黑料不打烊 Views Fall 2024
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Ten high school physics teachers from Upstate New York will spend three weeks this summer at 黑料不打烊 building cosmic ray counters, testing components of a neutrino detector and learning about the latest results of experiments being conducted on CERN鈥檚 Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, Switzerland.
Funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Department of Energy (DOE), the summer QuarkNet Program, hosted by the SU Experimental Particle Physics Group in the , provides professional development and ongoing support for teachers by linking them with researchers in the field of particle physics. This is the second year of funding for the program at SU. Last year, two high school physics teachers traveled to CERN to work directly with SU researchers who are conducting experiments on the LHC.
SU physicists Steven Blusk and Mitchell Soderberg are coordinating the high-energy group鈥檚 QuarkNet program. 鈥淭he program helps teachers become more effective in conveying the science of elementary particle physics and the excitement of this field of research to their students,鈥 Blusk says. 鈥淔or example, the cosmic ray devices the teachers will build are instruments most schools do not have, but which can help students get excited about physics. The devices will be available for loan to local high schools during the academic year.鈥
The three-week program (June 25-July 13) will include several lectures on particle physics and laboratory work, and a three-day, hands-on cosmic ray workshop presented by a QuarkNet representative, during which the teachers will build the cosmic ray devices. Other activities will include:
Participants receive a $1,500 stipend and a $200 materials budget for take-home activities. The experimental high-energy physics group participates in the LHCb collaboration at CERN. LHCb is one of four particle detectors located on the LHC ring. The experiment is dedicated to searching for new types of fundamental forces in nature, especially those that would help explain the disappearance of antimatter in the universe. The group is led by Professor Sheldon Stone and includes professors Marina Artuso and Tomasz Skwarnicki, as well as Blusk and Soderberg. Over the past three years, their research has garnered more than $3.1 million in federal funding, and has been continually funded by the NSF since the 1960s.
Participating teachers are:
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