A poet of Shakespeare’s time was apt to say that his love (for his lover) was not “sublunar.” He meant that his love was like the stars — constant and unchanging.
Articles from November 2019
Close encounters of the enduring kind
They just won’t go away. They hang around up there, year after year, in their saucer-shaped craft, playing tag with airliners, and causing inexplicable blips on radar screens.
The scientists of Nazi Germany
When I was a kid, my favorite comic strip hero was Captain Marvel. The archvillain of the strip was the mad scientist, Dr. Sivana, who used his considerable powers of intellect in evil plots to dominate the world.
Dragons, neutrinos and an unseen reality
As Lewis Mumford put it, “if man had not encountered dragons and hippogriffs in dream, he might never have conceived of the atom.”
A legacy of genius on scraps of paper
In 1913, the famous English mathematician G. H. Hardy received a letter from an unknown Hindu clerk in Madras, India, named Srinivasa Ramanujan. Attached to the letter were more than a hundred mathematical theorems, stated without any indication of how they they were derived.
But will it play in drawing room?
We have a teenager in our house with equal enthusiasm for computers and for classical music. He brings the two together with inexpensive software that allows him to transcribe a musical score into his computer, manipulate voice, key and tempo, and play it back through the stereo system. The result leaves something to be desired. When you have heard a Mozart piano concerto synthesized by a four-voice home computer, it is easy to conclude that computers and music should never be allowed to mix.
A razzle-dazzle ring circling the world
From the moment the plan for a thousand-foot-high tower was approved, the naysayers began to carp. Forty-seven writers, architects, and artists penned an indignant manifesto condemning the “black and gigantic factory chimney” that would crush beneath it all of the beauty of Paris. The writer Guy de Maupassant called it “an unavoidable and tormenting nightmare.”
A primrose is a primrose — well, not always
Come with me for a Valentine’s walk down the primrose path. It is a walk of spring, of young love, and of dalliance. Just now, in the midst of winter, we can use a taste of spring.
Women in science: against all odds
Here’s a quiz for you: Name all the women you can think of who made an important contribution to science before the year 1910.
The tales told by starlight
One year ago this week [in January 1986], the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded shortly after takeoff, taking seven astronauts to a fiery death. Evaluation of the accident and redesign of the shuttle and booster rockets has interrupted the launch schedule for at least two years. For astronomers, the grounded shuttle has meant a frustrating delay in deployment of the Hubble Space Telescope, one of the most remarkable instruments in the history of science, and one that has the potential to revolutionize our knowledge of the universe.