This website uses cookies to store information on your computer. Some of these cookies are used for visitor analysis, others are essential to making our site function properly and improve the user experience. By using this site, you consent to the placement of these cookies. Click Accept to consent and dismiss this message or Deny to leave this website. Read our Privacy Statement for more.
Print Page   |   Contact Us   |   Sign In   |   Join EPS
Activities
Blog Home All Blogs

Results of survey on conference expectations

Posted By Administration, Thursday 13 February 2025
Author: Ariane Wenger

A thorough understanding of attendees and their specific needs is crucial for designing conferences that are both relevant and effective. Thus, in summer 2024, we conducted a survey on researchers’ perceptions of and expectations towards scientific conferences. The survey was also distributed to the European Physical Society, and you might have participated in it (see previous article). Thank you very much for your contribution!

Survey participants considered scientific conferences useful and important. In particular, participants expected to explore research objectives and network at their next planned conference. Participants’ expectations of what to gain at their next planned conference largely did not differ between conference formats. The only exception were participants’ networking expectations, as virtual participants had lower expectations to network than in-person participants (Figure 1). Based on this, it can be argued that differences between in-person conferences and alternative formats become marginal once virtual and hybrid conferences can enable effective networking.

Figure 1. Participants expectations of what to gain at conferences

The variables were measured on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree). Dots represent means and error bars represent 95% confidence intervals. The five factors were measured with three to six items. Significant differences between in-person and virtual participants are marked with a *.

Participants’ conference expectations differed based on individual characteristics, such as career stage, geographical context, and personal circumstances, revealing that not all researchers need the same of conferences. Networking was the only factor that all participants expected to benefit from, highlighting that this is universally valued across all researchers and career stages.

Early-career researchers had higher expectations regarding acquiring general information, career development and securing scientific follow-up opportunities compared to senior researchers. Simultaneously, researchers from the Global South had higher expectations to acquire general information, explore research objectives and secure scientific follow-up opportunities compared to their researchers from the Global North. Furthermore, disadvantaged researchers (defined as those facing challenges with visa restrictions, childcare responsibilities, funding, and disabilities) had higher expectations for acquiring general information, career development and securing scientific follow-up opportunities compared to more privileged researchers. This highlights that researchers who are typically underrepresented and disadvantaged in traditional in-person conferences often stand to benefit the most from attending, as they pursue outcomes that go beyond networking.

Overall, the results highlight the potential of virtual and hybrid conference formats to meet the diverse expectations of researchers while significantly reducing travel-related greenhouse gas emissions and enhancing inclusivity by removing barriers like funding and visa restrictions. Virtual and hybrid formats can currently effectively address many conference objectives, except for networking, which requires innovative tools to support informal exchanges.  To transition toward sustainable practices, conference organizers should define clear goals, adopt purpose-driven formats, and invest in advanced technologies that cater to diverse researcher needs. These changes can align conferences with environmental and social sustainability goals while addressing the evolving needs of the global research community.

Annex

The results of the survey will be published in a research article that is currently under review. Complerte info can be found here.

Tags:  conference  EPS Associate Members  ETH Zurich  survey 

Permalink
 

News from EDP Sciences

Posted By Administration, Friday 22 November 2024

Author: Amy Walker


EDP Sciences physics archives demonstrate enduring influence

As the year rapidly draws to a close and planning for next year’s resources begins, we are delighted to be answering queries about our multiple physics archive collections including Annales de Physique archives (1914 to 2009), The European Physical Journal - Applied Physics (EPJAP) archives (1998 to 2015) and, notably, our most substantial archive collection, the Journal de Physique archives (1872 to 1997). The latter contains 125 years of excellence - including seminal papers by Marie and Pierre Curie, Henri Becquerel and Louis de Broglie – and is still being cited frequently by modern day researchers, demonstrating the enduring influence of the science published within.

Find out more about our archives, including the most cited articles in the Journal de Physique archives collection

Congratulations to Dr. Daniel Lincot, Awarded the 2024 Alexandre Edmond Becquerel Prize

EPJ Photovoltaics extends heartfelt congratulations to Dr. Daniel Lincot, our Honorary Editor-in-Chief, on being awarded the 2024 Alexandre Edmond Becquerel Prize. On September 23, 2024, at the 41st European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference and Exhibition, both Editors-in-Chief of EPJ Photovoltaics, Prof. Pere Roca i Cabarrocas and Dr. Jean-Louis Lazzari,  joined in celebrating Dr. Lincot’s achievement. Together with the EDP Sciences Team, they commend Dr. Lincot for his well-deserved honor and his significant contributions to the field of solar energy.

