Cheltenham Festivals news

Cheltenham Festivals news archives

10 minutes with… Brian Cox

2 months
2 weeks ago

During the Science Festival we caught up with particle physicist Brian Cox, and asked him about his recent rise to fame and what it’s like to be a Guest Director.

Brian Cox cr Conor Cahill

What does it mean to you to be Guest Director of the festival this year?
A: It’s wonderful because it is the biggest science festival in Britain and I assume it will get bigger, and bigger, and bigger. It’s the 10th anniversary next year isn’t it? So I’ll probably be asking to be Guest Director again because I’ve enjoyed it. It’s brilliant! I’ve done a lot this weekend. The Wonders [of the Solar System] event was great. I did two of those. [The Infinite] Monkey Cage, which I really wanted to do live – well, it was the first time we’ve done that in front of a live audience and it was brilliant, so brilliant that I think we want to do it always in front of an audience now. And I gave my usual talk, except it wasn’t my usual talk because I decided to invent a new one for Cheltenham and did a load of relativity and made it really hard. So I think everyone sat there going ‘Oh God, it’s maths’. I actually did vector identity. The vector, the differential form of Maxwell’s equations and derived the space-time interval. So there we go. I think it was alright.

Why do you feel events like this are important?
A: Science is of primary importance. I honestly think that economically and culturally speaking, it’s the most important thing to be doing in Britain. I think we should make Britain the best place in the world to do science. I think that should be an aspiration. David Cameron should stand up as Prime Minister and say ‘I will make Britain the best place in the world to do science’. The thing is, it’s affordable. We only spend, in total, about ten billion a year on universities, about three and a half billion on R&D. If you were to be bold and double it, Britain would be the best place in the world to do science and you wouldn’t notice in the bottom line of the country. Well, it wouldn’t impact the bottom line downwards. What it would do is impact the bottom line massively upwards. But I think in order to evolve and want to do that in Britain, you need massive public support because it’s a great bold project. And so things like Cheltenham and science on TV are building support for science. We’re going to lead the revolution and make Britain a better place in the world to do science and it will start here. In fact, this is probably the capital of the new Britain. It’ll be Cheltenham Town Hall if I have anything to do with it! Is that a bit overly ambitious?

Is this your first visit to the Cheltenham Science Festival and what do you think of it?
A: No, I was here last year. I did some stuff with Jim Al-Khalili. It’s brilliant. I actually like the fact that it’s quite informal. I like the fact that there’s this room in the Town Hall and everyone mixes together. There’s not a kind of a separation between speakers and the public and there often is at big festivals because it kind of has to be arranged that way. But I like here the fact that you just meet everybody.

Congratulations on your OBE. How does it feel to have shot to fame so quickly?
A: It’s actually beyond odd now. I was in a band before and we had a number one single so I’ve seen it a little bit, but not actually on the scale of after Wonders of the Solar System. I actually have to change my lifestyle because it’s a lot of hassle. That’s good because what it really means is that people are engaging with science. I’m kind of lucky in a way because I seem to have been the first person for a while who has managed to take these wonderful ideas and I’ve been kind of conduit for them. And although a lot of people have been doing it for a long time, you get over critical mass with viewing figures with the BBC. That’s what it is. Usually, you’d get at most about two million people – if you’re lucky, three million – watching a big science show and we had six and a half, if you add them up, for each episode. It’s still on. They just keep repeating it so it’s just consistently picking up an audience. That makes a huge difference. I’m really surprised because suddenly, you do get genuinely noticed like a celebrity rather than a scientist. In fact, my wife found a blog where someone had written ‘The BBC should stop having celebrities like Brian Cox presenting science programmes, they should have scientists’. That’s the funny thing – you get an audience that don’t know who you are. They don’t actually know you’re a scientist. They think you’re on Jonathan Ross so therefore you’re some kind of television presenter. It’s kind of an accolade in a way isn’t it? There’s a definite jump which I wasn’t expecting that has been made because of that programme.

