Share

cover art for First living transparent mouse; lab-grown stem cells; Spy balloons

New Scientist Weekly

First living transparent mouse; lab-grown stem cells; Spy balloons

Season 1, Ep. 266
ā€¢

šŸŽ§ Episode 266

āš”ļø The first human blood stem cells have been created in a lab and successfully turned into functioning bone marrow. This research could revolutionise the treatment of blood cancers like leukaemia and lymphoma. So far itā€™s only been tested on mice, but researchers are hopeful it could work in humans too.

āš”ļø In other mouse news, we are now able to turn mice see-through. Using a surprisingly common food dye, researchers have turned the skin of living mice transparent. The technique, which didnā€™t harm the mice, offers a new (though gruesome) look into the living body.

āš”ļø The US is planning to launch spy balloons to carry out surveillance and act as backup communication links. The news comes just a year after the US shot down a Chinese balloon that was full of intelligence-gathering equipment. Coincidence? Find out why balloons are making a comeback.

āš” Bats have a huge role in human health, often harbouring diseases that are then passed onto us, such as rabies and covid-19. But it turns out when bat populations collapse, thatā€™s also bad for human health. New research finds that when bats die, insecticide use in agriculture goes up and so does infant mortality ā€“ find out how the three are linked.

āš” How dark is deep space? Are there any regions of the universe that are completely and utterly devoid of all light? Researchers now have an answer. Plus, ISS astronauts report a strange noise on Boeingā€™s stranded Starliner capsule.

šŸŽ™ļø Hosts Timothy Revell and Christie Taylor discuss with guests James Woodford, Chris Simms, Jeremy Hsu and Michael Le Page.

šŸ“• To read more about these stories, visit newscientist.com.

More episodes

View all episodes

  • 269. The case for Arctic geoengineering; worldā€™s oldest cheese

    25:05||Season 1, Ep. 269
    Episode 269Could we re-freeze the Arcticā€¦ and should we? The Arctic is losing ice at an alarming rate and itā€™s too late to save it by cutting emissions alone. Geoengineering may be our only hope. A company called Real Ice has successfully tested a plan to artificially keep the region cold - but what are the consequences and will it work on the scale we need?Octopuses and fish have been found hunting together in packs in an unexpected display of cooperation. Not only do the fish scout out potential prey, they even signal to the octopuses to move in for the kill. And a fish doesnā€™t prove helpful? They get punched.The worldā€™s oldest cheese has been found in China - and itā€™s 3,500 years old. As we get a fascinating look into the fermenting habits of ancient humans, find out how modern day fermentation is being repurposed to help us create biofuels, break down microplastics and more. We hear from Tom Ellis, professor of synthetic genome engineering at Imperial College London.Our bodies are littered with microplastics - theyā€™re in our livers, kidneys, guts and even our olfactory bulb. How worried should we be? Microplastics have been linked to some pretty serious health consequences - but are they the cause?Hosts Rowan Hooper and Sophie Bushwick discuss with guests Madeleine Cuff, Michael Le Page and Grace Wade.To read more about these stories, visit https://www.newscientist.com/Ā Get your tickets for New Scientist Live: https://www.newscientist.com/nslivepod
  • 268. Does loneliness really cause ill health?; A time-travelling photon; The supermassive mystery of early black holes

    23:19||Season 1, Ep. 268
    Episode 268Research has long linked loneliness to surprising health conditions, including diabetes and some cancers. The assumption has been that loneliness in some way causes these issues, perhaps through increased stress or inflammation. But in a study of tens of thousands of peopleā€™s biomedical data, that link has gotten more complicated. Where does this leave the relationship between loneliness and health, and the public health programs that are trying to tackle both?Supermassive black holes are so big and existed so early in the universeā€™s history that astronomers are unsure how they formed. Dark matter to the rescue? Among the theories of how they formed is ā€œdirect collapse,ā€ which a study finds may be possible with some help from decaying dark matter. But a specific type of dark matter is needed to make this theory workā€¦so whatā€™s next?A photon has been observed travelling in negative time. It was caught leaving a cloud of atoms before it ever entered it. How is this possible? Is this a time travelling photon? Well, somehow, no laws of physics were broken. Obviously some quirky quantum effects are in play ā€“ but what exactly is going on?Plus: How Earth may have once had a ring around it; a pair of black hole jets that are 23 million light years across; how some long-stemmed flowers have evolved to help bats pollinate them; and the discovery of a brand new, teeny tiny chameleon.Hosts Timothy Revell and Christie Taylor discuss with guests Leah Crane, Sophie Bushwick and Karmela Padavic-Callaghan.To read more about these stories, visit newscientist.com.Get 10 weeks of unlimited digital access to newscientist.com and our app for Ā£10/$10 by visiting: https://www.newscientist.com/podcastĀ 
  • 267. Thorin and the lost Neanderthals; Fish that use mirrors; SpaceXā€™s spacewalk

