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Randall Paul's avatar

Paul, Thanks for this interesting piece. You would enjoy our U of Chicago standing quip:

It makes sense it practice, but does it work in theory?

Best wishes,

Randall Paul

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Alex Mendelsohn's avatar

An excellent article. I would add that much of my work in experimental physics, in a lab, was to figure out what factors could be safely ignored.

For example, thermal scattering of electrons going through a crystal produces a diffuse background in a diffraction pattern. If you are trying to work out the symmetry of the crystal, the thermal scattering blur usually isn't "blurry" enough to stop you from working out the symmetry. But a crystal that is highly contaminated (random stuff has accumulated on its surface due to a poor vacuum) and you definitely won't be able to work the symmetry out.

So as well as finding "effects" in a lab, you can also rule out real-world factors when the experiment is slowly but surely introduced to the real world.

I would also add that the depressing thing about being an experimental physicist is that it often takes decades for your lab research to become relevant in the real world (lifetimes if you are an astrophysicist), if it ever does. That is just how slow the process is. We don't jump straight from a single lab experiment into the real world. We build the foundations first.

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