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自然科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 1990 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列其中之一。


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  • 中文片名 :

  • 中文系列名:BBC 地平线

  • 英文片名 :From Earth to Miranda

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :约 48 分钟

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :1990

A journey following the NASA Voyager space probe which travelled from Earth to Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus & Neptune during the late 1970s and 1980s.

This documentary examines the discoveries made by the probe about each of the planets and their large collection of moons using real photographs and computer animations (often primitive, such was the technology available back then).

‘From Earth to Miranda’ documents the launch and the encounters with Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus and ending with Uranus’ moon Miranda.


应用科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 2005 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列其中之一。


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http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/horizon/ghostgenes.shtml

  • 中文片名 :基因中的幽灵

  • 中文系列名:BBC 地平线

  • 英文片名 :The Ghost in Your Genes

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :约 49 分钟

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :2005

Scientists have found a new layer to our genes that goes beyond DNA, the very cornerstone on which modern biology sits. With it comes startling first evidence that this can cause heritable effects in humans. The controversial science of epigenetics represents a major shift in thinking from the view that DNA carries all our heritable information, and that nothing an individual does in their lifetime will be biologically passed to their children.


自然科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 2002 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列之一。


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http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2002/freakwave.shtml

  • 中文片名 :畸形波 / 瘋狗浪 / 夺命怪浪

  • 中文系列名:BBC地平线

  • 英文片名 :Freak Wave

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :48 min

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :2002

The world’s oceans claim on average one ship a week, often in mysterious circumstances. With little evidence to go on, investigators usually point at human error or poor maintenance but an alarming series of disappearances and near-sinkings, including world-class vessels with unblemished track records, has prompted the search for a more sinister cause and renewed belief in a maritime myth: the wall of water. Waves the height of an office block. Waves twice as large as any that ships are designed to ride over.

These are not tsunamis or tidal waves, but huge breaking walls of water that come out of the blue. Suspicions these were fact not fiction were roused in 1978, by the cargo ship München. She was a state-of-the-art cargo ship. The December storms predicted when she set out to cross the Atlantic did not concern her German crew. The voyage was perfectly routine until at 3am on 12 December she sent out a garbled mayday message from the mid-Atlantic. Rescue attempts began immediately with over a hundred ships combing the ocean.

“We hoped to find at least a life-raft with people. We never found a living soul”

Captain Pieter de Nijs, München search co-ordinator

The ship was never found. She went down with all 27 hands. An exhaustive search found just a few bits of wreckage, including an unlaunched lifeboat that bore a vital clue. It had been stowed 20m above the water line yet one of its attachment pins had twisted as though hit by an extreme force. The Maritime Court concluded that bad weather had caused an unusual event. Other seafarers could not help but consider the possibility of a mythical freak wave.

Freak waves are the stuff of legend. They aren’t just rare, according to traditional views of the sea, they shouldn’t exist at all. Oceanographers and meteorologists have long used a mathematical system called the linear model to predict wave height. This assumes that waves vary in a regular way around the average (so-called ‘significant’) wave height. In a storm sea with a significant wave height of 12m, the model suggests there will hardly ever be a wave higher than 15m. One of 30m could indeed happen - but only once in ten thousand years.

Except they do happen with startling frequency. Since 1990, 20 vessels have been struck by waves off the South African coast that defy the linear model’s predictions. And on New Year’s Day, 1985 a wave of 26m was measured hitting the Draupner oil rig in the North Sea off Norway. Concerned shipping operators wanted to know what was going on. The largest wave marine architects are required to accommodate in the design strength calculations is 15m from trough to crest. If that assumption were to be proved false, the whole world shipping industry would face some very tough choices.

What could cause such extreme waves? Curious about the spate of South African incidents, oceanographer Marten Grundlingh plotted the strikes on thermal sea surface maps. All the ships had been at the edge of the Agulhas Current, the meeting point of two opposing flows mixing warm Indian Ocean water with a colder Atlantic flow. Radar surveillance by satellite confirmed that wave height at the edge of this current could grow well beyond the linear model’s predictions, especially if the wind direction opposed the current flow.

Problem solved: the answer was just to avoid certain ocean currents in certain weather conditions. There was nothing freakish about large waves; the mariners’ myth was an explicable phenomenon. To science, this was one that didn’t get away.

