George's Random Astronomical Object

PODCAST · science

George's Random Astronomical Object

George's Random Astronomical Object is a biweekly astronomy podcast featuring science discussions about astronomical objects at randomly selected locations in the sky. The wide range of topics discussed in the show include stars, variable stars, variable variable stars, supermassive black holes, ultracool dwarf stars, exoplanets, howler monkeys, infrared radiation, acronyms, more acronyms, starbursts, measurements of less than 12 parsecs, jellyfish galaxies, diffuse ionized gas, and general overall weirdness.

  1. 175

    Object 175: Counterintuitive Supernova Explosions

    The Cepheus Flare is a nearby regions where a series of supernova explosions have counterintuitively triggered the formation of stars.

  2. 174

    Object 174: Toy Exoplanets

    The red dwarf TOI-700 has at least four exoplanets orbiting it, and two of them are Earth-sized exoplanets lying within the star system's habitable zone.

  3. 173

    Object 173: The Hot Calibrator

    G191-B2B is a hot white dwarf with a layer of nearly pure oxygen that has been used as a flux calibration source for one particularly famous telescope.

  4. 172

    Object 172: Lego Minifigures with Masers

    VY Canis Majoris is not only much, much larger than the Sun but is also ejecting blobs of gas that are forming molecules and dust.

  5. 171

    Object 171: Guess Again

    3C 324 was once identified as a possible gravitational lens where one galaxy was bending the light from a galaxy behind it, but it turned out to be something different.

  6. 170

    Object 170: Don't Forget the Feedback

    NGC 2639 may look like an ordinary spiral galaxy, but it contains an active galactic nucleus with jets of gas that have emerged from that nucleus in four different directions, which is, to use the technical term, quite weird.

  7. 169

    Object 169: No Longer a Suspect

    LGS 3 (also known as the Pisces Dwarf Galaxy) is a nearby but faint dwarf galaxy that has provided some interesting clues as to how stars formed in the early universe.

  8. 168

    Object 168: A Very Good Looking Scientific Footnote

    While not many professional astronomers have spent much time looking at the open cluster Messier 103, it is still a spectacular object to see in an amateur astronomy telescope.

  9. 167

    Object 167: Controversial Radiowaves

    Astronomers have been studying the radiowave emission from the cluster of galaxies Abell 4038 quite intently and have provided both conventional and unconventional explanations for its origin.

  10. 166

    Object 166: An Overlooked Cluster

    The southern open cluster IC 2602, also known as the Theta Carinae Cluster or the Southern Pleiades, may not be as famous as some open clusters visible from the Northern Hemisphere, but it is still a good place for professional astronomers to study young stars, and it's also a good amateur astronomy target.

  11. 165

    Object 165: A Hole in the Clouds

    Baade's Window is an unusual hole through the interstellar dust in the Milky Way's disk through which astronomers can very clearly see the stars near the center of our galaxy.

  12. 164

    Object 164: Not Just Any Quasar But The Quasar

    Markarian 231 is now widely recognized not only as the closest quasar to Earth but also as a very bright ultraluminous infrared galaxy.

  13. 163

    Object 163: Ludricous Rotation

    The pulsar PSR J1022+1001 is one of a small subclass of pulsars named millisecond pulsars because they rotate one every few milliseconds.

  14. 162

    Object 162: Slightly More Interesting Than a Medieval Anglo-Gallic Coin

    The lenticular galaxy NGC 1172 contains two different populations of globular clusters, which indicates something about the history of the galaxy.

  15. 161

    Object 161: More Subclassifications

    Dy Pegasi is an SX Phoenicis type variable star, and SX Phoenicis type variable stars are a subset of Delta Scuti type variable stars, and this episode explains why that is confusing but what it also actually means.

  16. 160

    Object 160: A Spiral Galaxy Using a Non-Standard Font

    The spiral galaxy NGC 3718 has an unusually weird spiral shape, which belies its unusual history.

