The case for curiosity-driven research | Suzie Sheehy

90,159 views ・ 2018-11-26

TED


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In the late 19th century, scientists were trying to solve a mystery.
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They found that if they had a vacuum tube like this one
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and applied a high voltage across it,
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something strange happened.
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They called them cathode rays.
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But the question was: What were they made of?
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In England, the 19th-century physicist J.J. Thompson
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conducted experiments using magnets and electricity, like this.
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And he came to an incredible revelation.
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These rays were made of negatively charged particles
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around 2,000 times lighter than the hydrogen atom,
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the smallest thing they knew.
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So Thompson had discovered the first subatomic particle,
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which we now call electrons.
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Now, at the time, this seemed to be a completely impractical discovery.
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I mean, Thompson didn't think there were any applications of electrons.
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Around his lab in Cambridge, he used to like to propose a toast:
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"To the electron.
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May it never be of use to anybody."
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(Laughter)
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He was strongly in favor of doing research out of sheer curiosity,
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to arrive at a deeper understanding of the world.
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And what he found did cause a revolution in science.
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But it also caused a second, unexpected revolution in technology.
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Today, I'd like to make a case for curiosity-driven research,
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because without it,
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none of the technologies I'll talk about today
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would have been possible.
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Now, what Thompson found here has actually changed our view of reality.
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I mean, I think I'm standing on a stage,
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and you think you're sitting in a seat.
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But that's just the electrons in your body
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pushing back against the electrons in the seat,
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opposing the force of gravity.
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You're not even really touching the seat.
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You're hovering ever so slightly above it.
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But in many ways, our modern society was actually built on this discovery.
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I mean, these tubes were the start of electronics.
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And then for many years,
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most of us actually had one of these, if you remember, in your living room,
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in cathode-ray tube televisions.
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But -- I mean, how impoverished would our lives be
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if the only invention that had come from here was the television?
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(Laughter)
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Thankfully, this tube was just a start,
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because something else happens when the electrons here
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hit the piece of metal inside the tube.
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Let me show you.
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Pop this one back on.
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So as the electrons screech to a halt inside the metal,
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their energy gets thrown out again
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in a form of high-energy light, which we call X-rays.
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(Buzzing)
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(Buzzing)
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And within 15 years of discovering the electron,
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these X-rays were being used to make images inside the human body,
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helping soldiers' lives being saved by surgeons,
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who could then find pieces of bullets and shrapnel inside their bodies.
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But there's no way we could have come up with that technology
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by asking scientists to build better surgical probes.
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Only research done out of sheer curiosity, with no application in mind,
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could have given us the discovery of the electron and X-rays.
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Now, this tube also threw open the gates for our understanding of the universe
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and the field of particle physics,
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because it's also the first, very simple particle accelerator.
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Now, I'm an accelerator physicist, so I design particle accelerators,
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and I try and understand how beams behave.
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And my field's a bit unusual,
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because it crosses between curiosity-driven research
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and technology with real-world applications.
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But it's the combination of those two things
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that gets me really excited about what I do.
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Now, over the last 100 years,
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there have been far too many examples for me to list them all.
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But I want to share with you just a few.
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In 1928, a physicist named Paul Dirac found something strange in his equations.
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And he predicted, based purely on mathematical insight,
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that there ought to be a second kind of matter,
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the opposite to normal matter,
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that literally annihilates when it comes in contact:
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antimatter.
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I mean, the idea sounded ridiculous.
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But within four years, they'd found it.
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And nowadays, we use it every day in hospitals,
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in positron emission tomography, or PET scans, used for detecting disease.
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Or, take these X-rays.
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If you can get these electrons up to a higher energy,
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so about 1,000 times higher than this tube,
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the X-rays that those produce
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can actually deliver enough ionizing radiation to kill human cells.
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And if you can shape and direct those X-rays where you want them to go,
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that allows us to do an incredible thing:
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to treat cancer without drugs or surgery,
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which we call radiotherapy.
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In countries like Australia and the UK,
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around half of all cancer patients are treated using radiotherapy.
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And so, electron accelerators are actually standard equipment
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in most hospitals.
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Or, a little closer to home:
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if you have a smartphone or a computer --
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and this is TEDx, so you've got both with you right now, right?
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Well, inside those devices
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are chips that are made by implanting single ions into silicon,
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in a process called ion implantation.
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And that uses a particle accelerator.
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Without curiosity-driven research, though,
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none of these things would exist at all.
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So, over the years, we really learned to explore inside the atom.
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And to do that, we had to learn to develop particle accelerators.
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The first ones we developed let us split the atom.
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And then we got to higher and higher energies;
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we created circular accelerators that let us delve into the nucleus
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and then create new elements, even.
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And at that point, we were no longer just exploring inside the atom.
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We'd actually learned how to control these particles.
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We'd learned how to interact with our world
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on a scale that's too small for humans to see or touch
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or even sense that it's there.
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And then we built larger and larger accelerators,
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because we were curious about the nature of the universe.
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As we went deeper and deeper, new particles started popping up.
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Eventually, we got to huge ring-like machines
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that take two beams of particles in opposite directions,
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squeeze them down to less than the width of a hair
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and smash them together.
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And then, using Einstein's E=mc2,
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you can take all of that energy and convert it into new matter,
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new particles which we rip from the very fabric of the universe.
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Nowadays, there are about 35,000 accelerators in the world,
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not including televisions.
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And inside each one of these incredible machines,
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there are hundreds of billions of tiny particles,
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dancing and swirling in systems that are more complex
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than the formation of galaxies.
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You guys, I can't even begin to explain how incredible it is
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that we can do this.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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So I want to encourage you to invest your time and energy
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in people that do curiosity-driven research.
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It was Jonathan Swift who once said,
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"Vision is the art of seeing the invisible."
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And over a century ago, J.J. Thompson did just that,
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when he pulled back the veil on the subatomic world.
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And now we need to invest in curiosity-driven research,
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because we have so many challenges that we face.
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And we need patience;
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we need to give scientists the time, the space and the means
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to continue their quest,
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because history tells us
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that if we can remain curious and open-minded
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about the outcomes of research,
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the more world-changing our discoveries will be.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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