Eric Sembrat's Test Bonanza

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College of Sciences at TEDxDouglasville 2016

Monday, April 4, 2016

About 30 miles west of Atlanta lies the town of Douglasville. Described variously as “charming,” having a “small-town ambiance,” and “historic,” this town of close to 32,000 people away from the frenzy and busyness of the big city would not be an obvious site for a TEDx event. And yet for the second year in a row, TEDxDouglasville is happening, thanks to two Georgia Tech students driven by a deep sense of gratitude to their hometown: Joshua Barnett, a third-year physics major, and Mahdi Al-Husseini, a third-year biomedical engineering and public policy major.

For the two undergrads, TEDxDouglasville is a means to give back to a town and community that supported them as they began their undergraduate studies at Georgia Tech. Looking ahead to their graduation from Georgia Tech, Barnett and Al-Husseini regard TEDxDouglasville as a way to stay connected to their community of origin even as they might move farther away in search of their individual futures.

Barnett and Al-Husseini have known each other since their freshman days in Douglas County High School. “By the time we graduated, we were best friends and bound for Georgia Tech,” Barnett says. Al-Husseini masterminded the creation of TEDxDouglasville, asking Barnett to join soon after the TED license was approved. Barnett did not hesitate to take the role of co-organizer. “Both of us were deeply affected by a philosophy course we had taken in high school,” he says. “And we were convinced by the power of ideas and the impact of how ideas are conveyed.”

A big surprise of the event last year was how much younger the audience was than the organizers had expected. “A large number of high school students attended,” Barnett says. “This year we have made tickets more accessible to these students, and we’re even holding the event in a school that many of them attend.”

That would be Douglas County High School. When TEDxDouglasville 2016 is held there on April 9, two College of Sciences faculty members will speak:

Brian Hammer, from the School of Biology, will talk about cooperation and conflict in the microbial world. “Microbes are ubiquitous on Earth and interact with one another and their surroundings in diverse associations that maintain the health of our planet and all of its inhabitants,” Hammer says. His research is helping to explain how bacteria cooperate and compete. And he hopes the knowledge “will allow us to monitor and manipulate these behaviors to prevent and treat human diseases and to mitigate perturbations to global ecological systems.”

Laura Cadonati, from the School of Physics, will describe the discovery of gravitational waves. “Gravitational waves are ripples in the fabric of space and time that are produced by cataclysmic astrophysical events,” Cadonati explains. One hundred years  after Albert Einstein predicted their existence,  one such wave was detected for the first time on Sept. 14, 2015; the wave came from the merging of two gigantic black holes 1.3 billion years ago. Cadonati will explain how gravitational waves open a new way to probe the universe.

“Events like TEDxDouglasville speak to Georgia Tech’s and the College of Sciences’ tradition of educating and nurturing the whole person and not just the engineering or the physics aspects,” says College of Sciences Dean Paul M. Goldbart. “They also underscore the College’s commitment to sharing with nonscientists everywhere the excitement and promise of our researchers’ breakthrough discoveries.”  

With an average age of 21, Barnett, Al-Husseini, and the organizing team of TEDxDouglasville are on a steep learning curve to achieve their aspirations for TEDxDouglasville. Following are edited excerpts from a Q&A conducted by e-mail. Responses are from both Barnett and Al-Husseini except where indicated.

Why is Douglasville a good venue for a TEDx program?

It’s hard to resist Douglasville’s southern charm, incredible past, beautiful parks, and strength of community. Douglasville is where history meets modernity. This little, big city rests on the fringes of Atlanta, but remains far enough to stay humble.

This event is a way to engage our community. It would give people a chance to meet and converse with individuals with whom they might never interact otherwise. Diverse interactions is important in the development of a wholesome, interconnected community.

Who are the people you are trying to reach with TEDxDouglasville?

Students, construction workers, teachers, businessmen, janitors, social workers, doctors, lawyers. Anyone with a sense of curiosity. We seek to get people thinking, dreaming, and achieving.

What is your measure of success for TEDxDouglasville?

Exposing our audience to different people and new ideas was one of our goals from the beginning. But we must also consider the impact on the wider community. TEDxDouglasville inspired a new level of civic engagement: It led to a proposal for the Douglas Youth Department and catalyzed the creation of a service organization, Progressive Action Towards the Health of Douglasville, a lasting legacy.

It is also great to have scientists from Georgia Tech speak to a general audience, especially to high school students. TEDxDouglasville not only gives the audience a chance to connect with scientists on a tangible, accessible level, but it also helps to steer youth who are considering majoring in the sciences by providing a realistic snapshot of what scientific research looks like on the collegiate level.

