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2012/02/07 23:14 -
天佑中华录相集锦: 国是走向 人生玄机 隐情内幕 真相史实 断肠旧曲 诙谐讽刺 你我同台 五千大戏
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2012/02/07 22:51 -
天佑中华录相集锦: 国是走向 人生玄机 隐情内幕 真相史实 断肠旧曲 诙谐讽刺 你我同台 五千大戏
Tapped-In: iPhone Application Reviews
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- The Naked Scientists Podcast - Stripping Down Science
http://www.thenakedscientists.com/HTML/podcasts/
The Naked Scientists flagship science show brings you a lighthearted look at the latest scientific breakthroughs, interviews with the world's top scientists, answers to your science questions and science experiments to try at home.
Naked Scientists 12.01.29 - Are any viruses good for you?
2012/01/29
Has all the air in the world been breathed before? Are any viruses beneficial to health? Can naked farts transmit diseases? You set the agenda in this Naked Scientists Question and Answer show in which we also discover how Inuit cope without fruit and veg, whether muscles can become cancerous and how long before we can teleport to work. Plus, reproducing Alzheimer's disease in a dish, self-distilling vodka, magnetic soap to cleanse the parts other soaps can't reach, and what magic mushrooms do to the brain...
Naked Scientists 12.01.22 - Vitamin D: Shedding light on diabetes, MS and cancer
2012/01/22
Could a ray of sunshine hold the key to preventing MS, diabetes and even bowel cancer? Vitamin D - made naturally in skin exposed to strong sunlight - appears to reduce the risk of developing these, and a rash of other diseases. We examine the evidence to find out why as well as hearing how seaweed looks set to ignite a biofuel boom in the future, why a good night's sleep might make traumatic memories worse and how scientists have made multicellular life in the lab in just 60 days...
Naked Scientists 12.01.15 - Mind Meets Machine
2012/01/15
Where do you stand on becoming part person, part machine? This week we hook up with three pioneers in the field of cybernetics including walking cyborg Kevin Warwick, who volunteered his own nervous system to test out a new way to connect up with the machine world, Markus Groppe, who is trialling an implantable chip to restore vision to the blind, and Andrew Schwartz who's developing neural interfaces to couple the brain's motor circuits to a robot. Plus, news of an H5N1 'flu furore as scientists create the most dangerous virus imaginable, and a voyage to the deepest subsea vents ever discovered...
Naked Scientists 12.01.08 - What's Inside Your Nappy?
2012/01/08
Do stars form outside galaxies? What causes ringing in the ears? How fast does force propagate? Why do spectacles still work when worn backwards? Is the expanding universe tearing galaxies apart? And is any new water being created on Earth? Plus, news of the new satellite surveying the moon, the scientific way to sound out a Stradivarius and how a vaccine based on chimp viruses can protect against Hepatitis C. Plus, in kitchen science, Dave unpacks the contents of a nappy...
Naked Scientists 11.12.18 - What Colour is a Dead Chameleon?
2011/12/18
Are candles environmentally unfriendly? Why does tinfoil touching a filling set my teeth on edge? What colour does a dead chameleon go? Does antiperspirant deodorant make you sweat more elsewhere? Could we tether the moon on a string to stop it escaping? And why is the fine spray in the shower so cold? To find out, join Chris, Dave, Dominic and Helen for this festive Christmas edition of the Naked Scientists, which also sees the team connecting an oven shelf to their heads and a musical Higgs Boson-inspired interlude from Professor Karmadillo...
Naked Scientists 11.12.11 - Monitoring Moods with Mobiles
2011/12/11
Can new technologies probe human thoughts and feelings without us even realising? This week we talk to a researcher who's using mobile phones to tap into peoples' emotions to provide new insights into human behaviour and even spot the triggers that might be encouraging someone to smoke. Plus, how data mining and computer simulations can identify the patterns of behaviour that predate disasters so they can be predicted - and prevented - in future. And with the surge in online social media of the last 5 years, is statistics capable of keeping up when it comes to doing research using these resources? Meanwhile, in the news, we hear what causes cancer to spread, how ancient stone age man used bug-repellent bedding and how a Taxi driver's brain changes as he learns "the knowledge" of London's streets...
Naked Scientists 11.12.04 - Underwater Archaeology and Underwater Welding
2011/12/04
How do archaeologists locate, conserve and recover historical treasures from old shipwrecks? What is erosion revealing on the foreshores of the River Thames? And how do you weld up an oil or gas pipeline one kilometre underwater? This week we're looking at the "appliance of science" beneath the waves as well as hearing how the ageing Voyager space probes have discovered the births of new stars in the Milky Way, how a gene therapy technique can block HIV infection and how a computer programme can spot to what extent a photo's been doctored. Plus, does heading a football cause brain damage?
Naked Scientists 11.11.27 - Imaging the Invisible
2011/11/27
This week, how immune cells can be caught on camera as they exit blood vessels, a new design of lensless microscope and one that sees cells in 3D, how sound and heat can be used to find faults in materials and how something as small as an atom can be seen under an electron microscope. Plus, news that nerve transplants can correct metabolic disorders, the World's first fishhook, bionic contact lenses that project emails into your eyes, are statins safe and why are mirror reflections still blurry close up for the shortsighted...
Naked Scientists 11.11.20 - Is Technology Altering Your Brain?
2011/11/20
Is modern technology changing your brain? How fast does flu fly? Can you build a lightsaber? Your questions are the stars on the Naked Scientists this week, as we discuss the implications of faster-than-light travel, the risks of skydiving through a thundercloud, and ask if dogs can sniff out cancer. Plus, we find out how the brain detects different diets, what happens when black holes collide, and in Kitchen Science, how a coin can make a balloon roar!
Naked Scientists 11.11.13 - Flu Vaccines from Tobacco?
2011/11/13
In a show not to be sneezed at, we look at the evidence that coughs and sneezes are linked to heart attacks. We also probe the Flu Survey, a new citizen science initiative to gather data on the incidence of influenza-like illnesses in the European population; we talk to the company who are mass producing flu vaccines in tobacco plants and catch up with the Columbia University scientific adviser on Contagion, Hollywood's latest infectious offering. Plus, why babies don't tie their umbilical cords in knots and news of a new fat-busting injectible that selectively destroys adipose, evidence that only single strains of HIV are transmitted between partners and the discovery of two pristine primordial gas clouds produced by the Big Bang...
Naked Scientists 11.11.06 - NCRI Cancer Conference
2011/11/06
This week Kat Arney joins us live from the National Cancer Research Institute's conference in Liverpool. We find out how mistakes in cell signalling can cause cancers and why DNA repair pathways offer targets to treat tumours. Also, we explore the latest developments in cancer imaging, including new techniques that allow us to track chemical reactions happening inside the body. In the news, why you need to remove genes to repair nerves, and how clearing out old cells can prevent diseases of old age!
Naked Scientists 11.10.30 - Gene Therapy and Stem Cell Therapy
2011/10/29
This week's podcast is live from the British Society for Gene Therapy (BSGT) conference in Brighton, UK. Some of the world's top gene and stem cell therapists explain how we can manipulate genes to treat a variety of disorders, from cystic fibrosis and haemophilia to cancer and blindness. We hear what life is like as a haemophiliac and answer your questions, including whether gene therapy can alter all the cells in our bodies and how scientists account for the ethics and side effects of this research. Plus, is a human moustache like a cat's whiskers? Find out in Question of the Week!
