Questions | Answers |
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When you go from being a ginger to being bald, do you get your soul back? | In your case? Hopeless. |
What is the craziest misconception that you have had people tell you that they believe? | There is no craziest misconception, I'd say. People believed Nancy Lieder when she said you could see a giant planet everywhere in the sky (which turned out to be lens flares in pictures) but not the big bright comet Hale-Bopp. One guy claims comets are hot and bigger than planets, and he has followers. There's no idea so ridiculous you can't find people to believe it. |
Also what is your greatest achievement in life? | Greatest achievement (mushy, but true): I have a good marriage and a good kid. |
What terrifies you the most in Astronomy? | Gamma-ray bursts, no question. The sheer power of those beams of energy marching across the Universe, the lifetime supply of a star's energy packed into a blowtorch; that makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up. I'm glad they're so far away. |
As an astronomer, you are comfortable working with big numbers. Are you able to quantify just how badass Neil deGrasse Tyson is? | Yes. He is exactly equal to 1000 milliPlaits. |
Considering your knowledge of the cosmos, what out there still makes you look up and just wonder in amazement? | All of it. |
Seriously, all of it. Seeing Venus shining in the west, the crescent Moon with the dark side softly lit by reflected Earthlight, a nebula through a telescope, Cassini pix of Saturn, Hubble shots of supernovae... it all still gets to me. The day it doesn't is they day you can bury me. | |
Your whole "Don't be a dick" speech caused quite a stir in the skeptic community. Do you think it caused any shift in the way people deal with others, or are things pretty much the way they were prior? | I have heard from lots of folks who agreed with me, and lots who didn't. I got great feedback from people who reconsidered how to argue critical thinking topics, and that makes me happy. Of course, some of the others doubled down and dug in. That's to be expected. I don't have objective evidence of the outcome, but studies have shown not attacking your opponent tends to get better results. So I still think I'm right. :) |
I'm a 24 year old doing my PhD in astronomy. My question is, what advice would you give on most effectively doing public outreach? | Good question, and I'm not really sure past saying: go out there and do it. Writer a blog, hep out the local astronomy societies, find out what your department does for EPO. I got a huge start in face-to-face PO by doing the bi-annual star party at the University of Virginia, and I loved it. It taught me a lot on how to relate to the public and explain complicated topics. |
I hope you can make it happen! We need lots more folks like you who want to show the public how awesome astronomy is. | |
What is your favored/most likely doomsday scenario for the Earth? Why are you known as the "Bad Astronomer"? | "Most likely" = asteroid/comet impact, but it's also the one natural disaster we can prevent. We just have to choose to commit ourselves to doing it. They concern me, but I don't lie awake at night in a cold sweat. At least, not because of them. |
As for my nickname, try here. | |
What do you think about the idea that our universe lies inside a black hole? and that the big bang was the creation of a black hole in another universe? Is there any evidence that points to this being plausible? | Well, it's complicated :) but in very rough terms that may not be too far off. I don't think we're inside a black hole as most people think of them - the infinitely dense point where a star has exploded and the core collapsed - but it's certainly possible our Universe branched off as a quantum bubble form another metauniverse. I find that sort of thing fascinating, though I'm certainly no expert in it. What's neat is that there are astronomy missions (like Europe's Planck) designed to observe the cosmic background, the afterglow of the Big Bang, and may see subtle features in it that might indicate our origins. I wrote about that here |
Sorry if you've covered this - link as response okay - but how did you get into astronomy/physics/all that jazz? | Thanks! I love Hardwick and w00tstock. So much fun! |
Loved you at W00tstock, btw. Edit: And on the Nerdist podcast. | I got into all this when I was a wee lad, and my folks bought a cheap telescope. My dad pointed it at Saturn, and that was that. The lesson: always expose kids to science. You never know how far it will take them. |
