I am at the XVII International Conference on Nuclear Structure Properties at Sivas Cumhurıyet University in Sivas, Türkiye, It's mainly a national conference, but with a few invited international speakers (including me). I had pride of place as the first speaker, but only the first speaker in the scientific sessions. Before that was the conference opening session, which as well as the usual words from a high-up official at the University, included a couple of promotional videos and (best bit) a 30 minute concert by a unversity string orchestra. I was in the unenviable position of having to follow them with a talk on quantum computing.
Blog of the Isotopes
All about nuclear physics - research, news and comment. The author is Prof Paul Stevenson - a researcher in nuclear physics in the UK. Sometimes the posts are a little tangential to nuclear physics.
Wednesday, 25 June 2025
Thursday, 12 June 2025
NuPECC meeting in Strasbourg
I've spent today in a meeting in Strasbourg as part of the NuPECC (Nuclear Physics European Collaboration Committee) on which I sit as a nominated delegate of the UK. This is my second such meeting, having been rather recently named on the committee, and the structure was now familiar, with a series of reports on various things to do with nuclear physics research and the general research environemnt in each member country and in a trans-national sense. As well as those activities per se, it is a chance to network personally and on behalf of the UK community.
The meeting itself took place in the building of the ESF - the European Science Foundation, which is a typically nice oldish (though not that old by Strasbourg standards) institutional building that was on the site of a monestary which did not survive the revolution. Here we are in the garden during the first coffee break. I'm in the back row on the far left.
Wednesday, 11 June 2025
RIP Brian Wilson 1942 - 2025
I just read the news that Brian Wilson has died. He was, with due deference to the other members, the leading creative force in the Beach Boys. Aside from their general importance in popular music, the Beach Boys were the first band I really loved. I got a two volume "Very Best of the Beach Boys" compilation when I was something like 8 or 9 and moved quickly on from liking the surfing hits of volume 1 to the more complex and varied songs on volume 2. They have remained a favourite band of mine over the last 40+ years, with different parts of their work being important to me at different times of my life. Dennis Wilson's death in 1983, when I was 9, was the first death that affected me, the first time that someone important in my life died.
In the summer between finishing by BA and starting my DPhil, I went on holiday to Los Angeles. The fact that the Beach Boys were from there was just a coincidence - my (now dead) aunt lived there and it gave me and a University friend a base to see the sights. I associate the trip with one of the records I picked up there - a Brian Wilson solo album "I just wasn't made for these times" which tied in with a biopic about him. Brian had suffered a range of well known mental health, drug and alcohol issues, and I identified with him through such shared troubles that I was already startng to be aware of at that time, and was starting to engage with psychiatric services myself. A few songs on that album I bought in LA really stood out to me, and I will post one here. Called "Still I dream of it", this version from the album is a home-recorded solo demo by Brian, and you can really hear his fragility in it. The studio-recorded version of the song wasn't released when it was orinigally recorded, and though I've heard it now, I still prefer the demo version. Jimmy Nail has covered it, which brought him up highly in my esteem, and there is a strange AI version you can find in which Frank Sinatra's voice sings it. Apparently it was written with him in mind.
RIP Brian, and thanks
Tuesday, 3 June 2025
A viva in Paris
Today I have been in Paris to conduct a PhD viva for a student working in the overlap area between nuclear physics & quantum computing.it was an early start for me, getting to St Pancras station for the 8am train to Paris. The journey went very smoothly and I arrived at orsay-ville station in the south of the city in time for lunch with the rest of the PhD jury. The style of a viva in France is quite different to that of the UK not least because the poor candidate has an audience.
The candidate (Jing Zhang) gave a presentation to the audience, including the examienrs ("jury") and then we took it in turns to ask questions. I, and one of the other examiners (the "referees") had to also give a kind of overal report orally, to match one that we had already submitted.
After questioning, the jury retired to decide its verdict. Fortunately, and as usual, we agreed that Mr Zhang deserved to pass the ordeal and become Dr Zhang. His family, who had been on a Zoom call watching the whole proceedings dropped out shortly before the verdict, unfortunately, so I hope Jing was able to call them soon afterwards. Congratulations Dr Zhang!
I took one picture of all the proceedings, which perhaps doesn't capture the new doctor in the best light, but you can see he is thinking seriously. It also shows the cute "THX" made of quantum gates
Tuesday, 27 May 2025
People named *lton
It's been a while since I've been moved to post a nuclear physics spot-the-difference, but how could I not when I have never seen Rocket Man Elton John and Knockout Man Wilton Catford in the same room together, despite both people having spent most of their lives at music venues? Are they, in fact, the same person?
Catford
| John
|
Friday, 23 May 2025
DInosaur Jr @ The Troxy
Last night I went to see the band Dinosaur Jr at the Troxy. Dinosaur Jr were around when I was a teenager when they released the album of theirs that is still my favourite (Bug, featuring their signature song Freakscene). They are still going today, and like many bands of that era they tour with special anniversary concerts of particular albums.
Yesterday they played the songs from their 1995 album Without A Sound from start to finish, then went on with another half dozen songs from their catalogue. That included Freakscene, which I sat listening to with a big grin on my face. They ended with their stylish take on The Cure's song Just Like Heaven.
The audience was about 50% bearded middle aged men (like me), with the rest made up (roughly in order of number) middle-aged men without beards, women, and teenagers either there with their parents, or apparently there because they are independently into these dinosaurs
I'd never been to the Troxy before. It's in Limehouse, and was once a cinema serving the local, relatively poor, population. The area was largely bombed and/or cleared of slums during and after the war, and the cinema audience then dwindled. After serving a couple of uses of the years, it is now an events venue. We had seating tickets up on the balcony and while Dinoaur Jr are something of a noisy band to which the audience can gainfully mosh, my 51 year old frame was happy enough with a seat.
Monday, 19 May 2025
The 5 elements beginning with H
Without wanting to turn this blog into one about quizzes, I went with a couple of friends to my local pub for their Sunday night quiz only to find that one of the regular rounds was very on-topic. Round 3 is always a "top 5" round in which there are two parts, each of which asks you for five answers. Often these are the top 5 in some category, though yesterday they were not quite that, but just categories with only 5 answers and we we were asked to list them all.
Question 1 was on the words use to describe the going on horseracing courses. We managed to pluck 4 out of the 5 of those. Question 2 asked "What 5 chemical elements begin with the letter H?" Should be a write-in for a nuclear physicist, right? Well, I immediately wrote down Hydrogen and Helium, then Hafnium (named after Copenhagen - Hafn and Hagen are cognate words meaning harbour, like our word haven). Then it took me a minute to remember the proper name and spelling of the element Ho (it's Holmium, this time named after Stockholm).
The last one was a bit trickier for me. Part of the problem is that I remember a series of element names that were widely used before international agreement. I couldn't remember if Hahnium (named after Otto Hahn) was one of these. In the end, I decided (correctly) that it was, and that the other element beginning with H is actually named after the German state of Hesse, where the GSI laboratory is situated. I wrote down Hessium but the actual answer is Hassium but the people marking liaised with the questionmaster and they decided this was good enough for the point. It's called Hassium because of the Latin spelling of the state of Hesse.
Anyway - quite a hard question, really, with three pretty obscure elements. Apparently there was a science teacher in one of other teams and he was outed as not having scored 5/5!
Obligatory picture: The GSI site with the upgraded FAIR project, in the German state of Hesse