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July 28, 2005 -- As almost 1,300 physics teachers meet at the
University of Utah, the public is invited to attend two events:
a Demonstration Show meant to display the magic of physics and
a Nobel Prize winner’s lecture on microscopic to atom-sized
“nanoscience.”
The free public events are sponsored by the University of Utah’s
Department of Physics and the American Association of Physics
Teachers, which is holding its Aug. 6-10 summer meeting on campus.
The Demonstration Show and lecture are part of the physics community’s
ongoing recognition of 2005 as the World Year of Physics, which
is being celebrated 100 years after Albert Einstein’s most
significant discoveries.
- The Demonstration Show will be held at 7:30 p.m. Monday Aug.
8 in Kingsbury Hall on Presidents Circle.
- Horst Stormer, who shared the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics,
will deliver a lecture on “Small Wonders: The World of
Nanoscience” at 4 p.m. Tuesday Aug. 9 in Kingsbury Hall.
During the Demonstration Show, Zigmund “Ziggy” Peacock,
University of Utah’s physics demonstrator, will be joined
by colleagues from Rutgers, Brigham Young, Idaho State, Brown,
Oregon State and other universities in providing loud and colorful
demonstrations of physics principles.
Details are still being worked out, but “we will certainly
shatter some glass with sound, and smash a concrete block on a
person sandwiched between two ‘beds of nails,’”
Peacock says. “We will try to show some of the magic that
is physics.”
Peacock also plans to use an air gun to shoot a 10-inch wooden
bullet at a stuffed toy cougar – the mascot of rival Brigham
Young University. Meanwhile, Wayne Peterson, BYU’s physics
demonstration coordinator, says he may drop a University of Utah
football helmet and fire a similar bullet at it to demonstrate
how gravity works on both the helmet and the bullet.
Stormer, who works at Columbia University in New York and Lucent
Technologies’ Bell Labs in New Jersey, will speak on nanoscience
and nanotechnology. Nano means one-billionth. Nanoscience and
nanotechnology encompass everything from a few atoms in size up
to just about what can be seen through a microscope.
“Atoms represent the most gigantic LEGO set of the universe
– everything is made from them – and the nanoscale
is the scale where the game becomes interesting for the first
time,” says a summary of Stormer’s lecture on the
physics teachers’ website. “This lecture will focus
on the nanoscale, its wondrous meeting of physics, chemistry,
biology and engineering, and its potential to shape our technological
future.”
Stormer shared the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics with Daniel Tsui
and Robert Laughlin for the discovery of the fractional quantum
Hall effect, or what has been described as how electrons exposed
to ultracold temperatures and strong magnetic fields can behave
more like a fluid than like particles.
Most other events during the summer meeting are open only to registered
participants, which include high school, college and university
physics teachers from around the world. However, on Monday Aug.
8 and Tuesday Aug. 9, local educators and the public may visit
the physics education exhibit hall that will be set up in the
university’s Olpin Union Building Ballroom. Such visitors
first must pick up a pass at the meeting registration desk in
Olpin Union’s Parlor A.
News media representatives seeking more information on the American
Association of Physics Teachers summer meeting may see the group’s
website at
http://www.aapt.org/Events/SM05/index.cfm
or contact Carol Heimpel, AAPT director of meetings, starting
Aug. 6 at her temporary office in Parlor C of the Olpin Union
Building, phone (801) 587-9773. Before the meeting, Heimpel may
be reached at (301) 209-3340.
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