Season - Episode
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5 - 1Shipwrecked Feb 16, 2005 -
5 - 2Lost at Sea Feb 23, 2005 -
5 - 3Call of the Wild Mar 02, 2005 -
5 - 4To the Lighthouse Mar 09, 2005 -
5 - 5The Reef Mar 16, 2005 -
5 - 6Beneath the Waves Mar 23, 2005
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4 - 1Rover Jan 06, 2004 -
4 - 2Communication Jan 13, 2004 -
4 - 3Spacesuit Jan 20, 2004 -
4 - 4Impact Jan 27, 2004 -
4 - 5Aerial Surveyor Feb 03, 2004 -
4 - 6Rocket Feb 10, 2004
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3 - 1Gold Rush Oct 25, 2002 -
3 - 2Shakers Nov 01, 2002 -
3 - 3Quakers Nov 08, 2002 -
3 - 4Ice Nov 22, 2002 -
3 - 5Treasure Hunt Nov 29, 2002 -
3 - 6The Big Smelt Dec 06, 2002
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2 - 1Mapping It Out May 07, 2002 -
2 - 2Bugs and Barometers May 14, 2002 -
2 - 3Time and Transmitters May 21, 2002 -
2 - 4Feel the Heat May 28, 2002 -
2 - 5Sun and Sea Jun 04, 2002 -
2 - 6The Science of Celebration Jun 11, 2002
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1 - 1Mediterranean Mystery May 26, 2000 -
1 - 2Simmering Shutterbugs Jun 02, 2000 -
1 - 3Power Supplies Jun 09, 2000 -
1 - 4Sustenance and Sayonara Jun 16, 2000
Overview
Our final set of Rough Science space challenges are all about rockets. Mike, Jonathan and Kathy have to make three different rockets, but there's a catch; they're only allowed to use one thing as a fuel - and that's water! They've also got to design their rockets to carry a "passenger" - a (raw) egg. And Ellen and Iain have to find a way of returning the egg safely to Earth. Each of our 3 rocketeers designs a rocket that fits their science background. Jonathan's is the most ambitious - his physics background inspires him to build a steam powered rocket. Kathy - also a physicist - decides to use pressurised water, and Mike takes a chemical approach, using electrolysis to split water into hydrogen and oxygen gases, and then recombining them to form an explosive mixture. (Hydrogen and oxygen are what NASA uses to fuel its rockets - but the difference is that NASA uses a liquid fuel which can compress far more energy into a much smaller space.) What develops is a Rough Science space race, as the scientists compete to see who can get to the launch pad first, and whose rocket will be the most effective. Meanwhile, Ellen and Iain have to find a way of putting an egg on each rocket and returning it to Earth. They opt for a parachute made out of bin bags, and design a detachable nosecone for the rockets. However, the "detachable" part proves harder to achieve than first thought...

