 Grosvenor Teacher Fellow, and a 2019 AGU Voices for Science advocate.  Her research involves detecting life in the Universe through biosignatures and technosignatures and the ethics of sending powerful, intentional messages into space. She is passionate about inspiring the next generation of scientists and  teaches to underserved students around the world through the Ad Astra Academy. Julia also runs her own outreach events called  “Space in Your Face!” – a space variety show involving comedy, local artists, and cover songs. 

    http://juliademarines.com/

    Twitter: @LifeNspace

    Instagram: @mote_of_dust

    Facebook: @JuliaDeMarines

     

    Links

    Sullivan (1979), Radio leakage and eavesdropping

    Sullivan and Knowles(1985), Lunar Reflections of Terrestrial Radio Leakage.

    DeMarines+ (2019), Observing the Earth as a Communicating Exoplanet

    The One Earth Message

    The LUVOIR telescope

    The HabEx Observatory

    HawkEye 360

    David Grinspoon's appearances on this podcast: first, second, third.

    Andrew Siemion's appearances: first, second.

     

    Follow Us on Twitter.

    Our Discord Server

    Dream of the Open Channel

    Credits:

    Co-hosts: Daniela DePaulis and Paul Carr

    Producer: Paul Carr

    Music: DJ Spooky, Jason Robinson, George Hrab

    Software: Zoom,  Loopback, Reaper, Focusrite, Auphonic, OS X Mojave

    Hardware: Shure, Cloud,Focusrite, Apple.

     

    This podcast is released under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike license.