10/29/15 Radio Show feat. Jessie Schwab, Developmental Psychologist

Between sweet tunes like Qfolk and Diet Cig, I discuss early childhood development, specifically of language, with Jessie Schwab, doctoral candidate of developmental psychology at Princeton University. We get in to how this is measured (the efforts of the new Princeton Baby Lab), and even get in to the debate in psychology and linguistics of whether language is a learned or innate ability.

Artist Song Album Label Comments
Mischief Brew Slow Death Hymn This is not for children Alternative Tentacles
The Rezillos Top of the pops Can’t stand the Rezillos Sire Records
Royal Headache Another world High What’s your rupture
The Babies Get Lost Our House on the Hill Woodsist
Talking with Jessie Schwab Developmental Psychology
Shovels and Rope O Be Joyful O be joyful dualtone music group
Qfolk Leftist Love Song Songs I wrote S/R Bandcamp Princeton’s own!
Angel Olsen Enemy Burn your fire for no witness jagjaguwar
Mulatu Astatke Tezeta (Nostalgia) Ethiopiques vol 4 CRC edition
Torres Sprinter Sprinter Partisan Records 2015 album
Talking with Jessie Schwab Developmental Psychology
Billy Bragg, Wilco California Stars Mermaid Avenue Nonesuch interviewee selection
Tea Leaf Green Not Fit Raise up the tent Surfdog records interviewee selection
Old 97’s Big Brown Eyes Too far to care Elektra entertainment group interviewee selection
Portugal. The man The Sun The Satanic Satanist Equal Vision Records interviewee selection
Computer Magic Fuzz Fuzz Channel 9 Records
The Adverts Gary Gilmore’s Eyes Crossing the red sea with the adverts fire records
Deaf Wish Calypso Pain Sub Pop
Hinds Chili Town Very Best of Hinds so Far Mom+Pop
Diet Cig Scene Sick Over Easy Father/Daughter Records
The Coathangers Drive Suck my shirt Suicide Squeeze

10/22/15 Radio Show feat. Stephane Cooperstein, Particle Physicist

In this show we discuss the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, generally how particle physicists do what they do, and of course the Higgs boson. Stephane is part of the CMS detector group at Princeton and is actively working towards fully characterizing what’s called the Higgs boson “decay modes” (the different ways the Higgs could decay). We discuss it, so listen in!

(Playlist at the bottom, below the images.)

Below is a bubble chamber image, as discussed in the interview. Isn’t it beautiful?

bubble_chamber_small

bubble chamber fermilab

bubble chamber diagram

But when we discuss “jets” we’re referring to something like this:

particle jets

Some photos of the detector we discuss in the interview, and what Stephane works on, CMS.

CMS CMS_diagram

Artist Song Album Label
Modern Lovers Astral Plane Modern Lovers
Neko Case Man The Worse Things Get the harder I fight the harder I fight the more I love you Anti, Inc
Menace Beach Come on Give Up Ratworld Memphis Industries
Bratmobile Throwaway Pottymouth Kill Rock Stars
<Break – talking with Stephane>
Sharkmuffin Mondays Chartreuse Little Dickman Recrods
Young Fathers Shame White men are black men too Big Dada
Worriers Parts Imaginary Life Don Giovanni
Royal Headache Need You High What’s your rupture?
<Break – talking with Stephane>
Joan Shelley Not Over by Half NPR Tiny Desk Concert
Noah Gundersen Poor Man’s Son N/A Studio Litho
Denison Witmer Stations Of Joy and Sorrow Antique Shades
<Break – talking with Stephane>
Daniel Bachman Honeysuckle Reel Jesus, I’m a Sinner Tompkins Square
Tacocat Bridge to Hawaii NVM Hardly Art
Bara Heida I got your back S/T? Bara Heida
Flesh World Poolside Boys The Wild Animals in my life Iron Lung Records
Potty Mouth The Bomb Potty Mouth EP Planet Whatever
Marcus Mumford and Oscar Isaac Fare Thee Well (Dink’s Song) Inside Llewyn Davis Soundtrack Nonesuch records
Downtown Boys Dancing in the Dark Full Communism Don Giovanni
Horse Lords All that is sold Hidden Cities NNA Tapes
Colleen Green Deeper than love I want to grow up Hardly Art
Waxahatchee La Loose Ivy Tripp Merge Records

10/15/2015 Radio show feat. Brian Kraus, Plasma Physicist

Aired 2-4am on Thursday, October 15th, 2015. Brian and I discuss at the most base level, how we do our measurements. We compare and contrast our respective work and what we need in order to accomplish it!