Dr Daniel Lincot is awarded the Becquerel Prize- image credit: EDP Sciences

FLTR: Jean-Louis-Lazzari (EiC of EPJ Photovoltaics), Veronica Bermudez (Associate Editor of EPJ Photovoltaics),
Daniel Lincot (Honorary EiC of EPJ Photovoltaics), Pere Roca (EiC of EPJ Photovoltaics), Christophe Ballif, Chair Becquerel Committee

EPJ Web of Conferences now indexed in Scopus.

We are thrilled to announce that EPJ Web of Conferences has been accepted for indexing in one of the world’s largest abstract and citation databases of peer-reviewed literature, Scopus.


EPJ Web of Conferences is an open access publication series focused on publishing high-quality conference proceedings in the fields of Physics and related sciences. Read more about what the indexation means for the journal. 

Discover recently published proceedings from EPJ Web of Conferences

Vilnius, Lithuania, August 25-30, 2024
A. Michailovas, J.I. Mackenzie, F. Pirzio and E. Cormier (Eds.)

 EPJ Special Topics updates

The latest special topic in EPJ Special Topics is a 246-page technical design report presenting a detailed description of all aspects of the LUXE (Laser Und XFEL Experiment). This is published in open access, read it here.

Europhysics Letters news

In 2024, the journal EPL sponsored cash prizes again to the Best Activity Awards of the EPS Young Minds. See the article in the September issue of EPN.

EPL benefits from one of the largest collections of “transformative agreements” in the world. Many authors can therefore publish in open access in EPL free of charge, ensuring maximum dissemination of their work. Check the latest Editorial for details.


BOOK: 40 expériences de physique élémentaire issues des leçons de Marie Curie

It would be remiss of us not to mention a new book about one of our founders, Marie Curie.

This title presents lessons given by Curie to student Isabelle Chavannes, sourced directly from her notebook which was discovered in 2003. Published in French, the book reproduces the experiments taught to Chavannes using modern techniques, and includes related experiments which provide students and the science-curious with an easy way to understand essential concepts such as pressure, density, the weight of air, and more.

Discover a fun and progressive introduction to experimental physics by one of its most eminent figures, available in our Bookstore.

Tags:  distinction  EDP Sciences  EPS AM  EPS Associate Members  publication 

Permalink
 

News from EDP Sciences

Posted By Administration, Monday 24 June 2024
Updated: Monday 24 June 2024

As we move towards the second half of 2024 we have many updates to share with you, read on to find out what we’ve been up to...

Discover the latest news from EDP Sciences, an Associate Member of the European Physical Scociety.


Journal de Physique digital archives

To think that once a journal is archived, no researcher is interested in it anymore would be a misunderstanding of its continued contextual value. We were delighted to conduct research recently and discover that many articles in the Journal de Physique archives are still being cited today.

Find out more about our archives, including the most cited articles in the collection.

The European Physical Journal series

The EiCs of The Editors-in-Chief of EPJ Photovoltaics, Pere Roca i Cabarrocas and Jean-Louis Lazzari, would like to highlight two important papers recently published:

The EPJ Web of Conferences team was delighted to publish the proceedings of the 26th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP), organized by Jefferson Lab, which took place in Norfolk, Virginia, from 5–11 May 2023. Read more about the event and discover the proceedings.

The EPJ Scientific Advisory committee is pleased announce the nomination of two new members: Konstantinos Bachas, representing the Hellenic Physical Society (read the news here) and Adam Maj, representing the Polish Physical Society (read the news here)

EPL (Europhysics Letters)

EDP Sciences welcomes the appointment of the new Editor-in-Chief of EPL, Professor Richard Blythe, effective from May 1st. Read more about the experience Professor Blythe brings to the position.

The EPL 2023 Highlights collection showcases a selection of 40 of the most cited, downloaded and accessed articles published in EPL in 2023. These articles had a significant impact on the international community, and cover topics including “condensed matter physics, network physics, complex systems, black hole physics, many-body quantum systems to cite a few, as well as recently growing fields such as quantum information and amorphous topological matter.”

EDP Sciences Books news

The training years are often the most important; did you know that Einstein spent part of his youth in Lombardy, an extremely fruitful and determining period for the rest of his career? To know more, dig into WHEN ALBERT BECAME EINSTEIN ! Back to the future, you might be interested by RADICAL INNOVATION DESIGN , a free e-book about a systematic and usage-driven innovation methodology to ensure usefulness for users and profitability for companies !

