
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The world's oldest known killer whale is presumed dead. At an estimated age of 100 years, 'Granny' was last seen with her family in October. The scientists who've followed her and her pod for four decades announced that they believe she has died somewhere in the North American Pacific. Adam Rutherford talks to evolutionary biologist Darren Croft of the University of Exeter about this remarkable animal and the insights that Granny and her clan have provided on killer whale social life and the evolution of the menopause.
Adam also hears how a 'kitchen' experiment with Silly Putty and the form of carbon known as graphene led to the creation of an ultra-sensitive electro-mechanical sensing material. G-putty may provide the basis for a continuous and wearable blood pressure monitor. It can also detect the footsteps of spiders. Professor Jonathan Coleman of Trinity College, Dublin explains how its properties arise from mixing the two materials.
Reporter Marnie Chesterton tells how a 700 tonne magnet was moved 3,000 miles by road and river across the United States, inciting both conspiracy theories and adulation. Now homed at Fermilab - the US's premier particle physics lab - the magnet is about to start probing the laws of the Universe in the Muon g-2 experiment.
BBC science correspondents Rebecca Morelle and Jonathan Amos pick their space and astronomy highlights for the coming year.
Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker.
By BBC Radio 44.4
283283 ratings
The world's oldest known killer whale is presumed dead. At an estimated age of 100 years, 'Granny' was last seen with her family in October. The scientists who've followed her and her pod for four decades announced that they believe she has died somewhere in the North American Pacific. Adam Rutherford talks to evolutionary biologist Darren Croft of the University of Exeter about this remarkable animal and the insights that Granny and her clan have provided on killer whale social life and the evolution of the menopause.
Adam also hears how a 'kitchen' experiment with Silly Putty and the form of carbon known as graphene led to the creation of an ultra-sensitive electro-mechanical sensing material. G-putty may provide the basis for a continuous and wearable blood pressure monitor. It can also detect the footsteps of spiders. Professor Jonathan Coleman of Trinity College, Dublin explains how its properties arise from mixing the two materials.
Reporter Marnie Chesterton tells how a 700 tonne magnet was moved 3,000 miles by road and river across the United States, inciting both conspiracy theories and adulation. Now homed at Fermilab - the US's premier particle physics lab - the magnet is about to start probing the laws of the Universe in the Muon g-2 experiment.
BBC science correspondents Rebecca Morelle and Jonathan Amos pick their space and astronomy highlights for the coming year.
Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker.

7,728 Listeners

529 Listeners

881 Listeners

1,042 Listeners

286 Listeners

5,487 Listeners

726 Listeners

1,929 Listeners

614 Listeners

92 Listeners

961 Listeners

419 Listeners

85 Listeners

833 Listeners

247 Listeners

352 Listeners

353 Listeners

479 Listeners

370 Listeners

227 Listeners

325 Listeners

3,183 Listeners

111 Listeners

64 Listeners

835 Listeners

1,001 Listeners

499 Listeners

612 Listeners

116 Listeners

285 Listeners

274 Listeners

65 Listeners

82 Listeners

2 Listeners