Science Weekly
By guardian.co.uk
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Podcast Description
Alok Jha and the Guardian's science team bring you the best analysis and interviews from the worlds of science and technology
| Name | Description | Released | Price | ||
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1 |
Science Weekly podcast: X Factor for scientists – FameLab | FameLab is an international competition to find the next generation of Attenboroughs, Coxes and Winstons. A 2012 winner, a finalist and TV science presenter Alice Roberts discuss the importance of great science communication | 17 5 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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2 |
Science Weekly podcast: Time warped | Claudia Hammond reveals how our perception of time is warped by physical and mental conditions | 11 5 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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3 |
Science Weekly podcast: Jonah Lehrer on creativity and the brain | The author of Imagine: How Creativity Works, Jonah Lehrer, discusses what neuroscience can tell us about this apparently intangible talent | 3 5 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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4 |
Science Weekly Extra podcast: What has science ever done for us? | In the 2012 Sense About Science Lecture, Dick Taverne proposes that the development of science and democracy have gone hand in hand | 1 5 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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5 |
Science Weekly podcast: Are you getting enough sleep? | Russell Foster explains the importance of sleep, and John Sulston discusses the Royal Society's report on population and consumption | 27 4 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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6 |
Podcast: Science and comedy collide at the Festival of the Spoken Nerd | Science-themed comedy is all the rage. We meet the trio behind Festival of the Spoken Nerd, a touring variety show with an educational mission | 20 4 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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7 |
Science Weekly podcast: The hunt for Moby Duck | US writer Donovan Hohn discusses his epic search for a rubber duck lost at sea in his new book Moby Duck, plus John Whitfield on the science of reputation | 13 4 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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8 |
Science Weekly podcast: Daniel Everett on language | Linguist Daniel Everett discusses his book Language: The Cultural Tool and we have a report from the Gunther Van Hagen exhibition at the Natural History Museum, Animal Inside Out | 9 4 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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9 |
Science Weekly podcast: The joy of science demonstrations | Live at the Royal Institution, Alok Jha is joined by a host of guests performing spectacularly instructive demonstrations | 2 4 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 10 | VideoTake part in a live recording of our Science Weekly podcast at the Royal Institution - video | The Guardian's Science Weekly podcast will be recorded live at the Royal Institution in London at 7pm on Wednesday 28 March, with special guests, demonstrations and lots of audience participation | 19 3 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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11 |
Podcast: Wired for culture | Professor of evolutionary biology Mark Pagel discusses how culture allowed humans to race ahead of other species more constrained by biological evolution | 15 3 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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12 |
Science Weekly podcast: Mental athletics at the Memory Olympics | Joshua Foer describes what it's like to compete in the USA Memory Championship, and we meet the master of ceremonies at the Ig Nobel awards, Marc Abrahams | 9 3 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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13 |
Science Weekly podcast: Equations that changed the world | Alok Jha talks to Ian Stewart about his new book showing how hidden mathematical gems rule our lives | 2 3 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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14 |
Science Weekly podcast: Can science ever explain consciousness? | Three leading researchers and thinkers on consciousness discuss the emerging scientific understanding of this mysterious human faculty | 24 2 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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15 |
Science Weekly podcast: What role should science play in politics? | This special edition of the show focuses on how science informs policy in the UK and features science minister David Willetts | 16 2 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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16 |
Science Weekly podcast: Will climate change unleash geological mayhem? | Volcanologist Bill McGuire describes how rapid melting of glaciers and ice sheets as a result of climate change could trigger volcanoes, earthquakes and tsunamis | 9 2 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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17 |
Science Weekly podcast: Transplants and the future of intensive care | Where next for human-to-human transplants and intensive care? Plus, scientific censorship, and the Piltdown Man hoax | 6 2 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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18 |
Science Weekly podcast: Very large telescopes | Alok Jha describes his visit to the European Southern Observatory in the Atacama desert, home of some of the world's most astonishing telescopes | 27 1 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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19 |
Science Weekly podcast: Immortal cells and the search for ET | Alok Jha delves through the Science Weekly archive to find some of our most memorable interviews | 19 1 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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20 |
