Most successful scientific experiment

Most successful scientific experiment

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Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,597 posts

266 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
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Heard that R4 is inviting answers to this question.

I guess it depends what you mean by an experiment. Most successful - on a big scale as opposed to a laboratory, perhaps the Manhattan Project, the Wright Flyer or the Apollo Program?

And where does experimentation merge into invention?

hairykrishna

13,185 posts

204 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
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I think I'd class all of yours as engineering rather than experiment although, as you say, the line is blurred. The first atomic pile maybe? Michelson-Morley? Depending on your definition of successful.

Dr Jekyll

23,820 posts

262 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
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Strictly speaking an experiment is successful if it tells you something, Even if it's not what you wanted or expected.

deeen

6,081 posts

246 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
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The interference experiment demonstrating wave-particle duality

The guy who overturned years of dogma by infecting himself with stomach ulcers and curing them with antibiotics

The feather and the hammer (was it?) on the moon

StanleyT

1,994 posts

80 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
quotequote all
Most sucessful in terms of people following the result.
God.
Through the use of various idols on Earth convincing people that Religion exists.
Must be surely the most sucessful experiment in terms on cumulative number of converts over the history of humanity.
(VW Dieselgate might be the second most).


Manhattan project worked but there were a number of "uh-oh" moments, including when the Hanford pile got Xe contaminated (problem never identified but solved in a number of nours....) - the project could have shut down and nukes never come along...............



Least sucessful.
Hiding in my sisters bedroom cupboard when her mates were getting ready for ballet class.

annodomini2

6,868 posts

252 months

Wednesday 20th June 2018
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Archimedes water displacement?

Monty Python

4,812 posts

198 months

Wednesday 20th June 2018
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For all we know the entire universe may be an experiment.....shame it doesn't seem to be working too well.

Gary29

4,164 posts

100 months

Wednesday 20th June 2018
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Penicilin discovery.

Are we talking successful or important?

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,597 posts

266 months

Wednesday 20th June 2018
quotequote all
The word was successful.

The Archimedes thing, if legend is to be believed, was an observation rather than an experiment (ie not set up)

Moonhawk

10,730 posts

220 months

Wednesday 20th June 2018
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Monty Python said:
For all we know the entire universe may be an experiment.....shame it doesn't seem to be working too well.
Depends what the aim of the experiment might be - surely?

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,597 posts

266 months

Wednesday 20th June 2018
quotequote all
Monty Python said:
For all we know the entire universe may be an experiment.....shame it doesn't seem to be working too well.
How can you tell?

HaiKarate

279 posts

135 months

Wednesday 20th June 2018
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Sir Arthur Eddington confirming Spacetime curvature as predicted by GR.

V8LM

5,174 posts

210 months

Wednesday 20th June 2018
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'Success' is a difficult measure in experimentation. If an experiment produces the results that you knew where going to happen, then that is not a successful bit of research (and mostly a waste of time). If the experiment, done perfectly, doesn't give the results one was expecting that that is invariably more valuable that had the experiment given the expected results. If the outcome of the experiment was 100% certain before it was done then there is no point doing it.


Halmyre

11,222 posts

140 months

Thursday 21st June 2018
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I can think of two experiments that failed their original purpose but yielded significant results - Michelson and Morley's attempt to measure the effect of luminiferous aether, and showed that it didn't exist; and Penzias and Wilson's experiments in radio astronomy that led to the discovery of cosmic background radiation.

Monty Python

4,812 posts

198 months

Thursday 21st June 2018
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Moonhawk said:
Depends what the aim of the experiment might be - surely?
I guess so, but it doesn't look good for any life that exists in it, so maybe life is just a side-effect of it.

Moonhawk

10,730 posts

220 months

Thursday 21st June 2018
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Monty Python said:
Moonhawk said:
Depends what the aim of the experiment might be - surely?
I guess so, but it doesn't look good for any life that exists in it, so maybe life is just a side-effect of it.
Indeed - life may simply be an emergent property of matter, just like gasses, liquids, crystals etc.

annodomini2

6,868 posts

252 months

Thursday 21st June 2018
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Moonhawk said:
Monty Python said:
Moonhawk said:
Depends what the aim of the experiment might be - surely?
I guess so, but it doesn't look good for any life that exists in it, so maybe life is just a side-effect of it.
Indeed - life may simply be an emergent property of matter, just like gasses, liquids, crystals etc.
One theory would like to prove its all down to entropy

Tempest_5

603 posts

198 months

Saturday 7th July 2018
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I am currently trying to scientifically prove that the world revolves around the sun, not my Ex.

Sorry for flippancy, it is possible I am drunk.