On the University of Bath Thought Train we sit down with an academic from the University to talk about their work and current events. On this week's show Dr Janet Withall is in the studio to talk about the Retirement in Action Study.
Feb 28, 2018•42 min
On the University of Bath Thought Train we sit down with an academic from the University to talk about their work and current events. On this week's show Dr Felia Allum is in the studio to talk about the culture of organised crime in Naples, Italy. She also discusses: - The link between Italian culture and organised crime - Where fact ends and fiction begins with shows like The Sopranos - How education is the starting point of the fight back against organised crime.
Feb 06, 2018•42 min
In this IPR Public Lecture Lord David Owen – former Foreign Secretary and founder of the Social Democratic Party – discusses his advocacy for leaving the EU, and explores what foreign policy might look like after Brexit. This IPR Public Lecture took place on 18 January 2018.
Jan 24, 2018•1 hr 40 min
Thursday 2 November 2017 at 7 pm East Building Lecture Theatre 1.1 The Renaissance in Prosthetics Sir Saaed Zahedi OBE, Technical Director, Blatchford
Jan 11, 2018•1 hr 4 min
On the University of Bath Thought Train we sit down with an academic from the University to talk about their work and current events. On this week's show Professor Anna Bull is in the studio to talk about modern Italy and the issues it faces. She also discusses: - The Italian's attitude towards austerity - Italy's thoughts on Brexit - The various political parties vying for power in the 2018 elections
Dec 21, 2017•45 min
Joint William Herschel Society and University of Bath Lecture. Dr Marek Kukula of the Royal Observatory Greenwich speaks about the connections between Astrophysics and everyday life. Our familiar surroundings are full of profound astronomical connections. Astronomy has left its mark on our minds from high art to popular culture, and even the smartphone in your pocket owes a debt to astrophysical research! Recorded at a public lecture given at the University of Bath on 23 November 2017.
Dec 19, 2017•1 hr 18 min
This talk presents a history of the Bayesian inference and subjective probability, as viewed by a Bayesian Physicist. Dr Colin Fox is a leading international expert in large-scale Bayesian inverse problems and Professor of Physics at the University of Otago, New Zealand.
Dec 18, 2017•1 hr 3 min
On the University of Bath Thought Train we sit down with an academic from the University to talk about their work and current events. In this week's show Dr Brett Edwards & Dr Mattia Cacciatori are in the studio to talk international law & order. They also discuss: - Donald Trump's approach to international diplomacy - The important questions about chemical weapons in Syria - Why individualism in war rarely heralds results
Dec 12, 2017•46 min
On the University of Bath Thought Train we sit down with an academic from the University to talk about their work and current events. Naomi Deering is this week's guest and talks to us about how making fake poo can benefit some of the world's poorest people. We also talk about: - How proper sanitation can benefit society in a multitude of ways - What you can do to become become a 'toilet twin' - Who first worked out the recipe for the best fake poo
Nov 20, 2017•31 min
In this special episode of the Thought Train we bring you three fascinating lectures from our most recent Discovery Series event held at the Royal Society in London. In this podcast Professor Keith Stokes, Dr Nick Longrich and Professor Carole Mundell are on hand to deliver 15 minute lectures rugby safety, mass extinctions and space-time.
Nov 14, 2017•56 min
In this IPR 'in conversation' event distinguished politician and peer Lord Blunkett discusses the changes that he has observed in Britain's political landscape during his eventful career, and shares some of the wisdom that has come with his experience. This IPR 'in conversation' event took place on 14 September 2017, as part of the symposium Politics, Fake News and the Post-Truth Era
Nov 06, 2017•1 hr 5 min
On the University of Bath Thought Train we sit down with an academic from the University to talk about their work and current events. Professor Carole Mundell (Dept. of Physics)is this week's guest and joins us to talk about: - The intricacies of black holes - What gamma bursts can teach us about space - The likelihood of life on other worlds - Flat earth theory
Sep 29, 2017•41 min
On the University of Bath Thought Train we sit down with an academic from the University to talk about their work and current events. Dr Ben Bowman (Dept. of PoLIS)is this week's guest and joins us to talk about: - The aftermath of the 2017 General Election - A perceived liberal bias in the British education system - The power of the youth vote - Electoral reform
Jul 12, 2017•52 min
In this IPR 'in conversation' event BBC Director of Radio and Education James Purnell discusses the Corporation's mandate and how it will be fulfilled in a future of fake news, changing processes of democratic debate and an uncertain British identity. This IPR 'in conversation' event took place on 21 June 2017
Jul 07, 2017•1 hr 10 min
In 1990, Harvard biologist Stephen Jay Gould posed an intriguing question. What would happen if we were able to re-run the Tape of Life? Would small perturbations to the starting conditions yield radically different outcomes, or would the course of evolution follow a familiar path, differing only in its details? The first worldview sees evolution as an essentially open-ended process of unlimited potential, while the second regards evolution as more predictable. If the latter is true, can we make...
