The Institute for Advanced Study Faculty, Members And

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Institute for Advanced Study Faculty, Members And THE INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED STUDY Olden Lane Princeton, NJ 08540 (609) 734-8000 Cable: ADVANSTUDY FACULTY, MEMBERS AND ADMINISTRATION DIRECTORY . Academic Yeai 1985-1986 Term I: September 23 - December 20, 1985 Recess: December 24, 1985 - January 1, 1986 Term II: January 6 - April 4, 1986 EMERGENCY AND SERVICE CALLS Ambulance: 921 ..2100 Housing Office: .. 734-'8230 Medical Center at Pririceton: 921-7700 Police (Township): 921-2100 Security Mon.-Fri. (9 a.m.-5 p.m.): 452-3134 Mon.-Fri. (5 p.m.-9 a.m.): 734~8241 Sat.-Sun. (24 hours): 452-3134 Please call Mary Winsovsky·s Office (8214) for changes and additions to the Directory. ADMINISTRATION Harry Woolf, Director Patricia Dixon, Secretary Patricia Labalme, Associate Director Helen Laesker, Secretary Allen I. Rowe, Associate Director of Administration and Finance Marianne Weissenburger, Secretary Mary Wisnovsky, Assistant to the Director Laura Schuckmann GlUck, Secretary James Barbour, Manager of Administration Mary Mazza, Manager of Accounting Sabina Modzelewski, Comptroller Roberta Gernhardt, Personnel Officer ***** Libraries Elliott Shore, Historical Studies and Social Science Momota Ganguli, Mathematics and Natural Sciences School of Historical Studies Rose T. Murray, School Administrative Officer School of Mathematics Linda Y. Sheldon, School Administrative Officer School of Natural Sciences Page E. Hartwell, School Administrative Officer School of Social Science Peggy A. Clarke, School Administrative Officer ABBREVIATIONS A Building A AS Administrative Services ASCS American School of Classical Studies B Buil di ng B BO Business Office C Building C CS Carpenter Shop o Building 0 DH Dining Hall DO Director's Office E Building E ECP Electronic Computer Project F Fuld Hall G Garage Grnds Grounds HP Housing Project HS Historical Studies/School of Historical Studies Hsg Housing Lib Library LL Lower Level Maint Maintenance Math Mathematics/School of Mathematics MH Marquand House MS Mason Shop NS Natural Sciences/School of Natural Sciences OF Olden Farm Pers Personnel PS Paint/Plumbing Shop Rcptn Reception Sec Security SR Stock Room SSS Social Science/School of Social Science Whse Warehouse W West Building SYMBOLS * Term I ** Term II # Not in residence/On leave of absence DV Director's Visitor V Visitor r Name, Spouse & Off. & School (Short-term Dates) Address &Telephone Exts. IDept. ACCOUNTS Payable FILL BO 8212 ACCOUNTS Receivable FILL BO 8247 ADLER, Steven L. 287A Nassau Street 0102 NS Princeton, NJ 08540 8051 (609) 924-8273 ADLER, Jud ith 265 Hawthorne Avenue F202 Mathl Princeton, NJ 08540 8987 y/?lO NSL i b (609) 924-3683 AJALA, Samuel O. 218 Springdale Road F211 Math Princeton, NJ 08540 8393 (609) 683 -4671 (8112 ) ALEXANDER, Jeffrey C. 95 Einstein Drive W337 SSS Ruth H. Bloch Princeton, NJ 08540 8266 (609) 683-4643 ALFOLDI-ROSENBAUM, 272 Mercer Street HS Elisabeth Princeton, NJ 08540 (609) 921-6127 ALLOWAY, Leroy W. 24 Jun i per Row Rcptn Sec Mil dred Princeton, NJ 08540 8241 (609) ALLSEN, Lucille-H. 134 Bull Run Road W332 SSS Thomas T. Trenton, NJ 08638 8255 (609) 882-5152 ALMARZA, Isabel G. One Hardin Road Jose