
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The sun might not shape the pattern of our daily lives to the extent it did in the past. But understanding its behaviour is a focus of scientific research to grasp how activity on the surface of the sun - such as geomagnetic storms - can affect life on earth. "Space weather" can take out whole power networks, damage satellites and disrupt communication lines – the technology on which so many people rely.
Bridget Kendall and guests examine the sun's impact throughout history, and discuss what we know about its internal structure and magnetic fields.
Claire Raftery is a solar physicist and the Head of Education and Outreach at the National Solar Observatory in Boulder, Colorado; Philip Judge is a senior scientist at the High Altitude Observatory also in Boulder, Colorado. He’s written many papers on aspects of solar physics, as well as a book entitled The Sun: A Very Short Introduction; and philosopher Emma Carenini is the author of The Sun: Myths, History and Societies which considers how the sun has shaped philosophy and thought.
Producer: Fiona Clampin
(Photo: Post-Flare Loops Erupt From Suns Surface. Credit: Nasa/Getty Images)
By BBC World Service4.7
265265 ratings
The sun might not shape the pattern of our daily lives to the extent it did in the past. But understanding its behaviour is a focus of scientific research to grasp how activity on the surface of the sun - such as geomagnetic storms - can affect life on earth. "Space weather" can take out whole power networks, damage satellites and disrupt communication lines – the technology on which so many people rely.
Bridget Kendall and guests examine the sun's impact throughout history, and discuss what we know about its internal structure and magnetic fields.
Claire Raftery is a solar physicist and the Head of Education and Outreach at the National Solar Observatory in Boulder, Colorado; Philip Judge is a senior scientist at the High Altitude Observatory also in Boulder, Colorado. He’s written many papers on aspects of solar physics, as well as a book entitled The Sun: A Very Short Introduction; and philosopher Emma Carenini is the author of The Sun: Myths, History and Societies which considers how the sun has shaped philosophy and thought.
Producer: Fiona Clampin
(Photo: Post-Flare Loops Erupt From Suns Surface. Credit: Nasa/Getty Images)

7,766 Listeners

377 Listeners

891 Listeners

1,066 Listeners

5,474 Listeners

1,823 Listeners

3,249 Listeners

971 Listeners

869 Listeners

611 Listeners

284 Listeners

302 Listeners

1,799 Listeners

1,049 Listeners

2,071 Listeners

481 Listeners

297 Listeners

333 Listeners

161 Listeners

360 Listeners

3,224 Listeners

745 Listeners

1,606 Listeners