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
251
Nobel Prize 2.0
The Nobel Prize has rewarded some amazing discoveries.
23 min
252
The James Webb Time Machine
To look into deep space is to look back in time.
26 min
253
The James Webb Space Telescope
After decades of planning, NASA is finally (finally!) set to launch the successor to the Hubble.
23 min
254
What causes Alzheimer’s?
For decades, Alzheimer’s researchers have been stubbornly pursuing a single theory, but they’re starting to wonder: is this narrow focus the reason we still don’t have a cure?
27 min
255
Havana syndrome
Several years after US diplomats in Cuba claimed they were attacked by an invisible weapon, similar incidents continue to be reported around the world.
25 min
256
Getting to the bottom of butts
Once upon a time, there were no anuses.
23 min
257
The mysteries of endometriosis
This common chronic condition — where tissue that normally grows in the uterus grows elsewhere in the body — is barely understood.
27 min
258
A 150-year-old human
Two scientists. A billion-dollar wager. One unanswered question: Is the first human who will live to 150 already alive?
27 min
259
How low can you go?
Earlier this year, Nicole Yamase explored the bottom of the Challenger Deep, the deepest place in the ocean, where few people have ever been.
25 min
260
The tornado problem
8 minutes, 24 seconds.
21 min
261
Moon poop
Astronauts left something on the moon that could help unlock the origins of life itself.
21 min
262
Hot pink flying squirrels
An accidental discovery on a nighttime walk led one scientist and his team to wonder: How many mammals glow under ultraviolet light?
27 min
263
Henrietta Leavitt and the end of the universe
In the early 1900s, Henrietta Leavitt made one of the most important discoveries in the history of astronomy: a yardstick to measure distances to faraway stars.
28 min
264
How do animals know where to go?
25 min
265
Invasion of the jumping worms
These worms are fast, they’re mysterious, and they’re quickly changing North American ecosystems.
23 min
266
The many heights of Mount Everest
How tall is the world’s tallest mountain?
26 min
267
Unexplainable Flying Objects
UFOs are real, but that doesn’t mean they’re aliens.
29 min
268
The hunt for a new Pluto
Something strange is going on at the outer reaches of the solar system.
30 min
269
Cloudy with a chance of chaos
It’s surprisingly hard to predict how clouds form, move, and change.
25 min
270
A new force of nature?
Last month, physicists at Fermilab in Illinois found that tiny subatomic particles called muons were wobbling strangely.
22 min
271
Placebos work. Why?
For decades, scientists thought that placebos only worked if patients didn’t know they were taking them.
23 min
272
A virus that could heal people
In 2016, the UN declared antibiotic-resistant bacteria the “greatest and most urgent global risk.” Our best hope just might be phages,
21 min
273
The Twilight Zone of the ocean
A dive into its mysterious depths
24 min
274
The viral ghosts of long Covid
Scientists don’t understand why so many people suffer from Covid-19 symptoms for months, long after they stop testing positive.
22 min
275
Is a ton of psychology just ... wrong?
Psych!
27 min