
2 Research Teams; 2 Different Ideas on 2I/Borisov
It’s a comet that has the astronomical community. Is it from beyond our solar system? Is it made up of pebbles or something finer? Join Matt as he chats with
It’s a comet that has the astronomical community. Is it from beyond our solar system? Is it made up of pebbles or something finer? Join Matt as he chats with
As a seven year project to build a space debris hunting laser at Mount Stromlo comes to fruition, we celebrate 60 years since Yuri Gagarin and 40 years since the
We’re thrilled to welcome expedition 64’s flight engineer to Talkin’ Science. Colonel Mark Vande Hei beams in from the Baikonur Cosmodrome to chat to Matt about the mission ahead of
On this Talkin’ Science – Australia will have it’s own space command next year, joining other world powers in orbit. Astronomers have gotten a pretty good view of 2I/Borisov, as
Michael Davis AO beams in to chat about the Aussie Space Forum that took place in Adelaide last week.
Dr Graham Walker loves his job and he loves teaching others about science too. It’s all part of his outreach program that’s taken him to Africa, Asia and even right
We’re following three pretty big stories this week on Talkin’ Science. As Japan launches a space junk hunter, French wine that spent a year on the space station gets taste
Dr Brad’s back for another installment of Talkin’ Science. On this episode, we dive into a new study hinting at where Mars’ water went and Oumuamua – the intergalactic visitor – may actually be a shard of a planetoid… plus astronomers think seven of these visitors visit us every year…
Dr Luke Daly at the University of Glasgow led a recovery team to a very rare and precious carbonaceous chondrite meteorite. The Global Fireball Oversatory managed to guide the team to a radius of 400 meters to allow for a very fast recovery – maintaining the purity of the specimen.
Deadly Science was founded by Corey Tutt, the 2020 NSW Young Person of the Year, to meet the demand for STEM resources in remote Australian schools – and to show First Nations children that they too can be part of STEM.
Cosmonauts have fixed a leak in one of the oldest modules on the Space Station. Russia and China sign up to build their own station in lunar orbit and dust found in the Chicxulub Crater confirms the cause of the dinosaur extinction.
Dr Adam Stevens beams in to discuss new research pointing to bigger galaxies gobbling up the star forming gas in their neighbouring smaller galaxies…
Win a free trip to the moon… you’ll just need to convince a Japanese billionaire you’re worth it. A newly discovered exo planet could help us understand life and we may finally understand the moon beam excited by solar photons which was first discovered in 90’s.
PhD student Marcus Lower beams in to Trekzone to chat about the mega Neutron Stars called Magnetars on this Talkin’ Science Interview.
What a show this week, Dr Brad and Matt dive into black holes, a lot of black holes. Not only is one seemingly responsible for shredding a star but scientists believe they’ve found a nest of small ones.
Dr Matt Owers led a study of over 13, 000 galaxies to further our understanding of the construct of the universe. The findings led to some incredible discoveries that have already been published, but now the complete survey has been released.
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Astronomers from the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research have made a discovery of a new cosmic phenomenon: ASKAP J1832-0911. This object emits pulses of
It’s the end of the third week in June 2025, we went from learning about International Dark Sky Week to quantum computing potentially leading the
Astronomers have found that it is not how much gas a galaxy has, but where that gas is located, that determines whether new stars form.
A Microsoft artificial intelligence called Aurora can outperform existing Earth system forecasts, according to international scientists.
Creating new drugs or medical treatments are some of the great promises of quantum computing. Scientists at the University of Sydney have, for the first time, used a quantum computer to simulate the chemical dynamics of real compounds, a vital step towards modelling more complex molecules and designing bespoke chemicals that could lead to improved sunscreen or skin cancer treatments.
International researchers have predicted gravitational waves produced by two black holes with what an associated editorial has called “landmark precision”.
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