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Season 2015
2015x1 What Happens if You Fall Into a Black Hole? Episode overview
Air date
Jun 10, 2015
David Kaplan explores one of the biggest mysteries in physics: the apparent contradiction between general relativity and quantum mechanics.
David Kaplan explores one of the biggest mysteries in physics: the apparent contradiction between general relativity and quantum mechanics.
2015x2 Freeman Dyson: A ‘Rebel’ Without a Ph.D. Episode overview
Air date
Jun 11, 2015
A wide-ranging interview with the legendary mathematical physicist Freeman Dyson in which he discusses his work with Richard Feynman, his attempts to build a spaceship propelled by nuclear bombs and his controversial views on climate change.
A wide-ranging interview with the legendary mathematical physicist Freeman Dyson in which he discusses his work with Richard Feynman, his attempts to build a spaceship propelled by nuclear bombs and his controversial views on climate change.
2015x3 Artur Avila: A Brazilian Wunderkind Who Calms Chaos Episode overview
Air date
Jun 12, 2015
A video profile of the mathematician Artur Avila, whose solutions to ubiquitous problems in chaos theory have earned him Brazil’s first Fields Medal in 2014.
A video profile of the mathematician Artur Avila, whose solutions to ubiquitous problems in chaos theory have earned him Brazil’s first Fields Medal in 2014.
2015x4 Manjul Bhargava: The Musical, Magical Number Theorist Episode overview
Air date
Jun 15, 2015
A video profile of the 2014 Fields medalist Manjul Bhargava, whose search for artistic truth and beauty has led to some of the most profound recent discoveries in number theory.
A video profile of the 2014 Fields medalist Manjul Bhargava, whose search for artistic truth and beauty has led to some of the most profound recent discoveries in number theory.
Where did the universe come from? David Kaplan explores the leading cosmological explanation with the help of a baking metaphor.
Where did the universe come from? David Kaplan explores the leading cosmological explanation with the help of a baking metaphor.
2015x6 Yitang Zhang: An Unlikely Math Star Rises Episode overview
Air date
Jun 17, 2015
The opening scene from George Csicsery’s film "Counting From Infinity," about Yitang Zhang, a previously unknown mathematician who two years ago solved a major problem in number theory that catapulted him to mathematical stardom.
The opening scene from George Csicsery’s film "Counting From Infinity," about Yitang Zhang, a previously unknown mathematician who two years ago solved a major problem in number theory that catapulted him to mathematical stardom.
2015x7 Martin Hairer: In Noisy Equations, One Who Heard Music Episode overview
Air date
Jun 19, 2015
A video profile of the 2014 Fields medalist Martin Hairer, whose epic masterpiece in stochastic analysis, experts say, “created a whole world.”
A video profile of the 2014 Fields medalist Martin Hairer, whose epic masterpiece in stochastic analysis, experts say, “created a whole world.”
2015x8 Maryam Mirzakhani: A Tenacious Explorer of Abstract Surfaces Episode overview
Air date
Jun 23, 2015
A video profile of the 2014 Fields medalist Maryam Mirzakhani, whose monumental work draws deep connections between topology, geometry and dynamical systems.
A video profile of the 2014 Fields medalist Maryam Mirzakhani, whose monumental work draws deep connections between topology, geometry and dynamical systems.
2015x9 Subhash Khot: A Grand Vision for the Impossible Episode overview
Air date
Jun 24, 2015
A video profile of the 2014 Nevanlinna Prize winner Subhash Khot, whose bold conjecture is helping mathematicians explore the precise limits of computation.
A video profile of the 2014 Nevanlinna Prize winner Subhash Khot, whose bold conjecture is helping mathematicians explore the precise limits of computation.
2015x10 Alan Guth: How Many Two-Headed Cows in a Multiverse? Episode overview
Air date
Jul 02, 2015
In an infinitely branching multiverse, says MIT cosmologist Alan Guth, “there are an infinite number of one-headed cows and an infinite number of two-headed cows. What happens to the ratio?”
In an infinitely branching multiverse, says MIT cosmologist Alan Guth, “there are an infinite number of one-headed cows and an infinite number of two-headed cows. What happens to the ratio?”
2015x11 Hiranya Peiris: How to Test If We Live in a Multiverse Episode overview
Air date
Jul 09, 2015
University College London physicist Hiranya Peiris explains the seemingly impossible -- how the multiverse can be experimentally tested.
University College London physicist Hiranya Peiris explains the seemingly impossible -- how the multiverse can be experimentally tested.
Benjamin de Bivort’s lab at Harvard University developed a device called the fly-vac to study individual behavior. Upon entering a chamber, the fly must choose to walk toward the light .. show full overview
Benjamin de Bivort’s lab at Harvard University developed a device called the fly-vac to study individual behavior. Upon entering a chamber, the fly must choose to walk toward the light or dark end. A vacuum then sucks it back to the starting point, and it makes the choice again.
In a device in Benjamin de Bivort’s lab at Harvard University, a fly wanders through a tiny Y-shaped maze, choosing at the Y’s vertex whether to walk left or right. This array of Y-mazes .. show full overview
In a device in Benjamin de Bivort’s lab at Harvard University, a fly wanders through a tiny Y-shaped maze, choosing at the Y’s vertex whether to walk left or right. This array of Y-mazes allows researchers to track individual behavior in many flies simultaneously.
In this 2-minute video, David Kaplan explains how the search for hidden symmetries leads to discoveries like the Higgs boson.
In this 2-minute video, David Kaplan explains how the search for hidden symmetries leads to discoveries like the Higgs boson.
2015x16 James Bullock: The Case for Complex Dark Matter Episode overview
Air date
Aug 25, 2015
James Bullock, a physicist at the University of California, Irvine, explains why dark matter might be more complicated than astronomers have assumed.
James Bullock, a physicist at the University of California, Irvine, explains why dark matter might be more complicated than astronomers have assumed.
2015x17 Nancy Moran: An Explorer of Life’s Deepest Partnerships Episode overview
Air date
Sep 18, 2015
Nancy Moran, a biologist at the University of Texas at Austin, explains how colony collapse disorder led her to study the bacteria that live in the guts of bees.
Nancy Moran, a biologist at the University of Texas at Austin, explains how colony collapse disorder led her to study the bacteria that live in the guts of bees.
2015x18 Nima Arkani-Hamed's Visions of Future Physics Episode overview
Air date
Sep 23, 2015
Nima Arkani-Hamed, a physicist at the Institute for Advanced Study, makes his "big-picture" case for building a 100-TeV particle collider.
Nima Arkani-Hamed, a physicist at the Institute for Advanced Study, makes his "big-picture" case for building a 100-TeV particle collider.