Saturday, December 25, 2010

Super-B Accelerator Moves forward (does the US move back?)

As described in the following press release (see here). The Italian government has confirmed that they will be moving forward on the construction of the high intensity electron/positron collider known as SuperB.

Expected to produce 1000's of B-Mesons and Tau particles every second this will allow physicists to study the very rare decays of these B mesons as well as study CP violation to a much higher degree of accuracy than previously possible.

The U.S. meanwhile is still holding in the background awaiting word if we will even have a say in the future of particle physics. With the awaiting word of the Tevatron extended run (see P5 report recommending the extension of the Tevatron here) and knowing that many of the components for the SuperB will come from the short lived PEP-II experiment at SLAC just reinforces that while the rest of the world is looking forward to the future of science the US is increasingly looking like it playing a "wait and see" game.

At least this physicists may end up having to look for jobs in Europe and add to the potential brain drain (all though in my case a very small drain) facing the US.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Why I love my wife

My wife saw a box at work and said to her co-worker "I'll bet I can fit into that box"

So this professional and elegant women decided to climb into a box in front of her boss during the workday to demonstrate her ability to fit in a box!

This is what love is for me!

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Getting to meet some academic hero's!

It the past few months I've been very lucky/fortunate to get to meet/ask questions/listen to talks by some of my all time academic hero's. I thought I would share a few of those encounters/people here and include a chance for people to find out more about them:

Raman Sundrum
In September I got to attend a Fermilab Colloquium given by Raman Sundrum entitled "Warped Dimensions".
This was a really great talk about the possibility of general relativistic "warping" of higher dimensional space-time (don't worry if those words didn't mean much...they don't to most...but his talk would have you feeling like you maybe understood). The best part of his talk was how through simple illustration and explanation he gave access to the complicated and often misunderstood work of higher dimensional space-time and what this manifestation of this would be in accelerator based physics experiments.
I include and example image from his talk to show how a simple picture often is worth a thousand words.


Steven Levitt
The next academic hero of mine I got to meet and ask questions from was professor of economics at the University of Chicago, Steven Levitt. This was during a screening of the new movie Freakonomics that the U of C put on. Interestingly, they made this a "Pay-what-you-want" experiment as part of the screening process. Turns out that people paid basically what you would for a movie ticket (around 7 bucks if my memory serves) with some people paying as much as $100 dollars.
Not only am I a huge fan of Freakonomics books, and follow the blog (found here) and the new'ish podcast (found here) and have had the good fortune to see many lectures given by Prof Levitt, but I am also a fan of the method.

The extreme curiosity that Prof Levitt exudes through his work and when meeting him in person is something I myself strive for in life. To me his ideas of pursuing what is from data and example instead of the way we would like to think it is, is a wonderful approach for all scientists and curious minded people.

Also see the movie, even if you've read the book the visualization of the ideas and filmwork done is really good. An interesting side note: Prof Levitt during his Q&A at the screening revealed that very little of his own work went into the movie and in fact great portions where it seems that he is narrating was actually cobbled together from old lectures and he never actually gave his voice to that portion of the film

Peter McIntyre
Now this academic hero is kind of a cheat on my part because this is one person that not only have I got to meet and see lectures from, but I've also had the good fortune to work for and take courses from. Prof McIntyre is a professor at Texas A&M (my current school) and is by far and away one of the most brilliant people I've ever met.

One colloquium that I attended of his while at Fermilab was about a 100 TeV Proton/Anti-Proton Collider that he wants to see built in Texas. (Just for scale the best the LHC is going to do is 14 TeV....that is like saying if the tallest building in the world in 140 stories that the next building should be 1000 stories tall)

This is a man of great physics vision. He was one of the first people to imagine building a circular collider and to use Anti-matter for its collisions. From his mind (and that of many others) was the birth of Fermilab.

But his amazing-ness doesn't stop there. He works on 16 Tesla superconducting magnets, puts together plans for Thorium driven nuclear power, designs wave breaks to protect the Texas coast from hurricane driven waves, and manages to teach and inspire new generations of physicists.

He was a leader in proposing the now failed SSC tunnel at Texas...which would have pushed the US to the front of the world of particle physics for many years...instead of battling the LHC for years.

I took a introductory Quantum Mechanics course from him my first year in grad school and it was the hardest thing I've ever done...and the most rewarding course in terms of what I learned.

My hope is to be as well rounded, brilliant, and influential in my career as he has been in his.