Join the conversation on social media

We have many exciting projects planned for 2024 and we look forward to sharing them with you as soon as we are able. Do follow us on your social media platform of choice if you'd like to be among the first to hear from us - we're on LinkedIn, X (Twitter), and Instagram and now Bluesky and Mastodon too!

Tags:  EDP Sciences  EPJ  EPL  EPS AM  EPS Associate Members  publications  social media 

Permalink
 

Survey on researchers’ expectations of conferences

Posted By Administration, Friday 14 June 2024
Updated: Friday 14 June 2024

Author: Ariane Wenger


 Are you a researcher planning to attend scientific conferences? 

Please consider participating in and distributing this survey on researchers’ expectations of conferences that Ariane Wenger – a doctoral student at the Transdisciplinarity Lab (TdLab), ETH Zurich – is conducting as part of her dissertation on changing research exchange practices. The short (10 minutes) online survey is aimed at researchers of all scientific disciplines and career stages who are planning to attend scientific conferences. In particular, opinions and views of researchers from all around the world are appreciated. Participation in the survey will not only enrich this study, but will also help to identify avenues for enhancing current conference practices, benefiting the wider academic community.

The survey can be accessed here: https://ww3.unipark.de/uc/cexp1/.

Thank you very much for your support!

Tags:  conferences  EPS Associate Members  ETH Zurich  survey 

Permalink
 

News from EUROfusion: Joint European Torus sets fusion energy record

Posted By Administration, Thursday 18 April 2024

This month you will find news from our Associate Member EUROfusion.


JET Tokamak’s Latest Fusion Energy Record Shows Mastery of Fusion Processes

In a major scientific achievement, European researchers at the Joint European Torus (JET) facility have set a new world energy record of 69 megajoules released in a sustained and controlled fusion power pulse.

The result came as part of an experimental campaign to verify operating scenarios for future fusion machines, under conditions as close as possible to those in ITER and future fusion power plants. The result was made possible through the dedication of the international team of scientists and engineers at JET and reflects the central role that JET has played in accelerating the development of fusion energy.

Deuterium-Tritium campaign

In September 2023, the EUROfusion consortium of fusion laboratories around Europe started an ambitious experimental campaign at the JET facility of the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) in Culham, UK. Their goal: to test out operating scenarios extrapolated from small and medium size European devices to pave the way for the international ITER project and the fusion power plants to follow. JET is unique amongst present-day tokamak machines—which trap a donut-shaped cloud of hot, ionised fuel or plasma in a cage of magnetic fields—for its capability to work with the deuterium-tritium fuel that will form the basis of future fusion machines like ITER and the demonstration power plant DEMO.

Reproducible energy record

Using advanced scenarios to structure and control their plasma, the researchers set a new fusion energy record of 69.26 megajoules of heat released during a single pulse in JET. Released over six seconds from only 0.21 milligrams of fuel, the energy record equals the energy released from burning 2 kilograms of coal. The JET record is 20 times the amount of energy released in a recent shot at the U.S. National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in October 2023, which used a different approach to fusion to produce more energy than was absorbed by the fuel pellet. The new achievement by the EUROfusion team breaks their previous world records of 59 megajoules (2022) and 22.7 megajoules (1997), which were also set at JET. The scientists at JET were able to reliably reproduce the necessary fusion conditions for the new record in multiple experimental pulses, demonstrating the understanding and control they have achieved over the complex fusion processes.

Testing operating scenarios for ITER

The shots that broke JET’s previous fusion energy record came as a late addition to JET’s third and final run of deuterium-tritium experiments. The campaign was primarily designed as the first-ever opportunity to demonstrate that crucial operating scenarios for ITER will work in a deuterium-tritium environment with its abundant fusion reactions. “Perhaps even more interesting to me than the record is what we have achieved in terms of operating scenarios for ITER”, says the Head of EUROfusion’s Tokamak Exploitation Task Force, Emmanuel Joffrin from the French EUROfusion member CEA. “Not only did we demonstrate how to soften the harsh heat flowing from the plasma to the exhaust, we also showed in JET how we can get the plasma edge into a stable state thus preventing bursts of energy reaching the wall. Both techniques are intended to protect the integrity of the walls of future machines. This is the first time that we’ve ever been able to test those scenarios in a deuterium-tritium environment.” Dedicated upgrades over the past decade have brought JET’s technical specifications as close as possible to those of ITER, allowing for studies that will enable that future machine to hit the ground running when it enters operation.

Dr Fernanda Rimini, JET Senior Exploitation Manager, JET Scientific Operations Leader, said:“We can reliably create fusion plasmas using the same fuel mixture to be used by commercial fusion energy powerplants, showcasing the advanced expertise developed over time.”

