Science Quickly
En podkast av Scientific American
931 Episoder
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Microplastics in Fresh Water Are Mostly Laundry Lint
Publisert: 17.9.2019 -
Kids Are Not Hurt by Screen Time
Publisert: 16.9.2019 -
Lab-Grown Human Mini Brains Show Brainy Activity
Publisert: 13.9.2019 -
Eavesdropping Puts Anxious Squirrels at Ease
Publisert: 12.9.2019 -
Earth's Magnetic Field Initiated a Pole Flip Many Millennia before the Switch
Publisert: 11.9.2019 -
Humpback Whales Swap Songs at Island Hub
Publisert: 10.9.2019 -
Food Expiration Dates May Mislead Consumers
Publisert: 9.9.2019 -
Farmland Is Also Optimal for Solar Power
Publisert: 5.9.2019 -
Chemical Tweak Recycles Polyurethane into Glue
Publisert: 4.9.2019 -
Cholesterol Climbs after Crows Chomp Cheeseburgers
Publisert: 3.9.2019 -
How Hurricanes Influence Spider Aggressiveness
Publisert: 30.8.2019 -
Graphene Garment Blocks Blood-Sucking Skeeters
Publisert: 28.8.2019 -
Martian Winds Could Spread Microbe Hitchhikers
Publisert: 26.8.2019 -
Including Indigenous Voices in Genomics
Publisert: 21.8.2019 -
West Point Uniforms Signify Explosive Chemistry
Publisert: 19.8.2019 -
Secrets of the Universe Trapped in Antarctic Snow
Publisert: 14.8.2019 -
Certain Personality Types Are Likely to Make a "Foodie Call"
Publisert: 13.8.2019 -
Artificial Intelligence Sniffs Out Unsafe Foods
Publisert: 12.8.2019 -
A Computer Tells Real Smiles from Phonies
Publisert: 9.8.2019 -
Stare Down Gulls to Avoid Lunch Loss
Publisert: 8.8.2019
Host Rachel Feltman, alongside leading science and tech journalists, dives into the rich world of scientific discovery in this bite-size science variety show.
