Location:
United States
Description:
The Science Show gives Australians unique insights into the latest scientific research and debate, from the physics of cricket to prime ministerial biorhythms.
Language:
English
Episodes
Lab Notes: Why have Saturn's rings 'vanished'?
3/24/2025
As far as planets go, they don't get much more iconic than Saturn. A huge golden ball encircled by gigantic rings. But those distinctive rings — the very things that give Saturn its pizzazz — have seemingly disappeared.
So what’s going on, and when will they be back?
Duration:00:11:48
Landscape and islands
3/21/2025
Lord Howe Island may appear an island paradise, but its ecology has been under intense pressure from invasive species such as rats and pigs. Now birds are being found with stomachs full of plastic.
Duration:00:54:06
Lab Notes: The extreme conditions F1 drivers face in a race
3/17/2025
They might be the epitome of cool, but Formula 1 race car drivers can get hot — really hot.
An F1 cockpit can heat up to 60 degrees Celsius, and this affects cognition — the last thing you want when you're fanging around a track at 300kph.
This year, a new rule was introduced to give F1 drivers a bit of relief from that heat … which is just one of the risks of F1 racing.
Because we often hear about the performance of the cars in the race, but what about the humans behind the wheel?
Duration:00:13:33
Your exposome, Kavli awards and more improbable research
3/14/2025
80% of diseases are impacted by environment or lifestyle described as your exposome. Thomas Hartung expects information from studying the exposome will bring benefits on par with those brought by studying the human genome.
Duration:00:52:12
Lab Notes: 1 in 3 women get this infection. To cure it, treat men
3/10/2025
For women who get bacterial vaginosis or BV, a common condition that can cause a fishy-smelling discharge, many will get it again (and again).
Why some people were prone to recurrent BV was a mystery … until now.
Australian researchers have shown that BV-related bugs can be sexually transmitted, and treating male partners significantly cuts recurrence rates.
Duration:00:13:05
A crisis, an opera, and one of the greatest photos in history - The AAAS rides again.
3/7/2025
America’s top research institutions face an uncertain future.
Duration:00:54:06
Lab Notes: How Ozempic stops food cravings
3/3/2025
A weekly injection that stops that hankering for hot chips and donuts?
Many people on Ozempic and similar medications report this phenomenon, saying they no longer have incessant thoughts about sweets and fried food.
So how do these drugs, known as GLP-1 agonists, work in the brain to dial down "food noise" and help people lose weight?
Duration:00:11:39
The Science Show
2/28/2025
The Science Show gives Australians unique insights into the latest scientific research and debate.
Duration:00:54:05
Lab Notes: Are we on the brink of another pandemic?
2/24/2025
The H5N1 strain of avian influenza is currently ripping through the US, infecting wild animals, livestock and people. One person has died, and around 70 more infections have been confirmed.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration has made massive cuts to the nation's leading science and health agencies, and announced plans to withdraw from the World Health Organization.
As the risk of another pandemic rises, what does all this mean for us in Australia?
Duration:00:13:24
Scope for all as some cities leap ahead with green initiatives
2/21/2025
San Antonio Texas has restored the San Antonio River encouraging plants and animals back to the city.
Duration:00:53:03
Lab Notes: What history can teach us about ‘city-killer’ asteroids
2/17/2025
An asteroid dubbed 2024 YR4 is causing a stir among the space community and a frenzy in the media. It currently has a 2.3 per cent chance of crashing into Earth three days before Christmas in 2032. But this is not our first asteroid rodeo.
Get in touch with us: labnotes@abc.net.au
Duration:00:13:11
Vale Felicia Huppert
2/14/2025
Vale the Professor of Happiness Felicia Huppert
Duration:00:54:05
Lab Notes: Varroa is here but honey bees strike back
2/10/2025
Varroa is the parasite responsible for destroying bee colonies all around the world and is regarded as "the greatest biological threat to Australia's honey bee population."
The good news is that some honey bees can fight back. And they're being helped by breeders, scientists and artificial insemination on the tiniest scale.
Learn more on Lab Notes, the show that brings you the science of new discoveries and current events. Get in touch with us: labnotes@abc.net.au
Duration:00:13:30
The wonder of Australia’s deserts
2/7/2025
Unlike other deserts, Australian deserts experience occasional high rainfall. It supports a unique ecology.
Duration:00:54:04
Lab Notes: Why the Australian sun has a real sting to it
2/3/2025
Australia's summer UV levels are high enough to cause sunburn in as little as 11 minutes.
Yet the summer sun in the Northern Hemisphere rarely feels that full on.
So why does our sunlight have that extra "bite"?
Spoiler: it's not the hole in the ozone layer.
Learn more on Lab Notes, the show that brings you the science of new discoveries and current events.
Get in touch with us: labnotes@abc.net.au
Duration:00:13:33
Old rocks, old humans, old sharks, and links to today
1/31/2025
Opals, ancient humans and sharks dating back 465 million years. This week we see how today’s world has been shaped from the distant past.
Duration:00:54:04
Lab Notes: More than whale food — krill are climate heroes
1/27/2025
Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) do much more than fill whales' bellies. These tiny crustaceans also play a huge role in Earth's carbon cycle.
They sequester around 40 million tonnes of carbon each year, mostly in their poo — that's the equivalent of taking 35 million cars off the road.
Yet there's plenty we don't know about these thumb-sized critters.
Now a new study has revealed what they get up to under the Antarctic winter sea ice, and how this behaviour affects carbon calculations.
Dive into the secret life of krill on Lab Notes, the show that brings you the science of new discoveries and current events.Get in touch with us: labnotes@abc.net.au
Duration:00:13:19
Science Show Summer - Australia’s “Indiana Jones” and the lost Age of Mammals
1/24/2025
Opalised fossils previously overlooked at the Australian Museum have overturned our understanding of the origin of mammals with the emergence of a whole new age of mammals: The Age of Monotremes.
Duration:00:53:50
Lab Notes: A debunked vaccine theory rears its ugly head — again
1/20/2025
Robert F Kennedy Jr is tipped to lead the US Department of Health and Human Services. Over the years, RFK Jr has repeatedly pushed the claim that childhood vaccines cause autism spectrum disorder — a theory that's been well and truly debunked.
So where did this idea come from? What's bowel disease got to do with it? And what might the US expect with an anti-vaxxer at the helm of health and human services?
Duration:00:13:15
Micronesian community and scientists unite to protect remote Ulithi atoll
1/17/2025
A remote community in the western Pacific is working with scientists to battle the effects of invasive species, a leaking WW2 oil tanker and climate change.
Duration:00:54:03