science podcast #80

Saving Lebanon’s Cedar Trees, Black Carbon & Climate Change

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This week: We’re going to Lebanon for a story on threatened cedar trees. Then to Sweden and India to learn about a greenhouse pollutant that’s been making headlines lately – black carbon. This month seems to be one of astronomical discoveries – scientists have discovered a new magnetar. Also, Elsa is back from vacation and brings us news about birds and insect and tips on pouring Champagne. And we’re still talking online about volunteer computing projects in our Science Forum discussion. So please stop by with your comments and questions.

Saving Lebanon’s Legendary Cedars: Cedars have been an important part of life in Lebanon for at least 8,000 years, but they’re vanishing from the landscape. Ari Daniel Shapiro reports on efforts to preserve Lebanon’s legendary cedar trees.
Report by: Ari Daniel Shapiro
See a slide show of Ari’s trip to see Lebanon’s Cedars.

Elsa’s Favorite Science Stories:

Black Carbon from Cook Stoves: The leading pollutant blamed for climate change is carbon dioxide, but a new study says another form of carbon ranks a close second. So-called black carbon is a kind of soot produced by diesel engines, power plants, and the burning of wood. A major source of black carbon is cook stoves in the developing world, and scientists are now trying to clean those stoves up.
Report by: Rhitu Chatterjee
See a slide show of my pictures from rural India.
Controlling Soot Emissions Can Help Slow Climate Change, Wired
Black Carbon’s grey areas, by the Yale Forum on Climate Change & The Media.
Black carbon and atmospheric warming, a recent paper by V. Ramanathan.
More about Ramanathan’s latest black carbon studies.

New Magnetar Discovered: Scientists have discovered a rare magnetic star, or magnetar. It’s about 16,000 light years away in a star cluster called Westerlund 1, in the Ara constellation. Magnetars, a type of neutron star, form when stars collapse following a supernova explosion. This magnetar was formed from a star 40 times the size the Sun. Stars that big typically form black holes. The new discovery has led scientists to re-evaluate their theories about what happens to stars when they die.
Read more on the BBC’s website.
More about the new discovery here.


Fly through the Westerland 1 star cluster to see an artist’s illustration of the newly found magnetar. Credit: ESO/L. Calçada.
Scientists recently discovered another kind of neutron star last week – a pulsar. Check out that story in last week’s podcast.

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