Give us a preview of TEDxDouglasville 2016.

Our theme for this year is “Laying the Tracks,” which is rooted in the city’s origins from a railroad track. TEDxDouglasville 2016 will explore the intricacies of pioneering and building in the sciences, arts, education, and business. The event is laying tracks for ideas worth spreading, in hopes of building something extraordinary.

What happens to TEDxDouglasville when you graduate from Georgia Tech? 

Al-Husseini: We aim to transform TEDxDouglasville from an annual event into a continuous platform for creative thinking and community outreach. The proceeds from this year’s event will be stored in a scholarship fund dedicated to high school students in Douglas County.

I intend to spend four years on active-duty with the US Army, after a spring 2018 Georgia Tech graduation. Upon completing my service contract, I hope to attend graduate school and eventually return to Douglasville.

Barnett: I hope to take an advisory role for a successor who will come to organize the event. With plans to attend graduate school, I must commit more and more time to research and my courses. Meanwhile, we will explore various options.

Media Contact: 

A. Maureen Rouhi

Director of Communications

College of Sciences

Alumni: 

Have you ever wondered how so much delicious flavor finds its way into a bottle of beer? Join the Georgia Tech School of Physics and SweetWater Brewing Company for an evening with scientists and brewmasters as we investigate the science of fermentation. Explore interactive home brewing demonstrations and take a guided tour of the brewery. Attendees will enjoy 36 oz (that's 1064.65 mL) of their favorite SweetWater samplings in a keepsake Atlanta Science Festival beaker/pint glass. Space is limited. Adults age 21 and over only.

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Abstract: The IceCube project at the South Pole has melted eighty-six holes over 1.5 miles deep in the Antarctic icecap for use as astronomical observatories.
The project recently discovered a flux of neutrinos reaching us from the cosmos,with energies more than a million times those of the neutrinos produced at
accelerator laboratories. These neutrinos are astronomical messengers from some of the most violent processes in the universe associated with starbursts,
giant black holes gobbling up stars in the heart of quasars and gamma-ray bursts, the biggest explosions since the Big Bang. We will discuss the IceCube
telescope and highlight its first scientific results.

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Gravitational Waves Detected 100 Years After Einstein’s Prediction

Thursday, February 11, 2016

For the first time, scientists have observed ripples in the fabric of spacetime called gravitational waves, arriving at the earth from a cataclysmic event in the distant universe. This confirms a major prediction of Albert Einstein’s 1915 general theory of relativity and opens an unprecedented new window onto the cosmos.

Gravitational waves carry information about their dramatic origins and about the nature of gravity that cannot otherwise be obtained. Physicists have concluded that the detected gravitational waves were produced during the final fraction of a second of the merger of two black holes to produce a single, more massive spinning black hole. This collision of two black holes had been predicted but never observed.

The gravitational waves were detected on September 14, 2015 at 5:51 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time (9:51 UTC) by both of the twin Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) detectors, located in Livingston, Louisiana, and Hanford, Washington, USA. The LIGO Observatories are funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), and were conceived, built, and are operated by Caltech and MIT. The discovery, accepted for publication in the journal Physical Review Letters, was made by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration (which includes the GEO Collaboration and the Australian Consortium for Interferometric Gravitational Astronomy) and the Virgo Collaboration using data from the two LIGO detectors.

There are 12 Georgia Institute of Technology faculty members, postdoctoral researchers and students in the LIGO Scientific Collaboration. The team is led by Associate Professor Laura Cadonati, who also chairs the LIGO Data Analysis Council. In this role, she coordinates and guides the activities of hundreds of scientists around the world who work together to analyze the data coming out of the LIGO detectors.

“This is a groundbreaking discovery that will open a new field of gravitational wave astronomy where gravitational waves will be a new probe to explore the mysteries of the universe,” said Cadonati, who has been a member of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration for 14 years.

Based on the observed signals, LIGO scientists estimate that the black holes for this event were about 29 and 36 times the mass of the sun, and the event took place 1.3 billion years ago. About three times the mass of the sun was converted into gravitational waves in a fraction of a second ­– with a peak power output about 50 times that of the whole visible universe. By looking at the time of arrival of the signals ­– the detector in Livingston recorded the event seven milliseconds before the detector in Hanford ­– scientists can say that the source was located in the Southern Hemisphere.

The Georgia Tech researchers conducted various analyses over the span of six months toward the confirmation of the first gravitational wave detection. They examined the large amount of data collected by the two detectors and performed investigations to ensure that the observed signal wasn’t due to false noise from the instrument or environment.

