Multimedia Content - Annotated

Multimedia from the Carnegie Institution are available on iTunes U and YouTube.
Audio / Video Press Releases
Audio  

Diamonds Show Depth of Earth’s Carbon Cycle
Tuesday, November 3, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism

Steve Shirey, Staff Member

Scientists have speculated that Earth’s carbon cycle extends into the deep Earth, but until now there has been no direct evidence. Researchers analyzed diamonds that originated from the lower mantle and erupted to the surface. Analysis shows compositions consistent with the mineralogy of oceanic crust. This finding is the first direct evidence that slabs of oceanic crust sank into the lower mantle and that material, including carbon, is cycled between Earth’s surface and deep interior.

Video  

Mercury Not Like Other Planets MESSENGER Finds
Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism

Sean Solomon, Staff Scientist

The MESSENGER spacecraft has shown scientists that Mercury doesn’t conform to theory. Its surface material composition differs from both those of the other terrestrial planets and expectations prior to the MESSENGER mission, calling into question current theories for Mercury’s formation. Its magnetic field is unlike any other in the Solar System, and there are huge expanses of volcanic plains surrounding the north polar region of the planet and cover more than 6% of Mercury’s surface.

Video  

New form of superhard carbon observed
Monday, October 24, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Geophysical Laboratory

Dave Mao, Staff Scientist

Carbon is the fourth-most-abundant element in the universe and takes on a wide variety of forms, called allotropes, including diamond and graphite. Scientists at Carnegie’s Geophysical Laboratory are part of a team that has discovered a new form of carbon, which is capable of withstanding extreme pressure stresses that were previously observed only in diamond.

Audio  

A “Jumping Gene’s” preferred targets may influence genome evolution
Tuesday, October 12, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Embryology

Allan Spradling, Staff Scientist

Our genetic blueprint contains numerous entities known as transposons, which have the ability to move from place to place on the chromosomes within a cell. An astounding 50% of human DNA comprises both active transposon elements and the decaying remains of former transposons. Every time a plant or animal cell prepares to divide, the chromosome regions richest in transposon-derived sequences are among the last to duplicate. New research provides potential insight into both these enigmas.

Video  

Tatooine-like planet discovered
Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism

Alan Boss, Staff Scientist

A planet with two suns may be a familiar sight to fans of the Star Wars film series, but not, until now, to scientists. A team of researchers, including Carnegie’s Alan Boss, has discovered a planet that orbits around a pair of stars. This is the first instance of astronomers finding direct evidence of a so-called circumbinary planet. A few other planets have been suspected of orbiting around both members of a dual-star system, but the transits of the circumbinary planet have never been detected previously.

Audio  

New Discovery Sheds Light on the Ecosystem of Young Galaxies
Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Carnegie Observatories

Michael Rauch, Staff Scientist

A team of scientists, led by Michael Rauch from the Carnegie Observatories, has discovered a distant galaxy that may help elucidate two fundamental questions of galaxy formation: How galaxies take in matter and how they give off energetic radiation.

Video
 

Water Evaporated from Trees Cools Global Climate
Thursday, September 28, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Global Ecology

Ken Caldeira, Staff Scientist; Long Cao, Senior Research Associate; Julia Pongratz, Post-doctoral Fellow

Scientists have long debated about the impact on global climate of water evaporated from vegetation. New research from Carnegie’s Global Ecology department concludes that evaporated water helps cool the earth as a whole, not just the local area of evaporation, demonstrating that evaporation of water from trees and lakes could have a cooling effect on the entire atmosphere. These findings have major implications for land-use decision making.

Audio
 

New component of a plant steroid-activated pathway discovered
Thursday, September 26, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Plant Biology

Zhiyong Wang Staff Scientist and Tae-Wuk Kim Post-doctoral Fellow

Plant biologists have been working for years to nail down the series of chemical signals that one class of plant hormones, called brassinosteroids, send from a protein on the surface of a plant cell to the cell’s nucleus. New research has isolated another link in this chain. Fully understanding the brassinosteroid pathway could help scientists better understand plant growth and help improve food and energy crop production.

