3 THE REVEREND EVANS’S UNIVERSE
e comes from.
“I just seem to ar fields,” old me, ic look, ranquil edge of t icularly good at otremember names well.”
“Or chen.
o see elescope. I Evans o maneuver. In fact, outside but to a crooreroomoff tcelescope—a is about t-er tank—rests in a . o observe, rips to a smalldeck off tcops of eucalyptustrees groter-box vie is more t too bright, he finds his supernovae.
term supernova rop namedFritz Zzerland, Zo titute of tec once distinguisy and erratic talents. seem to be outstandingly brigtle more tating buffoon.” A fitness buff, en drop to teco demonstrate y to anyone it. oriously aggressive, ually becoming so intimidating t collaborator, a gentle man named alter Baade, refused to be left alone . Onat least one occasion Zened to kill Baade, ilson Observatory, if ech campus.
But Zartling brilliance. In turned tention to a question t roubled astronomers: ts of ligars. Improbably ron—tomic particle t been discovered in England by JamesC be at t of toccurred to if a star collapsed to t of densities found in toms, t ed core. Atoms erally be crusogetrons forced into trons. You ar.
Imagine a million really ill not even close. tron star is so dense t a single spoonfulof matter from it after tar t of energy leftover—enougo make t bang in tant explosionssupernovae. t events in creation.
On January 15, 1934, tract of apresentation t ed by Z StanfordUniversity. Despite its extreme brevity—one paragrapy-four lines—tractcontained