Science Friday

Brain fun for curious people.

https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/science-friday

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 46m. Bisher sind 1075 Folge(n) erschienen. Dieser Podcast erscheint täglich.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 32 days 33 minutes

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Neutrinos, Book Club, Air Conditioning. July 13, 2018, Part 1


In 1988, physicist Stephen Hawking’s wildly popular A Brief History of Time introduced general audiences around the world to scientists’ questions about the Big Bang, black holes, and relativity. Many of those questions remain unanswered, though the scie


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 July 13, 2018  47m
 
 

Jurassic World, Rhino Comeback, Uranus Collision. July 6, 2018, Part 2


It’s the 25th anniversary of the debut of Jurassic Park. And with Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom currently at the top of the summer movie food chain, its progeny continue to dominate the box offices. But even as the original Jurassic Park gave viewers th


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 July 6, 2018  46m
 
 

19th-Century Surveyor, Hawaii Volcano, Eagles' Nests. July 6, 2018, Part 1


In the 19th century, the American West was an arid climate yet to be fully explored. But surveyors like geologist John Wesley Powell, the second director of the United States Geological Society, would chart out the natural wonders that lied beyond the Mi


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 July 6, 2018  45m
 
 

Bee News, Summer Science Reading. June 29, 2018, Part 2


Bumblebees and honeybees are two species of bees that form colonies. The colonies of bumblebees are smaller compared to their honeybee cousins, who’s hives can house tens of thousands of individuals. But both of these colonies have complicated compositio


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 June 29, 2018  46m
 
 

Beef Genetic Testing, Chasing Whales, Radiolab Gonads. June 29, 2018, Part 1


Whales are majestic, awe-inspiring animals. Some species can reach up to 150 tons and take in a living room-sized volume of water in one gulp. They can even dive thousands of feet into the ocean while holding their breath all the way down. It’s hard to i


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 June 29, 2018  46m
 
 

Math And Social Justice, Chicago Coyotes, Meteorites. June 22, 2018, Part 2


Math isn’t often thought of as a tool for social justice. But mathematical thinking can help us understand what’s going on in society too, says mathematician Eugenia Cheng. For example, abstract math can be used to examine the power structures between me


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 June 22, 2018  55m
 
 

Alcohol Study, Cephalopod Week, Coral Oasis. June 22 2018, Part 1


Last week, the National Institutes of Health cancelled a $100 million study of alcohol and health after an internal investigation found “early and frequent” engagement with none other than the alcohol industry, to an extent that would “cast doubt” on the


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 June 22, 2018  46m
 
 

CRISPR, Colors, Narwhals. June 15, 2018, Part 2


Over less than a decade, the gene-editing technique known as CRISPR-Cas9 has taken the biology world by storm. But two new studies indicate that there could be a downside to the CRISPR approach. Did you know a blue jay’s feathers and a butterfly’s wings


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 June 15, 2018  47m
 
 

Dinosaurs, Celebrating Cephalopods. June 15, 2018, Part 1


Like a kraken rising from the depths (or a cuttlefish emerging from the sand), Cephalopod Week is back! Every year, Science Friday spends a week honoring the mighty, clever, mysterious cephalopod. This year, Field Museum curator Janet Voight joins Ira an


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 June 15, 2018  47m
 
 

Mars Organics, Museum Collections, Kelp Farming. June 8, 2018, Part 2


In 1832, less than a year into the first voyage of the Beagle, Charles Darwin found a beetle in Argentina. Turns out, discovering new species in the depths of museum archives is not so uncommon. 180 years later, an entomologist who happened to specialize


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 June 8, 2018  47m