Most approaches to creating commercial fusion favour the use of two hydrogen variants – deuterium and tritium. When deuterium and tritium fuse together they produce helium and release vast amounts of energy – a reaction that will form the basis of future fusion powerplants. Professor Ambrogio Fasoli, Programme Manager (CEO) at EUROfusion, said: “Our successful demonstration of operational scenarios for future fusion machines like ITER and DEMO, validated by the new energy record, instil greater confidence in the development of fusion energy. Beyond setting a new record, we achieved things we’ve never done before and deepened our understanding of fusion physics.”

UK Minister for Nuclear and Networks, Andrew Bowie, said: “JET’s final fusion experiment is a fitting swansong after all the groundbreaking work that has gone into the project since 1983. We are closer to fusion energy than ever before thanks to the international team of scientists and engineers in Oxfordshire. The work doesn’t stop here. Our Fusion Futures programme has committed £650 million to invest in research and facilities, cementing the UK’s position as a global fusion hub.”

Professor Sir Ian Chapman, UKAEA CEO, said: “JET has operated as close to powerplant conditions as is possible with today’s facilities, and its legacy will be pervasive in all future powerplants. It has a critical role in bringing us closer to a safe and sustainable future.”

JET concluded its scientific operations at the end of December 2023. The findings of JET’s research have critical implications not only for ITER—the fusion research mega-project being built in the south of France—but also for the UK’s STEP prototype powerplant, Europe’s demonstration powerplant, DEMO, and other global fusion projects, pursuing a future of safe, low-carbon, and sustainable energy.

Dr Pietro Barabaschi, ITER Director-General, said: “Throughout its lifecycle, JET has been remarkably helpful as a precursor to ITER: in the testing of new materials, in the development of innovative new components, and nowhere more than in the generation of scientific data from Deuterium-Tritium fusion. The results obtained here will directly and positively impact ITER, validating the way forward and enabling us to progress faster toward our performance goals once operation begins. On a personal note, it has been for me a great privilege having myself been at JET for a few years. There I had the opportunity to learn from many exceptional people.”

40 years of fusion science

JET has been the largest and most successful fusion experiment in the world, and a central research facility of the European Fusion Programme. The machine is based at the UKAEA campus in Culham, UK and has been a collective facility used by European fusion researchers under the management of the EUROfusion consortium—experts, students, and staff from across Europe and internationally, co-funded by the European Commission. A big aspect of its success was to show that large scientific projects can be done in a collaborative way on a global scale. Since its inception in 1983 as a joint European project, JET has been at the forefront of groundbreaking achievements, spearheading the pursuit of safe, low-carbon, and sustainable fusion energy solutions to meet the world’s future energy demands. Over its lifetime JET has delivered crucial insights into the complex mechanics of fusion, allowing scientists to plan the international fusion experiment ITER and DEMO, the demonstration fusion power plant currently under design by the European fusion community. Built by Europe and used collaboratively by European researchers over its lifetime, JET became UKAEA property in October 2021. The machine celebrated its 40th anniversary in June this year, and ceased plasma operations at the end of 2023, having created 105,842 pulses.

Fusion energy’s potential

Fusion, the process that powers stars like our sun, promises a clean baseload source of heat and electricity for the long term, using small amounts of fuel that can be sourced worldwide from inexpensive materials. Deuterium and tritium are two heavier variants of ordinary hydrogen and together offer the highest reactivity of all fusion fuels. At a temperature of 150 million degrees Celsius, deuterium and tritium fuse together to form helium and release a tremendous amount of heat energy without any greenhouse contributions. Fusion is inherently safe in that it cannot start a run-away process and produces no long-lived waste.

Original article released on the website of EUROfusion: Joint European Torus sets fusion energy record


More news from EUROfusion

Tags:  EPS AM  EPS Associate Members  EUROfusion  fusion  JET  Joint European Torus  tokamak 

Permalink
 

News from AYIMI: International tournaments in 2023

Posted By Administration, Thursday 14 September 2023
Author: AYIMI


IYPT 2023

International Young Physicists' Tournament , IYPT 2023, was held in Murree, Pakistan on 18th-25th July with participants from 14 countries. Again such as previous IYPTs, participants challenged with each others on selected problems from IYPT 2023 list. This IYPT had no Bronze medalist and the first three teams got gold and up to team ranking 8 got silver medal. Our team members from Iran who were selected from the national PYPT (Persian Young Physicists' Tournament) couldn't get any medals but in a panel with two finalists succeeded to be as the first team!! The most important parameters in such a tournaments are jurors who should be more experienced. Iran team members in IYPT 2023 were: Ramin Abdollahzadeh (Captain), Anisa Kaviani Maram, Farhan Sadeghvandi, Nita Jafarzadeh, Reza Niamanesh. The next IYPT will be held in Budapest, Hungary in July 2024.

