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Unexpected Elements

The James Webb Space Telescope - the first 6 months

Unexpected Elements

BBC

Science

4.4568 Ratings

🗓️ 1 January 2023

⏱️ 64 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has produced amazing images in its first 5 months, but amazing science as well. Roland hears from one of the leading astronomers on the JWST programme, Dr Heidi Hammel, as well as other experts on what they are already learning about the first galaxies in the Universe, the birth places of stars, the strange behaviour of some other stars, and the first view of Neptune's rings in over 30 years.

Over the past 12 months, CrowdScience has travelled the world, from arctic glacierscapes to equatorial deserts, to answer listeners’ science queries. Sometimes, the team come across tales that don’t quite fit with the quest in hand, but still draw a laugh, or a gasp. In this show, Marnie Chesterton revisits those stories, with members of the CrowdScience crew.

Alex the Parrot was a smart bird, with an impressive vocabulary and the ability to count and do basic maths. He was also intimidating and mean to a younger parrot, Griffin, who didn’t have the same grasp of the English language. Scientist Irene Pepperberg shares the consequence of this work-place bullying. 

Take a tour of the disaster room at ICPAC, the IGAD Climate Prediction and Applications Centre (ICPAC) based in Nairobi, Kenya. It’s a new building where scientists keep watch for weird new weather and passes that information to 11 East African countries. Viola Otieno is an Earth Observation (EO) Expert and she explained how they track everything from cyclones to clouds of desert locust.

Malcolm MacCallum is curator of the Anatomical Museum at Edinburgh University in Scotland, which holds a collection of death masks and skull casts used by the Edinburgh Phrenological Society. Phrenology was a pseudoscience, popular in the 1820s, where individuals attempted to elucidate peoples’ proclivities and personalities by the shape of their heads. We see what the phrenologists had to say about Sir Isaac Newton and the “worst pirate” John Tardy.

While recording on Greenland’s icesheet, the CrowdScience team were told by Professor Jason Box about “party ice.” 40,000 year old glacial ice is a superior garnish for your cocktail than normal freezer ice, apparently. This starts a quest for the perfect Arctic cocktail.

Image: An image from the James Webb Space Telescope (Credit: Nasa via PA)

Transcript

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0:00.0

Oh, hello. You have chosen a BBC podcast, but before you listen to it, we thought you might

0:04.7

like our podcast too. You might. You might. It is called Sightracked with me, Nick Grimshaw.

0:09.2

And me, Annie Mack. And we talk about the week in music. All the news, all the cultural

0:14.0

happenings in the UK and beyond. And great guests. And it's on BBC Sounds. Yes, where you can

0:19.7

also enjoy lots of playlists, music mixes and

0:22.6

live radio, everything from my six music breakfast show to Radio 3 Unwind. But obviously start

0:29.2

with our podcast sidetrack. Obviously. Obviously. So if you like music, listen on BBC

0:33.7

Sounds. Thank you for downloading the Science Hour from the BBC World Service with me, Roland Peace.

0:39.4

Later in the podcast, Crowd Science looks back over 2022, not at the things you heard,

0:45.3

but the things you didn't hear.

0:47.3

Over the course of this episode, I bring you a case of workplace bullying, but with parrots.

0:52.6

You'll get the lowdown on our search for the perfect

0:55.0

cocktail ice made with 40,000-year-old glacier. We travel to Kenya to visit the disaster

1:01.1

room, where scientists keep watch for weird new weather, and I'll take you to where the bodies

1:06.5

aren't buried. Yes, you get to meet the best and the worst of humanity preserved by a special

1:12.8

society who thought they could tell which you were just by looking at your face.

1:17.5

And it's a treasure trove. Join Marni and the team later. In talking of treasure troves,

1:23.0

it was a year and a few days ago on Christmas Day indeed that astronomers around the world received what's turned out to be the most incredible gift.

1:38.9

And we have engine start and lift-off.

1:44.7

Decolage lift-off from a tropical rainforest to the edge of time itself.

1:49.7

James Webb begins a voyage back to the birth of the universe.

1:53.3

After years of construction delays, cost overruns, even hold-ups on the launch.

...

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