A new book by Professor Emeritus Lee Pondrom. The book describes the lives of the people who gave Stalin his weapon — scientists, engineers, managers, and prisoners during the early post war years from 1945–1953. Many anecdotes and vicissitudes of life at that time in the Soviet Union accompany considerable technical information regarding the solutions to formidable problems of nuclear weapons development.
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Physics Major, Alex, Mahnke, Presents Wearable Idea at Hyper Innovation Executive Summit
Physics major, Alex Mahnke, presented his idea for a wearable with light sensors that create safer options for students, construction workers, and others traveling or working in low-light situations.
GMaWiP Kickoff, Thursday 9/20 at 4pm, Chamberlin 5290
Physics Learning Center participates in campus-wide peer tutoring effort
There’s significant value in a student receiving help from a peer, says Amihan, who has a Ph.D. in physics.
“This is someone they can relate to, someone who just recently had the same experience as they did in that same classroom,” she says. “I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve learned from one of our peer tutors how to better explain a complicated concept to a student.”
LAB^3 Art Installation Reception, Sept 8th 6-9pm
ALL kicks off the school year with LAB³, a September exhibition featuring artworks inspired by scientific research done at the Wisconsin IceCube Particle Astrophysics Center (WIPAC) and the Department of Physics at UW-Madison. The LAB³ project paired UW-Madison physicists and Madison-based artists and writers with 24 high school students from Madison, Middleton, Waunakee, Janesville, Wauwatosa, and Lake Mills. Over the summer, six teams (each composed of a scientist, visual/performing artist, writer, and 3-4 high schoolers) explored current scientific research ranging from neutrinos to dark matter to cosmic rays. In response to these scientific topics, the teams have produced original visual, literary, and performance-based art (including two-dimensional art, installation, video art, sculpture, and poetry) which will be on display at ALL from September 8 through September 29, 2018. An opening reception will be held on Saturday, September 8 from 6-9pm. The exhibition and reception are FREE and open to the public.
Physics professor Stefan Westerhoff dies at 50
Stefan Westerhoff, a professor in the physics department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, passed away on Sunday, August 5, 2018, after a long illness. He was 50.
Stefan was a leading physicist in the fields of cosmic ray physics and gamma ray astronomy and a faculty member at the Wisconsin IceCube Particle Astrophysics Center (WIPAC). He contributed to a suite of historic experiments concentrating on the search for the enigmatic sources of cosmic rays: the High-Energy-Gamma-Ray Astronomy (HEGRA) detector array in La Palma, Spain, the High Resolution Fly’s Eye (HiRes) detector in Utah, the Pierre Auger Observatory in Argentina, the Milagro telescope in New Mexico, and, in the past decade, the IceCube Neutrino Observatory, located at the South Pole and operated by UW-Madison, and the High Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) Observatory near Puebla, Mexico.
Stefan started his career in particle physics, but he had the vision, many years ago, to move into particle astrophysics. At that time, few astronomers or physicists paid much attention to this struggling discipline, and he was one of the pioneers in the early and rapid expansion of this field in Germany.
Born on December 25, 1967, in Hagen (Germany), Stefan was a PhD student at the University of Wuppertal, where he graduated in 1996. He came to the US as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, Santa Cruz, which included a stint at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. Following this, he was a faculty member at Columbia University from 2000 until 2007. He joined the faculty at UW-Madison in 2007, where he became a full professor in 2012.
Throughout his career, he was selected to serve on the main advisory committees covering particle physics as well as particle astrophysics, from the Subatomic Physics Evaluation Section (SAPES) of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada, which he chaired in 2015, to the CERN Proton Synchrotron Committee and the advisory board of the Gran Sasso underground laboratory. He was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2013 and received a UW-Madison Vilas Associates Award in 2014.
Stefan also excelled as a teacher. During his time in Madison, he taught courses ranging from core physics requirements to acoustics for musicians. As a physics teacher, Stefan was brilliant and fair, challenging and clear, and he was consistently rated as easily the best physics professor you could ever have, to quote several of his students—many of whom would organize their schedules to take as many courses with him as they possibly could.
