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Books editor鈥檚 blog: a riff on physics that shreds boundaries

Philip Moriarty explains quantum mechanics with heavy metal music in

Published on
August 2, 2018
Last updated
August 2, 2018
Judas Priest band
Source: Getty

A few years ago, recalls physics professor Philip Moriarty, he 鈥渨orked with a very talented musician called Dave Brown鈥 on a metal song whose riffs, rhythms and, um, rlyrics (漏 D. Brown) were derived from the fundamental constant known as the golden ratio鈥. When they uploaded their 鈥 鈥 to YouTube, he was 鈥渁bsolutely delighted鈥 by a comment reading: 鈥淚 think you just tricked me into liking math. Clever bastards.鈥

Moriarty has long used music and manipulated sound samples in his undergraduate teaching at the University of Nottingham. Expanding on that, his new book, When the Uncertainty Principle Goes to聽11 (BenBella), boldly sets out to 鈥渆xplain quantum physics with heavy metal鈥.

This partly reflects his own passions. For Moriarty, 鈥渢here鈥檚 nothing quite like the sense-bludgeoning experience of a heavy metal gig. The all-enveloping power of the music, the theatrics, the histrionics鈥︹ Yet he hopes that the book will appeal well beyond the tribe or tribes of 鈥渕etal-loving physicists鈥 and 鈥減hysics-loving metalheads鈥. And that is because he believes that there are genuine, illuminating connections between the two domains that 鈥渟imply have not received anything like the attention they deserve鈥.

Given that quantum physics is 鈥渋n essence a theory of waves鈥, there is an obvious link to music. But although some of what Moriarty wants to talk about would apply to everything from glam rock to Gregorian chant, he is firmly convinced that 鈥渢he stylings of heavy metal take these connections to another level entirely: chugging guitars, choked cymbals, artificial harmonies, and mosh pits each have their own parallels within the physics of the ultrasmall鈥etal music is perfectly placed when it comes to crossing that age-old (and very silly) divide between the arts/humanities and the sciences.鈥

Needless to say, Moriarty is well aware of the stereotypes: that 鈥渜uantum physics has a reputation for being conceptually challenging鈥, while heavy metal is often dismissed as 鈥渕usic for Neanderthals鈥 or excoriated as 鈥渢he root of all evil (and, as such, a convenient scapegoat for societal problems whose origins are a good deal more complex than the lyrics of the latest Judas Priest album)鈥. Yet he remains undaunted and even makes it clear up front that 鈥渢here will be maths鈥, given that mathematics has proved highly and unexpectedly effective in 鈥渆xplain[ing] everything from the crunchiest of riffs and heaviest of rhythms to the far-beyond-driven vibrations of atoms and molecules鈥.

It takes a certain courage to try to explain quantum physics to non-specialists, but Moriarty expresses 鈥渁 great deal of confidence in the intellect and tenacity of the average metal fan (and the average reader in general)鈥. Now all he has to do is trick them into liking maths and physics, and wait for the reviews declaring him a 鈥渃lever bastard鈥.

matthew.reisz@timeshighereducation.com

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Print headline: Riff on聽quantum worlds聽that shreds boundaries

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