PATTERNS AND PULSARS: TEN STORIES INSPIRED BY THE NOBEL PRIZE IN PHYSICS LAUREATES, 1970 TO 1979: 8 (The Nobel Physics Stories: A Decade-by-Decade Short Story Series) - Softcover

Book 8 of 13: The Nobel Physics Stories: A Decade-by-Decade Short Story Series

ALDEN, SIMON

 
9798258301178: PATTERNS AND PULSARS: TEN STORIES INSPIRED BY THE NOBEL PRIZE IN PHYSICS LAUREATES, 1970 TO 1979: 8 (The Nobel Physics Stories: A Decade-by-Decade Short Story Series)

Synopsis

Patterns and Pulsars is the eighth volume in a series of thirteen books, each covering a decade of Nobel Prize winners in Physics through a collection of original short stories.

Between 1970 and 1979, physics found profound order in both the extreme and the everyday. Scientists discovered how to record the full depth of light using phase and interference, explained how electrons pair up to flow collectively with zero resistance, and combined signals from scattered antennas to map the radio sky with unprecedented resolution. The Nobel Prize in Physics tracked a decade where the faint hiss of the cosmos revealed the early universe, and fundamental forces were unified into a single theoretical framework.

In this volume, ten prizes become ten works of literary fiction: a satellite operator reading magnetic geometry to predict space weather; two people trying to reconstruct their relationship using a holographic reference beam; a lonely theorist and their student discovering emotional breakthrough through collective order; an investigator tracking a smuggler who turns voltage into a coded song across a quantum barrier; a radio observatory catching a saboteur by using a pulsar as a calibration clock; a public figure accepting that internal pressures and deformation are natural parts of collective structure; a detective reorganising their entire system of categories to catch a new type of perpetrator; a person trapped in a controlling relationship learning how microscopic impurities dominate their landscape; two engineers refusing to dismiss a persistent hiss that turns out to be relic radiation; and a citizen exposing the hidden symmetry break that splits one system of governance into two.

Every discovery is accurate. Every story is new. Together they make the eighth decade of Nobel physics not a chapter in a textbook but a living world, full of people for whom these ideas arrived not as settled knowledge but as sudden, disorienting, and irreversible light.

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