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Supanova Week Continues… As We Recap Talkin’ Trek with Lee Sargent
Across 2019 illustrator and friend of the show, Lee Sargent, beamed in for a series of podcasts about Star Trek. This is That Time When Lee beamed in to talk
Across 2019 illustrator and friend of the show, Lee Sargent, beamed in for a series of podcasts about Star Trek. This is That Time When Lee beamed in to talk
Supanova Week starts now… While the Strange New Worlds production office handles a Covid case in the guest cast, we’re hearing rumours again of a new Star Trek movie. Plus
We’re flashing back to That Time When We Met David Mack, acclaimed author whose has written in the 24, Farscape and Star Trek universes.
It’s a comet that has the astronomical community. Is it from beyond our solar system? Is it made up of pebbles or something finer? Join Matt as he chats with
As a seven year project to build a space debris hunting laser at Mount Stromlo comes to fruition, we celebrate 60 years since Yuri Gagarin and 40 years since the
We’re flashing back to That Time When we met author Dayton Ward, as we kick off a fortnight of looking at the literature of Star Trek. Catch this interview in
So much awesomeness was packed into Monday’s First Contact Day panels, so we’re taking six minutes to give you what you need to know, including our easter egg breakdown of
We’re thrilled to welcome expedition 64’s flight engineer to Talkin’ Science. Colonel Mark Vande Hei beams in from the Baikonur Cosmodrome to chat to Matt about the mission ahead of
Bill and Dan, The Trek Geeks, are back on Trekzone to help us wrap up all the juicy tidbits we learnt from Paramount+’s First Contact Day panels…
On this Talkin’ Science – Australia will have it’s own space command next year, joining other world powers in orbit. Astronomers have gotten a pretty good view of 2I/Borisov, as
Michael Davis AO beams in to chat about the Aussie Space Forum that took place in Adelaide last week.
Desperate for shore leave on Nova Atar, the Enterprise is constantly waylayed by a string of seemingly random assignments from Starfleet Command. Ultimately all is not as it appears as
It’s The News from Trekzone. On this edition, Paramount+ is gearing up for three hours of panels about Star Trek, To The Journey gets funded – the highest total for
Dr Graham Walker loves his job and he loves teaching others about science too. It’s all part of his outreach program that’s taken him to Africa, Asia and even right
We’ve been checking in to Supanova since 2013, meeting the guests they bring to our shores for the fans. Now as 2021 rolls on, and with Covid-19 relatively under control
We’re following three pretty big stories this week on Talkin’ Science. As Japan launches a space junk hunter, French wine that spent a year on the space station gets taste
Australia’s first sovereign orbital rocket designed and built has finally cleared all regulatory hurdles, and
International researchers have found a giant planet transiting a very young star, in research that indicates this could be the youngest transiting planet found to date.
New analysis of marsquakes, which are similar to earthquakes, could offer clues into how Mars has evolved over billions of years, according to new research from The Australian National University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Researchers from the Curtin node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research say they have made a record-breaking astrophysical discovery while simultaneously uncovering a possible explanation for the rare and extreme event known as long-period radio transients.
The Voyager 2 flyby of Uranus in 1986 may have occurred during a rare intense wind event, according to international researchers who say this means our scientific understanding of the planet may be flawed.
Astronauts perform tasks slower in space, but a new study involving 25 professional astronauts has found no evidence of brain damage once they returned to Earth.
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Australia’s first sovereign orbital rocket designed and built has finally cleared all regulatory hurdles, and now sits poised on the launchpad in Bowen as it
International researchers have found a giant planet transiting a very young star, in research that indicates this could be the youngest transiting planet found to date.
New analysis of marsquakes, which are similar to earthquakes, could offer clues into how Mars has evolved over billions of years, according to new research from The Australian National University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
It’s the end of the third week in February twenty twenty five. Here’s the science and space headlines we followed…
Researchers from the Curtin node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research say they have made a record-breaking astrophysical discovery while simultaneously uncovering a possible explanation for the rare and extreme event known as long-period radio transients.
The Voyager 2 flyby of Uranus in 1986 may have occurred during a rare intense wind event, according to international researchers who say this means our scientific understanding of the planet may be flawed.
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