M. F. Labastida Princeton, NJ 08540 (609) 683-4629 ALVIN, Garry, Jr. 110 Cornwall Avenue BILL AS Elanora Trenton, NJ 08618 8220 (609) 392-4206 AMDUR, Robert 11 Hardi n Road W335 SSS Princeton, NJ 08540 8269 (609) 924-3772 AMERICAN School of HS/SSS ASCS Classical Studies Lib 8386 -2- Name, Spouse & Off. & School (Short-term Dates) Address &Telephone Exts. /Dept. ANGELUCCI, Domenic 1800 Klocker Road, #13 Rcptn Sec Geraldine Trenton, NJ 08619 8241 (609) 890-1312 ANTENUCCI, Michelino 19 Ford Drive Maint Antonietta Hamilton Twp., NJ 08690 8234 (609) 890-0340 ANTENUCCI, Vincenzo 19 Ford Drive Maint Angela Hamilton Twp., NJ 08690 8227 (609) 890-0340 ANTEROOM F305 HS 8335 ARCE, Javier 69 Einstein Drive W219 HS Fabienne Burkhalter Princeton, NJ 08540 8359 (609) 924-3772 ARMENTI, Sebastiano 35 Pine Street Grnds Luisa Princeton, NJ 08540 8232 (unlisted number) *ARRIGHETTI, Graziano 71 Einstein Drive W112 HS Franca Rosi Princeton, NJ 08540 8114 (no tel~phone service) BAGGER, Jonathan A. 161 von Neumann Drive 0201 NS Princeton, NJ 08540 8068 (609) 921-1127 BAHCALL, John ~. 21 Adams Drive E202 NS Neta Princeton, NJ 08540 8054 (609) 924-0658 BAHCALL, Neta 21 Adams Drive £109 NS John N. Princeton, NJ 08540 8082 (609) 924-0658 BAKEWELL, Peter J. 152 von Neumann Drive W319 HS Susan Benforado Princeton, NJ 08540 8367 (609) 924-7650 BARBOUR, James H., Jr. 3 Lakeview Court Fl02 80 Jo Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 8193 (609) 799-2696 BARNES, Joshua E. 64 Einstein Drive £105 NS Princeton, NJ 08540 8077 (609) 683-5749 ~-------- -- - --- -3- Name, Spouse & Off. & School (Short-term Dates) Address &Telephone Exts. /Dept. BASU, Kaushik 156 von Neumann Drive W315 SSS Alaka Princeton, NJ 08540 8259 (609) 683-4645 BATES, Albert M. Box 166A, R.D. #2 PS/G Maint Helena R. Yardville, NJ 08620 8227 (609) 298-3788 BAYAN, Enid M. 511B Kingston Terrace F310/ HS R.D. #4 A100 Princeton, NJ 08540 8328/ (609) 921-0146 8315 BEATSON, Elizabeth H. 15 Murray Place W222 HS Princeton, NJ 08540 8362 (609) 921-9136 *BEAUJEU, Jean 103 Einstein Drive A102 HS Claire Marie Princeton, NJ 08540 8334 (609) 683-5822 BEDARD, Robert 163 von Neumann Drive C205 Math Roland G. Guillot Princeton, NJ 08540 8176 (609) 683-5730 (8115 ) *BENDERSKY, Martin 14 Stonicker Drive ECP39 Math Margaret Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 8157 (609) 771-6029 (8113 ) BENFORADO, Susan 152 von Neumann Drive Peter J. Bakewell Princeton, NJ 08540 (609) 924-7650 BERNARD, Ian 45 McKinley Avenue Maint Trenton, NJ 08609 (609) 392-3542 BERNARD, Patricia 767 Lawrence Road HS/SSS HS/SSS Albert A. Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 Lib Lib (609) 883-5380 8377 *BERNSTEIN, Joseph N. 33 Einstein Drive C211 Math Princeton, NJ 08540 8179 (609) 683-4646 (8115 ) V**BERTRAND, Daniel A. 70 Einstein Drive ClIO Math - Joan Bertrand-McLaughlin Princeton, NJ 08540 8174 (03/04/85-04/04/86) (609) (8115 ) -----_. -4- Name, Spouse & Off. & School (Short-term Dates) Address &Telephone Exts. /Dept. **BERTRAND-MCLAUGHLIN, Joan 70 Einstein Drive Daniel A. Bertrand Princeton, NJ 08540 (03/04/85-04/04/86) (609) BESS, James 168 John Street B/LL AS Helen Princeton, NJ 08540 8219 (609) 924-0585 BEURLING, Arne 102 Battle Road Circle FI15 Math Karen Princeton, NJ 08540 8102 (609) 921-6832 (8100) BHATWADEKAR, Shrikant M. 