From an article written by Neal Hartman
for "Nautilus Magazine":
"Who really found the Higgs-Boson?":
"Fresh opportunities for new genius abound. Gianotti singles out dark matter as an example: “96 percent of the universe is dark. We don’t know what it’s made of and it doesn’t interact with our instruments. We have no clue,” she says. “So there is a lot of space for genius.” But instead of coming from the wild-haired scientist holding a piece of chalk or tinkering in the laboratory, that genius may come from thousands of people working together."
No comments:
Post a Comment
I’m going through some stuff but I will peek in now and then and will be back when it’s over..