Mysteries of the Universe

There Is Something Strange At The Edge of The Solar System

33 min · 29. juni 2026
episode There Is Something Strange At The Edge of The Solar System cover

Beskrivelse

Beyond the orbit of Neptune lies a frozen graveyard of ice and silence—or so we thought. In this episode, we journey into the outer reaches of our solar system to explore the anomalies that are forcing astronomers to rewrite the laws of physics. Discover the mystery of Quaoar, a dwarf planet with a ring that exists where gravity says it shouldn't, defying the classical Roche limit. We also investigate the tantalizing hunt for "Planet Nine" and a radical theory: What if the invisible force tugging on distant icy worlds isn't a planet at all, but a grapefruit-sized black hole left over from the Big Bang? Join us as we explore the "Gravity of the Void" and the invisible architects shaping the edges of our neighborhood in space.

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Alle episoder

28 episoder

episode How Did The Moon Form? cover

How Did The Moon Form?

In this episode, we tackle one of the greatest enduring paradoxes in planetary science: the mystery of how the moon was born. We begin in December 1972 with Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt—the first and only trained geologist to walk on the lunar surface. The off-white rock he collected, troctolite 76536, would become a message from the solar system's childhood, preserved like a pristine fossil on a geologically quiet world. We break down the three classic origin theories, capture, fission, and co-accretion, to reveal why the physical math behind them simply doesn't add up. Then, we look at the reigning champion of lunar history: the Giant Impact Hypothesis, which suggests a Mars-sized planet named Theia smashed into the proto-Earth 4.5 billion years ago. But when advanced mass spectrometers checked the isotopic "fingerprints" of lunar samples, they uncovered a stunning crisis. The moon doesn't look like an outsider; its chemical signature is identical to Earth's down to a tiny fraction. To resolve this cosmic paradox, we explore the radical new "Synestia" model—a theory of a collision so violently extreme that it melted both worlds into a searing, spinning, donut-shaped cloud of vaporized rock.

I går21 min
episode There Is Something Strange At The Edge of The Solar System cover

There Is Something Strange At The Edge of The Solar System

Beyond the orbit of Neptune lies a frozen graveyard of ice and silence—or so we thought. In this episode, we journey into the outer reaches of our solar system to explore the anomalies that are forcing astronomers to rewrite the laws of physics. Discover the mystery of Quaoar, a dwarf planet with a ring that exists where gravity says it shouldn't, defying the classical Roche limit. We also investigate the tantalizing hunt for "Planet Nine" and a radical theory: What if the invisible force tugging on distant icy worlds isn't a planet at all, but a grapefruit-sized black hole left over from the Big Bang? Join us as we explore the "Gravity of the Void" and the invisible architects shaping the edges of our neighborhood in space.

29. juni 202633 min
episode How Well Can We Protect Earth From Asteroids cover

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In December 2020, the iconic Arecibo Observatory collapsed, and with it, humanity lost one of its sharpest eyes on the cosmos. But the mission to protect our planet didn't stop there. In this episode, we dive into the high-stakes world of planetary defense. Explore how a global network of "watchers"—from NASA’s automated systems to the James Webb Space Telescope—scans the darkness for near-Earth objects that could threaten our existence. We’ll break down the real-life drama of tracking asteroid 2024 YR4, the complex science of orbital mechanics, and the chilling question that keeps astronomers awake at night: What happens when we find a "planet killer" headed our way, and are we ready to nudge it off course? Join us as we look at the thin line between a close call and a cosmic catastrophe.

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episode Inside China's New Massive Space Station cover

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