“Out of nowhere… a wave twice as high as average. The ship went down like freefall”

Göran Persson, Caledonian Star First Officer

Unfortunately, ocean currents could not explain two near disastrous wave strikes in March 2001. Once more two reputable ships, designed to cope with the very worst conditions any ocean could throw at them, were crippled to the point of sinking. The Bremen and Caledonian Star were carrying hundreds of tourists across the South Atlantic. At 5am on 2 March the Caledonian Star’s First Officer saw a 30m wave bearing down on them.

It smashed over the ship, flooding the bridge and destroying much of the navigation and communication equipment. The Caledonian Star limped back to port, her crew and passengers grateful that the engines had kept running, despite the onslaught.

Just days earlier, the cruise liner Bremen had been less fortunate. 137 German tourists were aboard when she too faced an awesome wall of water in the South Atlantic. The impact knocked out all the instrumentation and all power, leaving them helpless in the tumultuous sea. Unable to maintain her course into the waves, there was a real risk the ship could go down and they knew none of the passengers would survive in lifeboats in such freezing conditions. With emergency power only, the crew battled to restart the engines. When they eventually succeeded, it opened the door to a very lucky escape.

“We had said, ‘This kind of thing can’t happen; this kind of thing is too strange’”

Al Osborne, wave mathematician

No current could have created such huge waves. There is none in that part of the Atlantic. Clearly, there was another effect investigators needed to find. Except someone already had: it existed (on paper at least) in the world of quantum physics. Al Osborne is a wave mathematician with 30 years experience devising equations to describe open ocean wave patterns. Quantum physics has at its heart a concept called the Schrodinger Equation, a way of expressing the probability of something happening that is far more complex than the simple linear model. Al’s theory is based on the notion that in certain unstable conditions, waves can steal energy from their neighbours. Adjacent waves shrink while the one at the focus can grow to an enormous size. His modified Schrodinger Equation had been rejected in the past as implausible, but with research attention centred on analysing these rogue waves - including global satellite radar surveillance by the new European Remote Sensing Satellite - data began to emerge backing his case. When Al came across the New Year’s Day 1985 wave profiles from the Draupner oil rig, he saw his mathematical model played out in the real world.

Al’s work - if correct - suggests that there are two kinds of waves out on the high seas; the classical undulating type described by the linear model and an unstable non-linear monster - a wave that at any time can start sucking up energy from waves around it to become a towering freak. The consequences for ship design could be stark.

Currently the biggest wave factored into most ship design is smooth, undulating and 15m high. A freak wave is not only far bigger, it is so steep it is almost breaking. This near-vertical wall of water is almost impossible to ride over - the wave just breaks over the ship. According to accident investigator, Rod Rainey, such a wave would exert a pressure of 100 tonnes per square metre on a ship, far greater than the 15 tonnes that ships are designed to withstand without damage. It’s no wonder that even ships the size of the huge freighter München can sink without trace.


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应用科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 2013 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列其中之一。


Fracking_The_New_Energy_Rush_cover0.jpg


http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b02zldds

  • 中文片名 :水力压裂技术: 新兴能源技术热潮

  • 中文系列名:BBC 地平线

  • 英文片名 :Fracking: The New Energy Rush

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :约 59 分钟

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :2013

Iain Stewart教授对一种新兴却带有广泛争议的地表深处的天然气的发掘技术热潮进行了调查。不少时候,发掘地点就在一些居住地的地表以下;而将那里的天然气发掘出来运用到水力压裂技术。Iain Stewart教授去往美国,以发现这项技术的具体细节,为什么它能成为潜在的革新力量,以及我们能从美国人的经验中学到一些什么


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社会科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 2004 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列其中之一。


First_Olympian_cover0.jpg


http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/horizon/broadband/index.shtml

  • 中文片名 :

  • 中文系列名:BBC 地平线

  • 英文片名 :First Olympian

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :约 50 分钟

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :2004

Two and a half thousand years ago, sport was tough. Few athletes survived the rigours of the great sporting arenas of the Ancient Greeks and only one athlete has survived the ravages of time to offer a unique insight into a remarkable ancient world.

First Olympian tells the “Athlete of Taranto’s” fascinating story.Fifty years ago, a skeleton was found in Taranto in Southern Italy. On opening an ancient tomb,archaeologists found the skeleton with four richly decorated jars in each corner of the tomb, revealing that the owner had an obsession for sport.