Naked Scientists 11.10.23 - Why Is Ice Slippery?
2011/10/22
Can moonlight and a magnifying glass be used to start a fire? Why do bananas go brown and does it happen faster in the fridge or the fruitbowl? Why are ice and snow slippery? And how does flyspray work? Alongside your quality science questions in this week's Question and Answer science phone-in, we also hear how how space scientists have spotted a whole planet's worth of water in a nearby system, the surprising discovery that seaweed is making corals seasick, we serve up a digital delight with the kitchen that teaches you both to cook and speak French, and we find out why an antiviral a day could keep Alzheimer's at bay...
Naked Scientists 11.10.16 - Plant Pests and Plant Pathology
2011/10/15
This week, Plant Pests and Plant Pathology - we find out what happens when plants get ill, how to understand and prevent the spread of plant disease, and how they can call up an insect army to defend them if they're attacked. We also find out why some horse chestnut trees are going brown before their time, and meet the pesky critter responsible! Plus, a new technique to cleanly edit out and correct errors in the DNA code, how the plague bacterium hasn't changed in 600 years, and why children, but not chimps, choose to work together.
Naked Scientists 11.10.09 - Outpacing Petrol - Biofuels and Hydrogen
2011/10/08
This week, we're investigating alternatives to petrol. We'll board a biofuel powered bus to meet the plant scientists who are using algae to make biodiesel. We'll find out how to turn household waste into hydrogen, and meet the brains behind Bristol's first hydrogen powered passenger boat! Plus, the brain basis of boundless optimism, why a bacteria-busting chemical keeps injured arteries open, and a run down of this year's Nobel prizes!
Naked Scientists 11.10.02 - Would a Siphon Work in Space?
2011/10/01
Could a Siphon be used in orbit? Why do leaves change colour in Autumn? How is immunity passed from mother to baby through breastfeeding? Why do earthquakes happen away from plate boundaries? How do microwaves heat up food? We storm through your questions this week as well finding out how Twitter can be used to monitor moods around the world, how carbon dioxide can be converted back into a fuel, how biomarkers hidden inside ECG's can predict the risk of a repeat heart attack and how glowing bacteria can send secret messages! Plus, in Kitchen Science, we make flames without fire by making iron burn...
Naked Scientists 11.09.25 - Cheese Making and Cake Baking: The Chemistry of Cookery
2011/09/24
We've whipped up an appetising take on the science of food and cooking for you this week. With a main course of cookery in the kitchen served up by a cake-baking physicist followed by a microbiological look at the cheese board and then the bacterial basis of the Best Before Date for dessert, this three-course scientific combo is an absolute academic feast. Also on the menu this week, how scientists are using brain scanners to reconstruct the movies we see in the mind's eye and we ask whether Einstein was wrong as scientists report particles apparently moving faster-than-light...
Naked Scientists 11.09.18 - Chilling Out - The Science of Cryogenics
2011/09/19
This week, we're chilling out in the world of cryogenics, the science of the super-cold. We'll find out what happens to living tissue when it freezes, and how we can use low temperatures to keep organs, and maybe even one day whole bodies, in suspended animation. We also talk to the company behind an attractive new design of super-efficient fridge that runs on magnetism. In the news we hear how computer gamers have contributed to a breakthrough in HIV, why humans are programmed for overconfidence, and how the nervous system controls the immune system. Plus, we ask, is modern medicine altering the human gene pool?
Naked Scientists 11.09.11 - Supercomputers & Super Computing
2011/09/10
This week, we seek the science of supercomputers! We find out how they work, and how they can answer some of the biggest questions in science. We also hear about the World Community Grid, which offers scientists computer time donated by volunteers worldwide. In the news we hear how computer aided design can help breast restoration, why special stem cells with just one set of chromosomes can aid geneticists, and how Earth's precious gold may have come from outer space. Plus, we explore the workings of the humble calculator in Question of the Week!
Naked Scientists 11.09.08 - Australopithecus Sediba Special
2011/09/07
Reader in evolution at Wits University, Lee Berger, made a life-changing discovery when he uncovered the remains of a new species of hominid, Australopithecus sediba, in South Africa. Here, Chris Smith gets to meet the newest addition to the human family tree...
Naked Scientists 11.09.04 - Why do some animals dump indiscriminately?
2011/09/03
Why do some animals poo wherever the fancy takes them, whilst others are more fussy about the locations of their lavatory actions? What triggers pins and needles? How do some fish survive in both fresh and saltwater? And how are new nerve cells born in the adult brain? We burn through your best science questions this week as well as taking a look at Hubble's successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, and hearing how a computer model of a heart can revolutionise cardiac drug design and reviewing the evidence that bacteria were already antibiotic resistant over 30,000 years ago...
Naked Scientists 11.08.28 - Science in Scotland
2011/08/30
This week, Chris explores some of the cutting edge research taking place in Aberdeen. We meet a scientist making new cannabis-like chemicals that lack the side effects of the real thing, talk to a man exploring the deepest part of the Pacific - 7 miles down - to find out what's living there. Plus, thalidomide - 50 years on. Scientists now know why it had the damaging effects it did on unborn babies, but can they make a safe form of the agent so it can be used to treat cancers, leprosy and HIV?
Naked Scientists 11.08.21 - Do planes trigger rains?
2011/08/20
The rain in Spain falls mainly on the "plane". Or so the saying goes, but new research has confirmed that aeroplanes do cause clouds to dump their contents prematurely, often around airports, and in this week's show we explore this weather-altering effect of aviation. We also ask industry leader Rolls-Royce to explain how a jet engine works and how their designers have cut noise pollution from planes by over 99% since 1960. In the news, we hear how scientists are forecasting more accurate space weather predictions thanks to a new way to spot sunspots before they even erupt, a new study finds a host of new uses for old drugs, an artificial chromosome looks set to remedy muscular dystrophy and chemists discover diamonds being made in the flame of a candle...
Naked Scientists 11.08.14 - Chemistry By Design
2011/08/13
Are designer molecules poised to take us into a new chemical dimension? This week, we explore how, long before the bunsen burner gets lit, computer aided chemistry can enable us to create in silico imaginary new molecules, reactions and designer catalysts. We also delve into how chemicals are manufactured on a massive scale with a visit to a plant making zeolites. And in the news, how hydrogen-metabolising bugs can supercharge deep-sea mussels, how reprogrammed immune system cells can hunt-down cancer, and nature's stock exchange - how plants and fungi develop a subsoil free-market economy to trade resources.
Naked Scientists 11.08.07 - Do bubbles help washing up?
2011/08/06
Do bubbles help or hinder when doing the dishes? Can we find evidence of material from Earth on the Moon? Can camera lenses cause fires? And is fluoride in drinking water safe? In this Question and Answer show, we tackle your science queries, finding out if higher air pressure means louder sounds and if plants from cuttings remain genetically identical over centuries. Plus, launching Lego men to Jupiter, making brain cells from skin cells, and how vampire bats home in on hot blood...
Naked Scientists 11.07.31 - The Year in Ocean Science
2011/07/30
This week, we take a dive beneath the waves to look back at the last year in Ocean science. We call in on deep sea microbes, spawning corals and even a seahorse surgery. Plus we hear how the Census of Marine Life all got started and find out about some very strange creatures with sex organs on their heads...
