Integrated Sciences takes off
Transcription
Integrated Sciences takes off
The newspaper of the physics community September 2007 Integrated Sciences takes off Heather Pinnell reports on the launch this autumn of a new physics-based degree. Lee Woodgate/Eye Candy Illustration A new physics-based Integrated Sciences degree developed with the help of the Institute was launched in early September. The degree is being offered at four institutions as part of the drive to encourage more people to take science, technology, engineering and maths courses and to improve access for a broader range of students. The launch event for higher education representatives, employers and journalists was due to take place as Interactions went to press, with a senior figure from industry present to lend support for the new degree. The BSc degrees, named Integrated Sciences, contain a core physics syllabus comprising at least a third of the content, with each institution tailoring the other elements of the course to meet their own needs and expertise. Currently the universities of Surrey, The Integrated Sciences degree is designed to have broad appeal and equip graduates for a range of careers. Leicester, East Anglia and London South Bank (LSBU) are partners with Funding Council for England. As part Higher Education Group.” the Institute in the programme, but it of the Access strand, aimed at improvVictoria Adrienne, Stimulating is hoped this will be expanded to ing the accessibility and marketing of Physics programme manager include more institutions if enough stuphysics-based degrees to non-tradi- (Access), said it was hoped that dents are attracted to the new degree. tional students, the Institute worked Integrated Sciences would appeal to The core will include key areas of with the four partner institutions on people currently under-represented physics such as quantum mechanics the new degree during 2006. on physics degree courses, who may and optics, while the four institutions A key reason for the Institute’s face barriers for a number of reasons. will offer their own range of courses in involvement is to provide quality “It’s also aimed at people who may modern applications such as climate assurance for the new degree and to have just one science A-level in a mixchange, pollution and nanoscale scibring coherence to the qualification. ture of A-levels which may be mainly ence. The courses have an interdisciIn addition it meets the benchmark set in humanities subjects. It’s trying to plinary approach designed not least to by the Quality Assurance Agency for appeal to the ‘waverers’ – people who appeal to potential employers in sciskills in physics degrees. Further work could choose to do other courses and ence and beyond. is being done on how the recognition would not traditionally think of an While traditional undergraduate process might be applied to other integrated sciences degree. physics courses require applicants to physics-related degrees. “We want to show such students have at least A-level physics and A-level The Institute’s director of education that they can do it and that they will be maths, Integrated Sciences applicants and science, Peter Main, said: “This supported throughout the degree. We do not have to hold an A-level pass in new degree enables us to market an want them to know that lack of prior physics or maths, though they do need integrated sciences programme in a knowledge need not be a barrier.” at least one science A-level among their coherent way. Previously the various All the maths content needed in the other level 3 qualifications. There is an combined sciences degrees offered by degree will be integrated into the alternative route to entry through an the universities were all different and physics teaching, so anyone entering access course at LSBU. Entry requirehad no coherence. the course without A-level maths will ments differ between the institutions, “This provides an opportunity for not be at a disadvantage, she said. The though all hope to attract students people to do some physics at under- programmes will not require addiwho would not have taken physics graduate level who would not nor- tional maths “catch-up” courses, without the opportunity offered by the mally have been able to do so in the though LSBU will provide maths in its Integrated Sciences degree. past. It’s a science degree for the 21st access course, and students at any of the After completing two years of the century and it comes out of a recog- institutions can take advantage of the BSc, students could transfer into a nition that the barriers are breaking general maths courses which all higher more specialised undergraduate down between the science subjects. It education institutions must provide. physics degree. The University of East should also be borne in mind that Entrants to Integrated Sciences will, Anglia offers the chance to spend one people who have done these courses however, need a grade B at GCSE maths. year of the Integrated Sciences course will be perfectly eligible to become “Integrated Sciences is not a soft studying abroad. physics teachers. option; students who take it will have The Institute has been closely “In working out the details of the to work hard,” Adrienne said. involved at each stage in forming the programme we canvassed our mem- “However the work is not insurnew degree. Its development has been bers for ideas and we went through mountable and students are going to part of the Stimulating Physics proour education board with the pro- be supported through it.” gramme, set up by the Institute in posal. We also had input from the uniThe courses will be evaluated by the March 2006 and funded by a £1.8 m versities and we talked to the higher Institute of Education as part of its award from the Higher Education education community, including our evaluation of Stimulating Physics. “It’s trying to appeal to the ‘waverers’ – people who could choose to do other courses.” CONTENTS 2 News Institute welcomes rise in A-level entries ● Physics takes to the fields ● Women debate workplace culture in SET 4 Reflections Beth Taylor looks at the pros and cons of nuclear energy 5 People Francisco Diego reaches out beyond astronomy’s limits 6 Obituaries Eric Wharton and Chris Escreet remembered ● 7 Event horizon What’s on in physics 8 Antimatters Physics and Anthony Gormley “I’m not giving credibility to pseudosciences, I simply believe that we have to exploit the high level of interest in them.” Francisco Diego, p5 “Seeing human forms ‘sitting’ on the ceiling gives you a strong sense of not knowing which way is up.” Sharon Ann Holgate, p8 COMPLETE THE SALARY SURVEY NOW AT members.iop.org I n t e ractions September 2007 2 news HIGHLIGHTS Prestigious contract signed by IOP Publishing A prestigious contract for IOP Publishing to publish the research journals of the American Astronomical Society (AAS) has been signed. The announcement that IOP Publishing had been selected by the AAS to carry out the work was made in the spring (see June Interactions) and the contract was signed in Bristol on 31 July by AAS executive officer Kevin Marvel (pictured left) and IOP business director Ken Lillywhite (right). IOP Publishing went through an intensive selection process, beating off strong competition from major global publishers for the contract. Marvel said: “IOP Publishing will be a great partner for the publication of the AAS journals. I look forward to working with them to truly enhance the usability and value of our research journals to the research community.” A-level physics entries increase By Joseph Winters The number of entries for A-level physics has shown an increase this year. Although there was just a small improvement (0.35%) in the number of students sitting A level physics, there was a 3.2% rise in the number of students who sat AS level physics examinations this year. The results also show a rise in the number of girls taking A and AS level physics, 2.5% and 4.2% respectively. There has been a steady decline in the total number of physics examination entries until this year. In 1995, 35 000 students chose to take physics A-level but by 2006 the figure was down to 27 000. The Institute has worked closely with the government to ensure that students are aware of the broad career and study opportunities that physics qualifications can open up and also to try to enthuse students with the excitement of physics. The Institute’s chief executive, Robert Kirby-Harris, said: “The rise in A and AS level examination entries indicates a cumulative increase and suggests that physics is having a revival in schools across the UK.” Peter Main, the Institute’s director of