May 22, 2017•59 min
How do you make materials that make themselves? Karen Edler's research looks at ways of getting molecules in solution to find the middle ground between completely dissolving and being totally insoluble, to persuade them to put themselves together into complex and intricate structures. This work looks at self-assembly in a range of different systems, from lipid nanodiscs through to porous oxides, for applications from catalysis to drug delivery. By attempting to understand how structures form, th...
May 05, 2017•54 min
In this IPR Public Lecture Dame Fiona Reynolds - former Director-General of the National Trust and Master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge - reflects on her efforts to protect natural beauty and sites of cultural heritage, as well as the efforts of conservationists and urban planners through history. This IPR Public Lecture took place on 27 March 2017
Mar 31, 2017•40 min
In this IPR Public Lecture Professor Janine Wedel - IPR Global Chair and Professor in the School of Policy, Government, and International Affairs at George Mason University - examines the rise of Donald Trump and his populist contemporaries, analysing their appeal and their precedents in post-Soviet Eastern Europe. This IPR Public Lecture took place on 15 March 2017
Mar 22, 2017•56 min
In this IPR Public Lecture, Astronomer Royal, life peer and Cambridge scholar Lord Rees surveys the century ahead and the prospects it offers mankind. From AI and robotics to climate change and mass extinction, he makes the case that this is a time of great potential - for success as well as catastrophe. This IPR Public Lecture took place on 9 February 2017.
Feb 10, 2017•1 hr
In this IPR Public Lecture, veteran diplomat and author of Article 50 Lord Kerr of Kinlochard shares his insight into the negotiating process Britain will go through to leave the European Union. Examining Theresa May's strategy and the history of relations between Brussels and London, the life peer sets out five possible scenarios for the future of Brexit Britain. This IPR Public Lecture took place on 26 January 2017.
Jan 27, 2017•54 min
In this IPR Public Lecture, eminent economist Professor Roger Farmer of UCLA takes a look at financial crises, and their fundamental causes. Drawing on a number of novel economic models, he makes his suggestions for monetary and fiscal policy. This IPR Public Lecture took place on 22 November 2016.
Jan 17, 2017•50 min
Andrew Hall compares the sounds of bells to the frequencies of chemicals captured by a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectrometer. http://blogs.bath.ac.uk/csct/2016/a-chemical-chorus/
Dec 13, 2016•5 sec
Andrew Hall compares the sounds of bells to the frequencies of chemicals captured by a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectrometer. http://blogs.bath.ac.uk/csct/2016/a-chemical-chorus/
Dec 13, 2016•4 sec
Andrew Hall compares the sounds of bells to the frequencies of chemicals captured by a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectrometer. http://blogs.bath.ac.uk/csct/2016/a-chemical-chorus/
Dec 13, 2016•4 sec
Andrew Hall compares the sounds of bells to the frequencies of chemicals captured by a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectrometer. http://blogs.bath.ac.uk/csct/2016/a-chemical-chorus/
Dec 13, 2016•6 sec
Hand Bell by University of Bath
Dec 12, 2016•6 sec
BBC Wiltshire's Eva Piatrikova on University of Bath's Sports Performance Conference by University of Bath
Dec 02, 2016•4 min
Co-founder of Motivation, David Constantine MBE, delivers the 48th Annual Designability Lecture at the University of Bath, talking about his experiences as a wheelchair user and creating a charity / social enterprise to give disabled people in the developing world access to wheelchairs.
Dec 02, 2016•44 min
In this inaugural lecture, Dean of the Faculty of Science, Professor Nick Brook, discusses some of the latest results from an experiment that uses the Large Hadron Collider. The Large Hadron Collider beauty (LCHb) experiment studies the decay and properties of particles containing heavy (charm and beauty) quarks, produced in the forward region from proton-proton collisions at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). It uses the LHC as an intensity frontier machine and has recorded the world's large...
Dec 02, 2016•51 min
Aerospace Engineering students Sam, Nick and Elliot discuss their Lab2Moon project: LunaDome on BBC Radio Bristol. The team aims to win an international competition to design and develop an experiment to be sent to the moon in late 2017.
Nov 22, 2016•7 min