Science Weekly podcast: Playing God with nature | Dr Adam Rutherford introduces his new BBC documentary about the powerful new technology of synthetic biology | 12 1 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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21 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Stephen Hawking at 70 | Alok Jha reports from Stephen Hawking's 70th birthday symposium at the University of Cambridge, with excerpts from Hawking's address on Sunday | 10 1 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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22 |
Science Weekly podcast: Triumph and tragedy of Scott's Last Expedition | Historian Edward J. Larson discusses the ill-fated Terra Nova expedition and we get a sneak preview of the forthcoming Scott exhibition at the Natural History Museum in London | 23 12 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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23 |
Science Weekly podcast: Bruce Hood has Christmas lectures on the brain | Professor of psychology Bruce Hood introduces his Royal Institution Christmas lecture series 'Meet the Brain' | 22 12 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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24 |
Science Weekly podcast: Best of 2011, including death, evil and dark matter | Among the high points of 2011 were Stephen Hawking on death, Simon Baron-Cohen on evil, the final shuttle mission and dark matter | 19 12 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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25 |
ExplicitScience Weekly podcast: An accelerated guide to the Higgs boson | LHC physicist Prof Jon Butterworth provides a super-condensed course in quantum mechanics, particle physics and the Standard Model | 12 12 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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26 |
Science Weekly podcast: Durban climate change talks – deal or no deal? | What are the prospects of the Durban climate change talks setting a limit on global carbon emissions? Plus, Simon Frantz gives his top tips on how to receive a Nobel prize in style | 1 12 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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27 |
Science Weekly: Your beating heart | In association with the British Heart Foundation, we present an overview of how the human heart works and cutting-edge research into regenerating the organ after a heart attack | 25 11 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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28 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Understanding the brain | Alok Jha and Ian Sample investigate our understanding of the brain | 21 11 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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29 |
Science Weekly podcast: The inscrutable brain | Bryan Appleyard on the 'vastly inflated claims' of neuroscience, and Richard Holmes on the contenders for this year's Royal Society science book prize | 11 11 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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30 |
Science Weekly podcast: Steven Pinker on the neuroscience of violence | Steven Pinker on violence and the human brain, Boaz Almog on quantum levitation, and part two of Lawrence Krauss's wickedly informative lecture on Cosmological Connections | 4 11 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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31 |
Science Weekly Extra: Steven Pinker on The Better Angels of Our Nature | The internationally renowned scientist and science writer Steven Pinker talks to Alok Jha about his new book | 3 11 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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32 |
Science Weekly podcast: Seven billion people – and their place in the cosmos | Author Fred Pearce discusses the role of science in population growth and Lawrence Krauss delivers an insightful and humorous talk on our cosmic insignificance | 27 10 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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33 |
Science Weekly podcast: How Columbus changed the biology of Earth | Science writer Charles Mann reveals the seismic impact of Columbus on the ecology of the old and new worlds, and we unravel the science behind the new vaccine for malaria | 20 10 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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34 |
Science Weekly podcast: The carbon nanotechnology revolution | Professor Ravi Silva believes we're about to experience a new industrial revolution, driven by nanotechnology and carbon | 14 10 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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35 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Celebrating all things Nobel and Ig Nobel | Alok Jha is joined by Simon Frantz from Nobel Prize Watch to round up the 2011 Nobel and Ig Nobel winners | 10 10 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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36 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Science Uncovered at the Natural History Museum | The team went back to nature in South Kensington to record a show in front of a live audience at the museum | 30 9 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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37 |
Science Weekly Podcast: The hunt for dark matter | A fifth of our universe is missing. Professor Carlos Frenk of Durham University explains his quest to find the elusive dark matter that holds galaxies together | 21 9 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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38 |
Science Weekly podcast: British Science Festival 2011 special | Dark matter, microwave biomass recycling and the economic benefits of happiness were among the highlights of this year's British Science Festival in Bradford | 19 9 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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39 |
Science Weekly podcast: Dava Sobel on Copernicus | Alok Jha meets the author of the worldwide bestseller Longitude to discuss her latest book, on the life of Copernicus | 9 9 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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40 |
Science Weekly Podcast: The science of human attraction | Camila Ruz investigates the genetics of attraction and how one particular set of genes may be influencing everything from whom we choose as a partner to whether a pregnancy is successful | 1 9 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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41 |
Science Weekly podcast: Blogging the brain, and the sounds of space | Neurophilosophy blogger Mo Costandi takes us on a tour of the brain and astrobiologist Lewis Dartnell reveals the surprising sounds of space | 26 8 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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42 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Mammalian extinctions and malarial resistance | Kate Jones discusses how recent advances in our understanding of mammals can help prevent extinctions, and Nisha Ligon reports on the growing problem of counterfeit malarial drugs in Thailand | 19 8 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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43 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Man's best friend? In Defence of Dogs | Alok Jha meets biologist John Bradshaw to discuss his new book In Defence of Dogs: Why Dogs Need Our Understanding | 12 8 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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44 |
Science Weekly Podcast: GM drugs, Juno and Jupiter | Professor Julian Ma discusses his research using GM plants to produce antiviral HIV drugs, and Nasa scientist Jack Connerney tells us about the Juno spacecraft launched on Friday on a mission to probe the mysterious planet Jupiter | 4 8 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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45 |
Science Weekly: Hearing is believing | In a special edition devoted to how our brains make sense of what our ears are telling us, we speak to Sophie Scott about how the brain filters sounds, and to Roland Schaette about tinnitus | 29 7 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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46 |
ExplicitScience Weekly Podcast: The science of sleep and circadian rhythms | In an extended interview with Prof Russell Foster of Oxford University, Alok Jha probes the inner workings of our daily sleep-wake cycle | 22 7 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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47 |
Science Weekly Podcast: The God Species by Mark Lynas | Author and environmental activist Mark Lynas discusses his new book The God Species and we visit this year's Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition | 15 7 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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48 |
Science Weekly podcast: Sounds of the space shuttle - an acoustic tribute | As the space shuttle programme draws to a close, Piers Sellers and Scott Altman describe what it was like to fly on the shuttle – and we recreate the sounds | 11 7 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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49 |
Science Weekly podcast: Anarchy in the laboratory - the wild side of science | Michael Brooks discusses his book about mavericks in science, Free Radicals, and Brian Switek heralds a golden era of dinosaur research | 1 7 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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50 |
ExplicitScience Weekly podcast: How to achieve success through failure | Tim Harford talks science and success, and Alok Jha attends the Bright Club comedy night where sperm featured in one scientist's stand-up routine | 24 6 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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51 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Alok Jha talks human evolution with Chris Stringer | Alok Jha talks human evolution with Chris Stringer | 20 6 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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52 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Mending broken hearts and nerves | We meet researchers who have identified ingenious ways to repair tissue damage once thought to be irreversible in heart disease and multiple sclerosis | 10 6 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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53 |
Science Weekly podcast: The science of watching films | Psychologist and film buff Tim Smith explains how the best movie makers direct viewers' attention and why Hollywood is getting interested in the science | 3 6 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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54 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Climate science, transparency and harassment | Sir Paul Nurse talks to Alok Jha about the misuse of Freedom of Information requests to harass climate scientists | 27 5 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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55 |
Science Weekly podcast: Science fiction, and the age of astronomy | Author of The Sky's Dark Labyrinth Stuart Clark explores the early days of astronomy. Plus, Ian Sample discusses his explosive interview with Stephen Hawking, and we review a new science fiction exhibition | 23 5 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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56 |
Science Weekly podcast: The human era, and war without tears | Have humans changed the Earth to such an extent, we have created a new geological era: the Anthropocene? Plus, the uses of neuroscience in war | 14 5 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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57 |
Science Weekly podcast: The power of the virus, and supercooperators | Carl Zimmer introduces his new book A Planet of Viruses, and Harvard professor of biology and mathematics Martin Nowak lauds the role of cooperation in evolution | 6 5 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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58 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Our place in the cosmos, and a test for empathy | Author of The Address Book, Tim Radford, answers the perennial question, where are we? Plus, Simon Baron-Cohen discusses a scientific test for measuring empathy | 28 4 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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59 |
Science Weekly Extra: Simon Baron-Cohen on empathy and evil | Simon Baron-Cohen talks to Ian Sample about his proposal that we should redefine 'evil' as an absence of empathy | 28 4 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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60 |
