NOVA scienceNOW
NOVA scienceNOW: Season 4

Air Date

June 30, 2009

Episodes

8 episodes

NOVA scienceNOW

Season 4

Episodes

1. Diamond Factory / Anthrax Investigation / Auto-Tune / Luis Von Ahn

June 30, 2009

2. Hunt for Alien Earths / Art Authentication / Maydianne Andrade / Autism Genes

July 7, 2009

Join astronomers hunting for Earth-like planets, see how computers distinguish authentic art from forgeries, meet a spider biologist who studies sexual cannibalism, and learn about genes that may be involved in causing autism.

3. Marathon Mouse/Dinosaur Plague/Franklin Chang-Díaz/Space Storms

July 14, 2009

Watch how an "exercise pill" turns couch-potato mice into athletes, explore a controversial new theory of what killed the dinosaurs, meet the first Latino-American astronaut, and find out why the beautiful northern lights signal a threat to our electronic society.

4. Picky Eaters/Capturing Carbon/Sea Lions and Walruses/Sangeeta Bhatia

July 21, 2009

Discover why picky eaters may have a genetic excuse, learn about a new strategy for capturing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, see just how intelligent marine mammals can be, and meet a biomedical engineer who has figured out a way to make tiny livers in her lab.

5. Moon Smasher/Secrets in the Salt/Bird Brains/Lonnie Thompson

July 28, 2009

Follow a NASA satellite looking for water on the moon, see what ancient salt deposits reveal about life 250 million years ago, learn how bird brains are remarkably similar to our own, and meet a climatologist who digs for clues to climate change in the world's highest glaciers.

6. Public Genomes/Algae Fuel/Arctic Ocean Seafloor/Yoky Matsuoka

August 18, 2009

Explore the controversies behind genetic testing and genome sequencing, learn about algae fuel, follow an expedition to the Arctic Ocean seafloor, and meet a woman engineer designing prosthetic limbs controlled by human thought.

7. Saving Hubble Update/Gangster Birds/Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa/How Memory Works

August 25, 2009

Get an astronaut's view of the Hubble repair mission, find out why cowbirds are called "gangster birds," meet a Mexican immigrant farmworker-turned-brain surgeon, and learn how neuroscientists are finding ways to erase memories.

8. Earthquakes in the Midwest/Sleep/Sang-Mook Lee/First Primates

September 1, 2009

Using new data from cave stalagmites and the Mississippi riverbed to understand how and why earthquakes strike in the heartland; the crucial role sleep plays in strengthening memories and facilitating learning; a profile of marine geologist Sang-Mook Lee; paleontologist Jonathan Bloch, who thinks that tiny bones embedded in limestone may be the evolutionary evidence of the creatures that evolved into primates.