  17. 159

    Object 159: That One Very Famous Double Star

    While amateur astronomers know that Albireo is a very spectacular-looking double star, professional astronomers are more interested in the dynamical complexities of Albireo's two star systems.

  18. 158

    Object 158: Dark Burst

    The gamma ray burst GRB 020819 took place in a galaxy containing so much light-obscuring interstellar dust that people initially misidentified which galaxy contained the burst.

  19. 157

    Object 157: Something More Interesting than Three Exoplanets

    The nearby Sun-like star HD 69830 may have three exoplanets orbiting it, but astronomers seem more focused on trying to understand a hard-to-explain dust disk in the star system.

  20. 156

    Object 156: Dust Puffs

    Z Ursa Minor belongs to a class of variable stars that occasionally produce puffs of dust, but this is not the weeirdest thing about them.

  21. 155

    Object 155: Pinwheel

    The nearby face-on spiral galaxy Messier 101 is one of the most popular galaxies in the sky for astronomers to study, particularly in terms of studying the relative abundances of various elements within the galaxy.

  22. 154

    Object 154: The Binary Star System That Needed to Go on Hiatus

    A 0535+26 is a rather unusual star system called a Be high mass X-ray binary that periodically produces bursts of X-ray emission.

  23. 153

    Object 153: A Wolf Within a Wolf

    Hen 2-113 is a rather unusual planetary nebula that formed not when a Sun-like star died but when a large, massive, and extraordinarily hot Wolf-Rayet star blew away its outer hydrogen layers.

  24. 152

    Object 152: The Spiderweb Flashlight

    The quasar PKS 2126-158 has been popular to observe because astronomers can see many different things between the quasar and Earth, including an entire cluster of galaxies, that are absorbing light from the quasar.

  25. 151

    Object 151: A Magnetic Whale

    Beta Ceti is a relatively close giant star where helium fusion has been triggered in its core, but it's a bit unusual compared to other stars that have reached this stage in their evolution.

  26. 150

    Object 150: And Now for Something Completely the Same

    Wolf 1069 is another nearby red dwarf with an exoplanet, but this time, the exoplanet is more likely to harbor life than other nearby red dwarfs with exoplanets that I may have discussed in previous episodes.

  27. 149

    Object 149: Spaghetti Leftovers

    The globular cluster Messier 54 is not part of our galaxy but actually the nuclear stellar core of a dwarf galaxy that has nealy been completely gravitationally torn apart by the Milky Way.

  28. 148

    Object 148: Problem Solving

    DI Pegasi is a star system with two eclipsing stars in its center that orbit each other every 17 hours and 5 minutes and two smaller stars on very wide orbits that gravitationally tug on the central two stars, which has the effect that the variability of the star system's brightness seems to change over decades of time.

  29. 147

    Object 147: Nothing But Gas

    Abell 1142 is a peculiar cluster of galaxies that has formed from the merger of two smaller clusters, and its center contains nothing but gas.

  30. 146

    Object 146: The Prototype of Peculiar

    SN 2002cx was the first supernova ever identified in a subclass of objects now called Type Iax supernovae.

  31. 145

    Object 145: Neutron Numbers Time

    PSR J1518+4904 is one of the very few identified double neutron stars, and it has provided opportunities to perform unique measurements on the objects.

  32. 144

    Object 144: Heavy Metals

    The stars in the open cluster NGC 6253 contain abnormally large amounts of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium, and no one is quite certain why.

  33. 143

    Object 143: Almost Absolutely Awesome

    GJ 887 is a very close red dwarf with two exoplanets (and a potential third) that almost look like they could harbor life except for one potential problem.

  34. 142

    Object 142: The Littlest Galaxy Ever Found

    The awkwardly-named Segue 2 is (as of the time of the publication of this episode) the smallest galaxy anyone has ever found.

