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
Cloning for conservation, and divining dynamos on super-Earths
Setting up a permafrost observatory, and regulating transmissible vaccines
Top online stories, the state of marijuana research, and Afrofuturism
The Breakthrough of the year show, and the best of science books
Tapping fiber optic cables for science, and what really happens when oil meets water
The ethics of small COVID-19 trials, and visiting an erupting volcano
Why trees are making extra nuts this year, human genetics and viral infections, and a seminal book on racism and identity
Wildfires could threaten ozone layer, and vaccinating against tick bites
The long road to launching the James Webb Space Telescope, and genes for a longer life span
The folate debate, and rewriting the radiocarbon curve
Sleeping without a brain, tracking alien invasions, and algorithms of oppression
Soil science goes deep, and making moldable wood
The ripple effects of mass incarceration, and how much is a dog’s nose really worth?
Swarms of satellites could crowd out the stars, and the evolution of hepatitis B over 10 millennia
Whole-genome screening for newborns, and the importance of active learning for STEM
Earliest human footprints in North America, dating violins with tree rings, and the social life of DNA
Potty training cows, and sardines swimming into an ecological trap
Legions of lunar landers, and why we make robots that look like people
Pinpointing the origins of SARS-CoV-2, and making vortex beams of atoms
New insights into endometriosis, predicting RNA folding, and the surprising career of the spirometer
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