education and science, said: “We are delighted to see the gender divide decreasing. We’re seeing the girl–boy ratio change year-on-year as more and more female students choose to take the subject because they increasingly see physics as both interesting and relevant to them.” The Institute has taken a number of measures to encourage more girls into physics, with a teachers’ guide and training for teachers, including a specially produced DVD starring James Fleet and Helen Baxendale entitled Saving Nellie. It has also developed a best practice curriculum, designed to make sure classroom physics is interesting, and new courses to help non-specialist scientists train to become physics teachers. Life’s story takes on a surprising twist Structures that have some of the characteristics of self-replicating life have been shown to be possible components of interstellar dust. The discovery is reported in the August issue of the Institute’s New Journal of Physics. Using computer modelling, an international team has shown that when a plasma made from inorganic material becomes polarised, its particles can self-organise into mutually attracting helical structures which can divide into two copies of themselves. These can induce their neighbours to evolve more structures with only the the most stable surviving. The research was conducted by V N Tsytovich and others at the Russian Academy of Science’s General Physics Institute, working with colleagues at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Germany and the University of Sydney, Australia. Tsytovich said: “These complex, selforganised plasma structures exhibit all the necessary properties to qualify them as candidates for inorganic living matter.” ALIEN CONCEPTS Einstein Year ballet has a constant appeal The ballet specially commissioned by the Institute for Einstein Year is still being performed at several venues around Britain by the Rambert Dance Company. Constant Speed, which was first performed in May 2005, features in the company’s World View Tour 2007. Choreographed by Mark Baldwin, the ballet is inspired by Einstein’s theories concerning Brownian motion, the photoelectric effect and special relativity. At times the dancers represent pollen grains, at others they represent photons, and the changing colours of the stage lighting and the dancers’ costumes are used to represent the photoelectric effect. Constant Speed is showing at Venue Cymru, Llandudno, on 17–19 October; at Leeds Grand Theatre on 31 October – 3 November, and at Regent Theatre, Stoke on Trent, on 21–23 November. For further details, see www.rambert.org.uk. Solar energy could have a bright future Investment in the underpinning science for using solar energy must be improved considerably if its potential is to be fully exploited, the Institute says in its latest Vision Paper, “Solar energy conversion”. The briefing paper for policy makers describes how solar energy research is expanding rapidly, and showcases some of the research being done on improving photovoltaic technology. It describes how several UK research groups, including those at Durham University and the University of Wales Bangor, have been trying to improve the efficiency and stability of photovoltaic cells which use semiconducting compounds such as cadmium telluride and cadmium sulphide. It outlines how researchers at Northumbria University have been seeking cheaper alternatives to gallium and indium in photovoltaic technology, a group at Heriot-Watt University is developing a fabricating method using silicon nanocrystals and an Imperial College London team is looking at a technology based on quantum wells and quantum dots. I n t e ractions September 2007 In a first for a scientific society, the Institute teamed up with the holiday company Butlins this summer to create a physics-based adventure for children at their sites. Children used their mobile phones to help Echo (pictured), an alien from the planet Fizzix, find the scattered parts of his damaged spaceship – called powerpads. They explored the sites and hunted for clues to simple physics questions which they answered via text message, and could text their ideas for a new type of powerpad to Echo – encouraging them to think how physics can be applied. Every child was also given an accompanying comic book posing questions and describing key ideas such as centripetal force and friction. Children were encouraged to visit www.physics.org to get a certificate from the president of Fizzix and to see if their new powerpad suggestion has been posted on Echo’s webpage. They could also download a copy of the game and find out more about physics through online activities. Seminar focuses on SET and gender By Saher Ahmed A new good practice guide on gender and workplace culture was launched at the Institute of Physics in June by the UK Resource Centre for Women in SET (UKRC). The guide, SET Workplace Cultures: Making a Positive Impact, features the Institute as well as RollsRoyce, Edinburgh University, British Gas and National Grid as case studies. At the launch event, jointly hosted by the UKRC and the Institute, Wendy Faulkner from the School of Social and Political Studies at the University of Edinburgh described a research study she conducted into gender dynamics, cultures and identities in engineering practices. “Early years learning on the job are critical for retention,” she said, emphasising the need to “nurture a workplace where everyone is comfortable and belongs through awareness of the subtle inclusive–exclusive dynamics at work”. The Institute’s director of education and science, Peter Main, described the Institute’s university site visit scheme, which looks at the gender culture within university physics departments. He also outlined the recently launched Project Juno Code of Practice (see July Interactions). Based on the good practice identified in the visits, it is aimed at advancing women’s careers in physics higher education. He argued that similar underlying issues prevalent in academia and industry impede women’s progress and that male participation in familyfriendly policies is vital, as are strong, informal social networks for women. Rolls-Royce was the subject of the first UKRC/Institute of Physics industry site visit last October. Karen Brown, diversity director at RollsRoyce, explained why the company had requested a visit: “We wanted to see if the equal opportunity policies we had in place ensured true equality in the workplace or whether there were more subtle barriers at work that we can address,” she said. Separate focus groups with female and male staff were held from different levels within the company’s global purchasing division. As a direct result of the visit, Rolls-Royce has set up a Global Purchasing Diversity Council led by senior management. It has recommended that the company should look at granting full paternity leave pay rather than the statutory minimum, a review of meeting times to suit flexible working, and improving staff awareness of mentoring and flexible working schemes. ● The UKRC and the Institute are looking for organisations that would be interested in having a site visit. For details, contact the diversity team at the Institute (diversity@iop.org). news 3 Physics buskers take the field While cabers, hammers and other heavy items were being thrown with deceptive ease accompanied by the rousing sound of massed pipes, visitors to the Inverness Highland Games on 21–22 July were taking part in a festival activity with a difference – Physics in the Field. Throughout the summer, the Institute’s physics in society team, along with volunteers from the Institute’s student wing, NEXUS, have been performing as a crack team of physics buskers challenging people’s perceptions of physics using nothing more than items found in an ordinary home. By setting up stalls at outdoor events that don’t normally host science activities, the buskers have been captivating unsuspecting visitors with simple yet amazing physics tricks, such as balloon kebabs (pushing a kebab skewer through a balloon without it bursting), tame tornadoes (forming a vortex in a pop bottle), straw oboes (getting a tuneful racket out of a straw) and Alka-Seltzer rockets (launching film canisters to the heavens). Following a hugely successful appearance at the East of England Show in June, where the buskers entertained more than 4000 visitors during the course of a long weekend, and the disappointing last-minute cancellation of the Bradford Mela due to the flooding in early July, the Highland Games were a chance to defy the lousy summer and get people exploring physics. Unfortunately, the weather had other ideas and the