BBC Horizon: Can We Make a Star on Earth?

megaresp

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For those in the UK with an interest in nuclear fusion, the following is on BBC Four at 8pm this evening:
Horizon: Can We Make a Star on Earth?

Despite decades of dedicated work, nuclear fusion researchers have been unable to produce electricity capable of supplying a national grid. This documentary witnesses experimental physicist Brian Cox embark on a global tour to discover whether nuclear fusion is a feasible energy source for the future. On his journey he visits a bomb-testing facility in America, and enters the reaction chamber of South Korea's K-Star - a complex that may hold the key to progress in the field of fusion research
ETA: I've just realised it's a repeat. Has anyone seen this? Is it worth watching?
 
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I'm sure he will be pointing and things are telling us it is all really, really fantastic!

While staring whistfully at the sky?


(Haven't we been about 15 years away from fusion for about 40 years now?)
 
I enjoy listening to Brian Cox. It's like having cosmology explained to me by Roger Waters.
 
It looks more interesting than anything else on tonight so I'll give it a whirl.
 
I find Brian Cox really irritating - the way he grins all the time and emphasises every large figure/span of time...2 billion years etc. - it's like he's trying to engage the attention of a toddler the whole time.
 
I find Brian Cox really irritating - the way he grins all the time and emphasises every large figure/span of time...2 billion years etc. - it's like he's trying to engage the attention of a toddler the whole time.

That's called communication..
 
I find Brian Cox really irritating - the way he grins all the time and emphasises every large figure/span of time...2 billion years etc. - it's like he's trying to engage the attention of a toddler the whole time.

You didn't see the recent BBC astronomy series that he presented with Dara O'Briain? I was impressed by the interest and participation of teenagers. If you can do a better job, apply for his post.
 
I find Brian Cox really irritating - the way he grins all the time and emphasises every large figure/span of time...2 billion years etc. - it's like he's trying to engage the attention of a toddler the whole time.

I disagree.

I think he provides a good summary of current science to the lay-person, which is the intended audience.

My only beef with him is that he is so bloody young. I wish I had that brain power when I was his age.

V.
 
You didn't see the recent BBC astronomy series that he presented with Dara O'Briain? I was impressed by the interest and participation of teenagers. If you can do a better job, apply for his post.

That doesn't seem to be available online yet, but I will be looking for it. I hope it will be accessible on this side of the Pond.

Dara O'Briain is one of my favourite people. As well as being a super comedian he is a very smart chap. I hope for the day that he and Neil deGrasse Tyson would put something together.

V.
 
I disagree.

I think he provides a good summary of current science to the lay-person, which is the intended audience.

My only beef with him is that he is so bloody young. I wish I had that brain power when I was his age.

V.

Errrr, according to wiki he was born in 1968. That makes him, uuuuhhhh, a mere slip of a 44. Also,

"He also had some fame in the 1990s as the keyboard player for the pop band D:Ream." http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11798071
 
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I disagree.

I think he provides a good summary of current science to the lay-person, which is the intended audience.

My only beef with him is that he is so bloody young. I wish I had that brain power when I was his age.

V.

Well that's cheered me up, being in your mid 40s isn't usually considered young. Now if I could just have the brains!
 

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