Here are some links from the past week:
- I spent a big portion of this week attending Spin Caloritronics XI at scenic UIUC, for my first in-person workshop in three years. (The APS March Meeting this year was my first conference since 2019.) It was fun and a great way to get to meet and hear from experts in a field where I'm a relative newbie. While zoom and recorded talks have many upsides, the in-person environment is still tough to beat when the meeting is not too huge.
- Topical to the meeting, this review came out on the arxiv this week, all about the spin Seebeck effect and how the thermally driven transport of angular momentum in magnetic insulators can give insights into all sorts of systems, including ones with exotic spin-carrying excitations.
- Another article on a topic near to my heart is this new review (to appear in Science) about strange metals. It makes clear the distinction between strange and bad metals and gives a good sense of why these systems are interesting.
- On to videos. While at the meeting, Fahad Mahmood introduced me to this outreach video, by and about women in condensed matter at UIUC.
- On a completely unrelated note, I came across this short film from 1937 explaining how differential steering works in cars. This video is apparently well known in car enthusiast circles, but it was new to me, and its clarity was impressive.
- Finally, here is the recording of the science communication symposium that I'd mentioned. The keynote talk about covid by Peter Hotez starts at 1h49m, and it's really good.
- In terms of history (albeit not condensed matter), this article (written by the founding chair) describes the establishment of the first (anywhere) Space Science department, at Rice University, In 1999 the SPAC department merged with Physics to become the Department of Physics and Astronomy, where I've been since 2000.
2 comments:
Scenic UIUC??? Scenic UIUC?? What about scenic South Main Street (in Houston)
Since I lived for four years on South Main Street, four years in scenic Cambridge (MA) and
now fifty years at scenic UIUC, I think I know how to tell scenic --- or not.
See, if I'd really wanted to troll people, I would've referred to it as "exotic UIUC". :-)
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