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Title: Paul Grannis, Sept' 9, 2003


1
The State of the Department
Paul Grannis, Sept. 9, 2003 http//sbhep1.physics.
sunysb.edu/grannis/dept.html
2
Department Staff
Paul Grannis, Chairman Pam Burris, Assistant to
Chairman Laszlo Mihaly, Director of Graduate
Studies Pat Peiliker, Assistant Director of
Graduate Studies Chris Jacobsen, Director of
Undergraduate Studies Elaine Larsen, Assistant
Director of Undergraduate Studies Bob Segnini,
Director of Physical Labs Rich Berscak, Building
Manager Sara Lutterbie, Business Manager Diane
Siegel, Main Office Maria Hofer, Main Office Joe
Feliciano Frank Chin, Instructional Labs. Chuck
Pancake, Electronics Center Walter Schmeling,
Machine Shop Sal Natale, Receiving
3
Enrollments
Our undergraduate enrollments are up from last
year, not just the introductory courses AST101
141 registered students AST105 262
registered (Mars closeness caught
attention??) AST248 230 registered (Life in
universe preferred to life on LI?) PHY113 NEW
Physics of Sport closed out at 50 PHY121 351
registered PHY122 133 registered PHY131
302 registered PHY132 91 registered
PHY125 87 registered But also our junior
level majors courses PHY301 44 registered
(these are unprecedented) PHY303 42 registered
Are Physics and Astronomy gaining in
popularity? Is there a demographic change in the
university? We should view these upturns as an
opportunity! We continue to need to improve in
finding opportunities for research projects for
undergraduates, and the increased number of
majors amplifies this need.
4
Budgets
The university
budget outlook continues to be poor for the
coming year. The New York State economic climate
remains bad. It will be a difficult year to
advance new initiatives.
5
Special colloquiua
  • John Bahcall of the Institute for Advanced Study
    in Princeton will give the Provosts Lecture on
    Thursday Sept. 18 at 430PM How Does the Sun
    Shine in the Wang Center.
  • George Whitesides of Harvard will give three
    special lectures at BNL Berkner Hall on aspects
    of nanotechnology
  • Sept. 22, 5PM Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
  • Sept. 23 11AM Microtools for Biology
  • Sept. 23 4PM The Future of Science and
    Technology
  • 3. New York State APS Section meeting at BNL
    Oct. 17-18 with a wide ranging set of talks on
    Particle, Nuclear, Condensed Matter Physics
    (including Jacak and Jung of this department)

Regular Colloquium next Tuesday David
Hafemeister, California Polytechnic Univ.
Arms Treaty Verification. John Hobbs and
committee are planning a fine slate of talks be
here on Tuesday afternoons !
6
Outreach
The popular Open Night Friday night series for
the general public continues. Deane Peterson and
Tom Hemmick are planning a star-studded roster
for 2003 2004. Friday nights at 730 PM (ESS
001)
Astronomy Open Nights Fall 2003 Jim Lattimer
30 Years of Neutron Star Mergers (Sept.
5) Fred Walter 30 Years since Uhuru X-Ray
Astronomy comes of age (Oct. 3) and
more This is the 20th year anniversary of
Astronomy Open Nights
Astronomy Open Nights
Astronomy Open Night
Worlds of Physics Fall 2003 Axel Drees Gold Rush
on Long Island and the Search for Quark Matter
(Sept. 12) Hal Metcalf The Coldest Temperature
in the Universe (Oct. 10) and
more Also Geology Open Nights and The Living
World series.
Worlds of Physics
7
News of the faculty
David Fossan died on July 27, 2003. Dave joined
the Stony Brook faculty in 1965 after a postdoc
at the Niels Bohr Institute and a research
position with Hewlett Packard. He was a founding
member of the Nuclear Structure Laboratory, and
his research into nuclei in extreme conditions of
deformation and angular momenta were
internationally recognized. Dave won the
Chancellors award for Excellence in Research in
2002.
8
Emeritus Professor Nandor Balazs died on Aug. 16,
2003. He joined the Stony Brook faculty in 1961,
and his breadth of knowledge and eclectic style
helped shape the department over four decades.
