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Paul Preuss

In the eighties and nineties I was partly a freelance writer and
partly a film writer and editor, writing for science magazines such
as Discover and working for TV network providers such as Colossal Pictures and Carl Sagan’s Cosmos.

Late in the nineties I joined Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (where l soon learned that duct tape can do almost anything except seal ducts.) The job kept me busy working on numerous topics and making short films. I followed the discovery of dark energy and was honored to write about Saul Perlmutter; the most fun was immediately writing about Saul in the middle of the night, when he won the Nobel Prize.

I worked with UC Berkeley’s College of Engineering after leaving the Lab
in the 2010s, covering science that had a direct impact on people’s lives.

Here is a handful of my favorite articles and releases from those years.

 

Roman Seawater Concrete: the properties of ancient Roman concrete
that made port facilities that are still solid today
.

In the Domain of Design“Everyone designs
who devises courses of action aimed at changing existing situations
into preferred ones.”

Atom by Atom, Bond by Bond: highest-resolution images of a
molecule breaking and reforming chemical bonds.

A Dent in the Iron Hypothesis: plankton blooms do not send
atmospheric carbon to the deep ocean.

What Keeps the Earth Cooking: measuring the radioactive sources
of Earth’s heat flow.

Here are a few short essays on other scientific topics:

Humans, Robots, and the Ultimate Turing Test 

The Nonexistent Paradoxes of Time Travel 

Tangled Up in Quanta

And for those who want to know more about dark energy, here’s a
history of its discovery:

Dark Energy’s Tenth Anniversary, Part Iannouncing the
 accelerating universe.

Dark Energy’s Tenth Anniversary, Part IIsuccess breeds competition.

Dark Energy’s Tenth Anniversary, Part IIIthe aftermath:
 confirmation and exploration.