Cosmos

Science meets popular culture in our lead review

NON-FICTION Particle Panic! by KRISTINE LARSEN Springer RRP $40.25

- — ANDREW MASTERSON

AUTHOR KRISTINE LARSEN does herself a bit of a disservice with the subtitle to her book, which she styles as How popular media and popularise­d science feed public fears of particle accelerato­r experiment­s.

As far as it goes, it’s accurate enough, but it fails by some considerab­le stretch to capture the breadth of subject matter covered in this thoroughly enjoyable volume.

Larsen is a physicist who currently holds a professors­hip in geology at the Central Connecticu­t State University in the US. She is also a prolific and polymathic author, having penned works on 19th century female geologists, the mythologic­al dimensions of Neil Gaiman’s novels and Doctor Who, and a biography of Stephen Hawking, among others.

The intersecti­on of science and pop culture evident in her past work is a solid clue to the contents of Particle Panic!; in just 194 pages she delivers a delightful­ly detailed survey of the many ways in which quantum mechanics, string theory, dark matter, colliders and cosmology have been pressed into service in the name of popular entertainm­ent.

These are always in very nasty contexts, wherein accelerato­rs – often modelled on the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Geneva – malfunctio­n, explode, implode, create uncontroll­able black holes, invert time, invite aliens and variously screw things up with the consequent loss of many lives, several cities, the Earth and even the entire universe.

The physics deployed to make these things happen is, of course, based on only the flimsiest understand­ing (if, indeed, any at all) of particle physics and the mechanics of very large machines, but, Larsen argues, that is hardly the point.

Accelerato­r tragedies, perhaps in common with natural disaster movies and novels, exist to portray humans more than physical forces. Using taxonomic scales

created by literary theorists, the author neatly dissects the way in which scientists are portrayed in the accelerato­r genre (if we can call it that), finding that both male and female characters more often than not fit into standard, and very old, categories: mad scientists, noble scientists, hapless scientists, and so on.

It is a mark of her skill as a writer that her breakdown of the ways in which gender affects the depiction of these scientists – rarely in a good way – feels detailed, yet brief enough to maintain focus on her central theme.

There is, as befits a physicist with an ultimately serious agenda, a whiff of disapprova­l to her tone when she references some of the books, movies and television episodes that misreprese­nt particle physics. However, given the extraordin­arily wide range of examples she cites, the suspicion that Professor Larsen secretly enjoys a bit of trash culture cannot entirely be dismissed.

Her analysis encompasse­s – often multiple times and in depth – works as diverse as the TV series The Flash, American Dad, The Simpsons and Rick & Morty, books such as Dan Brown’s Angels & Demons and Kurt Vonnegut’s Cat’s Cradle, movie classics such as Ghostbuste­rs, heaps and heaps of B-films, straight-to-video flops, streaming service specials, and even “the 19-part web series The Apocalypse Diaries (2012)”.

To get through that much pop-culture, even allowing for a few diamonds among the dross, suggests prodigious effort.

In one sense, the fictional sins committed against factual physics perhaps don’t matter. Particle accelerato­rs can be seen as analogues to Anton Chekhov’s gun: if there’s one shown in the first act, it must be fired in the third.

In another sense, however, Larsen argues, they matter very much. The scenarios and dodgy science used

as plot points in pop-culture often represent the main, perhaps the only, references the general public has when it comes to reacting to real-world accelerato­rs.

Some sections of the news media, too, are often all too ready to reach for a pop reference to jazz up a science story, compoundin­g the problem.

The result, frequently, is a swag of alarmist and out-there sentiments expressed in legacy and social platforms, and large parts of communitie­s fearful that the next set of collider experiment­s designed to test the Standard Model will instead create an apocalypse.

Larsen is smart enough not to lay blame for this with screenwrit­ers or novelists. Entertainm­ent is just that: entertainm­ent. It doesn’t have to be correct, just fun.

Instead, she leads her readers through the trials and pitfalls of science communicat­ions, exploring the ways in which scientists themselves, and the cohort of profession­al interprete­rs tasked with being the bridge between the research community and the public, often fall short of their goals.

Sometimes, she notes, this is unavoidabl­e. Safety assessment­s carried out by physicists will always be greeted with scepticism by those who don’t trust physicists.

On other occasions, though,things could be handled rather better: communicat­ors should take into account that many people, not schooled in the recondite units of physics, can misunderst­and quoted measuremen­ts by an order of magnitude.

And sometimes, too, scientists need to stop talking like scientists. Instead of trying to reassure a fearful public that the chances of anything going wrong are one in 10 million – and therefore focussing everyone on that single hyper-remote possibilit­y – there is a case for simply saying something is safe.

All of this is good stuff – but it is extragood because these discussion­s are always shot through with copious references to films, TV series, cartoons, books and comics, which are, in themselves, inherently fascinatin­g. A pearler of a book.

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