Keeping water out of the stratosphere could be a low-risk geoengineering approach, and using magnets to drive medical robots inside the body
First up this week, a new approach to slowing climate change: dehydrating the stratosphere. Staff Writer Paul Voosen joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss the risks and advantages of this geoengineering technique.
Next on the show, Science Robotics Editor Amos Matsiko gives a run-down of papers in a special series on magnetic robots in medicine. Matsiko and Crespi also discuss how close old science fiction books came to predicting modern medical robots’ abilities.
This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy.
About the Science Podcast
Authors: Sarah Crespi; Paul Voosen; Amos Matsiko
Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.zvvddhw
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The age-old quest for the color blue and why pollution is not killing the killifish
Race and disease risk and Berlin’s singing nightingales
How dental plaque reveals the history of dairy farming, and how our neighbors view food waste
A new species of ancient human and real-time evolutionary changes in flowering plants
A radioactive waste standoff and science’s debt to the slave trade
Mysterious racehorse injuries, and reforming the U.S. bail system
Vacuuming potato-size nodules of valuable metals in the deep sea, and an expedition to an asteroid 290 million kilometers away
Mysterious fast radio bursts and long-lasting effects of childhood cancer treatments
Clues that the medieval plague swept into sub-Saharan Africa and evidence humans hunted and butchered giant ground sloths 12,000 years ago
Measuring earthquake damage with cellphone sensors and determining the height of the ancient Tibetan Plateau
Spotting slavery from space, and using iPads for communication disorders
How far out we can predict the weather, and an ocean robot that monitors food webs
Possible potato improvements, and a pill that gives you a jab in the gut
Treating the microbiome, and a gene that induces sleep
Pollution from pot plants, and how our bodies perceive processed foods
Peering inside giant planets, and fighting Ebola in the face of fake news
A mysterious blue pigment in the teeth of a medieval woman, and the evolution of online master’s degrees
Will a radical open-access proposal catch on, and quantifying the most deadly period of the Holocaust
End of the year podcast: 2018’s breakthroughs, breakdowns, and top online stories
‘The Tragedy of the Commons’ turns 50, and how Neanderthal DNA could change your skull
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
DNA Today: A Genetics Podcast
Museum of the Missing
Strange by Nature Podcast
Sasquatch Chronicles
Hidden Brain