Additionally, it’s WPRB’s pledge week! Call in to WPRB (609 258 1033) or go to pledge.wprb.com asap!

Artist Song Album Label
The Mondern Lovers Astral Plane The Modern Lovers Sanctuary Records
Downtown Boys Wave of History Full Communism Don Giovanni
The Coathangers Adderall Suck my shirt Suicide Squeeze
Radiatory Hospital Your Boyfriend Something Wild Salinas Records
Mourn Misery Factory Mourn Captured Tracks
Screaming Females Ripe Rose Mountain Don Giovanni
Brian Kraus Interview – measurements
Diarrhea Planet Skeleton Head I’m Rich Beyond Your Wildest Dreams Infinity Cat Recordings
The Fucking Champs You’re Feelings III Smith, Greene, Soate
Skating Polly Alabama Movies Fuzz Steilacoom Chap Stereo
Potty Mouth Creeper Weed Potty Mouth EP Planet Whatever
Jawreaker Reunion Tearing Down the Posters Lutheran Sisterhood Gun Club Miscreant Records
Deaf Wish They Know Pain Sub Pop
Nick Drake Road Pink Moon UFO Music
Nick Drake Cello Song Nick Drake island records ltd
Girlpool Chinatown Before the world was big Witchita
Ladysmith Black Mumbazo Hello My Baby Shaka Zulu Warner Brothers
Worriers Unwritten Imaginary Life Don Giovanni
Chastity Belt Joke Time to Go Home Hardly Art
Sam Cooke Cupid The Man Who Invented Soul BMG Entertainment
Menace Beach Come on Give up Ratworld Memphis Industries

10/1/2015 Radio Show + Interview with Princeton Plasma Physicist Brian Kraus

Music and interview with Princeton plasma physics doctoral student Brian Kraus. We talked about what is a plasma, the difference between fusion and fission, why fusion energy is so much cleaner than fission (what’s done in nuclear reactors), but also so much harder. We talked about the fusion reactor being built in France – ITER – as well as other things you can do with plasmas, like propelling satellites and space ships!

New Yorker article on the fusion reactor, ITER. (In the show I mention an Atlantic article, however I was unable to find it. This one also looks good!)

Artist Song Album Label
The Modern Lovers Astral Plane The Modern Lovers Sanctuary Records Group
Jawbreaker Reunion Laughing Alone Eating A Salad Lutheran sisterhood gun club Miscreant Records
Screaming Females Angelo’s Song Baby Teeth Don Giovanni
Young Fathers Nest White Men are black men too Big Dada
QUARTERBACKS Not in Luv Quarterbacks Team Love Records
Shopping For your money Consumer Complaints Fat Cat Records
Talking with Brian Kraus
Ava Luna PRPL Electric Balloon Western Vinyl
Charanjit Singh Raga Bhairav Synthesizing – Ten ragas to a disco beat Saregama
Marvin Gaye, Tammi Terrell Ain’t No Mountain high enough United Motown Records
Tinariwen Arawan Amassakoul WEDGE S.A.R.L.
Man Man Pink Wonton On Oni Pond Anti, Inc
Talking with Brian Kraus
Hop Along Sister Cities Painted Shut Saddle Creek
Jeff Buckley The Sky is a landfill Sketches from My sweetheart the drunk NA
Sarah Jarosz Shankill Butchers Song up in her head sugar hill
Talking with Brian Kraus
Royksopp Vision One Junior Parlaphone

Radio Show + Interview with Neuroscientist Sam Mcdougle

Full radio show, aired on WPRB 103.3 Princeton from 2 to 4am on Thursday, September 24th, 2015. The show features an interview with neuroscientist Sam McDougle (doctoral candidate at Princeton University). We discuss the cerebellum, how we learn things, and why that myth that we only use 10% of our brain is bullshit. We also play a few tunes he selected in addition to a song he’s released (on soundcloud) as Polly Hi. You can find more of his songs on his soundcloud site.

