Receptors that give our feline friends a craving for meat, and using combustion to propel insect-size robots
First up on this week’s episode, Online News Editor David Grimm joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about why despite originating from a dry, desert environment cats seem to love to eat fish.
Next on the show, bugs such as ants are tiny while at the same time fast and strong, and small robots can’t seem to match these insectile feats of speed and power. Cameron Aubin, a postdoc at Cornell University who will shortly join the University of Michigan, discusses using miniscule combustion reactions to bring small robots up to ant speed.
Finally in a sponsored segment from the Science/AAAS Custom Publishing Office, Jackie Oberst, associate editor for custom publishing, discusses with Bobby Soni, chief business officer at the BioInnovation Institute, an international life science incubator in Copenhagen, Denmark, what it takes to bring a product from lab to market and how to make the leap from scientist to entrepreneur. This segment is sponsored by the BioInnovation Institute.
This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy.
About the Science Podcast
Authors: Sarah Crespi, David Grimm
Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adk8409
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The environmental toll of war in Ukraine, and communications between mom and fetus during childbirth
The top online news from 2023, and using cough sounds to diagnose disease
The hunt for a quantum phantom, and making bitcoin legal tender
Science’s Breakthrough of the Year, and tracing poached pangolins
Farm animals show their smarts, and how honeyguide birds lead humans to hives
Basic geoengineering, and autonomous construction robots
Exascale supercomputers amp up science, finally growing dolomite in the lab, and origins of patriarchy
AI improves weather prediction, and cutting emissions from landfills
The state of Russian science, and improving implantable bioelectronics
Turning anemones into coral, and the future of psychiatric drugs
Making corn shorter, and a book on finding India’s women in science
The consequences of the world's largest dam removal, and building a quantum computer using sound waves
Mysterious objects beyond Neptune, and how wildfire pollution behaves indoors
How long can ancient DNA survive, and how much stuff do we need to escape poverty?
Visiting utopias, fighting heat death, and making mysterious ‘dark earth’
Reducing cartel violence in Mexico, and what to read and see this fall
Extreme ocean currents from a volcano, and why it’s taking so long to wire green energy into the U.S. grid
Reducing calculus trauma, and teaching AI to smell
The source of solar wind, hackers and salt halt research, and a book on how institutions decide gender
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