
BBC Inside Science
BBC Radio 4
Categorii: Stiinta si medicina
Asculta ultimul episod:
How do you plan for the scientific discoveries of the future? That’s the question Chancellor Rachel Reeves had to try to answer with this week’s Spending Review. She allocated more than 22 billion pounds a year by 2029/30 for research and development which was described as a boost for science. Robin Bisson, UK News Editor for news website Research Professional News, and Dr Alicia Greated, Executive Director at the charity Campaign for Science and Engineering in the UK, explain where the money will go.
As the UN’s Ocean Conference continues in Nice, France, we get the latest developments from Science and Climate Correspondent Esme Stallard, before diving into a kelp forest in our own UK waters with reporter Graihagh Jackson. It’s hoped that encouraging the seaweed could help sequester carbon dioxide.
We hear about the dinosaur discovery that’s rewriting the evolutionary story of the Tyrannosaurus Rex with University of Calgary palaeontologists Professor Darla Zelenitsky and Jared Voris.
And journalist Caroline Steel is in the studio with her round up of science stories straight from the researcher’s labs.
Episoadele anterioare
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972 - What science is the UK government funding? Thu, 10 Jul 2025
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971 - Can science save our oceans? Thu, 03 Jul 2025
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970 - Your science questions answered Thu, 26 Jun 2025
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969 - Does the pandemic agreement make the world safer? Thu, 19 Jun 2025
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968 - Will the Hole in the Ozone Layer Close? Thu, 12 Jun 2025
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967 - The mysteries of the ocean floor Thu, 05 Jun 2025
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966 - How vulnerable is our power supply? Thu, 29 May 2025
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965 - What would cuts to Nasa mean for space science? Thu, 22 May 2025
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964 - Answers to Your Science Questions Thu, 15 May 2025
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963 - How can science help us fight wildfires? Thu, 08 May 2025
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962 - Is this finally the moment for UK tidal power? Thu, 01 May 2025
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961 - Is everything we know about the universe wrong? Thu, 24 Apr 2025
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960 - Wild birds in crisis Thu, 17 Apr 2025
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959 - Are boys doing better than girls at maths and science? Thu, 10 Apr 2025
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958 - Better Than Gold: Critical Minerals Thu, 03 Apr 2025
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957 - AI in Science: Promise and Peril Thu, 27 Mar 2025
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956 - Biotech Risks and Asteroid Anxiety Thu, 20 Mar 2025
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955 - US science in chaos Thu, 13 Mar 2025
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954 - The World’s Biggest Iceberg Thu, 06 Mar 2025
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952 - Is 1.5 still alive? Thu, 27 Feb 2025
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951 - Next-gen batteries and 'dark oxygen' Thu, 20 Feb 2025
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950 - UK AI & science-optimised pasta Thu, 13 Feb 2025
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949 - Science in 2025 Thu, 06 Feb 2025
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948 - The Science of Laughter Thu, 30 Jan 2025
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947 - Board Game Science Thu, 23 Jan 2025
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946 - The Year in Science Thu, 16 Jan 2025
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945 - The rising threat of bird flu Thu, 09 Jan 2025
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944 - Fact-checking the Bovaer backlash Thu, 02 Jan 2025
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943 - Is flood forecasting failing? Thu, 26 Dec 2024
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942 - The climate cost of war Thu, 19 Dec 2024
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941 - Nuclear medicine shortages and Jane Goodall on COP29 Thu, 12 Dec 2024
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940 - COP29: Are climate summits working? Thu, 05 Dec 2024
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939 - Spooky Science Thu, 28 Nov 2024
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938 - Whatever happened to graphene? Thu, 21 Nov 2024
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937 - Are our carbon sinks failing? Thu, 14 Nov 2024
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936 - Should we bring back extinct animals? Thu, 07 Nov 2024
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935 - Could coal shut-down mark new era for energy? Thu, 31 Oct 2024
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934 - How green is space travel? Thu, 24 Oct 2024
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933 - Is lab-grown meat the future of food? Thu, 17 Oct 2024
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932 - The first civilian spacewalk Thu, 10 Oct 2024
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931 - The Grenfell cladding Thu, 03 Oct 2024
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930 - Predicting everything Thu, 26 Sep 2024
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929 - Why aren’t we eating more insects? Thu, 19 Sep 2024
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928 - Beavers of London Thu, 12 Sep 2024
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927 - Going for gold Thu, 05 Sep 2024
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926 - How much of a risk is space junk? Thu, 29 Aug 2024
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925 - CERN’s Supercollider Plan Thu, 22 Aug 2024
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924 - Should Antarctica be off limits? Thu, 15 Aug 2024
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923 - Wimbledon Grass Science Thu, 08 Aug 2024
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922 - Sun, sea... and science Thu, 01 Aug 2024