weekend was miserably cold and damp, meaning that attendance was down by two-thirds on last year. Russell Watkins Caitlin Watson reports on a summer of physics activities at festivals around Britain. Visitors try the “tame tornadoes” experiment helped by physics buskers at the East of England Show. Despite the adverse conditions, the buskers rose to the challenge, and among the 1200 visitors who tried out the tricks were members of the local emergency services, car enthusiasts from Inverness Cruise and cadets from the armed forces, as well as hundreds of families. Many of the cadets came back time and again over the weekend, bringing different friends with them and showing off their newfound knowledge and expertise, illustrating the impact of the activity. It’s this aspect of physics busking – visitors gaining the confidence to share the tricks with each other – that makes it really satisfying. All Physics in the Field events collate feedback via a comments board, and remarks from the Highland Games were overwhelmingly positive. Comments included: “I saw things that you wouldn’t normally see and it was cool”; “It all made me feel happy”; and “Very interesting and fun for all the family”. Several visitors to the stand also remarked on how much they appreciated the buskers’ presence at the games, because the relative geographical isolation of Inverness means that science outreach projects don’t often make it that far north. Many others took away resources and ideas to enable them to replicate the physics tricks at youth groups and afterschool clubs in the region. The buskers braved the rain yet again over the weekend of 17–19 August as they entertained the crowds at the Green Man electro-folk music festival in Wales for the second year running. As Interactions went to press, the team was preparing for the final outing this summer at the Newcastle Mela at the end of August. Physics in the Field will be expanding next year. The relevant branches have been invited to take over responsibility for running the four events attended this year, leaving the physics in society team to infiltrate new events and bring even more people a positive experience of physics. All of the physics tricks used by the buskers are available to view online at www.physics.org. Institute roots for Select Committee Women gain a voice in Europe The Institute wrote to the government on 5 July urging it not to disband the Commons select committee which covers science and technology. In a letter to Harriet Harman, Leader of the Commons, the Institute’s chief executive Robert Kirby-Harris said: “I would ask you to retain the unique expertise and cross-cutting role of the Science and Technology Committee. [It] is a well established and well respected committee which, over many years, has brought in-depth understanding and a strategic perspective to a wide range of issues relevant to science and technology in the UK.” It has since been announced that the committee will be changed into a Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills Committee, but may have a subcommittee with a broader science remit. Some have welcomed the news, though others remain concerned about its possible scope. Women physicists from several countries in Europe and from the UK gathered for a parliamentary reception held by the Institute’s Women in Physics Group (WIPG) to mark its membership of the European Platform of Women Scientists (EPWS). Some 80 people who attended on 19 June heard a European and UK perspective on the challenges facing women who pursue careers in science. Adelheid Ehmke, president of the EPWS, described some of the work in which the organisation has been engaged. Based in Brussels, the EPWS was set up to represent the concerns of women in the research policy debate in Europe and to influence the decision-making process. It also supports the work of existing national, European and international networks of women scientists. Catherine Thibault of Women in Science in France presented statistics on the career progression of women working in physics in French universities and national laboratories. These showed striking similarities to the pattern in the UK, with women underrepresented at all levels. The reception was hosted by Labour MP and qualified engineer Claire Curtis-Thomas, who gave powerful backing to the drive to encourage women to study science and engineering. She stressed the importance of attracting more women into science and retaining them in sciencebased careers. Ian Taylor, an MP and former Conservative minister who also sat on the Commons Select Committee on Science and Technology, gave a similar message in his introductory remarks. Barbara Sandow, chair of the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics’ working group on women in physics, outlined its role in monitor- ing and promoting the progress of women in physics careers, while Carol Robinson, professor of chemistry at Cambridge University, gave a personal account of the challenges that she had faced in returning to work following a career break. Beth Taylor, the Institute’s communications director, highlighted some of the Institute’s key achievements in supporting women in physics, including its guidance for teachers through the Girls in Physics programme, the development of the Juno Code of Practice for university physics departments, and support for physicists taking career breaks. The reception provided opportunities for networking, and WIPG chair Gillian Butcher concluded the event by introducing Liz Ainsbury, winner of the Early Career Woman Physicist of the Year Award, presented jointly by HSBC and the WIPG. IN BRIEF ● The 37th Annual General Meeting of the Institute of Physics took place on 19 July. Members passed the following resolutions: -- BDO Stoy Haywards LLP were reappointed as auditors (98% in favour); -- new annual membership subscriptions from 1 January 2008 were approved (91% in favour); -- the Annual Report was approved; -- the Annual Accounts were approved with 1 against. Members voted 34 % in favour and 65% against the following resolution, with 1% abstentions, so it was not passed: -- Where Council wishes to comment or express views on a member’s resolution on an AGM meeting notice, those comments or views must be made known to the resolution proposer so that s/he can, if wished, respond to them on that same AGM notice and be given space to do so. No further comments or views would then be allowed on that meeting notice, only at the AGM. The same applies to all General Meetings. ● A statement reiterating the Institute’s commitment to the principle of academic freedom has been placed in the “About Us” section of the website. It says that the Institute’s international relations programme aims to maintain constructive relationships with academic institutions and learned societies from all countries; the Institute accepts applications from individuals to conferences and meetings irrespective of race, religion or nationality; and IOP Publishing accepts submissions from individuals on the same basis. NEWSMAKERS Prof. Vitaly Ginzburg of the Lebedev Institute has been presented with his certificate as an honorary fellow of the Institute of Physics by Jerry Cowhig, managing director of IOP Publishing. Ginzburg, who was a joint winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2003, was made an honorary fellow in 2006, but he was unable to attend the Institute’s Awards Dinner in January due to ill health. The presentation took place in Moscow in June, with Cowhig acting on behalf of the Institute’s president, Peter Saraga. Averil Macdonald has been awarded the 2007 award for Personal Contribution to the Plastics Industry for her lecture for GCSE students, entitled “Fantastic plastic”. Macdonald, who lectures in physics at the University of Reading, also won the Institute’s Bragg medal in 1999 and was chosen as one of the UKRC’s Outstanding Women of Achievement this year. Vera Hazlewood has been awarded £500 as winner of the Computational Physics Group Thesis Prize. The award is made annually for the PhD thesis that contributes most strongly to the advancement of computational physics. Hazelwood is a technology translator at the Smith Institute in Guildford, Surrey. I n t e ractions September 2007 4 reflections Nuclear could work, if you ask me... Beth Taylor “The majority of responses will come from those who have the resources and the motivation – the industry and the NGOs.” So is this it? More than 12 years after the UK’s last reactor was commissioned, at Sizewell B, all the signs are that the government is about to give the green light to the construction of a new generation of nuclear