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It Must Be
Beautiful Edited by Graham
Farmelo
Many popular science books shun equations, partly due to
overzealous editors who fear that the appearance of anything
that looks like mathematics will frighten off potential
readers. In contrast, here is a book that relishes equations,
which celebrates their power and beauty, and which still
manages to explain rather than baffle.
Graham Farmelo of the Science
Museum has brought together an eminent team of writers,
including a lord, a knight and a Nobel laureate, who have each
written a chapter about one of the great equations of the
twentieth century. The title, “It Must be Beautiful”,
alludes to the belief common among many scientists that those
successful equations invariably seem to be beautiful. Albert
Einstein even went as far as declaring that, “the only
physical theories that we are willing to accept are the
beautiful ones.’
Scientists seeking objective truths
are often guided by aesthetics, but it is difficult to explain
why one hypothetical equation is more beautiful than another.
Sometimes the beauty in an equation is based on its intricacy,
but at other times it emerges from simplicity. Often the
beauty is a result of surprise. Nothing is more beautiful that
the shocking realisation that quantities that appear contrary
(e.g., energy and mass) are intimately related to each other
(E = mc2). And, of course, all valid equations must accurately
describe the universe, and there is an inevitable beauty in
truth.
Farmelo’s selection of beautiful
equations is biased towards physics, and in particular three
of the eleven chapters are devoted to the equations of the
greedy genius Einstein. However, the book does include a few
equations relating to chemistry, evolution and chaos, so there
is a nod towards the other sciences.
Indeed, it was gratifying to see a
chapter on Claude Shannon’s equations, which gave birth to
information theory, which in turn laid the foundations for the
Information Age. It was cheering to see an attempt to
popularise the work of Shannon. He is one the great heroes of
the last century, whose work has transformed our lives, yet in
the fame game he probably ranks below the first person to get
evicted from the Dutch version of the Big Brother household.
The book ends with a chapter by
Aisling Irwin entitled “An Environmental Fairytale”,
a brilliant account of the Molina-Rowland chemical equations
that eventually revealed the effects of chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs) on the ozone layer. As with most of the other chapters,
Irwin not only unpicks the equation, but also tells the story
of the scientists who discovered and understood it.
Ozone is the name of the molecule
containing 3 oxygen atoms, whereas normal oxygen contains only
2 atoms. Ozone is a pungent, pale blue gas that lurks in the
upper atmosphere, where it absorbs harmful ultraviolet light
known as UVB and UVC. Without ozone, ultraviolet rays would
reach the ground, causing cancer, cataracts and damaging our
immune system, which is why it was never a good idea to pump
ozone-destroying CFCs into the air.
CFCs were invented in 1930 by
Thomas Midgely, whose other great claim to fame was putting
lead in petrol to reduce ‘knocking’. If anybody deserves a
Nobel prize for damaging the environment, it is Midgely. To be
fair, both ideas seemed good at the time. In particular, CFCs
are incredibly stable molecules, which is why they were used
so widely in domestic appliances. Why should a stable CFC molecule destroy a molecule
like ozone, which is 50 Km above us?
CFCs were considered such a cuddly
chemical that James Lovelock, whose green credentials include
the Gaia model for the Earth, suggested releasing CFCs into
the atmosphere in order to track air currents. In fact, it was
this idea that got the American Sherry Rowland and his Mexican
graduate student Mario Molina interested in CFCs and
ozone.
They were the first to realise that
although CFCs are stable at sea level, they could be broken up
by high energy ultraviolet rays if they went high enough. The
first of the equations shown earlier describes how a chlorine
(Cl) atom can be chipped away from the CFC molecule. The
second equation shows how the rampant Cl atom tears an oxygen
atom away from the ozone to make normal oxygen and ClO.
Finally, The ClO picks up a stray oxygen atom on its travels,
making more normal oxygen and recreating a stray chlorine
atom. Once again the lone chlorine atom is free to destroy
another ozone molecule, and the cycle repeats over and over
again.
In the mid-70s nobody had measured
a drop in ozone, so there was no solid experimental evidence
as such. Nevertheless, the theoretical evidence from the
equations was enough to raise concerns, and by 1978 several
countries took action against CFCs, making this one of the
first implementations of the precautionary principle. It was
only in 1985 that scientists working for the British Antarctic
Survey announced the discovery of the ozone hole.
The bad news is that ozone hole is
still growing, but this is due to CFCs released back in the
1950s and 1960s. The good news is that the hole should be
replenished by 2075, assuming that China does not break the
ban on CFCs.
Today we debate global warming. The
equations are much more complex, probably less accurate than
the CFC equations turned out to be, and are therefore much
uglier. However, they are the best equations we have so far,
and the scientific consensus represents the best understanding
we have of the problem. There is no guarantee that the
scientists are 100% right, but they should be listened to and
the necessary measures implemented.
Unfortunately, it will be much
harder than it was for CFCs for scientists to win this
argument, as we have already seen in America. As Irwin points
out, banning CFCs was relatively painless, because CFCs were
associated with luxury goods, such as hairsprays and fridges,
whereas carbon fuels are integral to our lives. There is every
reason for governments and corporations with short-term
ambitions to focus on the gaps in the science and to claim
innocent until proved guilty. The rest of the world should
point to the equations and demand that the precautionary
principle be brought to bear once again.
I must admit that I still have a
few chapters to read, including the alluringly entitled
“Erotica, Aesthetics and Schrödinger’s Wave
Equation”. Nevertheless, I am already hoping that there
will be a second volume, which could be dedicated to the great
equations of previous centuries. Maxwell’s equations, Newton’s
equation of gravity, and the equations that describe
Archimedes’ principle would all make ideal chapters. It is
important to remember that old equations can also be
beautiful, especially if they continue to encapsulate the
truth.
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