Imaging the Invisible

Imaging the Invisible

This week, how immune cells can be caught on camera as they exit blood vessels, a new design of lensless microscope and one that sees cells in 3D, how sound and heat can be used to find faults in materials and how something as small as an atom can be seen under an electron microscope. Plus, news that nerve transplants can correct metabolic disorders, the World's first fishhook, bionic contact lenses that project emails into your eyes, are statins safe and why are mirror reflections still blurry close up for the shortsighted... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists

Episoder(1229)

Polio vaccine and policy probe

Polio vaccine and policy probe

In this week's show, we speak to a former navy commander about the Titan sub, do our decision-makers ignore evidence when making scientific policy? And the new telescope that is hoping to explore the ...

23 Jun 202328min

40 years of HIV

40 years of HIV

40 years since the identification of HIV, we look at where it came from, and how far are we from an effective vaccine... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists

20 Jun 202328min

Space solar power and fish running fevers

Space solar power and fish running fevers

The plan to beam-in solar power from space, ways to incentivise sharing trustworthy material on social media, and do ill fish run a fever like we do? Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting th...

16 Jun 202328min

The science of UFOs

The science of UFOs

This time, we'll be taking a deep dive into the extra terrestrial...and exploring UFOs. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists

13 Jun 202328min

UK Covid inquiry, AI, and cat contraception

UK Covid inquiry, AI, and cat contraception

As the UK's Covid inquiry kicks off, will it help to transform how we tackle future pandemics? How an AI is writing its own computer code, speeding up the Internet; and using gene therapy for cat cont...

9 Jun 202329min

Fossil fever: scientists dig in

Fossil fever: scientists dig in

Researchers around the world are naming a new kind of dinosaur every week on average at the moment - what's behind this golden age of palaeontology? We talk to scientists, museum staff and amateur fos...

6 Jun 202328min

Treaties, treatments and time travel

Treaties, treatments and time travel

Also in the news, boys vocalise more in their first year, NASA' holds a public meeting on the study of 'unitdentified aeriel phenomena', and what damage might a time traveller cause? Like this podcast...

2 Jun 202330min

Allergies and how they happen

Allergies and how they happen

This week, we're taking a closer look at allergies. What causes them, and what makes them so hard to cure? Along the way we find out what it's like to live with severe allergy, why the body has evolve...

30 Mai 202326min

Populært innen Vitenskap

fastlegen
smart-forklart
jss
tingenes-tilstand
villmarksliv
rekommandert
vett-og-vitenskap-med-gaute-einevoll
sinnsyn
forskningno
rss-rekommandert
fjellsportpodden
rss-paradigmepodden
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
aldring-og-helse-podden
pod-britannia
rss-nysgjerrige-norge
nordnorsk-historie
diagnose
tidlose-historier
rss-overskuddsliv