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Introduction to special issueA Passion for PhysicsRobert Coontz, Ian Osborne, and Phil Szuromi
Despite being one of the fathers of quantum mechanics, Einstein was dismayed by its probabilistic nature. Leggett (p. 871) explores the current status of the theory and discusses the controversy that still remains. Dunningham et al. (p. 872) look at two different categories: the fragile but useful and the robust but essentially useless. These two types of entanglement can perhaps explain the transition from the quantum to the classical worlds. Aharonov and Zubairy (p. 875) discuss some of the stranger aspects of time in quantum mechanics, especially the "delayed choice quantum eraser" of Scully and Drühl, in which the erasing of "which path" information in two-slit experiments can restore interference patterns, even if that information comes "after the fact." After the development of general relativity, Einstein spent many years attempting to unify the fundamental forces of the day: gravity and electromagnetism. Bennett (p. 879) discusses some of the current tests of Einstein's theories of relativity, including gravitational redshifts, gravitational waves, and the Lense-Thirring effect. He also discusses the role of dark energy and dark matter and the questions of the origin and ultimate fate of the universe. Guth and Kaiser (p. 884) overview inflationary cosmology, which helps bridge particle physics and gravitation, and they outline the experimental tests of inflation's mark on the present universe. They also discuss the theoretical efforts to use superstring theory to understand inflation and to determine the vacuum energy of the universe. In Books et al., Wilczek (p. 852) reviews Penrose's comprehensive perspective on our understanding of the physical behavior of the universe and the mathematical theory that underlies it. Einstein's legacy includes the physicists who continue to take up his mantle. Science's Next Wave (www.nextwave.org) profiles some European physicists as well as Canada's Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics.
The editors suggest the following Related Resources on Science sites:In Science Magazine
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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)