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The Life Scientific

Jim Al-Khalili on HIS life scientific

The Life Scientific

BBC

Technology, Personal Journals, Society & Culture, Science

4.61.4K Ratings

🗓️ 5 February 2019

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In an ideal (quantum) world, Jim Al-Khalili would be interviewing himself about his life as a scientist but since the production team can’t access a parallel universe, Adam Rutherford is stepping in to ask Jim questions in front of an audience at The Royal Society. Jim and his family left Iraq in 1979, two weeks before Saddam Hussein came to power, abandoning most of their possessions. Having grown up listening to the BBC World Service, he had to drop his ts to fit in at school in Portsmouth where he was one of just three boys in a class of more than a hundred girls. He specialised in nuclear physics and spent fifteen years in front of a computer screen trying to understand an exotic and ephemeral sub-atomic phenomenon known as the halo effect. His ‘little eureka moment’ came in 1996 when Jim discovered that, for the mathematics to add up, these halo nuclei had to be a lot bigger than anyone had thought. It isn’t going to lead to a new kind of non-stick frying pan any time soon but it was exciting, nonetheless. More recently he has become interested in quantum biology. It started as a hobby back in the 1990s when physicists were sceptical and many biologists were unconvinced. Since then evidence has been stacking up. Several studies suggest that lasting quantum mechanical effects could explain photosynthesis, for example. 'It maybe a red herring’ Jim admits but Jim and his team at the University of Surrey are determined to find out if the idea of quantum biology makes sense. Could life itself depend on quantum tunnelling and other bizarre features of the sub-atomic world? Download the special extended podcast to hear questions from past guests on The Life Scientific and some cheeky contributions from members of the Al-Khalili family. Producer: Anna Buckley

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, it's Doleepa, and I'm at your service.

0:04.7

Join me as I serve up personal conversations with my sensational guests.

0:08.8

Do a leap interviews, Tim Cook.

0:11.2

Technology doesn't want to be good or bad.

0:15.0

It's in the hands of the creator.

0:16.7

It's not every day that I have the CEO of the world's biggest company in my living room.

0:20.7

If you're looking at your phone more than you're looking in someone's eyes, you're doing the wrong thing.

0:26.0

Julie, at your service.

0:28.0

Listen to all episodes on BBC Sales.

0:31.0

Hello, I'm Jim Alkalee.

0:33.0

And as many of you life scientific podcast people will already know,

0:37.0

I've spent seven years interviewing some of the finest scientists alive,

0:41.0

learning about their passions and their quirks.

0:44.8

Which makes me feel rather embarrassed about what happened recently in front of an audience

0:48.7

at the Royal Society.

0:51.0

Over to you, Adam Rutherford. BBC Sounds, Music Radio Podcasts.

0:57.0

Of the 179 people featured on the Life Scientific over the last seven years years we have heard from some of the finest

1:04.6

scientific minds the most ingenious engineers and the most enthusiastic and passionate

1:09.6

biologists chemists mathematiciansians, and physicists are live today.

1:14.3

One name has been conspicuously absent from the list of interviewees and yet simultaneously

1:20.0

ever-present in every single show.

1:22.2

It's as if some weird quantum effect has bewitched this

...

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