Naked Scientists 11.07.24 - The Year in Astronomy
2011/07/23
This week, we look back over the last few months of space science. We'll hear how scientists search for planets in the glare of their parent star, why a simulated mission to Mars will help us to understand how astronauts will cope with isolation, and the challenges of communicating astronomy on television. Plus, what our solar system looks like to a distant observer, and how antique globes tell the story of our understanding.
Naked Scientists 11.07.17 - Digging up the Year in Archaeology
2011/07/16
This week we take a look back at a year's-worth of Naked Archaeology including a dig through some Pomepiian poo for clues about the Pompeiian lifestyle, the art of spear throwing with an atlatl and exposing the most recent neanderthals of the Caucasus. Plus we identify alien donkeys and learn how to make history from prehistory!
Naked Scientists 11.07.10 - Bouncing Bombs and Blacksmiths
2011/07/09
This week, we bring you the best bits of technology from the world of engineering including a guiding light into the workings of a retroreflector, the dual life of bi-stable structures, and a new way to harness energy from our rivers. Plus, we unearth the workings of a copper mine, discover how Barnes Wallis designed his famous bouncing bomb and bring you an atomic insight into the art of metalworking!
Naked Scientists 11.06.26 - Pushing Back the Pain Barrier
2011/06/25
This week, we explore the problem of persistent pain. We find out how chronic pain is currently treated, and look to our DNA for the genetic clues that could lead to future painkillers. In the news, a new TB vaccination that stands out on it's own, how babies make sense of broken toys, and why flying in a flock may be exhausting for pigeons. Plus, in Question of the Week, Diana asks why we have a spare copy of some organs.
Naked Scientists 11.06.19 - Coal Gasification and Carbon Capture
2011/06/18
This week, we find out how to get useful gas from useless coal, and make money from waste carbon dioxide! Underground coal gasification could allow us to access huge amounts of energy in inaccessible coal seams. We find out how it works as well as exploring a new method for capturing waste carbon and turning it into useful chemicals. In the news, dinosaurs inspire new designs for aircraft, spotting a star being ripped apart by a black hole, and the South African bid for the world's biggest radio telescope. Plus, Diana asks what the point is of "junk" DNA?
Naked Scientists 11.06.12 - Passengers in a Bacterial Body
2011/06/11
The good side of microbes goes under the microscope this week as we explore how the 100 trillion bacteria that thrive on us and in us, and even outnumber our own cells ten times over, work with the body to maintain good health. We also hear from the Nobel prizewinner who's turning the stomach bug Helicobacter pylori into an edible vaccine against the flu and how to build better bioreactors to culture them in! Plus, how trees cause clouds to form, more evidence that the building blocks of life came from outer space, how nicotine keeps smokers thin and built-in cardiac stem cells that can mend a broken heart...
Naked Scientists 11.06.05 - Do My Eyes have Anti-Shake Vision?
2011/06/04
What would we see at the edge of the universe? Are there long term health effects of eating spicy food? Why doesn't diesel need a spark to ignite? It's another Naked Scientists science question and answer show, where we take on your questions! Find out how a volcano makes Mars wobbly, why birds' lungs are more efficient than mammalian lungs and how a single speaker can make so many sounds at once. Plus, an outbreak of a new and lethal strain of E.coli and why increasing ocean acidification may be deafening fish.
Naked Scientists 11.05.29 - Metallurgy - Metals at the Molecular Scale
2011/05/28
What happens when a blacksmith meets a metallurgist? This week we explore what's happening at the molecular scale when the smithy works a piece of iron, we meet the superalloys that survive temperatures way above their melting points inside jet engines, and at the Rolls Royce precision casting facility we discover how precision plane engine parts can be cast from a single metal crystal. Also, in the news this week, how the blind brain has a built-in sonar, an attractive new magnetic material turned on by a current, and a new technique to detect troublespots brewing inside arteries. Plus, Kitchen Metallurgy - an experiment to show how you can manipulate metal molecules for yourself!
Naked Scientists 11.05.22 - Scratch 'n Sneeze - Science of Allergies
2011/05/21
This week's Naked Scientists is not to be sneezed at - we're looking at the science of allergies! We explore what happens to cause your body to overreact to harmless things, and find out how potentially fatal peanut allergy can be cured. Plus, how a dose of parasites could keep allergies at bay, and how special filters can engineer a breath of extremely fresh air!
Naked Scientists 11.05.15 - Wet But Not Wild - Farming Fish
2011/05/16
We cast our nets wide this week to catch the science of aquaculture or fish farming! We'll find out how farming marine life can reduce reliance on disappearing wild stocks, and explore the effect on the local environment. Also, how recycled fish poo and waste water can help repair damaged wetlands, and in Naked Engineering we find out how robotic fish can keep tabs on pollution in ports.
Naked Scientists 11.05.08 - Should I Lie Down to Tan?
2011/05/07
Is standing or reclining best for the perfect suntan? Can we see atoms? Why add pennies to Big Ben's pendulum? It's a question and answer show so we shoulder your scientific conundra! We'll find out how web companies keep up with growing data demands, what causes white ridges on fingernails, and why a clean glass keeps cola fizzier. Plus, in Kitchen Science, we find out how to balance a broom whilst blindfolded!
Naked Scientists 11.05.01 - Brains, Batteries and Nuclear Fusion
2011/04/30
Computers that can lip-read, a robot that follows your brain waves, prosthetic arms controlled by thinking about fingers that have been amputated, the future of nuclear fusion, Bandaids for batteries, why oral cancer rates are up 200% on 20 years ago and a brain stimulator for obsessive compulsive disorder. While the team take a well-earned Easter break, join Dr Chris for a look at the latest science from the AAAS in Washington DC.
Naked Scientists 11.04.24 - Diamond Light Source Special
2011/04/23
For Easter this week, we explore how synchrotron radiation can be used to probe and find answers to a variety of scientific questions as we bring you a special programme of highlights from the Diamond Light Source podcast. We hear how changes to key proteins can cause hypertension and pre-eclampsia, how green rust could provide a greener future and discover a new type of magnetic material which could make data storage faster, cheaper and more compact. Plus, we explore a new form of solar cell which could make solar energy more affordable in the future.
Naked Scientists 11.04.17 - DNA-away Disease: Gene Therapy at Work
2011/04/17
Two pioneers in the field of gene therapy join us to discuss how they're developing modified viruses to deliver healthy copies of genes to save patients afflicted by lethal genetic diseases. We also hear how energy can be harvested from footsteps and heartbeats to power nanodevices, and how a new SWARM of satellites is about to be deployed to study the Earth's magnetic field from space. Plus, in the news, how "ums" and "ahs" can boost a baby's learning power, how mankind talked his way out of Africa and how scientists are recreating schizophrenia in a Petri dish...
Naked Scientists 11.04.10 - Are Dogs Ticklish?
2011/04/10
Do dogs get ticklish? What wakes up mosquitoes at meal times? Do animals use weapons? In this fast-paced Question and Answer show we also focus on the nuclear threat from Fukushima and hear how gut bugs raise the risk of heart disease, why flaps for wind turbines have got engineers in a spin, and why tidiness stops stereotyping. Plus, how to make a balloon fireproof and what causes dark circles under the eyes when we get tired...
