• Audio long read: Three ways to cool Earth by pulling carbon from the sky
    May 30 2025

    With the world looking likely to blow past the temperature targets laid out in the 2015 Paris climate agreement, a growing number of voices are saying that carbon removal technologies will be necessary if humanity is to achieve its long-term climate goals. If these approaches succeed, they could help nations and corporations to meet their climate commitments — and help the world to halt global warming.


    However, questions remain about the financial viability of these technologies, and whether they can live up to the hype.


    This is an audio version of our Feature: Three ways to cool Earth by pulling carbon from the sky

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    16 mins
  • AI linked to boom in biomedical papers, infrared contact lenses, and is Earth's core leaking?
    May 28 2025
    00:33 Was a boom in papers driven by AI?

    A spike in papers formulaically analysing a public data set has sparked worries that AI is being used to generate low quality and potentially misleading analyses.


    Nature: AI linked to explosion of low-quality biomedical research papers


    08:07 Lenses that give humans infrared vision

    Researchers in China have created contact lenses that can allow humans to see infrared light, which could help with search and rescue missions, sending secret messages and even surgery.


    Nature: These contact lenses give people infrared vision — even with their eyes shut


    14:17 Does the Earth's core have a leak?

    Geologists have uncovered the strongest evidence yet that Earth's core is leaking. Rocks from Hawaii were found to contain isotopes of a rare element, which suggests the material originally came from the core. More work will need to be done to rule out other explanations.


    Nature: Is Earth’s core leaking? Volcanic rocks provide strongest evidence yet


    Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.

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    20 mins
  • These malaria drugs treat the mosquitos — not the people
    May 21 2025
    00:45 Treating mosquitoes for malaria

    Researchers have developed two compounds that can kill malaria-causing parasites within mosquitoes, an approach they hope could help reduce transmission of the disease. The team showed that these compounds can be embedded into the plastics used to make bed nets, providing an alternative to insecticide-based malaria-control measures, which are losing efficacy in the face of increased resistance.


    Research article: Probst et al.


    10:42 Research Highlights

    The sunlight-powered device that can harvest drinkable water from desert air, and evidence that the world’s richest people are disproportionately responsible for climate impacts.


    Research Highlight: Atacama sunshine helps to pull water from thin air

    Research Highlight: The world’s richest people have an outsized role in climate extremes


    13:02 The genetics that can lead to pregnancy loss

    Researchers have found specific genetic mutations that can lead to pregnancy loss. It’s known that errors, such as the duplication of chromosomes, can lead to nonviable pregnancies but less has been known about non-chromosomal genetic errors. The new work identifies DNA sequence changes that can lead to a non-viable pregnancy. This may offer clinicians the ability to screen embryos for these changes to help avoid pregnancy loss.


    Research article: Arnadottir et al.


    22:24 Briefing Chat

    Bespoke CRISPR-based therapy treats baby boy with devastating genetic disease, and the ‘anti-spice’ compounds that can lower chillies’ heat.


    Nature: World’s first personalized CRISPR therapy given to baby with genetic disease

    New Scientist: Chemists discover 'anti-spice' that could make chilli peppers less hot


    Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    32 mins
  • How to transport antimatter — stick it on the back of a van
    May 14 2025
    00:46 An antimatter delivery van takes its first road trip

    Researchers have developed a portable antimatter containment device and tested it by putting it in a truck and driving it around CERN. Their system could represent a big step forward in efforts to take particles made at CERN’s ‘antimatter factory’ and transport them to other labs, something currently impossible due to antimatter being destroyed upon contact with matter. The team showed the feasibility of their approach by using the system to safely transport particles of matter and are now looking to adapt it to ferry antimatter particles.


    Research article: Leonhardt et al.



    11:45 Research Highlights

    How a tradition of female diving on a South Korean island might have shaped the genomes of the island’s population, and a poison-dart frog that curiously seems to be monogamous.


    Research Highlight: How Korea’s female divers have adapted to cold plunges

    Research Highlight: A ‘hidden gem’ of the Amazon is a frog with odd habits



    13:46 The mathematics of a near-miss between black holes

    Physicists have tackled a longstanding problem in physics — understanding how two black holes gravitationally interact as they fly past each other — which could help with future detections of the gravitational waves that would be created by these events. Rather than repeatedly running expensive computer simulations to approximate the answer to this problem, a team of theorists have come up with a mathematical formula to describe a black hole fly-by, which can be run in a matter of seconds. Their results could be used to identify the tell-tale signatures of these events when they actually occur.


