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Perfect Symmetry: Accidental Discovery of Buckminsterfullerene
 
 

Perfect Symmetry: Accidental Discovery of Buckminsterfullerene (Paperback)

by J.E. Baggott (Author)
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Synopsis
In 1966, it was an amusing idea. In September 1985, it was a ball of paper and sticky tape, the result of six days of intense scientific discussion and one moment of inspiration. Five years later it was finally real: a perfectly symmetrical soccer-ball shaped molecule composed of 60 carbon atoms called buckminsterfullerene. This new molecule - one of a large family of carbon cage molecules called "fullerenes" - represents a new form of carbon in addition to diamond and graphite. Its accidental discovery has revolutionised our understanding of this most familiar of all elements. It has heralded a new chemistry, a new range of high-temperature superconductors and some marvellous new concepts in the architecture of large carbon structures. Carbon will never be the same again. In "Perfect Symmetry" , prize-winning science writer Jim Baggott tells the story of the accidental discovery of buckminsterfullerene, from its origins in the cold chemistry of interstellar clouds to the development of the fast-growing field of fullerence science. It is a story full of surprises.

From the Author
About the author
Jim Baggott was born in Southampton, England, in 1957. He graduated in chemistry in 1978 and completed his doctorate at Oxford in 1981. Following a tour of duty as a postgraduate research fellow at Oxford and at Stanford University in California, he returned to England in 1983 to take up a lectureship at the University of Reading. After a further five years of academic life, he decided on a complete change of career direction and now works for a major multinational oil company. He maintains a broad interest in science and philosophy, and writed on both these subjects in his spare time. He has been awarded prizes both for his experimental research and his science writing. His first book, "The meaning of Quantum Theory", was published by Oxford University Press in 1992. He is married, with one son Tim and a daughter Emma. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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