Naked Scientists 11.04.03 - Keeping the Conversation Flowing
2011/04/03
This week, we go wireless to explore the science of mobile phones. We hear how new error-correction techniques are promising to put an end to poor quality communications, we meet a new system that lets you borrow the antennae of other nearby phones to boost your data download rates, and a major study that's examining the potential health impacts associated with mobile phone use. Plus, in the news, the now not-so-anomalous Pioneer probe anomaly, the chemical cure that can flatten phobias and how a biased worm could overturn an election victory...
Naked Scientists 11.03.27 - Life Where the Sun Don't Shine...
2011/03/27
Life in inaccessible places - including in caves sealed off from the Sun and around deep-sea vents - is the subject of this week's Naked Scientists. In these intriguing environments, bacteria replace plants as the primary producers, extracting energy from the minerals around them to sustain a whole ecosystem. We also hear about the bone-eating worms that make a meal of whale carcasses that fall to the seafloor, an engineering trick for separating mined-metals from mud and, in the news, why the world's waves are getting bigger, how sperm can be grown in a dish and a gene that drives melanoma. Plus, the answer to the question where on Earth would you weigh the most...?
Naked Scientists 11.03.20 - Beyond the Universe - Multiverses and More
2011/03/20
This week, we find out what lies beyond the limits of our Universe as we discuss multiverses, higher dimensions, string theory and supersymmetry. We find out how these ideas develop from basic principles and how the LHC can help to confirm, or refute, their existence. In the news, how quartz creates mountain ranges, progesterone excites sperm, and why birds can't help but fly into things. Plus, Meera and Dave find out how to engineer electrons to travel close to the speed of light, and Simon Singh explains how to discover the distance to a far away star.
Naked Scientists 11.03.13 - Why did a Laser Make My Nuts Glow?
2011/03/13
Can you electrocute weeds? Why do teeth go wobbly? And which cells last a lifetime? In this bumper edition of the Naked Scientists, we tackle your pressing science questions and find out how the shuttle manoeuvres in space, what makes wounds itch, whether reverse osmosis can make moonshine and if static can stick a cat to a wall. Plus, how diamonds deal death to tumours, cooperation in the elephant world and an update on the Japanese earthquake situation. We also hear how a hairy leg can help you bend water to your will, and Diana discovers why potato peelers never need sharpening!
Naked Scientists 11.03.06 - Aspirin's Anniversary
2011/03/06
From anti-ague to anti-Alzheimer's agent: over the 112 years since it was first trademarked, Aspirin has evolved from popular painkiller to powerful preventative against heart attacks, strokes and even cancer. In this week's show we trace its history from the extraction of aspirin-like chemicals from willow bark to the creation of the drug itself. Plus, in the news, how the chemistry of life could have come to Earth in a meteorite and why we need to be careful with stem cells: a new study finds they have an above-average mutation rate. Also, a new technique to etch graphene sheets with single-atom precision, an insight into how our drugs are made and how painkillers hit pain where it hurts...
Naked Scientists 11.02.27 - Boosting Your Bones
2011/02/27
Just the bare bones this week as we find out how exercise strengthens the skeleton and how new scanning techniques can help to pick up osteoporosis earlier and inform its management. We also try out a new gadget for measuring the force muscles can apply and, in the news, discover what a self-healing tumour can tell us about common cancers, evidence that mammalian hearts can repair themselves and a new laser-based tool for diagnosing melanoma. Plus, how the bones of people who died up to a hundred years ago are helping scientists to combat chronic back pain by building a computer model of the backbone...
Naked Scientists 11.02.20 - Checking the Atmosphere and Changing the Climate
2011/02/20
We look to the skies in this week's Naked Scientists show, to uncover ways to monitor and change the chemistry of the atmosphere. We join researchers on board an air-sampling aeroplane to discover how atmospheric chemistry changes once the sun sets, and we discuss options for engineering the climate if things get too hot. In the news, the Ecuadorian population that may hold the genetic key to a disease-free life, and the rocks that move themselves around in Death Valley. Plus, a targeted muscle re-innervation strategy to afford amputees more powerful prosthetic control.
Naked Scientists 11.02.13 - What Makes Mucus Green?
2011/02/13
How do magnets multiply? What keeps an aeroplane in the air? How do wild animals avoid incest? It's open season on science questions in this week's Naked Scientists. We'll find out if oil extraction leaves a cavity, can cranberry juice cut urine infection rates and what happens when two lightning bolts collide? In the news, evidence of bipedalism in an early human ancestor, how oily fish helps avoid common causes of blindness and how smartphones are taking the pain out of cardiac rehabilitation. Plus, in Kitchen Science, the unexpected physics of a flying balloon.
Naked Scientists 11.02.06 - Low Energy, High-Power Processing
2011/02/06
This week we're getting inside the workings of the next generation of chips that are set to pack a bigger computing-punch but at a fraction of the energy-expenditure of todays' models: CTO Mike Muller joins us to explain the revolutionary technology that leading microprocessor-maker ARM is developing. Also, energy-efficient world-wide computing - we find out how distributing data-processing demands around the planet can turn waste energy into useful computations, simultaneously saving CO2 emissions, and in the news this week, a new malarial mosquito threat, rejection-free artificial blood vessels and the electric cap that helps users solve maths puzzle they previously found impossible.
Naked Scientists 11.01.30 - Leprosy: The Low Down
2011/01/30
Leprosy goes under the microscope this week as we uncover the origins of one of the oldest known human diseases, recognised this week on World Leprosy Day. A quarter of a million new cases are diagnosed every year, but how is the illness spreading, what damage does it do to the body and can it be stopped? We also hear what archaeologists are unearthing about the history of leprosy and where it came from in the first place. Plus, why it's time to rethink the workings of the circadian clock, brain scans for bilingualism, cow-stomach bacterial genes for biofuels, and the engineering that lies behind the cat's eye...
Naked Scientists 11.01.23 - Analysing Antimatter
2011/01/23
We're analysing the matter of antimatter this week to find out what is antimatter, how is it made and why's it so rare in the Universe? We talk to researchers at CERN who are capturing anti-hydrogen so scientists can study it properly for the first time, and Dave and Meera call in to the hospital to hear how antimatter holds the key to better body scans. Diana discovers how gravity bends a beam of light and there's also news of a novel way to neutralise HIV, researchers uncover how brains gauge the passage of time, and agriculture on the microscale: scientists have found the world's smallest farmers, they're just one cell wide...
Naked Scientists 11.01.16 - Do Metal Spinal Implants Lure Lightning?
2011/01/16
Does a metal implant turn a person into a living lightning-conductor or radio receiver, is eye-size important, why is frost bad for freezers, where did the first organic molecules come from, what happens to sparkling drinks in space and why does a bump on the head make you see stars? This week, join Chris, Sarah and Dave as they pit their wits against the latest crop of your top questions. Plus, why making new computer chips looks set to become easy PC, how stem cells can get to the heart of Long QT Syndrome, feeding the world in 2050 and a new musical device to keep the drummer in the driving seat...
Naked Scientists 11.01.09 - Would you donate your body to science?
