Unexplainable

Unexplainable takes listeners right up to the edge of what we know…and then keeps on going. The Unexplainable team — Noam Hassenfeld, Julia Longoria, Byrd Pinkerton, and Meradith Hoddinott — tackles scientific mysteries, unanswered questions, and everything we learn diving into the unknown. New episodes Mondays and Wednesdays.


From Vox and the Vox Media Podcast Network.

Science
Life Sciences
Natural Sciences
226
What’s the James Webb telescope searching for?
A lava planet, life on other worlds, the very first starlight in the universe — the most powerful space telescope ever built is ready to reveal many mysteries of the cosmos.
46 min
227
Vitamin X
Millions of Americans take dietary supplements — everything from vitamins and minerals to weight loss pills and probiotics.
31 min
228
Lost Worlds: What killed Venus?
Venus is the hottest, scariest place in the solar system, but billions of years ago it may have been a lot like Earth, complete with an ocean of water.
25 min
229
Lost Worlds: Life on Mars?
Mars was once a very different planet, with rivers, lakes, and — potentially — life.
27 min
230
Lost Worlds: Why do we have a moon?
In all our searching of the universe, we’ve never seen another moon like ours.
24 min
231
Lost Worlds: Aliens from Earth?
Was there a technologically advanced species living on Earth long before humans?
24 min
232
Dropping like flies
Insect populations are shrinking all over the world
24 min
233
Is telepathy real?
A groundbreaking study claims to have found a way for a fully paralyzed person to communicate entirely via thought. Today, Explained breaks down the science and asks: Is it too good to be true?
23 min
234
Why do we dream?
Dreams are weird, but can they be a scientific tool?
20 min
235
Should I take a DNA ancestry test?
What are the scientific, family, and privacy implications?
25 min
236
My octopus friend?
Octopuses are largely solitary animals, but there have been rare times — notably in the movie My Octopus Teacher — where they seem to have become comfortable around humans
22 min
237
Glow in the dark ocean
Most deep-water creatures are bioluminescent. Marine biologist Edie Widder has spent the last 40 years trying to figure out why.
28 min
238
When reality broke
In the 1920s, the scientist Werner Heisenberg came up with a wild idea that broke reality as Western science knew it.
23 min
239
Making Sense: The sixth sense
Why stop at five senses?
24 min
240
Making Sense: Sight unseen
Close your eyes and try to imagine an apple. Can you see anything?
22 min
241
Making Sense: The Umami Mama
For thousands of years, there have been four basic tastes recognized across cultures.
34 min
242
Making Sense: No one nose
26 min
243
Making Sense: The healing power of touch
Doctors can save the lives of premature infants, but the process is often painful. Luckily, a solution might be as simple as a parent’s loving touch.
25 min
244
Making Sense: How sound becomes hearing
In the same way optical illusions trick our eyes, audio illusions can trick our ears.
37 min
245
The methane hunters
Methane traps more than 80 times as much heat as CO2 over the short term.
20 min
246
What is love?
Can science help us predict whether a relationship will succeed? Or is it all just chaos?
30 min
247
A sonic tour of the solar system
What does it sound like on Mars? On Jupiter? Titan?
19 min
248
Finding asteroids before they find us
Scientists are constantly searching for asteroids that could crash into Earth.
28 min
249
Skeleton Lake
When scientists examined the DNA of ancient bones found near a Himalayan lake, they were forced to confront a seemingly impossible conclusion.
25 min
250
Are humans running out of sperm?
In 2017, researchers published an explosive finding: Sperm counts may be declining in some countries around the world.
25 min