SciPod
SciPod
Listen to the story behind the science. SciPod boasts a rich reputation of bringing a new, authentic and easy communication style to lovers of science and technology. Best of all, you can listen for free! so what are you waiting for, click play and start enjoying.www.scipod.global
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10 iul. 2026
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Omejeni v gibanju: medosebni odnosi v pogojih skrajne gibalne neaktivnosti 22.04.2026 13:03
Ko si predstavljamo raziskave, povezane z vesoljskimi odpravami, pogosto pomislimo na rakete, astronavte in tišino orbite. A se nekatere najpomembnejše ugotovitve o življenju zunaj Zemlje odvijajo daleč od vesolja, v tihih sobah, kjer ljudje več tednov nepretrgoma ležijo. To so študije dolgotrajnega ležanja, edinstven raziskovalni model, ki simulira učinke mikrogravitacije na človeško telo tako, d...
Where Gas Meets Liquid: Rethinking Carbon Capture for a Net-Zero Future 14.04.2026 14:42
The story of climate change is often told through numbers. Rising temperatures, increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide, and tightening timelines toward global climate targets dominate headlines. Yet behind these numbers lies a quieter, more complex story of engineering innovation. It is a story about how we might redesign industrial systems to reduce emissions without dismantling the infrastructure...
The Power of Crossing Disciplines: How Blending Arts and Sciences Transforms Education 14.04.2026 10:20
In many people’s minds, the arts and the sciences still occupy separate worlds. Science is often imagined as precise, objective, and technical, while the arts are seen as expressive, subjective, and emotional. These stereotypes are reinforced by the way higher education is organized, with students urged to specialize early and remain safely within disciplinary boundaries. Yet the challenges that s...
The Hidden Architecture of Immunity: How Cells Find Their Way in a Bird’s Body 08.04.2026 12:19
Deep inside the body of a developing bird lies a small, often overlooked organ that quietly orchestrates one of the most essential processes of life: the making of immune cells. This organ, known as the bursa of Fabricius, is not widely known outside scientific circles, yet it plays a central role in shaping how birds defend themselves against disease. Within its folds, an intricate story unfolds,...
Green Steel and the Price of a Cleaner Future 07.04.2026 10:43
Steel is everywhere. It forms the skeletons of skyscrapers, the frames of cars, the rails beneath trains, and the machines that build modern economies. Yet behind this essential material lies a difficult truth. Steelmaking is one of the world’s most carbon intensive industries. Each ton of conventional steel can release nearly two tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. As countries race to re...
A Model for the Rarest Cancers: Choroid Plexus Carcinoma and the Li-Fraumeni Inheritable Cancer Syndrome. 02.04.2026 17:24
In the landscape of childhood cancer, there are diseases so rare that even many physicians will never encounter a single case. Yet within these rare diagnoses lie some of the deepest biological insights and some of the most urgent clinical challenges. Choroid plexus carcinoma, often abbreviated as CPC, is one such disease. It is a malignant brain tumor that arises predominantly in very young child...
Hidden in the Grass: The Rising Threat of Powassan Virus 02.04.2026 9:14
On a warm spring afternoon in the northeastern United States, a walk through tall grass can feel harmless, even restorative. Yet hidden in the undergrowth is a growing public health concern that few people recognize by name. The Powassan virus is rare, but it is dangerous, and its quiet rise is reshaping how scientists think about tick borne disease, climate change, and neurological illness. In a...
Invisible Wounds, Visible Signals: Finding Brain Signals of Military Blast 01.04.2026 12:13
In the years since the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, many military veterans have carried home an invisible burden. Blast-related mild traumatic brain injury, often called blast-mTBI, has been described as the signature injury of those conflicts. It is labeled mild, yet for many who experience it, the consequences are anything but. Veterans report persistent headaches, sleep disturbances, memory la...
Being on Someone’s Side: What It Means to Act and Feel on Behalf of Others 31.03.2026 10:03
What does it really mean to act or feel on behalf of another person? The phrase is familiar in everyday life. Parents apologise on behalf of their children, lawyers speak on behalf of their clients, and friends feel anger or pride on behalf of those they care about. These cases seem ordinary, yet they raise difficult questions. Whose action is this, exactly? Whose feeling is being expressed? And w...
How Unnecessary Neonatal Unit Admissions Affect Families and Overstretch Care Systems 30.03.2026 8:36
In many hospitals around the world, the neonatal unit is seen as the safest place for a newborn baby who needs anything more than basic care provided in the postpartum unit. Yet this well-intentioned reflex to protect a baby “just-in-case” can carry hidden costs. A new study led by Dr Indira Narayanan, neonatologist and researcher at Georgetown University Medical Center, suggests that a small but...
How Light, Air, and Time Shape the Future of Two-Dimensional Materials 25.03.2026 13:13
Over the past two decades, materials science has been quietly transforming the technological foundations of everyday life. While consumers notice faster phones and more capable computers, the deeper story unfolds at the scale of atoms. Scientists are learning how to isolate and control materials that are only a few atoms thick, revealing forms of matter whose behavior differs profoundly from their...
After the Death of God: Reimagining the Divine with Alain Badiou 23.03.2026 10:58
What if the most honest way to speak about God today is to begin by admitting that the old images no longer work? For centuries, many believers pictured God as a supreme being who rules the universe from beyond it, guarantees meaning, and stands as the ultimate explanation for everything that exists. Yet modern history, philosophical critique, and even theology itself have steadily eroded this pic...