Do you think the media’s recent love of science has been responsible for your rise to fame and do you think that will continue to happen with more and more people?
A: Definitely. It was a conscious decision by the BBC to have the World of Wonder season – which is this kind of year of science – and commissioning programmes with scientists. I mean Kathy Sykes did programmes, Jim Al-Khalili has done them, Marcus du Sautoy, Alice Roberts. The great thing is, because of programmes like Horizon, you can take people who are academics and allow them to grow. It’s not automatic that you can make TV programmes. It takes some practice. You have to learn. And the BBC are excellent at doing that. So it’s not a random thing. I think it’s been building interest for a while and it is primarily down to the BBC I would say.

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We’ve tagged this post with , , , , , on Tuesday 22 June 2010.


10 minutes with… Mark Henderson

2 months
3 weeks ago

We spoke to Mark Henderson, Science Editor of The Times. We asked him about his job as a science journalist and the importance of getting the story right.

mark henderson cr Conor Cahill

Why do you think it is important to share science with the public?
Science is important to so many aspects of our lives now. You can see that in issues such as climate change and in healthcare, but also in the economy too – the fact that so much of the growth that we generate in this country ultimately derives from scientific advances. I think it’s very important that people understand that. I also think it’s important that people understand how science works, how discoveries are made, how we know what’s right and what’s wrong and what we can trust.

What do you love about communicating science?
First of all, the variety, the fact that there is so much exciting scientific endeavour going on – from the fruits of getting the genome sequence which is phenomenally exciting, to the Large Hadron Collider and space exploration. If you get bored covering science, something is wrong. I also love the rigour of science, the fact that ideas stand and fall on evidence rather than hearsay and assertion. The other great thing of course about writing for The Times about science is the way that you can ring up experts all over the world. They give you time and a personal tutorial on something really exciting. And that’s from one of the top names in the field. That’s pretty fun.

How did you go from a history degree to Science Editor for The Times?
I worked on The Times for about 4 years doing general reporting and writing jobs. Then I started a science job about 10 years ago. I don’t think it’s necessarily a disadvantage not to have a science degree. Science is so broad that if you’ve got a degree in particle physics and you’re being asked to write about molecular biology, you are not necessarily any better off. The key thing though is that you have to be able to understand the method of science – how science works – and I think if you can do that, then your actual academic background is less important.

Do you remember your first encounter with science?
I wrote quite a lot of leaders about global warming and GM crops when I did a spell as a leader writer. There is a learning curve though. I remember in my first couple of months on the job, I wrote a story about a cancer breakthrough almost every week because I was taking all these press releases at face value. And then I rapidly learned that actually most of these cancer cures that were being described were for mice and weren’t going to get anywhere near humans. You learn to be more sceptical.

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We’ve tagged this post with , , , on Thursday 17 June 2010.


Day 5 – coming up on the final day of the Festival…

2 months
3 weeks ago

Where has the time flown? It only seems like yesterday since day one of the science festival. One can’t help wondering whether the great physicists at the festival have been experimenting with time travel.

And today is your last chance to come and meet some of these amazing minds. Robert Llewellyn, of Red Dwarf and Scrapheap challenge fame, join us in Electric Dreams: The Future of Cars. Joined by engineer Roger Kemp and psychologist Harry Witchel, at 6pm the trio will be delving into the possibilities of electric cars. Could this be the answer to eco-friendly road travel?

Continuing on the theme of more carbon-efficient travel, Fuel Efficient Flying at 4.15pm will take a look at the future of air travel. Engineers John Green and Ben Evans will take a look at the design of fuel efficient aircraft as we continue our quest for guilt-free travel.

For those who enjoy a holiday in good old Blighty and appreciate what the British Isles has to offer, why not take a journey with geologist and Royal Society Fellow Richard Fortey. At 8pm, The Hidden Landscape will guide you through the hidden treasures of our British landscape and explain how events millions of years ago have made our landscape what it is today.

In health issues today, a panel of doctors, nurses and scientists will be taking us through the difficulties that hospitals face with the threat of superbugs. In Stopping the Spread of Superbugs, you, the audience, will make decisions that affect the outcome of a patient worried about the risk of contracting a superbug such as MRSA. Find out what decisions hospital staff must make every day to stop these nasty bugs in this interactive event at 2pm.

It’s your last chance to come and see this year’s science festival. It has been the biggest and best yet! Don’t miss it!

