Eureka! One of the world's greatest science walks
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                        Meet your guide, for an outline of our tour celebrating William Rowan Hamilton.
2 min 
                        We join the 2011 annual walk at Dunsink Observatory to find out.
15 min 
                        A short history of canals and especially the lovely Royal Canal
6 min 
                        Does it matter how fast the bird a boat is travelling?
3 min 
                        Canal locks are ingenious engineering, that let boats travel uphill.
4 min 
                        How singular waves, or solitons, were also discovered beside a canal.
2 min 
                        How, in 1844, a railway nearly replaced the waterway
2 min 
                        Our final stop is the commerative plaque on Broome Bridge
6 min 
                        Written and sung by local man, Jack Gannon.
4 minThis lovely walk by Dublin's Royal Canal is one of the greatest science walks, and a popular pilgrimage for geeks from around the world. We celebrate a famous Eureka moment in 1843, when Sir William Rowan Hamilton had a flash of inspiration while walking by the canal, and invented a revolutionary new type of algebra, called Quaternions. Every year, on the October 16th anniversary, hundreds of people retrace Hamilton’s footsteps from Dunsink Observatory to Broome Bridge, where he famously scratched his equation on a stone. Our tour joins the annual walk: enjoy the ballad, meet the people, explore the canal’s wildlife, science and engineering, and learn about Hamilton and his amazing algebra, which helped to land a man on the Moon!
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