2011/01/09
We're discussing human dissection in this week's Naked Scientists. Chris visits the dissection room to find out how trainee doctors benefit from dissecting real bodies, and why many medical schools are increasingly turning to alternatives. We're joined by physician and film maker Paul Trotman, who followed the lives, and beyond, of three donors to explore the reasons why people choose to donate their bodies, and the impact the process had on the student's lives. In Naked Engineering, we find out how a design that copies the body's own structure and movements can make better artificial limbs. Plus, how womens' tears can manipulate mens' moods, the perfect melody to send shivers up your spine and the headphones which can cancel out the sound of the dentist's drill.
Naked Scientists 11.01.02 - National Pathology Week 2010
2011/01/02
In this special podcast we focus on the highlights of this year's National Pathology Week. We'll be going behind closed doors for a tour of the pathology labs at Great Ormond Street Hospital, and we'll explore the role of veterinary pathologists in diagnosing and treating animal disease.
Naked Scientists 10.12.26 - Back in the Saddle: Getting Paralysed Patients Riding and Rowing
2010/12/26
In this special episode of the Naked Scientists podcast, we explore the world of Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES), a technology allowing people paralysed from the waist down to row and cycle by using external electrodes to stimulate leg muscles. Michele Vanoncini investigates how it works, what benefits it can bring and talks to some of the people who have used the technique to go for gold...
Naked Scientists 10.12.25 - Why does helium make your voice sound funny?
2010/12/25
When you breathe in helium, why does your voice sound all funny? Find out in the latest Naked Science Scrapbook!
Naked Scientists 10.12.19 - Blowing out Candles Round Corners
2010/12/19
In this festive episode, can you get drunk through your feet, the chemistry of cocktails, twelve marine critters of Christmas, the best food and drink combos to eschew indigestion, does a carbon fibre bike go faster, why are snowflakes different shapes and a way to impress your peers at the office party by blowing out candles round corners...
Naked Scientists 10.12.12 - Why's Graphene Great?
2010/12/12
Graphene is the focus of this week's Naked Scientists, including how it holds the key to the super-flexible touch screen displays of tomorrow, super-light composites and the next generation of computer chips. In the news, a breakthrough in understanding Alzheimer's Disease, why glider pilots should be paying more attention to how falcons fly and why a new exoplanet has led astronomers to question current theories of planetary formation. Plus, we celebrate the first chunk of cheese to make it into orbit and ask if there's any evidence of a health benefit from wearing magnetic bracelets...
Naked Scientists 10.12.05 - Electrifying the Future
2010/12/05
Current breakthroughs in electricity generation and distribution go under the spotlight in this week's sizzling edition of the Naked Scientists. We talk to the team with the electrical equivalent of cold-storage that can put power "on ice" until it's needed, and we hear how bright sparks in the UK are leading the charge to roll out "energy kiosks" to empower rural communities in Africa. We also check out a new form of small-scale turbine to extract power from rivers whilst minimising the environmental impact. In the news, why young people are more likely to fall victim to the flu, how a dose of worms controlled a man's inflammatory bowel disease and why the discovery of arsenic-loving bacteria is forcing us to rethink the chemistry of life. Plus, in Question of the Week, Diana gets to the bottom of whether it's possible to drink through your rectum...
Naked Scientists 10.11.28 - Why do Men's Bits Shrink in the Cold?
2010/11/28
How heavy is the Earth? How do snakes digest huge meals? Should I fear falling bullets? We take on these questions and more in this Naked Scientists Question and Answer show! We'll discuss the ideal hair for head lice, the mechanics of using a straw and why men's bits shrink in the cold! In the news we explore the link between jetlag and forgetfulness, discover a moon with an oxygen atmosphere, and a new technique to tell someones age by their blood. Plus, in Kitchen Science we find out why a full carton is much harder to shake.
Naked Scientists 10.11.21 - Smart Pills: Drugs to Boost Brain Power
2010/11/21
IQ-elevating agents that can boost brain power are being used by over 10% of university students. But how do these cognitive-equivalents of anabolic steroids for the brain actually work, what are their effects and are they safe? Moreover, is the advantage they confer an ethical one? And if not, should universities be screening students ahead of exams to deter their use? Meanwhile, in the news this week, we find out how lasers can cut complications in cataract surgery, why some people are allergic to wine, we hook up with the highlights from the world's biggest neuroscience meeting including the discovery of how the eye talks to the brain, and we hear how scientists have solved a long-standing mystery relating the structure of the placenta...
Naked Scientists 10.11.14 - The Science of Sustainable Shipping
2010/11/14
We set sail to discover the science of sustainable shipping in this week's Naked Scientists. We visit an enormous wave tank to find out how the sea swell can impact on damaged ships, and look at the problems caused by sulphur-rich shipping fuel. Plus, we hoist the SkySail, an enormous parafoil kite that can be deployed from the deck of a ship to cut fuel consumption by up to 60%. In the news we hear how happiness can be found here and now, why children tire so quickly when walking and how Earth became oxygenated 400,000 years earlier than we thought. Also, we investigate the elegant physics of a lapping cat!
Naked Scientists 10.11.07 - Cancer - Hallmarks and Hit and Run Viruses
2010/11/07
We catch up with cancer research this week including evidence that cancers subvert stem cells to suppress the immune system and how covert "hit and run" viral infections may be triggering a lot more tumours than we first thought. Also, joining us from the National Cancer Research Institute conference in Liverpool, cancer biologist Bob Weinberg explains how he sees cancer becoming a controllable chronic condition within just ten years. Plus, the buzz around a new tumour-spotting ultrasound technique, how a burst of electricity to the brain boosts mathematical ability, a new trick to block the brain damage done during a stroke and how bacteria store the genetic fingerprints of past viral adversaries to protect themselves in the future.
Naked Scientists 10.10.31 - Where does Phlegm come from?
2010/10/31
It's National Pathology Week 2010 and to celebrate the launch we're joined by pathologist Dr Suzy Lishman to take on your science questions! We'll find out where phlegm comes from, how petroleum jelly helps healing and the weight of red blood cells synthesised in a human lifetime. Also, can you concentrate lasers with lenses, why does an open carport stop frost, and if carnivorous plants photosynthesise, why do they need to eat insects? Plus, how researchers in Scotland are sniffing out pollution with such sensitivity, they can detect forest fires all the way from Canada! In Kitchen Science, Dave reads his credit card using rust!
Naked Scientists 10.10.24 - AIDS to conquering HIV
2010/10/23
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) goes under the microscope this week. We find out how the virus hijacks cells to construct new HIV particles and hear how close scientists are to developing a vaccine to block infection. In the news, we learn how bitter taste receptors in the lungs could lead to new asthma treatments, how our ancestors enjoyed some veg with their meat and how gene therapy could offer a way out of depression. Plus, how Lego is helping university students build a creative career in the world of engineering...
Naked Scientists 10.10.17 - The Science of Turbulence
2010/10/16
It's a bumpy ride on this week's Naked Scientists, as we explore the science of turbulence. We'll find out what turbulence is and why it needs some of the most powerful computers in the world to study it. We'll discover how puffs of water can terminate turbulence in tubes, and how convection keeps the temperature just right in new buildings. In the news this week, we hear about a potential new super-vaccine for TB, the comet that turned into an asteroid and the prospect of new low-cost gold-free leads for your hi fi. Plus, in Question of the Week, we find out why some people prefer not to be backwards in travelling forwards...