Sue Harris is our reporter in residence at the festival this year. Sue is a science writer and communicator based in London. She has a background in the healthcare industry and medical writing, although her experience spans a broad range of scientific subjects and she enjoys communicating science face-to-face. www.susanmharris.com

We’ve tagged this post with , , on Sunday 13 June 2010.


Saturday’s roundup: A spoonful of medicine

2 months
3 weeks ago

op-theatre cr Conor Cahill

On Saturday, it was time to take a dose of medicine. Among the broad range of events at The Times Cheltenham Science Festival, a number of health and medicine-focussed sessions featured as some of the most impressive.

Pathologist Suzy Lishman and her team of scientists showed the audience how to investigate a death from a suspected heart attack. Lishman dissected a pig’s heart, which is similar in size to a human heart. In the event Heart Attack she showed how to conduct a post-mortem examination and to look at the heart for damage and signs indicative of heart disease. Different doctors and scientists are involved in the investigations, explained Lishman. Sugar levels and other chemicals in the blood are measured by biochemists and microscopic structural damage is measured by histopathologists. There are also many other tests. There is certainly more to a post-mortem examination than cutting up bodies.

Along the surgical theme, Saturday featured a number of live simulated operations, led by surgeon Roger Kneebone. We went along to the workshop Fancy Yourself as a Surgeon to see what it was all about. It was certainly not for the faint hearted! Commenting on how realistic it was, Festival Director, Mark Lythgoe said, “The test is, when you walk into a theatre and if someone keels over it feels pretty live, and there were definitely a few wobbly legs”.

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We’ve tagged this post with , , , , on Sunday 13 June 2010.


10 minutes with… Quentin Cooper

2 months
4 weeks ago

Quentin Cooper, presenter of BBC Radio 4’s Material World, talked to us about what he does and offered some valuable advice for young scientists hoping to break into a career in science communication.

quentin-cooper cr Conor Cahill

Why do you think it’s important to engage with the general public about science?
I think that science has to be communicated because it’s an aspect of everyday life. You’re interviewing me with a machine that is the product of science. You’re filming me on another that’s got all the latest technology and optics and digital recording skills. I am talking thanks to the amazing workings of my brain and my voice box and everything else. It’s an aspect of what makes us, us. Science sometimes gets this reputation as being all about the really difficult stuff and we need to break that down.

You have been described as ‘the world’s most enthusiastic man’. What is it about broadcasting science that makes you so excited?
First of all, I’m not the world’s most enthusiastic man. It’s a friend of mine. He’s far more enthusiastic than I am. But I do get very enthusiastic about doing science. With science, I get access to people who are doing the cutting edge science and the people who are best at understanding that science. They come and talk to me in my studio. It’s an outrageous privilege and I love it! It’s great to be able to talk to the people involved and then hopefully break down the idea that these are difficult areas of science. So I get the question why am I so excited about science, what I don’t get is why everybody else isn’t quite so excited. This is the most amazing thing! It’s taking us into the unknown all the time. What’s not to be excited about?

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We’ve tagged this post with , , , , on Saturday 12 June 2010.


Friday’s roundup: The festival classroom

2 months
4 weeks ago

Dr Hal - cr Conor Cahill

Around 4600 pupils and teachers from over 60 different schools have attended events and workshops at The Times Cheltenham Science Festival this year. The three schools days have included 28 events and workshops. New this year was Girls’ day, an initiative that aimed to mentor 12-14 year old girls with an aptitude for science.

Visiting school children seemed to be having a great time throughout the duration of the school days. Two of the events on Friday stood out for some of the students.

The Bigger Bang almost blew the roof off the large Arena tent in Imperial Gardens. Shocked passers by wondered if everything was OK as they visibly jumped at the sound of the massive booms that were coming from the event. Presenter, Dr Hal of the University of Brighton, used different chemical reactions to create flashes, bangs, pops and stunning visual effects to explain how chemicals with different properties behave. In one stunt, carbon sulphide and nitrogen dioxide were mixed together in a giant test tube and then ignited. The result was a spectacular bright blue flash travelling along the tube, accompanied by a noise likened to a ‘barking dog’.

Here is what some of the students thought of the event:

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We’ve tagged this post with , , , , on Saturday 12 June 2010.


Day 4 – Events coming up today

2 months
4 weeks ago

It’s a big celebration of the gifted human race today! Come and help us celebrate all that is amazing about human beings.

