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Science Friday

Florence Flooding, Algorithms, Dino Demise. Sept. 14, 2018, Part 1

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Science, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Friday

4.4 • 6.3K Ratings

🗓️ 14 September 2018

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Last month, California passed a bill ending the use of cash bail. Instead of waiting in jail or putting down a cash deposit to await trial at home, defendants are released after the pleadings. The catch? Not everyone gets this treatment. It’s not a judge who determines who should and shouldn’t be released; it’s an algorithm. Algorithms have also been used to figure out which incarcerated individuals should be released on parole. Mathematician Hannah Fry and computer scientist Suresh Venkatasubramanian join Ira to discuss how algorithms are being used not only in the justice system, but in healthcare and data mining too.  As Hurricane Florence approaches the Carolinas this week, forecasters and disaster management officials are stressing one key piece of advice to evacuating residents: Take the storm seriously, regardless of the category designation. Once projected to hit Category 4, Florence was at Category 2 as of Thursday morning, but that number only describes the wind speed. Meanwhile, as University of California-Irvine civil engineer Amir AghaKouchak notes, there could be unusually devastating flooding, as storm surge from the ocean meets rainfall from a storm that is projected to pour on the region for days. “Compound flooding” is the phenomenon that left Houston under water after Hurricane Harvey in 2017, and, at its worse, could cause rivers to run in reverse. And, AghaKouchak says, climate change and sea level rise both make such flooding more likely in storms like Florence. The prevailing theory says a meteorite led to the demise of the dinos. But Gerta Keller, a longtime geologist and paleontologist, isn’t buying it, and says volcanoes were the real culprit. The latest episode of Undiscovered tells her story, and asks whether conflict among scientists really makes science stronger. Co-hosts Elah Feder and Annie Minoff join Ira for a preview. Subscribe to Undiscovered wherever you get your podcasts.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato, broadcasting from the studios of K-U-E-R-N-P-R-U-T-R-U-T-R in Salt Lake City today.

0:08.5

Later in the hour, a look at how algorithms are creeping into our everyday lives.

0:13.4

Have you had a personal run-in with an algorithm in your day-to-day life?

0:17.9

Share it with us. Give us a call. Our number is 844-724-8255-844-Sai Talk, or you can tweet us at

0:26.8

SciFRI. But first, the EPA is considering changing its rules for how certain emissions of the

0:32.7

greenhouse gas methane are regulated. It's a change favored by oil and gas producers, but not favored by climate

0:40.0

change scientists. Here to talk about that and other selected short subjects in sciences, Amy Nordrum,

0:46.1

news editor at the ICCLEE spectrum in New York. Welcome back, Amy.

0:50.0

Hi, Ira. Thank you. You're welcome. So what's going on with these new methane emission rules?

0:54.9

Well, the EPA requires oil and gas companies to regularly inspect all of their equipment for methane leaks.

1:01.2

And they also require these companies to report leaks that they do find.

1:04.8

Now, with these new rules, the EPA is giving companies more time to report a leak and repair it once they find it,

1:11.1

and also more time between mandatory inspections that they have to conduct on their equipment.

1:15.7

So basically they're doubling the amount of time.

1:18.3

So if they had to inspect their wells twice a year for methane leaks,

1:22.3

now they'll have to just do it once a year.

1:23.7

And if they were previously required to repair a methane leak within 30 days,

1:27.5

now they have about 60 days to do that. So a lot of environmentalists are not quite happy with this.

1:33.2

Right. Yeah. They're saying that this change in regulations could lead to more leaks that are found

1:38.6

less frequently, so more methane leaking out into the atmosphere. And methane is a very potent greenhouse

1:43.1

gas. It's 25 times more

1:45.2

effective at trapping heat in the atmosphere than CO2. But of course, the industry is very happy about this

...

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