What are your thoughts on the asteroid mining venture that we have heard of today? Link to www.cbsnews.com (I remember watching your TED talk where you spoke of how we on Earth can deflect the killer asteroid; you also mentioned of the possibility of putting it in orbit for mining) | My thoughts are here. I'll have more soon; the press conference starts in a few minutes! |
How do you feel about education reform in the USA being fronted almost entirely by individuals who have never themselves been professional educators? | Do you mean politicians or local School Boards? If the former, I'm not a fan at all, because of the vast partisan gulf going on right now, and how firmly the political right is denying science - and I want to be clear I do mean Republicans in charge, not necessarily people who just identify as Republicans. I have several pro-science Republican friends, and they hate what's going on with science in the GOP. Ideally, reform would be driven by people in charge who have lots of advisors with lots of experience, and they listen to those advisors. Instead, it tends to be driven by some educational trend with little evidence it works, or worse, a narrow ideology that excludes most of reality. Grrrr. |
Hi Phil. What's your survival plan for when the zombie apocalypse arrives? | I've thought about that, and decided just to join the crowd. I bet brains taste GREAT! |
Hey Phil, what do we know about the precursor to our Sun; our TRUE mother(s)? | Not much, to be honest. The Sun was formed 4.56 billion years ago, which is plenty of time for us to separate out from wherever it was we were born. Plus, the nebula we formed from is certainly long gone after that much time. There's some argument over whether we formed in an Orion Nebula-like huge stellar factory or a smaller, calmer cloud. I'm not sure where the current thinking stands on that. It's kinda neat that a) we can even consider stuff like this, and 2) it's possible we can figure it out! |
Wouldn't mining helium-3 from the moon be more profitable than mining an asteroid?? | Not yet. We have no use for helium-3! Once we have an actual working fusion reactor, then I'll cheer on anyone who wants to collect it. Until then, meh. |
What do you consider your best memory/event of working with Hubble? | Oh man, there are so many. I remember when my boss called me into his office, and showed me a picture of Jupiter's and Saturn's aurorae that were taken using our camera (this shot, in fact) and which hadn't been released yet. We had never seen anything like it. |
I remember finding our first asteroid in the pictures, and figuring out how big and how far away it was (in the main belt, and a half mile or so across)... and not being able to follow up because it was too faint to be seen from the ground! | |
I remember when we thought we might have an actual picture of a planet orbiting another star. I worked feverishly for a month trying to pin it down, and ultimately couldn't do it. Eventually we found it was a background star, but those were exciting weeks. :) | |
So yeah, too many to write about! | |
Have you ever gotten to argue Joe Rogan about the moon landing again? It seems you never got far enough on Penn's radio show. | Nah, after two segments I was done. The first one was light and funny, and it was a lot of fun. The second one he seemed a lot more aggressive, and it had a timbre I didn't care for. That's one reason I didn't do as well in the second one; his attacks surprised me. That was my fault; I should be prepared for such things when arguing against antiscience, and I hope the next time it occurs I'll be better prepared for it. |
How could artificial gravity be achieved, say, on the ISS? | The only real way would be to use spin/centrifugal force, and the ISS isn't designed for it. The stress would tear it apart. But there are some ideas for spacecraft to spin, or to have multiple units tethered together, revolving around the center of mass like two kids holding hands and spinning around. We may need to do stuff like that if we want to have long-duration space missions. There are medical problems with extended periods of microgravity, so we'll have to figure out how to so this. |
What do you consider to be the best route of entry for a scientist wanting to convert to journalism? Do you think a journalism degree is necessary? Or do you think someone with enough experience in their field and a pretty good voice on the page is already qualified enough to do the job? | Hmmm, good question, and I'm not entirely sure. Having journalism experience might be a plus, but I'm not sure it's necessary, especially since there are so few real journalists left. The best bet is to write, write, write. I know it's a cliche, but it's a cliche because it's true. Write for your local paper, write a blog, submit to group websites, whatever. Writing is like any other form of expression; you get better with practice. |
