ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Suzie Sheehy - Physicist
Dr. Suzie Sheehy uses accelerator physics to help reinvent technology for applications in medicine, energy and beyond.

Why you should listen

Dr. Suzie Sheehy designs particle accelerators. She's fascinated by using accelerator physics to help us reinvent technology for applications in areas such as medicine and energy. Her research projects have ranged from the design of new cancer treatment accelerators to building a scaled-down experiment that models particle beams -- answering fundamental questions about the physics of beams that are beyond reach of computer simulations.

Sheehy is currently a Royal Society University Research Fellow at the University of Oxford, where she also teaches graduate-level accelerator physics. She completed her undergraduate degree at the University of Melbourne in her native Australia (BSc Hons 2006) and DPhil at the University of Oxford in the John Adams Institute for Accelerator Science (2010). She has held fellowships from the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 (Brunel fellow 2010-2013) as well as her current Royal Society Fellowship.

Alongside her research, Sheehy is a prolific public speaker, presenter and science communicator, for which she has received a number of awards including the British Science Association Lord Kelvin Award, Institute of Physics HEPP Group Science in Society Award and the University of Oxford Vice Chancellors Civic Award. She is an expert TV presenter for Impossible Engineering on Discovery Channel and has cowritten and delivered live headline shows for tens of thousands of students at the Big Bang Fair alongside well known BBC TV presenters. She regularly presents public and schools lectures around the UK and further afield at major science festivals and venues like the Royal Institution.

More profile about the speaker
Suzie Sheehy | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxSydney

Suzie Sheehy: The case for curiosity-driven research

苏西 · 施海: 主张由好奇心驱动的研究的论据

Filmed:
1,736,184 views

物理学家苏西 · 施海说,看似毫无意义的科学研究可以导致非凡的发现。在这场演讲和技术演示中,她说明了:我们的许多现代技术都与几个世纪以来由好奇心驱动的实验紧密相连,并为投资更多好奇心驱动的研究以加深对世界的理解提供了论据。
- Physicist
Dr. Suzie Sheehy uses accelerator physics to help reinvent technology for applications in medicine, energy and beyond. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
In the late晚了 19th century世纪,
scientists科学家们 were trying to solve解决 a mystery神秘.
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19世纪晚期,
科学家在试图破解一个迷。
00:18
They found发现 that if they had
a vacuum真空 tube like this one
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他们发现,
如果有一个像这样的真空管,
00:21
and applied应用的 a high voltage电压 across横过 it,
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在上面施加高压,
00:24
something strange奇怪 happened发生.
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会产生奇怪的现象。
00:36
They called them cathode阴极 rays阳光.
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他们称之为阴极射线。
00:39
But the question was:
What were they made制作 of?
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但问题是:
它是由什么构成的?
00:42
In England英国, the 19th century世纪
physicist物理学家, J.J. Thompson汤普森,
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在19世纪的英国,
物理学家J.J.汤普森
00:46
conducted进行 experiments实验 using运用
magnets磁铁 and electricity电力, like this.
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用磁铁和电源做了个实验,就像这样。
00:57
And he came来了 to an incredible难以置信 revelation启示.
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他从中得到了
一个不可思议的真相。
01:00
These rays阳光 were made制作
of negatively charged带电 particles粒子
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这些射线是由某种
带负电荷的粒子构成的,
01:04
around 2,000 times lighter打火机
than the hydrogen atom原子,
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大约比当时他们所知的
最小的粒子,氢原子,还轻2000倍。
01:08
the smallest最少 thing they knew知道.
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01:10
So Thompson汤普森 had discovered发现
the first subatomic亚原子 particle粒子,
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于是汤普森发现了第一个亚原子粒子,
01:14
which哪一个 we now call electrons电子.
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也就是我们现在所称的电子。
01:17
Now, at the time, this seemed似乎 to be
a completely全然 impractical不切实际的 discovery发现.
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在当时,这似乎就是个
百无一用的发现。
01:21
I mean, Thompson汤普森 didn't think
there were any applications应用 of electrons电子.
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我意思是,汤普森并不认为
电子能做什么用途。
01:25
Around his lab实验室 in Cambridge剑桥,
he used to like to propose提出 a toast烤面包:
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在他位于剑桥的实验室里,
他过去常常邀杯道:
01:29
"To the electron电子.
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“为电子而干杯,
01:31
May可能 it never be of use to anybody任何人."
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希望它永远不会对任何人有用。”
01:33
(Laughter笑声)
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(笑声)
01:36
He was strongly非常 in favor偏爱 of doing research研究
out of sheer绝对 curiosity好奇心,
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他纯粹是因为好奇,
为了更深入地了解世界
而投身于研究工作。
01:40
to arrive到达 at a deeper更深
understanding理解 of the world世界.
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01:43
And what he found发现
did cause原因 a revolution革命 in science科学.
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他的发现确实引发了一场科学革命。
01:47
But it also caused造成 a second第二,
unexpected意外 revolution革命 in technology技术.
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但它也引发了另外一场
意料之外的技术革命。
01:53
Today今天, I'd like to make a case案件
for curiosity-driven好奇心驱动 research研究,
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今天,我想为由好奇心
驱动的研究提供充分理由,
01:57
because without it,
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因为如果没有它,
01:59
none没有 of the technologies技术
I'll talk about today今天
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我们今天讨论的所有技术,
02:01
would have been possible可能.
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都不可能存在。
02:04
Now, what Thompson汤普森 found发现 here
has actually其实 changed our view视图 of reality现实.
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汤普森的这个发现真正地
改变了我们对现实的看法。
02:08
I mean, I think I'm standing常设 on a stage阶段,
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我指的是,
我认为我现在站在台上,
02:11
and you think you're sitting坐在 in a seat座位.
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你们认为你们坐在座位上。
02:13
But that's just the electrons电子 in your body身体
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实际情况是:
你身体里的电子
02:15
pushing推动 back against反对
the electrons电子 in the seat座位,
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正把椅子上的
电子往下挤,
02:18
opposing反对 the force of gravity重力.
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以此对抗重力。
02:21
You're not even really touching接触 the seat座位.
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你甚至没有
真正碰到座位。
02:24
You're hovering徘徊 ever so slightly above以上 it.
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你只是一直在它上面
稍高一点的地方悬浮。
02:29
But in many许多 ways方法, our modern现代 society社会
was actually其实 built内置 on this discovery发现.
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但在很多方面,我们现代社会
其实是建立在这个发现之上的。
02:33
I mean, these tubes
were the start开始 of electronics电子产品.
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我是说,这些管子是
电子学的开端。
02:35
And then for many许多 years年份,
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以及在以前,
很长一段时间,
02:37
most of us actually其实 had one of these,
if you remember记得, in your living活的 room房间,
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如果你还记得,在你的起居室中,
我们大多数人都拥有它的产物,
02:40
in cathode阴极 ray射线 tube televisions电视.
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一台阴极射线管电视。
02:43
But -- I mean, how impoverished贫困
would our lives生活 be
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但是——我的意思是,
即使有了这个发现,
02:46
if the only invention发明 that had come
from here was the television电视?
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但如果电视只是这唯一的发明,
我们的生活将会多么困顿?
02:50
(Laughter笑声)
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(笑声)
02:52
Thankfully感激地, this tube was just a start开始,
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幸运的是,这个真空管只是一个开始,
02:55
because something else其他 happens发生
when the electrons电子 here
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因为当电子
撞到管子里的金属片时,
02:57
hit击中 the piece of metal金属 inside the tube.
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会发生别的事情。
03:00
Let me show显示 you.
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让我给你们演示。
03:04
Pop流行的 this one back on.
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重新打开它。
03:07
So as the electrons电子
screech尖叫 to a halt inside the metal金属,
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所以随着电子“嘎吱一声”
