Podcasts by Science In Action
The BBC brings you all the week's science news.
Further podcasts by BBC World Service
Podcast on the topic Wissenschaft
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Can carbon capture live up to its hype? from 2023-12-07T21:00
The burning of fossil fuels releases the greenhouse gas CO2. Many countries at COP28 have expressed an interest in using carbon capture technology to permanently capture and store this CO2. Clim...
ListenAll aboard the RRS Sir David Attenborough from 2023-11-30T21:00
This week, the RRS Sir David Attenborough arrived in Antarctica to start its first full season of science in the polar region. Dr Nadine Johnston reveals more about the mission and the research ...
ListenFires in the Pantanal wetlands from 2023-11-23T21:00
This month, Brazil has seen some of its highest recorded temperatures. The country’s Pantanal wetlands, the largest tropical wetlands in the world, have been scorched by wildfires. The region is...
ListenVolcanic rumblings in Iceland from 2023-11-16T21:00
Increased tremors have been felt in Iceland, and concerns about an impending eruption have led to the evacuation of the town of Grindavik. Geophysicist Dr Freysteinn Sigmundsson reveals more abo...
ListenSounds of the Cape from 2023-11-09T21:00
This week we're out in the wild and noisy spaces in and around Cape Town, South Africa.
Ichnologist Charles Helm takes Roland on a bumpy ride in Walker Bay Nature Reserve to hunt for fos...
ListenClimate emergency from 2023-11-02T21:00
Category 5 hurricane Otis, which devastated Acapulco, was supercharged by global warming; hurricane expert Kerry Emanual tells Science in Action.
Also, Brazilian ecologist Erika Berengue...
ListenBird flu reaches Antarctic region from 2023-10-26T20:00
Fear that the highly infectious variant of avian influenza, H5N1, would reach the Antarctic region and put isolated bird populations at risk has finally come to fruition as the first birds on Bi...
ListenAlarm at Campi Flegrei, Italy from 2023-10-19T20:00
Accelerating seismic tremors are raising concerns for the thousands of people living atop a volcanic hot spot close to Naples, Italy. Volcanologist Alessandro Pino has been keeping a watchful ey...
ListenDevastating earthquakes hit Afghanistan from 2023-10-12T20:00
Lying atop a network of fault lines, where the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates meet, Afghanistan is prone to earthquakes. However, the Herat area has not seen an event for almost 1000 years....
ListenThe best and the worst from 2023-10-05T20:00
The 2023 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Katalin Karikó and Drew Weismann for their contributions to developing the fundamentals that led to life saving mRNA vaccines. Altho...
ListenTrilobite dinner from 2023-09-28T20:00
What did a 465-million-year-old trilobite eat for dinner? And how can we possibly know? Archaeologist Per Ahlberg has used x-ray to peer into the guts of one ancient scuttling creature and worke...
ListenMore likely, more intense from 2023-09-21T20:00
Storm Daniel devastated the city of Derna in Libya after heavy rainfall broke a dam, causing extreme flooding downstream. The World Weather Attribution (WWA) reports that severe flooding in Liby...
ListenDeadly floods in Derna from 2023-09-14T20:00
Earlier this week the deadly Mediterranean cyclone, Storm Daniel, swept through the small city of Derna in Libya, collapsing a 50-year-old dam in its wake, and triggering devastating floods whic...
ListenReturning to the North Pole from 2023-09-07T20:00
In September 2012 Arctic sea ice melted to its minimum ever recorded and the German research ice breaker, Polarstern, ventured deep into the region North of Russia to record findings. It’s now r...
ListenDrowning coastal ecosystems from 2023-08-31T20:00
Global sea levels are rising more than 3mm per year under current climate conditions. At this rate we are due to hit an alarming 7mm rise per year by the end of the century. If this is not slowe...
ListenBrain-computer interfaces from 2023-08-24T20:00
Advances in brain-computer interfaces have allowed patients with paralysis to communicate faster, more accurately and more expressively with direct brain to speech translation. Co-author of an e...
ListenThe science behind the Hawaii fire from 2023-08-17T20:00
Hawaii is still reeling from the devastating fires that consumed Lahaina on the island of Maui last week. Professor of Meteorology from the University of Hawaii, Kevin Hamiliton, joins Science i...
ListenPandemic surveillance system at risk from 2023-08-10T20:00
ProMED is one of the most useful scientific tools you’ve never heard of. It’s a global surveillance system of infectious disease outbreaks which is available, for free, to researchers and the pu...
ListenBird Flu is back from 2023-08-03T20:00
Science in Action returns to H5N1, the fast spreading strain of bird flu which has caused devastation in the sky, sea, and land over the last few months, with no end in sight.
Roland visi...
ListenOcean current collapse from 2023-07-27T20:00
A large system of ocean currents known as the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) has been making headlines this week as a new paper predicts its imminent collapse. This could hav...
ListenOn the edge of a new volcano from 2023-07-20T20:00
For the third year running, Iceland’s Reykjanes peninsula is experiencing another spectacular volcanic eruption. Volcanologist Evgenia Ilyinskaya has been out in Iceland witnessing the sight and...
ListenEurope’s heatwave death toll from 2023-07-13T20:00
As extreme heat returns to much of the world we hear the impact of last year’s heatwaves in Europe, where 62,000 people are estimated to have died. Joan Ballester, Associate Research Professor a...
ListenMelting of Greenland ice sheet from 2023-07-06T20:00
Record-breaking global temperatures are accelerating Greenland ice melt at an alarming rate. Professor of glaciology Alun Hubbard has witnessed the melt first hand. He tells us how the ice sheet...
ListenPreparing for crises from 2023-06-29T20:00
We have entered a “permacrisis”, an extended period of instability and insecurity, fuelled not only by natural disasters but pandemics, climate change and war.
This week, Science in Acti...
ListenHuman embryo models from 2023-06-22T19:30
Over the last week, news of “synthetic human embryos” has made headlines around the world. Science in Action is getting to the bottom of the sensational story.
We talk to two of the rese...
ListenOceans in hot water? from 2023-06-15T20:00
As Pacific Ocean temperatures rise, a major El Niño is looming. Experts from the European Centre for Medium range Weather Forecasting, Magdalena Balmaseda and Tim Stockdale, join us to discuss h...
ListenThe beginnings of us from 2023-06-08T20:00
The origin of all complex life has been traced back 1.6 billion years as new molecular fossil records have discovered the fatty stains that our ancient single celled ancestors have left behind. ...
ListenVaccinating condors against bird flu from 2023-06-01T20:00
The California Condor has been brought back from the brink of extinction by dedicated conservation efforts over the past 30 years. Now, this critically endangered species is the latest victim of...
ListenBrightest supernova in a decade from 2023-05-25T20:00
A star in the nearby Pinwheel Galaxy has exploded spectacularly into a supernova, dubbed SN 2023ixf. It is the brightest in a decade and it has got astronomers around the world into a frenzy. Sc...
