23 episodes

Podcast from the University of Michigan's Museum of Natural History

University of Michigan Museum of Natural History Podcast University of Michigan Museum of Natural History

    • Science

Podcast from the University of Michigan's Museum of Natural History

    Pollinators

    Pollinators

    Recently the University of Michigan has been awarded the Bee Campus USA designation because of its commitment to pollinator conservation. Listen to this podcast that includes expert insight to this award and what you can be doing in your own garden!

    • 27 min
    Science Cafe: Extreme Science! Dark Matter and Dark Energy Research

    Science Cafe: Extreme Science! Dark Matter and Dark Energy Research

    Sometimes scientists must go to the ends of the earth, and even deep underground, to see the unseen! Join us and meet two charismatic researchers from the U-M Department of Physics who do just that. Bjoern Penning studies dark matter a mile underground in the former Homestake gold mine in Lead, South Dakota, using Lux-Zeplin, the world's most sensitive dark matter experiment. Marcelle Soares Santos contributed to the construction of the Dark Energy Camera on a mountaintop in Chile, one of the largest telescope cameras in the world, which she now employs to search for gravitational wave-emitting collisions of neutron stars and black holes. Bring your physics questions for this exciting conversation!

    • 1 hr 7 min
    Science Café: Climate Solutions: Renewable Energy Storage and Carbon Capture

    Science Café: Climate Solutions: Renewable Energy Storage and Carbon Capture

    How can renewables such as wind and solar energy produce power for use when the sun isn't shining or the wind ebbs? How can we capture the carbon dioxide that is already in the atmosphere?
    Join Charles McCrory of the U-M Department of Chemistry and David Kwabi of the U-M Department of Mechanical Engineering to discuss new research on renewable energy storage: using renewable electricity to charge batteries and produce chemical fuels like hydrogen that can be used for later energy generation.
    We'll also discuss how renewable energy may be used to mitigate climate change by capturing and storing atmospheric carbon dioxide, or converting it into useful products.

    • 57 min
    Science Café: Mapping ocean biodiversity hotspots

    Science Café: Mapping ocean biodiversity hotspots

    How does ocean biodiversity change over deep time? Join Matt Friedman, director of the U-M Museum of Paleontology, and Hernán López-Fernández, chair for collections and curator of fishes in the U-M Museum of Zoology. We will discuss how Matt uses old fossil fishes to answer new questions about biodiversity hotspots in ancient oceans. Hernán will help us consider how this research can shed light on the biodiversity changes we see today.
    Originally recorded November 16, 2022

    • 1 hr 8 min
    Science Café: Of the Galaxy, and Beyond—Photos from the Webb telescope

    Science Café: Of the Galaxy, and Beyond—Photos from the Webb telescope

    The James Webb Space Telescope increases the clarity and resolution of space photography, both within our galaxy and beyond. What do these photos tell us so far and what can we expect in the future? What does it take to put a project like this together? Join Professor and Chair Ted Bergin from the U-M Department of Astronomy as we celebrate the return of Science Cafés with an out-of-this-world conversation.
     
    Originally recorded on October 26, 2022. 

    • 1 hr 15 min
    Science Café: Something Fishy in Lake Michigan

    Science Café: Something Fishy in Lake Michigan

    Great Lakes fisheries are managed intensively to reduce nutrients from fertilizer runoff and to increase game fish populations such as trout and salmon. When you add invasive species such as non-native mussels and the possibility of carp, we have a very fragile system. Join us to discuss the past, present, and possible futures of Lake Michigan fisheries with Bo Bunnell of the U.S.G.S. Great Lakes Science Center and U-M School for Environment and Sustainability, Yu-Chun Kao of MSU's Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability, and Ed Rutherford of the NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Lab.
    Originally recorded on February 19, 2020. 

    • 1 hr 11 min

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