112 South Olden Lane F204 Math Princeton, NJ 08540 8332 (609) 683-5541 (8112 ) BIGELOW, Julian H. 3 Hornor Lane ECP9 NS Princeton, NJ 08540 8222 (609) 924-0945 r**BINNEY, James J. NS (04/01/85-07/31/86) rBLOCH, Ruth H. 95 Einstein Drive W306 SSS Jeffrey Alexander Princeton, NJ 08540 8261 (609) 683-4643 BOMBIERI, Enrico 45 Veblen Circle C207 Math Susan Princeton, NJ 08540 8109 (609) 924-5599 (8115 ) BOREL, Armand 106 Battle Road Circle C204 Math Gaby Princeton, NJ 08540 8108 (609) 924-1740 (8115 ) BOWER JONES, Sylvia 162 von Neumann Drive Eric L. Jones Princeton, NJ 08540 (609) 924-7585 BOWERSOCK, Glen W. 10 Maxwe 11 Lane W205 HS Princeton, NJ 08540 8353 (609) 924-4689 **BOYER, Jean-Claude 109H South Olden Lane W107 HS Anne-Marie Princeton, NJ 08540 8164 (609) -5- Name, Spouse & Off. & School (Short-term Dates) Address &Telephone Exts. IDept. BOZZAY, L. Paula 2940 Princeton Pike 0104 NS Emery Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 8066 (609) 882-5849 BREWSTER, Joseph E. 345 Gardner Avenue DH DH Betty C. Trenton, NJ 08648 8222 (unlisted number) BROWNAWELL, W. Dale 68 Einstein Drive CI07 Math Eva M. Princeton, NJ 08540 8172 (609) 683-4625 (8115) BUDDEN, Kathleen M. 1003 Hughes Drive, #6 FILL BO Hamilton Sq., NJ 08690 8212 (609) 890-8923 BUFFO, Alberto 7 Hardin Road F409 Math Princeton, NJ 08540 8128 (609) 683-1289 (8112 ) BUMP, Daniel W. 109E South Olden Lane C105 Math Princeton, NJ 08540 8170 (609) 683-4682 (8115 ) BURGESS, C.l ifford P. 42 Einstein Drive 0206 NS Caroline Princeton, NJ 08540 8070 (609) 683-0629 BURKHALTER, Fabienne 69 Einstein Drive Javier Arce Princeton, NJ 08540 (609) 924-3772 CARNEVALE, Angelo 120 Review Avenue Grnds Bice Trenton, NJ 08648 8232 (609) 882-7756 CARPENTER Shop G Maint 8236 CARROLL, James L. 12 Green Shadow Lane PS/G Maint Susie M. R.D. #4, Box 733A 8227 Princeton, NJ 08540 (201) 297-3209 CARUGO, Adriano 72 Einstein Drive WI03 HS Elisabeth Hjornevik Princeton, NJ 08540 8272 (609) 683-4640 ~--_...._-- - -6- Name, Spouse & Off. & School (Short-term Dates) Address &Telephone Exts. /Dept. CASERTANO, Stefano 178A von Neumann Drive E200 NS Franca Gorraz Princeton, NJ 08540 8083 (609) 683-4468 CHAVARRIAGA, Leticia 341 Witherspoon Street OF Maint Jairo Princeton, NJ 08540 924­ (609) 921-8230 7413 V*CHEN, Kuo-Tsai 101 Einstein Drive F410 Math - (spouse) Princeton, NJ 08540 8126 (10/11-10/20/85 ) (609) 8112) CHERNISS, Harold F. 98 Battle Road 0107 HS Ruth Princeton, NJ 08540 8307 (609) 924-3363 *CHERRIER, Pascal 1090 South Olden lane F214 Math Princeton, NJ 08540 8395 (609) 683-4664 (8112 ) V*CHESTER, Thomas J. 79 Einstein Drive E02 NS - Deborah Princeton, NJ 08540 8002 (11/07 -12/07/85) (609) CHOWlA, Sarvadaman 449 Ewing Street F113 Math Princeton, NJ 08540 8116 (609) 924-4943 (8112 ) **CIAMMITTI, Maria Luisa 100 Einstein Drive Carlo Ginzburg Princeton, NJ 08540 (609) CICCONE, Nick 27 Forest Avenue Grnds Ada lawrenceville, NJ 08648 8232 (609) 883-3690 CLAGETT, Marshall 30 Maxwell lane HS/SSS HS Sue Princeton, NJ 08540 Lib (609) 921-9065 8311 CLARK, Janet 108 Darrow Drive HS/SSS ASCS Kenn Pennington, NJ Lib (609) 466-3952 8387 CLARKE, Peggy Ann 206 Grandview Road W307 SSS Richard B. Skillman, NJ 08558 8250 (609) 466-2471 -7- Name, Spouse & Off. & School (Short-term Dates) Address &Telephone Exts. IDept. CLAUSEN, George W.