2nd International ISAC Olympiad

The 2nd International ISAC Olympiad was held by Ariaian Young Innovative Minds Institute, AYIMI and ADIB Artistic and Cultural Institute. The participants from different countries in two sections, Art and Science, and in different categories succeeded to get medal and certificate. Participants were from Iran, Turkey, Brazil, Czech Republic, Mexico, Afghanistan and Pakistan. In total : 36 Gold, 11 silver and 7 bronze.

Tags:  AYIMI  competition  EPS AM  EPS Associate Members  International Young Physicists' Tournament  IYPT  young physicists 

Permalink
 

World-renowned scientists begin long-term research stays at GSI/FAIR

Posted By Administration, Thursday 14 September 2023

FLTR: GSI/FAIR Research Director Professor Karlheinz Langanke, Professor Nu Xu, Professor Taka Otsuka
and Professor Volker Koch - Image credit: GSI/FAIR

13th September 2023. Press release GSI/FAIR. Three world-renown scientists, Profs. Volker Koch, Nu Xu and Takaharu Otsuka, are currently spending long-term research stays at GSI and FAIR and its partner universities in Darmstadt and Frankfurt. They are analyzing and interpreting current experimental data and preparing the first scientific experiments at FAIR in fruitful interdisciplinary cooperation.

Professor Volker Koch and Professor Nu Xu are both from the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. Volker Koch holds the professorship for theoretical heavy-ion physics and has been the laboratory’s nuclear physics division head. Nu Xu is professor for experimental heavy-ion physics and the former spokesman of STAR, a flagship experiment at the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider (RHIC) at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. Professor Takaharu Otsuka held the chair of theoretical nuclear physics at the University of Tokyo until his retirement. Taka Otsuka and Nu Xu are both recipients of Humboldt Research Awards, while Volker Koch is currently an EMMI Visiting Professor.

GSI and FAIR took the unique opportunity to discuss with these colleagues in an interview the motivation why they have chosen GSI for their long-term stay, and what personally fascinates them from the many science options at FAIR. Despite very different perspectives and different scientific expectations with regard to the FAIR research pillars, the three scientists have one thing in common: the anticipation of outstanding research prospects and decisive advances in knowledge in a unique world leading research infrastructure at FAIR. The whole interview can be read here:

GSI/FAIR: You all three are world-leading scientists and come from prestigious institutions. Why did you choose GSI for your research stays?

Volker Koch: The Rhein-Main-Neckar region is the center of gravity in nuclear science, in particular in my field of interest, which focuses on the properties of the strong force at the high-density and high-energy frontiers as it can be explored in heavy-ion collisions. There is for example the HADES experiment, which has taken exciting data in their latest runs within the FAIR Phase-0 program, which we try to understand now.  It is of great advantage to have many experts on campus and at the neighboring universities with whom we can look at these data from very different angles. In fact, I have missed such a stimulating scientific atmosphere during the pandemic and I every much enjoy the daily discussion taking place here. Of course, we also discuss the future opportunities, in particular the CBM experiment at FAIR, which we hope will answer some of the fundamental questions in our field of research.

Nu Xu: Indeed, the phase diagram of Quantum Chromodynamics, which describes the properties of the strong force as function of temperature and density, has still several open fundamental questions. I was much involved in the preparation and in the execution of experiments of the STAR collaboration where we have tried to explore whether this phase diagram exhibits a critical point like it is familiar to us from the phase diagram of water. Unfortunately, the STAR experiment left a gap in the data, which is needed to answer this question. The place from which we expect the answer is the CBM experiment at FAIR. To prepare this unique and scientifically extremely important experiment I am here.

