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The following article was just published in the July/August issue of FreeLance, the newsletter of the
Saskatchewan Writers Guild.
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Robert J. Sawyer: The Philosophical Science Fiction Writer
By Edward Willett
The Canadian Light Source, the giant synchrotron in Saskatoon, does not immediately spring to mind as a likely venue for a writer-in-residence.
Unless, perhaps, that writer is renowned Canadian science fiction author
Robert J. Sawyer. Then it seems like a perfect fit.
“Most of my books involve working scientists,” Sawyer notes. “I have often visited science institutions, but I've never been immersed for weeks on end in the ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 11:40, July 29th, 2009 under Blog |
Saskatchewan could soon be home to Canada’s first synchrotron, and if your first reaction is, "So what?" then, dear reader, you must read on.
Physicists are a lot like small boys: they like to see what makes things tick by smashing them up. In the case of small boys, those things may be clocks or model cars; in the case of physicists, they’re atoms and molecules. Small boys use hammers; physicists use particle accelerators, which speed up subatomic particles to enormous velocities and then smash them into targets.
The first particle accelerator, built in 1932, was an ordinary high-voltage transformer, but more specialized devices soon followed. Two of them, the betatron and cyclotron, accelerated particles inside a circular ring, and ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 23:17, June 10th, 1996 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns |