Orbitals
We have some bittersweet news: Orbitals is coming to a close.
info_outline 🧪 Solutions 112 | The Sweet Chemistry of Vanilla MemoriesOrbitals
If there’s one flavor you can always count on, it’s vanilla. Sweet, creamy, and nostalgic, it comes from a creeping orchid vine. But with increased demand, scientists are finding new ways to make it, including starting from an unexpected plant…rice!
info_outline 🧪 Solutions 111 | A Walk Among the SpongesOrbitals
Think the science behind sponges must be boring? You’re so, so wrong. Shrink down to the microscopic level with us and take a walk among sponges designed to keep bacteria alive, clean with just water, and literally cut through your holiday cleaning.
info_outline Bacteria are cleaning up our toxic waste | Orbitals 410Orbitals
Bacteria often get a bad rap, which is fair—they are responsible for diseases like strep throat, pneumonia, and tuberculosis, and antibiotic resistance is a legitimate threat to humanity's existence. But some bacteria might actually save lives by cleaning up things like massive oil spills and radioactive waste. Featuring Dr. Cara Santelli.
info_outline 🧪 Solutions 110 | What your raincoat and a hydrogen fuel cell have in commonOrbitals
Polymer membranes make everything from rain jackets to medical devices. But they’re also integral parts of hydrogen fuel cells, powering cars that give off nothing but water vapor. How do fuel cells work, and why aren’t you driving one yet?
info_outline The Great Molasses Flood of 1919 | Orbitals 409Orbitals
When you hear the word “molasses” you probably imagine super slow-moving, brown-colored sweet stuff that you add to a cookie recipe. And that is what molasses usually looks like, but under certain conditions and in large enough quantities, molasses can be dangerous. Just over a century ago, the North End of Boston learned just *how* dangerous.Â
info_outline 🧪 Solutions 109 | No 5G Without ChemistryOrbitals
5G is coming… but can your phone handle it? Surprisingly, a lot of that comes down to the chemistry inside! Let’s crack open your phone to figure out how chemistry is making it smaller, faster, and a little more sticky!Â
info_outline Sweat: The Taboo Fluid That Keeps Us Alive | Orbitals 408Orbitals
Sweat is this thing that many of us seem to loathe, but also pay a lot of money to do while being yelled at by professionals. So what is sweat? And why do we do it? And why are we often so embarrassed by it? This episode features writer Sarah Everts, who recently wrote a book called The Joy of Sweat: The Strange Science of Perspiration.
info_outline 🧪 Solutions 108 | Antiviral Fabric: From Less-Smelly Socks to Life-Saving MasksOrbitals
A team of researchers making workout gear that never stinks realized that their invention could actually have a bigger impact fighting a global pandemic. It all starts with a fabric found in your closet and a common mineral in your breakfast cereal.
info_outline It's Raining PLASTIC?! | Orbitals 407Orbitals
In 2020, researchers discovered that more than 1,000 tons of plastic—that’s over 100 million plastic water bottles worth—rains down on National Parks and wilderness in the western U.S. every year. How is that possible?
info_outlineWelcome to the first episode of Solutions, an Orbitals spin-off podcast for 2021!
We need to move people and stuff around the globe, but the options we have to do that aren’t great for our planet, and we’re the ones who are going to feel those effects. We’re talking with experts who are trying to make transportation more sustainable with innovative solutions like temperature reducing paint and new materials to make cars lighter.
Solutions is hosted by Alex Dainis, PhD, produced by Mike Rugnetta and George Zaidan, and edited by Garrett Crow. Music and sound design by Michael Simonelli and fact checking by Michelle Boucher, PhD. The Solutions executive producer is Jason Oberholtzer.
Solutions is made with funding and featuring scientists from 3M, Ascend Performance Materials, Baker Hughes, BASF, Dow, DuPont, Procter & Gamble, PPG, Royal DSM, SABIC, Solvay, and W. L. Gore & Associates, none of whom influenced any editorial decisions.