Asimov Press

Audio recordings of Asimov Press essays and science fiction, focused on the science and technologies that promote a flourishing future.

Why the FDA Is Slow to Remove Drugs

On the 90-year saga of oral phenylephrine. By Michael DePeau-Wilson.Read all articles from Asimov Press, for free, by visiting press.asimov.com.

12-01
38:16

A Most Important Mustard

On the origins of Arabidopsis thaliana, the premier model for plant biology. By Xander Balwit.Read all of our articles for free at press.asimov.com.

11-26
11:38

The Penicillin Myth

Competing theories seek to explain inconsistencies surrounding Alexander Fleming’s famed discovery. By Kevin Blake.Read all of our work for free at press.asimov.com.

11-24
37:48

How to See the Dead

A retinal implant designer must decide if translating mourning into light is progress or a refusal to let go. By Spencer Nitkey.Read all of our articles, entirely for free, at press.asimov.com.

11-17
31:40

Animalcules and Their Motors

Advances in cryo-electron microscopy are revealing the molecular intricacies of cell movement. By Niko McCarty.Read all of our articles, entirely for free, at press.asimov.com.

11-13
14:56

What Makes an Experiment Beautiful?

A beautiful experiment is not just a reflection of human ingenuity but also efficient science. Written by Ulkar Aghayeva.Read all of our articles, entirely for free, at press.asimov.com.

11-10
32:00

The Power of Limit Thinking

To make things better, first prove how good they can possibly be. By David Jordan.Read every article, for free, at press.asimov.com.

11-06
15:10

An Antivenom Cocktail, Made by a Llama

A new broad-coverage antivenom, made by mixing eight different nanobodies, protects mice against snakebites from 17 of 18 deadly species in Africa. By Xander Balwit.Read all of our stories for free at press.asimov.com.

10-30
19:16

Making the Electron Microscope

In a little over a century, the electron microscope evolved from a tool barely capable of resolving virus particles into one able to capture atomic detail. By Smrithi Sunil.Read every article from Asimov Press by visiting press.asimov.com.

10-26
45:09

How Nigeria Accepted GMOs

Genetically modified crops are finding a foothold in the Global South, producing some unlikely leaders in agritech. By Dr. Alex Wakeman.Read every article, for free, at press.asimov.com.

10-23
25:29

Atomic-Scale Protein Filters

How aquaporin and potassium channels filter hundreds of millions of water molecules or ions each second, by positioning the correct amino acid in the perfect place. By Niko McCarty.Read every essay from Asimov Press by visiting press.asimov.com

10-15
12:27

A Liver on Ice

How a liver goes from a brain-dead donor to a living recipient. By Donna Vatnick. Read every article from Asimov Press, for free, at press.asimov.com.

10-12
58:22

A Shift from Animal Testing

There has been a push toward animal-free alternatives in scientific research. But the success of such alternatives hinges upon whether and where they can outperform standard animal models. By Celia Ford.Read all Asimov Press articles for free by visiting press.asimov.com.

10-06
37:28

Seeing Microbes from the Sky

Biotechnology needs more and better transducers. A column by Niko McCarty.Read all our articles by visiting press.asimov.com.

10-01
13:34

The World’s Most Common Surgery

In 4,000 years, cataract surgery went from a crude procedure involving thorn instruments to a 20-minute operation with a 95 percent clinical success rate. The next step is broadening access. By Dr. Sangeetha AravindaVisit press.asimov.com to read all of our articles and subscribe.

09-29
30:54

AI-Designed Phages

A new paper from Arc Institute shows that a generative AI model can be used to design viable bacteriophages. By Niko McCarty.Read all of our work for free at press.asimov.com.

09-17
18:31

What We Find in the Sewers

Our ancestors once spread their excess effluent on their fields; now we mine it for vital molecules. By Calum Drysdale.Visit press.asimov.com to read all articles.

08-25
01:00:55

Pausing Insect Activity

Seasonal dormancy features in the life cycle of many insects. We can harness it for biological control, insect farming, and disease vector management at scale. By Ulkar Aghayeva.Read every article from Asimov Press by visiting press.asimov.com.

08-21
41:54

The Weight of a Cell

A single yeast cell weighs about one million times less than a grain of sand. But how do we know this? By Niko McCarty.Visit press.asimov.com to read all of our articles for free.

08-18
09:55

Leeches and the Legitimizing of Folk-Medicine

While we’ve derived useful molecules from the leech, live leech therapy has been largely marginalized in the West. It is time we reevaluate why. By Khushi Mittal & Xander Balwit.Read every article by visiting press.asimov.com.

08-14
24:24

Recommend Channels