ListenReturn of the Wildfires from 2023-05-18T20:00
Over the past few weeks, wildfires have scorched over 1,800 square miles of land across North West America and are still going strong. Dr Mike Flannigan, professor at the Department of Renewable...
ListenHuman genome goes global from 2023-05-11T20:00
In 2003, an incredible scientific milestone was achieved as the first human genome completed sequencing. For 20 years, this genome has been used as a reference by researchers for comparison to a...
ListenDarwin dumped from Indian classrooms from 2023-05-04T20:00
India is at the centre of much of the discussion on this week’s episode of Science In Action.
We hear about how a proposal to scrap Darwinian evolution from Indian secondary schools has l...
ListenThe truth about the Sudan biolab from 2023-04-27T20:00
Khartoum’s National Public Health Laboratory has been caught up in the ongoing conflict in Sudan. Dr Maysoon Dahab and Dr Ayman Ahmed explain the situation and why health labs are often targeted...
ListenAfrica moves towards creating and manufacturing its own vaccines from 2023-04-20T20:00
The pandemic showed Africa at the back of the global queue when it came to vaccines. That should never happen again if plans being debated in Cape Town this week go ahead. Roland talks to Seanet...
ListenBird flu: The global threat from 2023-04-13T20:00
H5N1, a highly pathogenic avian flu is racing across the world, and has infected multiple species, including wild and farmed birds, and mammals from cats to sea lions. What can be done to contro...
ListenChasing tornados in the American mid-West from 2023-04-06T20:00
Chasing tornados in the American mid-West – scientists are trying to learn the maximum from the tornado outbreaks currently in America. Professor Karen Kosiba calls us from a radar truck studyin...
ListenGene editing breakthrough from 2023-03-30T20:00
We look at a gene editing breakthrough, a new technique to correct genetic errors in sick patients. Roland speaks to Professor David Liu to learn about the base editing technology.
Also, w...
ListenAnimals at the Wuhan Market from 2023-03-24T12:41
DNA has revealed potential animal COVID carriers at the Wuhan market, but what does that tell us about the start of the pandemic? Roland talks to two of the experts behind the new analysis: Dr F...
ListenReturn of Cyclone Freddy from 2023-03-16T21:00
34 days after it first formed at the far end of the Indian Ocean, record-breaking Cyclone Freddy made a repeat landfall on Mozambique as well as passing over Malawi, causing extensive damage and...
ListenHuman Genome Editing - Promise and Peril from 2023-03-09T21:00
Human Genome Editing: The team meet experts at the Human Genome Editing Summit in London, seeking to cure genetic disease and ensure that it's safe and available to all. Roland Pease hears fro...
ListenDrought worsens in East Africa from 2023-03-02T21:00
The long rains of East Africa are forecast to fail again, for the third year running, precipitating a food crisis affecting millions. Science In Action explores the science of the drought, hears...
ListenCyclone Freddy batters Madagascar from 2023-02-23T21:00
Cyclone Freddy has made landfall on Madagascar, leaving destruction in its wake. At the time this edition of Science In Action is going to air, Freddy is on course to reach Mozambique and South ...
ListenCRISPR&bioethics from 2023-02-16T21:00
In the decade since the genome editing capabilities of CRISPR-Cas9 emerged, research into novel medicines has boomed – but alongside progress comes new ethical considerations. Controversy erupte...
ListenTurkey-Syria earthquake from 2023-02-09T21:00
In the early hours of Monday, a powerful earthquake hit Kahramanmaras in Turkey. Nine hours later another struck. When this edition of Science in Action first aired, 19,000 people were reported ...
ListenScience on ice from 2023-02-02T21:00
Pull on an extra layer and stay toasty whilst Science in Action braces for a deep freeze. Whilst we know plenty about the ice on the Earth’s poles, Roland is on a chilling journey to see what ca...
ListenBird flu (H5N1) outbreak in mink from 2023-01-26T21:00
An outbreak of pathogenic bird flu, H5N1, in a Spanish mink farm could be a cause for concern. Some experts fear the virus may now spill over to other mammals without strict surveillance. Marion...
ListenClimate science activism from 2023-01-19T21:00
Climate researcher, Rose Abramoff took to the stage at the American Geophysical Union (AGU) fall meetings, not as a guest speaker but in protest. Whilst her demonstration only lasted 15 seconds,...
ListenAtmospheric rivers from 2023-01-12T21:00
Flood warnings in parts of California have seen some of the state’s best known celebrities flee their homes. The current weather conditions are in part the result of ‘Atmospheric rivers’ – lite...
ListenOne year on from the Tonga eruption from 2023-01-05T21:00
We’re taking a look back at the January 2022 eruption of Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai, which literally sent shockwaves around the world. One year on, and we’re still uncovering what made the volcan...
ListenThe James Webb Space Telescope: The first six months from 2022-12-29T21:00
Nasa's James Webb Space Telescope has produced amazing images, and amazing science, in its first five months. Roland Pease hears from one of the leading astronomers on the JWST programme, Dr Hei...
ListenMosquito pesticide failing from 2022-12-22T21:00
Mosquito pesticide failing - prevention of dengue fever and other diseases at risk. Dangerous bird flu evolving fast - researchers are learning why bird flu is persisting and spreading fast roun...
ListenFusion milestone from 2022-12-15T21:00
Fusion milestone - the science behind the headlines. Laser fusion expert Kate Lancaster walks us through the technology that produced energy gain at the US's National Ignition Facility NIF
<... ListenAncient warmth in Greenland from 2022-12-08T21:00
Two-million-year-old molecular fossils reveal flourishing woodlands and widespread animals in Greenland's pre-Ice-Age past, and give hints to the Arctic’s future under global warming. We hear fr...
ListenCOVID spreads in China from 2022-12-01T21:00
Hong Kong health expert Professor Malik Peiris relates the lessons from the devastation there earlier this year. UK virologist Dr Tom Peacock reveals the unusual origins and evolution of omicron...
ListenA distant planet’s atmosphere from 2022-11-24T21:00
Nasa's JWST space telescope has unpicked the chemical contents and state of the atmosphere of planet WASP-39b 700 light years away. Astronomer Hannah Wakeford explains.
Meteorologist Laur...
ListenOnline harassment of Covid scientists from 2022-11-17T21:00
Since the Covid-19 pandemic began, scientists studying the virus have become targets of online harassment, and more recently, death threats. Roland speaks to Dr Angela Rasmussen, virologist at t...
ListenNeurons that restore walking in paralysed patients from 2022-11-10T21:00
Researchers have identified which neurons, when electrically stimulated, can restore the ability to walk in paralysed patients. Professor Jocelyne Bloch, Associate Professor at the Université de...
