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Science... sort of

328 - Redox Violations

Science... sort of

Brachiolope

Of, Science, Network, Paleopals, Media, Brachiolope, Natural Sciences, Sort

4.8677 Ratings

🗓️ 24 September 2020

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

00:00:00 - Phosphine has been detected in the atmosphere of Venus, where it shouldn’t exist. How could it have formed in detectable quantities? One explanation could be microbes living in a habitable zone high in the Venusian atmosphere, so that’s neat.

00:25:00 - Drinks would not exist for long on Venus due to the extreme heat, but here on Earth they go down just fine. Ben has a horchata-flavored drink which sounds delightful. Charlie has some coffee roasted by a buddy of his who is now selling his beans online at The Deer and the Bear, check it out! And Ryan has The Great Return IPA from Hardywood Park Craft Brewery which helps support restorations efforts of the James River in Richmond, VA, so that’s good.

00:32:53 - Our moon is a notably dry place with no oxygen, but an Indian probe recently detected hematite, aka rust, at the lunar poles. How could rust form in such an environment? Orbital dynamics and Earth’s magnetotail may provide the answer.

00:46:29 - PaleoPOWs are a lot like rust on the moon, you’re surprised to find it and not sure what to do with it now that you have it. First, Ryan thanks Rocky LaDuque for reposting Episode 77 to his own SoundCloud page, didn’t even know that was a thing but very grateful for it! Next, Charlie reads an e-mail from Stephanie from Travelcraft Journal who found us because we used her photo (with credit) when talking about the science behind spilled lattes. Finally, we come up with a BSso thesis for longtime supporter and homebrewer Richard P. who has earned his fake degree with a thesis entitled: Random Underdeveloped Simulation Test (RUST): Density and Temperature Gradient Stratification of S. cerevisiae during the fermentation of beer as an analog model for Phosine-generating microbial life in the atmosphere of Venus. Thanks, Richard!

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Audio Production by Rob Heath
Music credit: Tentative Cloud - Podington Bear

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Can we do Venus first since that's the hot story?

0:02.4

Sure.

0:02.9

Yeah.

0:03.5

Okay.

0:04.2

It's the hottest place in the solar system.

0:07.3

Nah, Ben.

0:08.1

The sun.

0:09.5

Whoa!

0:10.8

You just got got.

0:12.3

From science sort of.com, you're listening to Science Sort of this is episode 328. Our theme, this episode is Redox Violations. I am your host Ryan and joining me to talk about

0:39.8

things that are science, things that are sort of science and things that wish they were science

0:43.1

returning from out of the mountains. It's Ben Tivet. Hello everybody. How's it going? It's going

0:49.7

terribly. I was asking the listener. Oh, I'm answering for them. I'm just going to listen.

0:55.7

And emerging from the haze of the West Coast, it's Charlie Barnhart.

1:00.5

Pleasure to be here. And yeah, my air quality, I think, is sub-50 now, which is still horrible for Bellingham, but pretty good.

1:07.7

What color is the sky?

1:09.7

The sky is white with lenticular clouds and blue peeping through

1:16.4

in between. Nice. And if you were to go to the next planet over and look up, what color would

1:23.0

the sky be then? Brilliant white. It really? Is it white from the surface of Venus?

1:28.4

Oh, from the surface?

1:30.5

Dengy yellow, green, brown.

1:34.6

Yeah.

...

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