Saturday, March 31, 2007

LEN LYE

Not really about physics (any more than anything isn't!) but this picture is historically interesting, especially to residents of New Plymouth. It shows Len Lye (in black) attempting to erect an early (12m) version of his famous "Windwand" in New York in 1960. The technology back then simply wasn't up to Lye's vision. Now you can see a 45m Windwand on the New Plymouth foreshore. Lye's sculptures show an instinctive understanding of physics: if you get the chance, go and see his works. They are particularly interesting to students studying harmonics and wave-forms. The gentleman assisting him in the photo, wearing a white suit, is the English writer Robert Graves (author of "Goodbye to All That" and "I, Claudius"). In 1942 Robert Graves' daughter Catherine married the New Zealand nuclear physicist Dr. Clifford Dalton, who was later to invent the fast-breeder reactor. After Dalton's death in 1961, Catherine alleged that he had been murdered for his part in breaking the American monopoloy on nuclear technology, and even that the death of another New Zealand-born physicist, Dr. Gilbert Bogle, in 1963 was part of a cover-up to prevent Bogle from investigating Dalton's death. However it is generally accepted that Dalton died of cancer, and that Bogle's mysterious death beside a Sydney river was probably caused by hydrogen sulphide poisoning.

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