
Science Magazine Podcast Detecting the acidity of the ocean with sound, the role of lead in human evolution, and how the universe ends
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Oct 30, 2025 Join Paul Voosen, a dedicated climate reporter, as he unveils a groundbreaking acoustic method to detect ocean acidification, revealing the hidden effects of rising CO2 levels. Alysson Muotri, a researcher of brain organoids, explains how studying ancient and modern gene responses to lead exposure may offer insights into human evolution and resilience. Plus, Katie Mack, a theoretical cosmologist, shares fascinating theories about the universe's ultimate fate—including heat death and vacuum decay—provoking thoughts on our place in an ever-evolving cosmos.
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Acoustics Reveal Ocean pH
- Sound absorption in seawater depends on chemical relaxation of borate converting to boric acid, which steals energy from specific frequencies.
- Measuring frequency-specific attenuation reveals pH because borate abundance tracks acidity.
Use Deep Hydrophones For Broad Coverage
- Deploy deep hydrophones or moored sensors to integrate pH signals through the full water column instead of point sampling.
- Use long-term recordings to improve accuracy and approach float-comparable precision.
Undersea Cables As Massive Sensors
- Subsea fiber-optic cables can act as distributed acoustic sensors across hundreds of kilometers.
- They could potentially record surface-generated sound frequencies tied to ocean chemistry.





