Radiology Golden Oldies: Medical Physics
Herbert Y. Kressel, MD, interviews Stephen R. Thomas, PhD, about his Golden Oldies selections for medical physics, including landmark articles by Arthur Compton, Edith Quimby, Lauriston Taylor and more. (Source: Radiology Podcasts)
Source: Radiology Podcasts - February 24, 2015 Category: Radiology Authors: The Radiological Society of North America Tags: Podcasts Source Type: podcasts

Helping Eddie Redmayne play Stephen Hawking
Katie Sidle is a consultant neurologist at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, in London. She helped actor Eddie Redmayne in his portrayal of theoretical physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking in the film The Theory of Everything. She joins us to describe how that process worked, and what Motor Neurone Disease patients... (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - February 3, 2015 Category: Journals (General) Authors: BMJ talk medicine Source Type: podcasts

Helping Eddie Redmayne play Stephen Hawking
Katie Sidle is a consultant neurologist at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, in London. She helped actor Eddie Redmayne in his portrayal of theoretical physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking in the film The Theory of Everything. She joins us to describe how that process worked, and what Motor Neurone Disease patients... (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - February 3, 2015 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ talk medicine Source Type: podcasts

Helping Eddie Redmayne play Stephen Hawking
Katie Sidle is a consultant neurologist at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, in London. She helped actor Eddie Redmayne in his portrayal of theoretical physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking in the film The Theory of Everything. She joins us to describe how that process worked, and what Motor Neurone Disease patients thought about how their condition was depicted. Read the feature: http://www.bmj.com/content/350/bmj.h483 (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - February 3, 2015 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Nature Podcast: 29 January 2015
This week, Israeli skull piece could be from a human hybrid, revamping a classic physics experiment, and revolutionary archaeology. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 28, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts

Nature Podcast: 29 January 2015
This week, Israeli skull piece could be from a human hybrid, revamping a classic physics experiment, and revolutionary archaeology. For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 28, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Springer Nature Limited Source Type: podcasts

Nature Podcast: 29 January 2015
This week, Israeli skull piece could be from a human hybrid, revamping a classic physics experiment, and revolutionary archaeology. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 28, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts

Nature Extra: Nobel News
Science gets glitzy in October each year as the Nobel Prizes are awarded. Find out who took home the prizes for Medicine or Physiology, Physics and Chemistry. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 26, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts

Nature Podcast: 23 June 2016
This week, transmissible cancer, organising the hadron menagerie, and the latest gravitational wave result and what physicists want to know next. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 26, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts

Podcast Extra - A Beautiful Question
Is our universe beautiful? Do the fundamental laws that describe nature appeal to our aesthetic tastes? In this Podcast Extra, Frank Wilczek – theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate - discusses his latest book, which tackles this beautiful question. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 26, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts

REBROADCAST: Nature PastCast - January 1896
Physics in the late nineteenth century was increasingly concerned with things that couldn't be seen. From these invisible realms shot x-rays, discovered by accident by the German scientist William R öntgen. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 26, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts

REBROADCAST: Nature PastCast - December 1920
In the early twentieth century physicists had become deeply entangled in the implications of the quantum theory. Was the world at its smallest scales continuous, or built of discrete units? It all began with Max Planck. His Nobel Prize was the subject of a Nature news article in 1920. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 26, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts

Nature Podcast: 2 February 2017
Bird beaks show how evolution shifts gear, getting to Proxima b, and have physicists made metallic hydrogen?    (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 26, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts