Category: Uncategorized
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105: A City on Mars with Zach Weinersmith

What it would really entail to conquer the relentless Martian elements, engineer a thriving, self-reliant biosphere, and craft life-preserving abodes within the alien realms of lava tubes? Zach Weinersmith is the cartoonist behind the popular webcomic, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal. He, along with his partner in science, Kelly Weinersmith, have just published a new book entitled, ‘A…
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Vote for Nate! (Special Announcement)

Link to Vote: https://vote.signalaward.com/PublicVoting#/2022/individual-episodes/general/science-education The Show About Science is a finalist in the 1st Annual Signal Awards. Your vote can help us win a listener’s choice award in the Science & Education category!! We can’t do this without your support, so please vote for Nate and The Show About Science. Listener’s Choice voting for Signal…
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094: The Art of DALL-E 2 with Mark Chen

DALL-E 2 is a new AI system that can create realistic images and art from written text descriptions. Mark Chen is a research scientist at OpenAI, the company the created DALL-E 2. He joins Nate on this episode to explain how AI is putting the art in artificial intelligence. Sign up to make your own…
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093: The Physics of Baseball with Alan Nathan
Alan Nathan has been a Professor in the Department of Physics at the University of Illinois since 1977, but for the past 10 years, he has expanded his research interests to focus on the physics of baseball. His work looks at the dynamics of the collision between the ball and bat and the aerodynamics of…
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091: Proteins and Proteomics with Neil Kelleher

Proteins are one of the main drivers of human diseases. Scientists are now mapping all of the proteins in the human body in a similar way to how the Human Genome Project mapped genes. On this episode of The Show About Science, Neil Kelleher, PhD invites Nate to his lab on the campus of Northwestern…
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090: The Tale of Tails with Bo Xia
Why don’t I have a tail? That’s the question that Bo Xia asked himself when he was a little kid. Bo is now a PhD candidate at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Bo’s latest research attempts to answer his childhood question by identifying the mutation that resulted in ancestral humans losing their tails. On this…
