Subject: Have at it.
Author:
Posted on: 2012-08-01 22:04:00 UTC
If you don't know something, you've got the entire internet to do research on. Or, at least, that's how I work. I have relatives who've lived on every continent (except Antarctica), I've got a genealogist in my family, computer programmers, mechanics, three members of the military, and access to research sites and forums if I don't know something.
I don't know diddly about particle physics, but I know where to look to find the basic information that'll make my character appear to know what they're talking about.
I personally think that, as long as you do basic research--which will, theoretically, lead to a lot more in-depth research--then you can write just about anything. As much secondhand knowledge as your brain or harddrive can hold would be my recommendation, though.
There's a quote by Thoreau that I think illustrates my point: "Do not worry if you have built your castles in the air. They are where they should be. Now put the foundations under them." Our theoretical particle physicist character is the castle in the air; the research you need to do is the foundation you should put under it. (Which is pretty much my approach to writing. London sewers are a fascinating subject, by the way.)
But that's just me, and I need to stop rambling and start doing college stuff like I should be.
-Dragormir