I have really thrown myself into physics, since I am stuck at home (a) because there is a pandemic and (b) because SMU won’t let me on campus until tomorrow (because I was abroad when they ended work-related international travel 2 weeks ago). This has been a grand opportunity. Here […]
Yearly Archives: 2020
I spent today mainly in a online-only workshop for the Electron-Ion Collider, a new (and partly funded) accelerator project to be hosted by Brookhaven National Accelerator Laboratory in the U.S. I’m just listening and learning right now, but I am trying to get thinking about heavy flavor measurements with such […]
SMU is running two straight days of online faculty training for teaching digitally in the next few week. I spent a good part of today in various Zoom sessions, listening to rundowns of how to use certain features for certain purposes. The most useful thing, though, was hearing the concerns […]
Muons are a gateway drug. They are just difficult enough to detect that they are really not obvious to humans. They are just easy enough to stop in material that, once you learn to spot them, you want to stop them and watch them do what they do. What do […]
When I rescheduled the doctor’s appointment this past Friday, I made it very clear to the person on the phone that I had traveled abroad in the last 14 days. I made sure to lay that out in case that was an issue. They rescheduled me for 09:30am the next […]
I started this post as a place to collect scientific programming discussing COVID-19. The Guardian’s Science Weekly – “Covid-19: can ibuprofen make an infection worse?” (March 26, 2020) Nicola Davis speaks to Dr Ian Bailey about the current guidance on taking ibuprofen and other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs during a Sars-CoV-2 […]
The first thing I noticed when I turned onto one of the main roads during my run was the lack of cars. The road should have been two thick streams of cars – people fleeing Sunday services to get to their favorite restaurants before everybody else. If people attended services […]
Let’s end this day on a note of wonder. It’s Pi Day! (March 14, or 3-14). Pi is an irrational number… it cannot be written as the ratio of two integers. It’s a number that represents the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its own diameter. It shows […]
Things people panic-buy (and stores seem to have run out of) when faced with a serious respiratory virus: Toilet paper Tissue Paper towels Cleaning supplies Oatmeal Fresh Beef Fresh Chicken Pasta Milk Fresh vegetables, including avocados Frozen vegetables Eggs Bread Yellow onions Bottled water Things people do not buy (still […]
Today was a good running day. It was a really good running day. I don’t know what it was, but I haven’t felt this good running in a long time.
My institution issued the policy against work-related international travel around 8pm Central European Time. I was at CERN when it happened. I sought guidance from higher-ups at my institution: if you don’t get on the first flight back to the U.S., you can’t come to campus for 14 days after […]
Disease is one of those stresses on our systems that prompts and promotes the spread of misinformation. All of us are hungry for information about how to respond to this disease, but with that desire comes a certain level of credulousness that lets in misinformation. Check out the latest podcast […]