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Episode details

World Service,10 Jul 2014,28 mins

Available for over a year

A new study sheds light onto where dust grains that occur in the wake of an exploding star come from. Rocky planets like our earth are big clumps of cosmic dust – the small particles we see in space and galaxies. This dust can eventually form planets but the origins of the dust remain mysterious. Scientists are now trying to understand how these particles of dust get bigger and turn into rocky planets. Human Brain Project Senior neuroscientists have attacked the Human Brain Project, a billion-pound European Commission initiative aiming to simulate the human brain. The Human Brain Project aims to compile what we know about brain cells and networks and use a new generation of supercomputers to model how the brain functions. In an open letter, several hundred scientists say the project is "not on course" and are calling for more transparency. Sociable Birds Sociable weavers are unique birds common in Asia and Africa and they co-operate in groups, forming the biggest nests ever seen for any bird. They can be up to several metres in length and can weigh over a tonne, lasting for many years. Now a new study has found that these birds behave in a complex anthropomorphic behaviour, where even distantly-related birds share one big thatch. Dr René van Dijk, from the University of Sheffield, explains just how far these birds go to co-operate as a society. Virtual Water In China, lots of water intensive products are produced in water scarce regions and now researchers are using something they term virtual to help track its movement as it is becoming a scarce resource in many parts of the world. Research published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, shows that in China the richest provinces have a larger impact on areas with already tight supplies, through the importation of food, and other goods that used water to create them. Professor Klaus Hubacek from the University of Maryland explains why water resources are distributed unevenly and how virtual water can help. Presenter: Jack Stewart. Producer: Ania Lichtarowicz and Melissa Hogenboom (Image: The supernova SN 2010jl (large white spot near top) produced dust much larger than usually found in the Milky Way © X-ray: Nasa/CXC/RCA CA/P. Chandra et al)

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