Audio
 

Man in the Moon Looking Younger
Thursday, September 22, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism

Richard Carlson

Earth’s Moon could be younger than previously thought, according to new research. The prevailing theory of our Moon’s origin is that it was created by a giant impact between a large planet-like object and the proto-Earth. The energy of this impact was sufficiently high that the Moon formed from melted material that was ejected into space. As the Moon cooled, this magma solidified into different mineral components. Analysis of lunar rock samples thought to have been derived from the original magma has given scientists a new estimate of the Moon’s age.

Video
 

Meteorites: Tool Kits for Creating Life on Earth
Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Geophysical Laboratory

Jim Cleaves

Meteorites hold a record of the chemicals that existed in the early Solar System and that may have been a crucial source of the organic compounds that gave rise to life on Earth. Since the 1960s, scientists have been trying to find proof that nucleobases, the building blocks of our genetic material, came to Earth on meteorites. New research indicates that certain nucleobases do reach the Earth from extraterrestrial sources, by way of certain meteorites, and in greater diversity and quantity than previously thought.

Video

 

Supernovae Parents Found
Thursday, September 15, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Observatories

Josh Simon, Mark Phillips, Nidia Morrell

Type Ia supernovae are violent stellar explosions whose brightness is used to determine distances in the universe. Observing these objects to billions of light years away has led to the discovery that the universe is expanding at an accelerating rate, the foundation for the notion of dark energy. Although all Type Ia supernovae appear to be very similar, astronomers do not know for certain how the explosions take place and whether they all share the same origin. Now, researchers have examined new and detailed observations of 41 of these objects and concluded that there are clear signatures of gas outflows from the supernova ancestors, which do not appear to be white dwarfs

Audio
 

Reservoirs of Ancient Lava Shaped Earth
Friday, September 9, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism

Richard Carlson, Staff Associate

Geological history has periodically featured giant lava eruptions that coat large swaths of land or ocean floor with basaltic lava, which hardens into rock formations called flood basalt. New research proposes that the remnants of six of the largest volcanic events of the past 250 million years contain traces of the ancient Earth's primitive mantle—which existed before the largely differentiated mantle of today—offering clues to the geochemical history of the planet.

Audio
 

Potential New Eye Tumor Treatment Discovered
Thursday, September 8, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Embryology

David McPherson, Staff Associate

New research from a team including several Carnegie scientists demonstrates that a specific small segment of RNA could play a key role in the growth of a type of malignant childhood eye tumor called retinoblastoma. The tumor is associated with mutations of a protein called Rb, or retinoblastoma protein. Dysfunctional Rb is also involved with other types of cancers, including lung, brain, breast and bone. Their work could result in a new therapeutic target for treating this rare form of cancer and potentially other cancers as well.

Video  

Earliest Watery Black Hole Discovered
Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Observatories

Eric Murphy, Staff Scientist

Water really is everywhere. A team of astronomers have found the largest and farthest reservoir of water ever detected in the universe—discovered in the central regions of a distant quasar. Quasars contain massive black holes that are steadily consuming a surrounding disk of gas and dust; as it eats, the quasar spews out huge amounts of energy. The energy from this particular quasar was released some 12 billion years ago, only 1.6 billion years after the Big Bang and long before most of the stars in the disk of our Milky Way galaxy began forming.

Audio  

Diamonds Pinpoint Start of Colliding Continents
Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism

Steven Shirey, Staff Scientist

Jewelers abhor diamond impurities, but they are a bonanza for scientists. Safely encased in the super-hard diamond, impurities are unaltered, ancient minerals that can tell the story of Earth’s distant past. Carnegie's Steve Shirey analyzed data from the literature of over 4,000 of these mineral inclusions to find that continents started the cycle of breaking apart, drifting, and colliding about 3 billion years ago.

Video  

Searching for the “Perfect Glass”
Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Geophysical Laboratory

Dave Mao, Staff Scientist

Glasses differ from crystals. Crystals are organized in repeating patterns that extend in every direction. Glasses lack this strict organization, but do sometimes demonstrate order among neighboring atoms. New research from Carnegie’s Geophysical Laboratory reveals the possibility of creating a metallic glass that is organized on a larger scale.

Video
 

MESSENGER Orbital Data Confirm Theories, Reveal Surprises
Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism

Sean Solomon, Staff Scientist

Larry Nittler, Staff Scientist

In March, the MESSENGER spacecraft entered orbit around Mercury to become that planet’s first orbiter. The tiny craft is providing a wealth of new information and some surprises. For instance, Mercury’s surface composition differs from that expected for the innermost of the terrestrial planets, and Mercury’s magnetic field has a north-south asymmetry that affects the interaction of the surface with charged particles from the solar wind.

Audio
 

What Makes a Plant a Plant?
Friday, August 5, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Plant Biology

Arthur Grossman, Staff Scientist

Although scientists have been able to sequence the genomes of many organisms, they still lack a context for associating the proteins encoded in genes with specific biological processes. To better understand the genetics underlying plant physiology and ecology—especially in regard to photosynthesis—a team of researchers including Carnegie's Arthur Grossman identified a list of proteins encoded in the genomes of plants and green algae, but not in the genomes of organisms that don't generate energy through photosynthesis.

Video
 

Reforestation’s Cooling Influence--A Result of Farmer’s Past Choices
Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Global Ecology

Ken Caldeira, Staff Scientist

Julia Pongratz, Post-Doctoral Research Scientist

Includes video of Julia Pongrantz discussing the research

Decisions by farmers to plant on productive land with little snow enhances the potential for reforestation to counteract global warming, concludes new research from Carnegie’s Julia Pongratz and Ken Caldeira. Previous research has led scientists and politicians to believe that regrowing forests on Northern lands that were cleared in order to grow crops would not decrease global warming. But these studies did not consider the importance of the choices made by farmers in the historical past.

Audio  

Meteorite Holds Clues to Organic Chemistry of the Early Earth
Thursday, July 21, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism and Geophysical Laboratory

Carbonaceous chondrites are a type of organic-rich meteorite that contain samples of the materials that took part in the creation of our planets nearly 4.6 billion years ago, including materials that were likely formed before our Solar System was created and may have been crucial to the formation of life on Earth. The complex suite of organic materials found in carbonaceous chondrites can vary substantially from meteorite to meteorite. New research from Carnegie's Department of Terrestrial Magnetism and Geophysical Laboratory shows that most of these variations are the result of hydrothermal activity that took place within a few million years of the formation of the Solar System, when the meteorites were still part of larger parent bodies, likely asteroids.

Video
 

Young Graphite, Old Rocks: Looking for Evidence of Earliest Life
Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Geophysical Laboratory and Department of Terrestrial Magnetism

Dominic Papineau, Staff Scientist

Scientists have long debated about the origin of carbon in Earth’s oldest sedimentary rocks and how it might signal the remnants of the earliest forms of life on the planet. New research by a team including five scientists from Carnegie’s Geophysical Laboratory and Department of Terrestrial Magnetism discovered that carbon samples taken from ancient Canadian rock formations are younger than the sedimentary rocks surrounding them, which were formed at least 3.8 billion years ago. Their results indicate that the carbon contained in such ancient rocks should not be assumed to be as old as the rocks, unless it can be shown to have had the same metamorphic history as the host rock.

Audio
 

Consumption, Carbon Emissions, and International Trade
Friday, July 8, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Global Ecology

Ken Caldeira, Staff Scientist

Accurately calculating the amount of carbon dioxide emitted in the process of producing and bringing products to our doorsteps is nearly impossible, but still a worthwhile effort, two Carnegie researchers claim in a commentary published online this week. The Global Ecology department’s Ken Caldeira and Steven Davis commend the work of industrial ecologist Glen Peters and colleagues, published in the same journal late last month, and use that team’s data to do additional analysis on the disparity between emissions and consumption in different parts of the world.

Video
 

Sugarcane Cools Climate After Deforestation
Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Global Ecology

Scott Loarie, Post-doctoral

Brazilians are world leaders in using biofuels. About a quarter of their automobile fuel consumption comes from sugarcane, which significantly reduces carbon dioxide emissions that otherwise would be emitted from using gasoline. Now Carnegie’s Scott Loari and team have found that sugarcane has a double benefit. Expansion of the crop in areas previously occupied by other crops cools the local climate by reflecting sunlight back into space and by lowering the air temperature as the plants “exhale” cooler water.

