The Latest Stories From KQED Science
If Exploding Stars Made Music, They'd Sound Like This | Graduating high school senior Vanya Agrawal’s sonification project earned a spot at an international science fair this past spring. | |
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Reporter's Notebook: A Climate Tour of Crissy Field Reveals Both Past and Future | A beloved San Francisco shoreline sits at a nexus of both nature and the built environment, of both history and the future. | |
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Bay Area Researchers Tracking Bird Flu in Wastewater See No Evidence of Spread in SF | After the state detected bird flu in two chickens at a live market in San Francisco, further analysis by Stanford researchers suggests the disease has not spread. | |
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| Planetary Society | With a global community of more than 2 million space enthusiasts, The Planetary Society is the world’s largest and most influential space advocacy organization. Led by CEO Bill Nye, we empower the public to take a meaningful role in advancing space exploration through advocacy, education outreach, scientific innovation, and global collaboration. Learn more about our mission to explore worlds, find life off Earth, and protect our planet from dangerous asteroids at planetary.org. |
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Deep Look: The Life Aquatic | Happy World Oceans Day! Discover fascinating ocean animals and their unusual survival tricks in Deep Look’s special playlist: “The Life Aquatic.” One of the videos, “Ever Seen A Sea Star Gallop?” explores how starfish sniff out and capture their prey by relying on hundreds of water-propelled tube feet. | |
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Bay Curious: Feel Like the SF Bay Used to Be Bluer? You're Not Imagining It | A Bay Curious listener remembers when San Francisco Bay was more blue. Why the change? | |
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