• Ended
  • #<Network:0x00007f7a8649a658>
  • 2015-08-20T00:00:00Z
  • 1h
  • 3h (3 episodes)
  • United States
  • English
  • Documentary
An exciting three-part series about one of the great adventures in the history of science: the long and continuing quest to understand what the world is made of. Three hour-long episodes tell the story of seven of history’s most important scientists as they seek to identify, understand and organize the basic building blocks of matter.

3 episodes

Series Premiere

2015-08-20T00:00:00Z

1x01 Out of Thin Air (1754-1806)

Series Premiere

1x01 Out of Thin Air (1754-1806)

  • 2015-08-20T00:00:00Z1h

One of science’s great odd couples — British minister Joseph Priestley and French tax administrator Antoine Lavoisier — together discover a fantastic new gas called oxygen, overturning the reigning theory of chemistry and triggering a worldwide search for new elements. Soon caught up in the hunt is science’s first great showman, a precocious British chemist named Humphry Davy, who dazzles London audiences with his lectures, introduces them to laughing gas and turns the battery into a powerful tool in the search for new elements.

Over a single weekend in 1869, a young Russian chemistry professor named Dmitri Mendeleev invents the Periodic Table, bringing order to the growing gaggle of elements. But this sense of order is shattered when a Polish graduate student named Marie Sklodowska Curie discovers radioactivity, revealing that elements can change identities — and that atoms must have undiscovered parts inside them.

2015-08-20T00:00:00Z

1x03 Into the Atom (1910-1960)

1x03 Into the Atom (1910-1960)

  • 2015-08-20T00:00:00Z1h

Caught up in the race to discover the atom’s internal parts — and learn how they fit together — a young British physicist, Harry Moseley, uses newly discovered X-rays to put the Periodic Table in a whole new light. And a young American chemist named Glenn Seaborg creates a new element — plutonium — that changes the world forever, unleashing a force of unimaginable destructive power: the atomic bomb.

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