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Defending against high-frequency attacks

It was the summer of 2008. I was 22 years old, and it was my second week working in the crude oil and natural gas options pit at the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX.) My head was throbbing after two consecutive weeks of disorientation. It was like being born into a new world, but without [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:45-08:00April 8th, 2014|Uncategorized|Comments Off on Defending against high-frequency attacks

The cost and yield of moving from (quantum) state to (quantum) state

The countdown had begun. In ten days, I’d move from Florida, where I’d spent the summer with family, to Caltech. Unfolded boxes leaned against my dresser, and suitcases yawned on the floor. I was working on a paper. Even if I’d turned around from my desk, I wouldn’t have seen the stacked books and folded [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:50-08:00October 14th, 2013|Reflections, Theoretical highlights|Comments Off on The cost and yield of moving from (quantum) state to (quantum) state

Faculty Lunch and Discussion

Faculty Lunch and Discussion Date Speaker Location June 3 Xie Chen 114 East Bridge May 13 Dave Hsieh 114 East Bridge April 29 Jason Alicea 114 East Bridge April 15 Daniel Silevitch B157 West Bridge February 26 Alexei Kitaev 114 East Bridge February 12 Rana Adhikari 114 East Bridge January 29 Linda Ye 114 [...]

2024-04-16T11:33:58-07:00April 12th, 2016|Comments Off on Faculty Lunch and Discussion

Reading the sub(linear) text

Physicists are not known for finesse. “Even if it cost us our funding,” I’ve heard a physicist declare, “we’d tell you what we think.” Little wonder I irked the porter who directed me toward central Cambridge. The University of Cambridge consists of colleges as the US consists of states. Each college has a porter’s lodge, [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:41-08:00July 20th, 2014|Real science, Reflections, Theoretical highlights|Comments Off on Reading the sub(linear) text

This single-shot life

The night before defending my Masters thesis, I ran out of shampoo. I ran out late enough that I wouldn’t defend from beneath a mop like Jack Sparrow’s; but, belonging to the Luxuriant Flowing-Hair Club for Scientists (technically, if not officially), I’d have to visit Shopper’s Drug Mart. The author’s unofficially Luxuriant [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:53-08:00July 1st, 2013|Reflections, Theoretical highlights|Comments Off on This single-shot life

Free Feynman!

Last Friday the 13th was a lucky day for those who love physics --- The online html version of Volume 1 of the Feynman Lectures on Physics (FLP) was released! Now anyone with Internet access and a web browser can enjoy these unique lectures for free. They look beautiful. Mike Gottlieb at Caltech on [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:50-08:00September 21st, 2013|News|Comments Off on Free Feynman!

Diversity

Transforming the STEM Pipeline into a River The traditional metaphor of the “leaky pipeline” tracks the number of students entering the educational system and emphasizes points at which women and minority students leave the system. IQIM is working to increase diversity on our campus and more broadly in STEM by encouraging a [...]

2023-05-03T11:56:50-07:00April 28th, 2023|Comments Off on Diversity

How I learned to stop worrying and love graphene

Five years ago, I was staring out one of the few windowed cubicles in a cluttered office full of overambitious salespeople willing to throw their own father under a bus, if it meant a couple more dollars in commission and maybe a few more brownie points from the sweaty, beer-bellied sales manager. What was going [...]

2017-01-13T10:06:06-08:00July 13th, 2012|Real science|Comments Off on How I learned to stop worrying and love graphene

Science books for kids matter (or used to)

The elementary school I attended hosted an annual book fair, and every year I went with my mother to browse. I would check out the sports books first, to see whether there were any books about baseball I had not already read (typically, no). There was also a small table of science books, and in [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:56-08:00January 6th, 2013|Reflections, The expert's corner|Comments Off on Science books for kids matter (or used to)
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