Takaharu Otsuka: My scientific interest is somewhat different from that of my colleagues as I try to develop models, which describe the many facets of nuclear structure. Here the frontier are exotic unstable nuclei, which for example have a large number of extra neutrons compared to their stable counterparts. These nuclei and their properties are, however, crucial if we want to develop a general model, which describes the many phenomena the nuclear many-body system exhibits. For example, we have learnt in recent years that nuclear magic numbers, which are a cornerstone of nuclear structure whose explanation was awarded a Nobel Prize, are different in exotic from those in stable nuclei. We could recently show that among others the tensor force plays a crucial role in these exotic nuclei. In my career, I have benefitted very much from close contact to experimentalists, which some years ago were my colleagues at RIKEN. Now I think that in the future the NUSTAR experiments at FAIR will have the leading role in understanding many aspects of the structure of exotic nuclei beyond the present reach. In particular, I am interested in the physics, which determines the limit of existence in very neutron-rich nuclei where FAIR opens completely new perspectives. Therefore, I am happy to intensify my collaboration with my theory and experiment colleagues in Darmstadt. I hope that both sides will benefit from these activities.

GSI/FAIR: Professor Xu, you mentioned the STAR experiment at RHIC, which is one example that there are also other facilities worldwide which explore the science which will be in the focus at FAIR. Professor Otsuka, you referred to the Japanese flagship facility RIKEN. Perhaps you can elaborate where you see the advantages of FAIR and perhaps its uniqueness?

NX: The Brookhaven activities are finished leaving important questions unanswered. In my view, CBM is in the position to answer them. Actually, if there were other facilities, which were better advanced than CBM, I would have joined these activities. But there is none. If FAIR can deliver SIS100 beams the CBM collaboration will be ready for data taking. And the CBM experiment has the high-rate capabilities to decide whether a critical point exists in the QCD phase diagram or not.

VK: Indeed, to answer this fundamental science question statistics is the name of the game and CBM has the capability to deliver the required rate of data. This allows actually much more than to prove the existence of the critical point. For example, one can also explore the symmetry energy at densities twice or even three-times the value of saturation density, as it exists inside of heavy nuclei like lead. Such high densities are of crucial importance in many astrophysical environments, like core-collapse supernovae or neutron star mergers. The CBM data will also provide very valuable constraints for the nuclear Equation of State, which governs the structure of neutron stars, which are the most compact objects which one can study directly in the Universe. In fact, there are so many upcoming activities in astrophysics opening the era of multi-messenger exploration of the Universe, which all are intimately related to science, which will be, often for the first time, explored at FAIR. During my stay in Darmstadt, my colleagues and I have developed several new ideas how this complementarity can be optimally explored. I am really looking forward that FAIR will be switched on and the CBM and NUSTAR experiments start. This will be a new game in town, as we say in California.

TO: The FAIR facility offers significantly higher bombarding energies than the other facilities. This allows to explore mass regions in the nuclear chart which are not easily accessible with other accelerators, making the global activities complementary in many aspects. This opens exciting perspectives for my research interest. It is very exciting that FAIR will soon deliver for example first data on the very neutron-rich nuclei, which build the third peak in the astrophysical r-process, which is often referred to as the "gold peak". We have predicted the half-lives for the nuclei in the gold peak and it will be nice to see whether we have been right. Let me stress another important point. Also many activities at FAIR, although unique on the global level, are very complimentary. Take the symmetry energy, which my colleagues Volker Koch and Nu Xu want to study at very high densities. It is also relevant for astrophysical applications to know it at densities at and below saturation. This behavior can be studied with the R3B experiment within the NUSTAR collaboration.

GSI/FAIR: Your home countries have very strong activities in heavy-ion and nuclear structure science. Which role does FAIR play for these communities?

VK: The US Nuclear Physics community is currently preparing its Longe Range Plan, which also addresses the future opportunities of the research on high-density nuclear matter, that is the behavior of the QCD phase diagram at high densities as it will be explored at FAIR. I am not personally involved in the writing team, but I know that the intellectual interest of my theory colleagues in this field is tremendous. Personally, I am also convinced that there will be a growing American participation in CBM. 

NX: I share the view of my colleague Volker Koch concerning the interest in the US. But I like to add, that also in my mother country China there is a very large interest in the CBM physics, carried by six institutions including many postdoctoral and graduate students. The Chinese colleagues have been involved in the STAR experiment at RHIC and bring their expertise now to CBM. To underline the Chinese interest, components of the time-of-flight detector system for CBM have been built in China. They are tested and ready to be employed at FAIR. We need a SIS100 beam.

TO: There is an existing strong interaction between the Japanese and GSI activities in nuclear structure, but also in other FAIR research fields like atomic or biophysics. Some FAIR detectors developed by the NUSTAR collaboration have already been tested and used in experiments at RIKEN. But the exchange is in both directions. One interesting research field at FAIR will be hypernuclei, which is regular nuclei to which a lambda particle, which carries a strange quark, is added. Japan has a long history in hypernuclear research. But now we bring activities to FAIR based on a Memorandum of Understanding signed by RIKEN and GSI/FAIR where we jointly open research on neutron-rich hypernuclei. FAIR provides the SIS100 accelerator and the Super FRS, the equipment to produce such really exotic nuclei, and RIKEN develops and builds a novel detector which allows to study these hypernuclei. RIKEN has in fact very positive experience with such collaborative efforts abroad, for example, with a dedicated hadron physics program at Brookhaven. I am sure that also the RIKEN-FAIR project will be a success.

