Naked Scientists Special Editions show

Naked Scientists Special Editions

Summary: Probing the weird, wacky and spectacular, the Naked Scientists Special Editions are special one-off scientific reports, investigations and interviews on cutting-edge topics by the Naked Scientists team.

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Podcasts:

 11.07.07 - Inside Diamond | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 30:32

This month, we venture into the synchrotron along with members of the public to bring you a glimpse of the Inside Diamond open days. We meet the engineers and technicians that design the components of the synchrotron to keep it running smoothly, hear from Diamond CEO Gert Materlik about the main highlights of these open days. Plus, we talk to a scientist working on one of Diamonds latest Beamlines, I-24, that's enabling research that wasn't possible before including new insight in the fight against allergies!

 11.07.07 - WWII bunkers, thugs and aliens, and calving glaciers | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:56

This week in the Planet Earth Podcast, why weathermen are using a converted World War II bunker to monitor clouds; how thug species such as bramble, nettle and bracken can be just as damaging to woodlands as alien plants; and why scientists are going to Greenland to deploy a network of sensors in some of the country's glaciers.

 11.06.14 - Learning about Sheep Learning | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 17:40

Professor Jenny Morton provides new insight into the cognitive abilities of the supposedly dim-witted sheep and explains how these quick learning animals can be used to model Huntington's Disease...

 11.06.17 - Bumblebee declines, microbes, and amazing birds | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 20:22

This week in the Planet Earth Podcast - what UK farmers are doing to protect the country's vanishing bumblebees, butterflies and other pollinating insects; how scientists are trying to figure out how many types of microbes there are on our planet and why they all matter; and why birds are more amazing than we ever imagined.

 11.06.14 - Learning about Sheep Learning | File Type: video/mp4 | Duration: 04:59

This month we hear investigating the cognitive abilities of sheep can enable a better insight into the development and onset of Hunitington's Disease...

 11.06.10 - The Pressures of the Deep Sea | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 26:48

Anything in the deep sea, whether that's the microbes that live down there, or the research vehicles sent down to take samples of them face the same challenges from being way down deep. So why study the deep ocean depths? And how do we do it? For this naked scientists special, Sarah Castor-Perry went to Scripps Institution of Oceanography to find out, from Professor of Marine Microbial Genetics, Professor Douglas Bartlett, and engineer extraordinaire Kevin Hardy.

 11.06.03 - Cuckoos at Wicken Fen, snow, and radiocarbon dating | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 21:01

This week in the Planet Earth Podcast - the cunning tricks the cuckoo uses to get another bird to do the parenting, why researchers are studying snow in Sweden, and how an improved radiocarbon dating technique may put a few scientists' noses out of joint.

 11.06.02 - Picturing the underwater world | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 11:13

One of the biggest problems when it comes to caring for the ocean realm is that it is out of sight and out of mind. It's hard to care about something you don't know about, and most people, most of the time, don't have a chance to see ocean life for themselves. Underwater photography is helping to bridge that gap between people and the oceans. In this special podcast, Helen Scales chats to National Geographic photographer Brian Skerry to find out about the challenges of taking pictures underwater, from the technical constraints of taking electrical equipment into salty water to finding ways of portraying both the beauty of ocean wildlife and also the problems it faces today.

 11.06.01 - Taking a lobster's view on the oceans | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 17:39

How do marine animals hear, see, touch, and smell the world around them? Life underwater is obviously very different to life on land and it can be difficult for us air-breathing humans to imagine what goes on down there beneath the waves. But understanding how animals find their way around the ocean plays a vital role in our efforts to conserve marine life. In this special edition of the Naked scientists, Helen Scales meets sensory biologist Jelle Atema from Boston University to find out what we know about the ways marine animals build a picture of the world around them.

 11.05.31 - Exploring the wonders of the deep | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 15:58

The saying goes that we known more about the surface of the moon than we do about the deep sea - and that's probably true. But modern technologies are opening up the mysterious depths allowing scientists to venture further than ever before into this alien realm. In this special podcast, Helen Scales explores the wonders of the deep with biologist Tim Shank from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in the US. He recently led a pioneering expedition into the deep sea around Indonesia where his team discovered dozens of new species and shed light on extraordinary ecosystems in the dark depths that rival the vibrant coral reefs in sunlit shallows.

 11.05.17 - Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Zero Degrees of Empathy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 21:04

This month, Professor Simon Baron-Cohen explores human empathy and explains what empathy is, how it differs amongst the population and the neurological and environmental causes of these differences...

 11.05.24 - Flood defences, the Southern Ocean, and whiter clouds | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:52

This week in the Planet Earth Podcast, why removing some man-made coastal flood defences might not be such a harebrained idea, what it's like studying gas exchange in the wilds of the Southern Ocean, and, in what could be the first case of 'natural' geoengineering, how forests could be whitening the clouds right above them.

 11.05.06 - Science from a plane, and forecasting space storms | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 21:26

This week in the Planet Earth Podcast: how a specially-designed twin turboprop research plane is helping scientists in a huge range of subjects from archaeology to ecology, and why a violent space storm could spell trouble for communications systems across the world.

 11.04.27 - Volcanic ash and sediment time machines | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:13

This week in the Planet Earth Podcast, how last year's eruption of the Eyjafjallajkull volcano in Iceland gave scientists an unparalleled opportunity for research, and why sediment from rivers like the Thames can act like time machines to bygone eras.

 11.04.18 - The Power of Magnetism | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 26:46

This month we attract your attention to the power of magnetism as we explore just what magnetism is and how it can be induced. We also explore the role of magnetism in superconductors, as well as a class of materials known as multiferroics! Plus, we bring you the latest news and events from the light source.

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