Cutting edge forensic analysis reveals fascinating details about his diet, general health and appearance and which sports he excelled at. Lavish special effects and dramatic reconstruction then recreate the awesome sight of ancient Olympia and the games that would have drawn up to 40,000 spectators.

They were definitely more brutal than the Olympics of today - one wrestler ensured victory by breaking his opponents fingers - but were they more physically challenging? To discover the truth, modern athletes are put to the test in a series of events using equipment designed from the remains of ancient originals.


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自然科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 1996 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列其中之一。


Fermat’s_Last_Theorem_cover0.jpg


http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01rt4c7

  • 中文片名 :费马最后定理

  • 中文系列名:BBC 地平线

  • 英文片名 :Fermat’s Last Theorem

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :约 59 分钟

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :1996

The Pythagorean Theorem is simple: x^2 + y^2 = z^2. In this form, the equation can be solved. But what if the 2 is replaced with any positive integer greater than 2? Would the equation still be solvable? More than 300 years ago, amateur mathematician Pierre de Fermat said no, and claimed he could prove it. Unfortunately, the book margin in which he left this prophecy was too small to contain his thinking. Fermat’s Last Theorem has since baffled mathematicians armed with the most advanced calculators and computers. This programme chronicles the seven-year effort of one mathematician, Andrew Wiles, who methodically works in near isolation to determine the proof for this seemingly simple equation.

The programme was made in 1995 and first broadcast 26th January 1996. This version has a copyright date of 1997 and is 3 minutes longer than the Xvid (UKTV Documentary) edition. For further information see Simon Singh’s website

  • click on “Behind the Scenes” and scroll down.


自然科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 1995 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列其中之一。


Farewell_Fantastic_Venus_cover0.jpg


http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2000/lifeonmars.shtml

  • 中文片名 :再见金星

  • 中文系列名:BBC 地平线

  • 英文片名 :Farewell Fantastic Venus

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :约 48 分钟

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :1995

Tells the story of Earth’s sister planet Venus, from early sightings and fantasies to the present day. In particular, the findings of American and Soviet space probes in the 60s and 70s are examined. The Magellan space probe burned up in 1994 after a decade in orbit around the planet. Extraordinary images of the surface of Venus were produced but scientists have been left with a mass of geological puzzles that threaten to overturn 100 years of dogma about how planets work.


自然科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 2000 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列其中之一。


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http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2000/extremedino.shtml

  • 中文片名 :巨龙的奥秘

  • 中文系列名:BBC 地平线

  • 英文片名 :Extreme Dinosaurs

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :约 48 分钟

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :2000

Amazing new discoveries in South America are revolutionising what we thought we knew about the dinosaur world. It now seems that South America was home to both the largest meat-eater - so new it’s still without a name - and the largest herbivore - the enormous long-necked Argentinasaurus. And what’s more, these dinosaurs lived at the same time in the same place. So it’s possible that like in a science fiction movie, in this prehistoric world these two giants of their kind fought each other in a spectacular clash of the Titans.

Horizon follows the scientists to Argentina as they unearth one of these giants - a brand new species of dinosaur; the biggest carnivore ever discovered. Not yet named, this new creature is even bigger than T. rex, the so-called ‘king’ of the carnivores. The new giant South American predator had a skull bigger than a man that was full of serrated, knife-like teeth and long powerful jaw muscles. They could dissect their prey with almost surgical precision.

But even this formidable killing machine couldn’t alone have taken on the massive long-neck, Argentinasaurus, which was the height of a five-storey building. It must have hunted in a pack. The problem is, the mega-meat-eaters have always been assumed to have been solitary creatures. The evidence shows that they lived and hunted alone. If they weren’t pack hunters, then they would never have attacked Argentinasaurus. So it looked like the idea of a mighty battle between these two giants was simply science fiction. But extraordinary new clues are proving otherwise.


自然科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 2005 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列其中之一。


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http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/horizon/experiment_prog_summary.shtml

  • 中文片名 :

  • 中文系列名:BBC 地平线

  • 英文片名 :An Experiment to Save the World

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :约 48 分钟

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :2005

In March 2002, the scientific world was rocked by some astonishing news: a distinguished US government scientist claimed he had made nuclear fusion out of sound waves in his laboratory.

Rusi Taleyarkhan’s breakthrough was such important news because nuclear fusion is one of the most difficult scientific processes, and also one of the most coveted. It could solve all of our energy problems for ever. In principle, sufficient fuel exists on earth to provide clean, pollution-free energy for billions of people for millions of years.

