EurekaUS?   

In EurekaUK - a new report from Universities UK - one can read about the top 100 (in their opinion) research results produced in U.K. universities over the last 50 years. While I’m sure people will take issue with some of the details, I do think this is an interesting exercise, and one that I would guess surprises many members of the public who are sometimes unaware of the importance of university research. One thing new to me is that the first whole hip replacements were performed in my home town of Wigan in 1961!

I won’t reproduce the whole list here, although I encourage you to take a look - it really is fascinating. But I will list those results that I thought contained a lot of physics and astronomy. The sectioning is from the article.

Section one: Healthy babies and birth control

Scans during pregnancy: seeing babies through sound
Ian Donald invented the use of ultrasound for unborn babies at the University of Glasgow 40 years ago.

Section two. Healthier and longer lives

Ultrasound to detect weakened bones
In the 1980s Chris Langton at Hull University was the first to develop an early detection system for osteoporosis utilising “ultrasonic” waves.

Magnetic Resonance Imaging
In 1976 Peter Mansfield at Nottingham University was the first to publish a successful MRI scan of a living human body part - a finger.

Seeing the light: inside the human body: keyhole surgery and the endoscope
Harold Hopkins showed in 1954 how a bundle of tiny pin-like glass fibres allowed light and images to be transmitted along them even when they were curved- fibre optics.

Section four: Discoveries for the digital age

Fibre optics: lighting up the world
In the 1950s the “founding father of fibre optics” Narinder Kapany and Harold Hopkins at Imperial College London demonstrated that light could bend, given the right encouragement.

Generating information for CDs, DVDs and the internet
The internet, CDs and DVDs have all been made possible through a technology called strained quantum-well lasers, first proposed by Alf Adams at Surrey University.

Liquid crystal displays (LCDs)
George Gray and his colleagues at Hull University first created the first stable liquid crystals for use in LCDs.

Holograms
Dennis Gabor at Imperial College London, invented the method of producing holograms.

The scanning electron microscope
The scanning electron microscope allows researchers to peek inside materials, right down to the level of their most basic building blocks, atoms, and by so doing, to design materials that have the right properties to fit many different purposes.

Glass, photocopiers and solar panels
Nevill Mott researched into how materials conduct electricity and absorb light.

Section five: Planes, trains and automobiles

Seeing atomic scale defects in metals
In 1956 Peter Hirsch and his collaborators at Oxford University observed for the first time the motion of tiny dislocations in the atomic structure of metals.

Magnetically levitated trains
In the 1950s Eric Laithwaite at Imperial College London designed the world’s first magnetically levitating train.

Section nine: Space exploration

We are all made of stardust
In 1957 Fred Hoyle and three fellow scientists at Cambridge University proposed a startling theory: the elements were created in the oldest chemical factories in the universe: stars.

The discovery of Pulsars
In 1965 postgraduate student Jocelyn Bell joined Anthony Hewish in the astronomy department of Cambridge University to look for quasars, certain types of galaxies.

Big bangs and singularities
Stephen Hawking as a graduate student at Cambridge University, working with the theoretical physicist, Roger Penrose at Oxford University in the 1960’s proved that singularities exist.

Black holes are common in space
Research by Ken Pounds and his team at Leicester University helped to provide the best evidence so far that black holes are common in the universe.

Seeing a postage stamp on the moon
Martin Ryle, an astronomer at Cambridge University, knew that the development of more powerful telescopes would hold the key to many unanswered space questions.

Sensing the weather
In the 1970s Fred Taylor at the University of Oxford pioneered a technique that would be applied across the entire solar system called infrared remote sensing.

In our current climate of hostility to basic research, it is more important than ever to be able to point to the remarkable intellectual and practical returns that our universities generate from the public investment, and this list certainly helps with that task.

