Strange Universe
Sundays, 9:35 a.m.
Astronomer Bob Berman sheds light on the mysteries of space and time. Always fascinating and fun, Strange Universe will take you places you never knew existed. Learn why Betelgeuse sometimes goes weirdly dim and how after the totality in 2017 in places like Wyoming and the Carolinas, millions finally got to see a total solar eclipse.
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanOnce in a while, the sky offers a profusion of great beauty that happens to lie slightly below the limit of what the eye can see. That’s when you need a good pair of binoculars. Tune in to hear what phases of the moon you can expect to see.
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanSaturn always wins the Miss Universe contest. For anyone with a telescope, there are hardly any runners-up. Saturn is just a knockout, and even 60 power is plenty to show it well. The big question is simply where and when to look. Well the when is right now, these nights. The "where" is the constellation Aquarius.
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanThis week we’ll see a Perseid meteor shower. But if clouds spoil the spectacle for you, there will be lingering meteors. This shower’s intensity falls off rapidly after peak, so later you might only see a meteor every 3 minutes after midnight. Tune in to hear about the reddish stars and what to check for the in the sky!
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanEveryone loves shooting stars. And twice each year we get famous meteor showers, when their numbers explode to very nearly one per minute. That’s what’s happening now. And these Perseids will keep intensifying until their peak a week from now.
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanA century ago the famed astronomer Percival Lowell believed an unknown “planet X” was gravitationally tugging on Uranus and Neptune. So the wealthy Lowell founded an Arizona observatory to try to detect this ninth planet. We’re reminded of all this because this past week is when Pluto has come to its closest to Earth of 2024.
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanOne of the all-time lowest Full Moons you’ll ever see graces us this month, but the real fun happens a few nights from then as the “star” closest to the Moon, Saturn, is at its biggest and brightest of the entire year. Hear how to spot Saturn and why it’s hard to locate.
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanBastille Day is here and we had our own Independence Day fireworks just recently as well. So speaking of explosions, unimaginable violence is up in the sky too – and keeps happening. The greatest are supernovas. Tune in to hear how these cause a star’s total destruction.
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanWhat a year we’re having. First we got to see a super-rare total solar eclipse, when the Moon completely covered the Sun. And now this week, almost as rare, the Moon will eclipse a far more distant star, a famous blue one. When a star is blocked by the Moon, it’s called an occultation, and it rarely happens to one of the few truly bright stars that happen to be positioned along the Moon’s path.
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanAll the interactions in the universe can be explained by gravity, electromagnetism, and the two forces, strong and weak, that operate only within atoms. This week: The String Theory.
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Strange Universe With Bob BermanFor the first time since 1985, the Full Moon happens precisely on the summer solstice. Tune in to hear the process of the moon’s explosive brightening.