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    Vindicated: Ridiculed Israeli scientist wins Nobel

    JERUSALEM (AP) — When Israeli scientist Dan Shechtman claimed to have stumbled upon a new crystalline chemical structure that seemed to violate the laws of nature, colleagues mocked him, insulted him and exiled him from his research group.

    After years in the scientific wilderness, though, he was proved right. And on Wednesday, he received the ultimate vindication: the Nobel Prize in chemistry.

    The lesson?

    "A good scientist is a humble and listening scientist and not one that is sure 100 percent in what he read in the textbooks," Shechtman said.

    The shy, 70-year-old Shechtman said he never doubted his findings and considered himself merely the latest in a long line of scientists who advanced their fields by challenging the conventional wisdom and were shunned by the establishment because of it.

    In 1982, Shechtman discovered what are now called "quasicrystals" — atoms arranged in patterns that seemed forbidden by nature.

    "I was thrown out of my research group. They said I brought shame on them with what I was saying," he recalled. "I never took it personally. I knew I was right and they were wrong."

    The discovery "fundamentally altered how chemists conceive of solid matter," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in awarding the $1.5 million prize.

    Since his discovery, quasicrystals have been produced in laboratories, and a Swedish company found them in one of the most durable kinds of steel, which is now used in products such as razor blades and thin needles made specifically for eye surgery, the academy said. Quasicrystals are also being studied for use in new materials that convert heat to electricity.

    Shechtman is a professor at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, Israel. He is the 10th Israeli Nobel winner, a great source of pride in a nation of just 7.8 million people. Shechtman fielded congratulatory calls from Israeli President Shimon Peres, who shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1994, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    "Every citizen of Israel is happy today and every Jew in the world is proud," Netanyahu said.

    Staffan Normark, permanent secretary of the Royal Swedish Academy, said Shechtman's discovery was one of the few Nobel Prize-winning achievements that can be dated to a single day.

    On April 8, 1982, while on sabbatical at the National Bureau of Standards in Washington — now called the National Institute of Standards and Technology — Shechtman first observed crystals with a shape most scientists considered impossible.

    The discovery had to do with the idea that a crystal shape can be rotated a certain amount and still look the same. A square contains four-fold symmetry, for example: If you turn it by 90 degrees, a quarter-turn, it still looks the same. For crystals, only certain degrees of such symmetry were thought possible. Shechtman had found a crystal that could be rotated one-fifth of a full turn and still look the same.

    "I told everyone who was ready to listen that I had material with pentagonal symmetry. People just laughed at me," he said in an account released by his university.

    He was asked to leave his research group, and moved to another one within the National Bureau of Standards, Shechtman said. He eventually returned to Israel, where he found one colleague prepared to work with him on an article describing the phenomenon. The article was at first rejected but was finally published in November 1984 to an uproar in the scientific world.

    In 1987, friends in France and Japan succeeded in growing crystals large enough for X-rays to verify what he had discovered with the electron microscope.

    "The moment I presented that, the community said, 'OK, Danny, now you are talking. Now we understand you. Now we accept what you have found,'" Shechtman told reporters.

    Shechtman, who also teaches at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, said he never wavered even in the face of stiff criticism from double Nobel winner Linus Pauling, who never accepted Shechtman's findings.

    "He would stand on those platforms and declare, 'Danny Shechtman is talking nonsense. There is no such thing as quasicrystals, only quasi-scientists.'" Shechtman said. "He really was a great scientist, but he was wrong. It's not the first time he was wrong."

    Shechtman's battle "eventually forced scientists to reconsider their conception of the very nature of matter," the academy said.

    Nancy B. Jackson, president of the American Chemical Society, called Shechtman's breakthrough "one of these great scientific discoveries that go against the rules." Only later did some scientists go back to some of their own inexplicable findings and realize they had seen quasicrystals without understanding what were looking at, Jackson said.

    "Anytime you have a discovery that changes the conventional wisdom that's 200 years old, that's something that's really remarkable," said Princeton University physicist Paul J. Steinhardt, who coined the term "quasicrystals" and had been doing theoretical work on them before Shechtman reported finding the real thing.

    Steinhardt recalled the day a fellow scientist showed him Shechtman's paper in 1984: "I sort of leapt in the air."

    ___

    Science writer Malcolm Ritter in New York and Associated Press writers Karl Ritter, Malin Rising and Louise Nordstrom in Stockholm contributed to this report.

     

    348 comments

    • Gesit  •  7 mths ago
      A good scientist is a humble and listening scientist and not one that is sure 100 percent in what he read in the textbooks,
      • knaug60 7 mths ago
        ... but it is not 50/50. When the bulk of the evidence points one way or the other, a good scientist gives credence to that consensus. You cannot simply argue there is no evidence without yourself presenting evidence. That's not science, but dogma or politics.
      • Jay H 7 mths ago
        dogma and politics? that sounds like global warming.
      • Jerry 7 mths ago
        Never give CRE-"dunce" to a --- CON-"sense"-us!

        If it's not "dog"-ma --- then it's "dog"-pa!

