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Nature Podcast

Colossal 'jets' shooting from a black hole defy physicists' theories

Nature Podcast

[email protected]

Science, News, Technology

4.4859 Ratings

🗓️ 18 September 2024

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode:


00:45 The biggest black hole jets ever seen

Astronomers have spotted a pair of enormous jets emanating from a supermassive black hole with a combined length of 23 million light years — the biggest ever discovered. Jets are formed when matter is ionized and flung out of a black hole, creating enormous and powerful structures in space. Thought to be unstable, physicists had theorized there was a limit to how large these jets could be, but the new discovery far exceeds this, suggesting there may be more of these monstrous jets yet to be discovered.


Research Article: Oei et al.


09:44 Research Highlights

The knitted fabrics designed to protect wearers from mosquito bites, and the role that islands play in fostering language diversity.


Research Highlight: Plagued by mosquitoes? Try some bite-blocking fabrics

Research Highlight: Islands are rich with languages spoken nowhere else


12:26 A sustainable, one-step method for alloy production

Making metal alloys is typically a multi-step process that creates huge amounts of emissions. Now, a team demonstrates a way to create these materials in a single step, which they hope could significantly reduce the environmental burdens associated with their production. In a lab demonstration, they use their technique to create an alloy of nickel and iron called invar — a widely-used material that has a high carbon-footprint. The team show evidence that their method can produce invar to a quality that rivals that of conventional manufacturing, and suggest their technique is scalable to create alloys at an industrial scale.


Research article: Wei et al.


25:29 Briefing Chat

How AI-predicted protein structures have helped chart the evolution of a group of viruses, and the neurons that cause monkeys to ‘choke’ under pressure.


Nature News: Where did viruses come from? AlphaFold and other AIs are finding answers

Nature News: Why do we crumble under pressure? Science has the answer


Subscribe to the Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.



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Transcript

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0:00.0

Cross, the new series only on Prime Video.

0:04.0

You're going to be part of a masterpiece.

0:06.0

Evil knows his name.

0:08.0

Detective Alex Cross.

0:11.0

Where he lives.

0:13.0

It was in my house.

0:15.0

His darkest secret.

0:16.0

And when I'm done, the world will know the truth.

0:20.0

Based on characters created by James Patterson.

0:23.4

I'm not a monster.

0:24.4

I don't kill for fun.

0:25.8

Cross.

0:26.7

New series.

0:27.8

Watch now only on Prime Video.

0:30.2

Getting money from clients can feel like trying to wrestle honey from a grizzly bear.

0:34.0

That hasn't eaten in days.

0:36.2

While an amorous skunk clings to your leg. Not now skunky. But with zero online

0:40.8

invoice payments through Stripe and Go Cardless, you can give customers more ways to pay and keep your

0:44.9

cash flow flowing. Soon, rather than wrestling a grizzly bear, it feels more like you're cuddling

0:50.1

a koala bear. Oh. On a really soft sofa, while watching your favourite soap.

0:55.1

I can't believe she was his mother.

0:57.6

The healthy business,

...

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