Audio
  Climate Change from Black Carbon Depends on Altitude
Tuesday, June 27, 2011
Video
  Under Pressure: Germanium
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Video
  Cutting Carbon Dioxide Helps Prevent Drying
Monday, June 13, 2011
Audio
  Formaldehyde: Poison Could Have Set the Stage for the Origins of Life
Friday, June 3, 2011
Video
  Lunar Water Brings Portions of Moon’s Origin Story into Question
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Video
  Revisiting 1950s experiments for signs of life’s origin
Monday, May 16, 2011
Video
  Delving into Manganite Conductivity
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Audio
  A Solar System Family Portrait, from the Inside Out
Monday, April 25, 2011
Audio
  Unexpected Exoskeleton Remnants Found in Paleozoic Fossils
Monday, April 4, 2011
Video
  Meteorite Just One PIece of an Unknown Celestial Body
Monday, March 28, 2011
Video
  How Do You Make Lithium Melt in The Cold?
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Video
  Mastermind Steroid Found in Plants
Monday, March 7, 2011
Audio
  Scientists Watch Cell-Shape Process for First Time
Friday, February 25, 2011
Audio
  Nailing Down A Crucial Plant Signaling System
Friday, February 18, 2011
Video
  Hubble Sees Farther Back in Time Than Ever Before
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Video
  Termites Foretell Climate Change in Africa’s Savannas
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Audio
  How Pathogens Hijack Host Plants
Monday, January 31, 2011
Video
  War, Plague No Match for Deforestation in Driving CO2 Buildup
Monday, January 24, 2011
Video
  Breakthrough in Nanocrystals Growth
Monday, January 17, 2011
Audio
  Ancient Colorado River Flowed Backwards
Monday, January 3, 2011
Audio
  Optimizing climate change reduction
Friday, December 31, 2010
Video
  Carbon Mapping Breakthrough
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Audio
  Main Climate Threat from CO2 Sources Yet to Be Built
Monday, December 20, 2010
Video
  Roller Coaster Superconductivity Discovered
Monday, December 13, 2010
Video
  Asteroid Found in Gravitational “Dead Zone”
Monday, November 8, 2010
Video
  Arctic Rocks Offer New Glimpse of Primitive Earth
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Video   Scrubbing CO2 from Atmosphere Could Be a Long-term Commitment
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Video
  Potentially Habitable Planet Discovered
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Video   Whiter Clouds Could Mean Wetter Land
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Video   High Yield Crops Keep Carbon Emissions Low
Friday, August 20, 2010
Video   New Revelations about Mercury’s Volcanism, Magnetic Substorms, and Exosphere from MESSENGER
TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2010
Video   Global Tropical Forests Threatened by 2100
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 2010
Video   Plant “Breathing” Mechanism Discovered
TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 2010
Video   Ancient Galaxy Cluster Contains “Modern” Galaxies
TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 2010
Video   Did Phosphorus Trigger Complex Evolution−and Blue Skies?
THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010
Video   Silver Tells a Volatile Story of Earth’s Origin
THURSDAY, JULY 1, 2010
Video   Scientists Find Moon Whiskers
THURSDAY, JULY 1, 2010
Video   Chromosome “Glue” Surprises Scientists
FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 2010
Video   Moon Whets Appetite for Water
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 2010
Video   CO2 Effects on Plants Increase Global Warming
TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 2010
Video   For Stem Cells, Practice Makes Perfect
TUESDAY, MAY 25, 2010
Audio   Cracking the Plant-Cell Membrane Code
MONDAY, MAY 18, 2010
Video   Metallic Glass Yields Secrets Under Pressure
TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2010
Video   Old Star is “Missing Link” in Galactic Evolution
TUESDAY MAY 11, 2010
Video   Carbon Emissions ‘Outsourced’ to Developing Countries
TUESDAY MAY 4, 2010
Video   Bald Eagle Diet Shift Enhances Conservation
MONDAY MAY 3, 2010
Video   Merging Galaxies Create a Binary Quasar
FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 2010
Video   Gene Function Discovery: Guilt by Association
MONDAY, APRIL 12, 2010
Video   Superconducting Hydrogen?
TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 2010
Video   Astronomers Detect Earliest Galaxies
TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 2010
