Sunday, November 25, 2012

November Science Cafe: Dr. Mark Monmonier (Syracuse) -- "Lake Effect: Tales of large Lakes, Arctic Winds and Recurrent Snows"



Our next Science Cafe will be this upcoming Tuesday, November 27, at 7pm at the Pittsford Plaza Barnes and Noble.


Dr. Mark Monmonier of Department of Geography and Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University will speak about his new book, "Lake Effect: Tales of large Lakes, Arctic Winds and Recurrent Snows", and we will have a book signing immediately afterwards.

Here's a link to his website, and to his author page at bn.com.

As always, refreshments will be provided courtesy of a NASA grant, and ASL interpretation available for our deaf and hard of hearing guests. We hope to see everyone there.

Also, remember to check back here soon, as we'll be announcing our Spring 2013 series of talks, for January-May 2013, sometime in the next couple of weeks.

Monday, October 22, 2012

October Science Cafe: Some Mathematical Characters, Crackpots and Crazies - Dr. Charles Groetsch



Our next Science Cafe will be this upcoming Tuesday, October 23, at 7pm at the Pittsford Plaza Barnes and Noble.

Dr. Charles Groetsch, the Traubert Chair of Mathematics and Computer Science at the Citadel in Charleston, SC, will speak on the topic of


"Some Mathematical Characters, Crackpots and Crazies" 
 
Are mathematicians different than other people? Are they crazier or just eccentric? Is there a mathematical personality? Is mathematics hazardous? Are mathematicians a danger to society? No answers to any of these questions are offered in this talk. My purpose is to illustrate, in the lives of some famous (and infamous) mathematicians, instances where breathtaking talent and creativity co-existed with astonishing wackiness, doleful tragedy, or dangerous fanaticism. 

From the SIAM website: "His main teaching interest is the integration of mathematics, history and physical science in the classroom. He is the author of several books, some of which have been published in Japanese and Chinese language editions, and numerous research papers in this area."

On November 27, Dr. Mark Monmonier of Department of Geography and Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University will speak about his new book, "Lake Effect: Tales of large Lakes, Arctic Winds and Recurrent Snows", and we will have a book signing immediately afterwards.

As always, refreshments will be provided courtesy of a NASA grant, and ASL interpretation available for our deaf and hard of hearing guests. We hope to see everyone there.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Fall 2012 Science Cafes announced

It is my pleasure to announce the fall schedule for the Rochester Science cafe, now entering its fourth year. We have an exciting run of visiting speakers ready for the fall, and hope to see everyone there starting in a week. As always, Cafes will be held on the fourth Tuesday of each month, in the Community Room of the Pittsford Plaza Barnes and Noble, starting at 7pm, with refreshments provided and ASL interpretation available for the deaf and hard-of-hearing community. Here is the lineup for the fall:


September 25: Dr. Beverly Berger
Former head of the National Science Foundation's Gravitational Physics Division

Title: Vignettes from Einstein's Theory of General Relativity: Examples of How Science Progresses

Abstract: I will briefly discuss up to five examples from Einstein's Theory of General Relativity. In each case, as appropriate, I will discuss the problem or issue, a (possibly funny) story from my own experience, the resolution or breakthrough, and the current state-of-the-art. The focus will be on lessons learned for the progress of science with the approach (I hope) cultural rather than technical.
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On October 23, Dr. Charles Groetsch, the Traubert Chair of Mathematics and Computer Science at the Citadel in Charleston, SC. From the SIAM website "His main teaching interest is the integration of mathematics, history and physical science in the classroom. He is the author of several books, some of which have been published in Japanese and Chinese language editions, and numerous research papers in this area."


On November 27, Dr. Mark Monmonier of Department of Geography and Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University will speak about his new book, "Lake Effect: Tales of large Lakes, Arctic Winds and Recurrent Snows", and we will have a book signing immediately afterwards.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

April Science Cafe

On Tuesday, April 24, we will have a talk by Dr. Craig Henriquez of Duke University on "The future of brain-machine interfaces".

Dr Henriquez is the head of Duke's Center for Neuroengineering, whose mission is the following:
The Center for Neuroengineering brings together engineers, biologists, physicists, mathematicians, neurologists and psychologists to advance the methodologies for the recording, imaging and analyzing normal and abnormal brain activity. The center brings new capabilities to the community of Neuroscientists on campus but will house state-of-the-art computational and fabrication facilities for developing novel technologies for the brain.

By partnering with existing departments, the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience and the Brain Imaging and Analysis Center and their outstanding faculties and facilities, the Center for Neuroengineering will become the intellectual hub for neuro-based technologies such as neurochips, system-level computational modeling, and in the application of electrophysiological and functional imaging techniques to both monitor and treat neurological diseases.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

February Science Cafe

On Tuesday, February 28, we will have a talk by Dr. Arie Bodek of the UofR on "The Search for the Higgs Boson".

The discovery of the Higgs boson has been, for many years, considered one of the so-called holy grails in particle physics. From the Exploratorium website run by the CERN Laboratory:

The question of mass has been an especially puzzling one, and has left the Higgs boson as the single missing piece of the Standard Model yet to be spotted. The Standard Model describes three of nature's four forces: electromagnetism and the strong and weak nuclear forces.... the search for the Higgs particle(s) is some of the most exciting research happening, because it could lead to completely new discoveries in particle physics. Some theorists say it could bring to light entirely new types of strong interactions, and others believe research will reveal a new fundamental physical symmetry called "supersymmetry."


Quoting wikipedia:

Bodek was awarded the 2004 American Physical Society W.K.H. Panofsky Prize in Experimental Particle Physics "for his broad, sustained, and insightful contributions to elucidating the structure of the nucleon, using a wide variety of probes, tools, and methods at many laboratories.... His doctoral thesis provided some of the evidence of the quark's existence that was the basis for the 1990 Nobel Prize in Physics."

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

January Science Cafe

Hi everyone,
We are returning in the winter/spring of 2012 with talks from January thru May. To lead off, we are excited to present a talk by Dr. Sukanta Bose, who is visiting us from Washington State University. The talk will be this coming Tuesday, January 24, 7pm at the Pittsford Plaza Barnes and Noble:


Gravitational Wave Astronomy: The Next Generation
Dr. Sukanta Bose (Washington State University)

The coming years are expected to yield the first direct detections of gravitational wave (GW) signals and plant the first steps in an entirely new branch of astronomy. Plans are already underway for the followup advances in detector technology (third generation, or "3G"), and we are already envisaging the maximal GW science potential that may be realizable with an earth-based detector within a decade. These detectors will probe the dark energy seemingly making up most of the universe's mass, independent of any other type of observations, explore the properties of the black holes thought to lie at the centers of all galaxies, and peer inside neutron stars where no current telescope can see, and we will describe all these potential results and many more.