The Matter of Everything also highlights those whose contributions might have
historically been overlooked, such as Lise Meitner, dubbed the “German Marie
Curie” by Albert Einstein. Her work on nuclear fission went unacknowledged for
some 50 years after her colleague Otto Hahn was solely awarded the Nobel prize in
1944.
The commitment and collaboration of physicists and engineers through the second
world war showed what waspossible – for good and evil.Sheehy describes how
thedevelopment of the bombsthat destroyed Hiroshima andNagasaki awakened a
socialconscience in the field, pavingthe way to the internationalcooperation we see
today, suchas on the Large Hadron Collider.United behind a commongoal, and
with cross-governmentsupport, answers that had neverbefore seemed possible
suddenlyappeared within grasp. To Sheehythis is evidence
of
the potential physics
to overcome the challengethat face science and society nowfrom the nature of dark
matterto tackling the climate crisis .
RICE/CERN
1.Vocabulary
set out phrasal verb of set
1. Begin a journey.
"we set out from New York on Friday for Egypt"
2. Aim or intend to do something.
"she drew up a plan of what her organization should set out to achieve"
confound /kənˈfaʊnd verb gerund or present participle: confounding
cause surprise or confusion in (someone), especially by not according with their
expectations.
"the inflation figure confounded economic analysts"
rigorous /ˈrɪɡ(ə)rəs/ adjective
extremely thorough and careful.
"the rigorous testing of consumer products"
ambiguity /ˌambɪˈɡjuːɪti/ noun noun: ambiguity; plural noun: ambiguities
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