询价
NanoTemper 官方博客

8 science podcasts we’re binge listening to and learning from

3 min read
四月 8, 2020
Headphones continuous line art colored with green and blue featured image

Here at NanoTemper, many of us are passionate podcast aficionados and follow podcasts as a leisure activity to be entertained, to learn something new, and to generally let our minds wander. With that in mind, we want to share our favorite podcasts with you, many of them of course with a science-focus. We hope they’ll give you some food for thought.


1.
The Dropout

Follow the suspenseful story of Elizabeth Holmes, a once-celebrated Biotech visionary, who is allegedly responsible for one of the most scandalous cases of fraud the industry has seen so far. The Podcast documents the investigation of Rebecca Jarvis from ABC Radio who manages to tell an interesting story about a daring science and biotechnology enterprise, while making it as suspenseful as a great true-crime podcast. Listen here.


2.
13 Minutes to the Moon

The BBC has created a wonderful documentary about the crucial 13 minutes that passed for the Apollo 11 astronauts who started their descent from the lunar orbit to land on the moon. The podcast not only describes in fantastic detail what happened to Armstrong, Collins, and Aldrin but also explores the hardship and incredible effort invested by so many scientists and engineers to get them there safely. Listen here.


3.
A History of the World in 100 Objects

Here’s another wonderful BBC experience and a classic at this point. The podcast follows Neil McGregor, director of the British Museum, on a tour through his workplace while describing 100 objects he finds laying out the history of human development from hand axes and early pottery to the credit card and solar lamp. Listen here.


4.
The Habitat

Have the shelter-at-home orders been frustrating enough to make you think that being an astronaut on Mars would be easy? Well, think twice. Six volunteers are secluded on a remote mountain in Hawaii…that’s supposed to imitate Mars. They’re working as astronauts for a year so NASA can better plan for when the real blast off comes along. Follow this experiment with host Lynn Levy, who has been communicating with the team through audio diaries, learning about their discoveries, frustrations, and up-and-down relationships with each other. Listen here.


5.
99% Invisible

Do you ever see inflatable men at used car lots and think, “How did they become a fixture?” Probably not. But 99% Invisible, created and hosted by Roman Mars, dives into the architecture and design we may not ponder yet still help shape our world, like where fortune cookies come from and why Sigmund Freud chose a couch and not an armchair. Listen here.


6.
Radiolab

Since 2002, Radiolab has been devoted to investigating “a strange world.” Radiolab has won Peabody Awards and a National Academies Communication Award “for their investigative use of radio to make science accessible to broad audiences.” The show has an archive of hundreds of episodes and has toured in sold-out shows in the US. Listen here.


7.
You, Me & The Big C

Cancer will directly affect more than one in three people in their lifetime, but nobody can avoid the effects it has on our society as a whole. So why do we seem so afraid to talk about it? Rachael Bland, Deborah James, and Lauren Mahon candidly discuss everything that comes with one of the most pressing medical issues of our time, from the psychological impact of a cancer diagnosis, undergoing treatment, and coming to terms with an encroaching end of life, in a way that is funny, honest, and powerful. Listen here.


8.
In Our Time

This BBC podcast has a diverse variety of episodes that each follow the “history of an idea.” Make sure to check out the episode on Venus. It’s an interesting planet: it rotates backward at walking speed and has a day that’s longer than its year. That’s just the beginning of what makes it fascinating. Learn why Venus has been called Earth’s twin and what Venus may tell us about our own planet. Listen here.