Think Physics’ host institution Northumbria University has a PhD studentship available. Here’s the title:
Impact of Academic Research through Northumbria’s STEM outreach activities on the uptake of STEM disciplines by young people
I know, right? Snappy.
Importantly: there’s a full stipend available for this PhD, for three years at RCUK rates and fees.
There’s a full description of the project on offer at Find a PhD.com, and you can apply through that site too. At the time of writing this post the application deadline appears to be rather soon; that will be extended to later in July, so you’ve time to think it through.
https://nustem.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Dr.jpg9281650Jonathanhttps://nustem.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/logo-banner.pngJonathan2016-06-20 14:17:072016-06-20 14:17:58Study with us! PhD Studentship available
As a project with ‘Physics’ in our title, it hardly seems possible not to be talking about gravitational waves in the office this morning. We read the reports avidly, we got all excited, and we also realised that we’re hardly the experts on this. So here’s our brief run-down of the really useful stuff we’ve found from better journalists than ourselves and more informed cosmologists:
First up, an excellent film from the New York Times, which sets out what the LIGO experiment in Louisiana and Washington has done:
The rest of the Times’ report is a good solid overview of what’s happened. Through the arms-length reporting you can glimpse the level of excitement and the significance of the work.
If animation is more your style, this primer from PhD Comics will spin you through the bumpy landscape of gravitational waves:
“Space and time became distorted, like water at a rolling boil. In the fraction of a second that it took for the black holes to finally merge, they radiated a hundred times more energy than all the stars in the universe combined. They formed a new black hole…
The waves rippled outward in every direction, weakening as they went. On Earth, dinosaurs arose, evolved, and went extinct. The waves kept going. About fifty thousand years ago, they entered our own Milky Way galaxy, just as Homo sapiens were beginning to replace our Neanderthal cousins as the planet’s dominant species of ape. A hundred years ago, Albert Einstein, one of the more advanced members of the species, predicted the waves’ existence, inspiring decades of speculation and fruitless searching.”
It’s a beautifully-written piece, and it really captures the human aspect of this – of hundreds of physicists around the world experiencing that moment of discovery. It’s an image that’s ingrained in popular conceptions of how science works, of Archimedes leaping out of his bathtub and exclaiming ‘Eureka!’ The reality, of course, is usually very different. Science tends to proceed in small steps, miniature breakthroughs in labs and desks and computers around the world, inching forwards piece by piece. But the LIGO work appears to be a genuine breakthrough, and the excitement is both real and hard-earned.
“It is the cleanest signal you can imagine… you have to feel fantastic for those 800 scientists, who have been spending – some of them – decades of their careers working towards this first detection.”
— Dr. Andrew Pontzen, UCL
The programme also hears from the leading UK scientist on the project, Prof. Sheila Rowan of the University of Glasgow. You can get a good sense of how giddy everyone is about this by listening to her impression of the signal ‘chirp.’
Think Physics is based at Northumbria University, where it just so happens we run a Science Communication MSc course as a joint endeavour with the Centre for Life (who are also a Think Physics partner – are you spotting a pattern here?).
There are several such courses in the country, notably the ones run by Imperial College and the University of the West of England. The Northumbria course differs primarily in the close association with a leading visitor centre: if you look closely at the range of courses available, you’ll see that each skews towards a different niche and specialism.
The course is currently recruiting for its second entry cohort, either for full-time study over one year or part-time over two. Useful links:
https://nustem.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Science-Communication-MSc.jpg9281650Jonathanhttps://nustem.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/logo-banner.pngJonathan2015-08-07 12:59:522015-08-11 14:16:46Science Communication MSc
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