Science Weekly

Science Weekly

Twice a week, the Guardian brings you the latest science and environment news

Tämä podcast on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi podcastin jaksot saattavat sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(299)

Who really wins if the Enhanced Games go ahead?

Who really wins if the Enhanced Games go ahead?

Billed as a rival to the Olympic Games, the Enhanced Games, set to take place in 2025, is a sporting event with a difference; athletes will be allowed to dope. Ian Sample talks to chief sports writer ...

18 Huhti 202416min

Soundscape ecology: a window into a disappearing world

Soundscape ecology: a window into a disappearing world

What can sound tell us about nature loss? Guardian biodiversity reporter Phoebe Weston tells Madeleine Finlay about her visit to Monks Wood in Cambridgeshire, where ecologist Richard Broughton has wit...

16 Huhti 202416min

The senior Swiss women who went to court over climate change, and won

The senior Swiss women who went to court over climate change, and won

This week, in a landmark case, the European court of human rights ruled that Switzerland’s weak climate policy had violated the rights of a group of older Swiss women to family life. Ian Sample talks ...

11 Huhti 202415min

Remembering physicist Peter Higgs

Remembering physicist Peter Higgs

The Nobel prize-winning British physicist Peter Higgs has died aged 94. The confirmation in 2012 of the existence of the Higgs boson particle, five decades after Higgs had first theorised its existenc...

10 Huhti 202417min

Horny tortoises and solar mysteries: what scientists can learn from a total eclipse

Horny tortoises and solar mysteries: what scientists can learn from a total eclipse

For most people seeing a total solar eclipse is a once in a lifetime experience. But for scientists it can be a fleeting chance to understand something deeper about their field of research. Madeleine ...

9 Huhti 202417min

The science of ‘weird shit’: why we believe in fate, ghosts and conspiracy theories

The science of ‘weird shit’: why we believe in fate, ghosts and conspiracy theories

Psychologist Chris French has spent decades studying paranormal claims and mysterious experiences, from seemingly-impossible coincidences to paintings that purportedly predict the future. Ian Sample s...

4 Huhti 202418min

Hypermobility: a blessing or a curse?

Hypermobility: a blessing or a curse?

Being more flexible than the average person can have its advantages, from being great at games such as Limbo to feeling smug in yoga class. But researchers are coming to understand that being hypermob...

2 Huhti 202415min

The virus that infects almost everyone, and its link to cancer and MS

The virus that infects almost everyone, and its link to cancer and MS

On 28 March it’s the 60th anniversary of the discovery of Epstein-Barr virus, the most common viral infection in humans. The virus was first discovered in association with a rare type of cancer locate...

28 Maalis 202415min

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