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Clocking in at a Cambridge conference

Science evolves on Facebook. On Facebook last fall, I posted about statistical mechanics. Statistical mechanics is the physics of hordes of particles. Hordes of molecules, for example, form the stench seeping from a clogged toilet. Hordes change in certain ways but not in the reverse ways, suggesting time points in a direction. Once a stink [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:42-08:00May 8th, 2014|Reflections, Theoretical highlights|Comments Off on Clocking in at a Cambridge conference

Celebrating Theoretical Physics at Caltech’s Burke Institute

Walter Burke Editor's Note: Yesterday and today, Caltech is celebrating the inauguration of the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics. John Preskill made the following remarks at a dinner last night honoring the board of the Sherman Fairchild Foundation. This is an exciting night for me and all of us at Caltech. Tonight [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:36-08:00February 24th, 2015|Reflections|Comments Off on Celebrating Theoretical Physics at Caltech’s Burke Institute

Making predictions in the multiverse

I am a theoretical physicist at University of California, Berkeley. Last month, I attended a very interesting conference organized by Foundamental Questions Institute (FQXi) in Puerto Rico, and presented a talk about making predictions in cosmology, especially in the eternally inflating multiverse. I very much enjoyed discussions with people at the conference, where I was invited [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:47-08:00February 13th, 2014|Theoretical highlights|Comments Off on Making predictions in the multiverse

Squeezing light using mechanical motion

This post is about generating a special type of light, squeezed light, using a mechanical resonator. But perhaps more importantly, it’s about an experiment (Caltech press release can be found here) that is very close to my heart: an experiment that brings to an end my career as a graduate student at Caltech and the [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:51-08:00August 7th, 2013|Experimental highlights, The expert's corner|Comments Off on Squeezing light using mechanical motion

Frozen children

A few weeks ago, my friend Amanda, an elementary school teacher who runs a children’s camp during the summer break, suggested that it could be fun for me to come into the camp one day and do some science demonstrations for the kids. I jumped at the opportunity, despite (or perhaps because of) the fact [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:52-08:00July 29th, 2013|Real science|Comments Off on Frozen children

Putting back the pieces of a broken hologram

It is Monday afternoon and the day seems to be a productive one, if not yet quite memorable. As I revise some notes on my desk, Beni Yoshida walks into my office to remind me that the high-energy physics seminar is about to start. I hesitate, somewhat apprehensive of the near-certain frustration of being lost [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:35-08:00March 25th, 2015|Reflections, Theoretical highlights|Comments Off on Putting back the pieces of a broken hologram

The X Windows Solution

A Sun 3/60 Workstation in the late 1980s. I recently did an interview for an educational video about quantum physics. The filmmaker, who needed some cutaway shots to stitch the interview segments together, suggested a shot of me walking through the server room in my building. I complied, gazing with [...]

2017-01-13T10:06:00-08:00November 18th, 2012|Reflections|Comments Off on The X Windows Solution

The Most Awesome Animation About Quantum Computers You Will Ever See

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T2DXrs0OpHU?vq=hd720&rel=0&showinfo=0] by Jorge Cham You might think the title is a little exaggerated, but if there's one thing I've learned from Theoretical Physicists so far, it's to be bold with my conjectures about reality. Welcome to the second installment of our series of animations about Quantum Information! After an auspicious start describing doing the impossible, this [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:51-08:00August 22nd, 2013|Real science, Reflections|Comments Off on The Most Awesome Animation About Quantum Computers You Will Ever See

This Video Of Scientists Splitting An Electron Will Shock You

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKFecm9NKbM?vq=hd720&rel=0&showinfo=0] by Jorge Cham. Ok, this is where things get weird. If quantum computers, femtometer motions or laser alligators weren't enough, let's throw in fractionalized electrons, topological surfaces and strings that go to the end of time. To be honest, the idea that an electron can't be split hadn't even occurred to me before my conversation with Gil [...]

2017-01-13T10:05:37-08:00December 4th, 2014|Uncategorized, Videos|Comments Off on This Video Of Scientists Splitting An Electron Will Shock You
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