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Photos from APS

What a week. You go from Jacksonville, straight back into the mad rush ahead of the summer conference cycle. What rough beast slouches toward South Korea? Well, that’d be the Lepton-Photon conference (for which we’re all rushing to get ready)! While I jump back into the constant fray of my […]

Photos from APS

Reflections on APS

This APS brought a few interesting lessons. When you commit to an experiment, follow it through and ignore outside pressure to release results before you’re ready. Mingle with your superiors, and mingle with your peers. Spending $130 per night on a hotel room for a physics conference is not justified, […]

Reflections on APS

We were watching TV

Excellent science is going on to understand the dark ages of the universe. Using things like arrays of cheap TV antennae in China, or dipoles in western Australia, astronomers are trying to image the time when the universe was dominated by neutral hydrogen. 21 cm waves – the TV band […]

We were watching TV

Understanding an effect

Earlier today, I had the pleasure of watching two presentations from the MiniBooNE collaboration on their recently released results. The first was by Eric Zimmerman, with whom I’ve worked on Washington lobbying efforts, and the other was by Heather Ray. Heather’s talk was of most interest to me, as it […]

Understanding an effect

Teach them to salute

Did you know that the No Child Left Behind act requires all schools receiving federal money to make available the list of name, phone numbers, and addresses of all children upom request from military recruiters?

Teach them to salute

Good for science, and society

APS meetings are great for showcasing science – the MiniBooNE result, top charge, gravity probe B – and for relating science and society. I’m at a discussion of Sputnik’s influence on US science education. It is astounding how a single trigger event can spur a President and a nation to […]

Good for science, and society

Cosmology and Energy

This morning’s plenaries have been great. We got a look at just how concordant the concordance model of cosmology. The amount of different information – supernovae, relic elemental abundances, CMB, and galactic clusters – that can be explained by dark matter, dark energy, and inflation is remarkable. Steven Chu’s talk […]

Cosmology and Energy

Richness of kaons

Yesterday at the talk on going from postdoc to your first tenure track job, the panel warned us not to go do the same thing we did in grad school. This shows your flexibility as a scientist, allegedly making you a abetter candidate. Today, as I watch how the long […]

Richness of kaons

Chatting with Kestenbaum…

After David Kestenbaum’s talk on the levee failure, I couldn’t help but to go chat with him. He’s a fascinating guy, and it’s a real privelege for the science community to have such an experienced scientist working in science journalism. He was a very relaxed guy, and still in awe […]

Chatting with Kestenbaum…

More standard than exotic

CDF and D0 were well represented by two students today, Per and Zeynep, who presented their measurements of the top quark charge. The standard model top must have charge 2/3, but a simple extension (adding a fourth quark generation) would give an exotic quark with mass 175 GeV, pushing the […]

More standard than exotic

A good day at APS

I had the pleasure of chairing a session at APS , where students from Babar gave excellent talks about their frontier research. Now. David Kastenbaum from NPR, a PHD physicist from Harvard and the CDF experiment, is talking about canal failure in New Orleans.

A good day at APS

Top quarks: yesterdays discovery…

There is a famous saying in my field: yesterday’s mystery is today’s discovery is tomorrows calibration. Although we havent finished all measurements of the top quark, we know a lot about it. At LHC, the top quark will be prduced in such great numbers over background, it will serve as […]

Top quarks: yesterdays discovery…

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  • (no title)
    October 20, 2025
    Refreshing.“Prof. Yaghi’s advice to young people is simple: pursue that which brings you passion, ponder deeply about the natural world, experiment, and don’t be […]
  • (no title)
    October 20, 2025
    #Astronomy and a shared love of the sky has a way of bringing people together. SHARED SPACE (The Globe and Mail (Ontario Edition)), Oct […]

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