Modern medicine often astounds and amazes. With the skills of extremely talented surgeons, our chances of surviving accidents and fully recovering from operations of all kinds are continuously improving. Top surgeons are able to perform under immense pressure even with the responsibility of peoples lives in their hands. Today, you can find out what it is like to be a surgeon. We have a live link to our simulated operating theatre in Performance under Pressure: Operation Live at 6.30pm. Dr Dawn from channel 4’s Embarrassing Bodies will be joining a full surgical team for the very realistic demonstration, which will be followed by a discussion on how they perform under pressure.

If something a little lighter-hearted is your thing, School for Gifted Children at 9.30pm has been described as a cross between The Royal Variety Performance and The Royal Institution Christmas Lectures. Featuring comedian Robin Ince, this promises to be an evening of brilliant comedy, laughter, debate along with Ray Tallis, Kate Lancaster and Steve Mould.

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10 minutes with… Jim Al-Khalili

2 months
4 weeks ago

We had a chat with Jim Al-Khalili – Professor of Physics and of Public Engagement of Science at the University of Surrey – about his big hopes for the future of science and theoretical nuclear physics.

Jim Al-Khalili - cr Conor Cahill

What is your ultimate favourite thing about The Times Cheltenham Science Festival?
A: I like the idea that it’s all enclosed and it’s all contained mostly within the town hall. Here, you step out the door, and immediately next door there is another event, another exciting talk and everyone is milling around and everyone is bumping into each other. It’s just that feeling that you’re somewhere exciting, where lots of exciting things are happening that I don’t tend to find elsewhere.

What are you looking forward to the most this year?
A: On Saturday I’m doing an event on my Chemistry series with Chemist Andrea Sella. I’ve no idea what is going to happen there because he’s going to bring lots of demos and he’s going to expect me to do stuff, and I’m relying on him to stop me blowing myself up or suffocating myself. So I’m excited about doing that.

Today, you did an event on chaos theory. What is chaos theory?
A: The great thing about chaos theory is that you apply simple rules and you repeat them again and again. Under certain circumstances, it leads to something completely unpredictable that you could never foresee. And then there’s the flip-side of chaos which is that the same rules, simple rules, can lead to something complex with beautiful patterns emerging. I like to think that that’s a way of explaining how our universe is complicated. Whether chaos has a bearing on evolution and life is an interesting subject. The word chaos encompasses a lot of ideas.

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We’ve tagged this post with , , , on Friday 11 June 2010.


Day 3 – Events coming up today

2 months
4 weeks ago

Bill Bryson

Are you vegetarian, or has your vegetarian friend been telling you that you should give up meat? Come down to the Town Hall and see A Carnivore’s Dilemma at 2.30pm to find out what impact our carnivorous habits are having on the environment. Jonathan Porritt will be discussing with Maggie Gill and Alan Dangour how diets across the world have evolved and whether this has implications for climate change. Vegetarians and meat lovers alike are sure to be in for a lively debate.

Sticking with the environmental theme, do you recall the Great Smog over London in 1952? With our lessened use of coal you could be forgiven for thinking that we have completely cleaned up our act. But our panel of experts in The Air that we Breathe at 6.30pm will reveal what ‘clean air’ really looks like. They will explain how pollutants in the air can go unseen, and will discuss how these ‘invisible’ particles affect our weather and even our health.

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We’ve tagged this post with , , , , on Friday 11 June 2010.


Thursday’s roundup: Plugging in to the future of British science

2 months
4 weeks ago

Mark Lewney - cr Conor Cahill

A recurring theme seemed to emerge at The Times Cheltenham Science Festival yesterday – the importance of our young people to the future of British science. And with Science Minister, David Willetts MP visiting the festival, it was no surprise that the economy, funding for science and science education, and our future generation of scientists was high on many people’s agenda.

Heston Blumenthal and physicist Jim Al-Khalili, both spoke to us of the importance of getting young people enthused with science. “When I give talks to school children, I say don’t think I’m a science professor who is just going to tell you all the answers and understand everything. There is plenty of stuff we have no clue about, and it’s down to you guys, because you will be the scientists thinking about this stuff”, said Al-Khalili.

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We’ve tagged this post with , , , on Friday 11 June 2010.