8 Quotes & Sayings By Lisa Randall

Lisa Randall is a theoretical physicist at the University of Texas at Austin, in Austin, Texas. She received a Ph.D. in mathematics from Harvard University in 1994 and held postdoctoral fellowships at the University of California, Berkeley and the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. In 1998 she completed her first book Black Hole Blues: My Life In and Out of Science and has since published five books, including her most recent, Warped Passages: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Universe's Hidden Dimensions (2011), which was named an NPR Best Book of 2011.

1
Despite my resistance to hyperbole, the LHC belongs to a world that can only be described with superlatives. It is not merely large: the LHC is the biggest machine ever built. It is not merely cold: the 1.9 kelvin (1.9 degrees Celsius above absolute zero) temperature necessary for the LHC’s supercomputing magnets to operate is the coldest extended region that we know of in the universe–even colder than outer space. The magnetic field is not merely big: the superconducting dipole magnets generating a magnetic field more than 100, 000 times stronger than the Earth’s are the strongest magnets in industrial production ever made. And the extremes don’t end there. The vacuum inside the proton-containing tubes, a 10 trillionth of an atmosphere, is the most complete vacuum over the largest region ever produced. The energy of the collisions are the highest ever generated on Earth, allowing us to study the interactions that occurred in the early universe the furthest back in time. . Lisa Randall
2
Creativity is essential to particle physics, cosmology, and to mathematics, and to other fields of science, just as it is to its more widely acknowledged beneficiaries - the arts and humanities. Lisa Randall
3
Religion can have psychological and social roles, but in terms of really explaining how things work, science works differently. Science is based on material elements at the core. Lisa Randall
4
People who dismiss science in favor of religion sometimes confuse the challenge of rigorously understanding the world with a deliberate intellectual exclusion that leads them to mistrust scientists and, to their detriment, what they discover. Lisa Randall
5
Scientific research involves going beyond the well-trodden and well-tested ideas and theories that form the core of scientific knowledge. During the time scientists are working things out, some results will be right, and others will be wrong. Over time, the right results will emerge. Lisa Randall
6
Travel at faster than the speed of light certainly can have dramatic implications that are difficult to understand, such as time travel. Lisa Randall
7
A musical, like most religions, provides the audience or followers with a sense of belonging. Religious services, on the other hand, with their staged performances, invigorating songs, popular wisdom and shared experience, are almost a form of community theater. Lisa Randall