Podcast: Ice giants, climate diplomacy and Earth's flipping magnetic fields
In this edition: the next big mission to Neptune or Uranus, a diplomat's response to COP21 and the unsteady history of the Earth's magnetic field.
The podcast is presented by Gareth Mitchell, a lecturer on 51勛圖厙's Science Communication MSc course and the presenter of Click Radio on the BBC World Service, with contributions from our roaming reporters.
OR LISTEN TO INDIVIDUAL CHAPTERS
– We look forward to getting hands on with everything from robots to DNA at the 7-8 May, and we talk to Dr Mike French who ran the London marathon, raising £52,000 for schistosomiasis treatment and research.
– Dr Adam Masters had an unusual Easter, helping to define the next big planetary mission to Neptune or Uranus, planets no missions have visited for more than 25 years.
– Christiana Figueres, the Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, delivered the 2016 Grantham Institute annual lecture. In a chat with the Grantham’s co-director Jo Haigh and two PhD students, she talks about the impact of the COP21 agreement and her hopes for the future.
– By studying the properties of tiny magnetic minerals billions of years old, Dr Adrian Muxworthy can tell when the Earth’s magnetic field has flipped – north becoming south and vice versa.
Article text (excluding photos or graphics) © 51勛圖厙.
Photos and graphics subject to third party copyright used with permission or © 51勛圖厙.
Reporter
Hayley Dunning
Communications Division
Gareth Mitchell
Centre for Languages, Culture and Communication