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Broadcasts from the Cosmos

Episode 21 of 30

Astronomer Heather Couper looks at radio waves in space and how they led to the discovery of the pulsar. From June 2008.

Heather Couper presents a narrative history of astronomy.

Second World War radar research led to the discovery of radio broadcasts from the skies. A new science was born and radio astronomers started to build giant dishes to listen in to the cosmos, including the great radio telescope at Jodrell Bank, brainchild of Bernard Lovell.

In 1967, a field near Cambridge saw a strange new sort of telescope, consisting of 1,000 wooden posts and 120 miles of wire. It was with this that Jocelyn Bell discovered a regular cosmic heartbeat, a regular radio pulse. Researchers initially surmised that it might be a signal from an alien civilisation, but it was later found to emanate from an extremely dense spinning neutron star, the collapsed core of an exploded star or supernova. Soon dozens of these pulsars were known, taking physics to a new level.

Readers are Timothy West, Robin Sebastian, Julian Rhind-Tutt and John Palmer.

15 minutes

Last on

Tue 28 Nov 2017 02:15

Broadcasts

  • Mon 23 Jun 2008 15:45
  • Wed 29 May 2013 14:15
  • Mon 23 Feb 2015 14:15
  • Tue 24 Feb 2015 00:15
  • Mon 27 Nov 2017 14:15
  • Tue 28 Nov 2017 02:15