Sei sulla pagina 1di 5

12/16/13

The scale of things | symmetry magazine

dimensions of particle physics A joint Fermilab/SLAC publication sections FacebookTwitterRSS Feed subscribe

home
subscribe

departments
masthead contact

science topics

image bank

archives

day in the life December 10, 2013

The scale of things


By Heather Rock Woods

Illustration by Sandbox Studio, Chicago

Geoffrey West applies his physics way of thinking to biology and urban life.

PDF download

Related symmetry content


Day in the life: Scientist detects danger with physics Day in the life: Fundamental forces and medicinal molecules Day in the life: Detecting opportunity, in particle physics and beyond

Geoffrey West continually searches for underlying principles, the universal laws that explain why things tick.
www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/december-2013/the-scale-of-things 1/5

12/16/13

The scale of things | symmetry magazine

For many years, that meant working on the scale of tiny thingsquarks and other subatomic particles. In the past 15-plus years, West has branched out. Still using a theoretical-physics-inspired approach, he and biology colleagues developed a quantitative, predictive framework to explain why scale-related relationships occur in biology, and he has extended it to cities, cancer and other subjects. I still very much consider myself a physicist because physics deals with fundamental questions at all scales, from the subatomic to the cosmos, says West, distinguished professor and past president of the Santa Fe Institute and senior fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory. West grew up in modest circumstances in England, but by acing the national exams he earned a free spot at Cambridge. He attended Stanford University as a graduate student starting in 1961 and was oncampus to see the construction of SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. After holding junior positions at Cornell and Harvard universities, he joined the Stanford faculty, contributing theories on quarks and gluons at the time of SLACs Nobel-winning experiments that pointed to quarks' existence. In the mid-1970s, West founded Los Alamos particle theory group and led it for almost 30 years. In graduate school, one of his advisors had said, If you are a physicist, you should be able to work on anything. That's what you're being trained for. And thats what he did. As midlife arrived, West dove into the science of aging and learned what biologists know: As animal size scales up, almost all physiological functions, like heart rate, also scale in a systematic fashion. For example, as animal mass increases, the metabolic energy needed to run a body also increases. A giraffe burns about 75 percent more metabolism-revving oxygen than a creature half its mass, and most mammals and birds fit this three-to-four slope, or ratio, between metabolism and mass. West wanted to know why this regularity holds true, even though organisms are hugely diverse, with different adaptations, evolutionary histories, lifespans and survival strategies. To figure out the mechanism behind the relationship, West teamed with two biologists. "To me the most impressive thing about Geoffrey is how much biology he has learned, says Jim Brown, a well-known ecologist at the University of New Mexico. "This has allowed him to apply physics to biological problems with impressive power and realism. The threeWest, Brown and Browns graduate student Brian Enquist, now a professor at the University of Arizonahad a long series of conversations working through the mathematics of complex biological systems. They proposed that the physics and mathematics of an important network in animals drove the scaling pattern. In this case, capillary blood vessels bring oxygen to every cell in vertebrates and some invertebrates, making it a primary network for supplying and constraining metabolism. We provided the underlying theory that transcends the specific evolved design of the animal or plant, West says. Their original paper in Science has been cited almost 2500 times and has drawn controversy as well as inspired new interpretations. The framework has been applied to understanding and predicting ecosystem dynamics, cancer growth, sleep, urban studies and more. Each system has a different network, with its own physics that determines what the scaling pattern looks like. For cities, West suggests that there are two interacting networks: people and infrastructure. Data from urban areas around the worldno matter the culture, geography or historyreveal that a doubling in population increases per capita advantages like wages and per capita troubles like crime by 15 percent while saving 15 per cent on infrastructure like roads. West and his colleagues are also examining what governs corporate growth, innovation cycles and sustainability issues. His work has been featured in a range of publications from textbooks to Time magazine. Hes won awards in the fields of ecology, aging, mathematical biology, and one from the American Physical
www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/december-2013/the-scale-of-things 2/5

12/16/13

The scale of things | symmetry magazine

Society for using physics to benefit society. It has been very powerful and great fun, this physics way of thinking, West says.

Courtesy of: Geoffrey West

Like what you see? Sign up for a free subscription to symmetry !


Issue: December 2013

Science topics: applied science Laboratories and facilities: SLAC

More from symmetry

Visit the full archives

breaking

signal to background

signal to background

Answers to big questions Whats in a name?


www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/december-2013/the-scale-of-things

Mock data, real science


3/5

12/16/13

The scale of things | symmetry magazine

could lie in small particles

most popular
December 3, 2013

Reading in the Higgs era


Science writer Mike Perricone presents his favorite books on particle physics and a recommended reading list for the LHC/Higgs Era (2008 to the present).

November 27, 2013

The worlds oldest astronomers


Scientists in Japan use ancient trees to look back on the history of our local cosmos, and discover a mystery.

December 6, 2013

US particle physicists look to space


A panel met at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory to look for promising routes to the study of dark matter, dark energy and other phenomena.

symmetry tweets
December 15, 2013 ICYMI: Geoffrey West applies his physics way of thinking to biology and urban life: http://t.co/T81QaVzE5m December 15, 2013 Popular on the site: Reading in the Higgs era: http://t.co/Lg1Hy3O5JV December 15, 2013 ICYMI: A day in the life of a neutrino detector block: http://t.co/8XFNvyjrv1

trending on the web


December 11, 2013 Nature News

Simulations back up theory that universe is a hologram


A ten-dimensional theory of gravity makes the same predictions as standard quantum physics in fewer... December 11, 2013 Wired

Scientists discover a jewel at the heart of quantum physics


The discovery of a jewel-like geometric object dramatically simplifies calculations of particle...
www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/december-2013/the-scale-of-things 4/5

12/16/13

The scale of things | symmetry magazine

December 9, 2013 CNN

Inside CERN's $10 billion collider


Physicists and technicians are hard at work upgrading the Large Hadron Collider to explore the... VIEW ALL

sections

subscribe

archive

contact

social media

2013 symmetry A joint Fermilab/SLAC publication PO Box 500 MS206 Batavia, IL, 60510 USA contact suggest a story feedback social media facebook twitter more archives image bank pdf issues

www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/december-2013/the-scale-of-things

5/5

Potrebbero piacerti anche