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Pierre Curie: The precision of a scientific pioneer
Pierre Curie is perhaps best known for his work on magnetism
Pierre Curie (1859–1906) was a man whose legacy has shaped the course of modern science, yet his name is often overshadowed by that of his famous wife, Marie Curie. Despite this, Pierre’s contributions to physics, particularly in the field of magnetism and the discovery of radioactivity, were revolutionary and continue to influence scientific research today.
Early Life and Education
Born in Paris on May 15, 1859, Pierre Curie grew up in an intellectually stimulating environment. His father, Eugene, was a physician, and his mother, Sophie, was a teacher, which cultivated in Pierre a deep passion for learning. From an early age, Pierre showed an exceptional aptitude for mathematics and physics, subjects that would later define his career.
By the time Pierre was 16, he had already completed his studies in mathematics and physics, earning a degree from the prestigious Sorbonne University in Paris. This early foundation in scientific inquiry laid the groundwork for his future innovations.
In 1895 together with his brother Jacques Curie, Pierre Curie developed the Curie point—the temperature at which certain magnetic materials lose their magnetism
Innovative Work in Magnetism and Crystallography
Pierre Curie is perhaps best known for his work on magnetism. In 1895, together with his brother Jacques Curie, he developed the Curie point—the temperature at which certain magnetic materials lose their magnetism. This work, foundational in the study of thermodynamics and magnetism, continues to be a key concept in modern physics.
Additionally, Pierre Curie’s research in crystallography and his study of the magnetic properties of materials played a pivotal role in the development of solid-state physics. His work laid the foundation for understanding the relationship between a material’s structure and its magnetic properties, which remains essential in materials science today.
The Discovery of Radioactivity
However, Pierre Curie’s most significant contribution came from his work on radioactivity, which would forever alter the understanding of matter itself. In the late 19th century, the mysterious rays emitted by certain substances, like uranium, intrigued scientists. Working alongside his wife, Marie Curie, Pierre embarked on a series of experiments to better understand this phenomenon.
Their work, starting in 1898, led to the discovery of two new elements: polonium and radium. Marie Curie coined the term “radioactivity” to describe the spontaneous emission of radiation from these elements, but it was Pierre’s precise experimental methods and scientific rigor that helped bring clarity to the phenomenon. Their discovery of radium, in particular, was a breakthrough that would lead to numerous advancements in medical treatments, including cancer therapy.
Nobel Recognition and Collaboration with Marie Curie
In 1903, Pierre Curie, together with Marie Curie and Henri Becquerel, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for their joint work on radioactivity. The recognition marked the first time a Nobel Prize had been awarded to a couple. However, what makes this achievement particularly notable is that Pierre Curie insisted that Marie be included in the award, a gesture that demonstrated not only his scientific partnership with his wife but also his support for women in science, a rare stance in the male-dominated field of the time.
Tragically, Pierre Curie’s life was cut short in 1906 when he was killed in a street accident at the age of 46
Pierre Curie’s dedication to scientific rigor and his ability to work collaboratively with Marie, his wife and fellow scientist, was vital to their success. Their work would not only earn them the Nobel Prize but also set the stage for later advancements in nuclear physics and medicine.
Tragic Loss and Enduring Legacy
Tragically, Pierre Curie’s life was cut short in 1906 when he was killed in a street accident at the age of 46. His death was a blow to both the scientific community and his family. However, his legacy continued through his wife, Marie, who carried on their groundbreaking work and became the first woman to win a second Nobel Prize.
Today, Pierre Curie is remembered as a visionary physicist whose discoveries were instrumental in shaping the fields of physics, chemistry, and medicine. His contributions to magnetism, crystallography, and radioactivity remain foundational to scientific inquiry. His work continues to inspire scientists across disciplines and serves as a reminder of the power of precision, collaboration, and dedication in the pursuit of knowledge.
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The ‘Godfather of AI’ has a warning for us
The speed with which large language models such as ChatGPT has come to the fore has re-invigorated serious discussion about AI ethics and safety among scientists and humanities scholars alike.
The quest to develop artificial intelligence (AI) in the 20th century had entrants coming in from various fields, mostly mathematicians and physicists.
Geoff Hinton, famously known as the ‘godfather of AI’ today, at one point dabbled in cognitive psychology as a young undergraduate student at Cambridge. Allured by the nascent field of AI in the 1970s, Hinton did a PhD from Edinburgh where he helped revive the idea of artificial neural networks (ANNs). These ANNs mimic neuronal connections in animal brains, and has been the staple of mainstream research into AI. Hinton, a British-born Canadian, since then moved to the University of Toronto, where he’s currently a professor in computer science.
