Graham Farmelo

Graham Paul Farmelo (born 18 May 1953) is a biographer and science writer, a By-Fellow at Churchill College, University of Cambridge, U.K., and an Adjunct Professor of Physics at Northeastern University, Boston, U.S.A. He is best known for his work on science communication and as the author of The Strangest Man, a prize-winning biography of the theoretical physicist Paul Dirac. He lives in London.

Writing

In 2009, Farmelo published ‘The Strangest Man’, which won the 2009 Costa Prize for Biography[1] and the 2009 'Los Angeles Times Science and Technology Book Prize'.[2] The book was chosen by Physics World as the physics book of the year in 2009,[3] when it was selected as one of Nature’s books of the year. Much of the book was written while Farmelo was a Director’s visitor at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.

Farmelo edited 'It Must be Beautiful: great equations of modern science’, a collection of essays (2002). Its contributors included Peter Galison, Robert May, Baron May of Oxford, Oliver Morton, Roger Penrose, Christine Sutton, Steven Weinberg and Frank Wilczek.

He co-edited several inter-disciplinary collections of essays on museums and science centres, notably ‘Creating Connections – museums and the public understanding of current research’,[4] ‘Here and Now – contemporary science and technology in museums and science centres’[5] and ‘Museum visitor studies in the 90s’[6] These books resulted from international conferences that he co-directed in the U.K and the U.S.A.

Farmelo has written articles for New Scientist', Scientific American and several national newspapers in the U.K, book reviews in a wide range of publications, notably The Times', The New York Times, The Guardian, Nature and Times Higher Education.

In October 2013, he published Churchill’s Bomb, about Winston Churchill, his scientists and the Anglo-American politics involved in the early development of nuclear weapons. The book features the contributions of several scientists - including Niels Bohr, Vannevar Bush, James Chadwick, John Cockcroft, Otto Frisch, Frederick Lindemann, Robert Oppenheimer, Rudolf Peierls and Lord Rutherford – and also Churchill’s work on the Bomb with U.S. Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman and Dwight Eisenhower.

Science Communication

Farmelo was a senior executive at the Science Museum, London, from 1990–2003. He was responsible for a variety of initiatives, mostly concerning the presentation of contemporary science and technology in events and exhibitions, notably the planning and delivery of the Wellcome Wing and the Dana Centre.

He has lectured on Paul Dirac and on science communication all over the world and often appeared on BBC radio and television in the U.K., mainly in features on modern physics and science policy.

Farmelo has often given talks that feature the participation of an actor playing the protagonist, for example Leó Szilárd in 'Dawn of the Nuclear Age', Edinburgh Science Festival, 1993; Michael Faraday in lecture at the annual meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1994, and Paul Dirac in 'The Religion of Mathematical Beauty', Stirling Lecture, University of Durham, 2010.

Farmelo is now a consultant in science communication, specializing in museums and science centres, and in the strategic management of science-related organisations. Since 2003, he has done work in this field in the U.K, the U.S., Ireland, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and Japan.

Recognition

Farmelo was awarded the Kelvin Prize and Medal in 2012[7] by the Institute of Physics, which elected him a Fellow in 1998.

In 2011 he was appointed an Honorary Fellow of the British Science Association.

Education and early career in science

Farmelo was born in London and raised in Orpington, Kent. He went to Cray Valley School, Sidcup, where he worked on a project that led to his first published paper, in biomedical engineering.[8] At the University of Liverpool he took a BSc in mathematical physics (1974) and then a PhD in theoretical particle physics (1977). Directly afterwards, he was appointed as a lecturer in physics at the Open University. He worked there until 1990, writing texts and making television programmes on various course teams, chairing the production of the University’s Science Foundation Course (1986–1989). His research was in the field of particle physics (hadronic interactions)[9] and chaos (scattering theory).[10]

References

  1. 2009 Costa Prize for Biography
  2. 2009 Los Angeles Times Book Prizes
  3. Physics World book of the year 2009
  4. Farmelo, G.P. Chittenden, D. and Lewenstein, B.V. (eds.) ‘Creating Connections’, AltaMira Press, Walnut Creek, CA. ISBN 0–7591–0475–1
  5. Farmelo, G.P. and Carding, J. ‘Here and Now’, Science Museum Publications, London, ISBN 0–901805–97–1
  6. Farmelo, G.P. and Bicknell, S. ‘Museum Visitor Studies in the 90s’, Science Museum Publications, London, ISBN 0–901805–61–0
  7. 2012 Kelvin Medal and Prize
  8. Batchelor, K.W. and Farmelo, G.P., 'A basic design of a chair for hemiplegics with special reference to the back shape', Biomedical Engineering, October 1975, 10 (10), pp 373-8
  9. Farmelo, G.P. and Irving, A.C. ‘Regge Pole and Cut Behaviour at Fermilab Energies’, Nuclear Physics B113, Issue 3, 1976, pages 435–444
  10. Farmelo, G.P., Bercovich, C. and Smilansky, U., ‘Demonstration of classical chaotic scattering’, European Journal of Physics, Vol. 12 (1991), pages 122-128

External links