    27:23||Season 1, Ep. 267
    Episode 267The remains of an ancient Neanderthal man discovered in France may be one of the last members of a lost line. Researchers analysing the DNA of the fossil nicknamed ā€œThorinā€ (named after the dwarven king in the Hobbit) made the surprising discovery that heā€™s possibly one of the last of his line. He may have been part of a group that lived in isolation for 50,000 years.How can we tell climate change is to blame for specific heat waves, hurricanes, or other extreme weather events the planet has been hit by in recent years? Thatā€™s where attribution science comes in. Find out how the fingerprints of climate change could one day make it into your daily weather report.Elephants, chimps and even chickens have shown signs of self-awareness. Even a fish, the cleaner wrasse, has passed the famous ā€˜mirror testā€™ in recent years. But new research on this territorial fish has found it can also use mirrors as a tool ā€“ to decide if theyā€™re big enough to fight another wrasse. Learn more about how cleaner wrasse size themselves up before picking fights, and what this may say about their cognition.Private astronauts on a SpaceX mission performed the first ever civilian spacewalk on Thursday. Hear reaction to the historic news and why their state-of-the-art spacesuits are grabbing peopleā€™s attention. Plus hear how researchers have created a ā€œcloud atlasā€, full of gorgeous pictures of the weird and wonderful ā€“ and informative ā€“ clouds that fill Marsā€™ sky.Reporter James Woodford recently took control of one of the most advanced humanoid robots ever created. An energy company is helping NASA test a robot from its Valkyrie programme in Perth, Australia. James met the robot, nicknamed Val, and even helped use virtual reality tools to control her movements.Hosts Rowan Hooper and Christie Taylor discuss with guests Alison George, Madeleine Cuff, Corryn Wetzel and James Woodford.To read more about these stories, visit newscientist.com.
  • 265. Could mpox be the next covid-19?; Science of beat drops; Clothes made from potatoes

    27:15||Season 1, Ep. 265
    šŸŽ§ Episode 265āš”ļø The latest mpox variant has infected a record number of people in central Africa, has been found in travellers in Sweden and Thailand, and the World Health Organization has now declared it a public health emergency of international concern ā€“ just 15 months after the previous such declaration for mpox expired in 2023. But is this virus likely to become another covid? And as health authorities in the most affected countries struggle to keep it under control, will we be able to avoid further global outbreaks of the disease?āš”ļø New rogue worlds have been discovered in our galaxy that resemble both planets and stars but are neither. Thought to be brown dwarfs, the sheer number of them calls into question our understanding of how planet-sized objects form. This, plus another failed ā€“ but also successful ā€“ attempt to find dark matterā€™s hypothesised WIMPs.āš”ļø As a piece of music builds up to its crescendo, our brains know exactly when the beat is about to drop. Researchers have discovered the parts of our brains that are responsible for making sense of musical changes or ā€œboundariesā€ ā€“ and this is true whether youā€™re listening to Mozart or Metallica.āš” Clothes made fromā€¦potatoes? An idea to turn fibres from potato stems into fabric has turned from concept to reality. If we can use potato fibres instead of other more energy intensive materials, the designers say, we could reduce the environmental footprint of clothing production.Ā šŸŽ™ļø Hosts Timothy Revell and Christie Taylor discuss with guests Alexandra Thompson, Leah Crane, Grace Wade and Madeleine Cuff.šŸ“• To read more about these stories, visit newscientist.com.
  • 264. 1 in 5 coma patients have awareness; How to end the opioid crisis; ā€˜Wowā€™ space signalā€¦is lasers?

    24:56||Season 1, Ep. 264
    #264Some people in comas can understand whatā€™s happening around them. Previously estimated to be 1 in 10, that figure has now shot up to 1 in 5 ā€“ meaning this hidden awareness is much more common than we realised.Ā Another new drug has been approved to reverse opioid overdoses. Zurnai is more powerful than previous medications, which may be useful as the supply of illicit drugs becomes increasingly toxic. But with the opioid epidemic having killed more than 80,000 people in the US last year alone, are there ways to abate this crisis so fewer people overdose in the first place?The mysterious Wow! signal, detected by the Big Ear radio telescope in the 70s, was an unusual burst of radio waves that astronomers couldnā€™t explain ā€“ except, for some, the answer was aliens. Alien hunters have clung to this as the best potential evidence of extraterrestrial life, as the signal's origins have remained unexplained for 50 years. But we may have just figured out the answer to where it came from.Ā Many mainframe computers in big organisations like banks, airlines and government departments still rely on ancient computer code dating back to the 60s. The trouble is, as mainframe computers have gone out of use in most other contexts, the programming language COBOL is no longer taught to up-and-coming coders. Could AI help, as our understanding of COBOL dies out?Record fast cooling in part of the Atlantic Ocean is baffling scientists. This cooling isnā€™t linked to the normal La NiƱa wind patterns, so what else is at play? And how could it affect our global weather in the coming season?Hosts Rowan Hooper and Christie Taylor discuss with guests Alexandra Thompson, Grace Wade and Alex Wilkins.To read more about these stories, visit newscientist.com.
  • 263. Anxiety Special: The science of anxiety and how to make it work for you

