Who Owns Space?

Professor Brian Cox and an expert panel tackle the technology, politics and ethics of space exploration.   From space tourism to the search for life on Mars, space is a rapidly expanding, multi-trillion-pound global industry, driven by scientific, commercial and often political goals.  But what are the rules of space and who makes them?     In this episode, the panel answers audience questions on how Earth’s geopolitics are reflected in space, when asteroid mining might become a reality, and whether those star-buying kits are value for money.  Panellists  Carly Howett – Associate Professor of Space Instrumentation, University of Oxford Jill Stuart – Visiting Fellow, London School of Economics Helen Sharman – Chemist, science communicator and first British astronaut Sanjeev Gupta – Professor of Earth Sciences, Imperial College London Watch the video version of this episode and read a transcript on our website: www.crick.ac.uk/podcast/space  A BBC Studios Production for the Francis Crick Institute.    © BBC Studios / Francis Crick Institute 2025 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Om Podcasten

Science you can trust. Questions that matter.   Join Professor Brian Cox and a panel of the world’s top scientists and experts as they tackle your questions about some of the biggest science challenges facing society today.  Can we cure cancer? How do you separate nutrition fact from fiction? What do climate change and the march of AI mean for our future? Could we live forever? Each episode is recorded in front of a live audience and it’s their questions that drive the debate.  Hear from the experts who actually know what they’re talking about, including Adam Rutherford, Helen Sharman, George Monbiot, Giles Yeo, Jeanette Winterson, Rory Cellan-Jones, Paul Nurse, Kevin Fong and You, Me and the Big C’s Lauren Mahon.   With a focus on accuracy, openness, and debate, A Question of Science brings you the latest on what we know, what we don’t, and where science might take us next.  A BBC Studios production for the Francis Crick Institute, an independent charity and world-leading research lab.