• Physics Colloquium – Shuntaro Sumita

    Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Shuntaro Sumita, Kyoto University
    Topological Gapless Points in Superconductors: from the viewpoint of symmetry
    Topology in quantum physics has attracted much attention in recent condensed matter physics. One famous example is the topological insulator, which has a finite gap in its energy spectrum.

  • Physics Colloquium – Dr. Vincent Smith

    Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Dr. Vincent Smith, Honorary Research Fellow; University of Bristol (UK)
    CERN: An In-Depth Look

    CERN (near Geneva, Switzerland) was founded in 1954 by 12 European countries and now has 22 “member states.” I have been fortunate to have worked on experiments there since 1976, when the new Super Proton Synchrotron was commissioned. Since the late 1990’s, I have been a member of the Compact Muon Solenoid collaboration, one of the big experiments on CERN's Large Hadron Collider. I worked initially on the development, installation and commissioning of the Electromagnetic Calorimeter, a system of over 75,000 crystals of Lead Tungstate (PbWO_4) to measure the energy and direction of high energy gamma rays, electrons and positrons from collisions in the center of the detector.

  • No Physics Colloquium: Spring Break

    Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United States

    As the University is currently on Spring Break, there is no colloquium scheduled for Friday, March 22.

  • No Physics Colloquium Scheduled

    Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United States

    There is no Physics colloquium currently scheduled for this date.

  • Physics Colloquium – Aaron Viets

    Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Aaron Viets, PhD Candidate, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

    Optimizing Advanced LIGO's Scientific Output with Fast, Accurate, Clean Calibration

    Fast, accurate calibration of Advanced LIGO data is an essential part of gravitational-wave astronomy, necessary for prompt electromagnetic follow-up of gravitational-wave events and reliable estimation of source parameters.