Category Archives: scicomm

July Blog Post: Asteroids, Astronomy, Science Photography and Poetry plus July’s PubSci and discount tickets to a talk on the Northern Lights

In this post, I preview July’s PubSci talk (now booking) and other great science events coming up, we reflect on June’s PubSci and share details of a ticket offer for the coming weekend. Read on!

Our next event is only 2 weeks away

Microscope, books, magnifying glass: The search for proof
On 16th July, PubSci explores how scientific truth emerges and why it sometimes falters.

July’s PubSci talk is booking up fast, with 25% of places already snapped up – head to the booking page now if you don’t want to miss out – but before looking in more detail, we’ll serve up some other science-based goodies. There’s lots of science poetry in this edition of the PubSci blog, some great events, some sad astronomy news and some good astronomy news, a look back at June’s topic and an exclusive discount code for a super astronomy talk at the Royal Institution on Saturday 5th July.

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Art meets science in words and images

Traditionally dressed Peruvian women look at a small handheld device while a man looks on from behind a clump of grass
Peruvian women test water pH from a melting glacier. © Ciril Jazbec / Wellcome Photography Prize 2025

Last month we previewed a botanical photography exhibition at Ken Artspace and I’ve found another super photo exhibition for you this month. Since 1997 Wellcome Photography Prize has been celebrating compelling imagery that captures stories of health, science and human experience. This year the winners will be announced on 16th July (the same day as PubSci) and the top 25 images will be on show at The Francis Crick Institute close to London’s King’s Cross from 17th July until 18th October. The Crick is worth a visit just for the fabulous modern architecture and a very nice cafe.

The Poetry of Science and the Science of Poetry

This is a bumper season for poetry and science. The Brilliant is an annual competition celebrating poetry which expresses scientific wonder through verse. Alas, entries closed at the end of June for this year’s competition but you can read last year’s shortlisted entries and the 2024 winners here.

If you’d like to try your hand at writing poetry with a science theme, perhaps with a view to entering next year’s competition, I strongly recommend signing up for the CPD short course on Science Communication Through Poetry run by Sam Illingworth. It’s delivered live via Zoom over four Wednesday lunchtimes and costs just £50. There’s even a bursary for those on low income. Sam, a professor at Edinburgh Napier University, is also one of the judges for The Brilliant competition and has written several books on science and poetry including The Poetry of Physics published earlier this year. I’m hoping to tempt Sam down south for a PubSci event before too long.

A banner for Consilience Journal

If you enjoy the crossover between science and poetry and/or science and art, I recommend looking into a beautiful online journal called Consilience (referring to the convergence of thought between different disciplines). Consilience is free to read but you can support it by subscribing to their Substack. If you’re already a science poet or artist, and looking for somewhere to publish, Issue 22 of Consilience is now open for submissions of poetry and art exploring the scientific topic of ‘Waves’ – but do hurry, submissions for the coming issue close at noon on Sunday 6th July.

EVENT TOMORROW: Live Poetry and Live Neuroscience!

An image with an open book and text saying Verse and Worse

What happens when a poet and a neuroscientist get together to see if they can make sense of their connections?

They create an event called Verse and Worse, with Professor Sophie Scott and Will Eaves, both from the Neuromantics podcast.

On Wednesday 2nd July, at the Bloomsbury Theatre, Will and Sophie will be conducting live neuroscience experiments related to poetry. It looks like being a brilliant event, and it’s only £8, but there are lots of unsold seats at the time of writing, so book a ticket now and I’ll see you there.

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An Astronomic look back at June

A bright meteor streaks across the nighttime sky over a river
Fireball over Chelyabinsk, Russia, in 2013 (The Planetary Society)

At June’s PubSci Stuart Eves delighted us with “How the Universe is Trying to Kill Us – and How We can Stop It” in which he considered possible mechanisms to explain the surprising periodicity of global mass extinctions, with a focus on the way our solar system moves through the warped plane of the Milky Way every 30 million years or so.

If you want to read more about the effect of distant stars on our own solar system (and by implication, what encountering more of them as the solar system passes through the galactic disk) might mean for the stability of orbits, check out this article called Passing Stars Altered Orbital Changes in Earth and Other Planets, with its lovely illustration of the uncertainty of Earth’s orbit 56 million years ago that arises from the passing of a sun-like star 2.6 million years ago (which is about when we last passed though the galactic disk).

The world’s most powerful camera captures its first images of space

The Vera C Rubin observatory in Chile, home to the world’s most powerful digital camera, has released its first images, and to quote the ‘Super Soaraway Sun‘* (sorry!: WHAT A STUNNER!

*Let’s hope it doesn’t soar away in the light of the previous topic.

