THERE are scientists whose works people readily appreciate: molecular biologists and pharmaceutical scientists who develop medicines, vaccines and cancer treatments; climatologists and environmental scientists who track the weather and combat climate change; and engineers who invent faster electric vehicles and thinner devices.

And then there are those like Dr. Andre David, a particle physicist whose research deviates into unfamiliar realms of science and prompts questions like "What for?" and "How will this benefit me in my everyday life?"

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