PostHole
Compose Login
You are browsing eu.zone1 in read-only mode. Log in to participate.
rss-bridge 2021-12-27T20:32:00+00:00

The weirdness of water, Part 1 of 2

“I don’t really understand why water has so many properties on different scales ranging from very large and cosmic to very small quantum and quarky - Could you help by zooming in and out on water to explain what is known about it? Asks Neil Morton in Stirling. Rutherford and Fry learn about the special hydrogen bonds that makes water such an unusual liquid.

Quantum physicist Professor Patricia Hunt, at the Victoria University in Wellington in New Zealand explains to Hannah the quantum properties of individual water molecules and how they link up with other water molecules in liquid water and solid ice. She describes the hydrogen bonds that give water some of it’s weird and wonderful properties such as why ice floats, why water is able to store huge amounts of heat and why water has such a strong surface tension.

Science writer and author of ‘H2O – a biography of water’ Philip Ball describes how in the 18th century it was discovered that water was not one of the classical elements, but a compound liquid of water and hydrogen and explains to Adam why there are at least 15 different types of ice.

Physicist Dr. Helen Czerski sets the record straight on how ice forms in oceans and lakes and why water is at its densest at 4 degrees Centigrade and not zero.

Presenters: Hannah Fry & Adam Rutherford
Producer: Fiona Roberts


Homepage

Accessibility links

BBC World Service

Discovery

Main content

Listen now

The weirdness of water, Part 1 of 2

Discovery

‘Please explain the weirdness of water?’ asks Neil Morton in Stirling. Rutherford and Fry learn about the special hydrogen bonds that makes water such an unusual liquid.

“I don’t really understand why water has so many properties on different scales ranging from very large and cosmic to very small quantum and quarky - Could you help by zooming in and out on water to explain what is known about it? Asks Neil Morton in Stirling. Rutherford and Fry learn about the special hydrogen bonds that makes water such an unusual liquid.

Quantum physicist Professor Patricia Hunt, at the Victoria University in Wellington in New Zealand explains to Hannah the quantum properties of individual water molecules and how they link up with other water molecules in liquid water and solid ice. She describes the hydrogen bonds that give water some of it’s weird and wonderful properties such as why ice floats, why water is able to store huge amounts of heat and why water has such a strong surface tension.

Science writer and author of ‘H2O – a biography of water’ Philip Ball describes how in the 18th century it was discovered that water was not one of the classical elements, but a compound liquid of water and hydrogen and explains to Adam why there are at least 15 different types of ice.

Physicist Dr. Helen Czerski sets the record straight on how ice forms in oceans and lakes and why water is at its densest at 4 degrees Centigrade and not zero.

Presenters: Hannah Fry & Adam Rutherford
Producer: Fiona Roberts

###

####

Higher quality (128kbps)

Lower quality (64kbps)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Tue 28 Dec 2021
18:32GMT

BBC World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only

More episodes

Previous

The guiding hound

Next

The weirdness of water, Part 2 of 2

See all episodes from Discovery

Broadcasts

Mon 27 Dec 2021
20:32GMT

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

Mon 27 Dec 2021
21:32GMT

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

Tue 28 Dec 2021
02:32GMT

BBC World Service

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