meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Science Friday

DART Asteroid Mission, Rescue Robots, Raccoon Vaccination, Medical Marijuana and Workplace Rules, Lanternfly Signals. Sept 30, 2022, Part 2

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Friday, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Science

4.46.3K Ratings

🗓️ 30 September 2022

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

After Hurricane Ian, Robots To The Rescue Hurricane Ian made landfall in southwest Florida Wednesday, with winds over 150 miles per hour, high storm surge and heavy rains. As the storm, now weaker, is projected to move northward, search and rescue operations are setting out to assess the damage – with help from robots, both flying and swimming. Producer Christie Taylor talks with David Merrick, who is leading the emergency management team responsible for flying drones over areas hit by disasters like Ian, about what it takes to use robots in these contexts and how they help speed up response and recovery efforts.   Vague Medical Marijuana Rules Leave Workers and Employers in the Dark Vague legal safeguards for medical marijuana users in Pennsylvania are forcing patients to choose between their job and a drug they say has changed their life, and leaving skittish employers vulnerable to lawsuits, according to a three-month Spotlight PA investigation. While state law protects workers from being fired or denied a job just for having a doctor’s permission to use marijuana, those protections become opaque when people actually take the drug — regardless of whether they do it in their personal time. “It essentially makes no sense,” Pittsburgh attorney John McCreary Jr., who represents employers, told Spotlight PA. Some jobs are specifically regulated by state and federal drug testing rules, but most fall into a gray area that leaves the interpretation of the rules up to employers and the courts. That leads to inconsistency and what employers see as a lose-lose scenario: Either risk a wrongful termination suit, or potentially allow an unsafe work environment. Read the rest of the article at sciencefriday.com.   The DART Asteroid Impact Mission: It’s A Cosmic Smash This week, a small spacecraft slammed into an asteroid—on purpose. The mission, known as DART (for ‘Double Asteroid Redirection Test’) was an effort to try out a potential means of planetary defense. NASA wanted to discover: Is it possible to change the path of an approaching asteroid by slamming something into it? On Monday evening, the DART spacecraft slammed into the small asteroid moonlet Dimorphos, which orbits a slightly larger asteroid called Didymos. Pictures taken from onboard the spacecraft showed the rocky, rubbly terrain of Dimorphos approaching closer and closer, then disappearing, while telescopes observing the impact and cameras on a neighboring Italian Space Agency CubeSat showed a plume of debris ejected from the asteroid. Dr. Nancy Chabot, the DART coordination lead and a planetary scientist at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, which built the spacecraft and is managing the mission for NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office, joins host John Dankosky. They talk about the impact, and what scientists hope to learn about asteroids and planetary defense from the crash.   High-Flying Trick-Or-Treat Delivers Rabies Vaccines For Raccoons Rabies is one of the deadliest diseases in the world. It’s fatal in 99% of cases. Because of that, rabies prevention has been one of the most important—and successful—public health initiatives in the US. To contain rabies outbreaks, the USDA leads a mass vaccination effort from August to October to keep the disease from being carried by critters. It’s an action-packed adventure involving raccoons, helicopters, and fish-flavored candy. SciFri’s director of news and audio, John Dankosky, speaks with Jordona Kirby, the rabies field coordinator for the USDA’s National Rabies Management Program. She’s based in Milton, Florida.   Can Lanternflies’ Excretions Be Used To Quell Their Spread? As the invasive spotted lanternfly continues to spread west in the United States, researchers are trying to better understand—and perhaps find a way to control —the behavior of the pretty, but ravenous, insects. Important agricultural crops, including grapes, peaches, and apples are especially at risk from the spreading infestation. As the lanternflies feed on tree sap, they excrete a sweet-smelling liquid known as honeydew. That liquid can attract other insects, and can also allow fungus to grow on affected trees. Writing in the journal Frontiers In Insect Science this week, researchers from the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service report that chemicals in the honeydew may act as a signaling agent among the lanternflies—in some cases attracting others of the species. The finding may help explain the way in which the insects can infest a given tree in huge numbers, while leaving neighboring trees largely alone. John Dankosky talks with the paper’s lead author, Dr. Miriam Cooperband of USDA APHIS, about her research, and whether the finding may lead to a way to bait or repel the invasive insects.   Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm John Dankoski. Ira Flato is away. Hurricane Ian made landfall in

0:07.0

southwest Florida on Wednesday, with winds over 150 miles per hour, high storm surge, and flooding

0:13.7

rains. Search and rescue operations are out assessing the damage that's already been done.

0:18.9

And helping that assessment are search and rescue robots.

0:22.9

Producer Christy Taylor is here with more about that. Hi, Christy. Hey there, John. So what kind of robots

0:28.4

are we talking about here? Yeah, we're talking about robots that can crawl through rubble, fly over flooded

0:34.2

neighborhoods, or even swim to look for, for example, broken bridges.

0:39.2

They can go where people can't, and they can collect really high-resolution images a lot faster than a person could, too.

0:45.7

So that way, the more limited human responders can figure out where to go for rescues and later infrastructure repairs.

0:51.4

So the idea here is that the robots do the search part,

0:54.9

they map where flooding is worst, all that stuff that they do best. And then the humans get to do

0:59.6

what we do best. Right, exactly. And there's even some research out there saying that faster

1:04.4

response times, even by one day, can not only save lives, but also shorten the ensuing recovery

1:09.9

period by months or even years.

1:12.8

David Merrick is Director of the Center for Disaster Risk Policy at Florida State University.

1:17.6

He's an emergency management expert who focuses on those flying robots, so drones and other unmanned aircraft.

1:23.9

And he is, as we speak, sending those aircraft out across Florida.

1:27.5

I got to talk to him first thing yesterday morning.

1:29.6

His team was just about to roll out from the slightly noisy convention center in Orlando that's being used as emergency management headquarters.

1:37.4

We've been here in the Orange County Convention Center now for a day and a half we spent yesterday here.

1:42.5

The wind is going pretty good outside right now, but it looks like the storm has moved south of us pretty well.

1:50.0

So this morning, we're going to pack our vehicles and the hope is as soon as as the winds get below a safety threshold, which is typically tropical storm force winds, so 39 miles an hour, we will start pushing forward into the impacted areas.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Science Friday and WNYC Studios, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Science Friday and WNYC Studios and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.