power stations. Or, in official parlance, the government’s “preliminary view is that energy companies should be allowed to invest in new nuclear power stations”. Just one thing, it seems, needs to be completed before that green light shines – the government’s consultation on the role of nuclear power in a low carbon economy. Issued in May, the consultation invites the views of the public, industry, NGOs or any other organisation on a 207-page consultation paper, accompanied by a 34-page paper on strategic siting assessment, a 343-page Energy White Paper, and countless reams of paper which have already been the subject of consultation, under the title “Managing Radioactive Wastes Safely”. How many members of the general public are going to wade through that forest of electronic pages? With the help of our interested members, the Institute will submit a response by the October deadline which is informed, authoritative and independent. But you can bet that the majority of responses will come from those who have the resources and the motivation – the industry and the NGOs. They may well be informed and authoritative, but they are hardly likely to be independent, and highly likely to be mutually contradictory. The consultation asks 18 detailed questions of the form “do you agree or disagree with the government’s view?” on issues ranging from the impact of nuclear power on carbon emissions and energy security, to the future of reprocessing. As a former nuclear sceptic, it pains me to say this, but my own personal view is that the issues identified are largely the right ones and my own personal answer to almost all the questions raised is “agree”. For years I believed that a good analogy for nuclear power was the canal network – a technology which worked well in its day, but had been overtaken by a cheaper, more popular and more efficient alternative. The twin challenges of climate change and security of supply, however, have overturned all that. (And did I hear on the news the other week that Sainsbury’s are shipping groceries by canal again?) It makes no sense whatsoever for the government to single out one particular technology as a pariah. Nuclear has a lot to offer in terms of carbon abatement and diversity of supply. It should be allowed to compete on equal terms with other low carbon alternatives, recognising that each technology carries its own environmental burden. The key for the government will be to demonstrate that none is unfairly subsidised, through (for example) absolute transparency in the methods for funding decommissioning and waste management costs. So would I sign up unquestioningly to the consultation paper? Not quite. Three issues still concern me. Outstanding concerns First is the potential impact of focusing government attention and investors’ funds on a supply-side solution. For as long as I worked in the energy sector, the enormous potential of energy efficiency to contribute cost effectively to reducing demand was widely recognised. But the siren song of new supply technologies always distracted the attention of government and industry away from the more challenging conundrum of coaxing millions of individual consumers to act in their own enlightened self-interest. I hope that a renewed focus on nuclear new build does not repeat that cycle. Second is the confident assertion that non-proliferation risks are very small. I would not seek to argue with the analysis in the consultation paper that the risk of diversion of nuclear materials from the building and operation of modern nuclear power stations in the UK is very small. I am afraid, however, that this is too narrow and UK-centric a view. We cannot adopt a nuclear solution to the carbon and security challenges without expecting other nations around the world to do the same. And the US solution of a sealed fuel cycle provided by – guess who? – the US does not seem to me to be sustainable. How can the West expect to maintain this kind of technical monopoly ad infinitum? In my view, it is neither practical nor ethical. If we opt for new nuclear build, we must expect other countries to do the same, and accept that sooner or later they will demand control over their own fuel cycle. That would mean more North Koreas and Irans, raising proliferation risks well above that comfortable assessment of “very small”. Third, the paper rightly recognises the pressures that will be put on the supply chain and skills capacity to meet the demands of a major new build programme. The UK is facing other pressing infrastructure priorities including the 2012 Olympics, transport network renewal, a massive planned new housing programme, and a major reappraisal of flood defences. All these will require a wide range of design and engineering skills – and while other countries face similar pressures, we cannot and should not expect them all to be delivered internationally. Will we really have the resources to meet these demands? As the numbers of post-16 students taking physics has dropped over the years, the pool of vital technical and engineering skills has declined. It is high time to reverse that trend. A major infusion of cash and energy into education and skills could be a valuable outcome of the nuclear debate. Beth Taylor is the Institute’s director of communications and external relations. She writes in a personal capacity. focal point: council news New committee will oversee external engagement The Council of the Institute of Physics met on 19 July. President Peter Saraga opened the meeting by congratulating Institute members who were recognised in the Queen’s Birthday Honours, and five members appointed Fellows of the Royal Society, and five appointed Fellows of the Royal Academy of Engineering. ● Council noted the report of the annual general meeting, approved nominations for Honorary Fellows of the Institute and for the 2008 awards, and agreed a new international award – the Occhialini award – to be made jointly with the Italian Physical Society for distinguished work carried out within the preceding 10 years. It is to be made to I n t e ractions September 2007 physicists in alternating years working in Italy, or in the UK and Ireland. ● The Institute’s Strategy Implementation Plan was agreed by Council in July 2006. Chief executive Bob Kirby-Harris briefed members on progress made so far against 25 development themes identified in the original plan. He was able to report good progress in most areas, with a few cases where, after some delay, work is now beginning. The supplement included with this Interactions details key achievements in delivering the strategic goals. ● Plans to create a new committee of Council were approved. The External Engagement Committee, to be chaired by Heather Reid, will have a broad remit to advise on how the Institute engages with a range of different stakeholders in order to promote interest in and provide support for physics, and to enhance the Institute’s reputation. It will also oversee strategy for dealing with government departments, parliamentarians and the media, as well as advising on public outreach programmes. ● A recent review of branch constitutions focused on committee members’ and office bearers’ terms of office, balancing the need to ensure healthy turnover with the challenges that some branches face in filling posts. Council approved the review’s recommendations, which have been included in a new model constitution to be sent to all branches. ● Peter Saraga thanked past president Sir John Enderby and honorary treasurer Tony Scott for their outstanding service as they leave the Council on completing their terms of office. Much appreciation was also expressed to outgoing members Penny Endersby, Nigel Mason and Matthew Thomas, and international director Peter Melville, for their dedication and expertise. New office bearers and members elected unopposed: president elect Dame Jocelyn Bell-Burnell; honorary treasurer Colin Latimer; and members Stephen Bold, Christine Davies and John Reardon. ● Council minutes are available to view in the members’ area of the Institute’s website. people 5 profile: Francisco Diego Outreach for the stars Sharon Ann Holgate talks to an artistic astronomer. Lynn Nickerson and the secondary school girls she teaches made a film about physics, helped by a grant from the Institute. Spring 2006 It’s March and I get a message from Jo Wonder, a filmmaker who worked with me and my school’s science club a couple of years ago on making a film about metals and researching its effect on pupils’ understanding. The money came from Creativity Action Research Awards (CARA), a government-funded programme managed by the Arts Council of