His personal associations with Einstein,
Schrödinger, Dirac, Chandrasekhar and Wigner gave
Stony Brook a link to these giants of 20th
century physics. Nandor officially retired in
1995 but remained an active participant in the
department and in physics internationally.
9
Luis Orozco has resigned from our faculty as of
August 2003 to take up a position at the
University of Maryland where he will help lead
the establishment of a new atomic physics group.
Luis continues as an adjunct professor at Stony
Brook and will continue some research activities
here.
Norbert Pietralla will join the faculty
officially in January 2004. Norbert is a leading
expert in nuclear structure studies who has made
ground-breaking studies of symmetries and
collective states in heavy nuclei. Pietralla
holds the prestigious Emmy Noether junior faculty
fellowship at Cologne University, and has held a
research appointment at Yale.
Welcome back to those who were away last year
Phil Allen, Fred Goldhaber, Janos Kirz, Hal
Metcalf, Fred Walter On leave this year Dima
Averin (fall), Michael Gurvitch (fall), Tom Kuo
(fall), Michael Marx, Phil Solomon (fall)
10
Faculty awards
Phil Allen was a Guggenheim Fellow in
2002-3 Gerry Brown won the Wilbur Cross medal of
the Yale University Alumni Association Bob
deZafra was awarded Man of the Year in Civic
Affairs by the Village Times Ken Lanzetta was
honored for excellence in research by SUNY
Chancellor King Bob McGrath received the Iowa
Distinguished Alumni Achievement award Hal
Metcalf was Debye Hoogleraar at the University of
Utrecht for spring 2003 Laszlo Mihaly won the
Chancellors Award for Excellence in Teaching
11
Faculty awards
Peter Paul was inducted into the Long Island Hall
of Fame for his service as interim Director at
Brookhaven Lab. Deane Peterson was named Man of
the Year in Science by the Village Times for his
institution of Astronomy Open Nights George
Sterman won the American Physical Society J.J.
Sakurai Prize for theoretical particle
physics. Barry McCoy, Kostya Likharev and
Edward Shuryak were appointed SUNY Distinguished
Professors New Fellows Chris Jacobsen in the
American Association for the Advancement of
Science Chang Kee Jung, Jack Marburger and
Alexei Tsvelik in the APS.
12
Graduate student awards
We are delighted with the accomplishments of our
graduate students. The prizes for 2003 are an
excellent measure of their accomplishments Di
Tian Prize (Asian Student Achievement)
Stella Lai-Wa Siu Max Dresden
Prize(Outstanding Theory Thesis) Achim
Schwenk David Fox Prize (Outstanding TA)
Matthew Eardley Peter Kahn
Prizes (Travel Awards)
Bryan Field
Fabio Franchini
Xiyue Miao
David Shapiro T.A. Pond
Prize (Comprehensive Exam)
Koon-Kiu Yan Henry Silsbee Prize (Outstanding
performance) Ann Sickles Lee Wilcox
Prize (Outstanding Expt. Thesis)
Matthew Malek Seth Aubin and Carola Berger won
the (2 of 5) Presidents Award for Distinguished
Doctoral students Takeshi Koike and Joe Reiner
received Graduate Council commendations for their
thesis research.
13
Graduate student PhDs awarded
Stony Brook is one of the leading universities in
number of Ph.D. degrees granted. This past year
has been exceptional.
Aug. and Dec. 2002 (14 degrees) Scott
Bogner Univ. Washington postdoc nuclear
theory Olindo Corradini Univ. Bologna Ruben
Costa-Santos Univ. Utrecht postdoc James
Dickerson Columbia postdoc ? faculty at
Vanderbilt Pietro Faccioli ECT Italy
postdoc Antonio Garcia-Garcia IN2P3 Orsay France
postdoc Prasanth Jaikumar McGill Univ.
postdoc Jinyoung Serena Kim Steward Observatory
Tucson postdoc Bogdan Kulik Max Planck Inst.