ListenWhat peat can tell us about our future from 2022-11-03T21:02
The Congo Basin is home to the world’s largest peatland. Simon Lewis, Professor of Global Change Science at UCL and the University of Leeds, tells Roland how this peatland acts as a huge carbon ...
ListenSeismic events on Mars from 2022-10-27T20:00
The latest observations from Nasa’s InSight Mars Lander and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) have revealed new information on Mars’ interior structure. Dr Anna Horleston, Senior Research Associ...
ListenThe most powerful explosion ever recorded from 2022-10-20T20:00
It’s been an unusual week for astronomers, with telescopes swivelled off course to observe GRB221009A, the brightest gamma ray burst ever recorded. Gamma ray bursts aren’t unusual, the by-produc...
ListenInserting human neurons into the brains of rats from 2022-10-13T20:00
Sergiu Pasca, Professor of Psychiatry at Stanford University has left the petri dish in the drawer and grown human neurons inside the brains of juvenile rats. Successful connectivity and brain f...
ListenNobel Prize 2022: The science behind the winners from 2022-10-06T20:00
For the scientific community, the Nobel Prize announcements are an important part of the yearly science calendar. The award is one of the most widely celebrated and gives us a moment to reflect ...
ListenThe final moments of DART from 2022-09-29T19:32
NASA’s latest mission, DART hit the headlines this week after the space agency’s satellite successfully collided with a far off asteroid. The mission acts as a demonstration of Earth’s first pla...
ListenShould we mine the deep sea? from 2022-09-22T20:00
The first license of its kind has been granted for deep-sea mining. It will be used to run early tests to see whether the seabed could be good place to harvest rare earth materials in the future...
ListenScience and the causes behind Pakistan’s floods from 2022-09-15T20:00
A new report by the World Weather Attribution consortium demonstrates the impact of global warming on flooding in Pakistan. The consortium is helping to assess the link between humanitarian disa...
ListenThe genetics of human intelligence from 2022-09-08T19:32
Early humans and Neanderthals had similar-sized brains but around 6 million years ago something happened that gave us the intellectual edge. The answer may lie in a tiny mutation in a single gen...
ListenThe China heatwave and the new normal from 2022-09-01T20:00
Hot on the tail of China’s heatwave comes the other side of the extreme coin – tragic flooding. Also, a coming global shortage of sulfur, while scientists produce useful oxygen on Mars in the MO...
ListenSurprises from a Martian Lake Bed from 2022-08-25T20:00
The Jezero Crater on Mars was targeted by Nasa’s Perseverence rover because from orbit, there was strong evidence it had at some point contained a lake. When the Mars 2020 mission landed, it did...
ListenDeadly drought from 2022-08-18T19:32
East Africa has endured more than two years on continuous drought. The latest predictions suggest the drought is not likely to end any time soon. We look at why climate change and weather patter...
ListenIcelandic volcano erupts again from 2022-08-11T20:00
We talk to volcano scientist Ed Marshall in Iceland about working at the volcano which has burst into life spectacularly again after a year of quiet.
Also in the programme, we'll be fol...
ListenSynthetic mouse embryos with brains and hearts from 2022-08-04T20:00
This week two research groups announced that they have made synthetic mouse embryos that developed brains and beating hearts in the test tube, starting only with embryonic stem cells. No sperm ...
ListenThe first galaxies at the universe's dawn from 2022-07-28T20:00
In the last week, teams of astronomers have rushed to report ever deeper views of the universe thanks to the James Webb Space Telescope. These are galaxies of stars more than 13.5 billion light...
ListenHeat waves in the Northern Hemisphere from 2022-07-21T20:00
The extreme heat wave in western Europe over the last couple of weeks is just one of many in the Northern Hemisphere in 2022. How is global warming changing the atmosphere to make heat waves mo...
ListenFirst images from the James Webb Space Telescope from 2022-07-14T20:00
Roland Pease talks to two astronomers who began working on the James Webb Space Telescope more than two decades ago and have now seen the first spectacular results of their labours. Marcia Rie...
ListenLong Covid ‘brain fog’ from 2022-07-07T20:00
Following a bout of Covid-19, a significant number of people suffer with weeks or months of 'brain fog' - poor concentration, forgetfulness, and confusion. This is one of the manifestations of...
ListenExtreme heat death risk in Latin America from 2022-06-30T20:00
A new analysis of deaths in cities across Latin America suggests rising global temperatures could lead to large numbers of deaths in the region and elsewhere in the world. Even a 1-degree rise i...
ListenMonster microbe from 2022-06-23T20:00
Researchers have discovered a species of bacteria which dwarfs all others by thousands of times. Normally you need a microscope to see single-celled bacteria, but Thiomargarita magnifica is the...
ListenThirty years after the Earth Summit from 2022-06-16T20:00
Thirty years ago, world leaders met at the United Nations Earth Summit in Rio and appeared to commit to action to tackle two of the world's greatest environmental threats. The Earth Summit launc...
ListenBody scan reveals HIV's hideouts from 2022-06-09T20:00
Researchers have developed a medical imaging technique which reveals where in the body HIV lies hidden, even when people have their infection well controlled by antiviral drugs. The team at th...
ListenShould we worry about the latest Omicron subvariants? from 2022-06-02T20:00
Should we worry about the most recent Omicron subvariants, BA 4 and BA5? They are the subtypes of the Covid-19 virus now dominant in southern Africa and spreading elsewhere. New research sugge...
ListenHeat death by volcano and other stories from 2022-05-26T20:00
Science in Action this week comes from a vast gathering of earth scientists in Vienna, at the general assembly of the European Geosciences Union.
Roland Pease hears the latest insights i...
ListenDeath in the rainforest from 2022-05-19T20:00
Tree mortality in tropical moist forests in Australia has been increasing since the mid 1980s. The death rate of trees appears to have doubled over that time period. According to an internati...
ListenPortrait of the monster black hole at our galaxy’s heart from 2022-05-12T20:00
The heaviest thing in the Galaxy has now been imaged by the biggest telescope on Earth. This is Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the centre of our Galaxy – a gas and star-consumin...
ListenMekong Delta will sink beneath the sea by 2100 from 2022-05-05T20:00
The Mekong Delta is home to 17 million people and is Vietnam’s most productive agricultural region. An international group of scientists warn this week that almost all of the low lying delta wil...
ListenThe Indian subcontinent’s record-breaking heatwave from 2022-04-28T20:00
Deadly heat has been building over the Indian sub-continent for weeks and this week reached crisis levels. India experienced its hottest March on record and temperatures over 40 degrees Celsius...
ListenClimate techno-fix would worsen global malaria burden from 2022-04-21T20:00
As a series of UN climate reports have warned recently, drastic reductions in greenhouse gas emissions – a halving over the next decade – are needed if we are to keep global warming down to mana...