England’s Creative Partnerships and administered by CapeUK. There’s funding available from CARA2 to study creativity in education. Do we want to apply? Last time it was a massive extra workload, but also incredibly rewarding for us and the girls. We decide to go ahead. In June we’re awarded a grant to study “how the openendedness of a task affects the creativity required to address it”, using filmmaking as the medium for creativity. Suddenly the excitement wears off and the prospect of all of the extra work seems overwhelming. Philip Wade According to Francisco Diego, scientists engaging in outreach activities should be prepared to embrace all aspects of popular culture, even if that means tackling controversial subjects. “Outreach is a two-way system of communication. You have to listen to people and not dismiss their beliefs. I start one of my public lectures by talking about astrology, then go on to explain that the real science of the stars is far more fascinating. I’m not giving credibility to pseudosciences, I simply believe that we have to exploit the high level of interest in them to introduce the view of the universe that modern science is producing.” Diego, an astronomer who combines a science-popularisation career with a part-time research role at University College London (UCL), also uses artistic and philosophical language and imagery to get his points across. “The engaging power of art, poetry and philosophy makes any piece of information attractive by enhancing its beauty, mystery and relevance to fundamental questions that all humans have about life, death and eternity,” he says. His latest project, CosmicSky, consists of two 25 minute “immersive shows” – The Beginning of Forever and Celestial Cycles – that encourage contemplation on the nature of the universe via a mixture of science, poetry, visual arts, music and storytelling. They are presented in a portable planetarium and resulted from a collaboration between Diego, planetarium educator and artist Gill Russell, and poet-cum-storyteller Brian Hill. “When I met Gill and Brian we decided to create a show together for Glasgow Planetarium using tales about constellation names from different cultures. This was very successful, so we applied to NESTA for funding to develop more shows that used a lateral approach to delivering scientific information,” he recalls. Their successful application funded the building of the mobile CosmicSky dome and three years’ worth of running costs. The mini-planetarium seats 25 people, who can view projected visuals while listening to a surroundsound track that includes narration by Hill and effects of natural phenomena, such as storms and solar eclipses. Three computers automatically control the shows, so once set up in a venue the exhibit can effectively run itself. So far 10 000 people have enjoyed CosmicSky (www.cosmicsky.co.uk). “Feedback suggests that it changed the way people were seeing the world,” OBSERVATIONS Francisco Diego uses philosophy and the arts in his science outreach. enthuses Diego. The NESTA award has just expired, so the collaborators are waiting to see if venues will pay to hire the dome in the future. They also hope to produce further planetarium shows – a task that Diego originally got a taste for in his native Mexico in the late 1970s and early 1980s when he helped to create shows for the Luis E Erro Planetarium. Diego read mechanical engineering in1965–1970 at the Instituto Politécnico Nacional in Mexico City and worked for a decade in the field. “Meanwhile, astronomy was growing in my mind. If I could change one thing in my life, I would have studied astronomy sooner,” muses Diego, who is past-president of the UK Association for Astronomy Education. He also sits on the education committees of both the Royal Astronomical Society and the International Astronomical Union. His enduring love for astronomy was sparked off by a chance event in his childhood. “I lived in a six-storey block of flats in Mexico City, and when my friend was bought a little telescope for his birthday we decided to take it up onto the roof to try it out. We had to wait hours until sunset and eventually, as the sky grew dark, we saw a bright yellowish object. I immediately focused the telescope on it and saw Saturn. That image will remain with me forever,” he says. After this introduction to stargazing, Diego began designing his own telescopes and taking astronom- “If I could change one thing in my life, I’d have studied astronomy sooner.” ical images with them. Throughout the 1970s he built telescopes for several Mexican universities. This and working for the planetarium eventually became his permanent employment, and the contacts that he made with professional astronomers overseas resulted in his move to the UK in 1982 to do a PhD at UCL. His project involved building a high-resolution spectrograph for the Anglo-Australian telescope, which is still in use today and has been used to discover extrasolar planets. His doctorate ended in 1987 when the instrument was completed, and he has been designing new spectrographs with the UCL astrophysics group ever since. Diego’s interest in popularising astronomy grew after his PhD, and since 1993 he’s held a part-time senior research fellowship that frees him up for outreach work. As well as CosmicSky, this has included demonstrating at the University of London Observatory, TV and radio appearances, and giving demonstrations and lectures to schools, amateur societies, museums and organisations such as the Scouts and the Young Carers Association. Diego is part of the commission for the International Year of Astronomy in 2009 and leads expeditions to observe his “major passion”: total solar eclipses. The Science and Technology Facilities Council recently awarded him a Science and Society Fellowship, providing a part-time salary for further projects that he hopes will “open people’s minds to the beauty of the universe, and inspire young people to follow a career in cosmology or astrophysics”. He says: “Life goes very quickly, so it’s important to have a clear vision of what you aim to achieve. I want to remind politicians and the media about the importance of blue skies, curiosity driven research...of the importance of knowledge for its own sake as an essential part of culture in a modern society. This is how humanity has made progress.” Autumn 2006 I meet Jo in September to discuss plans. We want our film to focus on physics. Let’s take what is often seen by students as the hardest and most boring of the sciences and use this as an opportunity to give it glamour and excitement. In October I introduce students to the project. It’s open to anyone who’s willing to commit to the weekly after-school sessions. About 20 girls from years 8–11 want to take part. In November, students start on their first task, working incredibly hard in small groups to prepare film outlines to communicate any aspect of sound and light that they like. We meet with a local primary school with whom we’ve teamed up to apply for funding. Children from both schools share their film ideas, which are humorous, wacky, serious and very creative, though most would need a multimillion pound budget. In December we apply for a Public Engagement Grant from the Institute. Our existing funding won’t stretch to producing a high-quality film as well as the study into creativity. New Year 2007 Jo comes to school to hear the students’ second lot of film outlines. For the first time there’s a distinct lack of enthusiasm from the students. We wonder if it’s because they’re realising that their imaginings are going to be hard to translate into a real film. Afterwards we discuss what we can do to get them motivated again. A week later we get out the ray boxes, prisms, mirrors and filters. The girls play with the equipment and start making shapes and patterns with light, capturing images on their mobiles. By February the buzz is back. The whole group decides to go for something “dreamlike” and experimental. They want their film to have sound but no words. It will be about the hidden colours in white light, and reflection. There are some intense sessions as we grapple with ways to act out what goes on inside a prism or how we can represent the frequencies in the visible spectrum. Spring 2007 We come into school one weekend in April for the film shoot and the girls don swimming hats and white coats to become photons for the scenes in which they personify light. They patiently perform while the camera crew films take after take. My final report in June notes that the most creative times were when we allowed the students to play with the equipment, not expecting them to come up