The Large Hadron Collider

•September 9, 2008 • 1 Comment

A quick break from my self-imposed exile before I put the “Gone fishing†sign up again.

Michelson–Morley; Eddington’s expedition to the 1919 total solar eclipse; Edward Jenner injecting himself with smallpox; Pasteur’s S-shaped flasks; Millikan’s oil drops. If any readers are wondering what this seemingly random collection of words represents, they’re famous experiments in the history of science. Tomorrow sees the addition of another item to this list – the turning on of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN.

Other than Eddington’s expedition, which left these shores to the island of Principe to verify or disprove the bizarre predictions of Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity (that gravity could bend light), never has an experiment been quite so hyped. Having once applied to CERN for a summer job when I was still at school, I hope it’s understandable if I feel compelled to add my two-penneth.

There have been huge tunnels underneath the Swiss countryside (and crossing into France) for more than half a century. CERN’s where Tim Berners Lee developed the hypertext markup language that made the world wide web possible – the very first webserver was info.cern.ch. It’s a place where many notable scientific milestones have been achieved such as the creation of genuine antimatter in the form of anti-hydrogen atoms – now no longer the stuff of Star Trek. It was also where the weak nuclear force (which governs radioactive decay) was able to be combined with electromagnetism in one of the great steps along the way to that holy grail of physics – the grand unified theory (basically a theory of everything).

It’s hoped that the LHC will be able to explain one of the great asymmetries of the universe – why there appears to be so much more matter than antimatter. Another mystery that nearly everyone has been told about is the possible existence of the so-called “God particleâ€, the Higgs boson. It’s important because it could help explain why anything has mass at all. When we delve very deeply into the structure of matter, we find that almost all of it is made up of empty space. The once unbreakable atom became a tiny (but incredibly dense) nuclear core with distant, diffuse electrons in shells around it. Then the protons and neutrons that comprised the unbreakable atomic nucleus became made up of tiny quarks. What does it mean to have mass when matter itself is made of next to nothing? If the Higgs boson is found (and its identification is probably within the design spec of the LHC) then its associated Higgs Field provides a possible answer to the puzzle. If you want to hunt for Higgs yourself, try this interactive game from The Science Museum.

Some scientists and philosophers of science believe the process could go on forever – that we can keep dissecting and dissecting smaller and smaller “fundamental†particles. Others think the truth is just around the corner (officially the Higgs boson is the final piece of the jigsaw of what physicists call The Standard Model). In a way this mirrors the debate between the realists and the empiricists. Can scientific theories in some way be judged as “trueâ€, an explanation of how the universe really is, or are they a useful tool that doesn’t claim to be a fundamental reality?

I fully expect the God particle to be found in due course, but I’m not sure how much further the idea of fundamental particles and the Standard Model can take us. Normally I stand in the empiricists camp, but when I step out to become a true blue realist I enjoy the mathematical; beauty of ideas such as Garrett Lisi’s E8-based “exceptionally simple theory of everythingâ€. In this, the Higgs particle comes out of the geometry as just one way of looking at things, and there are others.

That’s one of the joys of physics. For instance, an atom of antimatter hydrogen can be viewed as having a negatively charged proton (an anti-proton) as its nucleus and a positively charged electron (a positron) around the outside, but it can also be viewed as an atom of regular hydrogen travelling backwards in time. Or you can just look at it through a bathroom mirror.

However you look at the universe, I’m delighted that the fuss about it ending tomorrow has apparently died down. Safe in the knowledge that the Earth isn’t about to be swallowed by an artificially created black hole or than Big Bang the 2nd won’t begin somewhere near Geneva on 10 September 2008, I shall take up my fishing rod and return to the luminiferous ether (disproved by Michelson and Morley) to keep writing Johnny Mackintosh and the Fountain of Time.
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Gone Fishing

•August 29, 2008 • 2 Comments

Apologies that this blog is notable for its lack of updates at present. It’s not that I don’t have numerous ideas with which to swell the blogosphere – the thing is I also have a book to write, so I’m temporarily putting up the “Gone Fishing†sign.

