
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Physics tells us that when matter is created, antimatter should be as well. But while the Universe is full of matter, there’s surprisingly little antimatter to be found. To try and understand this imbalance, a team have built a detector kept just above absolute zero which they are using to look for a hypothesised, ultra-rare type of particle decay that could create matter without antimatter.
Research article: The CUORE Collaboration
News and Views: Cryogenic mastery aids bid to spot matter creation
Subsidence of coastal cities makes them more vulnerable to sea-level rise, and tackling ‘crazy ants’ with a parasitic fungus.
Research Highlight: Global cities are sinking — and humans are partly to blame
Research Highlight: Marauding crazy ants come to grief when a fungus comes to call
Bacteria are well known for their ability to share genes, which they often do using small circles of DNA called plasmids. But while plasmids are common in bacteria, a long-standing mystery has been why they are absent in a group of cholera-causing strains of Vibrio cholerae. Now, a team might have solved this mystery, by discovering two previously unknown DNA defence systems that eliminate plasmids, hidden in the bacteria's genomes.
Research article: Jaskólska et al.
News and Views: Bacterial defence systems degrade plasmid invaders
We discuss some highlights from the Nature Briefing. This time, what smelling jars from an Egyptian tomb has revealed about ancient burial practices, and the latest report from the IPCC.
Science: Ancient smells reveal secrets of Egyptian tomb
Nature: IPCC’s starkest message yet: extreme steps needed to avert climate disaster
Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.5
708708 ratings
Physics tells us that when matter is created, antimatter should be as well. But while the Universe is full of matter, there’s surprisingly little antimatter to be found. To try and understand this imbalance, a team have built a detector kept just above absolute zero which they are using to look for a hypothesised, ultra-rare type of particle decay that could create matter without antimatter.
Research article: The CUORE Collaboration
News and Views: Cryogenic mastery aids bid to spot matter creation
Subsidence of coastal cities makes them more vulnerable to sea-level rise, and tackling ‘crazy ants’ with a parasitic fungus.
Research Highlight: Global cities are sinking — and humans are partly to blame
Research Highlight: Marauding crazy ants come to grief when a fungus comes to call
Bacteria are well known for their ability to share genes, which they often do using small circles of DNA called plasmids. But while plasmids are common in bacteria, a long-standing mystery has been why they are absent in a group of cholera-causing strains of Vibrio cholerae. Now, a team might have solved this mystery, by discovering two previously unknown DNA defence systems that eliminate plasmids, hidden in the bacteria's genomes.
Research article: Jaskólska et al.
News and Views: Bacterial defence systems degrade plasmid invaders
We discuss some highlights from the Nature Briefing. This time, what smelling jars from an Egyptian tomb has revealed about ancient burial practices, and the latest report from the IPCC.
Science: Ancient smells reveal secrets of Egyptian tomb
Nature: IPCC’s starkest message yet: extreme steps needed to avert climate disaster
Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6,199 Listeners
928 Listeners
599 Listeners
810 Listeners
610 Listeners
413 Listeners
1,372 Listeners
342 Listeners
966 Listeners
0 Listeners
513 Listeners
16 Listeners
4 Listeners
355 Listeners
398 Listeners
503 Listeners
107 Listeners
500 Listeners