4.5 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 26 June 2014
⏱️ 29 minutes
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Longitude Prize 2014 Winning Challenge Antibiotics resistance has been selected as the focus for the £10m prize. The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned of a "post-antibiotic era" where key drugs no longer work and people die from previously treatable infections. The next step in the challenge is to tackle this resistance, by developing a simple, cheap, quick test that allows you to tell whether an infection is bacterial or not. This will conserve the 50% of antibiotics that are currently given in situations where they have no effect.
Solar Cells A popular form of photovoltaic, or solar, cells is made using a harmful and expensive chemical called cadmium chloride. Now a team has found a new, cheaper, safer way of making solar cells by replacing the toxic element in the process with a material found in bath salts, magnesium chloride, and these are just as efficient. Professor Ken Durose from Liverpool University explains how it could reduce the cost of solar energy.
New Species How easy is it to find a new species for science? Whilst in the Bornean jungle, Dr Tim Cockerill discovered that it was relatively easy - one fell in his cup of tea! It was a tiny parasitic wasp. Another new species, of the same type of parasitic wasp, was recently discovered in a school playground in the UK. So new insects seem to be quite easy to find, but what about a new mammal or bird? Tim reveals that finding the creature is just the start of a lot of work needed to get his finding published and accepted.
Fijian Fisherwomen More and more conservationists are turning to local knowledge to work out the best way to save ecosystems. A great illustration of this grass-roots approach is underway in Fiji. They use a traditional system where villages will close an area of fishing grounds for a few months for fish stocks to recover. Conservationists are now learning about this system, known as 'tambu', to see if it can be used on a longer-term basis to help give fish stocks, that have become seriously depleted in the last few decades, a chance to recover.
Physics questions University College London cosmologist, Andrew Pontzen answers questions sent in by listeners about why, given the immense heat at the Big Bang, is there so much hydrogen in the universe, and not more of the larger atoms, which are forged under conditions of great heat? And are black holes responsible for the missing matter in the universe?
Producer: Fiona Roberts.
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| 0:00.0 | Just before this BBC podcast gets underway, here's something you may not know. |
| 0:04.7 | My name's Linda Davies and I Commission Podcasts for BBC Sounds. |
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| 0:37.0 | Hello you, this is the podcast of Inside Science from the BBC first broadcast on the 26th of June 2014. I'm Adam Rutherford. |
| 0:45.4 | Terms and whatnot at BBC.co. UK slash radio for. |
| 0:49.8 | We only had three complaints last week about my use of the word bacteria to mean both |
| 0:55.1 | singular and plural cells this week which is an improvement it is deliberate and |
| 1:00.2 | it is justifiable and you can hear our analysis of this and language evolution in a |
| 1:05.0 | program from the archive 8th of August 2013. The Inside Science team has worked hard on |
| 1:11.0 | this datum and any further complainants will receive many octopuses covered in algae. |
| 1:17.0 | Right, summertime, the sun is shining, the living is easy, the fish are jumping, |
| 1:22.0 | insects fly, listeners are questioning and the longitude |
| 1:25.8 | prize has been announced. |
| 1:28.0 | We have an Inside Science First, with our reporter accidentally discovering a new species in his cup of tea. |
| 1:35.0 | We have a brand new technique for making solar panels made not with exotic rare chemicals, |
| 1:40.0 | but with stuff that bath salts and tofu were made from. |
| 1:43.6 | And to top it all off, we answer your questions on the structure of the universe. |
| 1:48.5 | I tell you there's nothing too tiny or too grand for us. |
| 1:52.0 | But first, we've been building up for this for the last |
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