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To become a good teacher, ignore everything you’re told and learn from the masters (part 4 of 4)

In the previous posts in this series, I described how using lessons I learned from Richard Feynman and John Preskill led me to become a more popular TA. What I learned from a few others* If by some miracle I ever get to be a professor, there will be a few others I look to [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:36-08:00January 22nd, 2015|Reflections|Comments Off on To become a good teacher, ignore everything you’re told and learn from the masters (part 4 of 4)

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

How to build a teleportation machine: Teleportation protocol

Damn, it sure takes a long time for light to travel to the Pegasus galaxy. If only quantum teleportation enabled FTL Stargates… I was hoping to post this earlier, but a heavy dose of writer’s block set in (I met a girl, and no, this blog didn’t help — but [...]

2017-01-13T10:06:03-08:00September 17th, 2012|The expert's corner, Theoretical highlights|Comments Off on How to build a teleportation machine: Teleportation protocol

John Preskill and the dawn of the entanglement frontier

Editor's Note: John Preskill's recent election to the National Academy of Sciences generated a lot of enthusiasm among his colleagues and students. In an earlier post today, famed Stanford theoretical physicist, Leonard Susskind, paid tribute to John's early contributions to physics ranging from magnetic monopoles to the quantum mechanics of black holes. In this post, [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:42-08:00May 22nd, 2014|News, Reflections|Comments Off on John Preskill and the dawn of the entanglement frontier

Remembering Arthur Wightman

Arthur Wightman Arthur Wightman passed away this past January, at age 90. He was one of the great mathematical physicists of the past century. Two of Arthur’s most renowned students, Arthur Jaffe and Barry Simon, wrote an affectionate obituary. I thought I would add some reminiscences of my own — [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:55-08:00March 13th, 2013|Reflections|Comments Off on Remembering Arthur Wightman

Building a Computer: Part I

During my senior year in high school, I was fortunate enough to participate in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. At the awards banquet I was seated with fourteen others and we each had the choice of ordering either salmon or steak for our respective entrées. I noticed that while taking our fifteen different [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:48-08:00December 25th, 2013|The expert's corner|Comments Off on Building a Computer: Part I

Of magnetic monopoles and fast-scrambling black holes

Editor's Note: On April 29th, 2014, the National Academy of Sciences announced the new electees to the prestigious organization. This was an especially happy occasion for everyone here at IQIM, since the new members included our very own John Preskill, Richard P. Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics and regular blogger on this site. A request [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:42-08:00May 22nd, 2014|News, Reflections|Comments Off on Of magnetic monopoles and fast-scrambling black holes

To become a good teacher, ignore everything you’re told and learn from the masters (part 3 of 4)

In the first post of this series, I described some frustrations I had with what we were told to do in TA training. In the previous post, I recalled some memories of interactions I had with John Preskill while I was working at the IQI. When it came time for me to give my last [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:37-08:00January 18th, 2015|Reflections|Comments Off on To become a good teacher, ignore everything you’re told and learn from the masters (part 3 of 4)

The theory of everything: Help wanted

When Scientific American writes that physicists are working on a theory of everything, does it sound ambitious enough to you? Do you lie awake at night thinking that a theory of everything should be able to explain, well, everything? What if that theory is founded on quantum mechanics and finds a way to explain gravitation through [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:42-08:00June 2nd, 2014|Reflections, Theoretical highlights|Comments Off on The theory of everything: Help wanted

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
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