PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM Fall 2024
All Colloquia will take place on Thursdays at 1:30pm
Location: 111 Smith Hall.
Schedule Spring 2025
August 22th | NO COLLOQUIUM – First Week of School |
August 29th | NO COLLOQUIUM - First week of Labs |
September 5 | Speaker: Jorge Lopez, University of Texas El Paso Title: Italian delicacies served up in a neutron star crust. Abstract: The study of heavy ion reactions has taught us that nuclear matter has liquid and gaseous phases, phase changes, critical behavior, and many rich phenomena. Here a summary of theoretical efforts leading to the understanding of the thermodynamics of nuclear matter will be presented, including recent ones that study possible “pasta” like structures of neutron star crusts. *, J.A. Muñoz and J.A. López, Dynamics 2024, 4(1), 157-169. |
September 12 | NO COLLOQUIUM |
September 19 | Speaker: Nayana Shah, Washington University in St. Louis Title: Reimagining a complex quantum system: turning fermions to bosons, bosons to fermions Abstract: To explore and understand complex interacting systems, often the first step is to pose probing questions, both theoretically and experimentally, and to identify the relevant degrees of freedom for the conditions of interest. This then allows one to construct a model for the system that captures the interplay of those chosen variables. But this model may still not be amenable to theoretical analysis. One of the elegant ways to proceed is to seek a change of variables that transforms the model into a simplified form and at the same time advances the quest for identifying the emergent degrees of freedom at play. Transforming fermion fields to boson fields has been one such method of choice in low-dimensional strongly correlated quantum systems for the last five decades. Bosonization is a non-trivial transformation that in the case of the celebrated Luttinger model, transforms interacting one-dimensional fermions into free bosons and reveals the emergence of spin-charge separation. Another key paradigm for strong-coupling physics comes from the Kondo model for a localized impurity spin interacting with a conduction electron sea. Here too bosonization helps, and with additional unitary transformations leads to a solvable point. At this so-called Toulouse point, the reorganized bosons can now be transformed back to fermions to obtain a resonant-level model. After reviewing these ideas I will talk about work done over the last decade to put forth and establish a consistent way of implementing these transformations. To do so, I will share the story of its genesis in our discovery of inconsistencies and symmetry violations as we resolved a non-equilibrium transport puzzle. I will then conclude with the insights we have gained from our in-depth analysis of the multi-channel Kondo model using solvable points and renormalization group methods to compare the old/conventional and new/consistent ways of implementing the "bosonization-debosonization" program. Host: Benjamin Fregoso |
September 26 | Speaker: Maxim Dzero, 鶹Ƶ Title: Spontaneous synchronization: from fireflies to superconductors Abstract: The tendency to synchronize is one of the most ubiquitous and at the same time mysterious drives in all of nature. In the first part of my talk, I will show how the work of scientists from various disciplines came to the intriguing realization that the study of synchrony could deepen our understanding of not only certain aspects of human behavior or enormous congregations of fireflies blinking on and off in complete unison, but also the collectively synchronous behavior of 1023 electrons in advanced quantum materials. I will then proceed and discuss an example of how the tendency to spontaneously synchronize emerges in conventional superconductors which are driven out of equilibrium by an external electromagnetic radiation. Finally, I will discuss how this phenomenon of spontaneous synchronization in superconductors can be probed experimentally. Host: Physics department |
October 3rd | NO COLLOQUIUM - Fall Break |
October 10th | NO COLLOQUIUM - APS Meeting (Division of Nuclear Physics) |
October 17th | Speaker: Veronica Dexheimer, 鶹Ƶ Title: Using Neutron Stars to Reveal the Secrets of Dense Matte Abstract: Matter inside neutron stars and their mergers can reach densities of more than 10 times normal nuclear density. In such extreme environments, new particles and phases of matter appear, as well as different interactions become important. In this talk, I review old and new ways to use neutron star observable to learn about dense matter, comment on what we know and what we expect to discover within the next years concerning dense matter, and provide an overview of modern ways to build and share dense matter descriptions (usually referred to as equations of state). Host: Physics department |
October 24th | NO COLLOQUIUM |
October 31th | Speaker: Melanie Good, University of Pittsburgh Title: Student Perceptions of Physics Abstract: Understanding the subjective perspectives of physics students can help inform physics instructors as they design their course structure and pedagogical strategies to promote a positive learning environment. I will discuss several strands of research I have conducted that shed light on these issues. Using survey data collected over multiple semesters, I will discuss how introductory STEM students perceive problem-solving and course demands in physics. I will also share an investigation into the beliefs of non-STEM majors about science vs. pseudoscience in physics. Finally, I will conclude with a qualitative analysis, based on open-ended survey responses, of graduate TA perspectives on introductory physics problems. Host: Peter Tandy |
November 7th | NO COLLOQUIUM |
November 14th | Speaker: Jonathan Selinger, 鶹Ƶ Title: Reformulation of elasticity theory for liquid crystals and lipid membranes. Abstract: In this talk, we suggest mathematical reformulations of two classic concepts in the theory of soft matter: the Oseen-Frank free energy for nematic liquid crystals and the Helfrich free energy for lipid membranes. For nematic liquid crystals, the free energy becomes the sum of squares of four modes (splay, twist, bend, and a fourth bulk mode related to saddle-splay). For lipid membranes, it becomes the sum of squares of two modes (the sum and difference of principal curvatures). In each case, the reformulation shows how molecular shape and ordering can induce director gradients or membrane curvature. Hence, it provides a unified framework to understand the wide variety of modulated phases in liquid crystals and curved microstructures in lipid membranes. Host: Physics department |
Special colloquium November 19th, 1pm- 2pm 111 Smith Hall
| Speaker: Gerardo Valle, Universidad de Guadalajara Title: Immersion, narrative and virtual reality: tools for the construction of new educational possibilities Abstract: The construction of learning in upper secondary education involves the collaboration of multiple actors involved in the educational process. The teacher, as an expert in the content, must be able to adapt, fragment and mediate knowledge to achieve a transformation in learning that transcends both the emotion it provokes and the thematic content it addresses. Therefore, we propose an adaptation in teaching practice through experiential education and immersive teaching. This critical-creative approach incorporates intellectual and reflective levels in a participatory manner, through the formation of production communities that connect the teacher and the student with various multidisciplinary challenges based on the learning needs of the study units. Host: Physics department |
November 28th | NO COLLOQUIUM - Thanksgiving Break |
Special colloquium December 3rd, 1pm- 2pm 111 Smith Hall | Speaker: Daniela Cywiak, University of Guanajuato Title: Dynamics and Transport Properties of Dipolar and Non-Dipolar Liquid Crystals Studied via DMC Simulations and the Reaction Field Method. Abstract: Liquid crystals are materials that combine the structural ordering of solids with the fluidity of liquids. This work focuses on studying the dynamic and viscoelastic properties of colloidal liquid crystal systems composed of spherocylindrical particles. Using dynamic Monte Carlo simulations, we analyze dynamic properties such as self-diffusion coefficients. Additionally, by employing passive microrheology techniques, we study local viscoelastic properties to investigate how these properties are influenced by dipolar interactions. These results help us better understand the interplay between anisotropy, phase ordering, and long-range interactions in liquid crystal systems. Host: Physics department |
December 12th | NO COLLOQUIUM - Final Exam Week |