In this new episode of La Loupe, you will attend a short physics lesson with Julie Thoin-Bousquié, Valentin Ehkirch and Baptiste Langlois, journalists in the Economy department of L’Express.
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The team: Charlotte Baris (writing, presentation and editing) and Jules Krot (production).
Music and dressing: Emmanuel Herschon/Studio Torrent
Image credits: Sébastien Salom-Gomis/AFP
Logo: Anne-Laure Chapelain/Benjamin Chazal
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Charlotte Baris: To prepare for this episode, dear listeners, I had to dive back into a high school physics course and I even found a tool that will perhaps bring back bad memories for some of you: the periodic table of elements. What interests us in this table by Mendeleev is the first box, at the very top of the first column: an H for hydrogen. So I will spare you the passage on protons and neutrons. But I still noted a few facts about this gas: hydrogen, for example, is the most abundant element in the Universe, it is present in large quantities in stars and gaseous planets. It is also odorless, colorless, and very light. But above all: hydrogen has been considered for several years as a key element of the energy transition. It alone represents all aspects of the challenges and solutions of decarbonization and that’s what we explain to you in this episode!
For further :
Natural hydrogen, a mirage or miracle of the energy transition?
Green hydrogen: for the French sector, the difficult return to reality
In transport, does the hydrogen bet have a future?
Natural hydrogen: what we know from the first research authorized in France
Green hydrogen: Lhyfe, the Little Thumb from Nantes who dreams of being a European champion