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Regina Barber

๐Ÿ‘ค Speaker
See mentions of this person in podcasts
4427 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

Hey Short Wavers, before we get started, quick little favor to ask. Can you help us shape the future of Shortwave by completing a short anonymous survey? It's a chance for you to tell us about what you like and don't and how we can serve you better. It's an awesome responsibility, but I trust you. And we want to hear from everyone, whether you're a day one or brand new listener.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

Hey Short Wavers, before we get started, quick little favor to ask. Can you help us shape the future of Shortwave by completing a short anonymous survey? It's a chance for you to tell us about what you like and don't and how we can serve you better. It's an awesome responsibility, but I trust you. And we want to hear from everyone, whether you're a day one or brand new listener.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

Just go to npr.org slash shortwave survey. We'll also put a link in our show notes. Thank you. Okay, on to our show. You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Physics has a bit of a messy problem. There's matter missing in our universe. Something's there that we can't see, but we can detect it. This mysterious substance behaves a lot like the matter we know.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

Just go to npr.org slash shortwave survey. We'll also put a link in our show notes. Thank you. Okay, on to our show. You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Physics has a bit of a messy problem. There's matter missing in our universe. Something's there that we can't see, but we can detect it. This mysterious substance behaves a lot like the matter we know.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

Just go to npr.org slash shortwave survey. We'll also put a link in our show notes. Thank you. Okay, on to our show. You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Physics has a bit of a messy problem. There's matter missing in our universe. Something's there that we can't see, but we can detect it. This mysterious substance behaves a lot like the matter we know.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

You know, the matter that makes up you, me, the sun, the planets, and the stars. At least in the way that matter attracts other matter. Stars can orbit other stars, galaxies, collections of billions of stars can orbit other galaxies, And looking at those orbits or the way things move around other things in space can tell us how massive the object in the center is.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

You know, the matter that makes up you, me, the sun, the planets, and the stars. At least in the way that matter attracts other matter. Stars can orbit other stars, galaxies, collections of billions of stars can orbit other galaxies, And looking at those orbits or the way things move around other things in space can tell us how massive the object in the center is.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

You know, the matter that makes up you, me, the sun, the planets, and the stars. At least in the way that matter attracts other matter. Stars can orbit other stars, galaxies, collections of billions of stars can orbit other galaxies, And looking at those orbits or the way things move around other things in space can tell us how massive the object in the center is.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

But sometimes we can't see what is really causing that movement.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

But sometimes we can't see what is really causing that movement.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

But sometimes we can't see what is really causing that movement.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

That's Chanda Prescott-Weinstein. She's a theoretical particle physicist at the University of New Hampshire.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

That's Chanda Prescott-Weinstein. She's a theoretical particle physicist at the University of New Hampshire.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

That's Chanda Prescott-Weinstein. She's a theoretical particle physicist at the University of New Hampshire.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

That's why it's often called dark matter. It makes up over a quarter of the entire universe. Scientists don't know what it is, but they do know whatever it is has to have a few key components.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

That's why it's often called dark matter. It makes up over a quarter of the entire universe. Scientists don't know what it is, but they do know whatever it is has to have a few key components.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

That's why it's often called dark matter. It makes up over a quarter of the entire universe. Scientists don't know what it is, but they do know whatever it is has to have a few key components.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

So what could this mysterious substance be? A lot of astronomers are searching for the answer, and some, like Chanda, think a particle called the axion may help make the dark matter problem a little tidier.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

So what could this mysterious substance be? A lot of astronomers are searching for the answer, and some, like Chanda, think a particle called the axion may help make the dark matter problem a little tidier.

Short Wave
Could This Particle 'Clean Up' A Cosmic Mystery?

So what could this mysterious substance be? A lot of astronomers are searching for the answer, and some, like Chanda, think a particle called the axion may help make the dark matter problem a little tidier.