with ideas in advance but developing them as they experimented. By July our film, Living Light, is finished, with an original soundtrack and editing paid for from the Institute’s grant. It’s shown to our staff and the students involved. Reactions include: “it made me feel really weird” and “it turned out better than I expected”. Now I need to arrange for parents and the wider community to see it. It was a huge amount of work, but worth it. The girls’ interest in physics has been stimulated and deepened and we’ve definitely raised the profile of physics in the school and beyond. Visit www.iop.org/activity/outreach/ for more on Public Engagement Grants. To contribute to OBSERVATIONS, e-mail your idea to interactions@iop.org. I n t e ractions September 2007 6 letters President Mr Peter Saraga OBE FREng CPhys FInstP, Immediate Past President Prof. Sir John Enderby CBE FRS CPhys FInstP, Honorary Secretary Prof. John L Beeby CPhys FInstP, Honorary Treasurer Dr J A (Tony) Scott CPhys Hon.FInstP, Vice-president, Education Dr Elizabeth Swinbank CPhys FInstP, Vice-president, Business & Innovation Dr Keith Winters CPhys FInstP, Vice-president, Membership & Qualifications Mr Alan Pratt CPhys FInstP, Vice-president, Science Prof. Dame Carole Jordan FRS CPhys FInstP, Chief Executive Dr Robert Kirby-Harris CPhys FinstP, Director, Education and Science Prof. Peter Main CPhys FInstP, Director, International Dr Peter Melville CPhys FInstP, Director, Membership & Business Mr John Brindley, Group Finance Director Mr Sean Fox MInstP, Managing Director, Institute of Physics Publishing Mr Jerry Cowhig, Director, Communications & External Relations Dr Beth Taylor FInstP. Acting Editor Heather Pinnell, Art Director Andrew Giaquinto Institute of Physics, 76 Portland Place, London W1B 1NT, UK. Tel +44 (0)20 7470 4800; fax +44 (0)20 7470 4991; e-mail interactions@iop.org; Web http://members.iop.org LETTER FROM OBITUARIES ...the CPD manager Eric Wharton (1943–2007) You may remember in Interactions (February issue) I described our intention to develop a range of continuous professional development (CPD) services. These are now in place and I want to encourage you to make more of your membership and to actively manage your own development. Development is “the growth or realisation of a person’s ability and potential through the provision of learning and educational experiences” (Michael Armstrong, 2006). This idea lies at the heart of our approach to CPD – it’s not something to be engaged with simply out of obligation but as a means of enriching your working life and growing as a professional. Our new services aim to help by providing you with a wider choice of learning experiences. The most significant investment has been made in MyCPD, a free online tool that lets you set learning goals, plan activities that will allow you to meet those goals, keep a record of your experiences and reflect upon learning outcomes. Throughout the autumn we’ll also be running transferable skills courses, at subsidised rates, in London, Birmingham and Manchester. Feedback from previous courses has been very positive, including comments such as “excellent course, please run more courses” and “better than others I have attended”. If face-to-face courses are not for you, we also have some online and one course – “coaching skills” – is being offered free of charge to give you the opportunity for a taster. Why not try it out? Training is not the only way to carry out CPD. Attending conferences, having careers guidance, being a chartered physicist or chartered engineer panel member are all ways in which you can grow as a professional. To support this, we’ve commissioned a range of help sheets, such as Web 2.0 for Professional Development and Networking. These resources are available as free downloads for Institute members. In conjunction with the Institute’s careers department, we’re piloting a new online mentor and mentee matching service. Currently available to members of the Midland Branch, we expect the service to be available to all members later in the year. These services are the culmination of a year’s worth of development activity. Many of you have already taken advantage of them and I hope many more of you will do so. Stephanie Richardson is the Institute’s head of professional development. To find out more, visit www.iop.org/careers or e-mail cpd@iop.org. I n t e ractions September 2007 Eric Wharton, director of SET for Britain and SET for Europe, died on 6 June following a short illness. Wharton was well known for organising a wide-ranging array of prizes for early career researchers with receptions at the Houses of Parliament where they could showcase their work to MPs and peers. Sheffield University recognised his work with SET for Britain over the last nine years by awarding him an honorary doctor of science degree in 2006. Through his involvement in National Science Weeks in the Oxford and Thames areas he is thought to have helped more than 30 000 children and adults to engage with science. Although a member of the Institute, his BSc and PhD were in chemistry. After postdoctoral research he joined the Science Research Council in 1972, later moving to the Society of Chemical Industry. He is survived by his wife, Sue. Christopher Escreet (1959–2007) Chris Escreet, former secretary of the Institute’s Education Group, has died. Formerly head of physics at Appleby Grammar School in Cumbria, where he was a pilot teacher for the Institute’s Advancing Physics courses, he was dedicated to making science more popular. notices NEW BUSINESS AFFILIATES WANTED for the Institute’s Public Scientific Blogging, AlertMe.com. Engagement Grant Scheme 2008. If you are a great communicator, have a fantastic NEW MEMBERS idea for making physics accessible, can Imtiyaz Ansari, Michael Arvidson, Ahmet inspire other people, and need support to Aydin, Andrew Bird, Edo Boek, Robert Boyd, make your outreach activity happen, you Anne Cumberlidge, Rammile Eitelaie, Karen could apply for a Public Engagement Grant Fairall, Andrew Ferguson, Marie Freebody, from the Institute (see Observations, p5). Shahid Hussain, Colin Hutcheson, Caroline The grants, worth up to £1000, will be Lamont Smith, Lachlan MacLean, Nadeem given to support physics-based outreach Malik, Duncan Mansfield, Thomas activities during 2008. Application forms McInerney, Stephen McLean, Anthony and guidelines are available at McMahon, Michelle Moody, Jennifer www.iop.org/activity/outreach or e-mail Morrell, Simon Morris, Laura Mullin, Steven physics.society@iop.org. Closing date: Newton, James O'Connor, Barry Oldroyd, 2 November 2007. ● Fellows, members and associate Simon Procter, A Romer, Edward Swann, Simon Valentine, Tony Wilson, Mark Wright, members to participate in the Institute’s regular salary survey. The results are Andrew Young. anonymous. To take part, log in at NEW FELLOWS http://members.iop.org and select “My Matthew Angling, Roger Appleby, James Survey” on the left. If you prefer a paper Barton, Nitin Bhakta, Roger Eccleston, John version, e-mail member.services@iop.org Jeffers, Ajoy Kar, Mark Keene, Katherine giving your full name, membership ID numKirk, Xianoying Liang, Nicholas Lockerbie, ber and address to which the form should Abraham Ogwu, Christopher Pickard, be sent. We hope the results, to be Jonathan Pritchard, Andrew Scott, published later in the year, will be useful in Ephraim Suhir. members’ career planning. Deadline for online submission: 14 September. IN MEMORIAM ● Postgraduate students to apply for a Gordon James Aitchison, A Bose (Calcutta), three-month work placement funded by the George Buckley, Pierre Gilles De Gennes, Institute and the Parliamentary Office of James Alexander Hendry (Sutton Coldfield), Science & Technology (POST). The selected K Heron (Newcastle-upon-Tyne), John Peter POST fellow will be based in Westminster Hodgson (Manchester), John Leck, Andrew and will produce a POSTnote – a short Lumley, James Lydon, George Leslie briefing paper giving MPs and peers a Macdonald (Warlingham), George Gray broad overview of the background to a Macfarlane, Lakhdeep Singh Mangat, science or technology-based issue and its James Noakes, Cassilis Seelye, Brian policy implications – or may contribute to a Milton Spicer (Australia), Henry George longer report or assist a select committee in Taylor (Chepstow), Michael Tuite, Elizabeth an enquiry. Applicants must be based in Veitch, Eric Wharton. the UK or Ireland and be in their second or third year of postgraduate study in physics. Get recognised, get rewarded ● Applicants For more details, contact the Institute’s manager (science policy), Tajinder Panesor, e-mail