I posted some photos from CERN and thoughts about the latest achievement of the LHC – 8 TeV proton-proton collisions. We’re just about a week from the beginning of data-taking in 2012. The wind will be stronger in our sails, driving our great ships – ATLAS and CMS – faster in their pursuit of the new continent marked by Mount Higgs. Will that blurry mirage on the distant horizon become a real mountain peak, rising about the ocean?
CERN in the Spring
It’s time to go to CERN. The LHC has been delivering beam for a few weeks now, with a record 8 TeV center-of-mass energy having been achieved. The ATLAS detector stands ready for for first proton-proton collisions at this energy. This week is the ATLAS Physics and Performance week, and I am taking some time away from teaching to travel to CERN and focus on research.
Our SMU ATLAS group has been exploring some new directions in the search for and measurement of the Standard Model Higgs Boson. Our students and post-docs have been leading this effort so far, and my hope is to leap into the fray for a week and get my feet wet on the analysis. We’ve been partnering with physicists from outside of SMU, so this has been a very rewarding study for a new direction. I am also hoping to catch up on my own interests in the electrically charged Higgs Boson; our publication on last year’s data is imminent, and it’s time to think about new directions in that search as well. This week is an opportunity to step away from teaching and research – thanks to my co-professor in my course – and focus on research.
For now, though, this trip is just a lot of sitting in airports and waiting to get to CERN. This is the part I hate; the flights are just long enough to make me impatient and just short enough to prevent me from getting a really good night’s sleep on the plane. When I wake up tomorrow, I’ll be in Switzerland, ready to clear passport control and get my rental car. I don’t mind so much the arriving . . . but the waiting to arrive gets on my nerves.
Well, I guess I cannot complain too much. I have a Ph.D. thesis draft to read and markup in preparation for the thesis defense of one of our SMU graduate students. I also have at least two paper drafts to read and edit. It’s nice to be focused on physics papers for a change. Besides, if they are detailed enough and I am tired enough, I might just get more sleep than I originally planned for.
“Going Up Alleys” Podcast Episode 2 – Composer Decomposer
Kate Sekula and Steve Sekula discuss the secret language of music; just what happened at that conference in Fort Worth; exciting a revolution in teaching music theory; the Forer Effect, Barnum Statements, and Juh-Muh-Puh names; and astronomy (er . . . astrology) at the Awesomeville Public Library.
The “Going Up Alleys” podcast is an ongoing conversation about curious avenuues of investigation. The world is a strange and complicated place. In this irregular podcast, we’ll see how different people strive to make sense of it through creative and critical thinking.
Show Notes
- Host: Kate Sekula is a graduate student in the University of Connecticut Music Department, working toward her Ph.D. in Music.
- Host: Steve Sekula is an assistant professor of physics at Southern Methodist University.
- Buy music from the composers discussed in this podcast: Michael Tippett’s “The Vision of St. Augustine” and “A Child of Our Time“;
- Michael Klein, Professor of Music at Temple University
- David Easley’s abstract about chord repetition in punk rock (presented at the Texas Society for Music Theory 34th annual meeting)
- The podcast theme music is entitled “Occipital,” from the album “Classicoco” by the artist Nicoco. The album is available from Jamendo and is freely downloadable under a Creative Commons “share and share-alike” license.
- This podcast was produced at Hampton House. Linux, Ubuntu, Audacity, a Shure SM-58 microphone, and a little bit of “too much free time” were used in the making of this podcast.