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The inaugural episode of the CERES podcast is live

Writer's picture: CERES teamCERES team

Today, we are launching the CERES Podcast. In this new podcast series, we will talk about science – reviewing the latest science, revisiting old scientific questions, and discussing some of CERES’s own scientific research.


Often our discussions can be quite controversial because we are more interested in figuring out what is scientifically correct than what is politically correct. But, if you’re interested in science and in particular hearing frank and honest scientific discussions about the scientific topics you hear of in the news, then we think you’ll enjoy this podcast! So, subscribe and share this podcast with anyone else you think will enjoy it!



 


In this inaugural episode of the CERES Podcast, the CERES team leaders (Dr. Willie Soon, Dr. Ronan Connolly & Dr. Michael Connolly) cover everything from North American forest fires to using weather balloons to understand how the Earth’s atmosphere behaves.


  • In Part 1 – the “science news round-up” – we discuss three new papers that caught our attention in the last two weeks: a) a study of forest fire activity of the past 400 years; b) a paper that shows the “Social Cost of Carbon” needs to be majorly reduced from the US EPA’s current estimates; c) a preprint describing “long-vax”.

  • In Part 2, we take a deep dive into the origins of the claim that “97% of scientists agree on climate change”. We show that they just agree that “climate changes”, and there is actually a lot of disagreement over how much is due to human activity vs. natural factors.

  • In Part 3, we describe some of the published research of the CERES team. In this episode, Michael, will focus on the use of “molar density” to analyze weather balloons and the surprising previously undiscovered insights this technique is revealing about the Earth’s atmosphere.


Below is the YouTube version:


Click here for the Rumble version.


If you haven't already subscribed to the CERES channels, please follow us on YouTube at @ceres-science and Rumble at @CERES-science


For those on Twitter/X, you can follow Ronan at @1ronanconnolly. He has uploaded the video on X below:


 
 
 
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