Space music; crochet, maths and cocktails; selfies with atoms; Milky Way collision course; carbon-fibre bones
National Science Week Saturday 9 to Sunday 17 August 2025
The national festival that reaches more than 3 million people through over 2,000 events is back from 9 to 17 August.
Dozens of Science Week stories around Western Australia
- Space music with NASA astrophysicist and orchestra
- Female fossil rockers on tour: meet the Aussie girl-geek band The Ammonites – Perth and Geraldton
- Crochet: where maths meets craft, with cocktails
- Cosmic farming for a space food cookbook
- Quantum physicists and dark matter hunters on a road trip – Perth and regional WA
- When will the Milky Way crash into Andromeda? – Yalgoo, Cue, Mount Magnet
- Carbon-fibre bones, gravity waves, and selfies with atoms
- Blast bacteria with beanbags and join other Kids Research Institute Australia experiments
- Indigenous elders, rangers and locals join school students in boat building challenge using recycled and found materials
- Vote for Australia’s most underrated animals
More on these highlights below.
Scientists, experts and event organisers are available for interview throughout National Science Week.
Read on for direct contact details for each event, or contact Tanya Ha, [email protected] or 0404 083 863; or Shelley Thomas, [email protected] or 0416 377 444.
Media centre here. Images for media here.
WA launch event tonight at 5pm with Minister and quantum scientists
National Science Week kicks off in WA with an event exploring the quantum and mathematical mysteries of the Universe.
Launch event with:
- The Hon Stephen Dawson MLC, Minister for Science
- WA’s leading quantum scientists.
Where: Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre, 1 Bryce Ave, Kensington WA 6151
Media enquiries: Chloe Jensen, [email protected] or 0408 338 420.
National Science Week in Western Australia: highlights
Space music with NASA astrophysicist and orchestra in Perth – Kwinana
Dr Antony Brian – an astrophysicist, planetary geologist and Venusian volcanologist (who mapped the surface of Venus for NASA) – is on a mission to launch Baroque concertgoers into deep space.
In ‘Space Music’, he joins forces with Perth-based orchestra Australian Baroque providing accompaniment in the form of striking NASA images.
The multi-sensory experience takes place at Koorliny Arts Centre in Kwinana.
Saturday 16 August. Event details: www.scienceweek.net.au/event/space-music-presented-by-australian-baroque/waikiki/
Media enquiries: Brad Coleman, [email protected] or 0403 539 529.
Dr Antony Brian is available for media interviews.
Female fossil rockers on tour – Perth and Geraldton
The trio – Danni, Morgan and Blair, who graduated from Dinosaur University – are the alter-egos of performers Bridget Tran, Kate Neville and Montana Vincent. With the help of renowned singing palaeontologist Professor Flint, their show explores Australia’s prehistoric past, while shining a light on challenges facing women in science and inspiring girls to follow their lead and dream big!
Professor Flint will also bring a ‘show and tell’ table of Australian fossils on tour. Plus, audiences will get the chance to dive into a 580-million-year-old inland sea, thanks to the University of South Australia’s 360 VR reconstruction of the ancient Ediacaran seafloor.
Media enquiries: Michael Mills, [email protected] or 0411 287 381.
Crochet: where maths meets craft, with cocktails - Joondalup
Create your own hyperbolic geometry shape with yarn at Birra Bar at Edith Cowan University and learn the pattern from ECU mathematician Dr Julia Collins, while sipping on a specialty cocktail.
Julia is co-founder of Maths Craft Australia and has a PhD in 4-dimensional knot theory from the University of Edinburgh. She shares the maths that underpins crochet in a workshop-cocktail party.
You will need to have mastered the basic crochet stitch to take part in this workshop. It is not for absolute beginners, and you can BYO yarn and hooks if you like.
Friday 15 August. Event details: www.scienceweek.net.au/event/crochet-and-cocktails-2/joondalup/
Media enquiries: Cass Rowles, [email protected] or 08 6304 2467.
Julia Collins is available for media interviews.
Space farmers wanted – Perth
It’s Day 530 on the moon base and you’re eating packaged slop again… until a delivery of nutrient-enhanced microgreens arrives from Earth. Your mission is to sustainably grow and harvest edible plants in an extreme environment. But first you need to learn the basics of plant biology, food chemistry and farming approaches that minimise water, energy and resource use.
The ARC Centre of Excellence in Plants for Space is supersizing its mission to develop out-of-this-world future foods by enlisting public participation in ‘Grow 4 Launch’ experiments.
Participants will receive a microgreens kit complete with seeds, hydroponics gear and test tools, alongside guidance on how to alter plant sensory traits (colour, taste, smell and texture) and investigate conditions that help sustainable growth.
The project also invites participants to submit recipes, results and ideas for a Spacefood Cookbook which will also feature contributions from astronauts, nutritionists and chefs.
Kings Park: Monday 11 and Tuesday 12 August. Event details: www.scienceweek.net.au/event/grow-4-launch-workshops-grow-test-and-imagine-the-future-of-food-in-space/kings-park/
Crawley: Thursday 21 and Friday 22 August. Event details: www.scienceweek.net.au/event/grow-4-launch-workshops-grow-test-imagine-the-future-of-food-in-space-6/crawley/
Media enquiries: Lieke Van Der Hulst, [email protected] or 0449 846 067.
Plants for Space researchers available for interview. Great visuals at in-person events (Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth) involving cooking demonstrations, panel discussion, hands-on workshops with musical fruits, and decorating hydroponic plant growth units as rockets.
Quantum Year goes off-road – touring Australia’s cities and regions
Meet dark matter hunters and quantum experts at events across Australia.