Recommended publications
  • Columbia College Columbia University in the City of New York
    Columbia College Columbia University in the City of New York BULLETIN | 2011–2012 JULY 15, 2011 Directory of Services University Information (212) 854-1754 Columbia College On-Line http://www.college.columbia.edu/ ADDRESS INQUIRIES AS FOLLOWS: Financial Aid: Office of Financial Aid and Educational Financing Office of the Dean: Mailing address: Columbia College 100 Hamilton Hall 208 Hamilton Hall Mail Code 2802 Mail Code 2805 1130 Amersterdam Avenue 1130 Amersterdam Avenue New York, NY 10027 New York, NY 10027 Office location: 407 Alfred Lerner Hall telephone (212) 854-2441 telephone (212) 854-3711 Academic Success Programs (HEOP/NOP): Health Services: 403 Alfred Lerner Hall Health Services at Columbia Mail Code 2607 401 John Jay Hall 2920 Broadway Mail Code 3601 New York, NY 10027 519 West 114th Street telephone (212) 854-3514 New York, NY 10027 telephone (212) 854-7210 Admissions: http://www.health.columbia.edu/ Office of Undergraduate Admissions 212 Hamilton Hall Housing on Campus: Mail Code 2807 Residence Halls Assignment Office 1130 Amsterdam Avenue 111 Wallach Hall New York, NY 10027 Mail Code 4202 telephone (212) 854-2522 1116 Amsterdam Avenue http://www.studentaffairs.columbia.edu/admissions/ New York, NY 10027 (First-year, transfer, and visitor applications) telephone (212) 854-2775 http://www.columbia.edu/cu/reshalls/ Dining Services: 103 Wein Hall Housing off Campus: Mail Code 3701 Off-Campus Housing Assistance 411 West 116th Street 419 West 119th Street New York, NY 10027 New York, NY 10027 telephone (212) 854-6536 telephone
    [Show full text]
  • Second Order Twist Contributions to the Balitsky-Kovchegov Equation at Small-X: Deterministic and Stochastic Pictures
    Second Order Twist Contributions to the Balitsky-Kovchegov Equation at small-x: Deterministic and Stochastic Pictures S. K. Grossberndt Department of Physics, Columbia University (Dated: January 5, 2021) I study the second order twist corrections to a toy model of a dipole-dipole interaction in the context of a both deterministic and stochastic effects. This work is done in the high NC limit in the Bjorken picture. I show that the correction to the second twist terms of the stochastic picture suggest additional importance of the second twist correction in the stochastic model as compared to the deterministic model. I. INTRODUCTION is performed on this cascade, one reaches the Balitsky- Kovchegov (BK) evolution equation which is unitary and does not diffuse into the IR, distinguishing it from ear- There has been a large body of work in the field lier equations and generates a saturation scale that grows of high energy QCD related to the scattering for vir- with energy: allowing for the suppression of the non- tual photons on bound states [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]. Im- perturbative QCD physics that may enter through the portant results in this field include the parton model initial conditions [19][20] [21] [22]. As described by Bal- of Deep Inelastic scattering, first given by Feynman [6] itsky, the relevant logarithms in this equation may arise and later modified by Bjorken and Paschos [7], and the from the expansion of non-local operators which gives rise DGLAP evolution equations [8][9][10], both cornerstones to a twist interpretation of the equation, where higher of perturbative QCD.