急停在金属内部时,
03:10
their energy能源 gets得到 thrown抛出 out again
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它们的能量以高能光束的方式
被释放出来,也就是X射线。
03:12
in a form形成 of high-energy高能量 light,
which哪一个 we call X-raysX射线.
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03:16
(Buzzing嗡嗡)
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(嗡嗡响)
03:19
(Buzzing嗡嗡)
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(嗡嗡响)
03:21
And within 15 years年份
of discovering发现 the electron电子,
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在发现电子后的15年内,
03:24
these X-raysX射线 were being存在 used
to make images图片 inside the human人的 body身体,
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这些X射线被用来拍摄人体内部的影像,
03:29
helping帮助 soldiers'士兵 ' lives生活
being存在 saved保存 by surgeons外科医生,
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帮助拯救士兵生命的外科医生,
03:33
who could then find pieces of bullets子弹
and shrapnel弹片 inside their bodies身体.
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这样他们就能够在士兵
身体中找到子弹和弹片。
03:38
But there's no way we could have
come up with that technology技术
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但是回到最初,如果命令科学家
发明出更好的手术探针,
03:41
by asking scientists科学家们 to build建立
better surgical外科 probes探头.
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这种技术就能凭空出现,
这是不可能的。
03:45
Only research研究 doneDONE out of sheer绝对 curiosity好奇心,
with no application应用 in mind心神,
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只有纯粹出于好奇做的研究,
而不考虑任何实际用途,
03:50
could have given特定 us the discovery发现
of the electron电子 and X-raysX射线.
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才能让我们
发现电子和X射线。
03:54
Now, this tube also threw open打开 the gates
for our understanding理解 of the universe宇宙
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现在,这个真空管也为我们
理解宇宙和粒子物理领域
04:00
and the field领域 of particle粒子 physics物理,
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打开了一扇门,
04:02
because it's also the first,
very simple简单 particle粒子 accelerator加速器.
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因为它也是第一个粒子
加速器,结构堪称简陋。
04:07
Now, I'm an accelerator加速器 physicist物理学家,
so I design设计 particle粒子 accelerators加速器,
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嗯,我是加速器物理学家,
因此我设计粒子加速器,
04:11
and I try and understand理解 how beams behave表现.
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我试着理解粒子束的行为。
04:15
And my field's场的 a bit unusual异常,
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我的领域有点不一般,
04:16
because it crosses十字架 between之间
curiosity-driven好奇心驱动 research研究
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因为它的研究
不仅是由好奇心驱动的,
04:20
and technology技术 with
real-world真实世界 applications应用.
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而且也与现实世界的
应用技术相关。
04:24
But it's the combination组合
of those two things
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但这两者的结合让我对
04:26
that gets得到 me really excited兴奋
about what I do.
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我的工作感到非常兴奋。
04:30
Now, over the last 100 years年份,
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嗯,在过去100年中,
04:32
there have been far too many许多 examples例子
for me to list名单 them all.
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有太多的案例,数不胜数。
04:35
But I want to share分享 with you just a few少数.
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但我想给你们分享其中几个。
04:37
In 1928, a physicist物理学家 named命名 Paul保罗 Dirac狄拉克
found发现 something strange奇怪 in his equations方程.
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1928年,一位名叫保罗 · 狄拉克的物理学家
在他的方程中发现了一些奇怪的东西。
04:43
And he predicted预料到的, based基于 purely纯粹
on mathematical数学的 insight眼光,
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仅仅基于数学的洞察,他预测,
04:48
that there ought应该 to be
a second第二 kind of matter,
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应该有第二种物质,
04:51
the opposite对面 to normal正常 matter,
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与正常物质相反的物质,
04:53
that literally按照字面 annihilates
when it comes in contact联系:
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当它们相互接触时就会湮灭:
04:57
antimatter反物质.
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反物质。
04:59
I mean, the idea理念 sounded满面 ridiculous荒谬.
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我是说,这个想法听起来很荒谬。
05:02
But within four years年份, they'd他们会 found发现 it.
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但在4年之内,他们证实了它。
05:04
And nowadays如今, we use it
every一切 day in hospitals医院,
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如今,我们每天都在医院使用它,
05:07
in positron正电子 emission排放 tomography断层摄影术,
or PET宠物 scans扫描, used for detecting检测 disease疾病.
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正电子发射断层扫描,
或叫PET扫描,用于检测疾病。
05:13
Or, take these X-raysX射线.
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或者,拿这些X光来说。
05:15
If you can get these electrons电子
up to a higher更高 energy能源,
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如果你可以把这些电子
加速到更高能量,
05:18
so about 1,000 times higher更高
that this tube,
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例如,比这个管子里的高1000倍,
05:21
the X-raysX射线 that those produce生产
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由此产生的X射线实际上
05:24
can actually其实 deliver交付 enough足够
ionizing电离 radiation辐射 to kill human人的 cells细胞.
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可以释放足够强的电离
辐射,杀死人体细胞。
05:28
And if you can shape形状 and direct直接
those X-raysX射线 where you want them to go,
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如果你能够按照实际需求
调整X射线的形状和方向,
05:32
that allows允许 us to do an incredible难以置信 thing:
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就可以实现不可思议的事情:
05:35
to treat对待 cancer癌症 without drugs毒品 or surgery手术,
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无须药物或手术
就可以治疗癌症,
05:38
which哪一个 we call radiotherapy放疗.
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这就是我们说的放射疗法。
05:40
In countries国家 like Australia澳大利亚 and the UK联合王国,
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在澳大利亚和英国这样的国家,
05:43
around half of all cancer癌症 patients耐心
are treated治疗 using运用 radiotherapy放疗.
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大约一半的癌症病人
使用放射疗法。
05:47
And so, electron电子 accelerators加速器
are actually其实 standard标准 equipment设备
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电子加速器
实际上是很多医院的
05:51
in most hospitals医院.
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标准配备。
05:53
Or, a little closer接近 to home:
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或者,在日常生活中:
05:56
if you have a smartphone手机 or a computer电脑 --
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如果你有智能手机或电脑——
05:58
and this is TEDx的TEDx, so you've got
both with you right now, right?
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在TEDx,大家都带着它们,对吧?
06:03
Well, inside those devices设备
