Ultrasound moves immune cells and triggers their response and more Prime Ministers Prizes for Science
The Science Show gives Australians unique insights into the latest scientific research and debate.
The Science Show gives Australians unique insights into the latest scientific research and debate.
Mathematics is a key tool in every scientific discipline
Life Scientist award for work on microbes and their role in regulating climate plus Varroa mites – a positive for native bees?
Michelle Simmons had received The Prime Minister's Science Prize for her work on quantum electronics.
The Science Show gives Australians unique insights into the latest scientific research and debate.
Nobel Prizes, Covid good luck and Mars Rover's link to QUT
Researchers have found school curriculums are missing the contributions of female scientists. Why is it so important we know the people behind the discoveries?
Mathematicians and their models might just be the world's most inconspicuous climate heroes.
What happens when two theories are pitted against one another? Are we any closer to knowing where consciousness arises?
This Australian father-daughter duo played a huge part in the science and philosophy instrumental in the mind-brain problem.
Sharon Carleton takes a look at his decades of work in this 2003 feature, coinciding with this year's Eccles Institute seminar at ANU.
All the science underway to protect our health, our environment... and our smartphones?
Some of the science on display at this year's Hobart-wide celebration of the big, small and occasionally glowy.
Sometimes we all need to sit in silence ... but is there ever really silence? Take a seat and let your ears provide the answer.
The Exploratorium in San Francisco opened in 1969, and went on to inspire our own science centres in Australia.
Scientists are harnessing the very small to explore very big things — from faults in massive structures to time reversal at the molecular level.
From a teenage enthusiast to a 100-year-old Nobel Prize winner, The Science Show explores the agelessness of wonder.
Climate change is already having far-reaching consequences, for our forests, our oceans and ourselves.
Testing magnets for CERN'S Large Hadron Collider is a high-stakes job, with serious consequences.
Come along for a midnight hunt at a secluded resort, and a dawn boat trip to the speck of land where Hollywood Blockbuster Castaway was filmed.
Meet two groups — one in Scotland, the other in the US state of Georgia — using science against floodwaters.
Tag along for a trip out to sea to meet a woman from the Solomon Islands who is tracking this looming danger in the Pacific Ocean.
Carl Smith takes a trip to the Pacific to catch up with scientists working to conserve the region's biodiversity.
A woman was among Australia's first three science graduates. But it's still far from a level playing field.
There's a scientific story behind Dame Edna's famous Gladioli, and it involves one of Australia's top botanists.
He's one of the most famous scientists ever. But who was Isaac Newton, really? Sharon Carleton presents a portrait like no other about the myths surrounding the genius.
Dark matter is assumed to be responsible for holding the universe together. So where is it?
Reflecting on Sir David Attenborough's decades-long contribution to our understanding of the natural world.
Dave Keeling started measuring carbon dioxide in 1958, Dave’s son Ralph continues his father’s work today.
And bee venom shows promise treating a range of cancers.