ListenHow ‘magic mushroom’ chemical treats depression from 2022-04-14T20:00
Brain scanning experiments reveal how psilocybin works to relieve severe depression. Psilocybin is the psychedelic substance in 'magic mushrooms'. The psychoactive chemical is currently in cl...
ListenTsunami detective in Tonga from 2022-04-07T20:00
Just over two months ago, the undersea volcano of Hunga Tonga erupted catastrophically, generating huge tsunamis and covering the islands of Tonga in ash. University of Auckland geologist Shane...
ListenRadioactive Red Forest from 2022-03-31T20:00
Russian forces in the forested exclusion zone around the Chernobyl nuclear site may be receiving potentially dangerous levels of radiation. After the nuclear accident trees were felled and radio...
ListenWarming world from 2022-03-24T21:00
Unseasonably high temperatures have been recorded in both polar regions. Glaciologist Ruth Mottram discusses why they might be occurring now and the potential impact on her own work measuring c...
ListenCovid in the sewers from 2022-03-17T21:00
Analysis of wastewater from sewage systems has provided an early warning system for the presence of Covid-19 in communities – showing up in the water samples before people test positive. It’s al...
ListenWhy are Covid-19 cases rising in Hong Kong? from 2022-03-10T21:00
Hong Kong had been very successful at preventing the spread of Covid-19. Testing and isolation measures were very effective. However, vaccine uptake was low amongst elderly people and that says ...
ListenCovid -19 origins from 2022-03-03T17:14
Wuhan's Huanan Seafood Market is associated with many of the first cases or Covid- 19, but data on precisely how and from where the virus might have first spread has been difficult to find. How...
ListenReforming the ‘China Initiative’ from 2022-02-24T20:00
A scheme in the US designed to prevent industrial espionage and the theft of intellectual property, is to be refocused after it was accused of unfairly targeting Chinese American scientists. We ...
ListenBone repair from Covid-19 vaccine technology from 2022-02-17T21:00
Messenger RNA-based vaccines have been used successfully to kick start the antibody production needed to fight Covid-19. Now the technology has been successfully used to encourage the growth of ...
ListenInside Wuhan's coronavirus lab from 2022-02-10T21:00
The Wuhan Institute of Virology has been at the centre of a controversy surrounding the origins of the virus which caused the Covid-19 pandemic. The work of the lab's previously obscure division...
ListenIdentifying a more infectious HIV variant from 2022-02-03T21:00
We’re 40 years into the AIDS pandemic, and even with massive public health campaigns, still, 1 ½ million become infected with HIV each year; about half that number die of its ravages. And a stu...
ListenThe roots of Long Covid from 2022-01-27T21:00
There are now a number of biological indicators for the potential development of long covid. Immunologist Onur Boyman of Zurich University Hospital and Claire Steves, Clinical Senior Lecturer ...
ListenTonga eruption – how it happened from 2022-01-20T21:00
The effects of the Tonga eruption could be felt around the world, many heard the boom of a sonic shock, and tsunami waves travelled far and wide. Volcanologist Shane Cronin from the University ...
ListenHave we got it wrong on Omicron? from 2022-01-13T21:00
Studies using swabs from coronavirus patients seem to contradict earlier findings from cell cultures which showed Omicon replicated faster than earlier variants. As Benjamin Meyer from the centr...
ListenCorbevax – A vaccine for the world? from 2022-01-06T21:00
Corbevax, which is being produced in India, is grown in yeast in a similar way to several other widely available vaccines. The technology used to make it is far simpler and much more readily ava...
Listen2021: The year of variants from 2021-12-30T21:00
In our first programme of the year, we gathered a group of scientific experts directly involved in analysing the structure and impact of the SARS- Cov-2 coronavirus. There were concerns over the...
ListenOmicron – mild or monster? from 2021-12-23T21:00
Studies from South Africa and the UK suggest Omicron may be a mild infection for the majority of people. Hospital admissions are down when compared with other variants. However, the virus is rep...
ListenOmicron’s rapid replication rate from 2021-12-16T20:32
A study from Hong Kong university shows Omicron replicates 70 times faster than two earlier variants of the SARS-Cov-2 virus. Virologist Malik Peiris, explains how tests using cells from the win...
ListenCan the weather trigger a volcano? from 2021-12-09T21:00
Which came first the volcano or the rain? Volcanic eruptions are known to influence global climate systems, even leading to the cooling of the planet. However local weather conditions can also ...
ListenOmicron, racism and trust from 2021-12-02T21:00
South Africa announced their discovery of the Omicron variant to the world as quickly as they could. The response from many nations was panic and the closure of transport links with southern Afr...
ListenDeliberately doomed dart from 2021-11-25T21:00
DART is a space mission designed to hit a distant asteroid and knock it slightly out of orbit. It’s a test mission, a pilot project for a way of potentially protecting the earth from a stray ast...
ListenThe end for coal power? from 2021-11-18T21:00
The political message from the COP meeting was a fudge over coal, but what does the science say? Surprisingly India seems to be on track to switch away from coal to renewables. We explore the ap...
ListenBambi got Covid from 2021-11-11T21:00
Up to 8 percent of deer sampled in studies in the US were found to be infected with the SARS-Cov-2 Virus. Suresh Kuchipudi from the Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences at Penn State...
ListenJet fuel from thin air from 2021-11-04T21:00
Scientists in Switzerland have developed a system which uses solar energy to extract gases such as hydrogen and carbon dioxide from the air and turns them into fuels for transport. So far they h...
ListenCan we still avoid climate catastrophe? from 2021-10-29T09:15
Just a few days before COP26 opens in Glasgow, the World Meteorological Organisation reported record greenhouse gas levels, despite a fall in CO2 due to pandemic restrictions. The UN Environment...
ListenRed blood cells’ surprising immune function from 2021-10-21T20:00
We’ve talked a huge amount the past 18 months, for obvious reasons, about the way that white blood cells protect us from infection. But red blood cells – it’s probably among the earliest things ...
ListenWetlands under attack from 2021-10-14T20:00
Since its introduction four decades ago, Spartina alterniflora, a salt-water cordgrass from the USA, has been spreading along China’s coasts. Today, it covers nearly half of the country’s salt m...
ListenYoungest rock samples from the moon from 2021-10-07T20:00
In December 2020, China's Chang'e-5 mission returned to earth carrying rock samples collected from the moon – the first lunar samples to be collected since the American Apollo and Luna missions ...
ListenDrug resistant malaria found in East Africa from 2021-09-30T20:00
Since their discovery in the 1970s, artemisinin-based drugs have become the mainstay of treatment for malaria caused by the Plasmodium falciparum parasite. Researchers have identified artemisini...
ListenNew evidence for Sars-CoV-2’s origin in bats from 2021-09-23T20:00
Researchers studying bats in Northern Laos have found evidence that brings us closer than ever to understanding the origin of Covid-19. Since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic scientists...
