The most powerful explosion ever recorded
Unexpected Elements
BBC
4.4 • 568 Ratings
🗓️ 23 October 2022
⏱️ 54 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
It’s been an unusual week for astronomers, with telescopes swivelled off course to observe GRB221009A, the brightest gamma ray burst ever recorded. Gamma ray bursts aren’t unusual, the by-product of some supernovae are recorded weekly. Whilst the afterglow of these bursts usually lasts hours or days, the aftermath of, what has been dubbed ‘BOAT’, brightest of all time, is expected to linger for years to come. Harvard University’s Edo Berger and Yvette Cendas believe there’s lots to be learnt in the coming months.
Back in the primordial oceans, tiny, wriggling worms and shimmering jellyfish invented ever better ways to strip resources from their environment deep in the murky depths. The ability to efficiently take up oxygen from a marine environment acted as a gateway for a dramatic explosion in species diversity. But according to Michael Sackville, Postdoctoral Fellow University of Cambridge and Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory, when the gills first appeared they may have carried out a rather different function.
Plastics litter our oceans, and after time return to the shores. In order to predict and better understand where these plastic hotspots are, Professor Bhavani Narayanaswamy, Benthic Ecologist for Scottish Association for Marine Science, travels all over the globe to gather data and model these plastic hotspots.
In the future, this plastic waste could be broken down by a biological organisms. Chemical biologist Dr Federica Bertocchini at the University of Cantabria has identified enzymes responsible for munching through resilient polymers in waxworms. Why do some people pick up accents without even trying, while others can live in another country for decades without ever losing the sound of their mother tongue?
It’s a question that's been bothering CrowdScience listener Monica who, despite 45 years of living in the US, is still answering questions about where her accent is from. Presenter Marnie Chesterton sets off to discover why learning a new language is possible but perfecting the accent is so much harder.
Marnie speaks to a linguist about how we learn language and develop our first accent, and what we can - and can't change - about our accents. A phonetician explains to Marnie the difficulty of even hearing sounds that are not from our mother tongue, let alone replicating them. And Marnie enlists some expert help to learn some of the pitch sounds of Japanese – with mixed success.
Finally Marnie asks why people so dearly want to change their accents when doing so is such hard work. She hears from a sociolinguist about stereotypes and the impact of accent bias, and Shalu Yadav reports from the front line of Delhi call centres where workers experience prejudice about their accents regularly.
(Image: Gamma Rays in Galactic Nuclei. Credit: Getty Images)
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Oh, hello. You have chosen a BBC podcast, but before you listen to it, we thought you might |
| 0:04.7 | like our podcast too. You might. You might. It is called Sightracked with me, Nick Grimshaw. |
| 0:09.2 | And me, Annie Mack. And we talk about the week in music. All the news, all the cultural |
| 0:14.0 | happenings in the UK and beyond. And great guests. And it's on BBC Sounds. Yes, where you can |
| 0:19.7 | also enjoy lots of playlists, music mixes and |
| 0:22.6 | live radio, everything from my six music breakfast show to Radio 3 Unwind. But obviously start |
| 0:29.2 | with our podcast sidetrack. Obviously. Obviously. So if you like music, listen on BBC Sounds. |
| 0:34.0 | Thank you for downloading the Sart Tower from the BBC World Service with me, |
| 0:38.3 | Rellon Peas. And of course, here at the Polyglot BBC, we're acutely aware of the thousands of |
| 0:44.4 | languages and accents spoken around the world. And apparently getting the right tone can be |
| 0:49.8 | critical. Crowdsarts will be exploring why getting a foreign accent spot on is so hard |
| 0:56.3 | later in the podcast. Before that, there's astronomical excitement on science and action over |
| 1:02.7 | something that went flash in the night. Also, fish gills and us were taking a fresh look at a |
| 1:08.5 | key step in evolution, and the plastic washing up on |
| 1:12.7 | shorelines around the world and the worms that managed to digest it. |
| 1:16.8 | We found that saliva can oxidase and then degrade polyethamine. Within the saliva, we found |
| 1:22.1 | these two enzymes that can reproduce the same effect, and they work at a room temperature. |
| 1:25.9 | So very easy. There is no need of |
| 1:27.6 | pre-treatment of plastic with the heat or UV or anything. |
| 1:32.0 | And keep listening after the break for a crowd science class in classy accents. |
| 1:37.2 | In the United States, foreign accents are deemed as sounding less trustworthy, less competent, |
| 1:43.9 | less intelligent, less able to do their job, to teach a class. |
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