Environmental sustainability: exploring the challenges for the medical physics community

Environmental sustainability: exploring the c...

Up next

Droplet scientists push the boundary between living and non-living matter

In this episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast, we hear from a trio of scientists with a common interest in the physics of droplets. Specifically, Joe Forth, Rob Malinowski and Giorgio Volpe share a fascination with droplets that are “animate” – that is, capable of respondin ...  Show more

Ultrasound system solves the ‘unsticking problem’ in biomedical research

“Surround sound for biological cells,” is how Luke Cox describes the ultrasound technology that Impulsonics has developed to solve the “unsticking problem” in biomedical science. Cox is co-founder and chief executive of UK-based Impulsonics, which spun-out of the University of Br ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Katie Hemphill - "Biomedical Engineering to Animistic Wonder"
J. Brown Yoga Talks

<span style="font-size: 10pt;">You are listening to the free version of J. Brown Yoga Talks. To hear the rest of our conversation, please subscribe to podcast premium at: https://www.jbrownyoga.com/premium.</span>

 

...  Show more

How to Use Curiosity & Focus to Create a Joyful & Meaningful Life | Dr. Bernardo Huberman
Huberman Lab

In this episode, my guest is Dr. Bernardo Huberman, Ph.D., a research physicist, expert on quantum networks, and vice president of CableLabs’ Next-Gen Systems. We discuss his journey into science, beginning in South America, how a curiosity about physics led him to the United Sta ...  Show more

Ep. 217 Environmental Sustainability in ENT with Dr. Julie Strychowsky
BackTable ENT

Operating rooms generate up to 30% of a hospital's waste–what can ENT do to change that? In this episode, Dr. Julie Strychowsky, a pediatric otolaryngologist at London Health Sciences Center in Ontario, discusses environmental sustainability in ENT. --- SYNPOSIS The discussion co ...  Show more

Great Mysteries of Physics - trailer
Great Mysteries of Physics

"There is nothing new to discover in physics", declared the British physicist Lord Kelvin in 1900. That is no longer true. Today it is becoming increasingly clear that there are problems that physics, as we know it, doesn't seem to be able to solve. Perhaps we just need more data ...  Show more