First broadcast: Friday 11 May 2001 on BBC TWO
Blue Sky in more depth:
OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Dance therapy
Production team
How dancers might help people with spinal injuries Read more : OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Dance therapy
OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Dirty business
Production team
Germs are bad for you, aren't they? Read more : OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Dirty business
OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Lab on a Chip
Production team
Stephen Haswell, Professor of Analytical Chemistry at the University of Hull, talks about his invention: the micro reactor Read more : OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Lab on a Chip
OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Running rockets
The Open University
Anders Hansson, a theoretical physicist, explores the potential of the warp drive for powering spacecraft in the future Read more : OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Running rockets
OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Spaced out
Production team
Professor Martin Kemp, an art historian, and Professor Sir Roger Penrose, a mathematician and physicist, discuss how they are bridging the Art versus Science divide. Read more : OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Spaced out
OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Staring
Production team
Have you ever had the sense of being stared at? Biologist Rupert Sheldrake explains his exploration of this common phenomenon Read more : OU on the BBC: Blue Sky - Staring
Flights of fancy: Why do some wings shine?
BBC
Professor Roy Sambles, an optical physicist, describes research into the proteins that create a metallic appearance on the wings of moths and butterflies Read more : Flights of fancy: Why do some wings shine?
Inspiring ants
Patricia Ash
Dr Chris Melhuish explains how the natural world has influenced his work in robotics Read more : Inspiring ants
Crocodile cure
Production team
Television producer Jill Fullerton-Smith discovered how crocodiles can heal themselves in bacteria-filled water Read more : Crocodile cure
Making muscles
Production team
Professor Julian Vincent, a biologist, and Professor George Jeronimidis, an engineer, demonstrate how an interest in muscles can help engineers - and how cross-faculty brainstorming... Read more : Making muscles
The big bang-up
BBC
Dr Michael Hobson reveals how Crimewatch led his research in a new direction - using astronomy techniques to improve CCTV Read more : The big bang-up
Do crowds behave like fluids?
BBC
It used to be believed that crowds behaved like fluids - until Keith Still proved otherwise. Read more : Do crowds behave like fluids?















![Polling Station signage [Image: kagey b under CC-BY-NC-ND licence]](/openlearn/files/ole/ole_images/places/general-urban-scenes/polling-station-sign/polling station sign_0_0.jpg)



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