But let’s get a move on, shall we?
Q1) 9th August, 1968, saw the birth of Anglo-American actress, Gillian Anderson. She played Lady Dedlock in the BBC version of which Dickens novel?
Q2) 9th August, 1945, saw the USA drop a second atomic bomb. On which Japanese city?
Q3) 9th August, 48BC, saw Julius Caesar defeat Pompey the Great: at the Battle of Pharsalus. In the aftermath of the battle, Pompey fled to what’s now which North African country?
Q4) 9th August, 1969, saw the brutal murder of Sharon Tate, along with four other people. The deaths the responsibility of a group led by whom?
Q5) Finally … 9th August, 1945, saw the Soviet Union invade Japanese occupied Manchuria. Manchuria is part of which East Asian country?
Q1) 8th August, 1902, saw the birth of Anglo-Swiss physicist, Paul Dirac. His ‘Dirac Equation’ helped define what: the antiproton, the antineutron or the positron?A1) The positron.
Q2) More to the point, he was award a Nobel Prize for Physics: in which year of the 1930s?A2) 1933.
Q3) Which Austrian physicist shared that prize with Dr Dirac?A3) Erwin Shrödinger.
Q4) Dr Dirac helped define which branch of theoretical physics: Particle physics, Quantum Mechanics or Thermodynamics?A4) Quantum Mechanics.
Q5) He also did work on what: magnetic fields, magnetic monopoles or electromagnetic induction?A5) Magnetic monopoles.
Q6) Dr Dirac held the Lucasian Professorship for many years. The Chair is at which British University: Oxford, Cambridge or Saint Andrews?A6) Cambridge.
Q7) Who’s the current Lucasian Professor: Professor James Lighthill, Professor Stephen Hawking, Professor Michael Green or Professor Michael Cates?
Q8) In 1975, Dr Dirac gave a series of five lectures on physics. For the University of where: New South Wales, Queensland or Western Australia?A8) New South Wales.
Q9) There’s a piece of open source software named for Dr Paul Dirac. It’s designed to help scientists in which field: quantum chemistry, astronomy or particle physics?A9) Quantum chemistry.
Q10) Finally … Dr Dirac’s grave is in Florida. But there’s a commemorative marker to him: in which London Church?A10) Westminster Abbey.
“The next point - that’s all you must think about.”Rod Laver, born 9 August 1938.
Speaking of which, I just started reading that book. And it gave me the most interesting idea for a YA mystery sci-fi novel! :)
ReplyDelete1. Bleak House
2. Nagasaki
3. Egypt
4. Charles Manson
5. China (or Russia and China, depending, I guess)