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Into the Antiworld brings to life one of the most important scientific breakthroughs of the 20th century. It is 1928 and the British physicist, Paul Dirac, is absorbed in equations sent to him by fellow-scientist Werner Heisenberg. Dirac s solutions yields two answers, one corresponding to matter, the second seemingly incomprehensible. Through intellectual acrobatics, punctuated by flights of pure fancy, Dirac gradually come to grips with the second solution. All the while, he describes his doubts, emotions and progress to Heisenberg in the form of a letter. Finally Dirac accepts the beauty of the mathematics over his everyday experience and predicts the existence of antimatter. The audience shares this experience through an aerial ballet that mirrors the mental gymnastics of the scientist. Half way between dream and reality in the fertile mind of the physicist, we are drawn inexorably into the fascinating world of the infinitesimally small. Special effects of shadow and light illustrate the poetry inherent in Dirac s concept of matter and antimatter.
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