Date | Time | Speaker | Title | Description | Notes | Slides |
Thursday Jan. 30th |
1pm | Tim Andeen | The ATLAS Experiment, from Nevis to CERN | Columbia University has a large team of scientists working on the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland. Scientists from Nevis have been involved in every aspect of the experiment. Significant components of ATLAS were developed and built at Nevis and work continues upgrading the detector. The latest searches for physics beyond the Standard Model will be discussed as we look forward to even higher energy collisions in 2015 and beyond. | Lunch at 12:30 pm | |
Tuesday Feb. 18th | 1pm | Jose Alonso | Pushing the Envelope of Cyclotron Technology: from Medical Applications to Neutrino Sources | The Cyclotron, patented by E.O. Lawrence in 1934, has traditionally been a tool for nuclear physicists to study properties of nuclei. Even from the earliest days, however, applications of the beams from these machines in other fields have played an important role. Glenn Seaborg, in 1938 proposed the first use of an iodine isotope he discovered at the 27” cyclotron as a medical tracer, and in that same year Ernest's brother John Lawrence developed a program of treating tumors with neutrons from cyclotron beams hitting beryllium targets. Today cyclotrons are in widespread use: for radioisotope production, for cancer therapy with proton beams, and for increasingly-diversified programs in nuclear and particle physics research. This talk will cover the range of applications, and the evolution of machines optimized for each, and will explore new developments, from compact superconducting machines tailored for medical uses, up to and including a new project for development of very high-current cyclotrons as compact, cost-effective neutrino sources. | Lunch at 12:30 pm | |
Thursday Feb. 27th | 1pm | Mike Hahn | Evidence for Wave Heating in the Solar Corona | One of the major problems in astrophysics is to understand how the solar corona is heated to over a million degrees. In this talk I will review the coronal heating problem, its possible solutions, and present our results indicating that waves carry energy into the corona from lower layers of the Sun. | Lunch at 12:30 pm | |
Thursday Mar. 27th | 1pm | Lunch at 12:30 pm | ||||
Thursday Apr. 24th | 1pm | Lunch at 12:30 pm |
Date | Time | Speaker | Title | Description | Notes | Slides |
Sept. 26th | 1pm | Laboratories tour | Lunch at 12:30 pm | |||
Oct. 24th | 1pm | Ester Aliu | Astrophysics at the TeV scale | How experiments like VERITAS detect particles at this extreme energy and which scientific questions we try to address.The contribution of the Barnard and Columbia VERITAS groups will be described | Lunch at 12:30 pm | |
Nov. 21st | 1pm | Joy Didier | EBEX: The E and B EXperiment. | Measuring the polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) provides us with a wealth of information on the origin, composition and dynamics of the universe. EBEX is a balloone-borne telescope designed to measure the polarization of the CMB. I will give an overview of the instrument and of the recent science flight in Antarctica. | Lunch at 12:30 pm | |
Dec. 17th | 1pm | William Seligman | A Brief History of the Nevis Estate | + Christmas party | Lunch at 12:30 pm | Slides |
Date | Time | Speaker | Title | Description | Notes | Slides |
Jan. 24th | 2pm | Leslie Camilleri | The Nevis Neutrino Program | The experiments that the Nevis Neutrino group is involved in will be described, together with their relevance to the current state of Neutrino research | Lunch at 1:30 pm | NevisSemJan24.pdf |
Feb. 28th | 1pm | Guillaume Plante | Xenon : Searching for Dark Matter with Liquid Xenon Detectors | Why is dark matter needed, how can we detect it (hopefully!), the XENON project and the contributions of the Nevis XENON group. | Lunch at 12:30 pm | |
Mar. 28th | 1pm | Andrew D. Harken | An overview of RARAF | From broad beams to microbeams, single proteins to small animals. Where we have been to where we are going. | Lunch at 12:30 pm | |
Tues Apr. 16th |
2:30 pm | Jose Alonso | Pushing the envelope of Cyclotron Technology: From Medical Applications to Neutrino Sources. | Tuesday. Wine and cheese after the seminar |
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May 9th | 1:30 pm |
Ken Miller | Laboratory Astrochemistry | From the early universe to the interstellar medium | Lunch at 1 pm |
I | Attachment | History | Action | Size | Date | Who | Comment |
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An_overview_of_RARAF-Harken_2013.pdf | r2 r1 | manage | 17355.1 K | 2013-03-29 - 01:14 | TimothyAndeen | |
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An_overview_of_RARAF-Harken_2013.pptx | r1 | manage | 38863.6 K | 2013-03-28 - 21:05 | TimothyAndeen | |
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NevisSemJan24.pdf | r1 | manage | 40370.1 K | 2013-04-03 - 01:04 | TimothyAndeen |