Book 5: Chapter 19: Working the Problem
Book 5: Chapter 19: Working the Problem
Book 5: Chapter 19: Working the Problem
Bill
April 2337
In Virt
I’d received a referral from Professor Gilligan to a physicist who had just recently transitioned to post-life. Professor Hannah Turnbull had been with Newholme University for several decades, teaching theoretical physics. Now, having recently been forcibly retired by a fatal heart attack, she was somewhat at loose ends.
I sent an email to the address that Steven had included, being sure to attach his message so that the recipient wouldn’t discard mine as spam. Even so, there was no telling what kind of schedule she’d be on or how many other projects she might have going. I set a follow-up for a week away and pulled up my project. Might as well beat my head against a brick wall for a while.
“Only that you have a potential breakthrough in the generation of negative energy but need a second set of eyes to advance things.”
“Let’s just go with Bill,” I replied.
She dimpled momentarily. “And I’m Hannah. Anyway, Bill, it’s a tough nut to crack. The math supports the two-scalar-field hypothesis, but then it dead-ends. It’s like the old Calabi–Yau manifolds, where the number of possible configurations was just short of infinite, and there was no way to pick one that might represent our universe.” She paused and examined the whiteboard again. “I have a few colleagues I can talk to, if you’re okay with that. But right now ... ” She shook her head. “I think without another hint, you’ve probably taken this about as far as you can unless you can narrow down the problem domain.”
*****
Hannah stayed a few more minutes, I think out of politeness, but then made her excuses. I was left glaring at the whiteboard, a sense of helplessness settling over me. The AI had gauged me just right. The hint had been enough to get me excited, but too little to give me a real breakthrough. The number of possible solutions to the problem was not really infinite, but definitely included a long string of zeros. And I couldn’t test all of them.
Or ... couldn’t I? A good theoretical physicist would try to arrive at an answer mathematically, and there didn’t seem to be a path to that goal. But the Skippies had this humongous computer, as Hugh kept reminding us. I wondered how many simulations it could run at the same time. It would be dirty science—ad hoc modeling without any theoretical backing, just make it work and worry about why later.
I grinned and pulled up Virtual Studio. I hadn’t done any actual programming in quite a while, but replicants didn’t really get rusty.
NABC