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Alan Watson

Professor Alan Watson has spent 40 years trying to unravel the mysteries of cosmic rays and where they come from.

Professor Alan Watson from the University of Leeds, has spent 40 years trying to unravel a mystery at the frontier of physics. Where do cosmic rays - subatomic particles with the highest known energies in the entire Universe - come from? And which violent astronomical events are producing these hugely energetic jets of particles that travel for light years to reach us? As many as a million of them pass through us every night as we sleep, the equivalent of having two chest X-rays every year.

His quest to find the origins of cosmic rays has taken him from the North York Moors to the South Pole and the pampas grasslands of Argentina, where he has been instrumental in creating the largest ever cosmic ray detector, covering an area bigger than Luxembourg. He talks to Jim Al-Khalili about one of physics' fascinating mysteries.

(Image: Professor Alan Watson)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sun 29 Sep 2013 03:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Tue 24 Sep 2013 23:32GMT
  • Sun 29 Sep 2013 03:32GMT

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