    [Show full text]
  • Physics & Astronomy
    Physics & Astronomy 1 • make an effective oral presentation to an audience of peers and PHYSICS & ASTRONOMY faculty on a particular research topic. 504A Altschul Hall From Aristotle's Physics to Newton's Principia, the term "physics," taken 212-854-3628 literally from the Greek φυσις (= Nature), implied natural science in its Department Administrative Assistant: Joanna Chisolm very broadest sense. Physicists were, in essence, natural philosophers, seeking knowledge of the observable phenomenal world. Astronomy Mission originally concentrated on the study of natural phenomena in the heavens with the intent to understand the constitution, relative positions, and The mission of the Physics and Astronomy Department at Barnard motions of the celestial bodies in our universe. Though practitioners of College is to provide students with an understanding of the basic laws these disciplines have become somewhat more specialized in the past of nature, and a foundation in the fundamental concepts of classical century, the spirit that guides them in their research remains the same as and quantum physics, and modern astronomy and astrophysics. Majors it was more than two millennia ago. are offered in physics, astronomy, or in interdisciplinary fields such as, astrophysics, biophysics, or chemical physics. The goal of the In cooperation with the faculty of the University, Barnard offers a department is to provide students (majors and non-majors) with quality thorough pre-professional curriculum in both physics and astronomy. instruction and prepare them for various post-graduate career options, The faculty represents a wide range of expertise, with special strength including graduate study in physics and/or astronomy, professional and distinction in theoretical physics, condensed matter physics, and careers in science, technology, education, or applied fields, as well observational astrophysics.
    [Show full text]
  • APS Announces Spring 2003 Prize and Award Recipients
    Spring 2003 APS AnnouncesPrizes Spring 2003and Prize andAwards Award Recipients Thirty-six APS prizes and awards will University in Kingston, Ontario as professor In 1938 he moved to 2003 DAVISSON GERMER PRIZE be presented during special sessions at of physics and director of the Sudbury Princeton University, three spring meetings of the Society: the Neutrino Observatory (SNO) Institute and Ruud Tromp where he remained until 2003 March Meeting, 3-7 March, in Aus- in 2002 he was awarded a University IBM TJ Watson Research Center 1976. He then spent a tin, TX; the 2003 April Meeting, April 5-8, Research Chair in Physics. His research has Citation: “For his pioneering work in decade at the University in Philadelphia, PA; and the 2003 meet- centered on the use of the nucleus as a understanding the structure and growth of of Texas at Austin. His ing of the APS Division of Atomic, laboratory for the investigation of semiconductor surfaces and interfaces.” early contributions Molecular and Optical Physics, May 21- fundamental symmetries and interactions include the S matrix, the Tromp received a degree of physics 24, 2003; in Boulder, CO. of nature. He continues an active teaching theory of nuclear rotation, the theory of engineer from the Twente University of Citations and biographical informa- and research program in addition to the nuclear fission, action-at-a-distance Technology (the Netherlands) in 1978. In tion for each recipient follow. The Directorship of SNO. electrodynamics , and the collective model 1982 he obtained his Apker Award recipients appeared in of the nucleus. Beginning in 1952, he became PhD degree in physics the December 2002 issue of APS News immersed in gravitation physics, “inventing” 2003 HERBERT P.
