100 episodes

The Australian podcast about science, health and technology news. Join Ed Brown and his panel of co-hosts each week as we talk about the latest and coolest research and discoveries in the world of science. We're joined by special guests from all over the science field: doctors, professors, nurses, teachers and more.

Science On Top The Science on Top Team

    • Science
    • 4.9 • 23 Ratings

The Australian podcast about science, health and technology news. Join Ed Brown and his panel of co-hosts each week as we talk about the latest and coolest research and discoveries in the world of science. We're joined by special guests from all over the science field: doctors, professors, nurses, teachers and more.

    A Lot Of Poop

    A Lot Of Poop

    Hosts: Ed Brown, Penny Dumsday, Lucas Randall

    00:00:30 A team in Kenya and the UK have discovered a microbe that completely protects mosquitoes against the malaria parasite.
    00:10:17 Everybody poops, but if you don't it's very bad as one unfortunate record-breaking lizard found out.
    00:14:22 This year we've seen three big records broken in solar power efficiency.

    • 21 min
    A quick update

    A quick update

    An update on what's happening with the show.
    The quick version: we're still here, but the world's on fire and things are a bit tough. We'll be back.
    Stay safe everyone.
     
    Wednesday 5 August 2020

    • 3 min
    You Get An Ocean!

    You Get An Ocean!

    Hosts: Ed Brown, Penny Dumsday, Lucas Randall

    00:00:28 Good news in quarantine, two pandas in Hong Kong have finally mated! It only took them ten years!
    00:04:29 Lots of moons in our solar system seem to have subsurface oceans, and now it looks like Pluto does too!
    00:13:59 Soy is everywhere these days, but there are environmental concerns with it. Now a new study suggests fava beans could be a more environmentally friendly source of plant protein.

    This episode contains traces of Trevor Noah discussing pandas mating in Hong Kong.

    • 22 min
    The Same... But Opposite

    The Same... But Opposite

    Hosts: Ed Brown, Penny Dumsday, Lucas Randall

    00:00:39 When it comes to giving birth in the animal world, there's mostly only two options: live babies, or eggs. But very rarely, it can be both! Such is the case with the yellow-bellied three-toed skink.
    00:06:37 Imagine solar power that worked at night! That's (kind of) the promise of a new type of solar cell being developed by two American researchers.
    00:19:50 If you want to train a robot dog, there's the hard way and there's the easy way. The hard way is manually coding everything you want the dog to do. The easy way is to develop machine learning software that learns from watching other dogs!
    This episode contains traces of Michael Rowland and Lisa Miller discussing Singapore's robot dog technique of enforcing physical distancing, on ABC News Breakfast.

    • 29 min
    E-mouse-icons!

    E-mouse-icons!

    Hosts: Ed Brown, Penny Dumsday, Lucas Randall

    00:00:40 Researchers at the Max Planck Institute in Germany have used a machine-learning algorithm to finally answer one of science's most confounding puzzles: Is that mouse over there happy? Or afraid? Or disgusted?
    00:07:54 Astrophysicists from the University of Florida and Columbia University have figured out that a violent collision of two neutron stars released many of the heavier atoms that went on to form our solar system.

    This episode contains traces of Greg Milam, US correspondent for Sky News, on the Pentagon's release of videos showing unidentified flying objects.

    • 22 min
    They Smacked It With A Shovel

    They Smacked It With A Shovel

    Hosts: Ed Brown, Penny Dumsday, Lucas Randall, Dr. Helen Maynard-Casely

    00:03:36 NASA's Mars InSight probe has finally managed to drill into the Martian rock and soil - thanks to a traditional repair technique!
    00:13:04 The idea that glass is a liquid that flows is largely a myth.... sort of. It's an amorphous solid, so it does flow but very very slowly. Now an analysis of amber has shed some light on the disordered molecules that make glass a "liquid in suspended animation".
    00:26:36 When our fishy ancestors slithered onto land nearly 400 million years ago, they had hands and feet. But fingers and toes took a little longer to develop. The discovery of a complete skeleton of a fish from around that time gives some clues about the evolution of fingers.

    Dr. Helen Maynard-Casely is a planetary scientist working at ANSTO, Australia’s Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation. She is the co-author of the children's book I Love Pluto.

    This episode contains traces of the panel on Have I Got News For You discussing an astrophysicists attempts to make a device to stop you touching your face.

    • 36 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
23 Ratings

23 Ratings

Smiley Shark ,

Eyjafjallajökull !!!1!

I just want to hear Ed say Eyjafjallajökull over and over and over...

cambrown1 ,

Great science podcast for everyone

This is the best science podcast I've found that deals with non-mainstream (and of course the most interesting mainstream) science news in a fun and accessible way.

The presenters manage to explain some pretty complex science in a way that any of us can understand, and have some fun along the way!

I've also found the team very responsive to feedback, and am impressed with the quality of their work. Highly recommend. Kudos guys.

Dr. Snip snip ,

Holy Jesus

I listen to an abundance of podcasts and have done for a good 5 years now... however I've never been able to find one as good as this one. I love the verbal dynamics of the cast and the silly tangents that these boys (and occasionally girls) get themselves into. This show is super under-rated!

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