Friday, January 23, 2009

Astronomy and Particle Physics

I have the latest issue of Science on my desk, and I'm browsing through it while drinking coffee, which seems to me to be the ideal thing for a grad student to be doing on a Friday morning, especially since I am getting over a cold and can't think. The issue is all about astronomy, which ever since I was a kid has been one of my favorite subjects. I had "Where in Space is Carmen San Diego" and played in religiously. I used to know all the moons of Jupiter and I'm a total sucker for PBS specials on neutrinos. There is a spread in the middle of the magazine, outlining major discoveries in astronomy from Galileo to the Hubble telescope. As I'm reading through all these little snippets, I keep noting the common thread of astronomical observations confirming physics observations and vice versa and thinking what a beautiful combination these two fields are. Physicists, studying the smallest subatomic particles in existence, confirming their theories of particle behavior using the largest laboratories possible. The world is both astronomical unfathomably huge and ridiculously small all at the same time. I like to sit and meditate on that and try to let the true scope of the universe sink in. It makes me feel at one with something much larger than myself, but also excited and amazed that the human conciensce allows us to discover and explore all these things that not long ago were out of our reach and past the limits of understanding. It's a little boost of morale and inspiration which makes me remember why I wanted to be a scientist to begin with, and it is much needed for those research slumps which inevitably happen in grad school. Here's to an inspired and productive quarter!

1 comment:

  1. Since I usually only read Science online when it comes out on Fridays, despite receiving the print copy, I totally missed all of that. Thanks for pointing it out, it was a great read, even if they did have to omit a number of equally cool and profound experiments.

    Being a grad student myself I feel your pain when trying to figure out whats next in your life. So good luck with the blog and your studies.

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