GSI/FAIR: What is the scientific highlight you personally wish to see delivered by FAIR?

NX: With its high-rate capability and the other available observables, CBM will answer the question whether a critical point exists in the QCD phase diagram, or not. CBM will also constrain the nuclear equation of state to a level that it has a very strong impact on the understanding of astrophysical objects like neutron stars or supernovae. I would like to add that while the high-energy programs at CERN focus on the properties of the quark-gluon plasma – the form of matter as it exists in the very early phase of the Universe, here we concentrate on the properties of matter at high densities. If CERN is the high-energy frontier, FAIR is the high-density frontier. Both programs are complementary to each other and are both necessary for understanding the QCD phase diagram.

VK: The critical point and the equation of state are certainly also on the top of my list. But CBM can do more, perhaps answer questions which we do not even think about now. For example, recent lattice QCD calculations predict that the interaction between two Omega baryons is attractive. CBM with its very high event rate is likely the only experiment, which can check this prediction.

TO: In general, I expect from the NUSTAR experiments at FAIR decisive progress in our general understanding of the nucleus as a many-body system, already from phase 0 experiments and then more once FAIR is operational.  It would be quite exciting to understand the boundaries of nuclear existence as a function of neutron excess but also in the regime of superheavy nuclei, derived from nucleons as the fundamental building blocks and the strong and Coulomb forces acting between them. But I personally would also like to explore whether hypernuclei might be a tool to probe the emergence of nuclear shapes. There are some hints, which have recently emerged that nuclei might have a wider spectrum of geometric shapes than usually assumed.

GSI/FAIR: Thank you very much for this discussion. We wish you a successful stay in Darmstadt and many fruitful returns to GSI and later to FAIR.

Tags:  EPS AM  EPS Associate Members  FAIR  GSI 

Permalink
 

News from EUROfusion

Posted By Administration, Friday 12 May 2023
Author: EUROfusion

 

Read the latest news from EUROfusion, an EPS Associate Member.

New discovery points the way to more compact fusion power plants: https://euro-fusion.org/member-news/discovery-to-more-compact-fusion-power-plants/

Using fusion to track groundwater flows: https://euro-fusion.org/member-news/using-fusion-to-track-groundwater-flows/

TEDx Youth talk: Fusion in Fifteen Minutes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CbNsHBrpxmU

 

Tags:  EPS AM  EPS Associate Members  EUROfusion  fusion  power plants  TEDx 

Permalink
 

Spring update from EDP Sciences

Posted By Gina Gunaratnam, Thursday 11 May 2023
Updated: Thursday 11 May 2023

Author: EDP Sciences


We are pleased to share the latest news from EDP Sciences.

News from the European Physical Journal (EPJ)

Joint meeting of the Scientific Advisory and Steering Committees of the European Physical Journal

Image credit: Maria Sutter

For two days in April, more than 40 representatives of national physical societies and of the EPJ publishers and many of the journals’ Chief Editors gathered at EMPA (Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology) near Zurich under the chairmanship of the Swiss Physical Society to discuss all aspects of modern scientific publishing - ranging from individual journal development to improving support for early career researchers and the implementation of DEI principles at all levels.

In particular, the EPS Young Minds’ invited talk provided some excellent insights into what the next generation of scientists feels in terms of constraints and opportunities in this context. 2023 marks the 25th anniversary of the launch of the EPJ and, as part of this year’s special initiatives, EPJ expressly invites young career researchers organizing, specifically, meetings for their peers to apply for sponsorship.

EPJ Applied Physics – topical issue

EPJ AP is pleased to announce completion of the special issue on “Amorphous alloys and multiscale materials: Fundamental aspects and Energy applications” edited by Zhao Zhankui, Wang Hongli and Tai Cheuk-Wai. We hope you enjoy the articles which include “Micro- and nano-sized materials for solar evaporators: a review”.

EPJ Photovoltaics – Editorial Board

EPJ Photovoltaics is pleased to share its updated Editorial Board under Editors-in-Chief Prof. Pere Roca i Cabarrocas, Laboratoire de Physique des Interfaces et des Couches Minces, and Dr. Jean-Louis Lazzari, Centre Interdisciplinaire de Nanoscience de Marseille. Editors from Europe are joined by international colleagues from Qatar, Australia and Japan.

