Account Login
Don't have an account? Create One
Six years before the oldest of this year’s 30 Under 30 Innovators was born, I stood on top of a CANDU nuclear reactor at a facility outside Ottawa. There I was, 17 years old, looking through a window in the floor, watching scattered unknown ‘things’ floating through the heavy water—scientists were testing various elements for their response to the neutron moderator.
That same day, I tried out an early prototype of the Canadarm. You might not know it, but the Canadarm was initially developed in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s to load fuel into CANDU reactors. It’s adaptation for NASA didn’t start until 1975. The version I encountered required you to put your arm inside a mechanical sleeve; the gangly robotic assembly looked like an unwieldy extension of your own appendage. And it was—unwieldy, I mean. It took a lot of strength to move the mechanism enough on your end to open and close the ‘fingers’ on the other. The best I could manage was a slight twitch.
A few days before that, I watched a basketball go from bouncing one minute, to being dunked in liquid nitrogen the next, to shattering across the floor seconds later. That was my orientation to science week at the Terry Fox Youth Centre in Ottawa. I had no idea what the rest of the stay held in store and my mind was already blown.
Continue reading this story: click below to login/subscribe
Login or SubscribeComment policy
Comments are moderated to ensure thoughtful and respectful conversations. First and last names will appear with each submission; anonymous comments and pseudonyms will not be permitted.
By submitting a comment, you accept that Atlantic Business Magazine has the right to reproduce and publish that comment in whole or in part, in any manner it chooses. Publication of a comment does not constitute endorsement of that comment. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.
Cancel