Monday, 4 August 2025

Holiday in Oberstdorf

 I am on holiday for the week in Oberstdorf, Germany.  It's a mountain resort in the very far south of the country and we are here because there is a short track speed skating summer camp which one of my kids is attending.  I am here with him, and two of my other children, trying to keep everyone entertained while doing all the training activities for my 8yo.

It's very pretty here.  The town is in a valley between mountains.  There is a cable car up to the peaks, though we have stayed down in the town where the ice rink is, as we are not really here to (or equipped to) go hiking.  

 



Tuesday, 29 July 2025

Another Office Move

A year and a bit ago I had to move office at the University, after about 20 years in my previous office.   I moved from 12BB03 to 02AA04 – so up a level to the 4th floor, and across buildings from BB to AA.  My new office was pretty hard to work in with a constant drone coming from the plant room of Senate House outside it.  I am unable to filter out such noises and so I spent a year finding it pretty hard to function at work.  Now, though, I have moved offices again, to 28BC04, which is back to the floor (BC04) that I first had an office in when I arrived here in 2000.  I am not, alas, on the side of BC04 where I can see any plant life from my window, but otherwise the environent in this office is much bettern than the AA04 office.  

I await bookshelves so at the moment my office looks like this:

but hopefully it will be a bit more habitable soon. 
 

Friday, 11 July 2025

Unitary as a noun

Since working in the field of quantum computing, I've had to get used to seeing the word unitary used as a noun to mean a unitary object such as an operator or matrix.   

 Such a usage has yet to make it into any English dictionary that I've checked - not OED, Chambers, Cambridge, Merriam-Webster.  Of those, only OED do list one kind of nounal usage, with the definite article, meaning "that which is unitary" with a first example quotation give as:

Man loves the Universal, the Unchangeable, the Unitary - W. E. Channing, Perfect Life (1888)

(someone writing a thesis on quantum computing, please feel free to take that quote!)

 The bible of quantum computing, Nielsen and Chuang's textbook Quantum Computation and Quantum Information sticks to standard English usage, with unitary always an adjective, but there is at least one place where I could see an unwary reader thinking it was a noun.  On p71 (10th anniversary edition) they say

This result suggests the following elegant outer product representation of any unitary U.

Here, the symbol U is the noun and unitary is an adjective, and if they wanted a nounal usage of unitary I'm sure they'd've put a comma in there. 

To show an example of the contemporary nounal usage, I was going to pick the first paper in today's arXiv quant-ph section and show how it is done, but they very diligiently use unitary only as an adjective.  In fact, I had to scan through quite a few papers from today's quant-ph to find unitary as a noun, but here is an example (from arXiv:2507.07646):

Note that the state [...] is generated by a unitary acting on the initial state 

The latent lexicographer in me would be interested to know the first example of such a usage, but I fear it would be very hard to find. 

Monday, 30 June 2025

Horsegirl

Since I seem to be using this blog to document general cultural activity that I engage in, let me record my trip last night to the Scala near King's Cross in London to see Horsegirl play. 

At the start of the year I had not heard of Horsegirl, but I came across an advert on social media for their new album and thought they sounded like they'd be up my street.  Listening to the album confirmed that, yes, they were really a great example of the kind of genre I like - something between the Velvet Underground, Electrlane, Stereolab, and Honey Tongue, with a sound that is nevertheless distinctively their own.  

Having had their album quickly establish myself as my favourite album of the year so far, I checked out to see if they just happened to be playing London soon.  They are from Chicago, but with a record out I thought they might tour and - yes!  I saw that they had a gig coming up.  Unfortunately it was sold out and I accepted my fate not to see them on this tour.  A bit later I thought I'd just look up in case some tickets had been returned or more released or something.  They hadn't, but they had decided to add an extra date so that they'd play Scala twice.  

So there I was last night, enjoying my new favourite band:


 

Friday, 27 June 2025

Day Three at NSP–2025

It's the third and final day at the NSP-2025 conference in Sivas, Türkiye.  The scientific programme has continued with some experimental work on basic nuclear physics from international participants and theoretical and applied work from others.  We've had presentations from ELI-NP in Romania again, this time covering gamma-ray strength functions.  This is an area where I have done a bit of work in the past, and I have lined myself up with a trip there later in the year to give a seminar and to discuss more about potential collaboration.  On the applied side, there have been a diverse range of talks from medical applications, to the study of radioactivity in tea.  Here's a picture of a group of us at the lunch place on the last day:  L–R Dmitry Testov (ELI-NP), Ebrar Akyüz (Middle East Technical U), Aslı Kuşoğlu (ELI-NP), Alberto Camaiani (U Florence), P-A Söderström (ELI-NP), me (Surrey), Serkan Akkoyun (Sivas U)


 

Thursday, 26 June 2025

Day two at NSP–2025

It is day 2 of 3 at this conference I am attending in Sivas, Türkiye.  As if the opening concert were not enough yesterday, today we finished one of the scientific sessions with some Turkish folk dancing 

The conference has otherwise carried on with a combination of Turkish and international speakers.  Unlike the kind of conferences I usually go to, the emphasis here is on theoretical and applied nuclear physics, with relatively little on experimental blue skies nuclear physics.  This is, I think, because theory and applied work can be done without access to the most expensive facilities.  The main discussion of experimental work comes from the contingent who are here from ELI-NP, the facility just outside Bucharest in Romania.  

I'm enjoying meeting a bunch of new people, in a way that has taken me a long time to grow into over my professional life, and it might help that people see me as the senior expert and want to talk to me in that capacity.  In the last coffee break of the day I was even waylaid by each of a group of students in turn who wanted pictures taken with me, as if I were some kind of celebrity 🤷‍♂️

Wednesday, 25 June 2025

At NSP2025 in Türkiye

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.