Once your confident, talk to some of the science sites and see if they want contributions. If you have a strong, unique voice you'll have a better chance of getting heard. | |
Do you think Elon Musk has what it takes to get us to Mars? | Yes. |
Eventually. There's a long way to go, of course, and we'll see next week if and when Space X can get to the ISS. But he's got the right idea, and he's pursuing it carefully and logically. And if he can't , there are lots of others who will try. But I think he can. | |
Any advice for amateur astronomy total beginner? | Easy: find a local astronomy club and join! Seriously, that's the best first thing you can do. You can learn a lot that way, and attend star parties to see the sky and get familiar with it and the equipment. |
What's the strangest thing you've observed in space? | When I was working on Hubble, by random chance we got an image of two stars next to each other of almost the exact same brightness. We also got spectra, and the two stars were almost exactly the same. It was bizarre, like a cosmic mirage doubling the image of a single star, but it was definitely two different stars at least a light year apart. They were evolved carbon stars, red giants, and I never was able to figure out why they were so similar. It haunts me to this day. Seriously. |
Have you ever heard of /AskScience? We allow anyone to ask their own science question and we have knowledgeable people in their field of study answer them. I have a feeling you might enjoy it. Please give it a look! ...and feel free to answer some questions while you're at it, heh. ;) | I know about that, and lots of other Q&A sites too. I think they're great and wish I had more time to do stuff like that. But with everything I'm working on, adding something like that to my list would kill me. And I prefer breathing. :) |
Hi Phil, what is your favourite space pic? and why! | That's tough, because there really are so many that are so damn cool. But I love this one and this one, which are the same object (NGC 3603) observed in different ways. |
Here's one I've wondered about - not being an astronomy expert - but I understand it fascinates scientists that galaxies farther away are moving faster than the ones closer to us. If I understand that correctly, it makes sense to me - the ones farther away are also farther back in time, and would be showing less effect of gravity slowing them down, so they WOULD be moving faster....I'm sure I'm missing something. Can you set me straight? | It's not that we see them in the past so we see them when they were moving faster, it's that the Universe itself is expanding, so the ones farther away are moving faster. Think of it this way: take a picture of a hand grenade one second after it explodes. The stuff moving faster moves the farthest in that time, so it's farthest away. |
That's not the best analogy, but it gives you a sense of it. Every galaxy sees every other galaxy moving away from it, and there is no center to the Universe! | |
Here, this and this should help destroy your brain. :) | |
Am I correct in thinking that that famous "Earthrise" photo taken from the moon is misnamed, as the moon is in a tidal-locked orbit, and then Earth would always be in the same spot in the sky from the astronauts' perspective, thus preventing a "rise"? | Yes, but no. :) Apollo 8 was orbiting the Moon at the time, so they did in fact see the Earth rise. If they had been on the Moon's surface, the Earth wouldn't appear to move. Well, not very much; it does move due to the Moon's orbit being elliptical and other factors, but that apparent motion of the Earth in the lunar sky would be small. Look up the term "libration"! That'll help. |
If you had "full control", where would you focus money/time/effort as far as research/exploration/etc is concerned on a near term (<25 years\) timeline and on a far term (>50 years) timeline? | Oh man, I don't know. The politics of that are very complicated, and even with full control there are hard choices to make due to limited budgets, time, personnel. |
But if I could, I would support the idea of near-Earth asteroid exploration, coupled with putting an actual research base on the Moon and a bigger, better space station in orbit. | |
That's for crewed missions. Unmanned, I'd say keep ramping up Mars exploration, send probes to Europa, Enceladus, and Titan to look for life, and build monster telescopes in orbit to observe at all wavelength ranges. Y'know, the easy stuff! | |
Who is your biggest influence in the field of science at the moment? | I don't think I have one, to be honest. It wasn't the specific people who motivated me as a kid, it was the topic, the ideas of science. It still is! But I have lots of friends who inspire me like Neil Tyson, Bill Nye, Carolyn Porco, Amy Mainzer, and many, many more. Mostly that's in outreach, not research. But that's what I do! |