Naked Scientists 10.10.10 - Neuromarketing - The Brain Basis of Buying Behaviour
2010/10/09
How do advertisers get inside your head? This week we explore the field of neuromarketing - how a knowledge of your brain and behaviour can help marketers to manipulate your buying habits. We'll find out how the brain choses what stimuli to pay attention to and the neurological basis of why celebrity sells. In the news, the first Census of Marine Life and how researchers have got wind of the fact that men really are sweatier than women. Plus, we hit the shops to investigate how retailers trick you into overfilling your basket!
Naked Scientists 10.10.03 - Would an Antimatter Magnet Attract a Normal Matter Magnet?
2010/10/02
Why do you see flashes and patterns when you press your eyeballs? Would an antimatter magnet attract normal matter magnets? What is the hardest human bone to break? We take on your science questions this week, as well as explore the bed of Lake Windermere the gravity hills of Barbados and the first discovered habitable exoplanet. Plus, a flapless aircraft takes flight, how the brain decides which hands to use and why Raman spectroscopy offers a rum deal for anti-drug squads. In Kitchen Science, we find out why spit can form strings of beads...
Naked Scientists 10.09.26 - Neuroimaging
2010/09/25
This week we delve deep into the secrets of the brain. We'll find out how MRIs could be used to read your mind, and how they could help unlock what is going on in the brain of a person suffering from delusions or hallucinations. In the news we'll hear that the process of nerve repair could offer clues to cancer spread, and how it was gorillas that originally gave us malaria. Plus in Naked Engineering, Dave and Meera explore the amazing world of superconductors...
Naked Scientists 10.09.19 - The British Science Festival
2010/09/20
Naked Scientists 10.09.12 - What Happens to a Tankful of Fish in Orbit?
2010/09/11
Naked Scientists 10.09.05 - Science Down Under 2010
2010/09/04
Naked Scientists 10.08.22 - Diving into Naked Oceans!
2010/08/21
Naked Scientists 10.08.15 - Digging in the Dirt and Looking at the Stars
2010/08/14
Naked Scientists 10.08.08 - The Tour de France
2010/08/07
Naked Scientists 10.08.01 - The Science of Glastonbury
2010/07/31
Naked Scientists 10.07.25 - How do Ants Count?
2010/07/24
Naked Scientists 10.07.18 - Going Nuclear
2010/07/17
Naked Scientists 10.07.11 - Lasers in Medicine
2010/07/10
Naked Scientists 10.07.04 - How do you Weigh a Volcano?
2010/07/03
Naked Scientists 10.06.27 - What's the point of eyebrows?
2010/06/29
Naked Scientists 10.06.20 - Seriously Small Structures
2010/06/19
Naked Scientists 10.06.13 - 50 years of Lasers
2010/06/14
Naked Scientists 10.06.06 - Creatures in Colonies
2010/06/05
Naked Scientists 10.05.30 - Do Bacteria Grow on Bars of Soap?
2010/05/29
Naked Scientists 10.05.22 - Transmissible Tumours
2010/05/22
Naked Scientists 10.05.16 - Synthetic Biology
2010/05/15
Naked Scientists 10.05.09 - Does Beer Kill Brain Cells?
2010/05/08
Naked Scientists 10.05.02 - GPS - Where in the World Are We?
2010/05/01
Naked Scientists 10.04.25 - Archaeogenetics - The Past in Our Genes
2010/04/25
Naked Scientists 10.04.18 - The National Astronomy Meeting
2010/04/17
Naked Scientists 10.04.11 - What do worms do in the rain?
2010/04/11
Naked Scientists 10.03.28 - Can you Steer a Hurricane...?
2010/03/28
Naked Scientists 10.03.21 - The Science of Farming
2010/03/23
Naked Scientists 10.03.14 - How Do Jellyfish Reproduce?
2010/03/15
Naked Scientists 10.03.07 - The Science of Solar: Photovoltaics
2010/03/08
Naked Scientists 10.02.28 - The Science of Water Security
2010/03/01
Naked Scientists 10.02.21 - Winds, Wings, Whale Fins and Wind Power
2010/02/23
Naked Scientists 10.02.14 - Do animals use toilet paper?
2010/02/16
Naked Scientists 10.02.07 - Pollution & Plastics
2010/02/08
Naked Scientists 10.01.31 - Augmenting Reality
2010/02/01
Naked Scientists 10.01.24 - Explosive Science!
2010/01/25
Naked Scientists 10.01.17 - Does Farting make you Weigh Less?
2010/01/19
Naked Scientists 10.01.10 - Listen Here! The Science of Sound and Hearing
2010/01/11
Naked Scientists 10.01.05 - Launching Naked Astronomy
2010/01/05
Naked Scientists 09.12.20 - Dissecting Christmas Dinner
2009/12/21
Naked Scientists 09.12.13 - Was Swine 'Flu Man-Made?
2009/12/14
Naked Scientists 09.12.06 - Understanding Hepatitis C
2009/12/07
Naked Scientists 09.11.29 - What if a Meteorite Destroyed the Moon?
2009/11/30
Naked Scientists 09.11.22 - Science Down Under
2009/11/23
Naked Scientists 09.11.15 - Producing Planets
2009/11/17
Naked Scientists 09.11.08 - Investigating Infertility
2009/11/09
Naked Scientists 09.11.01 - Where do lost socks go?
2009/11/03
Naked Scientists 09.10.29 - Introducing - The Diamond Light Source Podcast
2009/10/29
Naked Scientists 09.10.25 - The Diseased Brain
2009/10/27
Naked Scientists 09.10.18 - High Altitude Adventures
2009/10/20
Naked Scientists 09.10.11 - Why does Water Expand when it Freezes?
2009/10/13
Naked Scientists 09.10.04 - Catching Up with Cancer Research
2009/10/05
Naked Scientists 09.09.27 - Researchers Revealed!
2009/09/29
Naked Scientists 09.09.20 - Life in the Branches
2009/09/21
Naked Scientists 09.09.13 - Building Bodies and Mending Broken Hearts
2009/09/14
Naked Scientists 09.09.06 - Can you run faster on the moon?
2009/09/07
Naked Scientists 09.08.30 - Diana and Meera's Best Bits
2009/08/30
Naked Scientists 09.08.23 - Ben and Dave's Best Bits
2009/08/25
Naked Scientists 09.08.15 - Helen's Best Bits
2009/08/17
Naked Scientists 09.08.09 - Kat's Best Bits
2009/08/11
Naked Scientists 09.08.02 - Peeing on an Electric Fence
2009/08/04
Naked Scientists 09.07.26 - Rubbish!
2009/07/28
Naked Scientists 09.07.19 - Making Babies - Pregnancy and Fertility
2009/07/20
Naked Scientists 09.07.16 - The Rap Guide to Evolution - Darwinian Hip Hop
2009/07/16
Naked Scientists 09.07.12 - Here's Looking at You - the Science of Vision
2009/07/14
Naked Scientists 09.07.05 - Why Does Toothpaste Make Food Taste Funny?
