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Adrian Gallo And Lisa Hildebrand

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Flugforensik - Abstürze und ihre GeschichteFlugforensik - Abstürze und ihre GeschichteHeimflug ins Verderben: 256 Tote beim Arrow-Air-Absturz in GanderArrow-Air-Flug 1285R stürzt 1985 kurz nach dem Start im kanadischen Gander ab. Alle 256 Insassen der DC-8 sterben. Benny & Andreas rekonstruieren wir den Fall, über dem bis heute Fragezeichen stehen.Unsere Interviewpartner:🎙️ David McNair, damaliger Flugunfall-Ermittler ✈️ Max Annen, erfahrener Pilot auf McDonnell-Douglas-Flugzeugen🛫 Jack Pinsent von der Gander Airport Historical Society 🫶  Amy Gallo, Witwe eines der Opfer der KatastropheLinks zur Episode:Gander Airport Society Majority Report Minority ReportWerde Patron und unterstütze FlugforensikWir danken u...2025-04-041h 40Toolroom RadioToolroom RadioToolroom Radio EP695Presented by Mark Knight: 2 hours of the hottest dance music brought to you from Toolroom. Including only but the best in underground dance music of right now, plus AAA weekly guests on the show. Toolroom Radio is your perfect house music fix. Lets get into it. TracklistMarvin Humes - Put Your Hands Up (Kideko Remix) [Love & Other] - 00.00Flashmob - Watch Me [Nothing Else Matters] - 04.34 Hot Right NowBrock Edwards, Dirty Secretz - Red Lights [Motive Records] - 09.14Julius Papp (feat. Lisa Shaw) - Way Back (Jarred Gallo Remix) [Salted...2023-07-241h 00Toolroom RadioToolroom RadioToolroom Radio EP695 - Presented by ESSELToolroom Radio is now live! ESSEL sits in for Mark Knight this week and coming up there’s brand new music from Danny Howard, Nick Curly, Jewel Kid, Dirty Secretz and Jarred Gallo. There’s all the usual features with Hot Right Now, Ben Remember’s In The Mix, there’s the Shakedown Staff Picks, and of course this week’s hottest record with the Killer Cut. Stay locked for Hour 2 as Deeper Purpose is in the Guest Mix, and Mark Knight will be coming in live from the Academy in LA. This is Where Music Matters. Tracklist Marvin Humes - Put Your...2023-07-242h 00Inspiration DisseminationInspiration DisseminationThe rigamarole of RNA, ribosomes, and machine learningBasic biology and computer science is probably not an intuitive pairing to think of, when we think of pairs of scientific disciplines. Not as intuitive as say biology and chemistry (often referred to as biochem). However, for Joseph Valencia, a third year PhD student at OSU, the bridge between these two disciplines is a view of life at the molecular scale as a computational process in which cells store, transmit, and interpret the information necessary for survival. Join us on this week's episode as we explore how machine learning can be used to try and reveal how ribosomes make...2022-04-2841 minInspiration DisseminationInspiration DisseminationMini-Molecules and Mighty IdeasThis week we have on the show Dr. Bo Wu – he recently graduated from Oregon State University with a Ph.D. from the Electrical Engineering department where he developed new sensors to monitor three different neurotransmitters that are correlated with our stress, mood, and happiness. Even though so much of our bodily functions rely on these neurotransmitters (cortisol, serotonin, dopamine), there are no current commercial or rapid techniques to monitor these tiny molecules. Since the majority of innovations in University settings never gets beyond the walls of the Ivory Tower, Bo wanted to design sensors with functionality and scalability in...2021-11-2929 minInspiration DisseminationInspiration DisseminationTwo Ways of Killing BacteriaScience strives to be apolitical, but that was not possible for bacteriophage research during the Cold War era. Bacteriophages are viruses that attack very specific bacteria; antibiotics also attack bacteria but they are not targeted and can kill both the good and bad bacteria. The Cold War saw the initial phases of Soviets researching bacteriophages while the Americans and their allies levied heavy investments into all things antibiotics. During World War II, antibiotics were widely used and bacterial resistance was becoming more apparent. Because the US and its allies focused on antibiotics, they failed to recognize this natural antibacterial...2021-11-2247 minInspiration DisseminationInspiration DisseminationHealthcare, but in paper formHave you ever thought of how a pregnancy test works? You probably know you can get a pregnancy test at a hospital to be 100% sure, but that test requires lab work, people power, time, and money (cough cost of healthcare cough) to get that answer. Instead, you can pee on a small piece of plastic and get an answer within minutes! But under the hood of the at-home pregnancy test is a lot of physics and chemistry happening in an automated fashion. First, the sample (urine) needs to be pulled, by capillary action, to be exposed to a few...2021-11-1544 minInspiration DisseminationInspiration DisseminationFighting for Freedom in OregonJason J. Dorsette is a Black man with a family full of civil rights activists and leaders with a rich history in the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People). As he described, “I was a country boy from the Jim Crow South and went to Oregon.” The NAACP of his upbringing did not exist here in Corvallis; literally, there was no collegiate branch in the Pacific Northwest when he arrived in 2014. Feeling like he didn’t belong, he helped to start the Oregon State University-NAACP branch in February of 2015 and continues to be involved in a variet...2021-11-0141 minInspiration DisseminationInspiration DisseminationThe Promise and Peril of New Plants on Oregon's Sand DunesIn a rapid fire interview, Rebecca Mostow connects her research on dunegrasses along the coastline of the Pacific Northwest and Dune, the new film adapted from a SciFi book series. The book series envisions a planet with constantly shifting sand dunes, an idea that the books’ author originally had when he visited Oregon’s sand dunes in Florence in the 1950’s. During this time period, federal and local agencies were planting a variety of plant species to keep the sand dunes stable making the lives of coastal communities less … sandy. It worked, and some would consider it a real-life example...2021-10-2533 minInspiration DisseminationInspiration DisseminationThe Science ContinuesIt’s been nearly 20 months since we’ve been back in the radio booth. Science has not stopped, but we as a team needed a break. Some of us on the Inspiration Dissemination team have graduated, some spent weeks at sea following whales, while others pivoted to research COVID-19 itself. It has been a wild ride, but we’re happy to be back doing regular shows again, even happier to have the opportunity to continue podcasting and learning from our fellow graduate students. Want to be on the show? Fill out our form on the website and we’ll get you...2021-10-1837 minInspiration DisseminationInspiration DisseminationHeather Forsythe Proteins run the show (except when they unfold and cause cataracts)Your eye lenses host one of the highest concentration of crystallin protein in your entire body and Heather Forsythe, a 4th year PhD candidate working with Dr. Elisar Barbar in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, uses incredibly detailed spectroscopic techniques to identify what happens to this protein as we age and why cataracts may develop later in life. Heather's specialty is Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, or NMR, of disordered proteins, and her work on crystallin is just one piece of her PhD. We also discussed her humble beginnings in Arkansas, her push towards medical school that was transformed on a...2019-09-3000 minInspiration DisseminationInspiration DisseminationHeather Forsythe Proteins run the show (except when they unfold and cause cataracts)Your eye lenses host one of the highest concentration of crystallin protein in your entire body and Heather Forsythe, a 4th year PhD candidate working with Dr. Elisar Barbar in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, uses incredibly detailed spectroscopic techniques to identify what happens to this protein as we age and why cataracts may develop later in life. Heather's specialty is Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, or NMR, of disordered proteins, and her work on crystallin is just one piece of her PhD. We also discussed her humble beginnings in Arkansas, her push towards medical school that was transformed on a...2019-09-3054 min