    [Show full text]
  • Electron Ion Collider
    Electron Ion Collider: The Next QCD Frontier Executive Summary Understanding the glue that binds us all This document is a result of a community wide effort that will be duly acknowledged in the full version of the White Paper Elke C. Aschenauer Brookhaven National Laboratory William Brooks Universidad T´ecnica Federico Santa Maria Abhay Deshpande1 Stony Brook University Markus Diehl Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY Haiyan Gao Duke University Roy Holt Argonne National Laboratory Tanja Horn The Catholic University of America Andrew Hutton Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility Yuri Kovchegov The Ohio State University Krishna Kumar University of Massachusetts, Amherst Robert McKeown Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility Zein-Eddine Meziani1 Temple University Alfred Mueller Columbia University Jianwei Qiu1 Brookhaven National Laboratory Michael Ramsey-Musolf University of Wisconsin Thomas Roser Brookhaven National Laboratory 1Co-Editor 1 Franck Sabati´e Commissariat `al' Energie´ Atomique-Saclay Ernst Sichtermann Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Thomas Ullrich Brookhaven National Laboratory Steven Vigdor Brookhaven National Laboratory Werner Vogelsang University of T¨ubingen Feng Yuan Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 2 Contents 1 Executive Summary: Exploring the Glue that Binds Us All 1 1.1 Introduction . .1 1.2 Science Highlights of the Electron Ion Collider . .3 1.2.1 Nucleon Spin and its 3D Structure and Tomography . .3 1.2.2 The Nucleus, a QCD Laboratory . .7 1.2.3 Physics Possibilities at the Intensity Frontier . 10 1.3 The Electron Ion Collider and its Realization . 10 1.4 Physics Deliverables of the Stage I of EIC . 12 References 14 3 Chapter 1 Executive Summary: Exploring the Glue that Binds Us All 1.1 Introduction Nuclear science is concerned with the origin and structure of the core of the atom, the nucleus and the nucleons (protons and neutrons) within it, which account for essentially all of the mass of the visible universe.
    [Show full text]
  • Prospects of Hadron and Quark Physics with Electromagnetic Probes
    FR9806072 Prospects of Hadron and Quark Physics with Electromagnetic Probes Proceedings of the Second ELFE on Hadronic Physics Parallel Sessions Saint Malo, France, September 23-27, 1996 Edited by N. D'HOSE1, B. FROIS1, P.A.M. GUICHON1, B. PIRE2 and J. VAN DE WIELE3 1 CEA-Saclay, F-91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France 2 Centre de Physique Theorique, Ecole Polytechnique, F-91128 Palaiseau, France 3 Division de Recherche Experimentale, Institut de Physique Nucleaire, F-91406 Orsay, France PREFACE The last three days of the second ELFE workshop on confinement physics were devoted to the results of the work done during the past year on the update and im- provement of the physics case, the feasibility of the ELFE at DESY project (which combines the HERA ring used as a stretcher and a low duty factor 25 GeV electron linac which could be either a section of the TESLA collider or the injector of the fore- seen short wave length free electron laser) as well as the development of the detectors. Here are the proceedings of the parallel sessions devoted to this review. The Editors. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface iii Inclusive and Semi-inclusive Reactions Radiative energy loss of jets in hot/cold nuclear matter S. Peigne 3 Partonic content of the nucleon from constituent quark models V. Vento and M. Traini 9 Coordinate-space picture of nuclear structure functions M. Vanttinen 15 Gluon and pion exchange currents in the electromagnetic excitation of baryon resonances E. Perazzi, M. Radici and S. Boffi 19 Time reversal odd fragmentation functions in polarized deep-inelastic leptoproduction R.
    [Show full text]
  • DPF Newsletter - July 1998
    DPF Newsletter - July 1998 In This Issue... The DPF Newsletter has a new look! Prizes The newsletter has been redesigned by the APS Publications Department. The DPF Congressional Reception newsletter is published roughly three times a year. Contributions from DPF members are DPF Centennial Plans welcome. Send them to [email protected]. Cathy Newman-Holmes DOE & HEPAP News Editor and DPF Secretary-Treasurer NSF News Meetings & Workshops DPF Public Information The DPF has a new Public Information On the Web Coordinator: Robert Cahn of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. He has DPF home page: developed a new Web page: http://www.aps.org/units/dpf/. http://phyweb.lbl.gov/~rncahn/pic.cfm. Note that it has moved in the last few months; the old site is redirecting but you may want to change your bookmarks. HEPAP Subpanel report on Planning for the Future of U.S. High-Energy Physics ("Gilman report", February 1998): http://www.hep.net/doe- hep/hepap_reports.cfm DOE Division of High Energy Physics: http://www.hep.net/doe-hep/home.html NSF Elementary Particle Physics: http://www.nsf.gov/mps/phy/particle.html APS Centennial: http://www.aps.org/centennial/ FNAL Director Search: http://www.fnal.gov/directorate/ura/ dirsearch/director_search.cfm FNAL Director Search Universities Research Association, Inc. (URA) has appointed a Search Committee to conduct an open, broad-based search for a successor to Fermilab Director John Peoples, who has announced his intention to retire, effective July 1, 1999. The Search Committee met at Fermilab 28-29 May 1998 and conducted extensive interviews with many members of the Fermilab staff and user community.