ListenEbola can remain dormant for five years from 2021-09-16T20:00
An international team of researchers has discovered that an outbreak of Ebola in Guinea in February this year was the result of re-activated Ebola virus in someone who’d been infected at least f...
ListenKeep most fossil fuel in ground to meet 1.5 degree goal from 2021-09-09T20:00
For the world to have a decent chance of limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees, 90% of remaining coal reserves and 60% of unexploited oil and gas have to stay in the ground. These are ...
ListenHurricane season intensifies from 2021-09-02T20:00
When hurricane Ida struck the coast of Louisiana last weekend, almost to the day that Katrina did 16 years ago, comparisons between the two events were soon to follow. As the latest storm contin...
ListenWorld’s first DNA Covid vaccine from 2021-08-26T20:00
Indian authorities have approved the world’s first DNA-based Covid vaccine for emergency use. Not all the data that has led to the opening of the phase 3 trials is yet publicly available, but as...
ListenSeismic citizen science in Hispaniola from 2021-08-19T20:00
The epicentre of the tragic earthquake in Haiti last week was just 100km from that of the even more deadly 2010 one. Unlike then, a network of small cheap seismic detectors run by volunteers is ...
ListenMethane: A climate solution? from 2021-08-12T20:00
The latest IPCC assessment raised alarm about the rate at which manmade emissions are contributing to climate change. Much of the focus for action is on reducing levels of carbon dioxide, howeve...
ListenRecord-shattering weather from 2021-08-05T20:00
July 2021 saw temperatures in the western US and Canada smash previous records by 5 degrees. And that’s what we should expect, according to a study prepared much earlier but published, coinciden...
ListenThe earliest traces of animal life on earth. from 2021-07-29T18:32
Do rocks found in Canada show animal life 350 million years older than any found before? And, delving to the core of Mars, the guts of cats, and into the life of Steven Weinberg.
Prof Eliz...
ListenYour molecular machinery, now in 3D from 2021-07-22T18:30
Back in November it was announced that an AI company called DeepMind had essentially cracked the problem of protein folding – that is they had managed to successfully predict the 3D structures o...
ListenScience when the funding dries up from 2021-07-15T20:00
This week the UK parliament voted to accept the Government’s continued cap on Official Development Aid. This disappointed many researchers around the world, funded directly and indirectly throug...
ListenHuman induced climate change heats up fast from 2021-07-08T20:00
Scientists say the record-breaking Pacific North-West heatwave of recent weeks must have been caused by human induced climate change, but as Geert Jan van Oldenborgh explains to Roland Pease, de...
ListenInsects in incredible detail from 2021-07-01T20:00
The Natural History Museum in London holds a massive collection of insects. It asked researchers at the Diamond light source, a facility near Oxford, to develop a high throughput X-ray microscop...
ListenTales of unexpected DNA data from 2021-06-24T20:00
This week Jesse Bloom of Seattle’s Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research has published an account of some DNA sequence data he located in an internet archive, despite it having been removed from the U...
ListenDoubling Earth’s energy imbalance from 2021-06-17T20:00
Nasa scientists have observed that the Earth’s energy imbalance has doubled in just 15 years. As greenhouse gas atmospheric concentrations have risen, so too has the difference between the total...
ListenEvolving viral variant trickery from 2021-06-10T20:00
Dr. Clare Jolly and colleagues have been looking at how the first of the major covid variants – alpha - evolved to be more transmissible. Whilst a lot of attention has been on the spike binding ...
ListenZoonotic hotspots and where to find them from 2021-06-03T20:00
Researchers map where the riskiest areas are for viruses to jump from bats into humans. Also, synthetic bacteria with unnatural DNA, and the origin of the humble watermelon.
David Hayman o...
ListenNyiragongo eruption from 2021-05-27T19:32
The latest Nyiragongo eruption was not entirely unexpected, the volcano’s lava lake inside the crater had been building up for years. Local volcanologists say it was only a matter of time befor...
ListenRobot revolution from 2021-05-20T20:00
A brain-computer interface allows a severely paralysed patient not only to move and use a robotic arm, but also to feel the sensations as the mechanical hand clasps objects . We hear from Jennif...
ListenCovid and clean air from 2021-05-13T20:00
We wouldn’t drink dirty water so why do we put up with polluted air? Researchers are calling for a major rethink on our attitude to air quality. Professor Lidia Morawska, from the Queensland Un...
ListenAfrica’s oldest burial from 2021-05-06T20:00
Analysis of the 78,0000-year-old fossil of a Kenyan boy reveals he was likely buried with care and attention, the body wrapped and laid to rest supported on a pillow. Maria Martinon-Torres, of t...
ListenMelting glaciers, warming coffee and a Dragonfly on Titan from 2021-04-29T20:00
When Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins – who passed away this week – looked down on the earth from lunar orbit during those days in 1969, he saw more ice and a smaller liquid ocean than you wo...
ListenExponential increase in Indian covid cases from 2021-04-22T20:00
As Covid cases surge almost beyond belief in India, how much is to do with social distancing, and how much to do with the mutations to the original virus?
Ramanan Laxminarayan talks to Rol...
ListenRolling out the vaccines faster from 2021-04-15T20:00
Two weeks ago several G7 leaders called for an international treaty on Pandemic Preparedness for the future. This week 175 prominent leaders called for lifting the IP on vaccine design. And form...
ListenOn the trail of rare blood clots from 2021-04-08T20:00
On Wednesday the EU’s EMA and UK’s JCVI announced a suspected correlation between vaccination and an extremely rare type of blood clot. Prof Sabine Eichinger is a co-author of a new paper sugges...
ListenPost-Covid outcomes after release from hospital from 2021-04-01T20:00
After last year’s first wave of covid-19 in the UK, individuals who had been discharged after hospitalisation suffered higher rates of coronary and respiratory disorders, and even diabetes subse...
ListenScience on the side of a new volcano from 2021-03-25T10:41
Sightseers and social media scrollers have flocked to the slopes of Fagradalsfjall, a volcano erupting 40 kilometres west of the Icelandic capital Reykjavik. Having produced less than 1 square k...
ListenInternational science at sea from 2021-03-18T20:32
In the UK thousands of scientists have signed open letters to the UK government protesting cuts to international funding announced this week. Abruptly and severely, the cuts may end hundreds of ...
ListenA shooting star parked on your driveway from 2021-03-11T19:30
Last week a fireball lit up the sky of western England. Locals and professionals scoured the countryside for any surviving precious fragments of meteorite, and thanks to them some bits of the ea...
ListenUncovering history with Little Foot's skull from 2021-03-04T21:00
One of our most complete ancient ancestor’s fossils has been transported to the UK from South Africa in order to be scanned at the Diamond Light Source. Roland Pease investigates what these scan...