    25:17||Season 1, Ep. 263
    #263Anxiety. Weā€™ve all felt it ā€“ some worse than others. But what exactly causes anxiety and why are some of us more likely to be hit by it? Science is finally unpacking the ins and outs of this evolutionary response.Whether you experience anxiety getting on a plane or when doing something out of your comfort zone, understanding why it happens is the best way to take control of it.In this special episode, New Scientist journalists and expert guests look at the phenomenon of anxiety. What is happening inside the brain when anxiety kicks in? Why do we need to better understand our own internal, bodily processes to fight anxiety? How much of our tendency towards anxiety is down to genetics?And they bring actionable advice too, including simple, science-backed lifestyle changes you can make to become less anxious, plus the surprising reasons anxiety can actually be a good thing ā€“ and how to make it work for youHost Christie Taylor discusses with guests Alexis Wnuk, Eleanor Parsons, Sahib Khalsa, David Robson, Caroline Hickman and Todd Kashdan, with additional reporting from Helen Thomson, Graham Lawton and Bethan Ackerley.Ā This episode is part of a special issue of New Scientist magazine. Find all the articles at https://www.newscientist.com/issue/3485/
  • 262. Deepest hole ever drilled in Earthā€™s mantle; Glitter on Mars; Quantum telepathy

    27:00||Season 1, Ep. 262
    #262Geologists have just drilled deeper into Earthā€™s mantle than ever before. The hole is in an area of the ocean called Atlantis Massif, where the upper mantle is exposed. Reaching 1268 metres deep, this incredible sample core could help uncover secrets to the very origins of life.Ancient human ancestors called Homo floresiensis and known as the ā€œhobbitsā€ may have evolved their short stature much faster than expected. Remains found on the Indonesian island of Flores suggest a much older group of hominins may have been slightly smaller, averaging just 1 metre tall, and possibly the ancestors of Homo floresiensis. How could this change the story of our mysterious cousins?Quantum telepathy may allow stock market traders to act faster and get richer. Using quantum entanglement, coordinating transactions in distant stock exchanges could happen faster than the speed of light. And surprisingly, this type of technology wouldnā€™t be hard to get up and running ā€“ so what happens if someone tries it?If we want to move to Mars one day, we have to make it a bit more enticing to live on. Ideas to terraform the Red Planet, or make it more Earth-like, have mostly been too expensive and unworkable. A method involving glittery clouds could be the answer to coaxing better conditions for human life.Ā Plus: The microbes and bacteria that can survive the harsh heat of your microwave; how the microbiome of a baby horse impacts its racing performance in adulthood; and the special trick leeches use to hunt the ultrafast blackworm.Hosts Christie Taylor and Timothy Revell discuss with guests Chen Ly, Sam Wong, Karmela Padavic-Callaghan and Alex Wilkins.To read more about these stories, visit newscientist.com.
  • 261. The first life on Earth; Banana-shaped galaxies; When is smartphone use ā€˜problematicā€™?

    31:08||Season 1, Ep. 261
    #261What was the first life on Earth like? Ancient fossils hint it could be a primitive kind of bacteria ā€“ but these 3.5 billion-year-old fossilised cells are controversial since theyā€™re vastly bigger than any modern bacteria. But thereā€™s now reason to believe that maybe, just maybe, they really are what they seem.Three game-changing drugs approved by the US for the treatment of Alzheimerā€™s disease may be less impressive than we first hoped. These are the first drugs to actually slow the progression of the condition ā€“ but they also come with risky side effects. Is the benefit worth the risk?Galaxies usually come in spiral or blob form, but it turns out there may be some that are shaped likeā€¦ bananas. First spotted by the Hubble Space Telescope, we initially thought their shape was a trick of light. But the much more powerful James Webb Space Telescope is seeing them too. The problem is this doesnā€™t fit with our understanding of how galaxies form ā€“ it may be time for a rewrite.Do you ever feel addicted to your smartphone? Well, thereā€™s a term for that ā€“ problematic smartphone use. The question is, what constitutes addiction and is your smartphone habit impacting you enough to be considered problematic? One group of researchers are working to find out, starting by looking at the link between problematic use and mental health in teenagers.The diversity of life on Earth may be best safeguarded on the moon. Parts of the lunar landscape are colder than anywhere on Earth, so it may be the best place to cryogenically freeze cells for things like fish, cows and even useful bacteria like those used in cheesemaking. But, as you might expect with the moon, such a biorepository faces some logistical challenges.Hosts Christie Taylor and Timothy Revell discuss with guests Michael Le Page, Alexandra Thompson, Alex Wilkins, Carissa Wong and James Woodford.To read more about these stories, visit newscientist.com.Find Dr Karan Explores here: https://www.drkaranrajan.com/podcast