Recorded live online for New Scientist subscribers, in this holiday special the team takes you through their stand out moments of the year, the funniest stories to hit the headlines, and their hopes for 2023 - and they answer questions from the audience too.
For stand-out highlights of 2022, the team discusses Deepmind and its transformative AI AlphaFold which predicted the structures of most known proteins. They celebrate the successes of the James Webb Space Telescope and a recent nuclear fusion experiment that has, for the first time ever, generated more power than it requires to run. They also chat about advances in organ transplants and the amazing discovery of ants which have evolved the ability to treat the wounds of their nest mates.
For their funniest picks of the year, they highlight the story of a fish that evolved to stand up on land then thought “nah”, and went back to living in water. Then there’s the news of researchers who wanted to find out if covid-related loss of smell correlated with negative reviews of scented candles on Amazon. And they discuss North America’s invasion by alien earthworms.
After audience questions, the team looks to the future. From the scientific discoveries spurred on by the covid pandemic, to developments in quantum computing, new innovative ways of producing food in more environmentally friendly ways, advancements in gene replacement therapies and the future of space travel, they discuss the stories they’re most looking forward to next year.
On the panel are Rowan Hooper, Penny Sarchet, Alexandra Thompson, Anna Demming and Sam Wong. To read about these subjects and much more, you can subscribe to New Scientist magazine at newscientist.com.
Events and discount codes:
Climeworks: www.climeworks.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
#81: Breakthrough in nuclear fusion; mini human brain grown with eyes; rapid evolution of synthetic bacteria
#80: Analysis of IPCC climate report; the rise of synthetic milk; discovery of new carnivorous plant
#79: Google creates a time crystal; microplastics in human placenta; boosting China’s vaccines; our climate future
#78: Will covid evolve to evade vaccines?; the oldest animal fossils ever found; predicting climate change’s extreme weather
#77: Is dropping covid restrictions unethical?; methane hints to life on Mars; Jeff Bezos and Blue Origin’s road to space
#76: Harm of race-based medicine; space tourism industry is go; America’s heatwave challenges
#75: Vaccine for kids; legacy of Dolly the sheep; how to repair the climate; China’s quantum advantage
#74: ‘Dragon man’ could be new species of human; Wally Funk goes to space; human and financial cost of heatwave; how covid affects the brain
#73: How to treat long covid; evolution of cooperation; Turing’s ACE computer; aliens watching Earth
#72: The evil in all of us; delta variant of coronavirus; glacier memory project
#71: Alzheimer’s treatment approved; human brain map breakthrough; time flowing backwards
#70: Coronavirus origin story; Big Oil’s nightmare; history of the gender pain gap
#69: Coronavirus evolution; geoengineering and food supply; Alice Roberts on the revolution in archaeology
#68: Climate change and methane mystery; breathable liquid; covid vaccines
#67: Brain plasticity; entropy and the nature of time; vaccine booster shots
#66: Sea level rise; Bitcoin carbon pollution; how to measure self-awareness
#65: Chernobyl radiation safety; Chinese space station; wisdom of trees
#64: Earth Day rescue plan: climate change and biodiversity special
#63: Musical spider’s webs; magic mushrooms for treating depression; the sound of coronavirus
#62: Synthetic life; rescue plan for Earth; muon g-2 new physics
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
New Scientist Escape Pod