Builders of the largest scientific instruments, and how cracks can add resilience to an ecosystem
First up this week, a story on a builder of the biggest machines. Producer Kevin McLean talks with Staff Writer Adrian Cho about Adrian’s dad and his other baby: an x-ray synchrotron.
Next up on this episode, a look at self-organizing landscapes. Host Sarah Crespi and Chi Xu, a professor of ecology at Nanjing University, talk about a Science Advances paper on how resilience in an ecosystem can come from the interaction of a plant and cracks in the soil.
Finally, in a sponsored segment from the Science/AAAS Custom Publishing Office, Jackie Oberst, assistant editor for custom publishing, discusses challenges early-career researchers face and how targeted funding for this group can enable their future success. She talks with Gary Michelson, founder and co-chair of Michelson Philanthropies and Aleksandar Obradovic, this year’s grand prize winner of the annual Michelson Philanthropies and Science Prize for Immunology.
This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy.
About the Science Podcast
[Image: Hong’an Ding/Yellow River Estuary Association of Photographers; Music: Jeffrey Cook]
[alt: red beach from above with podcast overlay]
Authors: Sarah Crespi; Kevin McLean; Adrian Cho
Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/science.adi5718
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kurt Vonnegut’s contribution to science, and tunas and sharks as ecosystem indicators
Cities as biodiversity havens, and gene therapy for epilepsy
Space-based solar power gets serious, AI helps optimize chemistry, and a book on food extinction
Snakes living the high-altitude life, and sending computing power to the edges of the internet
Climate change threatens supercomputing, and collecting spider silks
Linking violence in Myanmar to fossil amber research, and waking up bacterial spores
Giving a lagoon personhood, measuring methane flaring, and a book about eating high on the hog
Can wolves form close bonds with humans, and termites degrade wood faster as the world warms
Testing planetary defenses against asteroids, and building a giant ‘water machine’
Why the fight against malaria has stalled in southern Africa, and how to look for signs of life on Mars
Using free-floating DNA to find soldiers’ remains, and how people contribute to indoor air chemistry
Chasing Arctic cyclones, brain coordination in REM sleep, and a book on seafood in the information age
Monitoring a nearby star’s midlife crisis, and the energetic cost of chewing
Cougars caught killing donkeys in Death Valley, and decoding the nose
Invasive grasses get help from fire, and a global map of ant diversity
Probing beyond our Solar System, sea pollinators, and a book on the future of nutrition
Possible fabrications in Alzheimer’s research, and bad news for life on Enceladus
The Webb Space Telescope’s first images, and why scratching sometimes makes you itchy
Running out of fuel for fusion, and addressing gender-based violence in India
Former pirates help study the seas, and waves in the atmosphere can drive global tsunamis
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