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Superconductivity

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss ideas about why some materials lose their electrical resistance at low temperatures and expel their magnetic field and why that matters.

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the discovery made in 1911 by the Dutch physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes (1853-1926). He came to call it Superconductivity and it is a set of physical properties that nobody predicted and that none, since, have fully explained. When he lowered the temperature of mercury close to absolute zero and ran an electrical current through it, Kamerlingh Onnes found not that it had low resistance but that it had no resistance. Later, in addition, it was noticed that a superconductor expels its magnetic field. In the century or more that has followed, superconductors have already been used to make MRI scanners and to speed particles through the Large Hadron Collider and they may perhaps bring nuclear fusion a little closer (a step that could be world changing).

The image above is from a photograph taken by Stephen Blundell of a piece of superconductor levitating above a magnet.

With

Nigel Hussey
Professor of Experimental Condensed Matter Physics at the University of Bristol and Radbout University

Suchitra Sebastian
Professor of Physics at the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge

And

Stephen Blundell
Professor of Physics at the University of Oxford and Fellow of Mansfield College

Producer: Simon Tillotson

Available now

51 minutes

Last on

Thu 26 Jan 2023 21:30

LINKS AND FURTHER READING

CONTRIBUTORS








READING LIST

James F. Annett, Superconductivity, Superfluids and Condensates (Oxford University Press, 2005)

Stephen J. Blundell, Superconductivity: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2008)

Gerald Burns, High-Temperature Superconductivity: An Introduction (Academic Press, 1992)

Michel Cyrot and Davor Pavuna (eds.), Introduction To Superconductivity and High-Tc Materials (World Scientific, 1992)

Kristian Fossheim, Superconductivity: Discoveries and Discoverers: Ten Physics Nobel Laureates Tell Their Story (Springer, 2015)

V. L. Ginzburg and E. A. Andryushin, Superconductivity (WSPC, 2004)

Robert Laughlin, A Different Universe: Reinventing Physics from the Bottom Down (Basic Books, 2006)

Susannah Speller, A Materials Science Guide to Superconductors (Oxford University Press, 2022)


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Broadcasts

  • Thu 26 Jan 2023 09:00
  • Thu 26 Jan 2023 21:30

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