From Alewives to Bass: Discovering the Viruses Lurking in North America's Fish 20.03.2026 13:25
In rivers and lakes across North America, fish carry secrets invisible to the naked eye, secrets that researchers with the U.S. Geological Survey’s Eastern Ecological Science Center are determined to help uncover. With a passion for aquatic health and an interest in viral sleuthing, these researchers, including Dr. Clayton Raines, a fish biologist, have conducted groundbreaking research that is re...
After the Storm: Protecting Companion Animals in Crisis 19.03.2026 13:14
When disaster strikes, the images that dominate news coverage are almost always human centered. We see flooded neighborhoods, collapsed buildings, families waiting in shelters, and exhausted first responders. Yet woven into nearly every one of those scenes is another presence, often trembling at the end of a leash or peering out from a carrier. Companion animals are not an afterthought in modern l...
Blending Biology and Engineering to Repair Damaged Nerves 18.03.2026 8:55
When a peripheral nerve is badly damaged due to injury, the consequences can be life-changing. Hands that no longer feel heat or cold, muscles that will not respond to the brain’s commands, and pain that lingers for years are all common outcomes. Surgeons can sometimes stitch nerves back together, but when there is a section of nerve missing entirely, repair becomes far more complex. For decades,...
The Long Shadow: The Science Behind Long COVID 16.03.2026 10:58
Four years after the first lockdowns and daily case counts faded from headlines, COVID 19 continues to shape lives in quieter but deeply disruptive ways. For millions of people around the world, the virus did not simply end with a negative test. Instead, it left behind a complex and often invisible condition known as long COVID. This lingering illness challenges how medicine understands recovery,...
Ulcerative Colitis and the Hidden Logic of Chronic Disease 13.03.2026 15:17
Ulcerative colitis, often called UC, is a chronic inflammatory disease of the large intestine that is becoming more common across the world, including among teenagers and young adults. For many patients it begins with subtle warning signs such as abdominal discomfort, diarrhea, fatigue, or traces of blood in the stool. Over time these symptoms can escalate into painful and frightening flare-ups th...
The Quiet Gatekeepers: How Bank Size Influences Who Gets a Loan 13.03.2026 13:03
On any given day in the United States, millions of financial decisions are made quietly behind desks and computer screens. A loan officer reviews an application from a small construction company. An algorithm evaluates a mortgage request from a young family. A bank executive signs off on a merger that will reshape the local banking landscape. Each decision may seem technical or routine. Yet togeth...
Held in Place: Relationships Under Extreme Inactivity 06.03.2026 10:57
When we imagine research linked to space travel, we often picture rockets, astronauts, and the silence of orbit. Yet some of the most important insights into life beyond Earth happen far from space, in quiet rooms where people lie still for weeks at a time. These are bed rest studies, a unique research model that simulates the effects of microgravity on the human body by asking participants to rem...
Unraveling Azoospermia: Using Genetics to Avoid Futile Sperm Extraction 05.03.2026 9:40
For many couples struggling to conceive, a male infertility diagnosis can feel like a closed door. Roughly half of all infertility cases worldwide stem from male factors, and among these, one of the most frustrating conditions is non-obstructive azoospermia (or NOA for short), a complete absence of sperm caused not by a physical blockage but by a failure of sperm production itself. Until recently,...
How Smarter Catalysts Could Unlock the Future of Hydrogen Energy 04.03.2026 10:25
Hydrogen is often presented as one of the most promising tools we have for cutting carbon emissions, especially in parts of the economy where clean alternatives are limited. Heavy industry, long-distance transport, and chemical manufacturing all need large amounts of energy that cannot easily be supplied by batteries alone. Green hydrogen, produced using renewable electricity, could fill that gap....
When Blood Vessels Speak: How Lupus Turns the Body’s Gatekeepers into Active Messengers of Inflammation 04.03.2026 13:43
You may imagine your vasculature as a vast and silent network of tubes, dutifully carrying blood, oxygen, and nutrients to every organ and tissue. These vessels seem purely mechanical, like plumbing hidden behind walls, doing their job quietly and invisibly. Yet modern biology has revealed a far richer and more surprising reality. Blood vessels are lined with living, sensing, responding cells call...
From Hospitals to Households: How Decentralised Care Is Transforming Tuberculosis Treatment for Children 26.02.2026 15:20
Tuberculosis remains one of the world’s oldest and most stubborn infectious diseases, yet the way health systems respond to it is often dogged by modern challenges. Clinics are overcrowded, families must travel long distances, and children with vague or non-specific symptoms are frequently overlooked. For decades, tuberculosis care has been organised around hospitals and specialised facilities, ev...
Should I Stay or Should I Go? The Hidden Forces Behind Your Health Plan Loyalty 12.02.2026 8:10
If you ask someone in the United States whether to reconsider their health insurance plan choices, they may sigh, roll their eyes, and offer a story about navigating a maze of deductibles, networks, and confusing brochures. In practice, most people end up doing the simplest thing possible: they stay in the same plan they are already in. Economists have long noticed this pattern. Even when plans ra...
Hidden Engineers: How Earthworms Could Help Us Weather a Changing Climate 04.02.2026 11:51
If you were to observe a quiet Dutch pasture, you might not guess that one of the most important climate-resilience workers in the landscape is silently engineering the soil beneath the grass. However, just below your feet, an unassuming creature plays a role in buffering floods, preserving crops during droughts, and quietly maintaining the natural plumbing system of the land. This creature is the...
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