In 2018, Hinton’s contributions to computer science and AI caught up to him. He was awarded a share of the coveted Turing Award, which is popularly known as the ‘Nobel Prize in Computing’. His 1986 work on ‘back propagation’ helped provide the blueprint to how machines learn, earning him the popular recognition of being one of the ‘fathers of deep learning’ as well.
The last two years saw artificial intelligence become commonplace in public discourse on technology. Leading the charge was OpenAI’s ChatGPT, as large language models (LLMs) found use in a whole host of settings across the globe. OpenAI, Google, Microsoft and their likes are engaged in upping the ante.
But this sudden spurt has alarmed many and is re-invigorating a serious discussion about AI ethics and safety. Last year, Elon Musk was amongst signatories of a letter requesting to halt AI research for a while, fearing the ever-increasing odds that sentient AI may be in the horizon. But sociologists believe this risk is simply overplayed by billionaires to avoid the real-world problems posed by AI gets swept under the carpet. For example, job losses will occur for which there is no solution in sight about what should be done to compensate those who may lose their work.
However, in a very technical sense, computer scientists like Hinton have taken to the fore to make their views explicitly clear. In fact, Hinton ended his decade long association with Google last year to speak freely about what he thought was a competition between technology companies to climb upon each other’s advances. He, like many computer scientists, believe humanity is at a ‘turning point’ with AI, especially with large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT at the fore.
“It’s [LLMs] very exciting,” said Hinton in a Science article. “It’s very nice to see all this work coming to fruition. But it’s also scary.”
One research study suggests these LLMs are anything but ‘stochastic parrots’ that outputs what it’s been instructed to do. This doesn’t mean AI is anywhere close to being sentient today. However, Hinton and other computer scientists fear humanity may unwittingly run into the real risk of creating one. In fact, Hinton was one of several signatories of an open letter requesting policy makers to consider the existential risk of AI.
Creating a sentient AI, or artificial general intelligence (AGI, as it’s technically called) would vary in definition based on scientists researching them. They don’t exist for one today, and nobody safe to say knows what it would look like. But in popular lore, these can simply mean Skynet from the Terminator movies, becoming ‘self-aware’. Hinton was of the opinion that AI already surpassed biological intelligence in some ways. However, it must be bore in mind that AI isn’t anymore a stochastic parrot than it is sentient. Hinton doesn’t say more powerful AI would make humans all redundant. But AI could do many routine tasks humans already do, and thus replace them in those in time. Navigating them is a task that requires views that are transdisciplinary.
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The astrophysicist who featured in TIME’s most influential personality list
Priyamvada Natarajan’s contributions in astronomy helped shed light into two major research interests in contemporary astrophysics – the origins of supermassive black holes, and mapping dark matter in the universe.
For Priyamvada Natarajan, her earliest exposure to scientific research arose from her childhood passion making star maps. Her love for maps never abated, and shaped her career as a theoretical astrophysicist. In the media, she’s the famous ‘cosmic cartographer’, who featured in the TIME magazine’s list of 100 most influential personalities this year.
“I realise what an honour and privilege this is,” said Natarajan to The Hindu. “It sends a message that people working in science can be seen as influential, and that is very gratifying.”
The Indian-American’s claim to fame arises from her pathbreaking research into dark matter and supermassive black holes.
She devised a mathematical technique to chart out dark matter clumps across the universe. Despite dark matter being invisible and elusive to astronomers, they’re thought to dominate some 75% of the universe’s matter. Dark matter clumps act as ‘scaffolding’, in the words of Natarajan, over which galaxies form. When light from background galaxies gets caught under the gravitational influence of dark matter clumps, they bend like they would when passed through a lens. Natarajan exploited this effect, called gravitational lensing, to map dark matter clumps across the universe.
Simulation of dark matter clumps and gas forming galaxies. Credit: Illustris Collaboration
Natarajan reflected her passion for mapping in a TEDx talk at Yale University, where she’s professor of physics and astronomy. Though she’s an ‘armchair’ cartographer, in her own description, she has resolved another major headwind in astronomy – nailing down the origins of supermassive black holes.
Black holes generally form from dying stars, after they collapse under their weight due to gravity. These black holes would swallow gas from their environment to grow in weight. However, there also exists supermassive black holes in the universe, millions of times heavier than any star or stellar-sized black hole, whose formation can’t be explained by the dying star collapse theory. One example is Sagittarius A* at the center of the Milky Way, which is a whopping four million times massive than our sun.
First direct image of Sagittarius A* at the Milky Way center. Credit: EHT
The origins of these behemoths remained in the dark until Natarajan and her collaborators shed some light to it. In their theory, massive clumps of gas in the early universe would collapse under its own weight to directly form a ‘seed’ supermassive black hole. This would grow similar to its stellar-massed counterparts by swallowing gas from its environment. In 2023, astronomers found compelling evidence to validate her theory. They reported a supermassive black hole powering the ancient quasar, UHZ1, at an epoch when no black hole could possibly have grown to attain such a massive size.