Swirling clouds of interstellar gas
The Trifid and Lagoon nebulae 9,000 light years away, captured by the Vera Rubin Telescope

The observatory is tasked with detecting potentially deadly earthbound asteroids in time for us to take protective measures (if you came to June’s PubSci you’ll have some idea what these might be and what the pitfalls are). It will also be seeking concrete evidence for “dark matter” which is the standard cosmological explanation for the way galaxies spin. You can read more about that – and learn why the observatory is named after Vera Rubin – on this page.

A farewell to the world’s oldest radio astronomer

A giant dish at Jodrell Bank observatory

The former Astronomer Royal, Sir Francis Graham-Smith who died at the age of 102, was the world’s oldest active radio astronomer according to Jodrell Bank Observatory where he was director from 1982 to 1990. Graham, as he was known, was only the second director of Jodrell Bank after Lowell himself, and technically retired in 1988 but he continued working as emeritus professor of radio astronomy at The University of Manchester. Graham published his final astronomy article earlier this year. You can see Sir Francis Graham-Smith’s photo and read his obituary on the BBC New website.

HOT NEWS: Exclusive ticket discount for a talk on the aurorae of Earth and beyond

Last of the astronomy items in this edition of the PubSci blog is an exclusive discount code for a talk called Understanding the Northern Lights – From Earth to Jupiter on Saturday 5th July.

If the recent aurorae over central and southern Britain have piqued your interest, head to the Royal Institution this Saturday evening to discover what they are, how they happen, and why it’s so significant to the search for extraterrestrial life that Jupiter’s moon Ganymede experiences aurorae.

The speaker, Marina Galand, is Professor of Planetary Science at Imperial College London. I met Marina a few weeks ago and was bowled over by her knowledge, enthusiasm and energy for this subject. It’s going to be a brilliant talk and to make it even better the Ri has kindly offered PubSci a whopping 25% discount for this event with the code LIGHTS25 (feel free to share).

Book on Eventbrite via the Ri Website – your phone camera won’t even need to be in night mode!

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At last… July’s PubSci

(To be read in the voice of Viv Stanshall on Tubular Bells, for those of a certain vintage)

Book cover for PROOF - The Uncertain science of Certainty

 The nest PubSci talk is just 2 weeks away, on Weds 16th July, and we’re delighted to welcome Professor Adam Kucharski to explore the ideas behind his latest book, Proof: The Uncertain Science of Certainty.

How can we weigh up noisy evidence to decide how safe is an autonomous vehicle or judge somebody’s guilt or innocence?

Adam will explores how scientific opinion is formed, how to convince others of the facts, and what links wine and university exams, royalty and Guinness, cricket and robot racing.

Full details and the booking link are on PubSci’s Next Event page or you can book straight away on Eventbrite.

With over 25% of tickets already snapped [now at 30%] up at the time of writing, the best way to be certain of a place is to book yours today. Copies of Proof will be on sale at the event.

1/7/25 Posted by Richard Marshall, PubSci organiser and host.

PubSci: Sipping • Supping • Science

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PS In case you haven’t checked it out yet, science communicator and PubSci member, Ushashi Basu, recently wrote about PubSci in her excellent blog and interviewed me to find out how I came to be booking and introducing speakers for a public science outreach event in a pub, what led me into science communication, and what motivates me to communicate science.

It was a pleasure to chat with Ushashi over a coffee and look back at seven years of programming, promoting and hosting PubSci. You can read that interview here and see Ushashi’s other blog posts at https://ushashibasu.com/.

Hope to see you all at the Old KIng’s Head on Wednesday 16th July.

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Keeping Up With Future Events

To make sure you don’t miss out on future events, subscribe to our Google Calendar to be the first to know when new talks are scheduled, and follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. You can also sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

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About PubSci talks

PubSci is organised and hosted by science communicator, Richard Marshall, assisted by Mike LucibellaEvents are held upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. No specialist knowledge is required, just curiosity. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a cash whip-round to cover expenses on the night – consider it “Pay What You Can Afford”. As few of us carry cash these days, you can make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help us continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

The evolution of humans from sitting in a chair to talking about science in a pub (after Darwin)

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

Books, Bards, Brilliant Demos and a Blast Off!

In this edition of the PubSci blog: Looking back over April, something to do this weekend, details of May’s PubSci, and something to do at the end of the month.

Spring has sprung, the grass is ris’ – and last month I began our interstitial blog post with the words: “The sun is out, the trees are in blossom, and the PubSci blog is bursting with wonderful things to do…”

I can reuse that for today’s today’s post, although the warmest Mayday on record is of course a cause for concern within the context of shifting climate patterns and rising global average temperature.

On a lighter note, if you came to the Ig Nobel Awards tour on Sunday 6th April you might have seen me dressed as a banana for reasons that made sense at the time but are now difficult to explain. Blame the Annals of Improbable Research. Photos exist but have been hidden to protect the innocent.

