The Space Shot
A concentrated dose of space awesomeness, delivered right to your podcast feed.
We found 10 episodes of The Space Shot with the tag “astronomy”.
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Episode 345: Hubble Launches
Episode | April 24th, 2018 | Season 1 | 7 mins 2 secs
astronomy, exploration, hst, hubble, hubble space telescope, nasa history, shuttle, shuttle launch, space shuttle, sts, sts 31
The Hubble Space Telescope launched 28 years ago today! Listen in to hear a little bit about that mission and one of the astronauts that flew on STS-31.
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Episode 328: Catching Up With Compton
Episode | April 7th, 2018 | Season 1 | 6 mins 20 secs
astronomy, compton, compton gamma ray observatory, eva, gamma ray burst, gamma rays, grb, satellite deployment, shuttle, shuttle launch, space podcast, space podcasts, space shuttle, sts 37
Happy Saturday everyone! Apologies this episode is coming out later, I've been incredibly busy the past few days and am catching up on some podcasting.
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Episode 280: Pluto and The First Captive Carry Flight of Enterprise
Episode | February 18th, 2018 | Season 1 | 4 mins
astronomer, astronomy, blinkometer, clyde tombaugh, enterprise, pluto, pluto new horizons, space podcast, space podcasts, tombaugh
Happy Sunday! Thank you for making me part of your daily routine, I appreciate your time and your ears!
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Episode 244: Black Holes and the "Double Burp"
Episode | January 13th, 2018 | Season 1 | 6 mins 34 secs
aas, american astronomical society, astronomy, astrophysics, black hole, black holes, chandra, chandra observatory, dragon, dragon capsule, hubble, science, shuttle, space shuttle, spacex, stem, ula
Today's episode has some ULA and SpaceX news, plus black holes.
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Episode 227: Kepler
Episode | December 27th, 2017 | Season 1 | 10 mins 19 secs
apollo 8, astronomy, kepler, kepler laws, keplers laws, keplers three laws, planetary motion, space history
Kepler and some Apollo history for today's episode!
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Episode 203: Pioneer 10, Falcon 9, and Hubble Part 3
Episode | December 3rd, 2017 | Season 1 | 8 mins 8 secs
astronomy, endeavour, eva, falcon 9, hubble, jovian system, jupiter, nasa, shuttle, space history, space shuttle, spacewalk, spacex
Happy Sunday! I'm driving again this week and have some cool stuff planned, follow along @johnmulnix on Instagram and Twitter. Let me know what you think of the podcast by leaving a review! :) Thanks!
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Episode 201: Hubble Part 1
Episode | December 1st, 2017 | Season 1 | 6 mins 16 secs
astronomy, hubble, launch, russia, soyuz, space science, space shuttle, telescope, telescopes
Happy December! Be sure to check out the show notes for some links to incredible Hubble videos on YouTube. More on Hubble in tomorrow's episode, plus a bunch of Space Shuttle flights, it's going to be a fun episode, don't miss it!
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Episode 198: Spacelab 1, Mariner 4, and a Pulsar
Episode | November 28th, 2017 | Season 1 | 6 mins 44 secs
astronomy, columbia, john young, mariner, mariner 4, pulsar, shuttle, space science, space shuttle, spacelab, sts, sts9
I hope everyone has a fantastic week! We are approaching 200 episodes and I would love if we could get some more reviews to maybe match the number of episodes that are out. Go to iTunes or Apple Podcasts and leave a review. I appreciate it!
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Episode 49: Of Gamma-Rays and Launch Holds
Episode | July 2nd, 2017 | Season 1 | 4 mins 48 secs
astronomy, cold war, falcon 9, gamma ray astronomy, gamma ray burst, gamma rays, gamma-rays, grb, history, intelsat, nasa, nuclear weapons, project vela, space, space shot, spacex, the space shot, vela
Gamma-Rays, a Falcon 9, and some Lego Saturn V info. Subscribe to the episode today, especially so you don't miss the announcement tomorrow.
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Episode 28: Gamma-rays, Gemstones, and the Fermi Space Telescope
Episode | June 11th, 2017 | Season 1 | 5 mins 6 secs
astronomy, bruce banner, fermi, gamma rays, gamma-rays, gems, gemstones, gia, hulk, incredible hulk, irradiation, light speed, lightning, nasa, radio astronomy, space, thunderstorms
Today we are going to talk about Gamma rays. And no, not the kind that transformed Bruce Banner into the Incredible Hulk, but the kind that the Fermi Gamma Ray telescope is designed to observe.