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CrowdScience

Answers to even more questions

CrowdScience

BBC

Science, Technology

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 26 September 2025

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sometimes in science, when you try to answer one question it sparks even more questions.

The CrowdScience inbox is a bulging example of that. We get tons of new questions every week and many of those are following up on episodes we’ve made. Sometimes you want us to go deeper into part of the answer, or sometimes a subject intrigues you so much that it inspires further questions about it.

In this episode presenter Caroline Steel is on a mission to answer some of those questions.

The CrowdScience episode How do fish survive in the deep ocean? led listener Ivor to wonder what sort of vision deep sea fish might have. On hand to answer that is Professor Lars Schmitz, Kravis Professor of Integrated Sciences: Biology, at Claremont McKenna College in the USA

Sticking with vision, we also tackle a question inspired by the CrowdScience episode Do we all see the same colour? For years listener Catarina has wondered why her eyes appear to change colour. Professor Pirro Hysi, ophthalmologist at the University of Pittsburgh, sheds some light on that subject.

In India, Rakesh listened to the CrowdScience episode Will the Earth ever lose its moon? and wondered about Jupiter’s many moons. The European Space Agency’s Ines Belgacem is working on a new mission to study Jupiter’s moons. She explains which of the giant planet’s ninety seven moons are ones for Rakesh to watch.

We also hear how the episode Why can’t my dog live as long as me? caught the attention of listener Lisa... and her cat. She had us falling in love with the long history of falling cats and the scientists who study them. Caroline is joined by Professor Greg Gbur, physicist at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte in the USA and author of Falling Felines and Fundamental Physics.

Could this episode of follow up questions lead to an episode investigating the follow up questions to these follow up questions? Have a listen and, who knows, maybe you’ll find yourself inspired to email [email protected]

Presenter: Caroline Steel

Producer: Tom Bonnett

Editor: Ben Motley

(Photo: Innovation and new ideas lightbulb concept with Question Mark - stock photo Credit: Olemedia via Getty Images)

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts.

0:05.6

Your time starts now.

0:07.2

You're about to listen to a BBC podcast.

0:09.4

Absolutely right.

0:11.5

So, you might like to know that the BBC makes loads of other podcasts.

0:15.6

Really?

0:16.4

Wow.

0:17.2

Many of them are very funny.

0:19.1

Which I think means...

0:20.3

A hatful of ha-hars. And energy. Even if we do very funny. Which I think means a hatful of ha haas.

0:21.7

And energy.

0:45.7

Even if we do say so ourselves. I agree 100% of that. Find them all on BBC Sounds. Just tell us a joke. Come on, tell us a joke. Tell us a joke. Come on, tell us a joke. Just search comedy on BBC Sounds. I'm really looking forward to getting stuck in. The gravity of the high tide is giving the moon energy to enable it to spiral farther and farther away.

0:51.2

Welcome to crowd science, the show that answers your science questions, like this one.

0:54.2

And learn that the moon was slowly moving away from the Earth.

0:57.7

And that made me wonder if the moon will ever escape from Earth's gravity.

1:02.4

If you're a regular crowd science listener, that question might sound familiar.

1:05.0

And here's another you might recognize.

1:10.7

I think like every dog lover in the world, I wonder why my dog can't live as long as I do.

1:15.5

I'm Caroline Steele, and on CrowdScience, we find that answering one of your questions often sparks a whole avalanche of new ones.

1:19.3

This week, we're answering some of those bonus questions, questions that were inspired by episodes

1:23.9

of CrowdScience.

1:24.8

We're about 25 metres now, and already you can see the sunlight starting to diminish.

...

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