Berlin postdoc Yiping Lin Spintronic Research Gp
Japan postdoc Christopher Mauger Cal Tech
postdoc Achim Schwenk Ohio State postdoc Aaron
Stein Brookhaven Lab Nanocenter postdoc Andrew
Steiner Univ. Minnesota postdoc
14
Graduate student PhDs awarded
May and Aug. 2003 (28 degrees) positions where
known (postdocs if not noted) Lilia
Anguelova Univ. Michigan Peter Langfelder
Univ. Waterloo Seth Aubin Univ. Toronto
Chi-Lun Lee Univ. Massachusetts Tigran
Bacarian Matthew Malek Fermilab Carola
Berger Univ. Torino Filipe Moura Univ.
Amsterdam Tirthabir Biswas McGill Univ. Joseph
Reiner NIST Fernando Camino Stony Brook Juana
Rudati BNL Javier Cardona Univ. Colombia faculty
Kevin Schultz BNL Chemistry Todd Clatterbuck
Raytheon Corp. William Sherry Stony
Brook Ashfia Huq Argonne Lab Wade Smith
Alberto Iglesias New York Univ. Natasa Stojic
Trieste Jiangyong Jia Columbia Univ. Corrie
Vaa Daniel Kaplan Intel Corp. Keith Welsh
Rad. Oncology SB Bertram Klein Univ. Heidelberg
John Wilson Univ. N. Carolina Takeshi Koike
Stony Brook Gabor Zala
15
Incoming graduate students
Bandres Miguel Mexico ITESM Baumer Florian Ge
rmany W?rzburg University Bochmann Joerg Germany
W?rzburg University Da Silva Tiago Portugal Tec
hnical Univ. of Lisbon Dahms Torsten Germany W?
rzburg University Emerson Nathan US Union
College Fleckenstein Holger Germany Stony Brook
Flickinger Daniel US Stanford
Hammons Lee US Stony Brook
Herner Kenneth US Notre Dame Huang Xiaojing C
hina Fudan University Huang Yu-tin China Natio
nal Taiwan University Kiermaier Michael Germany U
niversity Munchen Kinoshita Megumi Japan City
College of New York Lange Almar Germany W?rzburg
University Langhojer Florian Germany W?rzburg
University McCumber Michael US University of
Arizona Meltzer Jory US Stony Brook
Nichols Sarah US Williams College Schmidt Ch
ristian Germany W?rzburg University Stroud Nichol
as US Univ. of Wisconsin Vavilkin Tatjana Germ
any University of Bonn Yu Jie China Nanjing
University Sun Tao China Tsinghua University
16
Undergraduate Degrees
Undergrad degrees May/August 2003 (where did
they go? Over ½ to grad school) Michael
Adler grad school in spring Doug Broege Univ.
of Michigan physics Matthew Bubelink Univ.
Central Florida Jennifer Cameron high school
teaching Constantinos Constantinou Penn State
Univ. Tara Falcone Masters in Teaching/Stony
Brook Evan Guarnaccia Univ. Kansas Corrine
Lamb Johns Hopkins Univ. Jiann
Lee Marketing/education company Vincent
Lore Rennsaleer Polytechnical Univ. Jose
Mawyin grad school in spring Jory
Meltzer grad student Stony Brook Fouad
Nasraddine CUNY Atmospheric science Gurpreet
Singh SUNY Downstate Medical Chris
Werth Collider Accelerator Dept/ BNL
17
News of other recent BS graduates
Daniel Dasilva (12/02) is in the School of
Optics, Univ. of Arizona Robert Wlodarczyk (5/02)
won Microsofts 2003 Imagine Cup Programming
Competition and went to the world championship
where he placed fourth. He has accepted a full
time position with Microsoft Brian Levine (5/02)
Teaching gifted high school students in NY
City Keith Carney (1998) Res. Assistant,
Geophysical Institute, Univ. Alaska Michael
Daffner (2000) Satellite controller with Sirius
Satellite Radio
18
Teacher of the year
Chris Jacobsen was honored as the Best Teacher by
the graduating seniors
19
The former Math, Physics Astronomy Library was
rededicated today
The Peter B. Kahn Library of Mathematics,
Physics and Astronomy is named to commemorate
Peters many contributions to the library, his
belief in the power of books to transform lives,
and his generosity to those who have studied
here.