What are some of your favorite trails to bike in the Boulder area? I always see you tweet pics but its usually hard to tell where they are from. | That's not by accident. :) But I bike all over. I prefer to head north, out of town, because that's quieter, and I'm more likely to see cool birds and animals and scenery. But seriously, biking anywhere in Boulder is a joy. I may go out today, in fact. |
How do we know the universe expansion is accelerating? How do we know it will keep accelerating, rather than the idea that we are perhaps still in the phase of the Big Bang where stuff would not have begun to decelerate? | I wrote about this on the blog, and the links (especially under "Related Posts" at the bottom) have your answer. :) |
Should we strive to gain a broad understanding of the universe, but have it be limited to far-away observation and mathematical theory... or should we put all of our effort into one huge, but limited achievement (like sending a colony ship to another star system)? | I don't think we need to make that choice. Why not do both? or at least, put money into understanding what we can while still going for big (but achievable) projects. Traveling to another star is probably not the best bet - takes too long, we don't have the right tech, it would cost too much - but putting a base on the Moon, going to Mars, exploring asteroids... that stuff we can do. And we could still push science as hard as we can by building probes and bigger telescopes. |
Can you suggest some "layman" level experiments that people can do to to debunk popular physics and astronomy myths and misconceptions? Ex; the earth does not revolve around the sun, the earth is less than 6000 years old. | Yup: go to my pal Moriel's site. She has some great stuff there. |
Are there more episodes of Bad Astronomy coming anytime soon? | And nope, no more "Bad Universe". We made three and that was it. New episodes of "How the Universe Works" will come out this summer, and I do talking head stuff in those. Stay Tuned! |
How would you recommend an aspiring science writer break into the field? | See here. :) |
I've been amused by your reviews of Hollywood films and how their science often goes hilariously wrong (Armageddon for one) in the name of entertainment. What TV shows or movies, in your opinion, get it more right than wrong? | Hmmm. Battlestar Galactica did a great job of at least trying very hard to be consistent (they had a science advisor who helped) Come to think of it, Big Bang Theory is pretty good too! For movies, Contact is probably the closest science/astronomy-based movie that got most of it right, and all the important stuff. 2001 did too. |
Hey Phil! As someone who shares a birthday with the hubble (go IRL cakeday), I'm glad that you're here to answer some questions. I just have one; What do you think will be the next revolution in space exploration? I know you mentioned we have an ion drive, but what do you think the next "holy shit" moment of tech will be? | Oooo, good question. I'm not sure. A lot of the stuff being worked on now is incremental, like bigger telescopes, more sensitive instruments, and so on. If we could combine high-thrust (like chemical rockets) and long-duration thrust (like ion drives) then you're really opening up the solar system. Fission/fusion drive? Maybe, but that's a long way off yet. |
Or the Orion drive. That would definitely be a holy crap moment. | |
I enjoyed reading your supposition about what Planetary Resources, Inc. was going to be, and your follow-up. Is this the vision-based long-term thinking that will get us beyond the shorter-term profit-driven LEO arena? | I'm hoping this will be long-term thinking. It sounds like it, and as I wrote on my post about it, it sounds like the investors know what they're getting into. |
Can you give us some more insight into your [and perhaps the astronomer community] expectation and predictions to what it means for the future of the world's space programs? Can you tell us your hopes for advancements in technology as they relate to astronomy in the next 5, 10, or 20 years? | If the company can do what they say, this will be critical. Needing water to live is a pain; it's heavy and can't be compressed, so having it already in space could save billions of dollars and make it way way easier to extend crewed missions (it's also good at absorbing radiation from the Sun). So this is an exciting possibility. |
