Quanta Magazine Season 2020 poster

Quanta Magazine — Season 2020

202025 episodes

About this season

Explore mind-bending developments in basic science and math research. Quanta Magazine is an award-winning, editorially independent magazine published by the Simons Foundation.

Episodes (25)

1
E1

1. Scarlett Howard on the Lessons of Teaching Bees Math

Aired 22 January 2020

Scarlett Howard describes how and why she taught honeybees math.

2
E2

2. Nobel Laureate James P. Allison on the Origins of His Cancer Immunotherapy Research

Aired 3 February 2020

James P. Allison of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center discusses what initially drew him to immunology as a field and why many scientists used to be skeptical that an immunological strategy for killing cancers would work.

3
E3

3. Omololu Akin-Ojo: Doing Cutting-Edge Physics in Africa

Aired 3 March 2020

Omololu Akin-Ojo of the East African Institute for Fundamental Research discusses his plans to invigorate theoretical physics in Africa, including by focusing on problems related to energy and water that will especially impact the continent.

4
E4

4. Ronald Rivest on Building Better Elections

Aired 12 March 2020

Ronald Rivest of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology describes the role of computers in voting and what makes elections trustworthy.

5
E5

5. Pincelli Hull Explains What Killed Off the Dinosaurs

Aired 25 March 2020

Evidence from the oceans decisively shows that an asteroid strike caused the last mass extinction, argues Pincelli Hull. The cataclysm continues to hold lessons for today.

6
E6

6. Epidemiologist Tara Smith Answers Your Coronavirus Questions

Aired 1 May 2020

Dr. Tara C. Smith is an infectious disease epidemiologist and contributing columnist for Quanta Magazine. In two recent columns for Quanta, Dr. Smith explored the animal origins of the novel coronavirus and explained how prior knowledge about other coronaviruses may help answer questions about the COVID-19 pandemic. On May 1, 2020, she answered questions live on Quanta's YouTube channel.

7
E7

7. Epidemiologist Tara Smith Answers Your Coronavirus Questions [Highlights]

Aired 7 May 2020

Dr. Tara C. Smith is an infectious disease epidemiologist and contributing columnist for Quanta Magazine. In two recent columns for Quanta, Dr. Smith explored the animal origins of the novel coronavirus and explained how prior knowledge about other coronaviruses may help answer questions about the COVID-19 pandemic. On May 1, 2020, she answered questions live on Quanta's YouTube channel.

8
E8

8. Katie Mack Knows How It’s All Going to End

Aired 22 June 2020

Katie Mack describes the most likely scenario for the end of the universe.

9
E9

9. James Maynard Solves the Hardest Easy Math Problems

Aired 1 July 2020

James Maynard talks about why he’s obsessed with prime numbers.

10
E10

10. Liz MacDonald on Strange Auroras

Aired 9 July 2020

Space weather scientist Liz MacDonald studies unique atmospheric phenomena such as the aurora called STEVE.

11
E11

11. Impossible Life Under the Ice—on Earth and Beyond

Aired 20 July 2020

The microbial ecologist John Priscu of Montana State University discusses what led him to seek life beneath the barren, frozen wastes of Antarctica — and how his discoveries there are shaping the search for life on other worlds.

12
E12

12. 'Gravity Is the Law That Makes Everything Happen'

Aired 18 August 2020

The theoretical physicist Claudia de Rham explains why gravity is so fundamental to our understanding of everything in the universe.

13
E13

13. Emily Riehl: Mathematician, Musician, Educator

Aired 2 September 2020

Emily Riehl talks about how higher category theory is like the viola, why she's drawn to expository writing, and the responsibility mathematicians have to address social justice issues.

14
E14

14. The Woman Who's Rewriting Higher Category Theory

Aired 3 September 2020

By turning higher category theory on itself, Emily Riehl hopes to make the powerful perspective more accessible to other mathematicians.

15
E15

15. Urban Traffic and Complex Systems

Aired 28 September 2020

Carlos Gershenson, a computer scientist and complexity researcher at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, answers questions about how principles of adaptation and self-organization can help transportation systems beat traffic jams and other urban mobility problems.

16
E16

16. Cracking the Puzzle of Biodiversity

Aired 14 October 2020

MIT physicist Jeff Gore tests theories about microbe communities experimentally and finds new rules governing ecological stability.

17
E17

17. The Bold Quest to Launch the Internet in Space

Aired 21 October 2020

Vint Cerf is one of the fathers of the internet. Decades ago, he and Robert Kahn developed the architecture and protocol suite known as Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP). Anyone who has ever surfed the web, sent an email, or downloaded an app has them to thank. Now, Cerf wants to boldly go where no internet has gone before. He's designing an interplanetary internet. But extending the internet to space isn’t just a matter of installing Wi-Fi on rockets. Scientists have novel obstacles to contend with. In this new video, Cerf discusses how an internet in space.

18
E18

18. The Extraordinary Math Hidden in Everyday Life

Aired 26 October 2020

L. Mahadevan is a professor of applied mathematics, physics, and organismic and evolutionary biology at Harvard University. He uses mathematics and physics to explore commonplace phenomena, showing that many of the objects and behaviors we take for granted, and consequently give little thought to, are quite extraordinary upon closer examination.

19
E19

19. The Cosmologist Who Dreams of Dark Matter

Aired 5 November 2020

Cora Dvorkin studies the invisible universe. Known as dark matter, it is thought to comprise roughly 85% of all matter in the universe. So far, no researcher has been able to directly detect it. But that only further excites Dvorkin, who is on a quest to uncover its secrets.

20
E20

20. Inside Dynamical Systems and the Mathematics of Change

Aired 17 November 2020

Bryna Kra searches for structures using symbolic dynamics. “[I love] finding order where you didn’t know it existed,” she said. "This is how I think about math: It’s about how things fit together."

21
E21

21. How to Shrink Big Data

Aired 7 December 2020

Jelani Nelson, a computer scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, expands the theoretical possibilities for low-memory streaming algorithms. He’s discovered the best procedures for answering on-the-fly questions like “How many different users are there?” (known as the distinct elements problem) and “What are the trending search terms right now?” (the frequent items problem). Nelson’s algorithms often use a technique called sketching, which compresses big data sets into smaller components that can be stored using less memory and analyzed quickly.

22
E22

22. The 'Male' and 'Female' Brain: New Clues in an Age-Old Question

Aired 14 December 2020

Questions like “why do men and women act differently?” are age-old, with tangled, deeply buried answers. But that is why Catherine Dulac, a Howard Hughes Medical Investigator and a professor of molecular and cellular biology at Harvard University, has become so well respected by her neuroscientist colleagues for the originality and creativity with which she has brought important answers to light.

23
E23

23. 2020's Biggest Breakthroughs in Physics

Aired 23 December 2020

This year, two teams of physicists made profound progress on ideas that could bring about the next revolution in physics. Another still has identified the source of a longstanding cosmic mystery.

24
E24

24. 2020's Biggest Breakthroughs in Math and Computer Science

Aired 24 December 2020

For mathematicians and computer scientists, 2020 was full of discipline-spanning discoveries and celebrations of creativity. We'd like to take a moment to recognize some of these achievements.

25
E25

25. 2020's Biggest Breakthroughs in Biology

Aired 25 December 2020

In 2020, the study of the SARS-CoV-2 virus was undoubtedly the most urgent priority. But there were also some major breakthroughs in other areas. We'd like to take a moment to recognize them.

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