[h3]Abel Sterling Schwellen, M.S.[/h3] [center][img]http://www.wn.de/var/storage/images/wn/startseite/freizeit/ausgehen/2012/04/interview-mit-johannes-strate-durch-die-hintertuer/29126460-1-ger-DE/Interview-mit-Johannes-Strate-Durch-die-Hintertuer1_image_630f_420f_wn.jpg[/img][/center] [indent][b]Age:[/b] 29 [b]Alignment:[/b] Neutral Good, "Benefactor" [b]Nationality:[/b] American (United States) [b]Languages:[/b] English, German, Japanese, Russian Abel Schwellen is a recent university graduate but a rising star in theoretical physics. Currently, Schwellen, a polyglot, works as one of several key researchers at an international project based in West Texas, and he is attempting to resolve the problem of locality in quantum physics. This arm is only one of several in the world, with partners in Europe, South America, and Asia also assigned to this research initiative. Schwellen's team and its international counterparts hope that this project might procure an option for a kind of 'teleportation,' but what could actually come out of their research is uncertain. Of his team, Schwellen was the last member to be invited to the second OEF. He is a late, seemingly tentative addition to the expedition, likely for his more wacky and somewhat fantastical ideas.[/indent]