Real English listening practice for beginners — with a simple science conversation. 🌟 Welcome to Oliver & Lily Easy English Lab We help you learn English through slow, clear, and natural conversations. Each episode explains ONE real research paper in very easy English. 🎧 Today’s Episode (EP01) — Neutron vs Gamma In this episode, Oliver and Lily explain a research paper about how scientists tell neutrons and gamma rays apart. We keep it beginner-friendly, and we avoid math and complex terms. You will hear the same idea explained step by step, like a real conversation. ✅ In this episode, you will practice: Listening to slow, clear English (A2–B1 level) Simple explanations of science words (in plain English) Useful phrases for explaining ideas: “It means…”, “In simple words…”, “Think of it like…” Natural rhythm and pronunciation with short dialogue lines A quick mini-quiz at the end 🔬 What you will learn (in easy English): Why neutron detectors must separate neutrons and gamma rays What “pulse shape” means (short tail vs long tail) Two detectors: stilbene and EJ-301 (organic scintillators) Two digital methods: charge comparison (CC) and constant time discrimination (CTD) What “FOM” means (a simple score for how clearly two groups are separated) 🚀 Perfect for: ✅ Beginners who want real listening practice without stress ✅ STEM students who want simple English science explanations ✅ Self-learners who like podcast-style dialogues 📌 More episodes / playlists 👉 Simple Science Talk in Easy English (Playlist) 👉 Easy English Listening Practice (Playlist) 🔔 Subscribe for new episodes and improve your English step by step. 🔑 Keywords easy english, english listening practice, english podcast for beginners, real conversation english, science english, learn english through dialogue, spoken english, shadowing, pronunciation practice, research paper explained, neutron vs gamma, pulse shape discrimination, organic scintillator, digital signal processing #learnenglish #easyenglish #englishpodcast #englishlistening #realconversations #scienceenglish #shadowing #pronunciation