Launch in new window
The Tuesday Wire's weekly dive into the wide world of science.
Featuring a rotating cast of smart people including Chemist Professor Allan Blackman and Physicist Dr Cushla McGoverin.
Thanks to MOTAT, the museum inspiring the innovators of tomorrow.
On Dear Science with AUT’s Marcus Jones we are talking about a sharp drop in coronavirus cases in South Korea, magic methyl and the potency of drugs and how nuclear war could alter the world’s climate
On Dear Science with AUT’s Allan Blackman we are talking about the controlling of academic discussion and washing your hands versus using sanitiser.
On Dear Science with AUT’s Marcus Jones we have a coronavirus update as well as how China has managed to slow the spread of the virus, a brightening star and a genome study about rats in New York.
On Dear Science with AUT’s Allan Blackman, we are talking about machine learning for antibiotics, fighting the rise of fraudulent whisky, and antimatter atoms
On Dear Science with AUT’s Marcus Jones, we are talking about when the coronavirus might peak, electric bacteria from thin air, and Minke whales struggling to communicate over the din of the ocean.
On Dear Science with AUT’s Allan Blackman talks to us about problematic funding issues, speedy retractions of faulty papers and possible early cancer diagnoses.
On Dear Science with AUT's Marcus Jones we are discussing an update on coronavirus, a milestone in forming metallic hydrogen, and the potential for life on planets orbiting black holes.
On Dear Science with AUT's Allan Blackman we are talking about the mathematically perfect cup of joe, a star in the Orion constellation losing its spot in the "Top 20 Brightest Stars" and a paper about bird droppings and graphene.
On Dear Science with AUT's Marcus Jones we are talking about a new virus that is spreading at an alarming rate, ozone-depleting gases that are heating up the Arctic, and an "agricultural revolution" in the UK.
On Dear Science with AUT's Allan Blackman we are talking about scientific anniversaries and what happens when a science paper is retracted.