At UW-Madison, he was a respected and admired colleague, and especially recognized for the constructive and thoughtful input given to every task he undertook, including advising undergraduate students and serving on committees for new faculty searches and overseeing tenure appointments.
Stefan’s colleagues and friends are deeply saddened by his passing and will remember him for his sharp mind, a witty sense of humor, his comforting voice and presence, and an amiable, generous, and straightforward personality. His legacy as a mentor leaves behind a cohort of scientists, not only in the IceCube and HAWC collaborations but also in other astronomy and astrophysics communities he was once a member of.
Stefan’s passion for music was well known. He preferred the classics and, among them, the opera: Beethoven, Brahms, Mendelssohn, Wagner, and many others. Stefan also was an accomplished piano player, although most of his friends never heard him play—not even when they were visiting in a room dominated by a baby grand piano—perhaps from Stefan’s inclination to always devote his full attention to his friends.
When not talking about physics or music, he would also make references to movies. As with music, he was fond of the classics, mostly films released before 1940. Yet he sometimes surprised his friends with his knowledge of sitcoms, such as The Golden Girls or Seinfeld.
Stefan is survived by his parents, Christa and Bernd Westerhoff, who visited him a few times per year but found themselves very far from Madison when Stefan’s health suddenly declined. His family and friends want to express their gratitude to Michaela Schultheis, his doctor Alissa Weber and the SSM oncology team, and the many caring nurses and social workers at Agrace Hospice & Palliative Care.
A memorial service will be held on August 25 in Madison. It will be from 2:00 to 4:00 PM at the Alumni Lounge in the Pyle Center, 702 Langdon Street. Memorial donations can be made to Agrace Hospice & Palliative Care and/or to the Stefan Westerhoff fund at IceCube for a memorial exhibit on acoustics to be placed in Chamberlin Hall, home of UW-Madison’s Department of Physics. To donate to this fund, please use this link and write “IceCube Project” as “Fund name” and in the gift options section mention that you are making this gift in memory of Stefan Westerhoff.
Physics professor Stefan Westerhoff dies at 50
Stefan Westerhoff, a professor in the physics department at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, passed away on Sunday, August 5, 2018, after a long illness. He was 50.
Stefan’s colleagues and friends are deeply saddened by his passing and will remember him for his sharp mind, a witty sense of humor, his comforting voice and presence, and an amiable, generous, and straightforward personality. His legacy as a mentor leaves behind a cohort of scientists, not only in the IceCube and HAWC collaborations but also in other astronomy and astrophysics communities he was once a member of.
A memorial service for Stefan Westerhoff will be held on August 25 in Madison. It will be from 2:00 to 4:00 PM at the Alumni Lounge in the Pyle Center, 702 Langdon Street.
Sau Lan Wu featured in Wired and Quanta Magazine
Sau Lan Wu spent decades working to establish the Standard Model of particle physics. Now she’s searching for what lies beyond it.
IceCube Neutrinos Point to Long-Sought Cosmic Ray Accelerator
Observations, made by the IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station and confirmed by telescopes around the globe and in Earth’s orbit, help resolve a more than a century-old riddle about what sends subatomic particles such as neutrinos and cosmic rays speeding through the universe.
IceCube NSF press conference
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory will be holding a press conference at NSF headquarters on Thursday, July 12 to announce a major breakthrough in multimessenger astrophysics. A local event will also be hosted in Madison:
UW-Madison scientists, Justin Vandenbroucke and John Gallagher, will briefly introduce the project and the leadership role that the Wisconsin IceCube Particle Astrophysics Center has played for the last 30 years. After that, a live-stream press conference organized by IceCube and NSF in Alexandria (VA) will be shown. At the end of the press conference, Prof. Vandenbroucke and Prof. Gallagher will answer questions from participants. Coffee and pastries will be provided.
When: Thursday, July 12, 2018 at 9:30 am
Where: Room 1111, UW-Madison Biotechnology Center (425 Henry Mall, Madison, WI 53706)
If you can’t attend, but would like to learn more about this breakthrough, you can follow the press conference from wherever you are at https://www.youtube.com/c/VideosatNSF/live at 10 am US CDT. You can also learn more about it and ask questions on a follow-up Reddit Ask Me Anything starting at 11:30 am.