2009/07/07
Naked Scientists 09.06.28 - Driving into the Future
2009/06/30
Naked Scientists 09.06.21 - The Future of our Food
2009/06/22
Naked Scientists 09.06.14 - Your Science Questions
2009/06/16
Naked Scientists 09.06.07 - The Science of Architecture
2009/06/09
Naked Scientists 09.05.31 - Bioengineering
2009/06/01
Naked Scientists 09.05.24 - Getting Under Your Skin
2009/05/26
Naked Scientists 09.05.17 - Science Questions and Answers
2009/05/19
Naked Scientists 09.05.10 - Clean Water and Alien Invasions
2009/05/11
Naked Scientists 09.05.03 - Tackling Transport
2009/05/05
Naked Scientists 09.04.26 - Cleaner City Air
2009/04/28
Naked Scientists 09.04.19 - Questions and Answers
2009/04/21
Naked Scientists 09.04.05 - SciFest Africa
2009/04/07
Naked Scientists 09.03.29 - History of Medicine
2009/03/29
Naked Scientists 09.03.22 - Computer Science
2009/03/24
Naked Scientists 09.03.15 - The Cambridge Science Festival
2009/03/17
Naked Scientists 09.03.08 - Your Questions and the Science of Sword Swallowing
2009/03/10
Naked Scientists 09.03.01 - Inspired by Science
2009/03/03
Naked Scientists 09.02.22 - The International Year of Astronomy
2009/02/24
Naked Scientists 09.02.15 - The Science of Love
2009/02/16
Naked Scientists 09.02.08 - Stripping Down your Questions
2009/02/10
Naked Scientists 09.02.01 - The Science of the Seriously Small
2009/02/03
Naked Scientists 09.01.25 - Material, Heal Thyself
2009/01/27
Naked Scientists 09.01.18 - Obesity in your Genes
2009/01/20
Naked Scientists 09.01.13 - New Year, New Naked Science
2009/01/13
Naked Scientists 09.01.06 - Why not "Ask the Naked Scientists?"
2009/01/06
Naked Scientists 08.12.30 - Introducing - Naked Archaeology
2008/12/30
Naked Scientists 08.12.24 - Science from the Sporran
2008/12/24
Naked Scientists 08.12.22 - Merry Naked Christmas
2008/12/22
Naked Scientists 08.12.14 - Emerging Diseases
2008/12/16
Naked Scientists 08.12.07 - The Science of Sight
2008/12/09
Naked Scientists 08.12.02 - The Naked Scientists in LA
2008/12/02
Naked Scientists 08.11.23 - Burning Science Questions
2008/11/24
Naked Scientists 08.11.16 - Archaeology
2008/11/18
Naked Scientists 08.11.09 - National Pathology Week
2008/11/11
Naked Scientists 08.11.02 - Your Questions and Answers
2008/11/03
Naked Scientists 08.10.26 - The Psychology of Drinking and Dancing
2008/10/28
Naked Scientists 08.10.19 - Fusion - The Real Solar Power
2008/10/21
Naked Scientists 08.10.12 - Your Questions and Answers
2008/10/14
Naked Scientists 08.10.05 - Catching Up with Cancer
2008/10/07
Naked Scientists 08.09.28 - Young at Heart - Healthy Ageing
2008/09/30
Naked Scientists 08.09.21 - Superbugs - MRSA and C. diff
2008/09/22
Naked Scientists 08.09.14 - Your Questions and the BA Science Festival
2008/09/15
Naked Scientists 08.09.07 - The Large Hadron Collider
2008/09/08
Naked Scientists 08.08.31 - The Science of the Sea
2008/09/02
Naked Scientists 08.08.17 - The Sounds of Science
2008/08/18
Naked Scientists 08.08.10 - The Final Frontier
2008/08/12
Naked Scientists 08.08.03 - A Punt down the Cam
2008/08/04
Naked Scientists 08.07.27 - Question and Answer Extravaganza!
2008/07/29
Naked Scientists 08.07.20 - Discovering Drugs
2008/07/22
Naked Scientists 08.07.13 - Olympic Science
2008/07/15
Naked Scientists 08.07.06 - Body Clocks and Circadian Rhythms
2008/07/07
Naked Scientists 08.07.01 - Naked Evolution
2008/07/01
Naked Scientists 08.06.22 - Naked Science Q&A Show
2008/06/24
Naked Scientists 08.06.15 - Fire and Mud
2008/06/17
Naked Scientists 08.06.08 - The Secrets of Odysseus
2008/06/10
Naked Scientists 08.06.01 - Questions and Answers
2008/06/03
Naked Scientists 08.05.25 - Life on Mars
2008/05/27
Naked Scientists 08.05.18 - Your Bacterial Body
2008/05/20
Naked Scientists 08.05.11 - Repelling Pests - Mosquitoes, Moths and Weeds
2008/05/13
Naked Scientists 08.05.04 - Clothed Questions, Naked Answers
2008/05/06
Naked Scientists 08.04.27 - Diamonds and Gemstones
2008/04/29
Naked Scientists 08.04.20 - Houses of the Future
2008/04/22
Naked Scientists 08.04.13 - The Science of the Sun
2008/04/15
Naked Scientists 08.04.06 - Q&A and the Edinburgh Science Festival
2008/04/08
Naked Scientists 08.03.30 - TB and Magnetic Bacteria
2008/03/31
Naked Scientists 08.03.16 - The Cambridge Science Festival
2008/03/18
Naked Scientists 08.03.09 - Naked Science Q&A Show
2008/03/11
Naked Scientists 08.03.02 - Science of Music
2008/03/03
Naked Scientists 08.02.24 - Virtual Life
2008/02/25
Naked Scientists 08.02.17 - Boston T-ransplant Party
2008/02/19
Naked Scientists 08.02.10 - Naked Science Q&A Show
2008/02/11
Naked Scientists 08.02.03 - Wet and Wild
2008/02/04
Naked Scientists 08.01.27 - Viruses and Vaccines
2008/01/28
Naked Scientists 08.01.20 - Combating Climate Change
2008/01/21
Naked Scientists 08.01.13 - Naked Science Q&A Show
2008/01/14
Naked Scientists 08.01.06 - Addiction and Dieting
2008/01/07
Naked Scientists 07.12.30 - Climate Change and more Ask the Naked Scientists
2008/01/02
Naked Scientists 07.12.26 - Ask the Naked Scientists
2007/12/26
Naked Scientists 07.12.16 - Naked Science Christmas Party
2007/12/17
Naked Scientists 07.12.09 - Naked Science Q & A Show
2007/12/11
Naked Scientists 07.12.02 - Alzheimer's, the Brain and Memory
2007/12/04
Naked Scientists 07.11.25 - Science in South Africa Special
2007/11/26
Naked Scientists 07.11.18 - The South Africa Space Special
2007/11/19
Naked Scientists 07.11.11 - Naked Science Q & A Show
2007/11/12
Naked Scientists 07.11.04 - Human Origins and Migration
2007/11/05
Naked Scientists 07.10.28 - Stem Cells and Cloning
2007/10/30
Naked Scientists 07.10.21 - Particle Physics Show
2007/10/22
Naked Scientists 07.10.14 - Naked Science Q&A Show
2007/10/15
Naked Scientists 07.10.07 - Beer & Brewing
2007/10/08
Naked Scientists 07.09.30 - Smart Materials
2007/10/02
Naked Scientists 07.09.23 - Robots and Artificial Intelligence
2007/09/25
Naked Scientists 07.09.16 - The Best of the BA Festival
2007/09/18
Naked Scientists 07.09.09 - Naked Science Q&A & the BA Festival
2007/09/09
Naked Scientists 07.09.02 - Naked Science Q&A