A woman and two men

April’s speaker, Snezana Lawrence (https://x.com/mathshistory) with PubSci Hosts Richard and Mike

We had a wonderful evening in the company of Snezana Lawrence at April’s PubSci, hearing about the writing process and contents of her beautifully illustrated new book A Little History of Mathematics. It was great to see so many new faces among the regulars and the Q&A was really engaged.

William Shakespeare

The Royal Institution gets a double mention in this month’s post, firstly because I’m event managing a brilliant talk there this coming Saturday 3rd May. In the Mathematical Life of Shakespeare, award-winning author Rob Eastaway (Why Do Buses Always Come in Threes?) explores the surprising ways that maths and numbers crop up in Shakespeare’s plays. With historical asides about games, optics, astronomy, music and magic, you’ll never think about maths or Shakespeare the same way again. Suitable for adults and anyone aged 8 and above.

If you stay for the evening event, I’ll also be hosting How Physics Connects Our Universe when theoretical physicist Chris White presents a new hypothesis linking quantum mechanics and general relativity.

But enough about them, what about us…?

Next PubSci: Wednesday 16th April | Science Goes Pop!

From Faraday to Van Tulleken, The Royal Institution of Great Britain – known by its chemical symbol, Ri – has been The Home of Science since 1799 and is famous for its public demonstrations which bring science to life. On Wednesday 21st May we bring the wow of live science to The Old King’s Head for a special event celebrating 200 years of Ri monthly Discourses and annual Christmas Lectures.

Royal Institution Christmas Lectures 2024 (Photo: Paul Wilkinson)

Michael Cutts from the Ri’s renowned demonstration team has designed, built, and showcased science demos at the Ri and around the world. He’ll take us through the history of live science and the importance of showing as well as telling. There may even be a few live demos suitable for a pub setting.

Doors 6.30 for 7pm start. Book your place on Eventbrite ASAP – tickets are going fast. As usual, you can make a contribution to PubSci’s costs via Eventbrite (minimum £1) or in cash on the night. Help PubSci keep science live. Hope to see you there!

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Finally, last weekend I went to Moonwalkers at Lightroom in Kings Cross, and I can’t recommend it enough. I paid full price (£29.50) which feels rather steep, but you can book through TimeOut for £19 if you plan your visit better than we did.

People watching an immersive projection of the moon

Blending archive footage and stills with brilliant graphics and a powerful soundtrack, Moonwalkers tells the story of the Apollo moon landings and looks forward to NASA’s Artemis mission planned for November 2025. It’s movingly narrated by Tom Hanks, who was involved in every stage of its making and shares his personal passion for spaceflight that began with watching Apollo 11 land on the moon in 1969. Highly recommended.

Moonwalkers plays in rotation with other events at Lightroom, next showing over the last week in May.

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Keep Up With Future Events

Dd you know PubSci has an online calendar where you can view future events?

Event titles and dates go in the calendar several months in advance, along with a brief outline of the talk. If you subscribe to our calendar, PubSci events will automatically appear in your own calendar.

We also publish a programme of PubSci events three times a year which you can view online or download for printing. The latest edition has just been uploaded. Why not print it out and put a copy on your work fridge for everyone to see!

Posted by Richard Marshall, PubSci organiser and host.

PubSci: Sipping • Supping • Science

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The evolution of humans from sitting in a chair to talking about science in a pub (after Darwin)

• • •

About PubSci talks

PubSci meets upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. No specialist knowledge is required, just curiosity. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

We use Eventbrite booking to manage numbers. Follow us on Eventbrite to be notified when new tickets become available.

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a cash whip-round to cover expenses on the night – consider it “Pay What You Can Afford”. As few of us carry cash these days, you can make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help us continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

• • •

We meet on the third Wednesday of the month, upstairs at the Old King’s Head near London Bridge Underground (Borough High Street east side exit). Join us every month apart from December for a regular dose of Sipping, Supping & Science.

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

How Insects Are Changing Our World – Erica McAlister & Adrian Washbourne | 15th May 2024

On Wednesday 15th May 2024, PubSci is delighted to welcome leading entomologist, Dr. Erica McAlister, and award-winning radio producer, Adrian Washbourne, for an evening of six-legged wonder.

The enormous compound eyes of a robber fly

The eyes of the robber fly inspired new solar cell designs (Credit: Thomas Shahan/Creative Commons)

Apologies for another tardy blog post. I’m just back from Mexico after viewing April’s total solar eclipse. You can read my personal blog post about what it’s like to experience an eclipse on LinkedIn, where you can also join the Science in the Pub (PubSci) LinkedIn group.

So, to business!