For the time being I need to dedicate all my writing efforts to finishing the second in the Johnny Mackintosh series. And as a treat for those who’ve made it all the way to the end of this apology, I offer a reward of sorts. You can be the first to learn that my working title for book two is Johnny Mackintosh and the Fountain of Time. I hope you like it.
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Vote Johnny Mackintosh!

•August 9, 2008 • 2 Comments

I love elections. This year in London we’ve seen Boris versus Ken, while in the US it’s going to be McCain versus Obama in November. But there’s another poll, happening right now, that you can all take part in – it’s called the Big Science Read.

The Big Science Read was launched at Jodrell Bank, the giant radio telescope that actually features in the second Johnny Mackintosh book. Despite being a feature of the Cheshire landscape for over fifty year, the Lovell Telescope is still the world’s third-largest fully steerable telescope in the world.

The people behind the contest have helpfully divided suggested books into fact or fiction categories. Perhaps because they couldn’t decide whether or not Johnny Mackintosh and the Spirit of London is based on a true story, they’ve left it off their list but you can still vote for it.

I believe it’s important that everyone has some understanding of science, how it works and how to evaluate the reports we see in the media. Ben Goldacre’s Bad Science column in the Saturday Guardian is something everyone should read. With Johnny Mackintosh, I thought it important to infuse the story with as much genuine science as possible, sitting quietly in the background, although never at the expense of the actual story-telling.

My aim was that the book would play a role in inspiring younger readers to discover more about the world (and indeed the universe) around them. I hope the use of science in fiction has worked. If you think it might have done, vote now.
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Book signing in Blackwell’s

•August 3, 2008 • No Comments

I’m delighted to announce I’ll be reading from Johnny Mackintosh and the Spirit of London and signing copies in Oxford’s fabulous Blackwell’s bookshop on Tuesday 12th August (from 3pm). I’ll doubtless say a few words about Johnny before I start and I’ll try to think of an activity to bring along that I can give out to children, maybe with a prize at the end of it.

If anyone doesn’t know, Blackwell’s is the first UK building to make use of time lord technology – it’s a true Tardis. From the outside you’d think it had room for hardly any titles, but venture through the doors and you’ll discover the biggest bookshop in the city. This is partly due to one of the natural wonders of the bookselling world, the cavernous Norrington Room, which was in the Guinness Book of Records for a while for having the most books or sale in a single room, anywhere in the known universe. For aficionados of the book, it eventually lost its place to the Imperial Library on Melania at the very centre of the galaxy.

The Norrington Room, from the Oxford Information Archive

If you can’t make it down to Oxford, but would like to say hello and get your own signed copy of Johnny Mackintosh and the Spirit of London, you can find out where to meet me in future on the main booksite.
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Water Ice found on Mars

•July 31, 2008 • 1 Comment

Channel 4 News is reporting that NASA has announced definitive evidence of water on Mars. For years now, images from Martian orbiters have suggested the Martian landscape was sculpted by running surface water. Last month we saw a white substance exposed by the Phoenix lander’s robotic digger, only to evaporate away as the days went by. Now, samples collected by the scoop have been analysed in the space probe’s ovens. The chemical signature is apparently clear.

False colour image of Echus Chasma courtesy of ESA

This is great news for the future. One of the main obstacles to a human Mars mission can now be overcome, as the people landing on the red planet won’t have to take water with them to live there. It’s waiting for them to make use of. The other major obstacle is how to get back. Perhaps a question that should be asked is do they need to? Throughout history, there have always been people prepared to leave home, crossing oceans, knowing they would never return. I expect there would be plenty of volunteers prepared to settle a new world, even if for now it’s a one-way journey.