2007/09/04
Naked Scientists 07.08.26 - The Best of the Naked Scientists 2
2007/08/28
Naked Scientists 07.08.19 - The Best of the Naked Scientists
2007/08/21
Naked Scientists 07.08.12 - Summer Special Q&A Show
2007/08/14
Naked Scientists 07.08.05 - Venoms and Toxins - Natures Arsenal
2007/08/07
Naked Scientists 07.07.29 - Naked Science Q&A Show
2007/07/31
Naked Scientists 07.07.22 - Extreme Survival Show
2007/07/23
Naked Scientists 07.07.15 - Fuels of the Future
2007/07/17
Naked Scientists 07.07.08 - The Brain, Epilepsy and Out of Body Experiences
2007/07/10
Naked Scientists 07.07.01 - Question and Answer Show
2007/07/03
Naked Scientists 07.06.24 - ARMAGEDDON - Super Volcanoes, Meteorites and Earthquakes
2007/06/26
Naked Scientists 07.06.17 - Forensic Science Show
2007/06/19
Naked Scientists 07.06.10 - Question and Answer Show
2007/06/12
Naked Scientists 07.06.03 - Animal Behaviour - Feathered Einsteins, Mischievious Meerkats and Monkey Vision
2007/06/05
Naked Scientists 07.05.27 - Planets and Cosmology
2007/05/28
Naked Scientists 07.05.20 - Volcanic pollution, the Ozone Hole and the Greenhouse Effect - The Atmosphere Show
2007/05/22
Naked Scientists 07.05.13 - Germs, Fungi and Viruses - The Microscopic World
2007/05/15
Naked Scientists 07.05.06 - Naked Scientists Question and Answer Show
2007/05/07
Naked Scientists 07.04.29 - Migrating Genes, Surnames and Y Chromosomes
2007/05/01
Naked Scientists 07.04.22 - Oceans and Marine Conservation
2007/04/24
Naked Scientists 07.04.15 - New Ideas in Cancer
2007/04/16
Naked Scientists 07.04.01 - Heart Disease and Repairing the Damaged Heart
2007/04/03
Naked Scientists 07.03.25 - The Science of Flight
2007/03/27
Naked Scientists 07.03.18 - National Science and Engineering Week
2007/03/20
Naked Scientists 07.03.11 - Naked Science Question and Answer
2007/03/13
Naked Scientists 07.03.04 - Peruvian Mummies and Animal Domestication
2007/03/06
Naked Scientists 07.02.25 - Parasites and Clean Water Supplies
2007/02/27
Naked Scientists 07.02.18 - Naked Question and Answer and Venomous Vipers
2007/02/20
Naked Scientists 07.02.11 - Nuclear Power and Radiation in Medicine
2007/02/13
Naked Scientists 07.02.04 - Science of Pain and Phantom Limbs
2007/02/06
Naked Scientists 07.01.28 - Extreme Organisms and Hydrothermal Vents
2007/01/30
Naked Scientists 07.01.21 - Climate Change and Renewable Energy
2007/01/23
Naked Scientists 07.01.14 - Naked Science Question and Answer and the World of Chemistry
2007/01/16
Naked Scientists 07.01.07 - Red Wine, Caffeine and Bugs in Your Guts
2007/01/09
Naked Scientists 06.12.17 - Christmas Question and Answer and the Star of Bethlehem
2006/12/19
Naked Scientists 06.12.10 - Dark Matter, Northern Lights and Mars in 3D
2006/12/12
Naked Scientists 06.12.03 - Naked Science Question and Answer and Polonium Poisoning
2006/12/05
Naked Scientists 06.11.26 - Repairing the Retina and Spinal Cord
2006/11/28
Naked Scientists 06.11.19 - Science in Antarctica
2006/11/22
Naked Scientists 06.11.12 - The Sound of Music
2006/11/14
Naked Scientists 06.11.05 - Naked Science Question and Answer and Record Breaking Fireworks
2006/11/07
Naked Scientists 06.10.29 - Superconductivity and Cooling Devices
2006/10/31
Naked Scientists 06.10.22 - How We Hear, Echolocation and Giant Whoopee Cushions
2006/10/27
Naked Scientists 06.10.15 - Science of Sight, Eye Diseases and Animal Vision
2006/10/17
Naked Scientists 06.10.08 - How Cancers Form, Cancer Biology and Future Therapies
2006/10/12
Naked Scientists 06.10.01 - Naked Science Question and Answer and New Horizons
2006/10/05
Naked Scientists 06.09.24 - Catalysts for Cleaner Environments and Future Energy
2006/09/26
Naked Scientists 06.09.17 - Peruvian Mummies, Ancient Environments and the Sahara
2006/09/22
Naked Scientists 06.09.10 - Hot Nectar, Warming Weather and Birds Missing the Spring
2006/09/15
Naked Scientists 06.09.03 - Naked Science Question and Answer
2006/09/03
Naked Scientists 06.08.06 - Naked Science Question and Answer
2006/08/09
Naked Scientists 06.07.30 - Crowd Control, Football Hooligans and Singing Mosquitoes
2006/08/01
Naked Scientists 06.07.23 - Exploding Jellyfish, Marine Conservation and Sharks-3D
2006/07/25
Naked Scientists 06.07.16 - The Science of the Sun, Sun Tanning, Nuclear Fusion and Fission Power
2006/07/18
Naked Scientists 06.07.09 - Allergies, the Immune System and Parasites
2006/07/12
Naked Scientists 06.07.02 - Sex Chromosomes, Genetics and Food Webs
2006/07/05
Naked Scientists 06.06.25 - Naked Question and Answer and The Life of Benjamin Franklin
2006/06/27
Naked Scientists 06.06.18 - Social Insects and Locust-Inspired Car Safety
2006/06/20
Naked Scientists 06.06.11 - Bacteria, Viruses and Fungi
2006/06/14
Naked Scientists 06.06.04 - Oil, Fuel Cells and Alternative Energy
2006/06/06
Naked Scientists 06.05.28 - Naked Science Question and Answer and the Science of Happiness - Naked Scientists 06.05.28
2006/05/30
Naked Scientists 06.05.21 - Music Technology and the Science of Sound
2006/05/23
Naked Scientists 06.05.14 - BSE, Cervical Cancer and Toxoplasmosis
2006/05/16
Naked Scientists 06.05.07 - Dinosaurs and Fossils - Jurassic Science set in Stone
2006/05/11
Naked Scientists 06.04.30 - Naked Science Question and Answer
2006/05/02
Naked Scientists 06.04.23 - Coral Reefs and Creatures of the Deep Sea
2006/04/25
Naked Scientists 06.04.09 - Forecasting Weather and Climate
2006/04/12
Naked Scientists 06.04.02 - Brainwashing and the Science of Pain
2006/04/05
Naked Scientists 06.03.26 - Naked Science Questions and Answers
2006/03/28
Naked Scientists 06.03.19 - Invasive Species, Conservation and the Last Giant Tortoise
2006/03/21
Naked Scientists 06.03.12 - Body Clocks, Circadian Rhythms and Time
2006/03/14
Naked Scientists 06.03.05 - Recycling, Water Use and Problem Plastic
2006/03/08
Naked Scientists 06.02.26 - The Science of Nanotechnology
2006/02/28
Naked Scientists 06.02.19 - Chinese Medicine and the Healing Power of Plants
2006/02/21
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