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It's Okay to Be Smart
The Weird Science That Lets Insects Fly in the RainThe Weird Science That Lets Insects Fly in the Rain
Imagine the scale of raindrops if you were the size of a small bird. Or mosquito. Flying through a drizzle should be deadly! Like flying through falling cars and boulders. And yet it’s not, because nature has given them a superpower—superhydrophobic surfaces that repel water and keep them airborne. How do these microscopic structures work? And how has modern engineering been inspired by them?
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Join Joe in this whirlwind tour of the endocrine system to find the answers.
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Is Everest the tallest mountain on Earth? The answer is not as simple as you might think.
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Turns out we’re all at risk of being overconfident about something.
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There's an absolutely weird, but surprisingly common phenomenon called sensory adaptation.
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Scientists in Florida can recreate a Category 5 hurricane in a box the size of a bedroom.
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Are humans still evolving? And how have our technological advances affected the process?
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Illusions teach us how our brain constructs a three-dimensional reality using 2-D images.
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Joe talks biology with science communicator extraordinaire Prof. Brian Cox.
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We explore why animals like whales, elephants, and other large animals not get cancer.
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The real magic of mirrors is far stranger and more interesting, as you’re about to learn.
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We take a look at how amazing the ability to read is.
17:56
Neuroscientist David Eagleman talks about illusions that make the moving picture possible.