20
Simons Lecturers
The bequest by the Simons Foundation will be used
this year to sponsor two special lecturers who
will visit the department for a week or more and
give a combination of colloquium and seminar
level talks. The lecturers will also be
available for discussions and interactions with
students and faculty. Lecturers were chosen to
present recent advances of physics and astronomy,
and to represent theoretical fields not strongly
represented at Stony Brook. David Spergel of
Princeton University will bring news of the
recent WMAP satellite measurements (and other
experiments) of cosmological parameters. He will
visit for the week of March 15-19. (Host Michal
Simon) Henk Stoof of the University of Utrecht
will discuss theoretical aspects of Bose Einstein
condensation. His visit will span several weeks
starting in mid-April. (Host Hal Metcalf)
21
The building
PHYSICS AND MATH BUILDING MASONRY REPAIR
STATUS Current Project Status Masonry probes
were performed in March 2003 to determine the
condition of the masonry facade, corner soldier
brick courses, masonry column enclosures, and
relieving angle structures by all the windows.
Scope of Work for the masonry repairs are
defined. Budgetary Cost estimates for masonry
repair and new roof were completed 1.86M A
project start date has not been scheduled because
the NYS Legislature has not allocated a Capital
Budget for any state universities or
colleges. The good news is that when the Capital
Budget is finally allocated by the State
Legislature, The Physics and Math Building is at
the top of the list. A Scope of Work and cost
estimate has been completed, and the project is
ready for engineering design.
22
The building
WATER LEAKS (Big problems over the
summer) Most of the perimeter of the roof
mechanical room has been sealed against water
penetrations due to rain. The Mechanical room
rain scuppers and downspouts have been repaired
to eliminate water leaks from the roof. However,
the cooling coil condensate trays for AC-1 and
AC-2 cannot be relined and waterproofed until the
cooling season is over, and the air handlers can
be shut down and condensate trays drained. In
addition, two mechanical room floor drain
plumbing lines will be repaired during the
shutdown.
On the roof
In the building
23
The building
Retrofit of building air handler fan drives
SEMPRA Energy Corp. is completing the engineering
design and bid process for computerized
energy-efficient control of all campus HVAC
climate control systems. The first phase will be
approximately a 25M contract to install energy
efficient air supply and return fan motors.
Estimated to begin in January 04. Calpine
COGEN Partners Construction plans for a new
79 MWatt generating plant was reviewed by the
SUNY Board of Trustees. The project has been
cancelled due to space, building, and noise
restrictions. Our current campus electrical power
distribution system maxed out at 40
MWatts. Blackout of Aug. 14 Emergency
generator regulator failed this resulted in
damage to our fire alarm electronics panel. The
system is now back up and operating but backup
systems are not yet in place. Projects
ongoing Repairs to fire alarm system, emergency
generator Telescope dome on ESS roof Graduate
student office furniture replacement Undergraduate
laboratory chairs replacement
Shipment arrived today!
24
Research highlights of the past year
What I will show is only the tip of the iceberg.
My thanks for all the input, and apologies for
not giving all the lovely advances of the past
year the full attention (or understanding) they
deserve.
Phys/Astro merger
Physical Sciences and Math research expenditures
Physics and Astronomy 13M (14th in the
nation) highest in the university
25
C.N. YANG ITP
  • SUSY, STRINGS
  • INTEGRABLE MODELS IN STAT MECH, QUANTUM COMPUTING
  • NEUTRINOS, QCD, HIGGS BEYOND THE STANDARD MODEL

A Selection
Covariant Quantization of Strings Geometry and
String Theory M. Rocek, P. Grassi P.van
Nieuwenhuizen Bound-state Gravity, W. Siegel
K.-Y. Lee
de Sitter Space L. Anguelova, P.Langfelder P.J.
de Smet
Virial Coefficients in Liquids N. Clisby
B.McCoy Number Theory Solvable Models, V.
Korepin
Global fits for neutrinos, Neutrinos and Solar
Dynamics, C. Gonzalez-Garcia , Neutrinos,
symmetry breaking, R. Shrock, N. Christenson
QCD Radiation, C.Berger, T.. Kucs, G. Sterman,
Higgs Cross Sections, B. Field, J.
