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Sunday, August 2, 2020

Life as a Physics Major- Research and Junior Lab(Part 2)

Life as a Physics Major- Research and Junior Lab(Part 2) A month and a half ago, I posted the first part of my series introduction to [emailprotected] This entry has been a while coming. I started drafting 2 weeks ago. At which time I wrote the following before I gave up: To say that Ive been busy would be pretty false. Ive been doing next to nothing. The IAP tide has crept ashore and Ive been simply floating happily around campus, letting wave after wave of indolence wash over me. My days are filled with tennis, swimming, gymnastics, cheerleading, road trips, and guitar hero III. I learned how to ski; I beat a song on hard; I nailed a back handspring first time since high school; I can flip underwater; Ive been helping my friend edit his personal statements for grad schools; and in the process Ive completely forgotten what was supposed to go into this entry. Since then, Ive hooked up with the TESS satellite folks again this time to do some research on the payload (science instruments) side of things. I just finished drafting a proposal, and since Ive got all this writing momentum, I pulled up this particular work in progress. We expect that this will turn into a senior thesis (in physics) for me, exactly how, were still a little muddy on, but theres certainly no shortage of work on the team. An excerpt from the proposal: The search for transiting exoplanets pushes CCD instrumentation to its photometric limit. The crossing of an earth-sized planet in front of its parent star sometimes results in an imperceptible but measurable reduction in brightness of the star. The missions goals rely on the ability of our instruments to positively identify and record these occasional tiny dips in photon flux by one-tenth or one-hundredth of a percent. Determining the sensitivity of our instruments ultimately requires us to establish a noise floor given the parameters of the mission. Contributions include dark currents, CCD pixel-to-pixel variation, readout noise, spacecraft jitter, and pointing error, among other randomly or pseudo-randomly occuring disturbances. My job, at least initially, will be to experimentally characterize this noise, and in doing so calculate the photometric precision or resolution achievable with our current assembly. Familiarity with all spacecraft instruments and a detailed understanding of the CCD system will be key to successful completion of this portion of the project. Once this important figure has been found to a high degree of accuracy, the question then remains concerning the expected scientific turnout: what types of exoplanets are we sensitive enough to discover? And in what quantities? More and more I have found, in research nowadays, there are no quick and significant projects. Quick, sexy, independent projects usually dont result in much, and the really cutting-edge, the really world-changing stuff, like LIGO, like at the Yale lab the search for WIMPs (whose facilities we toured), like JWST (the descendant of Hubble Space Telescope), like the Mileura Widefield Array (though they changed their name to something uglier), anyways, stuff like that, they take a long time. And as an undergraduate, you will ever only really touch a tiny piece of it. I have to admit my attraction to the latter types of projects, I really prefer to be a small part of something big than a big part of something small. Personal preference, of course. Eventually, maybe you and I will find ourselves a big part of something big, and of course that will come with its own rewards. :P Undergraduate years, its all about building up. IAP freshman year I had no clue what I was doing but somehow I found myself working on Artificial Gravity at the Man-Vehicle Laboratory. Back then, I still wanted to be a Course 16 (Aero-Astro) major. Not much came of it, of course, since besides 8.012, I didnt know much. But it was definitely good experience, and as you will find, early UROPs serve primarily as stepping stones onto internships, other UROPs, more independent work, more interaction with the research team, more contribution on your part. By the end of freshman year Id taken more foundational courses, I had 6.001 (the old scheme intro to programming), 18.03, 8.022 under my belt, and over the summer I worked for LIGO, with the Burst Team. Summer after Sophomore year, this past summer, I joined the TESS satellite team (a mission still in its proposal stages) as an intern. By then I had a much more complete set of skills and conducted mostly independent analyses which I then squeezed into three separate white papers. While I was doing all this, I also got to be in California. Classes prepare you for all the research (that you will eventually conduct) in a tangential but crucial way. A good researcher is a knowledge-skill dualBot. Able to couple an impressive skillset with years of comprehensive study of a subject. Classes usually give you the latter, (Save your notes.) but sometimes, they can offer a little of both. Junior lab I (8.13), as Ive started talking about in this entry, for example, consists of a total of 6 experiments- 2 introductory experiments so that you familiarize yourself with the usual mess of wires, the format of the whole thing, and what is expected of you, and 4 full-length experiments. On average we have about 2 weeks per full-length experiment. A lab guide is provided (the example shown is for a muons experiment- considered one of the easier 8.13 experiments) and gives you, to varying degrees and uncertain levels of detail, an overview of the lab and some basic experimental procedures and techniques. The rest is up to you. A grades are supposely given to those who somehow show aptitude beyond that required by the lab guide. We pick from the class a partner (and you will spend a lot of time with this partner) and pick from a hat a number that determines our experimental lines. This is less a way of looking fancy than a necessity due to the limited number of each experimental set-up (in most cases just one) and the need to stagger