tajinder.panesor@iop.org, tel 020 7470 4939. Closing date: 26 October. ● Applicants for the Very Early Career Woman Physicist of the Year Award, given by HSBC and the Institute’s Women in Physics Group (WIPG). The annual award is for women at the start of their careers in physics who have made a substantial contribution to the subject and may also have undertaken activities to support and encourage others. The winner will receive £1000 donated by HSBC and be given a certificate at a major event organised by the WIPG. Applicants must have completed an undergraduate physics degree within the last three years and be working as a physicist, or undertaking postgraduate study, in the UK or Ireland. For details, see www.iop.org/activity/groups/professional/ wip/index.html. Closing date: 31 October. ANNOUNCEMENTS ● The Institute’s annual Careers Fair will be held on 31 October in its London offices at 76 Portland Place, W1. The fair is aimed at final-year students, recent graduates and postgraduates and will feature 20 employers as well as workshops and CV checking. For further information visit www.iop.org/careers. MEMBER OFFER ● Online subscription prize draw Prof. G Compagno from Palermo (Italy) is June’s prize-draw winner, and Thorsten Kamps from Berlin (Germany) is July’s prizedraw winner. Each wins a 2 GB data stick. For your chance to win a data stick, pay your membership subscription online at http://members.iop.org when you receive your subscription notice. Institute of Physics Training Transferable skills training for physicists The Institute of Physics Award Best Practice in Professional Development 2008 “Rewarding your company’s commitment to training and developing physicists” •effective communication skills •introduction to project management •professional presentation skills •people management •leadership skills •financial awareness We welcome applications from all businesses, from larger organisations and from small and medium-sized enterprises. Anybody can apply on behalf of their company but your submission needs to be signed by a senior director or chief executive. For more details, contact Narinder Ubhi, the Institute's professional development officer (tel 020 7470 4800; e-mail narinder.ubhi@iop.org). Closing date: 1 November 2007 They run throughout the autumn in central locations in London, Birmingham and Manchester. Courses cost £200 for members and £250 for non-members (early-bird discounts available). Feedback from previous courses: “Very good and better than other courses I have attended.” “It was an excellent course.” For more details and to book, visit iop.org/careers. event horizon 7 Visit whatson.iop.org for full details of all Institute of Physics events. SEPTEMBER 2007 Physics by the Lake Summer School 2007 Summer school on condensed matter theory. Theory of Condensed Matter Group University College of St Martin, Ambleside, Cumbria 2–14 September www.physicsbythelake.org Registration required Clusters 07 Conference on the clustering of nucleons within the nucleus. Nuclear Physics Group The Holiday Inn, Stratford-uponAvon 3–7 September www.iop.org/Conferences Elizabeth Johnson Lecture Memorial lecture by Claire Curtis Thomas MP on translating science into government policy. Diversity Team 76 Portland Place, London W1 6 September diversity@iop.org E-mail to confirm attendance Schools Lecture Series: Light Fantastic – the Science of Colour Lecture by Pete Vukusic of Exeter University. Institute of Physics in Scotland Glasgow University, St Andrews University, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh 6, 10 &11 September www.iop.org/activity/education/ index.html ONE-DAY MEETING AGM and Lubrication of Nano-Ferrous Materials Meeting on progress in the tribological performance of nonferrous materials. Tribology Group 76 Portland Place, London W1 17 October www.iop.org/Conferences Booking required Physical Acoustics Tutorial Day and AGM One-day tutorial meeting. Physical Acoustics Group 76 Portland Place, London W1 13 September www.iop.org/Conferences Registration required Electron Microscopy and Analysis Group Conference (EMAG 2007) Conference with speakers, technical workshops, exhibition and posters. Electron Microscopy and Analysis Group Glasgow Caledonian University & University of Glasgow, Glasgow 3–7 September www.iop.org/Conferences Registration required Current Research in Combustion Forum for research students and early-career researchers. Combustion Physics Group Faculty of Engineering, Loughborough University 4 September www.iop.org/activity/groups/ subject/comb/index.html ONE-DAY MEETING Non-Adiabatic Molecular Dynamics: a Discussion Meeting with talks and discussion. Computational Physics Group 76 Portland Place, London, W1 10 September www.iop.org/Conferences Polymer Physics Group Biennial Conference Meeting with talks and discussion. Polymer Physics Group Grey College, Durham University 10–12 September www.iop.org/activity/groups/ subject/pol/index.html Registration required QuAMP 2007 Conference on ideas and results at the forefront of research. Atomic, Molecular, Optical and Plasma Physics Division University College London 10–13 September www.iop.org/Conferences Registration required Electro-active Materials Conference for those working on any aspect of field-induced effects in materials. Dielectrics Group Cranfield Management Development Centre, Cranfield 20 September www.iop.org/Conferences Registration required Sensors and their Applications XIV Conference on sensors, instrumentation and measurement. Instrument Science and Technology Group Liverpool John Moores University 11–13 September www.iop.org/Conferences Girls in Physics: What Works, What Next? Event at the BA Festival on successful strategies for engaging girls in physics. Education Department/Science Learning Centres Network Vanbrugh Dining Hall, University of York 13 September www.slcs.ac.uk/network/gip07 Conference and Training Course on Emergent Themes in Biophysics Research meeting and course on biological physics. Biological Physics Group Manchester Institute of Biotechnology, University of Manchester 17–18 September www.iop.org/conferences NASM 2007 Conference on novel applications of surface modification. Applied Physics and Technology Division University of Southampton 18–20 September www.iop.org/Conferences Registration required Extreme Physics at National Science Learning Centre, York Talks, workshops and participation. Education Group National Learning Centre, York 22–23 September www.pegresources.net/Home.html OCTOBER 2007 Light for the Firm but Gentle Control of Disease Talk by Prof. Stephen Brown of the Royal Free and University College London Medical School. Institute of Physics in Scotland Glasgow Science Centre, Pacific Quay, Glasgow 2 October www.iop.org/activity/branches/ Scotland How Do We Reconcile Growth, Emissions and Resources? Talk by Simon Roberts of the Foresight Group at Arup. Energy Management Group 76 Portland Place, London W1 9 October www.iop.org/activity/groups/ professional/emg/index.html Schools Lecture Series: Light Fantastic – the Science of Colour Lecture by Peter Vukusic of Exeter University. Education Department Prior Pursglove College, Guisborough; Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne; Hartlepool College of Further Education 16 & 17 October www.iop.org/activity/education/ index.html ONE-DAY MEETING Kelvin 2007 Event to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Kelvin’s death with four leading scientists speaking. Conference Strategy Committee Kelvin Gallery, University of Glasgow 14 November www.kelvin2007.org Booking required Electricity Supply Lecture by Lord F Tombs, former chair of the Central Electricity Generating Board. Energy Management Group 76 Portland Place, London W1 17 October www.iop.org/activity/groups/ professional/emg/index.html Utopia Theory: the Search for the Physics of Society Talk by science journalist Philip Ball. London & South East Branch Rutherford College Lecture Theatre 1, University of Kent 7 November www.iop.org/activity/branches/ London_and_South-East Into the Heart of Matter Talk on the Large Hadron Collider by Helen Heath of Bristol University Midlands Branch Hereford Sixth Form College 30 October www.iop.org/activity/branches/ Midland/index.html Low Temperature Techniques Meeting for newcomers to experimental research at low temperatures. Low Temperature Group East Midlands Conference Centre, Nottingham 7 November www.iop.org/Conferences Science, Engineering and Technology Careers Fair The Institute’s annual careers fair for final-year students, recent graduates and postgraduates. Careers Support 76 Portland Place, London W1 31 October www.iop.org/activity/careers/ Careers_Fair/page_5187.html N OV E M B E R 2 0 07 Schools Lecture Series: Light Fantastic: the Science of Colour Lecture by Pete Vukusic of Exeter University Education Department Highcliffe School, Christchurch; Clayesmore School, Dorset; Ralph Allen School, Bath 5, 6 & 7 November www.iop.org/activity/education/ index.html Pie in the Sky: Scotland’s Space Satellites Talk by Craig Clark of Clyde Space Ltd. Institute of Physics in Scotland Glasgow Science Centre, Pacific Quay, Glasgow 6 November www.iop.org/activity/branches/ Scotland Applications of Plasmas: Micro to Nano Scale Meeting with invited and contributed speakers. Ion and Plasma Surface Interactions Group 76 Portland Place, London W1 7 November www.iop.org/activity/groups/ subject/ipsi/index.html Experimental Techniques in Semiconductor Research One-day course aimed primarily at new researchers. Semiconductor Physics Group East Midlands Conference Centre, Nottingham 13 November www.iop.org/Conferences You are made of star stuff IOP Hereford and Worcester Annual Public Lecture, by Prof. Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell. Midlands Branch 19 November www.iop.org/activity/branches/ Midland/index.html Ticket only Registration required Elevate yourself Your chance to say thank you Help us to recognise outstanding teachers 31 October 2007 The Institute of Physics, London Sponsored by: sharp laboratories of europe Access an exciting world of career opportunities at the Institute of Physics 2007 Careers Fair. Meet a select group of Europe’s top employers who are there to find scientists and engineers just like you. Be seen in the right light with help from the CV Clinic and be inspired by guest speakers. With free entry, it’s your chance to fly. Register now or for more information e-mail careersfair@iop.org or visit www.iop.org/careers The Institute of Physics invites you to nominate secondary teachers of physics or primary science teachers for our Teachers Awards 2008. Entries have to reach the Institute by 12 October 2007 Forms can be obtained from: Gita Tailor, Teachers Awards 2008, Education Department, The Institute of Physics, 76 Portland Place, London W1B 1NT. Tel 020 7470 4800 E-mail gita.tailor@iop.org IOP Institute of Physics I n t e ractions September 2007 matters 8 Sculpture exhibition gets physical If you visited London’s Southbank over the summer, you might have noticed some unfamiliar additions to the city skyline – 31 life-size figures created by the sculptor Antony Gormley had taken up residence on walkways and rooftops. Gormley is probably most famous for Another Place, in which similar figures look out to sea from Crosby Beach near Liverpool, and for the gargantuan Angel of the North outside Gateshead. Every figure was part of a work called Event Horizon and they faced Blind Light, the exhibition of Gormley’s works taking place at The Hayward Gallery. As I approached, my childish delight at spotting these new guardians gave way to a worry that someone might call the police, in terror that a weary Londoner had finally snapped after one tube delay too many. I love the fact that art can provoke responses like these. During my PhD I was secretary of the Young Friends of Pallant House – a centre for modern art in Chichester – and I’ve been an avid gallery-goer since. Visiting Blind Light was going to make me forget about writing my solid-state physics textbook, surely? Entering the exhibition I was confronted by Space Station – a collection of 480-odd cubic metres of steel plate boxes that make up the rough shape of a human body and which Gormley claims is a model for Stephen Hawking’s vision of a habitat in space. It was imposing, overwhelming and scary. Shift II was a figure pinned to the wall “as if held by a centrifugal force”, according to the exhibition guide. It also quoted Gormley explaining that he had taken the term “event horizon” from cosmology, the idea being that, just as we will never see parts of the universe, viewers of the rooftop figures – which were arranged over a 1.5 km2 area around the gallery – would question whether there were more figures beyond those visible on the horizon. Science was the means by which the centrepiece of the exhibition, also called Blind Light, existed. Thanks to clever environmental control, it was effectively a cloud particles Environmental Physics Essay Competition The Institute of Physics Environmental Physics Group is pleased to announce its third essay competition, which was established to recognise excellence in communicating the significance, value and rewarding nature of engaging with environmental physics. Entries can cover any aspect of environmental physics, including (but not limited to) atmosphere and climate, hydrology, plant physics, waste, energy and the built environment. Essays should be written in an accessible way and should be no more than 2000 words long. The competition is open to all but entries from students are particularly welcome. Prizes ● cash prizes and certificates will be awarded for the winning essay(s) ● the winning entries will also be considered for publication (e.g. in Physics Education) Entries must be original and will be judged on writing quality and content. Essays can be purely scientific in content or can adopt a policy-related or other perspective. Entries and enquiries should be e-mailed to env.essay@physics.org. Further details can be found at iop.org/activity/groups/subject/env/index.html. Closing date: 31 December 2007 I n t e ractions September 2007 Gautier Deblonde Sharon Ann Holgate finds a surprising amount of physics in Antony Gormley’s sculptures. I found myself standing inside the very thing I was trying to get away from, but I was loving it. confined in a room, and it made for a disorientating sensory experience. However, as a physicist I was more interested in Drawn, a room with each corner occupied by an iron figure made from a cast of Gormley’s body. The pose struck was arms above the head and legs akimbo at 90°, so that the limbs could lie along the axes of the corners. In the exhibition book Gormley says that he wants this work to make the viewer “more uncertain about his or her position in space and gravitational value”. Seeing human forms “sitting” quite happily on the ceiling certainly does give you a strong sense of not knowing which way is up, but for me the figures were like the atoms at the corners of a unit cell. Suddenly I found myself standing inside the very thing I was trying to get away from, but I was loving it. My fascination with the structure of solids had been reborn. The forms within forms of the Matrices and Expansions collection of hanging works were, not surprisingly, inspired by geometry. Viewing from many different angles revealed a human figure trapped inside each stainless-steel doodle of polyhedral outlines, picked out by a denser arrangement of the wiring. Quantum Cloud, which is on permanent display at Greenwich, has the same idea. This and other works not featured in this exhibition, such as Meniscus, Critical Mass, Cell Cycle III and Chromosome, take titles or ideas from science. I will be interested to see what other links this multifaceted mind will produce in the future. Another work in the exhibition with a physics connection was Capacitor – a figure made from thousands of steel tubes, some containing rods which protrude from the body, creating a voodoo-doll like structure. The body at the centre of the piece is, according to the exhibition guide, “a core at the centre of a field, but it is not clear whether this is expanding or contracting; a big bang or a black hole”. I began to realise that Gormley might have a large collection of popular science books. While laughing at the ludicrous but inspired Mother’s Pride – a wall of slices of bread that reveal the shape of a curled up person via half-eaten slices – I also mused on the problems that art conservators are likely to have in the future. I later read that Mother’s Pride was made at the height of the Cold War and is one of a range of pieces created from materials that we might use to protect ourselves from, or to survive, a nuclear attack – a much less palatable link to physics. It was enjoyable clambering round and peering inside the works – so different from the passive gazing that we normally do. Outside the gallery I held the hand of one of the Event Horizon figures. It felt strange. All of these body forms are made from casts of the artist’s own body, so I was, in a way, holding Antony Gormley’s hand – the hand of a man I’ll probably never meet. Sharon Ann Holgate is a science writer. The works described here can be viewed at www.anthonygormley.com.