Great Moments In Science - With Dr Karl Kruszelnicki

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 27:11:59
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

From the ground breaking and life saving to the wacky and implausible, Dr Karl Kruszelnicki reveals some of the best moments in science.

Episodes

  • Measles erases immune system memory

    21/06/2022 Duration: 06min

    Measles is a nasty infection that you don't want to get. It can cause death and, what's more, it can also erase your immune system's memory. Only relatively recently scientists have measured this directly - by concentrating on antibodies – which can be generated by natural infection, and by vaccines.

  • Anticipation

    14/06/2022 Duration: 05min

    Anticipation is a strange experience. It can take you all the way from hope and trust, to anxiety and fear. But there’s a happy balancing point where anticipation can enrich your life.

  • Drunk animals

    07/06/2022 Duration: 05min

    Who’d’ve thought that one of the most sober animals is the humble hamster. They love alcohol but it doesn’t affect them. And who’d’ve thought that there’s a way to measure inebriation levels in animals - it’s called the Wobbling Scale – but hamsters NEVER wobble. 

  • The washing of bed sheets

    31/05/2022 Duration: 06min

    The average recommendation is to wash your bed sheets at least every two weeks. This is because every day you shed a mix of dead skin cells, sweat, germs, and body oils.. Sometimes you can delay bed sheet washing, it all depends on what kind of things you get up to in bed.

  • Atmospheric rivers, part 2

    24/05/2022 Duration: 08min

    Very long and very widebut only a few kilometres thick, atmospheric rivers carry water from the tropics towards the poles – and they shift huge amounts of heat as well. A few decades ago, atmospheric rivers hit West Antarctica and collapsed two massive ice shelves.

  • Atmospheric rivers

    17/05/2022 Duration: 06min

    A discovery in weather in the 1990s was the Atmospheric River. They've been around for pretty much ever though - one of them bankrupted California in 1862, and another dumped lots and lots of water onto Brisbane, in February 2022.

  • Why are whales so big?

    10/05/2022 Duration: 06min

    Whales are the giants of the marine realm, and here's why they get that way. This episode was originally published in May 2018

  • Most distant star ever found

    03/05/2022 Duration: 07min

    The star Earendel came into existence a long time ago, and is now famous as the most distant single star that astronomers have been able to obtain an image of.

  • Grasshopper can turn into locust

    26/04/2022 Duration: 06min

    The Koran, the Bible, the Sanskrit Mahabharata, and the Greek Illiad all mention plagues of locusts, and they're seen as carvings in ancient Egyptian tombs. Large numbers of locust could have come about because, in certain circumstances, grasshoppers metamorphose—into locusts.

  • Ivermectin and COVID—Part 2 of 2

    19/04/2022 Duration: 08min

    The drug ivermectin is really good for treating worms; unfortunately it was falsely promoted as a COVID cure due to data errors, drug trial anomalies, or insufficient publication review.

  • Ivermectin and COVID

    12/04/2022 Duration: 06min

    There are many cases of drugs being repurposed once a new aspect of them is discovered—their new use is often very beneficial. One such drug is ivermectin. It works well against various parasitic infections. It does not work against COVID.

  • The swing of bowling

    05/04/2022 Duration: 06min

    Ball games were happening 3,500 years ago, and ever since then we’ve bounced and batted in all sorts of fun ways. We're especially interested in the mechanics of a ball curving as it travels through the air—which happens in swing bowling.

  • Antarctic fiery flush

    29/03/2022 Duration: 05min

    At Australia's Antarctic base they do lots of cool science stuff, and aim to create as little waste as possible—including the toilets. There's actually a toilet known as the 'Fire Breathing Dragon'—so more exciting than its official name of Electric Incinerating Toilet.

  • Wood for the future

    22/03/2022 Duration: 07min

    Wood has a loads of potential—from it we can make semi-conductors, batteries, steel, concrete, even plastics. It does need a lot of processing but we already do that with materials like steel, glass and concrete.

  • Sydney smallpox epidemic

    15/03/2022 Duration: 07min

    We're now quite familiar with terms like 'herd immunity' and 'epidemic', and that when separate groups of people—with separate germs—meet for the very first time, things can turn out badly. If you have never been exposed to a specific germ you won't be primed for protection against it.

  • Worm blobs

    08/03/2022 Duration: 05min

    When digging the compost pile into the garden, Dr Karl noticed a ball of entangled shape-shifting worms. You might think 'yuck'—but there's a 'wow' factor because some animal groupings can generate intelligence, giving the group an advantage over solitary individuals.

  • Black holes bared

    01/03/2022 Duration: 06min

    The final piece about why the 100 million or so black holes in our Milky Way galaxy are missing.

  • Black hole buddies

    22/02/2022 Duration: 06min

    More on the almost-emptiness that is black holes. Because they're invisible, they're difficult to find—but sometimes get discovered because they give off X-rays.

  • Black hole basics

    15/02/2022 Duration: 06min

    Even though it sounds totally crazy, astronomers are very confident that black holes exist. Our galazy is really old, it should carry at least 100 million black holes but we’ve found only a couple of dozen of them.

  • Fartology 101—common scents

    08/02/2022 Duration: 06min

    There's really no 'genteel' way to say it, this week we're... passing wind. But even though it's totally natural, it can be embarrassing.

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