That night, alone in the lab, Alena looked at the manual one last time. It wasn’t a dry document. It was a lighthouse. And as long as there were neutrons to track and problems to solve, she knew exactly where to dock her doubts.
She sighed, rolling her chair across the linoleum floor to the sagging bookshelf. There it was: MCNP5 Theory Manual , LA-UR-03-1987. The spine was cracked, the pages yellowed, and the smell of old paper and institutional coffee clung to it.
Flipping to Chapter 2, “Neutron Interactions,” she didn’t just see equations. She saw ghosts. Each cross-section plot was a tiny history of a billion virtual journeys. Each variance reduction technique was a hard-won battle against the tyranny of random chance.
Then she reached Section 3.5: Surface Crossing and Track Length Estimation .
Dr. Alena Ruiz stared at the blinking cursor on her terminal. The simulation had failed again. Somewhere in her model of a neutron transport problem—a new type of reactor shielding—particles were vanishing instead of scattering. Her supervisor’s words echoed in her head: “When MCNP lies to you, go back to the theory manual. The code remembers what you forget.”