How to hack your home with Ri Christmas lecturer Danielle George
We catch up with this year’s Royal Institution Christmas Lecturer Danielle George to find out what she has in store for budding young scientists, and what she’ll be doing over the festive period. Congratulations on being named this year’s Ri Christmas Lecturer – what was your response when asked? When I first received an email asking if I might be interested in presenting the lectures I thought it must have been sent to me by mistake so I ignored it. But then I received a second email a few days later which convinced me that maybe it really was a genuine request and not spam after all! After I submitted my proposal and did a screen test, I became glued to my mobile for days hoping to receive a call with good news. I was over the moon when I found out I had been chosen! Now that the preparation is well underway I am getting even more excited. Michael Faraday’s findings in the field of electromagnetism nearly 200 years ago are integral to my field of work today, so I’m honoured to have the opportunity to present in the very same lecture theatre he stood in and to demonstrate how his discoveries are still of fundamental importance to the cutting-edge research taking place in engineering today. You’re going to be speaking to a room-full of the next generation of scientists – does this feel like a huge responsibility? HUGE! And I’m relishing the thought of it. It’s a fabulous opportunity to influence the next generation of scientists and engineers. I teach 200 first year undergraduates every year so I’m hoping that will prepare me a little. Are you nervous? I am nervous but it’s a good type. The type I normally feel before giving each lecture at work. I think it’s a healthy feeling and shows that you are passionate and care about the outcome. If I ever stop feeling it then I know it’s time to give up lecturing. I’m getting as much advice as possible from previous Christmas Lecturers to see the best way to prepare and I’ll try my usual preparation of hot chocolate before a lecture. The series is titled Sparks will fly: How to hack your home – can you tell us what we have to look forward to? In Sparks will fly: how to hack your home, we will take three great British inventions – the light bulb which was developed by Geordie inventor Joseph Swan, the telephone by Scottish inventor Alexander Graham Bell and an electric motor which was first completed by the Royal Institution’s very own Michael Faraday in 1821 – and show viewers how to adapt, transform and ‘hack’ them to do extraordinary things. It’s tinkering for the 21st century, using the full array of cutting edge devices that we can lay our hands on: 3D printers, new materials, online collaboration and controlling devices through coding. I want to use the lectures to announce the new rules of invention.
Prof Danielle George Credit: Paul Wilkinson Photography Ltd.
- The Christmas Lectures were started to specifically tailor for ‘juveniles’ of those between the ages of 15-20.
- The original lectures in 1825 were to provide a set of 22 lectures on Natural Philosophy suited to a juvenile audience during the Christmas, Easter and Whitsuntide recesses. From 1827 the Juvenile lectures were only given at Christmas.
- Michael Faraday gave 19 series of Christmas Lectures between 1827 and 1861.
- The 1840 series of Christmas Lectures was supposed to be undertaken by Faraday but he was taken ill and John Frederic Daniell had to step in at the last minute and give the lectures on ‘The First Principles of Franklinic Electricity’.
- The first Christmas Lectures to be published were Michael Faraday's lectures on the ‘Forces of Matter’ from 1859.
- The Christmas Lectures have taken place every year since 1825, apart from 1939-1942 when they were stopped during WWII when it was felt it to be too dangerous for children to come into central London due to the blitz.
- The Christmas Lecture have been continuously televised since Eric Laithwaite’s 1966-67 series entitled ‘The Engineer in.
- Animals have often featured in the Christmas Lectures, in fact 13 series of lectures have featured live animals including 1937 Julian Huxley’s series ‘Rare Animals and the Disappearance of Wild Life’ which featured a live lion called Max in the theatre.
- 6 Nobel Prize Winners have given Christmas Lecture series (Both the Bragg’s and Porter have undertaken multiple series)
- William Henry Bragg – Physics 1915
- William Lawrence Bragg – Physics 1915
- Archibald Vivian Hill – Medicine (or Physiology) 1921
- Max Perutz – Chemistry 1962
- George Porter – Chemistry 1967
- John Sulston – Medicine (or Physiology) 2002
- Only 3 people have given the series twice since 1945, Eric Laithwaite, George Porter and Charles Taylor.
- The 1958 series featured a different individual undertaking each of the 6 lectures - J.A. Ratcliffe, J.M. Stagg, R.L.F. Boyd, Graham Sutton, G.E.R. Deacon, G. de Q. Robin
- Only two Americans have undertaken the Christmas Lectures – 1968 Philip Morrison ‘Gulliver's Laws: The Physics of Large and Small’ and 1977 Carl Sagan ‘The Planets’
- Professor Christopher Zeeman gave the first ever lecture series on Mathematics in 1978 entitled ‘Mathematics into Pictures’.