Science Weekly Podcast: Antibiotic resistance and the eater of time | Darwinian evolution and antibiotic resistance; a new time machine; and the growing controversy surrounding shale gas extraction | 21 4 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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61 |
Science Weekly podcast: Middle-aged brains and information overload | New York Times science editor Barbara Strauch describes the surprising abilities of a middle-aged mind; James Gleick on information overload; plus, the latest in our series of unanswerable questions | 18 4 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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62 |
Science Weekly podcast: Hard-wired prejudices, and 50 years in space | David Eagleman suggests prejudices may be hard-wired into our brains; a new real-time film celebrating 50 years since Yuri Gagarin went into space; plus, Brian Greene asks this week's 'Hannaford question' | 11 4 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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63 |
Science Weekly podcast: What is 'the self' and where exactly is it? | We attempt to explain 'the self' with Julian Baggini; Tim Flannery tells us how love can save the environment; and Brian Cox answers the 'Hannaford question' | 4 4 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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64 |
Science Weekly podcast: Mathematics special + Brian Cox = science2 | Bowing to popular demand, here's our mathematical special. No calculators allowed. As an added bonus, physicist and star of the small screen Brian Cox dropped by | 27 3 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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65 |
Science Weekly podcast: Just how many universes are there? | Brian Greene claims that every decision we make creates a parallel universe - and the proof is in the maths; plus, we join Tim Jackson as he takes a Q&A session on whether rampant consumerism is ruining our lives | 21 3 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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66 |
Science Weekly podcast: Why scientists love Germany | We visit the European Space Agency's operations centre, and get a taste of some of the most exciting research being carried out in Germany | 14 3 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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67 |
Science Weekly podcast: What became of Beagle 2? | The man who lost a spacecraft; Lester Brown on food bubbles; Alzheimer's; a mission to Mercury; and responding to national emergencies | 7 3 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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68 |
Science Weekly podcast: AAAS 2011, drugs and the sound of the stars | The highlights of this year's AAAS science festival in Washington DC, professor David Nutt explains his latest research on reclassifying drugs; plus, the sound of the stars | 28 2 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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69 |
Science Weekly Extra podcast: Requiem for the space shuttle | In an extended interview, former Nasa astronaut Jeff Hoffman reflects on 30 years of the space shuttle | 21 2 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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70 |
ExplicitScience Weekly podcast: Electric cars, the space shuttle and yeast | Shai Agassi's vision of a green future; former Nasa astronaut Jeff Hoffman reflects on 30 years of the shuttle; and the sex life of yeast | 20 2 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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71 |
ExplicitScience Weekly podcast: The birds and the bees (X-rated version) | Nature's most intimate sexual secrets; Peter Atkins on the limits of science; plus, why chemistry often gets overlooked | 14 2 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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72 |
ExplicitScience Weekly podcast: Ham the astrochimp, and the LHC keeps going | It's 50 years since the first ape went into space; why the LHC isn't going to shut down for a year; Alok's first book; and Isabella Rossellini on her Green Pornos | 7 2 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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73 |
Science Weekly podcast: The next generation supercomputer | How new technologies will boost your laptop; how Ikea makes you buy stuff you don't need; plus, new evidence questioning the out of Africa theory | 31 1 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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74 |
Science Weekly podcast: How blogs are changing science | From Science Online 2011, we take an extended look at the world of blogging and its role in modern science | 24 1 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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75 |
Science Weekly podcast: Monitoring climate change in the Antarctic | We dial up researchers looking at climate change in Antarctica; plus, Clay Shirky explains his answer to this year's Edge Question | 16 1 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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76 |
ExplicitScience Weekly: Why we should learn to love the meteorite | The benefits of Earth being hit by a meteorite; the secret world of turtles; and the effect of women's tears on men | 10 1 11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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77 |
ExplicitScience Weekly: Christmas at the Large Hadron Collider | As the LHC goes into hibernation for the winter, we visit the Atlas experiment to ask, will 2011 be the year of the Higgs? | 26 12 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
|
78 |
Science Weekly: Royal Institution Christmas Lectures: Size Matters | We join the production crew for a rehearsal of one of this year's Christmas Lectures at the Royal Institution | 20 12 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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79 |
Science Weekly: The great arsenic bacteria backlash | The global reaction to Nasa's arsenic bacteria research; plus, Dr Petra Boynton exposes some dating myths | 13 12 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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80 |