ListenWaste not, want not from 2021-02-25T21:00
Although vaccines will go a long way to reducing the number of cases of Covid, there’s still a need for other approaches. One of these could be an engineered biomolecule, designed by virologists...
ListenWeird weather from 2021-02-18T21:00
A paper in the BMJ shows that deaths from Covid 9 are being massively overlooked in Zambia. The new data come from post-mortem tests at the University Hospital mortuary in Lusaka, showing that a...
ListenPerseverance approaches Mars from 2021-02-11T21:00
On 18th February the Perseverance rover should land on Mars. Katie Stack-Morgan of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab tells Roland Pease about the technological advances that mean that the spacecraft sho...
ListenMixing Covid vaccines from 2021-02-04T21:00
A new trial is about to start in the UK, seeing if different vaccines can be mixed and matched in a two-dose schedule, and whether the timing matters. Governments want to know the answer as vacc...
ListenNew Covid vaccine from 2021-01-28T21:00
Researchers at Imperial College have been working on a strategy that can make RNA vaccines stretch further. Anna Blakely explains how the new approach works and why RNA vaccines are adaptable to...
ListenSaving the Northern White Rhino from 2021-01-21T21:00
Northern white rhinos are extinct in the wild and there are just two females in captivity in Kenya. Conservationists are working on an artificial breeding programme, using eggs from the females ...
ListenGravitational waves and black holes from 2021-01-14T21:00
After collecting data for more than twelve years the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav) announced it may have detected new kinds of gravitational waves cause...
ListenNew variants of SARS-Cov2 from 2021-01-07T21:10
Mutant strains of SARS-Cov2 have been identified not only in the UK, where it was first identified, but also in at least 30 other countries. And to complicate matters, another alarming variant, ...
ListenCoping with Covid from 2020-12-31T21:00
This has been an incredible year for scientific advance and collaboration, epitomised by the roll out of vaccines that didn’t exist a year ago, against a virus that no one had ever heard of . Listen
A year with Covid -19 from 2020-12-24T21:00
It was the end of December 2019 when reports of a new flu like infection first came out of China. Within weeks millions of people were in lockdown as the virus took hold around the world.
...
ListenCovid -19 – Mutations are normal from 2020-12-17T21:00
This week the UK Health secretary raised concerns over a new variant of SARS- CoV-2 currently spreading across Europe. Viruses mutate all the time so it’s no surprise that a new form of the one ...
ListenThe unchecked spread of Covid-19 in Manaus from 2020-12-10T21:00
Pictures of coffins and mass graves seen by satellites showed that Manaus has been badly affected by Covid- 19. Now analysis of blood samples shows the extent to which the virus took hold in th...
ListenFreak weather getting even freakier from 2020-12-03T21:00
This year’s Atlantic hurricane season has seen a new record for severe storms says Climatologist Michael Mann. He says warming oceans are one of the drivers.
And Australia has seen spring ...
ListenVaccines – the Covid confusion from 2020-11-26T21:00
While developing new treatments drug companies usually release little useful information on how the clinical trials are progressing. However with the world’s attention on potential vaccines agai...
ListenCovid- 19 – Good news on immunity from 2020-11-19T21:00
Tests on patients for up to 8 months following their infection with SARS- CoV-2 suggests an immune response can persist. Alessandro Sette and Daniela Weiskopf at the La Jolla Institute in Califo...
ListenCovid-19 defeats US Marines from 2020-11-12T21:00
The WHO is working with China to try and pinpoint the source of SARS- COV-2. Sian Griffiths, Emeritus Professor of Public Health at the Chinese University of Hong Kong says there are lessons we ...
ListenCoronavirus spreads from mink to humans from 2020-11-05T21:00
All the farmed mink in Denmark are to be killed. Around 17 million. This is because they have SARS COV-2 coronavirus circulating among them and some humans have contracted a new strain from the ...
ListenOsiris Rex stows asteroid material from 2020-10-29T21:00
Last week NASA’s Osiris-Rex mission successfully touched down on asteroid Bennu’s crumbly surface. But the spacecraft collected so much material that the canister wouldn’t close. NASA systems e...
ListenNasa probe Osiris Rex lands on asteroid from 2020-10-22T20:00
Science in Action talks to Nasa researcher Hannah Kaplan who is part of the team for the space agency’s sampling mission to the asteroid Bennu. Mission scientists were overjoyed this week when t...
ListenCovid-19 mortality from 2020-10-15T20:00
Why is there such a range in the number of deaths from Covid -19 between countries? A study of the data across 21 industrialised countries reveals a wide discrepancy. Preparedness and the point ...
ListenDo Covid–19 mutations matter? from 2020-10-08T20:00
Data from clinical investigations has suggested that a specific mutation in the SARS-Cov -2 virus has made it more transmissible. This finding is now supported by molecular biology work. Ralph B...
ListenAre children the biggest Covid-19 spreaders? from 2020-10-01T20:00
An analysis of Covid-19 data from South India shows children more than any other group are transmitting the virus both to other children and adults, Epidemiologist Ramanan Laxminarayan tell us ...
ListenWhy Covid -19 vaccines may not stop transmission from 2020-09-24T20:00
While vaccines against Covid -19 are being developed at unprecedented speed, none of them have been tested to see if they can actually stop transmission of the virus. They are designed to stop t...
ListenMalaria resistance breakthrough from 2020-09-17T20:00
Some East Africans have a genetic mutation which gives them resistance to Malaria. Investigations into how it works have produced a surprising finding. As researcher Silvia Kariuki explains it’s...
ListenMonitoring Covid-19, harvests and space junk from 2020-09-15T18:08
Roland Pease reports from the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s annual meeting in Seattle. At the UK Research and Innovation’s stand in the exhibition hall, he’s joined by th...
ListenCovid -19 science versus politics from 2020-09-10T20:00
With the announcement in the UK of investment in rapid testing for people who may not have Covid -19 we ask why is this only happening now? For months on this programme we’ve featured scientifi...
ListenNyiragongo - is Goma under threat? from 2020-09-03T20:00
A new survey of the volcano's activity suggests there may be an eruption in the next 4 to 7 years. It's a particular concern for the populations of Goma and Gisenyi, two cites between the volcan...
ListenCovid-19 therapy controversy from 2020-08-27T20:00
This week Science in Action examines the evidence around the Trump Administration’s emergency use authorisation of convalescent plasma therapy for the treatment of Covid-19. Donald Trump descri...
ListenTrouble in Greenland from 2020-08-20T20:00
Has the loss from Greenland’s vast ice sheet reached a tipping point? According to glaciologist Michalea King, the rate at which its ice flows into the sea stepped up about 15 years ago. The ...
ListenPutin’s Covid-19 vaccine from 2020-08-13T20:00
Russia’s President Putin announced the registration of a vaccine for coronavirus. This was reported with widespread alarm amid concerns over safety, but as BBC Russian Service’s Sergei Goryashko...
