
Photosynthesis
Timothy Walker looks at how 17th-century botanists made the connection between the growth of a plant and the energy from the sun - the process of photosynthesis.
The air we breathe, and all the food we eat, is created from water, sunlight, carbon dioxide and a few minerals. That's it, nothing else. It sounds simple, but this process is one of the most fascinating and complicated in all of science. Without it there could be no life on earth. It's that important.
For centuries people believed that plants grew by eating soil. In the 17th century, pioneer botanists began to make the connection between the growth of a plant and the energy from the sun. They discovered how plants use water, sunlight and carbon dioxide to produce sugars - how, in fact, a plant grows.
The process of photosynthesis is still at the heart of scientific research today. Universities across the world are working hard to replicate in the lab what plants do with ruthless efficiency. Their goal is to produce a clean, limitless fuel and if they get it right it will change all our lives.
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Van Helmont's experiments on plant growth
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Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Timothy Walker |
| Producer | Louise V Say |
| Series Producer | Paul Overton |
| Series Producer | Graeme Thomson |
Broadcasts
- Tue 14 Jun 201121:00
- Wed 15 Jun 201100:00
- Wed 15 Jun 201103:30
- Sat 18 Jun 201122:30
- Tue 31 Jan 201220:00
- Wed 1 Feb 201201:00
- Thu 17 Apr 201420:00
- Fri 18 Apr 201402:00
- Thu 10 Dec 201502:30
- Tue 9 May 201701:00
- Thu 23 May 201923:00
- Thu 25 Aug 202219:00
- Fri 26 Aug 202201:35



