Ian Pitchford

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The muon appeared to behave remarkably like the electron but had greater mass and was more unstable. When the American physicist Isidor Rabi was told of the discovery, he quipped: ‘Who ordered that?’ It seemed strangely unnecessary for nature to reproduce a heavier, more unstable version of the electron. Little did Rabi realize how much more there was on the menu of particles.
What We Cannot Know: Explorations at the Edge of Knowledge
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