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嗯,这些设备中的芯片,
06:06
are chips芯片 that are made制作
by implanting植入 single ions离子 into silicon,
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是在“离子注入工序”中通过
06:10
in a process处理 called ion离子 implantation植入.
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将单个离子注入硅来制造的。
06:13
And that uses使用 a particle粒子 accelerator加速器.
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这就需要粒子加速器。
06:18
Without没有 curiosity-driven好奇心驱动 research研究, though虽然,
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没有由好奇心驱动的研究,
06:22
none没有 of these things would exist存在 at all.
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这些东西没有一个会存在。
06:27
So, over the years年份, we really learned学到了
to explore探索 inside the atom原子.
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那么,多年来,
我们真正学会了探索原子内部。
06:33
And to do that, we had to learn学习
to develop发展 particle粒子 accelerators加速器.
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要做到这一点,
我们必须研究发展粒子加速器。
06:37
The first ones那些 we developed发达
let us split分裂 the atom原子.
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我们开发的第一个加速器
让我们分裂原子。
06:41
And then we got to higher更高
and higher更高 energies能量;
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然后我们得到
越来越高的能量;
06:45
we created创建 circular accelerators加速器
that let us delve钻研 into the nucleus
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我们创造了圆形加速器,
让我们深入原子核
06:49
and then create创建 new elements分子, even.
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然后甚至产生了新的元素。
06:53
And at that point, we were no longer
just exploring探索 inside the atom原子.
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在那一刻,我们不再只是探索原子内部。
06:58
We'd星期三 actually其实 learned学到了
how to control控制 these particles粒子.
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我们学会了控制这些粒子。
07:01
We'd星期三 learned学到了 how to interact相互作用
with our world世界
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我们学会了在一个人类无法看到、
触摸甚至感知到的微观层面上
07:03
on a scale规模 that's too small
for humans人类 to see or touch触摸
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与世界互动。
07:08
or even sense that it's there.
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07:12
And then we built内置 larger
and larger accelerators加速器,
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然后我们建造越来越大的加速器,
07:16
because we were curious好奇
about the nature性质 of the universe宇宙.
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因为我们对宇宙的本质充满好奇。
07:19
As we went deeper更深 and deeper更深,
new particles粒子 started开始 popping up.
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随着我们越钻越深,新的粒子接连被发现。
07:24
Eventually终于, we got to huge巨大
ring-like环状的 machines
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最终,我们建造了一个巨大的环状机器,
07:27
that take two beams of particles粒子
in opposite对面 directions方向,
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它把两束粒子从相反的方向
07:31
squeeze them down
to less than the width宽度 of a hair头发
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压缩到不到一根
头发那么细的宽度,
07:33
and smash粉碎 them together一起.
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然后使它们对撞。
07:35
And then, using运用 Einstein's爱因斯坦 E=mcMC2,
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然后,根据爱因斯坦
质能方程E=mc^2,
07:38
you can take all of that energy能源
and convert兑换 it into new matter,
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你得到了所有的能量,
并把它转化为新的物质,
07:42
new particles粒子 which哪一个 we rip安息
from the very fabric of the universe宇宙.
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我们从宇宙的特定基本
结构中提取的新的粒子。
07:48
Nowadays如今, there are
about 35,000 accelerators加速器 in the world世界,
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如今,全世界有35000台加速器,
07:53
not including包含 televisions电视.
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不包括电视。
07:55
And inside each one of these
incredible难以置信 machines,
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在这些神奇的机器里面,
07:59
there are hundreds数以百计 and billions数十亿
of tiny particles粒子,
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有数千亿的微小粒子,
08:02
dancing跳舞 and swirling纷飞 in systems系统
that are more complex复杂
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在比星系的组成
还复杂的系统中,
08:06
than the formation编队 of galaxies星系.
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跳舞和旋转。
08:08
You guys, I can't even begin开始 to explain说明
how incredible难以置信 it is
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各位,我甚至都无法解释,
我们能做到这一点
是多么的不可思议。
08:12
that we can do this.
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08:14
(Laughter笑声)
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(笑声)
08:16
(Applause掌声)
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(鼓掌)
08:23
So I want to encourage鼓励 you
to invest投资 your time and energy能源
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所以我想鼓励
你们投入时间和精力,
08:27
in people that do
curiosity-driven好奇心驱动 research研究.
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支持人们去做
由好奇心驱动的研究。
08:31
It was Jonathan乔纳森 Swift迅速 who once一旦 said,
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乔纳森 · 斯威夫特曾经说过,
08:34
"Vision视力 is the art艺术
of seeing眼看 the invisible无形."
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“远见是见人所未见的艺术。”
08:38
And over a century世纪 ago,
J.J. Thompson汤普森 did just that,
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一个多世纪前,
汤普森就是这么做的,
08:41
when he pulled back the veil面纱
on the subatomic亚原子 world世界.
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当他揭开亚原子世界面纱时。
08:45
And now we need to invest投资
in curiosity-driven好奇心驱动 research研究,
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现在,对于由好奇心驱动的
研究,我们需要进行投入,
08:49
because we have so many许多
challenges挑战 that we face面对.
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因为我们面对着如此多的挑战。
08:52
And we need patience忍耐;
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我们需要耐心;
08:54
we need to give scientists科学家们 the time,
the space空间 and the means手段
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我们需要提供给科学家时间、场所以及
08:58
to continue继续 their quest寻求,
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继续他们的探求的工具,
09:00
because history历史 tells告诉 us
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因为历史告诉我们:
09:02
that if we can remain
curious好奇 and open-minded思想开明的
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如果我们能够对研究的结果
09:05
about the outcomes结果 of research研究,
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保持好奇和开放的心态,
09:08
the more world-changing改变世界的
our discoveries发现 will be.
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我们的发现就越能改变世界。
09:11
Thank you.
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谢谢。
09:12
(Applause掌声)
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(鼓掌)
Translated by jacks jun
Reviewed by Wilde Luo

