"Yeah, but thinking about it like that, it actually does make fundamental magical research more appealing, combining magic and technology would be great."
"I have no idea how long it takes to set up covert experiments, so maybe you should mention to your dad we want to do this in a few years, Willow."
"I mean, it's not my dad's stuff, the really sensitive sensors are really huge, and CERN doesn't have one of those yet, they started building it last year. I dunno what'd happen with magic around it, but the way these things work is that like... The physicists have this model of how particles work and what they do, and then they're like, 'if we're right about this and we do that, then this will happen,' so they go ahead and do that and see if the thing happens. Like, throwing one particle at another and seeing how much energy's released, I guess, or something. And if they get it wrong they spend a while trying to figure out why and coming up with new things to test."
"We don't have anything resembling a model of how hypothesized phlogistons work..."
"Yeah, but we don't even actually have any observations in order to make a model. Like, we're told technology doesn't work here, but doesn't work how? Does it stop working and resume when away from here? Does it get fried? Does it do different things? Does it become sentient? If it gets fried, where does it get fried, how long does it take to get fried, what gets fried first, how much magic is enough, is long exposure to weak magic the same as short exposure to strong magic, et cetera."
"So, Willow, get your dad really excited about all these questions and promise him we'll make careful observations if he mails us gadgets."
"I don't think there's actually a rule against it, just, you know, it'll break so why would you."
"I think Mr. Maxwell will probably have a better idea than us about what things are easy to observe and cheap enough that he doesn't mind owling them to Hogwarts."
"I suppose so. I'm wondering if small things like electronic watches are affected or if it's only more sophisticated tech."
"Well... yes, but there might be a limit to how much he wants to spend on miniaturized electronics for twelve-year-olds to take apart in the hopes that we produce adequate notes."
"There probably is but we won't reach it. He'd be the last to say no to experimentation."
"Anyway, I'd rather let him design the experiment at least to start since he's a real scientist but as long as there's things we're curious about we may as well ask."
"Well, he says that the only difference between being a 'real scientist' and not is that real scientists need peer review."