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News from ICTP 96 - Commentary
Egyptian science, once an enduring pillar of this ancient civilisation, shows promising signs of rebirth.
Among the Pyramids
Cairo, the political and cultural
heartland of the Arab world, served as the venue for the Cairo
International Conference on High Energy Physics, which took place
in January.
Two former ICTP Diploma students, Shaaban Khalil (1991-1992) and
Elsayed Lashin (1992-1993), were instrumental in organising the
conference, and funding from ICTP's Office of External Activities
(OEA) covered travel and lodging expenses for many participants
from the developing world. Additional money from the US National
Science Foundation helped to make the conference an international
event. In all, some 60 physicists from around the world attended.
The conference was the first of its kind to be held in Egypt.
Although science in Egypt has faced hard times for a very long
time, for several millennia during ancient times the country was
at the centre of scientific discovery.
Egypt, in fact, is home to one of the world's oldest civilisations--the
place where humankind made its first great leaps forward in science
and technology. According to scholars, Egypt and Babylon informed
and inspired the ancient civilization of Greece, which most intellectuals
view as one of the pillars of modern science. Meanwhile, Giza's
5000-year-old pyramids, which required precise knowledge of geometry
and engineering, serve as a lasting symbol of ancient Egypt's
scientific and technological skill.
The golden age of Egyptian science, centered in Cairo, took place
between the 20th and 15th centuries before the birth of Christ.
Nearly a thousand years later, following the conquest of Egypt
by Alexander the Great, the city named in honour of this fierce
warrior and world conqueror became a renowned centre of learning
with the construction of a museum and library unprecedented in
size and scope for their time. Euclid lived and worked in Alexandria,
as did Erastothenes of Cyrene, the first scientist to accurately
measure the Earth's circumference, and Apollonios of Perga, who
wrote the first textbook on conics. Astronomical studies in Alexandria
were equally remarkable. For example, Aristarchos, the Copernicus
of antiquity, proposed a heliocentric cosmological system 1800
years before Copernicus.
Egypt's golden age of science is not about to return but recent
developments suggest that the long dark days for science in Egypt
may finally be coming to an end. Indeed a reasonable level of
research in nuclear physics, laser physics and spectroscopy has
taken place in Egypt over the past two decades. But the same cannot
be said for particle physics. While physicists and, more generally,
scientists suffer from the usual litany of problems afflicting
researchers in the developing world (limited access to journals
and books, inadequate laboratory equipment, and suffocating bureaucratic
rules and regulations), there is now a level of knowledge, commitment
and even enthusiasm, especially among younger physicists, that
suggest progress will be made despite the obstacles standing in
the way.
The coordinated efforts of ICTP's Diploma Programme and Office
of External Activities deserve some of the credit for the promising
signs that surround the state of particle physics in Egypt. The
nation's young and talented physicists would be the first to tell
you that ICTP's 'support stream' from post-undergraduate education
through the first years of their careers has been instrumental
in their efforts to turn their dreams into reality. But at the
same time much of the credit must go to the perseverance of the
scientists themselves. Shaaban Khalil, for example, first presented
his proposal to hold an international conference on high energy
physics in Cairo several years ago. Thwarted time and again by
a lack of funding and bureaucratic indifference, he refused to
be discouraged and finally triumphed when most observers thought
he would fail.
Slowly but steadily a critical mass of Egyptian-born particle
physicists are earning advanced degrees, and slowly but steadily
they are choosing to return to their home country after completing
their education abroad. As these researchers become better known
in the global physics community, they are attracting the attention
of their university deans and presidents at home. Such notice
often leads to additional funding and additional funding opens
the door to more productive research.
If current trends continue, Egypt, once the home of Euclid, could
soon have its own centre for theoretical physics. And if such
a centre is built, the International Conference on High Energy
Physics, held in Cairo in January, will surely be cited as one
of the major reasons why.
Faheem Hussain
Coordinator, ICTP High Energy Diploma Course
Head, ICTP Office of External Activities