The value of fundamental research
The panelists acknowledged that it’s difficult to win funding when there are many scientific areas competing for the same resources, but particularly because with fundamental work, it can often be difficult to see how the work will possibly turn into practical applications. “The more successful we are at reaching out to the public and getting them to understand what we’re doing, the more excited they’ll be by it,” said Joseph Polchinski, one of this year’s finalists and a professor at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. “But I think there is still a lot of support for science for the wonder of it.”
The long-term financial value of such research is one way to emphasize the value of fundamental work, the panelists said, but it can be extremely difficult to project the path theoretical work, and even discoveries, will take. “[Physicists] are not very good at predicting what the future is going to bring, which is a wonderful thing about the field,” said finalist Andrew Strominger of Harvard University. “What we discover tends to be far more wonderful and beautiful than what we could imagine.”
For example, in 1859, the French mathematician Urbain Le Verrier took careful measurements of Mercury’s orbit and determined that its location in the night sky was a few degrees off from where calculations predicted it should be. The work was interesting in its own right, but its true significance emerged half a century later. “That tiny glitch in the motion of Mercury is what Einstein turned into the general theory of relativity,” said Strominger.
And while it’s true that theoretical physics can be very difficult to comprehend for the average person—indeed, Albert Einstein needed several decades to sort out the implications of his early works—that perspective will naturally change over time. “Maybe one hundred years down the road, they will study higher dimensions in elementary school and think that it’s an everyday thing,” said finalist Cumrun Vafa of Harvard University, referencing a complex topic popularly debated in physics circles today.
Pictured above: The 2014 Fundamental Physics Prize celebration featured a panel discussion on current challenges in fundamental physics research with Andrew Strominger, Harvard University; Joseph Polchinski, KITP/University of California-Santa Barbara; Yuri Milner, moderator; Michael B. Green, University of Cambridge; John H. Schwarz, California Institute of Technology; and Cumrun Vafa, Harvard University.
Bjorn Carey