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WHAT: Conceiving the COBE Satellite Mission, 1989-92
WHO: George Smoot and John Mather, 2006 Nobel Prize winners
Backing up the Big Bang
Erik Vance
Best way to blow ten hours a day for three months: SimCity In 1989 Will Wright broke the computer gaming
mold by creating a game that no one could win. The game required players
instead to balance dozens of factors involved in planning and building a city from the ground up. Then came "The Sims," a virtual version of playing house that became the best-selling game ever. Gamers say Wright has redefined the video game and opened the way for more fully interactive games such
as "Second Life." His newest project is an
evolution-inspired
game called "Spore."
IMPACT: A Brief History of Time author Stephen Hawking called the results of Smoot and Mather’s three-year COBE satellite mission "the greatest discovery of the century, if not of all time." The satellite, conceived independently by the two while both were at Berkeley, substantiated
a prediction that the universe, at its edges, has stripes left over from just after the Big Bang. "They are like tooling marks from the manufacture
of the universe," says Smoot. "These little tooling marks—things that you would normally not notice—after billions of years turn into the structures we actually see with our telescopes." Smoot may also be a runner-up as one of the most often-quoted scientists on religious websites
after he enthusiastically said of his discovery, "If you’re religious, it’s like seeing God." Fourteen years later he is still explaining that he meant this metaphorically.
George Smoot Roy Kaltschmidt/LBNL
EUREKA MOMENT: Once the data from COBE was sent to Earth, Smoot analyzed it for years before he could be sure he’d found his ripples. The night he was, Smoot says, "I was out really late. But I didn’t care. It was sort of like I was sliding down the hill on air. It was clear. Everything
made sense."
 Nicholas Gurewitch/The Perry Bible Fellowship
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