$1 trillion of platinum on the moon; how your brain distinguishes between reality and imagination; rise of the hyperworm

月球上的10万亿颗铂金;你的大脑如何区分现实与想象;超级蠕虫的兴起

New Scientist Podcasts

科学

2025-06-06

25 分钟
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Episode 306 It’s been discovered that the moon is probably home to $1 trillion worth of platinum. Researchers suggest nearly 6500 of the Moon’s craters were made by asteroids containing commercial quantities of platinum, palladium, rhodium, ruthenium, iridium and osmium. Does that mean space companies are going to head out on mining missions imminently…and should they? Hear the reasons for and against mining on the Moon. When you imagine something in your mind, how does your brain know that it’s not real? Certain brain regions have been identified in a new experiment which help keep reality and make-believe separate. This finding could tell us a lot about conditions like schizophrenia - or what’s going on when we dream. It may even answer that question; are we living in a simulation? Read our imagination special here: https://www.newscientist.com/issue/3545/  A newly discovered emergent behaviour has been found in nematode worms - the world’s commonest animal. These millimetre long worms are able to merge to form superorganisms, creating tentacles or towers that can straddle long distances. Learn about this collective behaviour and how it's coordinated.  Chapters: (00:16) Platinum on the moon (08:44) How your brain distinguishes between reality and imagination  (18:05) Rise of the hyperworm - nematodes merge to form superorganism Hosted by Rowan Hooper and Penny Sarchet, with guests Carissa Wong, Jayanth Chennamangalam, Steve Fleming and Serena Ding. To read more about these stories, visit https://www.newscientist.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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  • Welcome to Those Who Can't Teach Anymore,

  • a narrative podcast series that explores why teachers are leaving education and what can be done to stop the exodus.

  • This season,

  • we're getting a look at the year and the life of teachers from across the country through their audio journals.

  • Look for Those Who Can't Teach Anymore, season two, a different kind of the same thing.

  • Welcome to the world, the universe and us, the weekly news podcast for a new scientist.

  • I'm Rowan.

  • And I'm Penny Sashay on today's show how your brain determines reality from imagination and a new discovery about the most numerous animal on the planet.

  • Yeah, this is a new form of emergent behavior.

  • So it's very cool story.

  • But first, did you know that the moon has significant amounts of platinum in it?

  • I did not know that, no. Do you know where I'm going to go with this story?

  • Oh, no, it's not Mining on the Moon again, is it?

  • It's your favourite subject.

  • Okay, well, let's get into it.

  • How is it that we didn't know that we had platinum on the Moon?

  • Okay, so I should say it's not just platinum,

  • it's the platinum group of metals, which is platinum, palladium, rhodium, ruthenium.

  • iridium and osmium.

  • I just set that to music for the element song.