Robert Krulwich: The Fruitless Search For Solar Systems Like Ours

Scientists have found hundreds of big, gassy planets that orbit close to "their" star, though solar systems with small rocky planets, like ours, have been elusive. This might be because they are hard to detect using existing techniques, but an astronomer says he’s getting a bit nervous. He doesn’t want to think that we are the exception rather than the rule. (http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=125468427)

Featured on Forgotten Classics, episode 119 (http://hcforgottenclassics.blogspot.com)

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  1. NPR: Lucy’ Laugh Enlivens the Solar System

    NPR: Krulwich on Science: Lucy’s Laugh Enlivens the Solar System

    In 1951, when CBS first broadcast the I Love Lucy show, Ricky, Lucy, Fred and Ethel became electromagnetic signals traveling at nearly the speed of light to receivers all over America, where they got bounced on to our living rooms and into our lives.

    But not all those signals stayed on Earth.

    —Huffduffed by sdanielson 4 years ago

  2. Guardian Science Weekly: Brian Cox’s Wonders of the Solar System

    Nell Boase and the team chat to Brian Cox about his new TV series and the latest developments at the LHC; we learn why the Flat Earth Society raises genuine questions for science; breaking news from the AAAS; and Lord Robert Winston on anticipating the dangers of new technology

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/blog/audio/2010/mar/01/science-weekly-podcast-brian-cox

    —Huffduffed by pip 3 years ago

  3. Hmmm … Robert Krulwich on Science: Sudden Love—A Very Improbable Valentine

    She was a gorilla. Barb was a human. And between them, the strangest thing happened. (http://www.npr.org/rss/rss.php?id=5500502)

    Featured as podcast highlight on Forgotten Classics, episode 119. (http://hcforgottenclassics.blogspot.com)

    —Huffduffed by JulieD 3 years ago