Crack the code and you can read the messages, but as a hint, Venter revealed the quotations: «To live, to err, to fall, to triumph, to recreate life out of life,» from James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man; «See things not as they are but as they might be,» which comes from American Prometheus, a biography of
nuclear physicist Robert Oppenheimer; and Richard Feynman's famous words: «What I can not build I can not understand.»
Not exact matches
Robert Bussard, a
nuclear physicist who has spent most of his career investigating fusion for both the government and private companies, applauds Olson's ambition.
According to theoretical
physicist Robert Fleischer of CERN, the European Organization for
Nuclear Research in Geneva, Switzerland, the simplest explanation would be a massive, photonlike particle similar to known members of the standard model and capable of interacting directly with bottom quarks and strange antiquarks.
Iranian and U.S.
nuclear scientists have much to learn from each other, says
Robert Rosner, a theoretical
physicist at the University of Chicago in Illinois and former director of Argonne National Laboratory.
It was later famously quoted by the American
physicist J.
Robert Oppenheimer to describe the first
nuclear bomb test on July 16, 1945.
I first saw the phrase «dread to risk ratio» the other day in an essay on the
nuclear calamity in Japan by
Robert Socolow, a Princeton University
physicist focused on energy and climate.