Earlier in the week the current ISS crew had to prepare to evacuate after Russia tested an anti-satellite weapon, spreading thousands of high velocity shards of ex-satellite into a reasonably low-earth orbit and potentially endangering many other earth observation and communication satellites of all nations. How can we clear this and all the other debris? BBC Space Correspondent Jonathan Amos tells Gaia Vince about the Russian test and of efforts to de-orbit some other deceased orbital vehicles.
Simon Evans, deputy editor of the website Carbon Brief, was one of many attending the COP26 summit which ended at the weekend. How do all the declarations, promises and the "Glasgow Pact" itself add up in the great carbon ledger we all need to worry about?
And the last of BBC Inside Science's Royal Society book prize nominees, Jessica Nordell talks to Gaia about writing her book "The End of Bias: A Beginning: The Science and Practice of Overcoming Unconscious Bias". Her investigation into the science of all of our preconceptions and unacknowledged prejudices surprized even herself.
Presented by Gaia Vince
Produced by Alex Mansfield
Studio production by Anna Buckley and Bob Nettles
Made in Association with The Open University
Episodes
Date
Duration
Monkeypox, Pompeii aDNA, and Elephant Mourning Videos
Why are non-African monkeypox cases causing concern? Also, the first complete human genome from a Pompeiian cadaver, and how YouTube is...
Thursday 23 June 2022
00:35:08
Buried Mars Landers, Freezing Species, and Low-Tide Archaeology
Since 2018, Nasa's InSight Mars lander has been sitting on the surface listening to the seismic rumbles of the red planet's deep interior....
Thursday 16 June 2022
00:28:03
Running Rings Around Matter
Astronomers have captured the first image of Sagittarius A*, the gargantuan black hole at the centre of our galaxy. Dr Ziri Younsi,...
Thursday 09 June 2022
00:28:10
Precious Metals, Earlier Eggs, and Meaningful Meteorites
With the cost of living spiralling, many are probably thinking more about the price of food than lithium, titanium, copper or platinum. But...
Thursday 02 June 2022
00:32:22
The Ebb and Flow of the Tidal Power Revolution
This week, we begin with a disturbing medical mystery. Since the start of the year, almost 200 children worldwide have fallen ill with...
Thursday 26 May 2022
00:43:50
Building Better Engagement
Victoria Gill and guests ask why does scientific communication matters in society and how it might be done better, with Sam Illingworth,...
Thursday 19 May 2022
00:34:05
A Trip-Switch for Depression?
Could magic mushrooms be the key to a revolution in treating depression? Professor David Nutt, director of the Imperial Centre for...
Thursday 12 May 2022
00:35:25
Declining Data, Climate Deadlines and the Day the Dinosaurs Died
Covid-19 infections in the UK are at an all-time high. But most people in England can no longer access free Covid-19 tests, and the REACT-1...
Thursday 05 May 2022
00:36:14
How can the UK get to zero carbon?
Energy is essential: every living thing needs energy to survive, and today’s industrialised societies consume enormous quantities of it....
Thursday 28 April 2022
00:27:46
Racial inequality in UK science
This month the Royal Society of Chemistry released a shocking report on racial inequality at all stages of academia, from research funding...
Thursday 21 April 2022
00:32:16
Global food security during Ukraine conflict
The Russian conflict in Ukraine is already causing hunger there, and as Ukraine and Russia are huge grain exporters, the crisis will be far...
Thursday 14 April 2022
00:28:54
High Seas treaty talks and discoveries from the deep
The High Seas make up most of our oceans but belong to no-one and are largely unregulated, leaving them at risk of plunder. UN talks start...
Thursday 07 April 2022
00:28:37
Cyber frontlines in Ukraine
As conflict continues in Ukraine, there are invisible ‘cyber frontlines’ running in parallel to the physical fighting. We hear how the...
Thursday 31 March 2022
00:28:06
Inside Science is now first on BBC Sounds
Looking for the latest episode? New episodes of Inside Science will now be available first on BBC Sounds for four weeks before other podcast...
Friday 04 March 2022
00:01:00
World’s largest Jurassic pterosaur found on Skye
In a week of exciting fossils finds we get up close to a 170 million year old pterosaur, found on the Isle of Skye. And over in the States,...
Thursday 24 February 2022
00:28:56
COVID-19: Beginnings... and endings?
With the prime minister proposing an end to self-isolation requirements as early as the end of the month, we thought we would check in with...
Thursday 17 February 2022
00:32:41
Fusion energy smashes world record
This week the UK-based JET Laboratory broke its 25-year-old record for energy extracted by nuclear fusion - the process that powers the...
Thursday 10 February 2022
00:28:42
The Continuing Story of the Nuclear Waste Bill
Whilst energy prices are shooting up due to gas demand, in the UK the plans for the next generation nuclear reactors are moving ahead. The...
Thursday 03 February 2022
00:36:55
Predicting Long Covid, and the Global Toll of Antimicrobial Resistance
Prof Onur Boyman, Director of department of Immunology at University Hospital, Zurich, this week published a paper in the journal Nature...
Thursday 27 January 2022
00:36:17
The 'perfect' depth for a destructive eruption
Why was the blast from the Hunga-Tonga-Hunga-Ha'apai volcano so explosive? Where are we on the global climatic thermostat? And how you can...
Thursday 20 January 2022
00:37:17
The Rutland ‘Sea Dragon’, An Astronomer's Christmas and some Animal Magic
After 20 years of planning, preparation and a nail-biting build up fraught by delays The James Webb Space telescope finally launched on...
Thursday 13 January 2022
00:28:02
Deep ocean exploration
UCL oceanographer Helen Czerski explores life in the ocean depths with a panel of deep sea biologists. They take us to deep ocean coral...
Thursday 06 January 2022
00:37:16
A new space age?
Dr Kevin Fong convenes a panel of astronautical minds to discuss the next decade or two of space exploration.
2021 was an eventful year in...
Thursday 30 December 2021
00:41:56
The Origin of Celtic Culture in Britain?
Victoria Gill hears of ancient DNA evidence for an unrecognised mass migration from continental Europe 3,000 years ago that may even have...
Thursday 23 December 2021
00:38:15
The James Webb Space Telescope
The launch of the James Webb Space Telescope is only days away. Scheduled for lift off on 24 December, the largest and most complex space...
Yet More Space Junk; COP-up or COP-out; The End of Bias.
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science
BBC Radio 4
The podcast BBC Inside Science has been added to your home screen.
Earlier in the week the current ISS crew had to prepare to evacuate after Russia tested an anti-satellite weapon, spreading thousands of high velocity shards of ex-satellite into a reasonably low-earth orbit and potentially endangering many other earth observation and communication satellites of all nations. How can we clear this and all the other debris? BBC Space Correspondent Jonathan Amos tells Gaia Vince about the Russian test and of efforts to de-orbit some other deceased orbital vehicles.
Simon Evans, deputy editor of the website Carbon Brief, was one of many attending the COP26 summit which ended at the weekend. How do all the declarations, promises and the "Glasgow Pact" itself add up in the great carbon ledger we all need to worry about?
And the last of BBC Inside Science's Royal Society book prize nominees, Jessica Nordell talks to Gaia about writing her book "The End of Bias: A Beginning: The Science and Practice of Overcoming Unconscious Bias". Her investigation into the science of all of our preconceptions and unacknowledged prejudices surprized even herself.
Presented by Gaia Vince
Produced by Alex Mansfield
Studio production by Anna Buckley and Bob Nettles
Made in Association with The Open University