Zeros to Heroes
Posted: Mon Sep 13, 2010 3:04 pm
Zeros to heroes: 10 unlikely ideas that changed the world
New Scientist | 13 Sept 2010
New Scientist | 13 Sept 2010
No matter how elegant or ingenious they may at first seem, most novel scientific ideas turn out to be false. But for a remarkable few, the opposite is the case. Written off when first proposed, they turn out to be not only true but world-changing. In an era when research funding is scarce, these 10 ideas serve as a timely reminder of the value of pure science not only in terms of satisfying our curiosity, but ultimately for its endless practical uses.
- WHAT'S THE USE OF ELECTRICITY?
Michael Faraday built an electric motor in 1821 and a rudimentary generator a decade later – but half a century passed before electric power took off.- BAYES'S PROBABILITY PUZZLE
What links modern cosmology to 18th-century musings on billiards? The answer lies in a theorem devised by amateur mathematician Thomas Bayes.- THE INVENTION THAT'S BEST HIDDEN
A car with just two wheels looked too terrifying to catch on, but the secret of its amazing balancing act is at the heart of today's guidance systems.- THE MAN WHO LEARNED TO FLY
George Cayley knew how to make a plane a century before the Wright brothers took off. If only he'd got the internal combustion engine to work.- HOW WE ALMOST MISSED THE OZONE HOLE
The axe was poised over the British Antarctic Survey's ozone monitoring programme when it noticed an awfully big hole in the sky.- PUTTING THE 'i' IN iPODS
They exasperated their 16th-century discoverer, but imaginary numbers have given us everything from quantum mechanics to portable music.- THE TRAGIC FATE OF A GENETIC PIONEER
We now know that gene activity can change significantly without changes to DNA – but did a shamed scientist who killed himself in 1926 get there first?- TALL TALES OR THE TRUTH OF TINY LIFE?
When a 17th-century Dutch draper told London's finest minds he had seen "animalcules" through his home-made microscope, they took some convincing.- ROGUE BRAIN-KILLING PROTEINS
Before winning his Nobel prize, Stanley Prusiner was ridiculed for suggesting that a rogue protein caused spongiform brain diseases.- THE LONG WAIT TO SPEAK IN CODE
Digital sound was invented in 1937 – decades before the technology to use it had been developed.