These observations came nearly two decades following Natarajan’s first paper on this in 2005. In a 2018 interview to Quanta, she expressed how content she would be with her contributions to astrophysics without having her theory requiring experimental verification done within her lifetime. For, she would be simply content at having succeeded at having her ideas resonate among astronomers for them to go search for her black holes. “I’m trying to tell myself that even that would be a supercool outcome,” she said in that interview. “But finding [the supermassive black hole ‘seed’] would be just so awesome.”
Beyond science, Natarajan’s a well-sought public speaker as well, with pursuits in the humanities as well. In fact, at Yale University, she’s the director of the Franke Program in Science and the Humanities, which fosters links between the two disciplines. Her humanities connect comes at MIT, where she did degrees in physics and mathematics before taking a three-year hiatus from science to explore her interest in the philosophy of science. However, she returned to astronomy soon thereafter, enrolling as a PhD student at Cambridge, where she worked under noted astronomer Martin Rees on black holes in the early universe which seeded her success in later years.
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Peter Higgs’ odd tryst with the ‘God particle’
The nonagenarian Higgs, who passed away last week in Edinburgh, had expressed displeasure that he alone received the fanfare for the Higgs boson.
History perhaps would have it no other way for Peter Higgs, with his name seemingly linked forever to the ‘God particle’.
The nonagenarian Higgs, who passed away last week in Edinburgh, had expressed displeasure once that he alone received the fanfare for the Higgs boson. For in his own admission, there were some six other theoretical physicists who had come up with exactly the same idea arguably around the same time. Higgs even proposed to re-name the mechanism which led to the Higgs boson, to “ABEGHHK’tH mechanism”, in an attempt to represent the contributions of every theorist involved by having their initials. However, the name Higgs boson stuck in parlance after Benjamin Lee, a physicist in the 1970s, was better acquainted with Higgs work than the other physicists, and preferred using the former’s name as ‘shorthand’ to describe the particle.
The Nobel Committee didn’t overlook this fact, when Higgs was awarded the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics with Francois Englert – the only one of the remaining six to be alive by that point. But they’re also the lucky few who got to see their groundbreaking work become the crowning jewel moment in their career.
Higgs, who faced much of the limelight after he directly proposed a quantum particle in his 1964 paper, had a steely resolve to defend his work from the onslaught of critique, as is rather common when radical scientific progresses are on the cusp of making.
But for a really long time though, the Higgs boson didn’t find consensus amongst particle physicists as the particle they should really fund the LHC to identify. The theory didn’t find resonance amongst leading physicists of Higgs’ time either; even Stephen Hawking, as The Guardian notes, on one occasion publicly stated the particle will never be discovered. Higgs retorted publicly likewise, saying that Hawking’s celebrity status had helped him escape accountability for his misguided statements.
At long last when the Higgs boson was finally discovered in 2012, Higgs was all teared up during the announcement at Geneva. This was perhaps a crowning moment more so than the Nobel Prize arguably, for a career well-spent in service for science.
The media hype that followed in its reporting of the Higgs boson’s discovery, also helped the particle’s longevity in popular memory. A slew of news stories popularized it as the ‘God particle’, when it is literally anything but that. The Higgs boson is a prediction arising within quantum field theory (or QFT), which accounts for the various interactions between three of the fundamental forces of nature – electromagnetism, the strong and weak nuclear forces.
At one point in time, these three fundamental forces existed in unison at the time of the Big Bang. But matter as we knew it was massless too then. it was only after a billionth of a billionth of a billionth of a billionth second after the colossal Big Bang, did the particles get imbued with mass at all, due to a mediating Higgs boson. According to QFT, the Higgs boson emerges from one of, in fact, many characteristic energy fields from which quantum particles arises and interacts. The Higgs isn’t the carrier of mass, but it is that interlocutor which mediates the Higgs field (which is what the quantum field associated with the Higgs is called) with the massless particles. In QFT, the Higgs is just another particle.
According to Business Insider, the ‘God particle’ conception was directly derived from Nobel Prize winning physicist, Leon Lederman’s book in 1990. The planned title of his book, ‘The Goddamn Particle’ was changed to ‘The God Particle’ upon the insistence of his publishers then. Lederman’s logic was to convey how Higgs boson evaded the eyes of particle detectors of his era. But Higgs wasn’t a fan of the naming. In a 2013 interview, he said “The name itself is a sham … it was a joke, you know.”
But the term ‘God particle’ stuck in popular lore ever after, with no re-naming around the horizon.
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