150 episodes

Brain fun for curious people.

Science Friday Science Friday and WNYC Studios

    • Science
    • 4.3 • 5.1K Ratings

Brain fun for curious people.

    Carbon Cost Of Urban Gardens And Commercial Farms | Why There's No Superbloom This Year

    Carbon Cost Of Urban Gardens And Commercial Farms | Why There's No Superbloom This Year

    Some food has a larger carbon footprint when grown in urban settings than on commercial farms, while for other foods the reverse is true. Also, what’s the difference between wildflowers blooming in the desert each spring, and the rare phenomenon of a “superbloom”?

    • 18 min
    Inside The Race To Save Honeybees From Parasitic Mites

    Inside The Race To Save Honeybees From Parasitic Mites

    Varroa destructor mites are killing honeybees and their babies at alarming rates.

    • 18 min
    The Brain’s Glial Cells Might Be As Important As Neurons

    The Brain’s Glial Cells Might Be As Important As Neurons

    These lesser-known nervous system cells were long thought to be the “glue” holding neurons together. They’re much more.

    • 15 min
    Limits On ‘Forever Chemicals’ In Drinking Water | An Important Winter Home For Bugs | Eclipse Drumroll

    Limits On ‘Forever Chemicals’ In Drinking Water | An Important Winter Home For Bugs | Eclipse Drumroll

    A long-awaited rule from the EPA limits the amounts of six PFAS chemicals allowed in public drinking water supplies. Also, some spiders, beetles, and centipedes spend winter under snow in a layer called the subnivium. Plus, a drumroll for the total solar eclipse.

    • 25 min
    Investigating Animal Deaths At The National Zoo

    Investigating Animal Deaths At The National Zoo

    When an animal dies at Washington, D.C.’s National Zoo, a pathologist gathers clues about its health and death from a necropsy.

    • 17 min
    Eating More Oysters Helps Us—And The Chesapeake Bay

    Eating More Oysters Helps Us—And The Chesapeake Bay

    In the ever-changing and biodiverse Chesapeake Bay, conservation and food production go hand in hand.

    • 18 min

Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5
5.1K Ratings

5.1K Ratings

Dr. Dr. Anne ,

A gem

Science Friday has been a "go to" for me for years. Often while cleaning up at the lab, we'd play it on NPR and it was a good intro for my undergrad students, to the nerdy, funny, gee-whiz aspects of science. Thanks for a real gem of a program!

Layla Eller ,

Five star content, one star listening experience

Please just bring back the full episodes on Friday.

Noonette58 ,

Still enjoying

I preferred the longer format but I understand the reasoning…it is not the only long podcast I listen to that went to shorter segments because it seemed more likely audiences would listen. I enjoy the variety of topics and views. I see a lot of negativity but if I am
Not interested in a topic I just skip it myself. The people interviewed that I listen to always seems knowledgeable and I always learn something.

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