Artist Song Album Label
Nina Simone Everyone’s Gone to the Moon
Potty Mouth Truman Show Potty Mouth EP Planet Whatever
Young Fathers Nest White Men are Black Men Too Big Dada
Ben Harper, Blind Boys of Alabama Well, Well, Well There Will Be a Light Virgin
Guantanamo Baywatch Shenanigans Darling…It’s too late Suicide Squeeze
Talk with Sam McDougle
Ultimate Painting Ultimate Painting Ultimate Painting Trouble in Minds Records
Minor Alps Buried Plans Get There Barsuk Records
Sonny and the Sunsets The Application Talent Night at the Ashram Polyvinyl
Friendly Males Done it again Nopalera Lolipop
Talk with Sam McDougle
Give it up Polly Hi N/A N/A
Worriers They/Them/Theirs Imaginary Life Don Giovanni
The Cats Six Packs Grave Desecrator + 4 N/A
Heavens to Betsy Terrorist Calculated Kill Rock Stars
Velvet Underground Pale Blue Eyes The Velvet Underground (45th Anniversary Delux Edition) Universal Records
All Dogs Sunday Morning Kicking Every Day Salinas Records
The Julie Ruin Ha Ha Ha Run Fast TJR Records
Andrew Bird Fake Palendromes The Mysterious Production of Eggs
Fat Creeps Dad Weed Must Be Nice Fat Creeps
Chastity Belt On the Floor Time to go home Hardly Art
Royal Headache Garbage High What’s Your Rupture?
El Ten Eleven My Only Swerving El Ten Eleven Bar/None Records
Reviver Antennas Versificator Exigent Records
Mitski Francis Forever Bury Me At Makeout Creek Don Giovanni

Interview with Professor Paul Steinhardt on the Quest for Quasicrystals

Featured image is of a two-dimensional organic quasicrystal. Source: Natalie Wasio et al., Nature, 2014 via Wired
Image accompanying the Mixcloud link below is an actual image of a “Real Decagonal Quasicrystal with Quasi-unit cell tiling superposed.” Source: Paul Steinhardt (website)
PJSteinhardt
Paul Steinhardt

This is my full interview with Paul Steinhardt, Albert Einstein professor of physics at Princeton University. We spoke about the magnificent quasicrystal – what it is, why they’re special and fascinating, and their incredible discovery (both of the synthetic and natural varieties). This is a fast-moving and hot area of research, and there is surely more to come soon.

 

Update: This was one of my (Stevie’s) first science interviews on WPRB (read: first interviews ever), and Paul was gracious enough to come in and spend the time with me, nonetheless. Sitting at the mic in the mirror studio, he relayed the whole story of how he became fascinated by quasicrystals, a crystal with a quasi-periodic structure and ten fold symmetry that is both mathematically interesting and, it turns out, can have desirable physical properties, like as coating on airplane wings and non-stick frying pans. This eventually led Steinhardt and his team on a quest to the farthest reaches of Russia for a naturally occurring sample that scientists had previously thought couldn’t exist as it would be too fragile. (Though! Quasicrystals were accidentally made in a lab in 1982.)

Listen to the whole story by clicking on the link at the top.

Indeed, the first naturally occurring quasicrystal was found by Paul and his team in 2009, and the second just last year in March 2015. The origins of the crystal are unknown, but due to its atomic makeup and the conditions required for its formation, the best theory involves meteors colliding in space. Steinhardt explained the theory in this interview, and further in an excellent Scientific American article on the topic (emphasis added):

The ratios of isotopes of oxygen in silicate and oxide minerals around the quasicrystal grain are typical of minerals found in meteorites called carbonaceous chondrites, the team reports. This indicates that the rock is of extraterrestrial origin and very old: virtually all chondrites formed at the birth of the Solar System. It is likely, but not certain, that the quasicrystal grain within the meteorite is of roughly the same age. It was found entwined with a silica mineral that forms only at high pressures and temperatures—such as might be created by a collision with the chondrite body.

From “World’s Only Known Natural Quasicrystal Traced to Ancient Meteorite,” Scientific American, Jan. 3, 2012.

More resources:

Cosmology, Astronomy, and the Oldest Light in the Universe (Interview with Dr. Renée Hlozek, Princeton University)

The Mixcloud embed isn’t working at the moment, so you can find the audio here. (WordPress is a fickle, but free, beast.)

This was a weird thing for me to do – interview a cosmologist – because I’m a cosmologist. I tried to ask her questions to get her to explain what we do and why we do it. For your perusal, this is part 1 of out interview:

Extra links:

http://www.esa.int/spaceinvideos/content/view/embedjw/437383

The electromagnetic spectrum. Notice that red light has a longer wavelength than blue.

The dashes are the polarization directions (the color is the intensity).^^ Polarization of the CMB from the BICEP2 results last year (primarily due to the CMB light filtering through dust in our galaxy before it reaches out telescopes).