        And 'poly-tics' means "multiple blood-suckers"!
    • Yes  •  7 mths ago
      First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win.
    • bryan e  •  7 mths ago
      Remember the words of German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer who, 200 years ago, said all truth goes through three stages:
      • First it is ridiculed
      • Then it is violently opposed
      • Finally it is widely accepted as self evident
      • William 7 mths ago
        Just look at round earth and evolution.
    • NothingYet  •  7 mths ago
      And still not one soul who has actually checked the truth content of this article before commenting on how awful science treats their "dissenters".

      Well, folks, in this case the orthodox science community started teaching quasi-crystals to undergrads in 1985... one year after the discovery was published.

      And YOU could have known that... if YOU had been enrolled in a class on crystallography at a world renowned university at the time.

      :-)
    • Gesit  •  7 mths ago
      Forget the box and back to nature
      • Display name 7 mths ago
        Yes
        (NATURE) Check out all the things in nature that have six sides. (Snowflakes)
        Check out how the veins on leaves are LOGRYTHMIC :-)
        Wonder why Large TV antennas for homes receive radio waves (LOGRYTHMIC) positioning of the rods determine what freq they can receive along with how length of the rods determines frequency.

        Oooooh, you could study for decades.
      • Gesit 7 mths ago
        Back to nature I mean we shouldn't became textbook but focus to nature it self,
    • Elaine  •  7 mths ago
      Well done, Congrats!
    • purusha  •  7 mths ago
      Sadly the ridicule of other peoples thinking goes through the whole society. If you think outside the box you will be ridiculed. These people who have brains to think different are the most important people in our society. Niels Bohr another famous scientist were quoted saying" If it sounds crazy then it is probably true." Before people put other people down, they should learn to hide their arrogance and ignorance - that will be the first step toward thinking originally. This is 1000 years true wisdom.
    • Kal  •  7 mths ago
      Where would we be if more scientists thought outside the box?
      • Mike 2012 7 mths ago
        How do you know you're thinking outside the box, when you don't know what shape the box is?
      • Kal 7 mths ago
        Outside the box is any shape that goes against traditional belief.
      • LORD KABIGON 7 mths ago
        Science is a never finished ediface. Todays accepted truth is allways subject to assault by those who perceive a clearer truth. The test is whether there is an experiment that fots the new paradigm. A never ending story.
    • NothingYet  •  7 mths ago
      Oh, Eric, can your racism and shove it up your #$%$
    • Persephinae  •  7 mths ago
      I was going to ask about transparent aluminum being next, but it looks like science already took care of that one too. yay for trekkie scientists! ^^
    • NothingYet  •  7 mths ago
      Look, an anonymous troll? But I will feed you! You need it.

      No, anonymous, the consensus back in 1984 was that Shechtman was right. His work was immediately accepted. I remember it well because I was there.

      But you weren't.

      :-)
    • Inquirer  •  7 mths ago
      How sweet it is to have the last laugh !!!
      Congratulations, Professor Shechtman, your discovery proved that there is such a thing as QUASICRYSTALS.
      You also incidentally "discovered" that there are QUASI-SCIENTISTS who are insulting, humiliating, and are downright narrow-minded.
      • A Yahoo! User 7 mths ago
        Remember, scientists are human first. We all tend to defend quite fiercely that which we hold dear and true.
      • G 7 mths ago
        If you think that insults and humiliation makes someone a "QUASI_SCIENTIST", you've, obviously never had to defend research in front of your graduate advisor (nor have you served on a Church committee).
      • Jason 7 mths ago
        Nerds are like that; they develop these theories based on their vast knowledge only to miss something new or right under their nose because they were too busy following all the rules to their theories. Hard to explain but I see it often enough.
    • Ming The Merciless  •  7 mths ago
      A well earned prize.
    • Lilly White  •  7 mths ago
      Well done Sir. Not only is your discovery remarkable, and your willingness to give everything to stand by what you knew to be correct even more remarkable, but your attitude towards those who refused to further investigate makes you an outstanding rare Man who stands tall above the others.
    • NothingYet  •  7 mths ago
      Ah... I see... still nobody here who has the slightest clue about crystallography.

      :-)
    • Ralph Turchiano  •  7 mths ago
      There is a difference between Calling yourself a scientist and being a scientist. His story is just as cool as his discovery. What a great scientist. Congratulations Dan Shechtman.
    • NothingYet  •  7 mths ago
      Shechtman's discovery, by the way, does not invalidate the laws of crystallography. Quasicrystals are not classical crystals as they do not have long range translational symmetry. They do possess a NEW form of order, which sets them apart from classes of solid states that had been known before.

      Of course, I do not expect trolls to understand any of this.

      :-)
    • icyrebel  •  7 mths ago
      congrats to a great scientist.. one that walks with an open mind....
    • commentator  •  7 mths ago
      Week-old story!
    • Alien_Visitor  •  7 mths ago
      In the book, ”The day the Universe Changed” all it takes is one idea, one thought to open another dimension of our world that has laid unseen or unknown for ages. Congratulation to this scientist and his well earned Nobel Prize.
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