EPJ N Nuclear Sciences & Technologies – new ‘Key Summary’

Optimising spent nuclear fuel storage in Europe” is the latest ‘Key Summary’ from EPJ N and looks at an extensive review in EPJ N by members of the EURAD consortium. The review explores the parameters involved in choosing safe long-term storage solutions for spent radioactive fuel and recommends best practice for the industry. The ‘Key Summary’ also hears from author Dimitri Alexandre Rochman.

Astronomy & Astrophysics and Subscribe to Open (S2O)

Astronomy & Astrophysics (A&A) recently announced that it will continue to publish its research in open access for the second consecutive year under Subscribe to Open (S2O). In contrast to other core astronomy journals that have transitioned or will transition to open access via the Gold (APC) route, A&A has chosen S2O to achieve immediate open access while minimizing any potential disruption to authors or subscribers. Find out more.

Société Française de Physique 150th anniversary – Master classes itinérantes

The first in a series of five Masterclasses on “Science publishing and Open Science” recently took place in Nice. Next stop Lyon for which registration is still open!

German Physical Society Spring Meeting - Europhysics Letters

There were four winners of the “EPL best poster prizes” at the Spring Meeting of the German Physical Society (DPG) that took place from 26-31 March 2023 at the Technical University Dresden. Congratulations to Anna C. Jäkel, Aleksandr Kostarev, Nico Schramma and Laura Strampe.

Book news - The Basics of Electron Transport in Spintronics

The basics of electron transport in Spintronics – Textbook with lectures, exercises and solutions’ by Vincent Baltz, CNRS researcher and group leader at SPINTEC. Based on a series of lectures given to MSc and PhD students, this book will appeal to a wide range of readers, from students at the graduate level to researchers and engineers. It allows the reader to navigate easily between concepts and to gain a broad view of spin-dependent electron transport. Learning is supported by ten extended exercises with complete solutions. Order directly from the EDP Sciences Bookstore or via your favourite online book shop.

Don’t forget our SFP anniversary books discount code - PHYS234 - valid until the end of June 2024! We are delighted to offer a 5% discount on EDP Sciences books in the following series: Savoirs Actuels / Une introduction à / Sciences & History / Enseignement Sup Physique.

With our best wishes from ‘Paris in Spring’

EDP Sciences

Tags:  EDP Sciences  EPJ  EPL  EPS AM  EPS Associate Members  EPS Young Minds  French Physical Society  publication  SFP 

Permalink
 

The EPS AG Prize winners 2023 are announced!

Posted By Administration, Thursday 23 March 2023

EPS AG Prizes 2023

The European Physical Society’s Accelerator Group (EPS-AG) has announced the winners of its 2023 prizes, which are awarded every three years for outstanding achievements in the accelerator field. The prizes will be presented at an awards session during the International Particle Accelerator Conference (IPAC’23), which takes place from 7th to 12th May in Venice, Italy.

The EPS-AG Rolf Wideröe Prize for outstanding work in the accelerator field has been given to Katsunobu Oide, KEK and visiting scientist at CERN / University of Geneva, for his many conceptual contributions to linear and circular particle colliders. Examples include the Oide limit of final focus systems and the design of the final focus test beam at SLAC, crab crossing in circular colliders, the beam optics design code SAD, design work for KEKB and KEK-ATF, advanced lattice design for the FCC study, and his leading role in design, commissioning and performance optimization of KEK accelerators.

The EPS-AG Gersh Budker Prize for a recent, significant, original contribution to the accelerator field has been awarded to Mikhail Krasilnikov, DESY/Zeuthen, for his achievements in the development of high brightness electron beams and a high power, tunable THz SASE free electron laser based on those beams, demonstrating lasing at the PITZ facility in 2022.

The EPS-AG Frank Sacherer Prize for an individual in the early part of his or her career goes to Xingchen Xu, Fermilab, for his contributions in demonstrating the effectiveness of the internal oxidation method in Nb3Sn wires to strongly improve the performance of this superconductor by using artificial pinning centers, opening the way to the next generation of high field accelerator magnets.

 

More info

Tags:  CERN  conferences  DESY  EPS Accelerator Group  EPS AG  EPS Associate Members  Fermilab  IPAC'23  KEK  prize 

Permalink
 
Page 1 of 3
1  |  2  |  3
Community Search
Sign In
Login with LinkedIn
OR





EPS Privacy Notice :: Contact us