PostHole
Compose Login
You are browsing eu.zone1 in read-only mode. Log in to participate.
rss-bridge 2022-11-14T21:00:00+00:00

The puzzle of the plasma doughnut

What do you get if you smash two hydrogen nuclei together? Helium and lots of energy – it's nuclear fusion!

Nuclear fusion is the power source of the sun and the stars. Physicists and engineers here on earth are trying to build reactors than can harness fusion power to provide limitless clean energy. But it’s tricky.

Rutherford and Fry are joined by Dr Melanie Windridge, plasma physicist and CEO of Fusion Energy Insights, who explains why the fourth state of matter – plasma – helps get fusion going, and why a Russian doughnut was a key breakthrough on the path to fusion power.

Dr Sharon Ann Holgate, author of Nuclear Fusion: The Race to Build a Mini Sun on Earth, helps our sleuths distinguish the more familiar nuclear fission (famous for powerful bombs) from the cleaner and much less radioactive nuclear fusion.

And plasma physicist Dr Arthur Turrell, describes the astonishing amount of investment and innovation going on to try and get fusion power working at a commercial scale.


Homepage

Accessibility links

BBC World Service

Discovery

Main content

Listen now

The puzzle of the plasma doughnut

Discovery

“How does fusion work, and how can we do it safely on earth?” asks Les Walker.

What do you get if you smash two hydrogen nuclei together? Helium and lots of energy – it's nuclear fusion!

Nuclear fusion is the power source of the sun and the stars. Physicists and engineers here on earth are trying to build reactors than can harness fusion power to provide limitless clean energy. But it’s tricky.

Rutherford and Fry are joined by Dr Melanie Windridge, plasma physicist and CEO of Fusion Energy Insights, who explains why the fourth state of matter – plasma – helps get fusion going, and why a Russian doughnut was a key breakthrough on the path to fusion power.

Dr Sharon Ann Holgate, author of Nuclear Fusion: The Race to Build a Mini Sun on Earth, helps our sleuths distinguish the more familiar nuclear fission (famous for powerful bombs) from the cleaner and much less radioactive nuclear fusion.

And plasma physicist Dr Arthur Turrell, describes the astonishing amount of investment and innovation going on to try and get fusion power working at a commercial scale.

###

####

Higher quality (128kbps)

Lower quality (64kbps)

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Mon 21 Nov 2022
01:32GMT

BBC World Service except Americas and the Caribbean

More episodes

Previous

The Riddle of Red-Eyes and Runny-Noses

Next

Wild inside: The Cheetah

See all episodes from Discovery

Broadcasts

Mon 14 Nov 2022
20:32GMT

BBC World Service Americas and the Caribbean, UK DAB/Freeview, Europe and the Middle East & Online only

Mon 14 Nov 2022
21:32GMT

BBC World Service Australasia, News Internet, South Asia & East Asia only

Tue 15 Nov 2022
04:32GMT

BBC World Service Americas and the Caribbean, Australasia, South Asia & East Asia only

Space

The eclipses, spacecraft and astronauts changing our view of the Universe

The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry

[The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry]

A pair of scientific sleuths answer your perplexing questions. Ask them anything!

Podcast

Discovery

Explorations in the world of science.

Similar programmes

By genre:

  • Factual > Science & Nature

By format:

Magazines & Reviews

[BBC World Service homepage]

Online schedule

Help & FAQs

Contact us

News in more than 40 languages


Original source

Reply