I have a 10" Dobsonian, but I'm stuck in the suburbs 99% of the year. What deep-sky objects would you recommend as targets for a almost-city sky? We've become close friends with the planets, but there's not much in the Messier catalog that we can see. Also, you're the man. | Yeah, that's tough. At some point, there's not much you can do except load it into the back of a pickup and get away from the lights. But things like M42, M31 for fuzzies, clusters like M35, M41, M13 and others are still cool through a big aperture even in light polluted skies. like I've said before, find a local astronomy club! That usually helps. |
Top 5 tips for aspiring science communicators? | 1) Communicate. |
2) Communicate. | |
3) Communicate. | |
4) Communicate. | |
5) Communicate. | |
IOW, practice. Get out there and do it. Write, blog, talk, whatever. The more you do it the better you'll get, and the more likely people will listen. If the most talented communicator in the world sits at home and plays video games all the time, they're not the world's best communicator. They're the world's least efficient one. | |
How concievable / plausible is panspermia? | I think it's entirely plausible, but difficult to prove. It also pushes the origin of life problem back one step! But it's always good to know more - maybe it was easier for life to start on Mars than on Earth. If that's the case, wouldn't it be cool to know for sure? |
What do you think of the fact that there is a sequel series to Cosmos coming out in a year or two (I don't remember the date that was mentioned)? Do you think you might be making an appearance on it? | I think it's great! Neil Tyson will do a fantastic job with it, and Seth MacFarlane, the co-creator of the reboot, is a major science dork. I have no idea if they'll ask me to be in it, but if it's like the old show then it'll mostly be the host - Neil - in various astronomical situations. The old show didn't have interviews and such. I actually hope they go that way; all the other shows do interviews, and this one should be different. |
Have you ever thought about changing your first name to "Yo"? | Yes. It was my second choice; Dannon was already taken. |
Do you agree with Stephen Hawking that we shouldn't attempt to contact alien civilizations or do you have a different opinion? What do you feel about the likelihood of other civilizations in our own galaxy? | I think that the tech to find other civilizations isn't all that hard to make, so us broadcasting our existence doesn't make much difference. And if they want to come here and eat our resources, there's not much we can do anyway. :) ]I wrote about this briefly](Link to blogs.discovermagazine.com when he made that statement, in fact. |
I think alien life is likely, but I'm agnostic about intelligent life as we understand intelligence. But the conditions for life to arise appear to be pretty easy to make, and we know there are lots of planets out there! So life is very likely IMO. | |
Do you remember your first really big "oh wow!" moment? Mine was pointing a telescope at a bright light in the sky and seeing Jupiter & Saturn for the first time. | Yup, same here. It was seeing Saturn through as small cheap 'scope my folks bought. I was five, and I was hooked. :) |
Just last night I watched your TED talk and you have got me extremely excited about humanities expansion to space! | Well, if they can do what they, it's a very big deal indeed. Time will tell. I wrote a lot about it on my blog, including what it means for the future of space. |
I've followed your blog on/off over the years: we need more "smart people" posting online. Question for you: I've found it easier to find stuff in the night sky lately; I live in the eastern part of Orlando, and I've been able to pick out a dim red Mars with little difficulty (Google Sky confirms when I see it). I took this pic a few weeks ago when Jupiter and Venus were out. As cities and people switch to CFLs and LEDs, are you hearing any reports of a decrease in light pollution? | Decrease? Not really; as cities expand it tends to get worse. We need better lighting which are more efficient, cheaper in the long run, and provide better illumination of the ground without ruining the sky. Look up The Dark Sky Association! They're a good group. |
As someone who has read both your books Bad Astronomy and Death from the Skies, I first wanted to thank you for writing a book and maintaining a blog that opened my mind to science and skepticism. I highly recommend the former book as a classic in teaching scientific method mixed with awesome humor. | First thanks! Glad you liked my books. |
now for the question, can you tell me what is your prediction for the status of skepticism in the future? Do you think there ever will be a world where at least most are skeptics and don't readily believe in superstition? | Second, I doubt the world will ever be mostly skeptical. Our brains just don't work that way... and even skeptics have a hard time being skeptical about everything, including ourselves. The best we can do is try to minimize the damage done by blind belief, and work as hard as possible to maximize people's ability to think critically. |