To make it happen, individual atoms must be slammed into each other with enough energy to make them fuse together, something that requires temperatures found only in the core of stars like our Sun – over 10 million Kelvin. The idea that these temperatures had been reached in a small scale laboratory using only soundwaves took many scientists by surprise. To them, fusion projects were huge multibillion-pound, intergovernmental schemes with the far off goal of producing energy in several decades time.

Taleyarkhan’s fusion breakthrough was based on a little-understood process called sonoluminescence. It’s a process that magically transforms sound waves into flashes of light, focusing the sound energy into a tiny flickering hot spot inside a bubble. It’s been called the star in a jar.

The star in a jar effortlessly reaches temperatures of tens of thousands of degrees, hotter than the surface of the sun. Many scientists had wondered if the core of the bubble was even hotter – maybe even as hot as the core of the sun. If so, fusion would happen there. But until Taleyarkhan, no one had been able to either prove it or disprove it.

The breakthrough and the paper in Science attracted great scepticism. When fusion takes place, particles called neutrons are given off. These are considered by scientists to be the key signature of nuclear fusion – but measuring neutrons on a small, laboratory scale had proven notoriously difficult in the past – and had even killed off an infamous fusion claim in 1989. Many scientists didn’t believe that Rusi Taleyarkhan’ neutron detection was absolutely right. So to get to the bottom of the issue, the experiment was re-run by Mike Saltmarsh and Dan Shapiro, colleagues at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. They couldn’t find any evidence of fusion. But the controversy escalated as Taleyarkhan’s team stood their ground and then, two years later, brought out a new paper showing even more fusion and more neutrons. This paper was thoroughly reviewed and published in another respected journal.

But the the controversy wouldn’t die down. Nuclear fusion from soundwaves would be a huge scientific breakthrough – and to be convinced of it, many scientists wanted to see better evidence, evidence that was absolutely incontrovertible. They wanted to look very precisely at the timing of the neutrons to see just how closely they were related to the flashes of light.

If they occurred at the exact same time, they would finally be convinced that fusion was taking place. But they wanted timing with incredible accuracy, that of a nanosecond, or a billionth of a second. This was one measurement that, though possible, still hadn’t been carried out by Taleyarkhan and his team.

So Horizon decided to try to sort out the issue once and for all. And we commissioned an independent team of leading scientists to conduct the experiment. Working from the instructions set out in Taleyarkhan’s paper, we assembled the same key scientific conditions to create nuclear fusion from sonoluminescence. To see if we could find fusion, we measured the neutrons and the flashes of light simultaneously with nanosecond accuracy, something that had never been done before.

The experiment was carried out by Seth Putterman, one of the world’s leading practitioners of sonoluminescence. His data was analysed by a panel in the UK that included experts in sonoluminescence and neutron detection. They agreed that Putterman had achieved the vital scientific conditions set out in Taleyarkhan’s paper and that his experiment was a good attempt at getting the same results.

But then it came down to the crucial question: did Putterman find fusion? The result was negative. Recording data nanosecond by nanosecond, Putterman did not find a single neutron close enough to a flash of light for it to be considered the result of nuclear fusion.

We put our conclusion to Taleyarkhan. He said that several differences in our equipment could have affected our results. It is very possible that other laboratories around the world will reproduce Rusi Taleyarkhan’s fusion results but until then, the claim will continue to attract great scepticism from the wider scientific community.


自然科学类纪录片,BBC 频道 1990 年出品,是 BBC Horizon 系列其中之一。


Encounter_with_Neptune_cover0.jpg


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  • 中文片名 :

  • 中文系列名:BBC 地平线

  • 英文片名 :Encounter with Neptune

  • 英文系列名:BBC Horizon

  • 电视台 :BBC

  • 地区 :英国

  • 语言 :英语

  • 时长 :约 48 分钟

  • 版本 :TV

  • 发行时间 :1990

A journey following the NASA Voyager space probe which travelled from Earth to Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus & Neptune during the late 1970s and 1980s. This documentary examines the discoveries made by the probe about each of the planets and their large collection of moons using real photographs and computer animations (often primitive, such was the technology available back then).

‘Encounter With Neptune’ examines the discoveries of the planet Neptune and its geologically active moon Triton.