While I am, of course, extremely proud of the work that has come out of my home country’s universities, I am equally proud of those results for which U.S. universities can take credit. If I think about a similar list for the U.S., there are truly great physics results, like the discovery of asymptotic freedom (Gross, Politzer and Wilczek; Nobel Prize 2004), the creation of Bose-Einstein condensates (Cornell, Ketterle and Weiman; Nobel Prize 2001), the detection of anisotropies in the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation (Smoot and the COBE team, 1992), to mention just a few random examples.

However, I’m sure there are equally high-impact results in the other fields listed in the U.K. report, about which I am far less knowledgeable. It would be interesting to hear what our opinionated CV readers think the analogous list for the U.S. might contain. What would a EurekaUS report look like?


10 Comments on “EurekaUS?”   rss feed

  1. Belizean

    The discovery of quantum computation and quantum cryptography doesn’t seem to be on the list (unless I missed it). Whopper of an oversight.

  2. Haelfix

    God where to begin. About 50% of physics has its origins in the US during the last 50 years, whether from natural born Americans or foreigners working at US universities. The big shift came following WWII (before that point, i’d point to England and Germany as the primary drivers of science).

    I wouldn’t even know where to begin, a top 10 list for the US would immediately hit on personal biases towards which discoveries are nearest to our own line of work.. Maybe in the development and refinement of quantum field theory and its applications to particle physics (the standard model) and condensed matter.

    I firmly believe the Hubble telescope, the space race and WMAP are amongst the greatest experiments of all time as well, on the astrophysics side.

  3. PK

    Quantum computing still has to prove itself (although I am optimistic).

    It is also not clear how secure quantum cryptography is in real systems. Sure, the maths tells you it can in principle be secure, but noisy components can introduce correlations that may give the game away. I want to know to what extent the companies making these devices have really tried to break their own crypto systems.

  4. todd.

    Can we claim teh interwebs, or does the governmental/military involvement invalidate that one?

  5. Belizean

    Quantum computation is on firmer ground than the the Hawking-Penrose singularity theorems in that the latter assume energy conditions of dubious applicability to the real universe, while the former rests solely on the axioms of quantum theory.

  6. Cynthia

    Belizean,

    If I’m not mistaken, quantum computing/cryptography is in a rather unique position to receive a fair amount of private funding as opposed to public funding. Perhaps PK - as an expert in the field - could kindly refute or back-up my blanket assessment regarding the funding of quantum computing/cryptography.

    Best regards,

  7. Carl Brannen

    I thought that the list was short on theoretical physics. They could have listed considerably more stuff by Hawking. There was no mention of Bohm or Hiley. And my personal favorite for unappreciated British theoretical physics research is the work by the University of Cambridge’s geometric algebra group in unifying GR and the Dirac equation. For example, see:

    Gravity, gauge theories and geometric algebra
    A. N. Lasenby, C. J. L. Doran and S. F. Gull.
    Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. A356, 487-582 (1998).
    http://www.mrao.cam.ac.uk/~clifford/publications/abstracts/gravity.html

    or a quick introduction:
    http://www.mrao.cam.ac.uk/~clifford/publications/ps/grav_gauge.pdf

    Carl

  8. Luis Sanchez

    I had done a kind of EurekaMex post in my blog, in the particular case of an EurekaUS there are so many discoveries in the US (at least with a lead role done in the US), to name a few: inflationary cosmology, QED, the BCS theory of superconductors, nonabelian gauge theories,J-Psi, lots of results in string theory (like the Green-Schwarz anomaly cancellation, Branes, Mirror symmetry, Vafa-Strominger explanation of black holes entropy), G proteins, grow factors regulating cell growth, the gens of programmed cell death…

    There is no question that US is the world leader in science, so this list will be nearly endeless…

  9. Sacha

    “Stephen Hawking as a graduate student… …proved that singularities exist.”

    …hmmmm - but isn’t it an assumption in that work that the universe is classical?

  10. Sacha

    (from my readings of popular physics works by Kim Thorne and others…)




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