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Host Dave Schlom is joined by special co-host Kendall Hall, astronomer and physics professor at California State University Chico as we dive into the first images and science coming out of the James Webb Space Telescope.
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Host Dave Schlom talks to three contributors to the book NASA and The Long Civil Rights Movement. Recently published for the first time as a paperback, the book is a collection of essays that came out of a symposium that drew on the expertise of historians to examine NASA's role in the deep south (and beyond) during the height of the space race and to the present day.
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NASA's $10 billion new telescope showed the world something remarkable today: an image of some of the first galaxies to form in the universe.
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Blue Dot's signature Apollo@50 series continues with the fifth lunar landing mission, Apollo 16. In April of 1972, the crew of Commander John Young, Lunar Module Pilot Charlie Duke, and Command Module Pilot Thomas "Ken" Mattingly set out for the most ambitious science mission to date to explore the mysteries of the Descartes Highlands.
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Blue Dot Dave talks with two of the researchers whose proposals have been selected as well as the acting executive overseeing the program for NASA HQ.
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Host Dave Schlom gets to talk about one of his favorite topics, spaceflight history, with NASA/JPL Historian Eric Conway.
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Host Dave Schlom helps profile two NASA missions, one about to begin and one that has just been completed.
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Host Dave is joined by special guest co-host Dr. Kendall Hall (Professor of Physics CSU Chico) to visit with James Webb Space Telescope science team member Dr. Charles Beichman, the Executive Director of NASA's Exoplanet Science Institute at CalTech in Pasadena.
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Host Dave Schlom talks to two scientists studying the solar system but in very different ways.
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Dave convenes a panel of experts on something that is the most important topic of the 21st century: climate change.