What helium means in a world of screens
Nobel laureate and Cornell University physics professor Robert Richardson has a warning about helium. The world is running out of it. And that…
Nobel laureate and Cornell University physics professor Robert Richardson has a warning about helium. The world is running out of it. And that could mean a lot to the tech world.
He says, “It will be impossible to have MRI machines without the liquid helium to cool the magnets.”
Helium is also used in fiberoptic cables – it helps keep the signals strong. All those screens in our lives? The LCD screens – those need helium, too. We need helium for telescopes and NASA uses it to clean out rocket engines.
Richardson co-chaired an inquiry into the world’s dwindling helium supply. He just published a report recommending the price of helium go up 20-50 fold. That would make it worthwhile for people to recover and recycle helium. And it would make balloons very expensive.