"... when I was a graduate student in the 1950s, I had to learn a lot about cosmic ray physics β because that's where all the information was coming from about new particles. And I remember how surprised I was when a professor β at Princeton where I was a student β Arthur Wightman, told me that pretty soon physicists would no longer be worried about cosmic rays. They would be getting the information about particles from new kinds of s β which would accelerate known particles like s, which are the nuclei of hydrogen atoms, or s to very high energy where they would collide with each other or with stationary targets. And in that collision new matter would be formed."
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People from New York (state)Physicists from the United StatesPrinceton University facultyYale University alumniYale University faculty
Original Language: English
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Steven Weinberg, (original program date: June 4, 2011; quote at 9:14 of 1:01:20)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Arthur_Wightman
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Arthur Wightman
(March 30, 1922 β January 13, 2013) was an American mathematical physicist, known for the .
6 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Arthur Wightman β
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