
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Scientists this week announced hopeful results in two of the big COVID-19 vaccination trials. Trudie Lang, Professor of Global Health at the Nuffield Department of Medicine, Oxford, describes some of the methodology used, what the efficacy statistic means, and how the novel approach of inserting mRNA rather than deactivated virus parts, is so exciting.
Prof Charles Cockell has been investigating how bacteria might be grown in space on lumps of asteroid to extract precious minerals, and as Kim McAllister reports, his lab is itself in orbit.
And it is just a few weeks since the UK, and several other countries, signed up to a set of bilateral agreements with the US called the Artemis Accords. These are an attempt to update previous outer space treaties on how countries - and indeed companies - might mine and use resources in space, given that no-one can currently legally claim sovereignty. As Dr Thomas Cheney of the Open University and Prof Jill Stuart of the LSE describe, the Accords have been greeted in certain quarters with some discord.
Presented by Marnie Chesterton
Made in collaboration with The Open University.
By BBC Radio 44.4
285285 ratings
Scientists this week announced hopeful results in two of the big COVID-19 vaccination trials. Trudie Lang, Professor of Global Health at the Nuffield Department of Medicine, Oxford, describes some of the methodology used, what the efficacy statistic means, and how the novel approach of inserting mRNA rather than deactivated virus parts, is so exciting.
Prof Charles Cockell has been investigating how bacteria might be grown in space on lumps of asteroid to extract precious minerals, and as Kim McAllister reports, his lab is itself in orbit.
And it is just a few weeks since the UK, and several other countries, signed up to a set of bilateral agreements with the US called the Artemis Accords. These are an attempt to update previous outer space treaties on how countries - and indeed companies - might mine and use resources in space, given that no-one can currently legally claim sovereignty. As Dr Thomas Cheney of the Open University and Prof Jill Stuart of the LSE describe, the Accords have been greeted in certain quarters with some discord.
Presented by Marnie Chesterton
Made in collaboration with The Open University.

7,649 Listeners

519 Listeners

880 Listeners

1,046 Listeners

292 Listeners

5,511 Listeners

1,798 Listeners

721 Listeners

2,101 Listeners

1,919 Listeners

599 Listeners

966 Listeners

412 Listeners

83 Listeners

759 Listeners

731 Listeners

217 Listeners

332 Listeners

364 Listeners

475 Listeners

361 Listeners

233 Listeners

308 Listeners

3,169 Listeners

113 Listeners

65 Listeners

817 Listeners

555 Listeners

642 Listeners

387 Listeners

239 Listeners

56 Listeners

75 Listeners

74 Listeners