PubSci is next Wednesday 15th May, and it’s one you won’t want to miss.

Dr. Erica McAlister of London’s Natural History Museum has spoken at PubSci more than any other scientist, with good reason. Erica is on a mission to change our minds about flies. As keeper of flies and fleas at the Natural History Museum, her infectious enthusiasm for flying and sucking things is guaranteed to win you over.

Award-winning Radio producer Adrian Washbourne has made numerous programmes for BBC Science and recently produced two acclaimed series on insects for BBC Radio 4, fronted by Erica. Now they have published a book inspired by the series: “Metamorphosis, How Insects Are Changing Our World”.

Line drawing of a flea

Flea, from Robert Hooke’s ‘Micrographia’

PubSci is delighted to welcome Erica and Adrian who will bring us some of the highlights of their book – described as an “accessible, beautifully illustrated celebration of insects and their extraordinary contributions to humankind – to reveal the wonder of insects, historical figures who made breakthroughs in understanding them, and the vital role they play in ensuring life, as we know it, continues.

Book now on Eventbrite if you’d like to know how insects inspire human technology, if flies can help us lower our carbon footprint, and why the best mixtape to take into space isn’t what you think!

Metamorphosis will be on sale at PubSci, with the opportunity to get your copy signed by the authors.

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PubSci takes place upstairs at the Old King’s Head near London Bridge tube. Doors open 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub. 

We use Eventbrite to manage numbers – reserve your place now! PubSci is free to attend but please consider making a donation with your reservation to help us cover our costs.

• • •

About the speakers

A woman holding a fly

Courtesy of NHM

Dr. Erica McAlister is Principle Curator of Diptera (flies) and Siphonaptera (fleas) in the Department of Entomology at London’s Natural History Museum.

She is a regular guest on TV and Radio, including The Natural History Programme, The Living World, Who’s the Pest?, Natural History Heroes, Infinite Money Cage, No such thing as a Fish, The Museum of Curiosity, The Museum of Life, Springwatch and The Life Scientific. In 2019 she was the winner of the Zoological Society of London Award for Communicating Zoology.

Erica is the author of award-winning natural history books, The Secret Life of Flies (2017), The Inside Out of Flies (2020), and A Bug’s World (2022) –  a book for children illustrated by Stephanie Fizer Coleman.

Book cover for Metamorphosis

Metamorphosis will be available to purchase at the event

Adrian Washbourne is an award-winning producer who spent 35 years working for BBC Radio and the World Service. He has produced landmark documentary series on botany, art and science, and the history of medicine.

Adrian has won several Association of British Science Writers awards and was awarded the 2019 Medical Journalists’ Association Feature of the Year.

Metamorphosis – How Insects are Changing Our World is the result of Erica and Adrian’s work together on two celebrated series for BBC Radio 4, and was published in April 2024.

PubSci is delighted to welcome Erica and Adrian as our speakers for May. Subscribe to our calendar to be the first to know what’s happening each month.

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Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a traditional whip-round to cover expenses – consider it a “Pay What You Can” event. Not many of us carry cash these days, so you can contribute digitally through our TipJar or make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help PubSci continue putting on events. We have no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

Check out the Future Events page where you can also subscribe to our Google Calendar so PubSci events automatically appear in your own Calendar.  You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

• • •

We used to meet on the first Wednesday of the month but PubSci is now on the third Wednesday. Join us upstairs at the Old King’s Head near London Bridge Underground (Borough High Street east side exit) every month apart from December for a regular dose of Sipping, Supping & Science.

image-third-wednesdays

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

Levitating Hamsters! Science Comedy, 29th Feb.

PubSci is pleased to announce a special event on 29th February as part of the Waterloo “Pinch of Vaults” festival. You are invited to an evening of science communication comedy and storytelling in London SE1

Science communicator and PubSci host Richard Marshall presents a one-man show about the weird and wonderful stories that sometimes make science stranger than fiction. With science as the warp and imagination as the weft, Richard weaves a unique narrative to make you laugh and make you think (then make you laugh again).

Somewhere between a science talk and a stand-up comedy show, exists a space where one man and his powerpoint pick at the loose threads of science to see where they might lead us. With contributions from leading scientists, including Nobel Laureate Professor Sir Andre Geim.

Book today! Over 30% of tickets already sold.

Date: 7pm, Thursday 29th Feb 2024

Venue: Alaska, Waterloo (129 Alaska street, London SE1 8XE)

Doors: 6.30pm

Tickets on sale from the Vault Festival/PoV website


Regular PubSci is on Weds 21st Feb at the Old Kings Head, when Dr Anna Joyce talks about the science and psychology of sleep. See the preview our Next PubSci page. Full details and tickets soon.

Subscribe to our Events Calendar and Eventbrite page to receive automatic updates on events and tickets.