Project X

All Episodes 2008
TV-G

  • Ended
  • #<Network:0x00007f13787e9388>
  • 2008-02-14T05:00:00Z
  • 30m
  • 4h (8 episodes)
  • Canada
  • English
The answer? Just ask Team X. Dynamic, smart, and above all curious, our team of top scientific investigators will do anything to find the solution. Even spend three hours underwater in a small tank. For science of course. Project X is a new, half-hour themed series that sets out to explore the frontlines of science in an offbeat, entertaining, but intellectually challenging manner. A series that demonstrates to the viewer that science is everywhere in our lives… a passport to a hidden and constantly evolving world of knowledge and events. Each week, we’ll approach a new theme from three very different scientific perspectives. Our core team – microbiologist Jennifer Gardy, engineer Brian Fleck, along with grad student Marc Huot, and science education expert Brian Alters – will be joined by experts from around the globe to give a 360° view of the science behind the world around us. Tasked with a new theme each week, they explore it from every angle: They travel right to the source of the story to explore and carry out challenges and experiments to help explain the science. Always enthusiastic, always asking questions – they venture to the test labs and test backyards and kitchens to make their point. The stories and themes belong in the realm of “mind-blowing” and “too crazy to be true.” It’s a mix of practical and wacky… backyard tinkerer to full-fledged scientist. But they are all stories that are based on some type of established scientific principles, which our expert team demystifies in an oh-so-clever and accessible way, making it relevant to a diverse audience. From the latest in science and technology, to the people behind the headlines – all told with a compelling, unique and unexpected perspective: Project X will change the way that you think about the world around you.

8 episodes

Series Premiere

2008-02-14T05:00:00Z

1x01 Flight

Series Premiere

1x01 Flight

  • 2008-02-14T05:00:00Z30m

Project X takes Flight with its debut episode! Dr. Brian Fleck takes a ride in a hang glider to help illustrate the basic physics of flight, along the way explaining how something the size of an apartment building can actually get off the ground. Marc Huot then goes skiing in a wind tunnel to unlock the secrets of an Olympic Gold alpine jump. And together they take a look at the human contribution to flight – rocket science. But flying is not quite as easy as these guys make it out to be. Dr. Jennifer Gardy picks up a few tips from some of Canada’s top fighter pilots on how to sustain performance and focus even under high levels of G force. Next she’s off to take a parabolic flight with the National Research Council, during which she’ll experience the feeling of zero Gs – weightlessness. (Read what Dr. Gardy has to say about these harrowing experiences on the Project X Blog) And Dr. Brian Alters gets up close and personal with the only mammals capable of really flying – bats. Meeting with bat experts and researchers he’ll help to show us that, for all the progress we humans have made in defying gravity, we still have a lot to learn from nature’s experts.

2008-02-21T05:00:00Z

1x02 Body Armour

1x02 Body Armour

  • 2008-02-21T05:00:00Z30m

Dr. Brian Alters takes a dive from aboard the exploration boat, The Tiburon. Once beneath the surface of the waves, he takes a close look at some of the unusual protective suits of sea creatures including lobsters, sea snails, loggerhead turtles - and sharks. And he learns how the abalone, a shellfish, may have the toughest armour of all. Re-enacting scenes reminiscent of the movie 300 Dr. Brian Fleck and Marc Huot do their best to do damage to replicas of the suits of armour used throughout the ages. From animal hides to chain mail to armour suits and then bulletproof vests, they demonstrate how new weapons drove the need to develop new armours. Dr. Jennifer Gardy looks at the most personal form of armour, our skin, and finds that our body's largest organ contains the key to developing a new class of antibiotics. She travels down to the swamps of Louisiana to get up close and personal with an alligator - a reptile with impressive and surprising body armour.

2008-02-28T05:00:00Z

1x03 Invaders

1x03 Invaders

  • 2008-02-28T05:00:00Z30m

The Project X team tracks the fallout when an outsider with bad manners and a voracious appetite disrupts the natural order of a paradise island ecosystem. Next they check out a clever way to head off invasive species before they get in, and finally they travel to Mexico, to find out what happens when an invader intrudes on the most private place you've got – your body.

2008-03-06T05:00:00Z

1x04 Light

1x04 Light

  • 2008-03-06T05:00:00Z30m

Project X takes a big picture look at light. From what light consists of, to the amazing light shows we see in nature, the Project X team experiments with and explores the fundamentals of light to discover the most cutting-edge science on the planet.

2008-03-13T04:00:00Z

1x05 Memory

1x05 Memory

  • 2008-03-13T04:00:00Z30m

Is there such a thing as a perfect memory? The Project X team learns that memories are subjective, selective, incomplete, even faulty. In the hands of a gifted magician, our memories don’t stand a chance.

2008-03-20T04:00:00Z

1x06 Speed

1x06 Speed

  • 2008-03-20T04:00:00Z30m

This episode looks at things that go fast and our desire to push the limits of speed. We’ll look at the roles that design and chemistry play, and how we can create ways of going faster than previously thought possible.

2008-03-28T04:00:00Z

1x07 Eat

1x07 Eat

  • 2008-03-28T04:00:00Z30m

How do you stave off dehydration in the scalding, suffocating heat of an unrelenting sun? Join the Project X team as they uncover amazing animal adaptations and human survival techniques that cheat death in the desolate heat of the desert.

2008-04-03T04:00:00Z

1x08 What’s to Eat?

1x08 What’s to Eat?

  • 2008-04-03T04:00:00Z30m

This episode might not have you running to the fridge, but it will make you think about what you eat. We’re looking at what’s on the menu for people and animals- and how some not-so-appetizing food habits can be a good thing.

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