Guardian Focus: The Cancún climate change conference | Examining the climate change compromises, emission deals and fallout from WikiLeaks at COP16 in Cancún | 9 12 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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81 |
Science Weekly: The arsenic bacterium that could help find life in outer space | An arsenic-loving bacterium; an augmented reality dinosaur; what your finger-length means; and should science journals be free? | 6 12 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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82 |
Science Weekly: Memory on trial | Can we trust the memory of court witnesses?; a sneak preview of a new climate science exhibition; oxygen tasted on another world; and 'evidence' we can see into the future | 29 11 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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83 |
ExplicitScience Weekly: Saving pandas, tigers and tortoises | Are giant pandas really endangered? Glastonbury goes solar, the best physics on the web, tiger droppings, plus sounds from the Large Hadron Collider | 22 11 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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84 |
Science Weekly: Getting high and the threat of climate war | Mind-altering drugs; War as a consequence of climate change; Why some areas of science are too difficult to explain through sound alone; plus, next month's Guardian science book club | 15 11 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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85 |
ExplicitScience Weekly: Testing fear, panic and arousal in cinemagoers | The physiology of panic, fear and arousal in cinema-goers; the evolutionary psychology of leadership; plus, robonauts and holographic communications | 7 11 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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86 |
Science Weekly: The Book of Human Life - second edition | The first map of human genetic variation; homeopathy on the NHS; the space shuttle; a 'liberal gene'; plus, an eco-tour of Hampstead Heath | 1 11 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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87 |
ExplicitScience Weekly: Maggie Philbin on science books and Tomorrow's World | Maggie Philbin discusses science books and Tomorrow's World; plus, James Randi and PZ Myers at TAM London | 25 10 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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88 |
Science Weekly: Rebuilding HMS Beagle, and Hubble's 20th birthday | Recreating Charles Darwin's ship; how to dial the space station; Hubble turns 20; Arabic science; and Stephen Hawking at the Albert Hall | 18 10 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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89 |
ExplicitScience Weekly: Nobel prizewinner Andre Geim, and Steve Jones on incest | 2010 Nobel prizewinner Andre Geim speaks to the pod, Brian Cox takes us around Cern, and we investigate the science of incest | 11 10 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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90 |
Science Weekly: Bugs, bowels and bats | How dangerous are the bacteria lurking in our homes? Is a vaccine against diarrhoea a realistic prospect? Plus: an insight into the sex lives of fruit bats | 1 10 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
|
91 |
Science Weekly: Back from the dead | Can extreme cooling in intensive care bring people back from the dead? Plus, Jon Henley meets crime scene investigators who are solving murders by studying insects | 27 9 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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92 |
Science Weekly: What the brain can and can't do | We delve into the mysteries of the mind; plus, are we reaching the limits of what humans can understand? | 20 9 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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93 |
Science Weekly: Richard Dawkins, David Attenborough and algae | Science Weekly: Algae make environmentally friendly fuel; science funding cuts; plus, Richard Dawkins and David Attenborough in conversation | 13 9 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
|
94 |
Science Weekly: Scientists slug it out | Scientific rivalry; a museum makeover; the Tevatron's stay of execution; and Stephen Hawking coming out as an atheist | 6 9 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
|
95 |
Science Weekly: Gone fishin' | The podcast team is taking a brief summer break, but we're back with a full show next week | 30 8 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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96 |
ExplicitScience Weekly: Questioning gravity | The big questions about our universe; a sex scientist; zombie ants; plus, is the moon really getting smaller? | 22 8 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
|
97 |
Science Weekly: Superheroes – a warning | The downside of superheroes; decision-making in ant colonies; a scan for autism; plus, has P=NP been solved? | 16 8 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
|
98 |
ExplicitScience Weekly: Elon Musk's mission to Mars | A tour of Elon Musk's rocket factory; grow your own underpants; an emotional robot; plus, how to tan your bum | 9 8 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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99 |
Science Weekly: Cern, space and sniffing | The woman behind Cern's Atlas experiment; the Rosetta mission's stunning pictures of asteroid Lutetia; and communicating by sniffing | 2 8 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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100 |
Science Weekly: Why you should distrust your senses | Our fallible senses; newly reunited footage and audio of Apollo 11 mission control; plus, how comics are being used in medicine | 26 7 10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| Total: 100 Episodes |
Customer Reviews
If you love Science, you will like this show
Of all the Science podcasts I listen to, this is the best.
It keeps me up to date in an infomative and amusing way.
Any chance of you folks doing a tour down under?
Most UK shows eventually do it...;-)
Fast paced and fun
These guys love science at least as much as you or I do. Geeky but sassy.
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