He's built a nuclear reactor. He's also a just become a teenager. Take a look at the moment when a 13-year-old Jamie Edwards from the UK became the youngest person ever to successfully carry out atomic fusion.
A 13-year-old Lancashire schoolboy has become one of the youngest people in the world to carry out nuclear fusion.
Jamie Edwards, a pupil at Penwortham Priory Academy, created the project from scratch with help from his school.
"I can't quite believe it - even though all my friends think I am mad," he said.
The last record holder was US student Taylor Wilson, who was 14 when he created nuclear fusion in 2008.
Jamie, who started work in October in an under-used school science laboratory, recreated a process known as 'inertial electrostatic confinement' which dates back to the 1960s.
'Star in jar'
"One day, I was looking on the internet for radiation or other aspects of nuclear energy and I came across Taylor Wilson," said the junior scientist who faced a race against time to complete the project before his 14th birthday on Sunday.
"I looked at it, thought 'that looks cool' and decided to have a go."
"You see this purple ball of plasma - basically it's like a star in a jar," he added.
Jamie, along with friend George Barker, set about trying to create nuclear fusion by consulting an open source website for amateur physicists.
His application for funds was rejected by various nuclear laboratories and universities.
School funding
"They didn't seem to take me seriously as it was hard to believe a 13-year-old would do something like that so I went to my head teacher Mr Hourigan in October," he said.
"I was a bit stunned and I have to say a little nervous when Jamie suggested this but he reassured me he wouldn't blow the school up," said Priory head Jim Hourigan, who agreed to give £2,000 to the project.
Jamie ordered parts and equipment from Lithuania, the US and UK, working on the project every break and lunchtime as well as after school.
His nuclear fusion record attempt is yet to be verified by the Open Source Fusor Research Consortium
Note:
A kind of nuclear fusion
This type of fusion has been known about since the 1960s.
A high voltage is put through a confined gas creating tiny pockets hotter than the surface of the Sun.
Some charged hydrogen atoms can fuse together to produce a helium nucleus and a few neutron particles.
Care needs to be taken because of the high voltage production of a small amount of radiation, including some X-rays.
The process is called inertial electrostatic confinement.
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