Steve Flammia wrote a flattering post on The Quantum Pontiff about a game we used to play, in which Steve would ask a question and I would have just a minute or two to prepare a 20 minute mini-lecture answering the question. Steve reports that “these were not easy questions.” But actually most of them were.

Steve gives an example: “Why do neutrinos have a small but nonzero mass?”

For the record, I explained that there are no operators of dimension four or less, allowed by the symmetries of the standard model, that give neutrinos mass (if there is no light right-handed neutrino) … But there are dimension-five operators which generate neutrino masses when the electroweak gauge symmetry becomes broken;  these operators can arise in the effective Lagrangian when we integrate out shorter-distance physics (for example, the new physics associated with grand unification), appearing with a  coefficient suppressed by a factor of the short-distance scale.

Okay, maybe you don’t know what all those words mean, but trust me — in 20 minutes one can explain it all pretty well.

Steve Flammia is a brilliant and erudite physicist and applied mathematician, who appreciated my explanation thoroughly and immediately. Why had he never heard this argument before? There must be thousands of physicists who could have explained it as well as I did. I was reminded that, if you pick any two recent physics PhDs, each will know a lot, but the intersection of what they know might be surprisingly small.

When I was a graduate student at Harvard in the late 1970s, I had several local heros, including (then) postdocs Edward Witten and Michael Peskin. But my biggest heros were Steven Weinberg and Sidney Coleman — two very different men, each fascinating in his own way (more about that another time). Neither one of them ever told me to do anything or not to do anything, which may be why I tend to have a laissez-faire attitude toward my own students.

Steven Weinberg

Sidney Coleman

Weinberg was interested in cosmology, so I read all his papers (and his book) about that. Coleman was interested in magnetic monopoles, so I thoroughly studied his 1975 Erice summer school lectures about that.

But it turned out that, at least at that time, Weinberg knew little about monopoles, and Coleman knew little about cosmology. I knew both. I was a two-trick pony.

Knowing two tricks made it relatively easy for me to realize something interesting — that according to standard big-bang cosmology lots and lots of magnetic monopoles should have been produced in the early universe, many more than we see around us today. This discrepancy revealed that something was seriously wrong, a puzzle which would be addressed by the theory of cosmic inflation.

I found out later that Zeldovich and Khlopov had arrived at an insight similar to mine, and that Kibble had also noticed that magnetic monopoles should have been created in the early universe, without fully appreciating the implications. But despite these antecedents my paper on the subject (my very first publication) attracted a lot of attention, and eventually helped me get this job at Caltech.

A one-trick pony can achieve great scientific success, by attaining world-class mastery of a single trick. But a two-trick pony, even one with limited technical prowess, can sometimes make influential scientific contributions just by noticing fruitful connections between different topics or ideas. I’ve been a two-trick pony throughout most of my career.

As has wisely been said: “A man’s got to know his limitations.”