The Sky at Night
External Rating92%
195730 minEm Exibição

The Sky at Night

Emissora:BBC Four

Episódio Anterior

S2026E03 - "Space Weather: The Perfect Storm"

Foi ao ar em Jun 8, 2026, 9:00 PM

Próximo Episódio

S2026E04 - "The Aliens Next Door?"

Vai ao ar em Jul 13, 2026, 9:00 PM (Em 3 dias)

Descrição

Our team of astronomers tell us what's on view in the night sky. From comets to quasars, there is always something fascinating to discuss in the Universe.

Detalhes

Status
Em Exibição
Idioma
English
Duração
30 min
Estreia
April 24, 1957
Programação
Monday às 22:00

Links Externos

Episódios (70 Temporadas · 821 Episódios)

Destination Moon

The team explore Nasa's Artemis II mission, the first crewed journey towards the moon since 1972. They also look into robotic landers and new scientific clues from lunar samples.

Apr 13, 2026

30 min

Jodrell Bank: Tuning Into the Universe

The team explore the remarkable story of Jodrell Bank Observatory and its towering Lovell Telescope, which scientists have used to listen to the cosmos for almost 70 years.

May 11, 2026

30 min

Space Weather: The Perfect Storm

The team uncover a danger that humanity is only just waking up to – space weather. They meet the dedicated people working to keep us safe from the very worst that the sun can throw at us.

Jun 8, 2026

30 min

The Aliens Next Door?

Could alien life exist closer than we think - perhaps right next door? A paper published in 2025 suggested that strange markings discovered on Mars could provide some of the strongest evidence yet that life once existed on the Red Planet. The Sky at Night team travels across Great Britain to investigate this and other evidence that suggests the search for life beyond Earth may lie within our own solar system.Off the east coast of Scotland, Chris Lintott meets Dr Claire Cousins, who explains the fundamental conditions needed for life. She then turns to the ground beneath their feet, where the red rocks along the North Berwick coastline are marked with patterns similar to those seen on Mars. To find out more about how these markings could have formed here - and possibly on Mars - Chris heads to Edinburgh, where Dr Sean McMahon is investigating whether similar patterns can be recreated in the lab.Meanwhile, in Cardiff, George Dransfield speaks with Professor Jane Greaves, whose paper on the detection of phosphine in the clouds of Venus six years ago caused a stir. Did the phosphine truly exist, and could it point to life? Ongoing research is continuing to build the case for unusual chemistry - and possibly life - on our closest planetary neighbour.Further out in the solar system, the icy moons of Jupiter and Saturn offer another compelling possibility. Maggie Aderin-Pocock is in Milton Keynes to meet Dr Mark Fox-Powell, whose team are recreating these freezing conditions in the lab to understand how chemistry behaves there. Their work is helping identify what future missions to these icy worlds should look for as potential signs of life - and has even led to the discovery of a new mineral that can only form in such extreme environments.Across Mars, Venus and the icy moons, one theme emerges: life may not require Earth-like conditions in the way we once assumed. Instead, it could thrive in unexpected environments.Finally, Pete Lawrence rounds off the programme with a tour of the summer night sky, and we are reminded of how vast our galaxy is and how small our place within it really is.So, are we alone? The search continues - right here on our cosmic doorstep.

Jul 13, 2026

30 min

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