Smith Glueball dynamics, A. Goldhaber
Presidents Thesis Award, 2003
Students
26
Simons Workshops on Mathematics and Physics
(First of five summer workshops at the
intersection of mathematics and physics in string
theory and integrable models
Other recent Conferences Neutrinos, Supergravity
, Quantum Computing (with PA, Math, IMS)
27
50M KOPIO experiment to measure CP violation in
KL ? p0 n n at Brookhaven was approved by NSF and
Congress with Mike Marx as Project Manager. The
KOPIO summer interns made a game to recognize the
nifty events in real time. (http//www.phy.bnl.gov
/millerc/KOPhome.html)
  Within the last few milli-seconds, Earth has
been threatened by a group of evil Alien
physicists and only you (yes, I'm speaking to
you) can stop their evil plot of world
domination. As a sign of their fairness, they
offer us a "best of out of seven competition," to
decide our fate. If we win, the Aliens will halt
their assault on Earth and offer us the highly
coveted secret of making 20 minute brownies in 15
minutes. However, if we lose, they plan to do
something really, really, really evil and bad
like...so evil that it would make evil people
seem less eviler.
          The Aliens have already defeated us in
Chinese Checkers, arm wrestling (Props to the
ripped Zriged), and leap frog. However, we
earthlings have destroyed them in tic-tac-toe,
ultimate-frisbee, and badminton. Now, it comes
down to the tie-breaker and you have been chosen.
The category that you have selected is Quantum
Nonlinear Higher-Dimensional Theoretical
Mathematics.           After five grueling
hours, the final score is 10,832 to -3, and it's
not in your favor. In other words, you LOST!!!!
Good going, Einstein. The earth has been doomed
because of your failure. Then, a minute later,
you begin to cry (you big baby). The Aliens look
upon thee, and decide to give you a second
chance, while laughing at your pitiful self. They
decide on this game....if you feel bold,
press the "Enter" button to save the
world.
28
Chang Kee Jung, Clark McGrew, C.Yanagisawa
Nucleon decay and Neutrino Group
SuperK-II Detector reconstruction complete,
taking data
Papers written/edited by the Stony Brook group in
2002 SuperK Detector NIM paper Supernova Relic
Neutrino search PRL paper (M.Malek PhD)
UNO 13 times larger than SuperK
HEPAP Facilities Committee Report Mar.
2003 Rated Scientific Potential of UNO
Absolutely Central ? Ready to submit planning
proposal
K2K-IFirst successful long baseline (250km)
neutrino oscillation experiment
  • Observes neutrino oscillation 3s level
  • Confirms SuperK atm neutrino results

JHFnu 50 times more powerful than K2K
  • Look for ne appearance, measure sin2q13
  • precision measurement of sin2q23 and Dm232

29
DØ Experiment
J. Hobbs, R. McCarthy, M. Rijssenbeek, P. Grannis
New tracker working very well Si mstrip and
Scint. fiber. See w, f, J/y, y, U, Z ?
mm with excellent resolution.
Bs -gt mm
Luminosity now well above Run I
John Hobbs led the Higgs group new best limit on
H? WW nearing prediction of some models
Higgs -gt WW search
Run I
30
Search for exotic H (grad student Marian
Zdrazil)
DØ Experiment
B lifetime measurement (postdoc Wendy Taylor).
Competitive with previous world data
Limit set at MHgt 115 GeV best in world
New DØ measurement of top quark pair cross
section at 2 TeV.
e
Top quark candidate
m
j2
j1
31
Computational Astrophysics Achievements (Lattimer,
Prakash, Swesty, Wijers)
  • Developed next-generation 2-D supernova explosion
    model on 6000 processor IBM SP _at_ LBNL (largest
    unclassified machine in US!)
  • New model for predicting supernova and
    proto-neutron star neutrino signals
  • Carried out first multi-dimensional model of
    Gamma ray burst shock interactions
  • Developed new technique for solving Boltzmann
    equation on adaptively refined meshes (allows
    simulation of multi-scale radiation-hydrodynamic
    phenomena)
  • Established a Beowulf cluster in ESS for code
    development data analysis

32
The SMARTs telescopes at Cerro Tololo Stony
Brook, Yale, American Museum of Natural History,
Ohio State, Johns Hopkins and Georgia State
formed a consortium to operate three 1 meter
class telescopes. Stony Brook has rights for
about 100 nights of observations. Stony Brook
effort led by Fred Walter and Mike Simon.
