Deep Thoughts for April 6, 2015 - Sanford Underground Research
Transcription
Deep Thoughts for April 6, 2015 - Sanford Underground Research
Deep Thoughts Notes from the underground by Communications Director Constance Walter Monday, April 6, 2015 NASA grant takes students to California E ducation is a big part of Sanford Lab’s mission. That’s why members of Sanford Lab’s Education and Outreach Department spend a lot of time working with students and teachers across the state. Recently, Bree Oatman, STEM Education Specialist at Black Hills State University (BHSU), accompanied a group of students and faculty from Sinte Gleska University (SGU) to California. They visited the Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) at California Technology Institute (Caltech), the University of Southern California (USC) and the NASA Ames Research Facility. The trip was funded through a grant from NASA EPSCoR (Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research). “We wanted the students and teachers to meet some of the scientists who are involved in the life underground experiments taking place at Sanford Lab and expose them ν Early Science at Homestake Sanford Lab and the Lead and Deadwood chambers team up for a special night of science and chili at the Deadwood Gulch Convention Center Dr. Michael Cherry Roy P. Daniels Professor of Physics, Louisiana State University 7 P.M., Thursday, April 16 Deadwood Gulch Convention Center 304 Cliff St., Deadwood, SD The presentation is free to the public The late nuclear chemist Ray Davis earned a share of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2002, for his neutrino experiment at Homestake. Lead-Deadwood Community Fund Chili Feed 5-7 P.M. All you can sample for $6 Dr. Michael Cherry spent seven summers at the Homestake Mine working with Ray Davis on his neutrino experiment. But that wasn’t the only experiment on the 4850 Level. In 1985, Dr. Cherry used the most sensitive and largest detector in the world to study very energetic cosmic rays, photon decay and other mysterious particles in the universe. In his talk, Dr. Cherry will discuss experiments and experiences on the 4850 Level. to a variety of disciplines in science and engineering,” Oatman said. “They had a chance to meet people and get a better understanding of the research being done at Sanford Lab.” Students toured JPL’s facilities, including clean rooms where scientists build experiments and test new technologies. They learned the history of JPL, which can be traced to the mid-1930s when a few Caltech students and amateur rocket enthusiasts From left: Sinte Gleska University students Karen Moore and Dakota Young and their instructor Dana Gehring visit with Dr. Annie Rowe in the started tinkering with rockets, Microbiology lab at the University of Southern California. and talked with scientists about space exploration. a Capacity Building Grant, figure out which topics they EPSCoR focuses on which will allow SGU to want to explore.” The Capacity establishing partnerships with buy basic equipment to help Building Grant includes government, higher education faculty teach simple biotech stipends for summer research, and industry to improve and activities in the classroom. which can be done on the enhance research. The pro“As we walked through USC’s Rosebud Reservation where gram also targets underserved laboratories, we were thinkSGU is located. populations through Capacity ing about the Sinte Gleska The next step, Oatman Building, which is designed to environment and what it could said, is to find out exactly develop research in rural areas. become.” what SGU needs to upgrade “A lot of tribal colleges And the students, Oatman their facilities. “There is great have limited resources and added, were thinking about potential for future collaboraequipment,” Oatman said. their summer research tions. It’s really what Capacity She applied for and received projects. “They’re tying to Building is all about.” Science and Chili April 16 For seven summers in the 1980s, Dr. Michael Cherry conducted research on the 4850 Level of the Homestake Mine. Cherry worked on Davis’s solar neutrino experiment but mainly focused on studying cosmic rays, using the Large Area Scintillation Detector (LASD). In 1988 Cherry left Penn State for Louisiana State University. The Roy P. Daniels Professor of Physics at LSU, he continues to do research into cosmic rays and solar neutrinos, among other research projects. One such project, the CALET Project (CALorimetric Electron Telescope), will collect data from the International Space Station. On Thursday, April 16, at 7 p.m., Cherry will discuss his experiments and experiences at Homestake mine in a public presentation at the Deadwood Gulch Convention Center. Sponsored by Sanford Lab and the Lead and Deadwood Chambers of Commerce, the presentation will follow the Lead-Deadwood Community Fund Chili Feed, which begins at 5 p.m. The presentation is free to the public; the Chili Feed is $6 for all you can sample. South Dakota Science and Technology Authority Lead, South Dakota