To celebrate Quantum Year, the National Quantum & Dark Matter Road Trip will tour pubs and schools in regional and remote communities in Western Australia, South Australia and New South Wales – and run events in capital cities between 4 August and 17 August.
Communities will also get the chance to trial the Dark Matter Hunter computer game, play with 3D quark puzzles, a muon detector, gravity well, diamond earring-based magnetic field sensor, and quantum computing chips.
Dark matter accounts for 84 per cent of all the matter in the Universe, but we don’t yet know what it is. Australia is a key player in the quest to find out. Quantum technologies are crucial in the hunt for dark matter and they’re already used in smart phones and cars, medical imaging, manufacturing, and navigation. But today’s technologies capture only a small fraction of the potential of quantum physics.
Multiple dates and locations across WA.
Media enquiries: Fleur Morrison, [email protected] or 0421 118 233.
Multiple experts involved with different legs of the tour are available for media interviews, including dark matter enlightener Jackie Bondell and particle physicist Ben McAllister.
When will the Milky Way crash into Andromeda? – Yalgoo, Cue and Mount Magnet
Astrophysicist Dr Ruby Wright will reveal the fate of our galaxy over dinner party conversation under the stars in Western Australia’s outback gold rush towns.
Guests can also join a guided tour of the Milky Way, the Moon, Mars, and deep space objects like the Jewel Box Cluster – all magnified with the help of International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) telescopes.
Media enquiries: Charlene D’Monte, [email protected] or 0468 579 311.
Carbon-fibre bones, gravity waves, and selfies with atoms – Crawley
Perth’s Forrest Research Foundation opens its doors to the public, in collaboration with Supersonic Science, at Forrest Hall (UWA campus, Crawley).
Visitors can witness the Universe being born or journey inside molecules at a virtual reality station; take photos with atoms or against the backdrop of distant galaxies (thanks to greenscreen technology); see how gravity waves work; and check out carbon-fibre bones, shark skeletons and more.
The Forrest Research Foundation drives research and innovation capacity by supporting over 60 PhD scholars and postdoctoral fellows from around the world to conduct research at one of the state’s five universities.
Saturday 16 August: www.scienceweek.net.au/event/national-science-week-showcase-at-the-forrest-research-foundation/crawley/
Media enquiries: Connor Bottrell, [email protected] or 0434 088 162.
What floats your eco-boat? – Wyndham & East Kimberley
That’s a pivotal question for students competing in a school boat building challenge across WA’s East Kimberley region, thanks to an initiative of Wyndham Youth Aboriginal Corporation. Students can only use recycled items and found materials from the local environment to build – and test – their innovative, eco-friendly vessels at Wyndham’s public swimming pool.
The East Kimberley School Boat Building Challenge, facilitated by Wyndham District High School and St Joseph’s School, is open to students from East Kimberley, including Wyndham, Balgo, Warnum, Glen Hill and Kalumburu. Indigenous Elders, rangers and locals with boating/fishing experience will assist students and share knowledge that weaves science, Country and culture together.
Wednesday 13 August. Event details: www.scienceweek.net.au/event/east-kimberley-school-boat-building-challenge-and-family-day/wyndham/
Media enquiries: Neville D’Silva, [email protected] or 0409 832 370.
Blast bacteria with beanbags at Kids STEM Festival Kalgoorlie
Kids can ‘kill’ bacteria with white blood cell beanbags, explore how sunscreen blocks UV rays and more at Kids STEM Festival Kalgoorlie.
This free, two-day event brings together local scientists and fun activities from Kids Research Institute Australia. It showcases accessible pathways to science and technology careers in the region and invites local schools to join a curriculum-based experiment and showcase results to the community.
Wednesday 13 August. Event details: https://www.scienceweek.net.au/event/festival-of-stem-kalgoorlie/kalgoorlie/
Thursday 14 August. Event details: https://www.scienceweek.net.au/event/the-kids-stem-festival-kalgoorlie-workshops/kalgoorlie/
Media enquiries: Serena Bearsley, [email protected] or 0425 571 158.
Touring medical research scientists available for media interviews. Images and video from last year’s event in Broome also available.
What is Australia’s most underrated animal? – online
Do weird and wonderful Aussie creatures get the attention they deserve? For Science Week 2025, ABC Science wants Australians to cast their vote for Australia’s most underrated animal.
Not the usual cuddly crowd-pleasers, but the ugly, the annoying and the lesser-known critters that are often over-looked, under-conserved and underrated.
“We are trying to do the impossible here and rate what may be unrateable, vote on what may be un-findable, but most of all, find out as much as we can about animals which live their entire lives outside the spotlight of popular consciousness,” says Dr Ann Jones from ABC Radio National podcast What the Duck?!
The search for Australia’s most underrated animal will be decided on Friday 15 August. Images here.
Friday 1 August – Friday 15 August: To find out more and vote, go to www.abc.net.au/underrated.
For interviews with Dr Ann Jones, contact Amy Reiha, ABC Publicity, [email protected] or 0404 026 039
For interviews with other animal experts and science communicators, contact:
Tanya Ha, [email protected] or 0404 083 863
Shelley Thomas, [email protected] or 0416 377 444
About National Science Week
National Science Week is Australia’s annual opportunity to meet scientists, discuss hot topics, do science and celebrate its cultural and economic impact on society – from art to astrophysics, chemistry to climate change, and forensics to future food.
First held in 1997, National Science Week has become one of Australia’s largest festivals. Last year about 3 million people participated in more than 2,000 events and activities.
The festival is proudly supported by the Australian Government, CSIRO, the Australian Science Teachers Association, and the ABC.
In 2025 it runs from Saturday 9 to Sunday 17 August. Event details can be found at www.scienceweek.net.au.