  35. 141

    Object 141: Just a Very Nice Spiral

    Messier 74 is just a very nice looking face-on spiral galaxy, which has made it quite useful for many different types of astrophysical analyses.

  36. 140

    Object 140: Imagine All the Dust

    Infrared observations of SN 1995N indicate that the material ejected by the explosion may have produced a huge amount of dust.

  37. 139

    Object 139: Recoil

    The galaxy 3C 186 features a supermassive black hole with a mass several billions of times the mass of the Sun that has been ejected 36000 light years out of the galaxy's nucleus.

  38. 138

    Object 138: A Weird Example of a Weird Subclass of a Weird Class of Objects

    4U 1850-087 is an ultracompact binary star system consisting of a whtie dwarf and a neutron star orbiting each other so closely that the neutron star can strip the outer layers off of the white dwarf.

  39. 137

    Object 137: The Bedtime Story of the Black Hole that was Too Large for its Galaxy

    The elliptical galaxy NGC 4291 contains a supermassive black hole that is unusually massive in comparison to the rest of the galaxy.

  40. 136

    Object 136: Barium

    HD 11397 is one of very few Sun-like stars that might seem ordinary but actually contain abnormally large amounts of heavy elements, most notably barium, that they could not have formed themselves.

  41. 135

    Object 135: Feedback Time

    NGC 3801 is one of the very few nearby galaxies where astronomers can see jets from an active galactic nucleus disrupting star formation in the galaxy in a process known as feedback.

  42. 134

    Object 134: Not Dead Yet

    The star at the center of the planetary nebula NGC 7094 is almost but not quite a white dwarf, making it a rather unusual object for astronomers to look at.

  43. 133

    Object 133: Strong Arm Tactics

    One of the spiral arms in the galaxy NGC 3110 is producing unusually huge amounts of new stars as well as unusually huge amounts of infrared emission.

  44. 132

    Object 132: I Need a 2002 Pop Culture Reference

    The radio source PMN J0134-0931 created a lot of excitement in 2002 when people discovered that it was a quasar gravitationally lensed by another galaxy in front of it, they were really excited.

  45. 131

    Object 131: Get To Know Your Ultrafaint Neighbors

    Hydrus I is a very small, ultrafaint dwarf galaxy orbiting the Milky Way that was accidentally (or, to use the technical term, serendipitously) found by the Dark Energy Survey.

  46. 130

    Object 130: Putting It All Together

    NGC 4261 was made famous when Hubble Space Telescope observations in the 1990s showed that this elliptical galaxy contains a supermassive black hole.

  47. 129

    Object 129: Rinky-Dink

    The very small Pyxis Cluster orbits the Milky Way in such an extremely extended orbit that it travels further away than many of the dwarf galaxies orbiting our galaxy.

  48. 128

    Object 128: The Dwarf Living Inside the Bridge

    The NGC 6221/NGC 6215 Group of galaxies contains a bridge-like structure of hydrogen gas connecting the two spiral galaxies within the group as well as a dwarf galaxy that looks like it formed within the bridge.

  49. 127

    Object 127: The Nebraska Blue Straggler Special

    The open cluster NGC 188 is peculiar not only because it is very old for an open cluster but also because it contains an unusual number of blue stars for a cluster of its age.

  50. 126

    Object 126: Do Not Mention Exoplanet b Again

    HD 181433 has three exoplanets, two of which are gas giants with very unusually elongated orbits that have been very challenging to properly measure.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

George's Random Astronomical Object is a biweekly astronomy podcast featuring science discussions about astronomical objects at randomly selected locations in the sky. The wide range of topics discussed in the show include stars, variable stars, variable variable stars, supermassive black holes, ultracool dwarf stars, exoplanets, howler monkeys, infrared radiation, acronyms, more acronyms, starbursts, measurements of less than 12 parsecs, jellyfish galaxies, diffuse ionized gas, and general overall weirdness.

HOSTED BY

George Bendo

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!