Did you ever figure out why the customer doesn't cheese? | It is simply sufficient to know that CUSTOMER DOESN'T CHEESE. |
Hi, Phil. With the retirement of the Space Shuttle program where do you think the future of American space exploration is headed? Is there anything in the works to replace the shuttle program or is America leaving the current era of space travel to other governments or private interests? | NASA has plans on a next generation launch system. I wonder if we really need it; private space (plus existing launchers) may be able to build something for less money than NASA can. :) I'm not an expert in these things, so I try to be careful when I speak. But I'd like to see the case for just why NASA should build this. |
Preface: You're awesome, thanks for doing what you do. Question: What's up with those ultra high-energy cosmic rays? I mean, seriously: A proton with the kinetic energy of a baseball going the speed of sound, and not even coming from the galactic core? That's just crazy! What could cause that, besides stray shrapnel from some kinda alien superweapon? | I know! I don't think there's a good explanation yet. At those energies they can't travel very far without breaking down into gamma rays, so it's unclear what kind of thing might be creating them. You can bet black holes are involved! The total energy to create such particles is easy, but giving it to a single particle is pretty weird. It's like popping a billion kernels of popcorn, and having one with enough energy to launch into orbit. Bizarre. |
I know your more of a skeptic than agnostic or atheist...but I would like your opinion as well. So, as a scientist, I wonder what your viewpoint is on this whole matter. Is it even important to get religious people to believe in science, and if so how should a serious debate be entertained, if such a debate were to even exist ? Is there a way to balance to obviously contradictory views ? | My opinion on this is a matter of record. |
Why aren't we launching more probes directly into Jupiter & Saturn's atmospheres? is it budget? lack of overall interest? | Budget, mostly. Getting there is hard, and expensive. But we've dropped one probe into Jupiter (Galileo) and I bet at Cassini's end-of-mission they'll do the same at Saturn. It's sad in its way, but we also learn even more about those planets, even as the probe dies. I think that's wonderful and amazing. |
I'm thankful to you both for bringing to peoples' attention the plans of American Airlines to air the views of the despicable Meryl Dorey and for helping to end those plans. What do you think can be done to combat that kind of scientific ignorance, whether it has to do with vaccines or the universe? | All I can say is, keep fighting. Ignorance will always be with us. Some people have a loose grip on reality, some are easily influenced by others (especially with confirmation bias so strong in us humans), and others just don't know the real story. The best we can do is keep pounding away, keep getting the info out there, and try to make it as easy to understand and as easy to accept as possible. It's grueling, and frustrating, and anger-making, but it's really important. Successes like with AA make it easier sometimes, too. :) |
Phil, thanks so much for doing an AMA. I've been reading your blog since before it went to Discover and you are a big reason that I now consider myself a skeptic and critical thinker. You, along with Adam Savage, are my personal geek heroes/mancrushes. | Wow, that's nice of you to say! I have a crush on Adam too. I think he probably knows. |
My question: Any chance we'll see more of you on Discovery? | I'll be on Discovery later this summer in "How the Universe Works". I don't know for sure when it airs though. |
How likely do you think it is that the observable universe is all, or nearly all, of the entire universe? | Since the Universe is expanding, there is a whole part of it we can't see (this primer may help.) It's beyond our horizon, but it exists. That's why we talk about our "observable" Universe. This stuff makes my brain hurt too. |
Alternatively, how likely do you think it is that what we currently consider the universe is simply one of many such structures, similar to galaxies making up galaxy clusters? | OTOH there may be other Universe, like bubbles in foam, created like ours was but out of our reach. It's an interesting idea, and there's some math to back it up. I wonder if we'll ever know? It seems odd to think we might be able to find out, but from what I understand, it's possible. |
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