ListenCounting the heat health threat from climate change from 2020-08-06T20:00
If the world does not curb its greenhouse gas emissions, by the end of this century, the number of people dying annually because of extreme heat will be greater than the current global death tol...
ListenNASA rover heads for Mars ancient lake from 2020-07-30T20:00
NASA launches its new robotic mission to Mars. The rover, Perseverance, will land in a 50 kilometre wide crater which looks like it was filled by a lake about 4 billion years ago – the time whe...
ListenMaking a Covid-19 vaccine for two billion people from 2020-07-23T20:00
There’s been encouraging news about the Oxford Covid-19 vaccine this week from a trial involving about 1,000 people. But how great is the challenge in scaling up from making a few thousand doses...
ListenHow long do Covid-19 antibodies last? from 2020-07-16T20:00
Science in Action looks at some of the latest research on the response of our immune system to infection by the coronavirus. Researchers at Kings College London find that protective antibodies a...
ListenRwanda’s game changing coronavirus test from 2020-07-09T19:32
African scientists have developed a reliable, quick and cheap testing method which could be used by worldwide as the basis for mass testing programmes.
The method, which produces highly ac...
ListenCovid -19 and Children from 2020-07-02T20:00
Studies in Children who have been severely affected by Covid 19 in Italy, Britain and the US are showing the same thing – a range of symptoms linked to an overactive immune system. Elizabeth Wh...
ListenRecord high temperatures – in the Arctic from 2020-06-25T20:00
A record summer temperature in Siberia is an indication of major changes in the Arctic climate. Changing weather patterns there have a knock on effect for other parts of the planet says Climatol...
ListenCovid -19 hope for severe cases from 2020-06-18T20:00
A multi arm trial testing a range of drugs has shown that readily available steroids can be lifesaving for people severely ill with Covid-19. Max Parmar, head of the UK Medical Research Council...
ListenFood security, locusts and Covid -19 from 2020-06-11T20:00
Despite the Covid-19 pandemic efforts to counter massive swarms of locusts across East Africa have continued. In many places this has been very effective, killing up to 90% of locusts. However, ...
ListenThe medical complexity of Covid -19 from 2020-06-04T20:00
Autopsies show Covid 19 can affect the brain and other organs. Pathologist Mary Fowkes from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai found the signs of stroke - unusually in young people, as ...
ListenBrazil’s Covid chaos from 2020-05-28T20:00
The number of cases of Covid -19 infections in Brazil and deaths related to the pandemic may be much higher than official figures show. Testing of the living is not widespread and there are few ...
ListenCovid-19 vaccines from 2020-05-21T19:57
There are more than 100 different Covid-19 vaccine trials currently going on. We look at which seem to be the most promising with Helen Branswell from Stat News.
And we examine a very ol...
ListenLoosening lockdown from 2020-05-14T20:00
How is Covid -19 spread? Who is most at risk and what are the circumstances under which it is most likely to be transmitted? These questions need answers for the implementation of effective and ...
ListenCovid -19 new hope from blood tests from 2020-05-07T20:00
Research from New York examining the blood of people who have recovered from Covid – 19 shows the majority have produced antibodies against the disease, The researchers hope to soon be able to e...
ListenEbola drug offers hope for Covid-19 from 2020-04-30T20:00
Remdesivir a drug eventually rejected as a treatment for Ebola seems to have aided recovery in a trial with more than a thousand Covid -19 patients. Researchers are cautious but hopeful; a leadi...
ListenPresidents and pandemics from 2020-04-23T20:00
President Trump has repeated unfounded claims that scientists created Covid-19 in a lab. Rigorous scrutiny of the genetics of the virus reveals no evidence for such a claim.
And Brazil’s ...
ListenItaly, getting Covid-19 under control from 2020-04-16T20:00
Italy is beginning its first tentative steps towards ending its lockdown. These are small steps, opening a few shops in areas where virus transmission has seen big falls. Part of the reason for ...
ListenCovid 19 - the threat to refugees from 2020-04-09T20:00
Massively over crowded Moria refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesbos has seen numbers grow from 5 to 20 thousand in a matter of months. Hundreds of people share taps and toilets, there is lit...
ListenCovid 19 – The fightback in Africa begins from 2020-04-02T20:00
Nigeria has seen a small number of Covid -19 cases, largely spread amongst the most affluent, people who travel abroad, However there is concern about the potential of the virus to spread to ove...
ListenThe science of social distancing from 2020-03-26T21:00
The strong social distancing policies introduced by China seem to have been successful in stopping the spread of Covid 19. Without any effective drug treatments, reducing our number of contacts ...
ListenCovid -19, are you carrying the virus? from 2020-03-19T21:00
In Italy the entire population of a small town was tested for Covid 19. Of those infected, one in three people with no symptoms had the virus. And from China researchers found many people carrie...
ListenCovid -19 how infectious is it really? from 2020-03-12T21:00
Covid- 19 cases seem to be multiplying daily and there is now a growing body of scientific evidence both on its spread and the effectiveness of measures to try and control it. We look at what’s ...
ListenAustralia’s fires - fuelled by climate change from 2020-03-05T21:00
Attributing Australia's bush fires, a major study says man-made climate change was a big driver – making the fires at least 30% worse than they would have been if natural processes were the only...
ListenTracking coronavirus spread from 2020-02-27T21:00
The appearance of Covid -19 in Italy and Iran surprised many this week. As the virus continues to spread we look at ways to contain it.
Australia’s fires have burnt around 20 percent of th...
ListenCoVid-19: Mapping the outbreak from 2020-02-13T21:00
Researchers at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical medicine have developed an online map which presents the latest information on the spread of CoVid-19 and allows anyone to follow the out...
ListenCoronavirus, prospects for treatment? from 2020-02-06T21:00
Doctors in the US have treated a coronavirus patient with a drug developed for Ebola. That drug had never been tested on people so its use here seems an extreme move. We look at why this kind of...
ListenUnderstanding the new coronavirus from 2020-01-30T21:00
Parts of China are on lockdown, a small number of cases have been reported in other countries and the past week has brought widely conflicting views on the potential danger presented by the new ...
ListenNew Coronavirus from 2020-01-23T21:00
The way in which a new virus has emerged in China is reminiscent of SARS, a highly infectious virus that spread rapidly. It’s so similar that Health officials demanded action as soon as its exis...
ListenMount Taal volcano from 2020-01-16T21:00
An experimental satellite called Aeolus, named after a Greek god of wind, which takes daily global measurements of the wind patterns throughout the depth of atmosphere has improved weather forec...
ListenAustralia’s extreme fire season from 2020-01-09T21:00
2019 was Australia’s hottest year on record, a major factor behind the bush fires which have been far worse than usual. We look at the patterns of extreme weather that have contributed to the fi...