Audio   Climate Change Puts Ecosystems on the Run
FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 2010
Video   Antagonistic genes control rice growth
TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 2010
Video   First Super-Earths Discovered around Sun-like Stars
TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 2010
Audio   Ken Caldeira Testifies to Congress on Geoengineering
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2010
Video   Hawaiian Hot Spot Has Deep Roots
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2010
Video   Breakthrough in Monitoring Tropical Deforestation Announced in Copenhagen
MONDAY, JANUARY 25, 2010
Video   “Safety Valve” Protects Photosynthesis from Too Much Light
TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 2010
Video   “Dropouts” Pinpoint Earliest Galaxies
MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2010
Video   New Hydrogen-Storage Method Discovered
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2009
Video   Rich Ore Deposits Linked to Ancient Atmosphere
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
Video   “Ultra-Primitive” Particles Found in Comet Dust
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2009
Video   New Way to Monitor Faults May Help Predict Earthquakes
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2009
Video   Plants on Steroids: Key Missing Link Discovered
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2009
Audio   Scientists Study Possible Responses to Climate Emergencies
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2009
Audio   Carnegie Donates Landmark Clones to Biology
THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 2009
Video   Hydrocarbons in Deep Earth?
MONDAY, JULY 27, 2009
Video   Plants Put Limit on Ice Ages
WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 2009
Video   Stem Cell Surprise for Tissue Regeneration
THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 2009
Video   Midget Plant Gets Makeover
MONDAY, JUNE 22, 2009
Audio   Global Sunscreen Won’t Save Corals
THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 2009
Video   Is the Sky the Limit for Wind Power?
MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2009
Audio   Advance in understanding cellulose synthesis
MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2009
Audio   Surprise: Typhoons Trigger Slow Earthquakes
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 2009
Audio   ‘Colossal’ Magnetic Effect Under Pressure
FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2009
Audio   Bioelectricity Promises More ‘Miles Per Acre’ Than Ethanol - Interview with Chris Field
THURSDAY, MAY 7, 2009
Audio   MESSENGER Reveals Mercury as a Dynamic Planet
THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 2009
Audio   Fingerprinting Slow Earthquakes
THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2009
Video   Mysterious Space Blob Discovered at Cosmic Dawn
THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2009
Audio   Did a Nickel Famine Trigger the “Great Oxidation Event”?
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 2009
Video   Asteroid Impact Helps Trace Meteorite Origins
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2009
Video   Early Agriculture Left Traces in Animal Bones
TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 2009
Audio   Under Pressure, Atoms Make Unlikely Alloys
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 2009
Audio   Coral Reefs May Start Dissolving When Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Doubles
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 2009
Audio   Global Ecology’s Congressional ‘Hat Trick’
TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 2009
Video   Airborne Ecologists Help Balance Delicate African Ecosystem
MONDAY, MARCH 2, 2009
Video   New Stars from Old Gas Surprise Astronomers
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2009
Audio   Exploring Planets in Distant Space and Deep Interiors
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2009
Audio   Decisive Action Needed as Warming Predictions Worsen, Says Carnegie Scientist
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2009
Audio   Scientists deconstruct cell division
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2009
Audio   High Pressure Yields Novel Single-Element ‘Compound’
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2009
Audio   Spectacular Heating of Planet Observed
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 2009
Audio   Exoplanet Atmospheres Detected from Earth
THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2009
Audio  

