

Science Friction
ABC Australia
In humanity's next giant leap, astronauts are heading back to the Moon for the first time in more than 50 years.
We'll bring you daily Artemis II mission updates, from lift-off to splashdown, and answer your questions about life as an astronaut, the science of spaceflight, and plans to venture beyond the Moon.
The Challenger Legacy (Season 5)
In January 1986, the Challenger space shuttle disintegrated 73 seconds after lift-off. This is the story of how the tragedy unfolded, the engineers who tried to stop it — and the enduring consequences for humanity's exploration of space.
Artificial Evolution (Season 4): Three decades ago, Dolly the Sheep became the first ever cloned mammal. Nearly 30 years later, genetic technology has reshaped the world around us. Environment reporter Peter de Kruijff explores what's changed, where we are headed, and whether we're okay with it.
Brain Rot (Season 3): How does being chronically online affect our brains? Technology reporter Ange Lavoipierre explores the wildest ways people are using tech — from falling in love with AI companions to data-dumping a life into a language model — and the big questions about our own screen use.
Cooked (Season 2): Why do some studies show ice cream is good for you? Why do some people say they feel good going carnivore, and do we really need as many electrolytes as the internet tells us? Food and nutrition scientist Dr Emma Beckett cuts through these confusing findings to explain how nutrition science works.
AI Overlords (Season 1): AI didn't come from nowhere, and its development hasn't been a smooth, straight line — it's been rife with drama, conflict and disagreement. Technology reporter James Purtill looks at where AI came from, who controls it and where it's heading.
We'll bring you daily Artemis II mission updates, from lift-off to splashdown, and answer your questions about life as an astronaut, the science of spaceflight, and plans to venture beyond the Moon.
The Challenger Legacy (Season 5)
In January 1986, the Challenger space shuttle disintegrated 73 seconds after lift-off. This is the story of how the tragedy unfolded, the engineers who tried to stop it — and the enduring consequences for humanity's exploration of space.
Artificial Evolution (Season 4): Three decades ago, Dolly the Sheep became the first ever cloned mammal. Nearly 30 years later, genetic technology has reshaped the world around us. Environment reporter Peter de Kruijff explores what's changed, where we are headed, and whether we're okay with it.
Brain Rot (Season 3): How does being chronically online affect our brains? Technology reporter Ange Lavoipierre explores the wildest ways people are using tech — from falling in love with AI companions to data-dumping a life into a language model — and the big questions about our own screen use.
Cooked (Season 2): Why do some studies show ice cream is good for you? Why do some people say they feel good going carnivore, and do we really need as many electrolytes as the internet tells us? Food and nutrition scientist Dr Emma Beckett cuts through these confusing findings to explain how nutrition science works.
AI Overlords (Season 1): AI didn't come from nowhere, and its development hasn't been a smooth, straight line — it's been rife with drama, conflict and disagreement. Technology reporter James Purtill looks at where AI came from, who controls it and where it's heading.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Sep 22, 2019 • 30min
Bioerror to bioterror - does synthetic biology give new tools to terrorists? Part 2
Will bioterrorism become more targeted with the help of new tools in biotechnology and synthetic biology? From your cells to crops, pandemics to plagues - are the risks real or far-flung? Natasha Mitchell was the only journalist in a NATO security workshop considering the threats. Hear what insiders have to say.

Sep 15, 2019 • 29min
Bioerror to bioterror - what if a human-engineered virus escaped the lab? Part 1
Scientists can now 'engineer' biological organisms never before found in Nature. What if they make a mistake, and a synthetic virus escapes the lab? Or a rogue mind turns to synthetic biology to wage bioterror? Is anyone watching?

Sep 8, 2019 • 26min
Lovers in the Lab: when your passion for science becomes passion for each other
Meet three couples who have taken their romances way further than most. Frank, passionate, hilarious stories of making it work.

Sep 1, 2019 • 30min
Tai Asks Why - the seventh grader with a cult science podcast and mind for big ideas
Meet a 12 year old scientist who's got a whole lot of questions...enough to take you to the moon and back.

Aug 25, 2019 • 31min
Only technology will save us from ourselves - Science Friction's Beaker Street Great Debate
The battlelines are drawn, brains tuned, arguments sharpened and teeth gnashing as two teams go head to head at the BeakerStreet@TMAG festival at Hobart's Tasmanian Museum & Art Gallery for National Science Week. Your fearless adjudicator, Science Friction host Natasha Mitchell, cannot and will not be bribed*. (*Except with wombats).

Aug 18, 2019 • 29min
This famous physicist wants to solve a big mystery – cancer
Why is a famous physicist and cosmologist usually interested in Big Questions about the Universe now diving into the deep history of cancer?

Aug 11, 2019 • 27min
Artists on the loose at the Large Hadron Collider - Science Friction at the CERN
88 metres underground, in the labyrinth of chambers and corridors of the world’s large particle accelerator, art and science collide in wild and wonderful ways.

Aug 4, 2019 • 26min
A mind on the move - Nobel winner Venki Ramakrishnan on being an outsider, borders and Brexit
How can a Nobel Prize winning scientist feel like an outsider?

Jul 28, 2019 • 30min
Brexit gets personal: borders, brains and science
A whistle-stop tour into the lives of adventurous young European scientists and their wunderlust.For them Brexit is deeply personal. Moving stories of lives shaped by bitter politics.

Jul 21, 2019 • 26min
The Apocalypse Part 3: A supervolcanic winter
Could one volcano cause global carnage? Making sense of a mystery. Your DNA and the archaeological record are full of surprising clues.


