Showing posts with label Frank Close. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Close. Show all posts

Eclipse - Journeys to the Dark Side of the Moon with Professor Frank Close

On 21 August 2017, over 100 million people will gather across a narrow strip of the USA to witness the most watched total solar eclipse in history.

On Thursday, Feb 2 we're delighted to welcome one of the UK's most well-known and respected physicists and science writer Professor Frank Close to discuss the spellbinding allure of this most beautiful of natural phenomena. He will also be discussing his latest book ‘Eclipse - Journeys to the Dark Side of the Moon’, explaining why eclipses happen and revealing their role in history, literature and myth.

He'll also be focusing on 'eclipse chasers', who travel with ecstatic fervour to some of the most inaccessible places on the globe to be present at the moment of totality.


Frank Close lives in Abingdon, and his scientific career and achievements are genuinely outstanding. A professor of physics at the University of Oxford and a former head of the theoretical physics division at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, he is the author of bestselling books Antimatter, Neutrino, The Infinity Puzzle (the story behind the discovery of the Higgs Boson) and 'Half Life' (the true story of Harwell physicist Bruno Pontecorvo).

He has won the Association of British Science Writers award three times, was vice president of the British Association for Advancement of Science and won the Royal Society Michael Faraday Prize for Science Communication.

Frank will be at Mostly Books on the evening of Thursday, Feb 2nd at 7.30pm. Tickets are £4, to include a glass of wine, with £3 redeemable against a copy of 'Eclipse' on the night. We expect to be full on the night for this wonderful speaker, so please let us know as soon as you can if we can reserve you a space.

We hope to see you on the night!

Half Life: The Divided Life of Bruno Pontecorvo - Physicist or Spy?

On the eve of the publication of his new book, 'Half Life: The Divided Life of Bruno Pontecorvo - Physicist or Spy?', Professor Frank Close will reveal his discoveries about the atomic scientist Bruno Pontecorvo.

Pontecorvo was an Italian physicist who worked on the British atomic bomb project at Harwell, and his son, Gil, was about to start his second year at Abingdon School. However, on August 31, 1950, in the middle of a holiday in Italy, he abruptly left Rome for Stockholm with his wife and three sons without informing friends or relatives. The next day he was helped by Soviet agents to enter the Soviet Union from Finland.

World-renowned scientist and writer Frank Close reveals the full story of Pontecorvo, bound up in the murky world of scientific research as the Second World War turned into The Cold War. What nuclear secrets did Pontecorvo take with him? Who was the M15 mole at the School? What role did Kim Philby play?

Close has had unprecedented access to archives, letters, family members and other scientists in telling Pontecorvo’s story. Pontecorvo worked on the Anglo-Canadian arm of the Manhatten Project and was privy to many secrets. He uncovered a way to find the uranium so coveted by nuclear powers.

Close is professor of physics at the University of Oxford and a former head of the theoretical physics division at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. He is author of bestselling books including Lucifer’s Legacy and Antimatter and has twice won the Association of British Science Writers award.

Frank will be speaking at the Amey Theatre, Abingdon School on Wednesday, March 4 at 7pm. Copies of his book will be on sale on the night, which Frank will be delighted to sign. This is a free event, and will be unticketed, but please email us to register your interest and let us and the school know that you will be attending.

(And take a look at this special BBC 'On This Day' news report from 1950)