New Technology Needed to Monitor Rain Forest “Tsunami”

TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2009

Audio   Half-baked Asteroids Have Earth-like Crust
FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 2009
Audio  

“Scrawny” Gene Keeps Stem Cells Healthy
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 2009

Audio   New Rain Forest Mapping Technology Gets Huge Support
TUESDAY, JANUARY 6, 2009
Video   Zeroing in on Hubble’s Constant
MONDAY, JANUARY 5, 2009
Audio   Climate Change Alters Ocean Chemistry
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2008
Audio   Corralling the Carbon Cycle
NOVEMBER 13, 2008
Video   Electronic heat trap grips deep Earth
NOVEMBER 12, 2008
Audio   World Needs Climate Emergency Backup Plan, Says Expert
NOVEMBER 7, 2008
Audio   New Process Promises Bigger, Better Diamond Crystals
OCTOBER 28, 2008
Video   “Little Bang” triggered Solar System formation
OCTOBER 2, 2008
Video   Oldest Known Rocks Discovered
SEPTEMBER 26, 2008
Video   Putting the Squeeze on Nitrogen for High Energy Materials
SEPTEMBER 3, 2008
Video   Chris Somerville delivers ’Developing Cellulosic Biofuels’ ICAR Keynote Lecture (audio)
AUGUST 12, 2008

Video
 

Maelstrom quashes jumping genes
AUGUST 11, 2008

Embryology

Alex Bortvin

Scientists have known for decades that genes called transposons can jump around the genome, but it can be dangerous, especially in cells that produce eggs and sperm. To ensure the integrity of these cells, nature developed a mechanism to quash this genetic scrambling, but how it works has remained a mystery. Now a team of scientists, including researchers at the Department of Embryology, has identified a key protein that suppresses jumping genes in mice and found that the protein is vital to sperm formation.


Video
 

Carnegie’s Alan Cutler receives James H. Shea Award for Science Writing
JULY 22, 2008

Administration

Alan Cutler (video)

The National Association of Geoscience Teachers has awarded the 2008 James H. Shea Award to science writer Alan Cutler at the Carnegie Institution. The Shea Award is given annually. Other winners of the Shea Award include Science magazine writer Richard Kerr, Pulitzer Prize winner John McPhee, and Stephen Jay Gould


Video
 

Moon water discovered: Dampens Moon-formation theory
JULY 9, 2008

Terrestrial Magnetism

Erik Hauri

Using new techniques developed by Carnegie’s Erik Hauri, scientists have discovered that tiny beads of volcanic glasses collected from two Apollo missions to the Moon contain water. Contrary to previous thought, water was not entirely vaporized in the violent events that formed the Moon. The results call into question some critical aspects of the “giant impact” theory of the Moon’s formation and may have implications for the origin of possible water reservoirs at the Moon’s poles.


Video
 

Abandoned Farmlands Are Key to Sustainable Bioenergy
JUNE 25, 2008

Global Ecology

Elliot Campbell

Robert Genova

Christopher Field

Biofuels can be a sustainable part of the world’s energy future, especially if bioenergy agriculture is developed on currently abandoned or degraded agricultural lands, report scientists from the Carnegie Institution and Stanford University. Using these lands for energy crops, instead of converting existing croplands or clearing new land, avoids competition with food production and preserves carbon-storing forests needed to mitigate climate change.


Video
 

Supernova birth seen for first time
MAY 22, 2008

Observatories

Alicia Soderberg

Edo Berger

Astronomers have seen the aftermath of spectacular stellar explosions known as supernovae before, but until now no one has witnessed a star dying in real time. While looking at another object in the spiral galaxy NGC 2770, using NASA’s orbiting Swift telescope, Carnegie-Princeton fellows* Alicia Soderberg and Edo Berger detected an extremely luminous blast of X-rays released by a supernova explosion. They alerted 8 other orbiting and on-ground telescopes to turn their eyes on this first-of-its-kind event.

Features
Video  

About Carnegie Institution for Science: Our Mission

 

Video  

FORTHCOMINGShaun Hardy, Librarian at Carnegie’s Broad Branch Road Campus presents "To Penetrate the Mantle of Darkness"

 

Video  

Robert M. Hazen, staff scientist at Carnegie’s Geophysical Laboratory, discusses mineral evolution

 

Video  

Paul Silver, staff scientist at the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, discusses his earthquake research

 

Video   Sean C. Solomon, director at the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, discusses MESSENGER