Professor Brian Cox takes a global journey in search of the energy source of the future – nuclear fusion. It is the process that fuels the sun and every other star in the universe. Yet despite over five decades of effort, scientists have been unable to get even a single watt of fusion electricity onto the grid.
Brian returns to Horizon to find out why. Granted extraordinary access to the biggest and most ambitious fusion experiments on the planet, Brian travels to the USA to see a high security fusion bomb testing facility in action and is given a tour of the world’s most powerful laser.
In South Korea, he clambers inside the reaction chamber of K-Star, the world’s first super-cooled, super-conducting fusion reactor where the fate of future fusion research will be decided.
Nuclear fusion is nature’s power source. From the Sun to the most distant stars, the energy that lights up the Universe is released by sticking hydrogen nuclei together to make helium.
Since hydrogen is the most abundant element in the Universe, it seems sensible to ask whether we might endeavor to do the same and power ourselves out of our serious energy crisis by building stars on Earth.
The problem of course is that stars are big and hot; the Sun is the size of a million Earths, and burns six hundred million tonnes of hydrogen fuel every second.
This is a small part of the documentary. We are still looking for the full documentary.
4 Comments
Looks like your video got taken down =(.
It’s up again – now on a Chinese video host. (Edit: Link dead again, still looking around for the full documentary)
this link seems to work mcafree found nothing and the video works
got the link from a forum post (the link was for members only which I was not) then found the link with the same exact info on piratebay small amount of seeders though. I hope the link comes through all right.
Removed link.
Hi,
even though we really appreciate the help, we cannot accept any downloadable links for any documentary. This is a streaming site only.
If you find the full documentary through a friendly video host, (I.E. one without popup ads and long loading time) I’ll be sure to take a look and fix the link.
Thanks again.