9 THE MIGHTY ATOM
niversity, o become ttestplace in to do physics.
Ps are notoriously scornful of scientists from ot Austrian p olfgang Pauli left , aggered aken a bullfigood,” o afriend. “But a c . . .”
It ood. “All science is eitampcollecting,” imes since. tainengaging irony t physics.
Ruto be a genius, but even luckier to live at a time ing and so compatible (imentsnotanding). Never again e so comfortably overlap.
For all an especially brilliant man and ually prettyterrible at matics. Often during lectures so lost in ions tell tudents to out for themselves.
According to ime colleague James Cron, even particularly clever at experimentation. enacious and open-minded. Forbrilliance ituted sing out toiers, as far as deal furt oted ractable problem, o it people and to be more receptive tounortions. est breakto spendimmensely tedious ting at a screen counting alpicle scintillations, as t of o see—possibly t—t t in tom could, if o “make this old world vanish in smoke.”
P made timid sold t Rut to make a radio broadcast across tlantic, a colleague drilyasked: “ of good-natured confidence. o o be at t of a I?” C. P. Snoy.”
But botc theCavendish.
1It ful period in science. In tgen discovered X rays at ty of ürzburg in Germany,and t year ivity. And tself to embark on a long period of greatness. In 1897, J. J. tron t. R. ilson particle detectortron there.
Furtill in ture, James atson and Francis Crick ructure ofDNA at the Cavendi