60-second Science

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 142:09:07
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Sinopsis

Leading science journalists provide a daily minute commentary on some of the most interesting developments in the world of science. For a full-length, weekly podcast you can subscribe to Science Talk: The Podcast of Scientific American . To view all of our archived podcasts please go to www.scientificamerican.com/podcast

Episodios

  • If Sea Ice Melts in the Arctic, Do Trees Burn in California?

    19/05/2022 Duración: 05min

    A new study links sea ice decline with increasing wildfire weather in the Western U.S.

  • How to Care for COVID at Home, and Is That Sniffle Allergies or the Virus? COVID Quickly, Episode 30

    16/05/2022 Duración: 08min

    Today we bring you a new episode in our podcast series COVID, Quickly. Every two weeks, Scientific American’s senior health editors Tanya Lewis and Josh Fischman catch you up on the essential developments in the pandemic: from vaccines to new variants and everything in between. You can listen to all past episodes here.

  • How Astronomers Finally Captured a Photo of our Own Galaxy's Black Hole

    12/05/2022 Duración: 03min

    It took hundreds of researchers and many telescopes to capture an image of the black hole at the middle of our Milky Way.

  • Two-Headed Worms Tell Us Something Fascinating about Evolution

    10/05/2022 Duración: 06min

    Researchers looked back at more than 100 years of research and found that a fascination with annelids with mixed up appendages was strong—and that research still has relevance today.

  • The Harmful Effects of Overturning Roe v. Wade

    06/05/2022 Duración: 06min

    A landmark study of women who were turned away from getting the procedure found that being forced to have a child worsened their health and economic status.

  • Safer Indoor Air, and People Want Masks on Planes and Trains: COVID Quickly, Episode 29

    02/05/2022 Duración: 05min

    Today we bring you a new episode in our podcast series COVID, Quickly. Every two weeks, Scientific American’s senior health editors Tanya Lewis and Josh Fischman catch you up on the essential developments in the pandemic: from vaccines to new variants and everything in between. You can listen to all past episodes here.

  • Climate Change Is Shrinking Animals, Especially Bird-Brained Birds

    25/04/2022 Duración: 04min

    As the world warms, many animals are getting smaller. For birds, new research shows what they have upstairs may just make a different in how much smaller they get.

  • Cosmic Simulation Shows How Dark-Matter-Deficient Galaxies Confront Goliath and Survive

    20/04/2022 Duración: 05min

    A research team finds seven tiny dwarf galaxies stripped of their dark matter that nonetheless persisted despite the theft.

  • Venturing Back to the Office and the Benefits of Hybrid Immunity: COVID Quickly, Episode 28

    15/04/2022 Duración: 06min

    Today we bring you a new episode in our podcast series COVID, Quickly. Every two weeks, Scientific American’s senior health editors Tanya Lewis and Josh Fischman catch you up on the essential developments in the pandemic: from vaccines to new variants and everything in between. You can listen to all past episodes here.

  • Science Finally Has a Good Idea about Why We Stutter

    13/04/2022 Duración: 04min

    A glitch in speech initiation gives rise to the repetition that characterizes stuttering.

  • Love Computers? Love History? Listen to This Podcast

    12/04/2022 Duración: 04min

    In the newest season of Lost Women of Science, we enter a world of secrecy, computers and nuclear weapons—and see how Klára Dán von Neumann was a part of all of it.

  • Probiotics Could Help Save Overheated Corals

    08/04/2022 Duración: 06min

    Think of the process as a kind of marine fecal transplant—except the restorative bacteria do not come from stool; they come from other corals.

  • The History of the Milky Way Comes into Focus

    05/04/2022 Duración: 02min

    By dating nearly a quarter-million stars, astronomers were able to reconstruct the history of our galaxy—and they say it has lived an “enormously sheltered life.”

  • Second Boosters, Masks in the Next Wave and Smart Risk Decisions: COVID Quickly, Episode 27

    01/04/2022 Duración: 09min

    Today we bring you a new episode in our podcast series COVID, Quickly. Every two weeks, Scientific American’s senior health editors Tanya Lewis and Josh Fischman catch you up on the essential developments in the pandemic: from vaccines to new variants and everything in between. You can listen to all past episodes here.

  • New Research Decodes the Sea Cow's Hidden Language

    30/03/2022 Duración: 06min

    Florida manatees are “talking” up a storm, and a team that has been recording those sounds for seven years is starting to understand the chatter.

  • Does This Look like a Face to You?

    25/03/2022 Duración: 03min

    Science—and experience—show that we most definitely see faces in inanimate objects. But new research finds that, more often than not, we perceive those illusory faces as male.

  • Some Good News about Corals and Climate Change

    23/03/2022 Duración: 01min

    A nearly two-year-long study of Hawaiian corals suggests some species may be better equipped to handle warmer, more acidic waters than previously believed.

  • Florida Gets Kids and Vaccines Wrong and Ukraine's Health Crisis: COVID Quickly, Episode 26

    18/03/2022 Duración: 08min

    Today we bring you a new episode in our podcast series COVID, Quickly. Every two weeks, Scientific American’s senior health editors Tanya Lewis and Josh Fischman catch you up on the essential developments in the pandemic: from vaccines to new variants and everything in between. You can listen to all past episodes here.

  • Are You Better Than a Machine at Spotting a Deepfake?

    15/03/2022 Duración: 11min

    New research shows that detecting digital fakes generated by machine learning might be a job best done with humans still in the loop. 

  • A Treasure Trove of Dinosaur Bones in Italy Rewrites the Local Prehistoric Record

    11/03/2022 Duración: 05min

    New fossils are changing a decades-old story about the species that roamed the Mediterranean 80 million years ago.

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