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Sidedoor

Lights Out

Sidedoor

Smithsonian Institution

Sidedoor, National Zoo, Exhibits, National Museum, Zoo, Washington, African American History And Culture, Postal Museum, Exhibit, Society & Culture, American History, Pop Culture, History, Art19, Air And Space, Science, The Smithsonian, Tony Cohn, Museum, Smithsonian, History Of The World, Natural History, Dc

4.6 • 2.3K Ratings

🗓️ 15 March 2023

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Most people in North America can't see the Milky Way. The reason? We're ensconced in a luminous fog of artificial lighting 24/7. The evolution of lighting technology over the last century has made it possible to live, work, and play at any hour - day or night. But light pollution affects all life on earth, from humans to plants and insects. So, how did we find ourselves surrounded by a glowing shroud of electricity... and can we have the dark, without giving up the light?

Guests: 

Hal Wallace, curator of electricity collections at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History 
Lisbeth Fuisz, coordinating director, Lights Out D.C. 
Brian Schmidt, museum specialist, Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History 
Diane Turnshek, Astronomer; Dark Skies Advocate

This episode was produced in collaboration with the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History's exhibition: Lights Out: Recovering Our Night Sky. Through over 100 photographs, nearly 250 objects, interactive experiences, tactile models, and a theater program, discover why dark nights matter, rekindle your connection with the night sky, and consider how much light at night is enough—for whom, for what purpose, and who gets to decide?

Lights Out: Recovering Our Night Sky is open March 23, 2023 - TBA. 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Side Door, a podcast from the Smithsonian with support from PRX.

0:13.4

I'm Lizzie Peabody.

0:24.1

Diane Ternshek loves stars.

0:26.9

I have a countertop that looks like the Milky Way in cement with embedded hundreds of

0:33.3

fiber optic cables for stars.

0:36.0

And she's always loved stars.

0:38.4

Ever since she was a little kid.

0:39.8

I used to tell people I wanted to be a theoretical nuclear astrophysicist.

0:45.8

And when you're seven and you say that, people's eyes bugger.

0:48.7

Yeah.

0:49.7

And I kind of, I like that.

0:51.3

I like that expression on people's faces.

0:53.8

So I was like, oh, I better do that thing.

0:55.8

I've told everyone this is what I want now to do it.

0:59.4

And Diane did that thing.

1:01.2

She went to school.

1:02.2

She became an astronomer.

1:04.2

Ended up with a graduate degree, but then having children changed that.

1:11.3

Diane chose to step away from her career to raise her four boys in Pittsburgh.

1:15.6

But once they got older, she was ready to turn her gaze skyward again.

1:20.0

The Mars Desert Research Station was actively accepting applicants.

1:24.8

In fact, anybody can go.

...

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