    [Show full text]
  • Report of the RBRC Scientific Review Committee Brookhaven National Laboratory November 6-8, 2012 I
    Report of the RBRC Scientific Review Committee Brookhaven National Laboratory November 6-8, 2012 I. Introduction The last time the RBRC Scientific Review Committee met was October 27-29, 2010. This report discusses the important developments over the past two years. The Scientific Review Committee consists of Wit Busza, Miklos Gyulassy, Kenichi Imai, Richard Milner (Chair), Alfred Mueller, Charles Prescott, and Akira Ukawa. The committee membership is listed in an appendix to this report, with members’ addresses and affiliations. At the beginning of the meeting, in executive session, the committee was pleased to hear the opening remarks given by Dr. Hideto En’yo, Director of the RIKEN Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science, who traveled to Brookhaven specifically for the purpose of attending this review. Dr. En’yo reported on the renewal of the agreement between BNL and RIKEN to continue RBRC for the six years 2012-17, with the possibility of further extension. The committee congratulates BNL and RIKEN for this important achievement. In this report we review the current program and recent achievements. II. Overview of the current program Dr. Nick Samios, the RBRC Director, presented an overview of RBRC personnel as well as recent achievements in the scientific program and the performance of the RHIC accelerator. At the beginning of his presentation, Dr. Samios discussed the management of RBRC and the role RBRC plays in the career development of scientists and scientific leadership. He pointed out that Dr. Y. Akiba remains Experimental group leader with Dr. A. Deshpande, his deputy, and Dr. L. McLerran remains Theory group leader with R.
    [Show full text]
  • American Physical Society New York State Section Physics Newsletter Zohreh Parsa, Editor
    December 2003 +February 2004 Volume 2, No. 1 American Physical Society New York State Section Physics Newsletter Zohreh Parsa, Editor Editor’s Foreword Particle Accelerator Frontiers and New Physics Potentials Greetings from the editor: Our Dec 03 Newsletter was extended to cover Jan 04 events/news. Thanks for the overwhelming response to the inaugural edition of our Newsletter. We hope you like this After 11 Years, the New York State Section of the American issue, and look forward to your comments. The purpose here is to Physical Society (APS) topical symposium was held on “Particle provide information and communicate physics related events and Accelerator Frontiers and New Physics Potentials” at BNL on current New York State (NYS) affairs that would be particularly in- October 17 and 18, 2003. The meeting was organized by Dr. teresting to local members. In this issue: a brief on the recent Sym- Zohreh Parsa of the BNL Physics Department, and was attended posia, a comment from the chair, and outreach program, will pro- by more than 200 registered participants from New York State, vide you with an overview of our NYSS and its activities. The section neighboring states and overseas. There were also 62 student at- on “Physics Highlights and News in NYS” includes: the latest “g-2” tendees including 23 cadets from West Point Military Academy results; “More Muons on Long Island:” (envisions a general user facil- accompanied by their physics instructor. At the symposium, dis- ity that would make more than 1011 very low energy muons per tinguished speakers from across the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • QCD Phenomenology
    QCD Phenomenology Lectures at the CERN–Dubna School, Pylos, August 2002 Yu.L. Dokshitzer LPTHE, University Paris-6, France and PNPI, St. Petersburg, Russia Abstract The status of QCD phenomena and open problems are reviewed Foreword The four lectures on “QCD Phenomenology” at the Σǫρν–∆oυµνα school, delivered in the dungeon hall of the magnificent Pylos castle were, naturally, labelled by Greek letters and dealt with α – the basics of QCD and its main problems, β – the running coupling and anatomy of the Asymptotic Freedom, γ – QCD partons and the rˆole of colour in multiple hadroproduction and δ – non-perturbative corrections to QCD observables. In the written version of the lectures I have chosen to concentrate on the qualitative discussion of selected QCD phenomena rather than teach you the basic perturbative QCD techniques1 . The selection criterion was as follows. I have picked the topics that I find puzzling and/or whose importance I feel have not attracted as much attention as they rightfully deserved. 