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Suzie Sheehy - Physicist
Dr. Suzie Sheehy uses accelerator physics to help reinvent technology for applications in medicine, energy and beyond.

Why you should listen

Dr. Suzie Sheehy designs particle accelerators. She's fascinated by using accelerator physics to help us reinvent technology for applications in areas such as medicine and energy. Her research projects have ranged from the design of new cancer treatment accelerators to building a scaled-down experiment that models particle beams -- answering fundamental questions about the physics of beams that are beyond reach of computer simulations.

Sheehy is currently a Royal Society University Research Fellow at the University of Oxford, where she also teaches graduate-level accelerator physics. She completed her undergraduate degree at the University of Melbourne in her native Australia (BSc Hons 2006) and DPhil at the University of Oxford in the John Adams Institute for Accelerator Science (2010). She has held fellowships from the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 (Brunel fellow 2010-2013) as well as her current Royal Society Fellowship.

Alongside her research, Sheehy is a prolific public speaker, presenter and science communicator, for which she has received a number of awards including the British Science Association Lord Kelvin Award, Institute of Physics HEPP Group Science in Society Award and the University of Oxford Vice Chancellors Civic Award. She is an expert TV presenter for Impossible Engineering on Discovery Channel and has cowritten and delivered live headline shows for tens of thousands of students at the Big Bang Fair alongside well known BBC TV presenters. She regularly presents public and schools lectures around the UK and further afield at major science festivals and venues like the Royal Institution.

More profile about the speaker
Suzie Sheehy | Speaker | TED.com