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Daily Current Technology News - Astronomy NewsPhysics Force at Northrop Mon, 16 Nov 2009 00:00:00 CST All Physics Force performances are approximately one hour long. It is recommended that you arrive early to get a seat since it is first come first serve. Parking information for Northrop can be found here. In addition to the public shows, Physics Force will perform for thousands of school children bussed in for shows on January 6-12, 2010. More information: https://www.physics.umn.edu/calendar/pf.all/future/ Be a geek and a nerd: Jim Kakalios at Convocation 2009 Fri, 13 Nov 2009 00:00:00 CST Documentary highlights positive impact of NOvA on northern Minnesota Wed, 11 Nov 2009 00:00:00 CSTThe NOvA collaboration is a University of Minnesota physics project. A short documentary put out by Fermilab and the Department of Energy highlights the positive impact that the NOvA project has had on the small community of Orr in northern Minnesota. You can view the video on Youtube. More information: http://www-nova.fnal.gov/ Physics Fall Picnic Thu, 10 Sep 2009 00:00:00 CSTThe Physics picnic will take place at Boom Island Park on Sunday, September 27st, 1-5pm. Please fill out the picnic form in your e-mail or mail box and return it to Joffrey Peters, or Ryo Namba, both of whom are in office 79 in the basement. Our mail boxes can also be used to turn in the form. The form is due by Friday, September 25th. Directions to Boom Island Park can be found here. Kakalios video wins regional Emmy award Tue, 25 Aug 2009 00:00:00 CST Kakalios was tapped by Warner Bros. as a science consultant for the popular comic book movie, “Watchmen.” “The Science of Watchmen” looks at his involvement with the film and the physics behind its extraordinary characters. The video enjoyed enormous success, garnering over 1.5 million views on YouTube, making it one of the most widely viewed videos ever in higher education. "If anyone had asked me back in grad school if I could imagine winning an Emmy for a YouTube video -- I would have answered, 'what's a YouTube?'” said Kakalios. "This award is a testament to the University News Service who conceived and created the video." Recognized by his colleagues for his research in condensed matter physics, most students know Kakalios for his popular freshman seminar “Everything I Know About Physics I Learned By Reading Comic Books.” A professor in the Institute of Technology’s School of Astronomy and Physics since 1988, he is also the author of the science book “The Physics of Superheroes.” The video was produced by the University News Service team, under Elizabeth Giorgi, managing editor, and was nominated by the Midwest chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. The nominated clip can be viewed here. Award winners from the News Service include, Daniel Wolter, Justin Ware, Elizabeth Giorgi and Drew Swain. The Upper Midwest Emmys is an awards event celebrating regional excellence in television production. The Emmy Awards are put on by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (NATAS) and recognize a variety of categories including news, sports and documentary programming, as well as individual talent. The Upper Midwest region includes Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, western Wisconsin and most of Iowa. More information: http://midwestemmys.org/2009/08/21/emmy-nominations-2009/ LIGO results set new limits on gravitational waves Thu, 20 Aug 2009 00:00:00 CST In a recent article published in the journal Nature, physicists announced the results of data taken by LIGO from 2005-2007 showing that the stochastic gravitational wave background expected to arise as a result of the Big Bang has not yet been observed. By not observing evidence of gravitational waves physicists can rule out some of the models of the early universe that predict relatively strong stochastic background gravitational waves. "We can start learning what the universe is not like. This is a major milestone in this field." said Vuk Mandic, of the University of Minnesota, cochair of LIGO's Stochastic Working Group. Mandic said that this is the first time that a direct search for gravitational waves has reached a sensitivity such that physicists can begin making statements about the evolution of the early universe. More information: https://www.physics.umn.edu/about/news/340/Gravitational_waves.html Neutrinos on Display Mon, 17 Aug 2009 00:00:00 CST The early-May groundbreaking for the NOvA Far Detector Laboratory construction project in Ash River, Minnesota was just the beginning. Construction work at the site is now well under way and northern Minnesota is abuzz with the excitement of being the center of neutrino physics in the United States, as well as being the site of the country's major deep underground science laboratory. On Saturday, August 15th , Senator Al Franken and members of his staff visited the Soudan underground laboratory as the guests of the School of Physics and Astronomy, Fermilab and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (Photo Gallery). Guided by physicists Ken Heller, Ron Poling and Angela Reisetter, Fermilab communications director Judy Jackson, and Soudan lab staff members Jim Beaty and Jerry Meier, the senator toured the MINOS and CDMS experimental halls and received