Big Picture Science - Radical Cosmology
(Repeat) 400 years ago, some ideas about the cosmos
were too scandalous to mention. When the Dominican friar Giordano Bruno
suggested that planets existed outside our Solar System, the Catholic
Inquisition had him arrested, jailed, and burned at the stake for heresy.
Today, we have evidence of thousands of
planets orbiting other stars. Our discovery of extrasolar planets has
dramatically changed ideas about the possibility for life elsewhere in the
universe.
Modern theories about the existence of the
ghostly particles called neutrinos or of collapsed stars with unfathomable
gravity (black holes), while similarly incendiary, didn’t prompt arrest, of
course. Neutrinos and black holes were arresting ideas because they came
decades before we had the means to prove their existence.
Hear about scientific ideas that came before
their time and why extrasolar planets, neutrinos, and black holes are now found
on the frontiers of astronomical research.
Guests:
- Alberto Martínez – Professor of history, University of Texas, Austin, and author of Burned Alive: Giordano Bruno, Galileo & the Inquisition
- Anne Schukraft – Associate scientist, Fermilab National Accelerator Laboratory
- Ephraim Fischbach – Professor of physics and astronomy, Perdue University
- Chris Impey – Professor of astronomy, University of Arizona, and author of Einstein’s Monsters: The Life and Times of Black Holes
This repeat podcast originally aired on February 18, 2019
Download podcast at - http://bigpicturescience.org/episodes/radical-cosmology
You can listen to this and other episodes at http://bigpicturescience.org/, and be sure to check out Blog Picture Science, the companion blog to the radio show.
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