the 8-9 groups per lab period that will be fighting for counter space. Lab days are either Mondays and Wednesdays, or Tuesdays and Thursdays, where on each day we have a chunk of 3 uninterrupted hours in the lab. Fridays are open lab days: opportunity for groups to sign up and work on an experiment they have yet to finish (collect better data, fix errors, in some cases redo the whole thing). As you can imagine, Fridays are quite busy. For the introductory experiments, we are allowed one lab day each. My partner, Pablo, and I wound up doing the Photoelectric Effect and Poisson Statistics. If you find us on the experimental lines page, youll see the full-length experiments we performed and their order. I would say the hardest part about the whole class is the timeline overlap between experiments. Even ideally, you wind up writing your paper and preparing your oral and sometimes even finishing up analysis for the last experiment a week into the next. Also, its killer to get behind. On the first day, were handed a formidable looking volume: Were told to respect the volume (they cost $40 on special order) and fill the vessel with our acquired knowledge and wisdom. Were told that it will be collected periodically and we will be evaluated on how well we have used it. Were given a pat on the back by seasoned physicists and sent on our way. At first, for me, this did not go very well. The first notebook check at the end of September I got a 60/100. But I learned. By the next I got an 80/100 and eventually worked my way up to a 90. Heres a look inside my 8.13 notebook- which I filled cover-to-cover (150 pages): Some Graphs from Poisson Lab Notes from Alpha Decay Lab Calculations from Cosmic-Ray Muons Lab Our first official lab was X-Ray Physics the 15 part experiment. Unfortunately for my partner and me, we didnt realize that some parts were optional until wed gone into 3 extra Friday sessions in a desperate attempt to finish the lab. Extra time was given to our first lab to account for equipment familiarization and just general intimidation. Our germanium solid-state detector. The ionization chamber is kept at a chilly ~80K to reduce noise- underneath it there you see the nitrogen tank. Row of Geiger-Counters :P sitting on a lead box full of radioactive isotopes. We go into this box a lot for the X-Rays experiment. This is my graded first paper: Experiments in X-Ray Physics. It was way too long. It could have been better a lot of work went into this though. The most rewarding thing about this whole course is really the improvement. Mostly through repetition and the sense of urgency, you feel yourself becoming a more fluent experimentalist with every lab you complete. Ive uploaded three papers into the same folder linked above. Take a look if you are interested in the kind of written product we churn out, but by no means feel obligated :) The other two arent graded, Im not sure where I put their graded counterparts. (Note: I did not upload the Rutherford Scattering lab. Because I hate it.) Here, take a look around: Foreground: really ghetto way of shielding the Rutherford set-up from photon noise. Background: The saddest tree on earth. An experiment I did not perform. I have no idea. Maybe Frank-Hertz? Maybe second semester. Lots of cables with alligator mouths :) Our quantum computer. I hear the concept is awesome but the lab totally blows. Grapevine. Relativistic Dynamics experiment is the big wire ball with the fan blowing at it. We wanted to do this one but we did not get it, we wanted muons more. Speaking of muons muons are great. Heres me standing next to the plastic scintillator for muon lifetime experiment. Muons are flying through my body, and Im lovin it. Thanks Scott for the picture :D Scott is fun. Scott will save your life multiple times, I guarantee it. Compton Scattering! Its okay, I hear. Uh, bookcase? Look closer. Pulsed NMR setup. The magnets for it. Alpha decay, the final lab we did. The set-up looks so weak but its considered one of the hardest experiments. Table of nuclides. We had to memorize this. No, Im kidding. Optical Pumping next semester. I hear this one is temperamental. Will do my best to avoid. Oral presentations are a pretty big part of Junior Lab. With every paper is an accompanying 15 minute PowerPoint presentation (here, Im giving the example of my slides from Alpha Decay, which I ended up choosing for my public oral as well) given to the professor and TA of your section. These are videotaped for review with a communications instructor. In total, 5 are taped in these settings and the last is a public oral given to the class and all the instructors and all your friends and are supposedly taped and put on the internet I havent been able to find it thusfar, but Ill put my public oral up if I do. Mine was well-attended seeing as I invited my hall. The public orals are held in succession and in these big end-of-term parties with pizza and drinks and victory speeches given by professors like football coaches after a big game. Youre encouraged to come back for another semester: which the eventual 8 majors do, but some dont. We lose friends, partners. Im sad to report that my partner will not be joining me in 8.14. Likewise, my new lab partner, Chris, is also newly orphaned. All in all, a busy semester behind me and an equally busy semester ahead, Im going into the last week of IAP feeling not quite as bored and relaxed as I would have hoped, knowing once semester starts its another marathon to the finish. Spring semester has been historically more manageable for me, I like the days getting longer the breeze getting warmer, the flowers and the leaves on trees and just the whole outlook really agrees with me. On my plate is 8.14, 8.06 (Quantum III, communication intensive, with a paper at the end), a writing class yet to be decided, and perhaps a history class. Im leaving some time to do work for the non-profit Im a part of, to be a cheerleader, to publish our lit/art magazine, and start research for my senior thesis. A new terms is nigh; theres no time to waste. 4 years go by pretty quickly. -Lulu

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