an introduction to neutrinos and the more mysterious and yet-to-be-detected dark matter particles. While weather conditions precluded a planned tour of the the Ash River NOvA site, Senator Franken learned about the physics of NOvA, as well as the impact of the project on the northern part of our state. The approval of funding for NOvA has brought new visibility on the national scene to neutrinos and the role of the University of Minnesota in the major U.S. projects of the field. The science section of the Monday, August 17 edition of the Washington Post has an article about MINOS and NOvA that prominently features comments from Minnesota physicist Marvin Marshak, who is the principal investigator of the cooperative agreement with the U.S. Department of Energy under which the University is building the Far Detector Lab. CLEO collaboration submits 500th paper Mon, 17 Aug 2009 00:00:00 CSTThe CLEO collaboration has recently submitted its 500th publication to a peer-reviewed journal. This is the largest number of papers of any collaboration in the history of elementary particle physics. CLEO papers have garnered more than 23,000 citations (as compiled by the SPIRES high energy physics database), and there have been countless uses of CLEO measurements tabulated in the Particle Data Group's "Review of Particle Physics." CLEO has investigated the production and decay of the heavy bottom and charm quarks, filling in many of the details of the Standard Model of particle physics. The experiment ran from late 1979 until early 2008 at the electron-positron collider CESR at Cornell University. The University of Minnesota has been part of the project since 1988, when Professor Ron Poling, one of the original CLEO collaborators, joined our faculty. He and Professors Dan Cronin-Hennessy, Yuichi Kubota, and Jon Urheim (now at Indiana University) have supervised 15 University of Minnesota graduate students on CLEO Ph.D. projects. The 500th CLEO paper is titled "Improved Measurements of Semileptonic Decays of D Mesons to pi and K Mesons," and will be published in Physical Review D. It describes precise measurements that are key to understanding fundamental parameters in elementary particle theory. Although this research at CLEO is now complete, Cronin-Hennessy and Poling are pursuing these Standard Model tests to even greater precision with the BESIII experiment in Beijing, China. Experiments like CLEO and BESIII are an important complement to investigations of the high-energy frontier at the Fermilab Tevatron and, soon, the LHC. For example, CLEO measurements have provided precision information that helps give confidence that the Higgs boson will be found and that it will be within the energy reach of the LHC. Similarly, studies of mixing and measurements of CP violation in quark decays that were begun by CLEO are the prototype for investigations of neutrino oscillations with the MINOS and NOvA experiments. In addition to CLEO and BESIII, the University of Minnesota high energy physics group plays leading roles in MINOS, NOvA and the CMS experiment at the LHC. No one knows where the next great discoveries will emerge, but these projects provide the best hope for major progress in unraveling deep mysteries in the nature of matter and the universe. Graduate Student Orientation Thu, 06 Aug 2009 00:00:00 CSTThe School of Physics and Astronomy will hold orientation from August 24 to September 4, 2009. Students will receive a copy of the orientation schedule when they arrive. Please contact Judy Soine if you have any questions. Poling New Head of School of Physics and Astronomy Thu, 11 Jun 2009 00:00:00 CST Poling says “Allen Goldman has provided the School of Physics and Astronomy with steady leadership as Head for thirteen years, and we are all deeply grateful for his exceptional service. Every day's news reminds us that the challenges of the coming years will be great, but that there are also opportunities. With Allen's help and with the energy and creativity of a vibrant community of faculty, students, staff, and alumni, I hope to be a part of finding and realizing those opportunities." Professor Poling received his Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Rochester, and his B.S. (Physics) from the State University of New York at Buffalo. He joined the University of Minnesota School of Physics and Astronomy as an Assistant Professor in 1987. He became an Associate Professor in 1991 and has been a full Professor since 1996. Ron was an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow (1988-92). He was the recipient of the Clifford C. Furnas Memorial Award of the University at Buffalo (1998). He was elected an APS Fellow in 1998. EBEX Balloon launched Tue, 09 Jun 2009 00:00:00 CST School of Physics and Astronomy professor Shaul Hanany is the principal investigator of the EBEX collaboration which includes cosmologists from 13 other universities and laboratories. The flight terminated at 9:40 p.m. Mountain Time in Arizona. The balloon was spotted in Prescott, Arizona and reported as an unidentified bright object around 8:00 p.m. in the evening. You can see a video of the launch and read about the daily lives of the EBEX crew at Asad Aboobaker's blog. More information: http://groups.physics.umn.edu/cosmology/ebex/
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