33
This data was analyzed by V. Lore (USB 2003) as
part of an AST487 senior research project and A.
Nencke, an REU visiting student in summer 2003.
34
Deane Peterson has used optical interferometry to
deduce the oblateness of hot, rapidly spinning
stars, near the breakup angular velocity. Data
are consistent with gravitationally induced
surface brightnesses and further measurements
will test the 1924 theory. These are the first
measurements of the orientation of rotation axes
of an individual star other than the sun.
35
Aaron Evans, Phil Solomon have studied ultra
luminous infrared galaxies ULIGs which are
high red shift objects with the IR luminosity
comparable to that of quasars.
Evans et al. data
False color IR images with molecular gas contours
HST optical image
ULIGs are massive galaxies in the making with
O(102) ordinary star formation rates. They are
probably Quasars in formation, with gas feeding
the supermassive black holes. The recently
launched Space Infrared Telescope Facility will
examine these objects in much more detail.
36
Visiting Professor Paul Hickson has recently
operated the LZT 6 m liquid mercury telescope
near Vancouver and obtained FWHM image resolution
of 3 arc sec. Improvements to the mirror can
bring this down to the target 1 1.5 arc sec.
LZT is a prototype for the LAMA array, led by Ken
Lanzetta of 18 such liquid mirrors of 8-10 m
diameter, whose equivalent light gathering is
that of a 40 m diameter single mirror! LAMA is
presently in its Phase 0, leading to a Conceptual
Design Report for external review at the
beginning of 2004.
37
Jet Quenching at RHIC in AuAu
Axel Drees, Tom Hemmick, Barbara Jacak
Ph.D. Thesis J.Jia 8/03 nucl-ex/0308006 ? PRC
  • Alternative explanations of jet quenching
  • Final state energy loss gluon bremsstrahlung
  • Initial state saturation of gluon distribution
  • color glass condensate

Nuclear Modification Factor
PHENIX Au-Au at ?sNN 200 GeV
Suppression by factor 5
Jet quenching well established
38
Control Experiment d-Au in Spring 2003
dAu Control Experiment
Au Au Experiment
d-Au experiment Initial state effects present
in Au nucleus Reaction volume to small for jet
absorption
nucl-ex/0308006
Preliminary Data
Different and opposite centrality evolution of
AuAu experiment from dAu control
Jet suppression is clearly a final state effect
39
C.Vaman et al.,
Chirality discovery with GAMMASPHERE before HULK
104Rh
D. Fossan, K. Starosta, T. Koike et al. showed
the existance of chiral pairs of nuclear states
nearly symmetric left-and right-handed pairs.
40
David Fossan and Kris Starosta conducted
experiments at the Gammasphere for the past 8
years. This year, the movie The Incredible Hulk
featured Gammasphere as the cause of Dr. David
Banners transformation into the Hulk, and the
object of Hulks rage. Hollywood made
a 1M replica of
the 25M detector.
41
Gerry Brown, Edward Shuryak, Jac Verbaarschot,
Ismail Zahed
42
(No Transcript)
43
Subsequent elaboration of this sticky molasses
idea by Brown, Lee, Rho and Shuryak
44
Condensed matter theory
Phil Allen and Sasha Abanov work with their
colleagues on electrical polarity in ferro- and
antiferroelectrics and applications to
nanosystems.
Sasha Abanov also studies topological methods in
theory of low-dimensional electron systems.
Selected Publications
axon
Y. Lin, E. E. Mendez, and A. G. Abanov, Phys.
Rev. B 66, 195311 (2002) Tunneling
Characteristics of an Electron-Hole Trilayer in a
Parallel Magnetic Field. A.G. Abanov and V. E.
Korepin, Nucl. Phys. B 647 FS, 565 (2002) On
the probability of ferromagnetic strings in
antiferromagnetic spin chains.
dendrite
Dima Averin works on theory of solid state
quantum computation and mesoscopic quantum
measurements. Last year, he collaborated with a
group at NEC in the first demonstration of
quantum coherent dynamics of two coupled
Josephson-junction qubits.