1. INTRODUCTION. ON GUESSWORKS. The spirits were kind enough to say: “We have no respect of cullours” [2] In the late 1970s one could say “QED was 30 years old”. In 2003 we cannot but state that “QCD arXiv:hep-ph/0306287v1 29 Jun 2003 is 30 years young”. Dating great discoveries is a delicate business, though. “The spirit” in the above Charlotte Fell-Smith’s narrative actually was Uriel2, the one of four Archangels responsible for funda- mental science (and physics in particular) [3]. Thus the idea of colour invariance, as communicated by Arch. Uriel to Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • DPF Newsletter - March 2003
    DPF Newsletter - March 2003 In This Issue... DPF and APS Election News DPF and APS Election Bill Carithers was elected Vice-Chair of DPF in this News year’s election. The new Executive Committee members are Marcela Carena and John Womersley. Message from the Chair The members of the 2003 DPF Executive Committee DPF Meetings and the final years of their terms are H.R. 34, the "Energy and Chair: Jonathan Bagger (2003) Science Reinvestment Act" Chair-Elect: Sally Dawson (2003) Visa and National Laboratory Access Problems Vice-Chair: Bill Carithers (2003) Education and Outreach Past Chair: Stan Wojcicki (2003) Subcommittee Secretary-Treasurer: Nick Hadley (2003) Report from the US Linear Collider Steering Group Division Councilor: Peter Meyers (2003) (USLCSG) Executive Committee Members: Report from P5 Marty Breidenbach (2003), Young-Kee Kim (2003), Howard Haber (2004), Elizabeth Simmons (2004), Prizes Marcela Carena (2005) and John Womersley (2005) New APS Fellows We would like to take this opportunity to thank the DPF Executive Committee members whose terms DPF Committees expired in 2002: Chris Quigg (Past Chair), and Janet Conrad and Bill Carithers (Executive Committee members). We would also like to express our The DPF newsletter is appreciation to all who agreed to run for DPF office published roughly three this year. We were fortunate once again to have an times a year. Contributions excellent slate of candidates. are welcome. Send them to the Editor. Editor: Nicholas Hadley (DPF Secretary-Treasurer), Physics Dept., The University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, (301) 405-6063, fax (301) 699-9195, [email protected]. Message from the Chair I'd like to kick off my term as DPF Chair by telling you about some important recent developments and by soliciting your help in a long-term effort to increase support for our field.
    [Show full text]
  • Electron Ion Collider Physics the Glue That Binds Us All: Next QCD Frontier!
    Electron Ion Collider Physics The glue that binds us all: Next QCD frontier! Zein-Eddine Meziani Temple University “It is difficult and often impossible to judge the value of a problem correctly in advance; for the final award depends upon the gain which science obtains from the problem.” David Hilbert, 1900 Paris 06/10/16 RHIC&AGS Users’ Meeting, BNL. 1 Origins life Origins of 6/21/2016 MIT LNS Colloquium, Cambridge, MA 2 Nuclear Science and QCD Nuclear Science To discover, explore and understand all forms of nuclear matter Nuclear Matter Quarks + Gluons + Interactions Nucleons Nuclei At the heart of the visible universe, accounting for essentially all its mass Among the Experimental Tools: Giant electron microscopes opened the gateway to nucleon structure at Stanford and at SLAC using electron proton scattering. Modern microscopes are pushing the frontiers of resolution, brightness and polarization combined. Theory Tools: Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) A fundamental theory of quarks and gluons Describes the formation of all forms of nuclear matter Understanding of QCD is a fundamental and compelling goal of Nuclear Science3 The Science Problem ? The structure of all nuclear matter in Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) and ultimately confinement What do we know? QCD successes in the perturbative regime are impressive, many experimental tests led to this conclusion But Many non-perturbative aspects of QCD including confinement are still puzzling. Confinement has been identified as one of the top millenium problems in Physics! (Gross,
    [Show full text]