4.5 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 28 November 2013
⏱️ 28 minutes
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Therapeutic hypothermia is standard treatment for cardiac arrest patients to protect against the damaging or deadly repercussions of a beatless heart. But this global practice has been called into question after research in the New England Journal of Medicine reported no difference in survival rates between patients chilled to 33 degrees and those cooled to just below normal body temperature to 36 degrees. Dr Jerry Nolan, vice chair of the European Resuscitation Council tells Dr Adam Rutherford how doctors worldwide are reacting to this new study and Dr Kevin Fong, author of "Extremes, Life, Death and the Limits of the Human Body" describes how medicine has historically harnessed hypothermic states to heal.
Show Us Your Instrument: The European Space Agency's GAIA mission is due to launch just before Christmas. It will spend the next 5 years recording space, using a billion pixel camera. This camera is made up of charge-couple devices, similar to the ones you'd find in your smart phone. These are damaged by space radiation. Dr Ross Burgon damages them in his lab first, to tell whether the images coming back from space are real stars or planets, or the digital equivalent of a smudge on the lens.
Methane is the second most important greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide because it's 25 times more powerful than carbon dioxide at trapping the sun's rays. And it doesn't hang around as long either, ten years as opposed to a 100. So tackling methane is seen by many countries as a useful way of reducing greenhouse gases, quickly. But that depends on knowing how much there is. A new paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reveals that United States could be underestimating its methane emissions by as much as fifty per cent. Dr Vincent Gauci Head of Ecosystems and Biodiversity at the Open University explains how the Americans got their sums so wrong, and considers whether the British calculations are similarly suspect.
The fuzzy concept of "terroir" for wine fans has always been difficult to pin down. Climate, soil, geology and individual wine-making practice don't make it easy to identify what makes particular wines unique. But Dr David Mills, Professor in the Department of Viticulture and Enology at University of California, Davis, has used DNA sequencing to study the microbial ecology of individual grapes. And he concludes bacteria and fungi could explain "microbial terroir".
Producer: Fiona Hill.
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0:00.0 | Choosing what to watch night after night the flicking through the endless |
0:06.8 | searching is a nightmare we want to help you on our brand new podcast off the |
0:11.8 | telly we share what we've been watching |
0:14.0 | Cladie Aide. |
0:16.0 | Load to games, loads of fun, loads of screaming. |
0:19.0 | Lovely. Off the telly with me Joanna Paige. |
0:21.0 | And me, Natalie Cassidy, so your evenings can be a little less |
0:24.9 | searching and a lot more watching listen on BBC sounds. |
0:29.1 | Hello you this is the BBC Inside Science podcast and I'm Adam Rutherford. |
0:34.0 | BBC.co.uk. |
0:35.0 | UK slash radio for is the place to find out things about how to listen with impunity. |
0:40.0 | I do try to be sensible but honestly there's a fungal pathogen in this week's show called |
0:44.4 | Botryotinia fukliano. |
0:46.7 | I had to ask the pronunciation team at the BBC how to get away with that. |
0:49.9 | Yes, we have a pronunciation team. |
0:51.9 | Anyway, wine, wind and Gas this week, |
0:54.7 | rather like an uncle on Boxing Day. |
0:56.6 | Gas, how the Americans have got their greenhouse methane estimates wildly wrong |
1:01.0 | and what that means for climate change. |
1:03.0 | Wind, we follow up on some of your feedback from last week's feature on renewable energy |
1:07.1 | storage. |
1:08.1 | And wine? |
... |
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