Yu.A. Pashkin et al., Nature 421, 823 (2003).
45
NEUROMORPHIC NETWORKS BASED ON HYBRID
CMOS/MOLECULAR CIRCUITS
W. Chen, E. Cimpoiasu, K. Likharev, X. Liu, J.
Lukens, A. Mayr (Chemistry), I. Muckra, Ö. Türel
Motivation
Cerebral Cortex 107 neural cells/cm2
1011 synapses/cm2 (a major challenge!)
axon
dendrite
synapse
CrossNet Circuits -1012 synapses/cm2
- speed x105 of bio (estimates)
Basic Idea
Current Research Issues - experimental
implementation and characterization of molecular
synapses - CrossNet architecture development
and training (on numerical models, using
supercomputer cluster Njal)
46
Condensed matter experiment investigations of
Vladimir Goldman, Emilio Mendez, Laszlo Mihaly,
Peter Stephens examine a wide range of systems on
campus and at the BNL light source.
IR studies of strong electron correlations
Quantum dots
Fullerenes
Semiconductor microcavities
n-type Al As/AlGaAS Left mirror
47
MANIPULATING ATOMS WITH THE BICHROMATIC FORCE
Why the bichromatic force (2 lasers at different
n) ???
Its HUGE, and it spans a HUGE velocity range!!!
VELOCITY SPACE MAP
Hal Metcalf
The left shows the result of the ordinary optical
force used for laser cooling for the past 20
years. It moves atoms from one small region of
velocity space to another close by. The plot is a
line-out of intensity.
The right side shows that the bichromatic force
collects atoms from a MUCH larger region of
velocity space (dark area) and also moves them by
a MUCH larger amount (brightness), indicating a
MUCH larger force.
The arrow shows the force direction, and thus the
velocity change. The plots are on the same scale.
48
Molecular manipulations Cold molecule
production through Photoassociation and
Controlled photodissociation through pulse shaping
CH3
Tom Weinacht
PA
Rb 5S Cs 6P
Raman transfer?
Tom Bergeman
CH3CO
Rb 5S Cs 6S
molecules have same translational temperature as
atoms

fragment mass ?
  • Predictions of interesting properties for a Bose
    condensate of polar species.
  • Vibrationally excited Rb Cs molecules trapped in
    wells E field gradient allows addressing
    individual sites so each molecule is a cubit
  • Possible system for quantum computation.
  • Fragmentation of CH3-CO-CH3 molecule depends on
    laser pulse shape.
  • Can discover optimal pulse shapes for selective
    fragmentation using feedback

49
X-ray optics microscopy
  • Group of Jacobsen and Kirz physics of x-ray
    optics and microscopy, and applications in
    biology and environmental science.
  • Undulator beamlines at NSLS, NSF Center for
    Environmental Science, BNL Center for Functional
    Nanomaterials. Funding NSF, NIH, NASA.
  • Two examples shown below more is going on in
    the group!
  • Spectromicroscopy
  • X-ray absorption edges have near-edge resonances
    which indicate chemical binding state
  • Chemical speciation at 40 nm resolution!
    Complexity is sorted out using cluster analysis.
  • Environmental science look at metal,
    radionuclide uptake and transport in groundwater
    colloids
  • Astrobiology amino acids in interplanetary dust
    particles?
  • Biology correlate morphology with chemistry to
    guide selection of sperm for in-vitro
    fertilization
  • This example H. Fleckenstein, M. Lerotic.
    Purple DNA. Brown flagellar motor. Yellow
    lipids. Red mitochondria.

Diffraction/diffraction tomography 3D imaging at
and beyond lens limit. This image diffraction
pattern of one yeast cell. D. Shapiro, E. Lima
(plus T. Beetz diffraction tomography).
50
  • A wealth of exciting physics and astronomy has
    emerged your work over the past year.
  • The students, research associates and faculty at
    Stony Brook are recognized as being at the
    leading edge in many of the most important areas
    of science.
  • We welcome the new students to our community,
    and wish them every success in even more exciting
    enterprises to come.

Reception outside the Department Office (in the
keg circle) follows !
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