StarDate

Billy Henry
StarDate
Latest episode

332 episodes

  • StarDate

    Coma Berenices

    04/13/2026 | 2 mins.
    The long-lost tail of the lion climbs high across the sky at this time of year – a spray of faint stars that trails behind Leo. Today, it’s known as Coma Berenices – the hair of Queen Berenice II of Egypt. It’s the only modern constellation that represents a real person. Originally, though, it was the tuft of hair at the end of the lion’s tail.

    The stars came to represent Berenice about 2300 years ago. The story was invented by the court astronomer to the king of Egypt, Ptolemy III. The queen had left her beatiful locks in a temple – an offering to the gods to protect her husband, who was off at war. The hair disappeared, angering the king. So the astronomer told him that the gods had whisked the offering into the sky.

    But to most of the western world, the stars remained part of Leo for centuries longer. They didn’t become a separate constellation until the 1500s, when they were named for Berenice.

    Coma Berenices isn’t easy to find. All of its stars are faint, so you need especially dark skies to see them. Its brightest star is Beta Coma. It’s a near twin to the Sun – a little bit bigger, heavier, and brighter. Yet even it isn’t visible from light-polluted cities or suburbs.

    The constellation is well up in the east at nightfall. It’s above brilliant Arcturus, the brightest star of Bootes, and to the lower left of Leo – the long-lost tip of the lion’s tail.

    Script by Damond Benningfield
  • StarDate

    Edward Maunder

    04/12/2026 | 2 mins.
    Most years, the Sun produces hundreds or thousands of sunspots – magnetic storms that look like dark splotches on its surface. From 1645 to 1715, though, sunspots all but disappeared. In many years, the number stayed in the single digits. And in some years, there were no sunspots at all.

    Today, that period is known as the Maunder minimum. It’s named for British astronomer Edward Maunder, who was born 175 years ago today. He wrote about the period in the late 1800s.

    Maunder was working at Britain’s Royal Observatory. He was assisted by his wife, Annie, who was a “computer” at the observatory – someone who did the tedious calculations.

    Maunder discovered a pattern in the sunspots, which wax and wane during a cycle of about 11 years. When a new cycle begins, most of the sunspots are concentrated at the Sun’s middle latitudes. As the cycle peaks, they’re concentrated closer to the equator.

    But he’s best known for the Maunder minimum. It occurred during the “Little Ice Age” – a period of unusual cold. That suggests a link between solar activity and Earth’s climate. But the link isn’t confirmed – it could be just a coincidence.

    We still don’t know what caused the sunspots to vanish. It had happened at least once before. So the mystery of the Maunder minimum remains unsolved.

    Script by Damond Benningfield
  • StarDate

    Navi

    04/11/2026 | 2 mins.
    Gamma Cassiopeia is a busy star system. The main star is surrounding itself with a disk of gas and dust. The star is interacting with an invisible companion. And it’s building up to an impressive demise.

    Gamma Cas is the middle point of the letter M or W formed by the stars of Cassiopeia, which is high in the north-northwest at nightfall. Gamma Cas is the most distant member of that pattern, at 550 light-years. Its main star – the one visible to the eye alone – is about 15 times the mass of the Sun. And it’s about 20,000 times brighter than the Sun.

    The star spins at about a million miles an hour at its equator. That causes it to bulge outward, so it looks more like a lozenge than a ball. That high speed causes the star to fling gas from its surface, forming a disk around the star.

    Its companion probably is the corpse of a once mighty star. Some of the gas from the main star may fall onto the companion.

    Gamma Cas is only about eight million years old, yet it’s nearing its end. In a few million years more, it’s likely to explode – ending the life of this busy star.

    Incidentally, Gamma Cas has another name: Navi. It was bestowed in the 1960s by the crew of Apollo 1. It’s the middle name of commander Virgil Ivan Grissom spelled backward. After the crew died in a launchpad fire, NASA placed Navi on the charts used by later crews to navigate to the Moon.

    Script by Damond Benningfield
  • StarDate

    Going for a Ride

    04/10/2026 | 2 mins.
    You might want to buckle up for this one. We’re going to take a wild ride through the universe. It’s a combination of several motions – involving our planet, our solar system, and our galaxy.

    First up is Earth’s motion around the Sun. Our planet’s average orbital speed is about 66,600 miles per hour. At that speed, it takes exactly one year for Earth to make one full turn.

    The Sun is moving as well, and it’s taking Earth and the rest of the solar system along for the ride. The Sun is about 27,000 light-years from the center of the Milky Way Galaxy. It circles around that center at almost 500,000 miles per hour. The galaxy is so huge, however, that it takes about 230 million years to complete one orbit.

    And that’s not the fastest motion we’re experiencing. The Milky Way belongs to a small cluster of galaxies, the Local Group. The group is being pulled toward the Virgo Cluster, which contains thousands of galaxies. And the Local Group, Virgo Cluster, and much more are being pulled in by the gravity of the Great Attractor – the center of an enormous collection of galaxies and dark matter. The Milky Way is speeding toward it at more than 1.3 million miles per hour.

    So while the ground beneath your feet feels steady, keep in mind that it’s on the move – tugged by the Sun, the galaxy, the Great Attractor – and perhaps even more.

    Script by Damond Benningfield
  • StarDate

    Iodine

    04/09/2026 | 2 mins.
    Iodine is special. It’s the heaviest element that’s commonly needed by living organisms. In humans, it’s used by the thyroid to produce growth-regulating hormones. It’s found in seafood and other products.

    The element itself is created in some of the most violent events in the universe. In fact, so were almost all of the heaviest elements – anything more substantial than iron.

    The elements are forged in the rapid neutron-capture process. “Seed” elements are slammed by huge amounts of neutrons – the bits of an atomic nucleus with no electric charge. That builds heavier elements, including gold, silver, uranium – and iodine.

    Lighter elements are forged in the hearts of stars. More-massive stars create heavier elements. But they can’t make anything heavier than iron. The element-making process shuts down, and the star explodes. The blast can produce huge numbers of neutrons, which are sent flying at high speed. They ram into the debris, creating heavier elements.

    But not all exploding stars produce the right conditions to make heavier elements – especially the heaviest of all. Those elements can be formed when two ultra-dense stellar corpses ram together. The merger splatters the region with neutrons. They can forge enough heavy elements to make many planets as massive as Earth.

    Iodine probably is made by both types of events, which sprinkle this life-giving element throughout the cosmos.

    Script by Damond Benningfield

More Astronomy podcasts

About StarDate

StarDate, the longest-running national radio science feature in the U.S., tells listeners what to look for in the night sky.
Podcast website

Listen to StarDate, Crash Course Pods: The Universe and many other podcasts from around the world with the radio.net app

Get the free radio.net app

  • Stations and podcasts to bookmark
  • Stream via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
  • Supports Carplay & Android Auto
  • Many other app features
Social
v8.8.9| © 2007-2026 radio.de GmbH
Generated: 4/14/2026 - 9:29:40 PM