Once the signal was extracted from the LIGO data, the Georgia Tech team was able to compare it with hundreds of its simulations of binary black hole mergers. This helped confirm that the signal indeed originated from two black holes, nearly equal in mass, that were spinning on their respective axes as they orbited and collided, forming a single, spinning black hole.    

These binary black hole simulations were produced by the Georgia Tech numerical relativity team, under the leadership of Deirdre Shoemaker, associate professor and director of Georgia Tech’s Center for Relativistic Astrophysics. They solved Einstein’s field equations to model sources of gravitational waves using high-performance computing facilities.

“When we saw the initial signal, we knew something that strong could only be from colliding black holes,” said Shoemaker. “My group and I immediately went to our bank of theoretical predictions and searched for one that looked similar. After many years of computer modeling, we were finally able to compare our expectations with something that nature actually produced.”

According to general relativity, a pair of black holes orbiting around each other lose energy through the emission of gravitational waves, causing them to gradually approach each other over billions of years, and then much more quickly in the final minutes. During the final fraction of a second, the two black holes collide into each other at nearly one-half the speed of light and form a single more massive black hole, converting a portion of the combined black holes’ mass to energy, according to Einstein’s formula E=mc2. This energy is emitted as a final strong burst of gravitational waves. It is these gravitational waves that LIGO has observed.

In the coming months, as LIGO continues its observing schedule, data will be streamed directly to the PACE computing cluster at Georgia Tech. The team will continue to exploit this new window of the universe with the construction of additional computing facilities and deployment of the LIGO analyses on the Open Science Grid.

The discovery was made possible by the enhanced capabilities of Advanced LIGO, a major upgrade that increases the sensitivity of the instruments compared to the first generation LIGO detectors, enabling a large increase in the volume of the universe probed—and the discovery of gravitational waves during its first observation run. The US National Science Foundation leads in financial support for Advanced LIGO. Funding organizations in Germany (Max Planck Society), the U.K. (Science and Technology Facilities Council, STFC) and Australia (Australian Research Council) also have made significant commitments to the project. Several of the key technologies that made Advanced LIGO so much more sensitive have been developed and tested by the German UK GEO collaboration. Significant computer resources have been contributed by the AEI Hannover Atlas Cluster, the LIGO Laboratory, Syracuse University, and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.  Several universities designed, built, and tested key components for Advanced LIGO: The Australian National University, the University of Adelaide, the University of Florida, Stanford University, Columbia University in the City of New York, and Louisiana State University.

LIGO research is carried out by the LSC, a group of more than 1000 scientists from universities around the United States and in 14 other countries. More than 90 universities and research institutes in the LSC develop detector technology and analyze data; approximately 250 students are strong contributing members of the collaboration. The LSC detector network includes the LIGO interferometers and the GEO600 detector. The GEO team includes scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute, AEI), Leibniz Universität Hannover, along with partners at the University of Glasgow, Cardiff University, the University of Birmingham, other universities in the United Kingdom, and the University of the Balearic Islands in Spain.

LIGO was originally proposed as a means of detecting these gravitational waves in the 1980s by Rainer Weiss, professor of physics, emeritus, from MIT; Kip Thorne, Caltech’s Richard P. Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics, emeritus; and Ronald Drever, professor of physics, emeritus, also from Caltech.

Virgo research is carried out by the Virgo Collaboration, consisting of more than  250 physicists and engineers belonging to 19 different European research groups: 6 from Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in France; 8 from the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN) in Italy; 2 in The Netherlands with Nikhef; the Wigner RCP in Hungary; the POLGRAW group in Poland and the European Gravitational Observatory (EGO), the laboratory hosting the Virgo detector near Pisa in Italy.

Media Contact: 

Jason Maderer
National Media Relations
404-660-2926
maderer@gatech.edu

Summary: 

For the first time, scientists have observed ripples in the fabric of spacetime called gravitational waves, arriving at the earth from a cataclysmic event in the distant universe. This confirms a major prediction of Albert Einstein’s 1915 general theory of relativity and opens an unprecedented new window onto the cosmos.

Intro: 

For the first time, scientists have observed ripples in the fabric of spacetime called gravitational waves, arriving at the earth from a cataclysmic event in the distant universe. This confirms a major prediction of Albert Einstein’s 1915 general theory of relativity and opens an unprecedented new window onto the cosmos.

Alumni: 

One of the most obvious facts about the universe is that the past is different from the future. We can remember yesterday, but not tomorrow; we can turn an egg into an omelet, but can’t turn an omelet into an egg. That’s the arrow of time, which is consistent throughout the observable universe. The arrow can be explained by assuming that the very early universe was extremely orderly, and disorder has been increasing ever since. But why did the universe start out so orderly? I will talk about the nature of time, the origin of entropy, and how what happened before the Big Bang may be responsible for the arrow of time we observe today.

