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BBC Inside Science

New Horizons Pluto update; friendly predatory bacteria; Christmas in the lab; human ancestry

BBC Inside Science

BBC

Technology, Science

4.51.3K Ratings

🗓️ 24 December 2015

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Since the epic flyby of Pluto in July, NASA has been regularly downloading staggering images from the New Horizons mission. Pluto is not a dead rock, but a geologically active dwarf planet, with tectonic movements, ice plains, glaciers, dunes and cryo-volcanoes. For an end of year update on the observations and outstanding mysteries, Adam meets Alan Stern, the Principal Investigator on New Horizons, who is still marvelling at the success of this humble craft.

Scientists have discovered how a potentially useful predatory bacterium called Bdellovibrio protects itself against its own weapons when it invades other bacteria. Professor Liz Sockett discusses how the work offers insights into early steps in the evolution of bacterial predators and how this will help to inform new ways to fight antimicrobial resistance

Science stops for no one .So how are researchers nurturing their experiments over the festive period? Marnie Chesterton has gone on the hunt for scientists for whom Christmas Day will be yet another day in the lab.

This year there's has been an explosion of papers of using DNA to reconstruct human history. We've invented new techniques for extracting DNA from the long dead, and for analysing ancient genomes. Professor Matthew Cobb from the University of Manchester assesses recent key developments in reconstructing the lives and population structures of ancient civilisations.

Producer Adrian Washbourne

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello you're

0:03.0

this is the 2015 Christmas Eve edition of Inside Science from BBC Radio 4.

0:05.9

I'm Adam Rutherford and more information can be found at BBC.co.

0:09.6

UK slash Radio 4.

0:11.5

Here's your Christmas Eve dose of science while you're peeling brassica or

0:14.8

erasure inserting castin air into the cloacal cavity of a meliorgris gallopavo that

0:20.1

sprouts, chestnuts and turkey. While you're stuffing your turkey,

0:23.6

we take a look at the bacteria

0:24.9

which stuff themselves inside their hosts

0:27.5

until they explode.

0:29.1

And we'll be finding out what scientists do

0:30.8

at Christmas when their experiments won't wait for Turkey, the Queen or the Virgin

0:35.2

Birth. But first, it's been a big year for science and we're revisiting and updating the

0:40.3

best science stories of 2015 and there was none bigger than the spaceship

0:44.7

New Horizons and its encounter with Pluto. This grand piano-sized craft had launched

0:50.2

from Cape Canaveral in January 2006 and a year later did a slingshot around Jupiter in which

0:55.9

it gained a kick of several thousand miles per hour.

0:59.2

It then entered a long hibernation sleep to save power and was on its way to the former ninth

1:04.1

planet of the solar system. In January, Mission Control in Baltimore woke New Horizons

1:09.4

up to take some blurry, heavily pixelated snaps of Pluto and generally warm up for the flyby.

1:16.1

On July the 14th, just before 1 o'clock GMT, this happened.

1:20.1

Okay, copy that.

...

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