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Physics Department Colloquia

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Structure and Dynamics from Random Observations
Date: Friday, April 26th
Time: 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
Place: Chamberlin 2241
Speaker: Abbas Ourmazd, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Abstract: Don’t be a control freak. At weddings, the bridal photo is taken under bright lights, with the happy couple holding still. Traditionally in science, the “best” observations are those with the largest signal from the most tightly controlled system. Like bridal photos, the results are not always exciting. In a wide range of phenomena – from the dance of proteins during their function, to the breaking of molecular bonds on the femtosecond scale – tight control is neither possible, nor desirable. Modern data-analytical techniques extract far more information from random sightings than usually obtained from set-piece experiments. I will describe on-going efforts to extract structural and dynamical information from noisy, random snapshots. Examples will include YouTube videos, the structure and conformations of molecular machines such as the ribosome, and the ultrafast dynamics of bond-breaking in small molecules like nitrogen. Less can be more, but only if there is plenty of it.
Host: Uwe Bergmann
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