ListenAdapting California from 2020-01-02T21:00
Roland Pease is joined by California based science Journalist Molly Bentley as we examine the impact of earthquakes and fires. California has experienced both in the last year - What’s it like t...
ListenGaming climate change from 2019-12-26T21:00
The latest round of climate negotiations, COP25, have ended without agreement on many fundamental issues. We join researchers from Perdue University in the US who have developed a role-playing g...
ListenUnderstanding the Anak Krakatau eruption from 2019-12-19T21:00
We have the latest from a year long investigation into the causes of the December 2018 Indonesian Tsunami. And we get a look at the first pictures from the Mayotte undersea volcano, which emerge...
ListenWhite Island volcano eruption from 2019-12-12T21:00
This week’s programme comes from the world’s largest earth sciences conference, the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.
Roland Pease talks with Diana Roman of the Carnegie Institu...
ListenCRISPR babies scandal – more details from 2019-12-05T21:00
Extracts from unpublished papers on the methods used by a Chinese scientist to genetically modify the embryos of two girls reveal a series of potentially dangerous problems with the procedure an...
ListenNew malaria target from 2019-12-02T12:53
Molecular scale investigations have identified the mechanism which confers resistance to antimalarial drugs. Researchers hope work to turn off this mechanism could mean cheaper well known antima...
ListenPolitics and Amazonia’s fires from 2019-11-21T21:00
This year’s Amazon fires have been worse than since 2010, scientists blame a government attitude which they say has encouraged deforestation. Government funded scientists have contributed anonym...
ListenAustralia burning from 2019-11-14T21:00
Australia’s annual wild fires have started early this year, drought is a factor but to what extent is ‘Bush fire weather’ influenced by climate change?
A two million year old fossil tooth ...
ListenClimate in crisis from 2019-11-07T21:00
Pledges to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are largely unachievable says a major audit of commitments to the Paris Climate Accord.
Air pollution in Delhi is so bad, breathing the toxic pa...
ListenWildfires and winds in California from 2019-10-31T23:08
The Santa Ana in the south, and the Diablo in the north, are winds that are fuelling the terrible fires raging in California this week. They’re also blamed for bringing down power lines that som...
ListenIs quantum supremacy ‘garbage’? from 2019-10-24T20:00
A quantum computer has performed a calculation considered impossible for conventional computers, but how meaningful is the result? As our guest reveals, this quantum state can be hugely signific...
ListenMalaria's origins and a potential new treatment from 2019-10-17T20:00
A variety of malarial parasites have existed amongst the great apes for millennia. How did one of them jump species and why did humans became its preferred host? And from Antarctica we hear abou...
ListenFrom batteries to distant worlds from 2019-10-10T20:00
Nobel prizes this week went to a range of discoveries that you might be familiar with, in fact you might be using one of them right now – the lithium ion battery. The scientists credited with it...
ListenDrought likely to follow India’s floods from 2019-10-03T20:00
India has experienced some of the worse monsoon weather in years, but despite the extreme rainfall climate models suggest a drought may be on the way, with higher than average temperatures predi...
ListenGlobal climate inaction from 2019-09-26T20:00
This week’s IPCC report on the state of the world’s climate looks very much like their earlier reports on the subject. The document cautiously expresses a picture of a future with greater climat...
ListenSouth East Asia choking - again from 2019-09-20T11:36
Staying indoors might seem a good way to avoid air pollution, but scientists studying the fires in Indonesia have found there is little difference between the air quality in their hotel room and...
ListenEmbryoids from stem cells from 2019-09-12T20:00
Scientists know very little about the first few days of the life of a human embryo, once it's been implanted in the womb. Yet this is when the majority of pregnancies fail. Professor Magdalena Z...
ListenNew evidence of nuclear reactor explosion from 2019-09-05T20:00
An isotopic fingerprint is reported of a nuclear explosion in Russia last month. Researchers ask people living in the area or nearby to send them samples of dust or soil before the radioactive c...
ListenNanotube computer says hello from 2019-08-29T19:32
A computer processor made of carbon nanotubes is unveiled to the world. Also, the continuing quest for nuclear fusion energy, and the stats on crocodile attacks since the 1960s.
(The world...
ListenAmazonian fires likely to worsen from 2019-08-22T19:32
As fires across the amazon basin continue to burn, we speak to the researchers watching from space and from the ground.
Also, new pictures back from the surface of asteroid Ryugu thanks t...
ListenCracking the case of the Krakatoa volcano collapse from 2019-08-15T19:32
Scientists this week are on expedition around the volcano Anak Krakatoa, which erupted and collapsed in 2018 leading to the loss of some 400 lives on the island of Java. The scientists, includin...
ListenKeeping tabs on nuclear weapons from 2019-08-08T20:00
The US has withdrawn from a historic nuclear disarmament treaty. However the verification of such treaties has been under scrutiny for some time as they don’t actually reveal the size of nuclear...
ListenThe snowball effect of Arctic fires from 2019-08-01T20:00
Wildfires are an annual phenomenon across the arctic region, but this year they are far more intense than usual, we look at the drivers for these extreme fires and the consequences, in particula...
ListenThe human danger – for sharks from 2019-07-25T20:00
A global project tracking sharks through the deep oceans has found they are increasingly facing danger from fishing fleets. Sharks used to be caught accidentally, but now there is a well-establi...
ListenThe moon landing and another big space anniversary from 2019-07-18T20:00
It’s 50 years since the moon landing and 25 years since Shoemaker - Levy 9 crashed into Jupiter. The Apollo missions returned to earth with cargos of moon rocks and the comet crash showed us wha...
Listen'Free' water and electricity for the world? from 2019-07-11T20:00
Researchers in Saudi Arabia have developed a prototype solar panel which generates electricity and purifies water at the same time. The device uses waste heat from the electricity generating pro...
ListenAnalysing the European heatwave from 2019-07-04T20:01
The recent European heatwave broke records, but how severe was it really and what were the underlying causes? Having run the numbers, climate scientists say global warming played a large part, a...
ListenIs climate change driving Europe’s current heatwave? from 2019-06-27T20:00
As Europe experiences another record breaking heatwave, we look at the science of attribution. Usually it’s a long time after extreme weather events that scientists gather enough data to make a ...
ListenIran’s nuclear plans from 2019-06-20T20:00
Iran’s nuclear programme is at the centre of a political row, with the country suggesting it could increase uranium production to above the levels permitted under an international agreement. We ...
ListenSouth Asia heatwave and climate change from 2019-06-13T20:00
South Asia has experienced a heatwave where the monsoon has been delayed and temperatures have reached over 50 degrees. Despite this the extreme heat has led to far fewer fatalities than previou...
ListenUS foetal tissue research ban from 2019-06-06T19:32
The US has withdrawn funding for scientific research involving foetal tissue. Scientists point to the lack of feasible alternatives to using foetal tissue – which comes from embryos donated to ...
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