Parking options:
Visitors parking area 4 lot: State Street & Ferst Drive

Visitors parking area 2 lot:
349 Ferst Dr NW, Atlanta, GA 30318

 

 

 

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Outermost occupied electron shells of chemical elements resemble monopoles, dipoles, quadrupoles, and octupoles corresponding to filled s-, p-, d-, and f-atomic orbitals. Theoretically, elements with hexadecapolar outer shells could also exist, but none of the known stable elements have filled g-orbitals. On the other hand, the research paradigm of “colloidal atoms” displays complexity of physical behavior of colloidal particles exceeding that of their atomic counterparts, allowing for switching between colloidal elastic dipole and quadrupole configurations using weak external stimuli. This lecture will describe colloidal elastic hexadecapoles formed by polymer microspheres dispersed in a liquid crystal, a nematic fluid of orientationally ordered molecular rods. The solid microspheres locally perturb the uniform molecular alignment of the nematic host, inducing hexadecapolar and other elastic multipoles that drive highly anisotropic colloidal interactions. We uncover physical underpinnings behind the spontaneous formation of colloidal elastic hexadecapoles and describe the ensuing particle bonding inaccessible to colloids studied previously. The lecture will conclude with discussion of practical applications that can be enabled by combining unique properties of metal and semiconductor nanoparticles with facile switching of self-assembled ordered superstructures that they exhibit in nematic hosts.

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The progress in neutrino physics over the past fifteen years has been tremendous: we have learned that neutrinos have mass and change flavor. This discovery won the 2015 Nobel Prize. I will pick out one of the threads of the story-- the measurement of flavor oscillation in neutrinos produced by cosmic ray showers in the atmosphere, and further measurements by long-baseline beam experiments. In this talk, I will present the latest results from the Super-Kamiokande and T2K (Tokai to Kamioka) long-baseline experiments, and will discuss how the next generation of high-intensity beam experiments will address some of the remaining puzzles.

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Epithelial cells are mostly quiescent when they are mature and uninjured, but they undergo collective migration during morphogenesis, cancer metastasis, and wound repair. We have recently reported (Nature Materials, Park et al, 2015) that, during differentiation, airway epithelial cells in air-liquid interface culture undergo a transition from a fluid-like, mobile “unjammed” state toward a solid-like, immobile “jammed” state. This transition toward the jammed state is substantially delayed in cells from asthmatic donors, compared with cells from normal donors. Furthermore, mature, jammed cells undergo a transition toward the unjammed state when they are subjected to compressive stress that mimics bronchoconstriction, a process that occurs during asthma exacerbations. These jamming and unjamming transitions are accompanied by unique changes in cell shape that are associated with intercellular forces.

 

 

 

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Soft condensed matter is an exciting and rich field to work in. Advances in optical microscopy, proliferation of new materials and systems, open new avenues and pose new questions which cannot be answered within existing theoretical approaches. It is quite clear that chemistry and genetics alone cannot explain the variety of shapes and forms present in nature, and that multidisciplinary and multiscale approaches should be adopted. In this talk, I will show how phenomenological models can give insight into the development of complex self-assembled structures with characteristic patterns and geometries. I will argue that topological defects can capture essential features of macroscopic shape and relate it to microscopic order, providing a natural way to connect different length scales and to account for large deformations in soft and biological systems. I will describe liquid crystalline materials with 2-fold (nematic), 3-fold (triatic) and 4-fold (tetratic) orientational order and construct new energetically favourable solutions for 1/3 and 1/4 disclinations, with the latter resulting into the formation of cube as a ground state. The proposed continuum description allows to compare our results with recent experiments on confined fd-viruses. On the larger scale, I will introduce a novel framework of defect guided folding, relevant to discuss the development of biological materials with layered microstructure, in particular cerebral cortex, fingerprints and lung surfactant.

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Liquid crystals are best known for their use in displays, but their interest extends far beyond. This phase of matter, intermediate between liquid and solid, is composed by anisotropic molecules which spontaneously align in space. When the molecules cannot achieve a perfect order, they form topological defects, “mathematical” objects which can be used as physical objects for many purposes. I show two examples of how liquid crystal defects can inspire concepts for new materials. The first example is a bistable system, obtained by confining liquid crystals in a micron-sized cubic scaffold.  The device can switch between “bright” and “dark” metastable states, thanks to the interaction of the defects with the scaffold. The second example is a self-assembled  structure of liquid crystal defects that act as micro-lenses. The structure resembles an insect’s compound eye, able to focus objects at different distances and sensitive to the polarization of light. 

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