
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Quasars, the energetic engines driven by the voracious appetite of supermassive black holes, have been observed in the very early universe, upending ideas about how long it took to form these behemoths in the first place. New results on a peculiar object tagging along around the Sun with the Earth casts doubt on its origin as a possible fragment of the Moon. And the climate takes a swipe at strange quark for complaining about the heat. Check it all out, plus trivia and space news, on Walkabout the Galaxy.
By Joshua Colwell, Adrienne Dove, and James Cooney4.8
116116 ratings
Quasars, the energetic engines driven by the voracious appetite of supermassive black holes, have been observed in the very early universe, upending ideas about how long it took to form these behemoths in the first place. New results on a peculiar object tagging along around the Sun with the Earth casts doubt on its origin as a possible fragment of the Moon. And the climate takes a swipe at strange quark for complaining about the heat. Check it all out, plus trivia and space news, on Walkabout the Galaxy.

348 Listeners

1,353 Listeners

321 Listeners

836 Listeners

2,882 Listeners

569 Listeners

234 Listeners

2,359 Listeners

329 Listeners

381 Listeners

161 Listeners

74 Listeners

105 Listeners

152 Listeners

69 Listeners