    Research article: Driesse et al.


    22:10 Briefing Chat

    How physicists turned lead into gold, for a microsecond and at tremendous cost, and the genetics of the skunk cabbage’s foul odour.


    Nature: Physicists turn lead into gold — for a fraction of a second

    Video: Scientists turn lead into gold

    Nature: How skunk cabbages and other smelly plants brew their foul odour




    Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.


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    31 mins
  • NSF terminates huge number of grants and stops awarding new ones
    May 12 2025

    In this Podcast Extra, we examine recent developments US National Science Foundation, which has seen significant numbers of research grants terminated. In addition, there have been freezes on funding for new grants and any additional money to existing ones. We also discuss US President Donald Trump’s proposed budget for fiscal year 2026, which calls for disproportionately large cuts to federal science funding.


    News: Exclusive: NSF stops awarding new grants and funding existing ones

    News: Trump proposes unprecedented budget cuts to US science

    News: Are the Trump team’s actions affecting your research? How to contact Nature

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    11 mins
  • Herring population loses migration 'memory' after heavy fishing
    May 7 2025
    00:46 How fishing activity altered the migration pattern of Herring

    Selective fishing of older herring has resulted in a large shift in the migration pattern of these fish, according to new research. For years, herring have visited sites on the south coast of Norway to spawn, but in 2020 a rapid shift was seen, with the fish instead visiting areas hundreds of kilometres to the north. Researchers have concluded that too many older fish have been removed from these waters, preventing the knowledge of the best spawning grounds being passed to younger, less experienced fish. This finding shows how human activity can affect animal migration, which could have serious consequences for the delicately balanced ecosystems built around them.


    Research article: Slotte et al.


    10:37 Research Highlights

    Archaeologists have identified tools that the ancient Maya may have used for tattooing, and the self-assembling stable structures that may help ‘forever chemicals’ persist in nature.


    Research Highlight: Tattoo-making tools used by ancient Maya revealed

    Research Highlight: ‘Forever’ molecules bunch themselves into cell-like structures


    13:02 How might AI companions affect users’ mental health?

    AI companions — apps where humans build relationships with computers — are hugely popular, with millions of people around the world using them. But despite increased social and political attention, research investigating how these systems can affect users has been lacking. We find out about the latest research in this space.


    News Feature: Supportive? Addictive? Abusive? How AI companions affect our mental health


    24:52 Briefing Chat

    A technique that lets researchers directly edits proteins within living cells, and how a fibre-rich, low-fat diet could help replenish populations of gut microbes ravaged by antibiotics.


    Nature: Powerful protein editors offer new ways of probing living cells

    Nature: How to fix a gut microbiome ravaged by antibiotics


    Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    38 mins
  • The dismantling of US science: can it survive Trump 2.0?
    Apr 30 2025

    In this episode:



    00:46 What will be left of US science after Trump 2.0?

    100 days into his term, President Donald Trump and his administration have already caused the biggest shakeup in modern scientific history, slashing funding, bringing large swathes of US research to a standstill and halting many clinical trials. But many fear these actions are just the beginning. We look at what the long-term impacts of these decisions might be for science in the United States and the world.


    Nature: Will US science survive Trump 2.0?



    13:42 Research Highlights

    A distant planet that orbits two stars, at a right angle, and how fringe-lipped bats’ hearing helps them find palatable amphibians.


    Research Highlight: ‘Tatooine’-like planet orbits two stars ― but at a weird angle

    Research Highlight: For these bats, eavesdropping is a valuable learnt skill



    16:07 Briefing Chat

    The first skeletal evidence from bones that Roman gladiators fought lions, and scientists finally pinpoint the genes responsible for three of the pea traits studied by Gregor Mendel.


    BBC News: Bites on gladiator bones prove combat with lion

    Nature: Century-old genetics mystery of Mendel’s peas finally solved


    Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    28 mins
  • Audio long read: Do smartphones and social media really harm teens’ mental health?
    Apr 25 2025

    Research shows that, over the past two decades, rates of mental illness have been increasing in adolescents in many countries. While some scientists point to soaring use of smartphones and social media as a key driver for this trend, others say the evidence does not show a large effect of these technologies on teenagers’ psychological health.


    At the heart of the dispute is a large, complex and often conflicting body of research that different researchers interpret in different ways. This has left parents unsure what to do.


    This is an audio version of our Feature: Do smartphones and social media really harm teens’ mental health?

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    18 mins
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