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"Advent calendar #23: Moonshine in Rutherford's brain"

6 Comments -

1 – 6 of 6
Blogger icalvino said...

Back in November, when I asked you abount this year's advent series, I didn't think you're gonna make it on such a short notice.

It was pleasure to read it, thanks ;)

And have a great Christmas time!

4:41 AM, December 23, 2011

Blogger Bee said...

Well, thanks for the reminder. You too, have a merry Christmas. Best,

B.

4:43 AM, December 23, 2011

Blogger Giotis said...

"the awful prospect that he saw looming over the horizon: a new and dreadful war, a new and devastating weapon, and unprecedented destruction"

I don't think so; the vast majority of scientists are too ambitious and scientific driven to suppress a huge discovery for such concerns (but maybe Rutherford was an exception).

Moreover if that was true then the scientists of Manhattan project would look kind of immoral according to Rutherford standards which I don't think is the case.

5:36 AM, December 23, 2011

Blogger Uncle Al said...

Rutherford's moonshine dictum bothered Leo Szilard. Szilard was waiting for a Southampton Row, London traffic light to change in late 1933. Before the light, he was thinking about neutrons. Then, the world changed - Szilard conceptualized a chain reaction using uncharged particles inert to a nucleus' electrostatic barrier.

The Making of the Atomic Bomb, Richard Rhodes, pp. 27-28.

(Had Szilard hallucinated superluminal neutrinos, we might have a bomb that detonates before it is constructed, tremendously saving costs. Thiotimoline, OTOH, is obviously silly.)

10:25 AM, December 23, 2011

Blogger Arun said...

Wiki gives these two quotes, from Rutherford:

"All science is either physics or stamp collecting" (though he was in 1908 awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry)

"We haven't the money, so we've got to think."

11:17 AM, December 23, 2011

Blogger Phil Warnell said...

Hi Bee & Stefan,

So although everyone is concerned with whether Rutherford was being truthful, which I think might remain as somewhat uncertain, I am fairly confident he was indeed Ernest:-)

Merry Christmas,

Phil

3:32 PM, December 23, 2011

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