That’s probably the subject of a longer, more thought out blog entry. For now, we may not be sure there’s life on Mars, but at least we know there’s ice on Mars and that should be the subject of great rejoicing.
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All About Eve

•July 30, 2008 • No Comments

It’s always been my hope that humanity can embrace a glorious future among the stars. I just wish we’d get a move on. Thankfully, on Monday Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic opened the hangar doors to reveal WhiteKnightTwo, the launch vehicle that is intended to begin the sub-orbital journey for passengers aboard SpaceShipTwo in eighteen months’ time.

Until recently, space travel was the sole preserve of governments, and very few of those at that. Then came the Ansari X Prize offering $10 million for the first ship to reach an altitude greater than 100 km twice in the space of a fortnight. Many teams took part, but on 4 October 2004 it was Burt Rutan’s Scaled Composites that took the money with SpaceShipOne.

Branson and Rutan teamed up; fast forward four years and for the princely sum of $200,000 you can buy a seat along with two pilots and five fellow passengers that will give you a view of the curvature of Earth from space and about five minutes of weightlessness. And let’s not forget the rush of the launch and then the glide back down to collect your spacewings.

SpaceShipTwo is still in the hangar, apparently 70% built, but WhiteKnightTwo is expected to begin flight tests later this year. It’s like a catamaran for the skies, with two hulls that between them will carry the space vehicle to a height of 15 km before its hybrid rocket engine lifts it to sub-orbital altitude. At first, Virgin Galactic aim to manage a flight each week, but when everything is up and running at full capacity there should be four flights a day from their New Mexico spaceport.

Branson’s mother officially christened the launch vehicle – it was named “Eve†after her, as well as symbolizing a new beginning for space exploration (let’s hope Apple stays well away from the computer systems). WhiteKnightTwo could also herald a new age in more traditional aviation, being the largest all carbon composite aircraft with the huge benefits in efficiency that promises.

Apparently more than a hundred future Virgin Galactic astronauts are fully paid up and ready to fly. My name officially went on the list on 28 September 2004, but they’ve still not asked me to show them the money. Maybe, if my astronaut application with the European Space Agency comes through, I won’t have to.
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Don’t go to Harrods on Saturday!

•July 25, 2008 • No Comments

First it was on (Wednesday)

Then it was off

Then it was back on again (Saturday)

NOW IT’S OFF AGAIN

Huge apologies to anyone who was planning to visit me in Harrods this Saturday, but there are more logistical problems at the bookshop so we’ve had to postpone once again. I don’t think it’s fair to you to advertise a new date until I have a personal letter from Mohamed Al Fayed himself saying everything’s been sorted out, so for now I shall have to put a visit to his Knightsbridge corner shop on the backburner.
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Come to Harrods on Saturday

•July 25, 2008 • No Comments

SEE ABOVE - THIS HAS NOW BEEN CANCELLED

I held my breath and my Harrods hiccup has been overcome. I’ll be signing books there this coming Saturday (26 July) from 2.30pm. It would be lovely to meet any existing readers if you want to come and say hello and, if people want to buy a copy of the book, what better spot could there be?

If you can’t make it this time, you can see where to meet me in the future over at JohnnyMackintosh.com.
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Johnny Mackintosh goes Dutch

•July 25, 2008 • 1 Comment

While Johnny might not be at the age to split his restaurant bills, he’s easily old enough to wander into a bookshop in The Netherlands and read about his adventures in another language. The beautiful Dutch edition of the first book, Johnny Mackintosh en de supersnelle augurk, dropped through my letterbox a couple of days ago. Future quiz aficionados might be interested to read that it was officially published by Prometheus on 24 June so was actually the first Johnny Mackintosh title to come out anywhere in the world.

There are more pictures over on JohnnyMackintosh.com where, if you’re not linguistically challenged, you can read the Dutch back cover copy.
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Don’t go to Harrods today!

•July 23, 2008 • No Comments

STOP PRESS!

Due to unexpected problems, Harrods have had to postpone today’s book signing. It will probably now take place this coming Saturday (26 July) from 2.30pm.

Massive apologies for the late notice - watch this space for more details.
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