NIGHT TRAIN BY MARTIN AMIS

Bax Denziger, incidentally, is famous: TV-famous. I know stuff about him. He has a twin-prop airplane and a second home in Aspen. He is a skier and a mountaineer. He used to lift weights for the state. And I don’t mean in prison. Three or four years ago he fronted a series on Channel 13 called “The Evolution of the Uni­verse.” And they have him on the news-magazine shows whenever something gives in his field. Bax here is a skilled “communicator” who talks in paragraphs as if to camera. And that’s pretty much how I’m going to present it. The technical language should be right because I had Tobe run it by his computer.

I kicked off by asking him what Jennifer did all day. Would he please describe her work?

Certainly. In a department like ours you have three kinds of people. People in white coats who man the labs and the computers. People like Jennifer—postdocs, maybe assis­tant professors—who order the people in white coats around. And then people like yours truly. I order everyone around. Each day we have a ton of data coming in which has to be checked and processed. Which has to be reduced. That was Jennifer’s job. She was also working on some leads herself. As of last fall she was working on the Milky Way’s Virgo-infall velocity.

I asked him: Could you be more specific?

I am being specific. Perhaps I should be more general. Like everyone else here she was working on questions having to do with the age of the universe. A highly controversial and competitive field. A cutthroat field. We’re looking at the rate of expansion of the universe, the rate of the deceleration of that expansion, and the total mass-density para­meter. Respectively, in shorthand: Hubbies constant, q-nought, and dark matter. We’re asking if the universe is open or closed… I look at you, Detective, and I see a resident of the naked-eye universe. I’m sure you don’t bother too much with this stuff.

I said, well, no, I seem to make do okay without it. But please.

What we see out there, the stars, the galaxies, the galaxy clusters and superclus-ters, that’s just the tip of the iceberg. That’s just the snowcap on the mountain. At least 90 percent of the universe consists of dark matter, and we don’t know what that dark matter is. Nor what it adds up to. If the total mass density is below a certain critical point, the universe will expand forever. The heavens will just go on getting emptier. If the total mass density is above a certain critical point, then gravity will eventually overcome expansion, and the universe will start to con­tract. From big bang to big crunch. Then— who knows?—big bang. And so on. What has been called the eighty-billion-year heartbeat.

I’m trying to give you an idea of the kinds of things Jennifer thought about.

I asked him if Jennifer actually went up in the telescope much. He smiled indulgently.

Bubble, bubble, Hoyle and Hubble. Allan Sandage needs a bandage. Ah, the cage at midnight, with your flask, your parka, your leather ass and your iron bladder. The see­ing! Detective—

Excuse me. The what?

The seeing. The seeing? Actually it’s a word we still use. The quality of the image. Having to do with the clarity of the sky. The truth is, Detective, we don’t do much “see­ing” anymore. It’s all pixels and fiber optics and CCDs. We’re down at the business end of it, with the computers.

I asked him the simple question. I asked him if Jennifer was happy in her work.

I’ll say! Jennifer Rockwell was an inspi­ration to us all. She had terrific esprit. Per­sistent, tough, fair. Above all tough. In every respect her intellect was tough. Women…Let me rephrase this. Maybe not at the Nobel level, but cosmology is a field where women have made lasting contributions. Jennifer had a reasonable shot at adding to that.

I asked if she had an unorthodox side, a mystical side. I said, You guys are scientists, but some of you end up getting religion, right?

There’s something in that. Knowing the mind of God, and so on. You’re certainly affected by the incredible grandeur and complexity of revealed creation. But don’t lose sight of the fact that it’s reality we’re investigating here. These things we’re study­ing are very strange and very distant, but they’re as real as the ground beneath your feet. The universe is everything religions are supposed to be, and then some, weird, beau­tiful, terrifying, but the universe is the case. Now, there are people around here who pride themselves on saying, “All this is just a physics problem. That’s all.” But Jennifer was more romantic than that. She was grander than that.

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