Listen to a selection of clips from recent and upcoming programmes.
Lucy Hawking talks to Laura Fine about her father's pioneering work on speech synthesis.
Mark Miodownik introduces the wonders of the Transmission Electron Microscope.
Adam Rutherford speaks to Agnieszka Fryckowska about living and working in Antarctica.
Professor Sophie Scott of University College London explains how MRI scanners work.
Ecologist Lynne Boddy explains how fungi fight each other for resources.
Patricia Fara, Lisa Jardine and Simon Schaffer put Newton into context.
Pallab Ghosh visits Maastricht in the Netherlands to see how "test tube burgers" are made.
Inside Science visits a refracting telescope at The Royal Observatory in Greenwich.
Ice artist Galya Morrell tells of a time when she used silence as her best defence.
Forget meat, lab-grown leather could be the first cultured beef product to hit shelves.
Lisa Jardine and Andrea Wulf on why the new classification system was thought 'smutty'.
Edward Lu says there are one million asteroids large enough to destroy a major city.
Geoff Bird takes his recording equipment with him when he goes for his vasectomy.
What influences the decision to test a child for faulty gene?
Video courtesy of Trai Anfield
Video courtesy of Chris Sperring
Physicist Peter Barham discusses spying on individual penguins in Show Us Your Instrument.
Psychologist Daniel Kahneman explains prospect theory in a nutshell.
What happens when religious beliefs are at odds with medical decisions?
Josiah Wedgwood carried out thousands of experiments to achieve his unique Portland Blue.
Alice Roberts asks Robert Crompton whether some of us have more ape-like feet than others.
Jo Haigh, Professor of Atmospheric Physics at Imperial College London, and Jim Al-Khalili.
Dr Ceri Brenner uses a high-energy laser at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxford.
Alice Roberts and Sarah Perkins find an example that shows why we should record roadkill.