Frontiers in Science Public Lecture Series - Free Admission
Scientists and engineers will take on roles of educators through the Frontiers in Science Public Lecture Series. The series is intended to inform the public about the diversity of research being conducted at the Laboratory.
Looking Inside Explosions (and Other Things)
Dr. Christopher Morris
Subatomic Physics Group
Los Alamos National Laboratory
The ability to see within objects advances science, medicine, and even provides a better understanding of
the forces unleashed by high explosives during detonation. During his presentation, Dr. Morris will talk
about the history and science of radiography and how x-rays, protons, and naturally-occurring cosmic rays
can be used to see through opaque objects. From assisting surgeons with pictures of what's inside a
human body to helping border agents find nuclear contraband inside freight containers, a wide range of
applications will be discussed.
Tuesday, August 25, 2009, at 7:00 pm
James A. Little Theater
New Mexico School for the Deaf
1060 Cerrillos Road
Santa Fe, NM
Tuesday, August 27, 2009, at 7:00 pm
Duane W. Smith Auditorium
Los Alamos High School
1300 Diamond Drive
Los Alamos, NM
Thursday, September 1, 2009, at 7:00 pm
New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science
1801 Mountain Road NW
Albuquerque, NM
Thursday, September 3, 2009, at 7:00 pm
Taos Convention Center
120 Civic Plaza Drive, Coronado Hall, El Alcalde Room, Taos
Espanola, NM
For further information, contact Linda Anderman at the Community Programs
Office at (505) 665-9196 or anderman@lanl.gov.
Past Events
Lost In Transmission:
Saving Energy With Superconductivity
Dr. Dean Peterson
Superconductivity Technology Center
Los Alamos National Laboratory
June 2009
Los Alamos, Espanola, Santa Fe, and Albuquerque, NM
The Shapes of Proteins: a look
inside the molecular machines of life
Thomas C. Terwilliger
Bioscience Division
Los Alamos National Laboratory
November 2008
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, and Taos, NM
The Science of Renewable Energy Storage
Albert Migliori
Seaborg Institute and the
National High Magnetic Field Laboratory
Los Alamos National Laboratory
August-September 2008
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, and Espanola, NM
Continental Breakup and the Dawn of Humankind
Giday WoldeGabriel
Los Alamos National Laboratory
April 2008
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, and Espanola, NM
Small Satellites on a Shoestring:
The LANL Experience
Diane Roussel-Dupre
Los Alamos National Laboratory
February 2008
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, and Espanola, NM
Cracking the Neural Code:
Discovering the Language of the Brain
Garrett Kenyon
Los Alamos National Laboratory
November 2007
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, and Taos, NM
The Dark Universe: Revelations and Mysteries
Salman Habib
Los Alamos National Laboratory
September 2007
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, and Espanola, NM
The Turbulent World: How Nature Mixes Things Up
Robert Ecke
Center for Nonlinear Studies
Los Alamos National Laboratory
May 2007
Avian Influenza: How LANL is helping resond to a
potential pandemic
Jeanne Fair, Norman Johnson, Ruy Ribeiro, and Gary Resnick
Los Alamos National Laboratory
December 2006
Chilling Out with Lasers: The Science of Optical Refrigeration
Richard Epstein
International, Space, and Response Division
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Is There Energy For All in the 21st Century?
Rajan Gupta
Theoretical Division
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Abstract,
March and April 2006
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, Espanola, and Taos, NM
Samples from the Sun—NASA’s GENESIS Mission, Crash,
and Recovery
Dr. Roger Wiens
Space Science & Applications
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Abstract,
November 2005
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, and Albuquerque, NM
Gamma-Ray Bursts— one reason why 'astronomical' is
an adjective
Ed Fenimore
Laboratory Fellow,
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Abstract,
September 2005
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, and Albuquerque, NM
A Personal Perspective of the Changing Nuclear Threat
Siegfried S. Hecker
Senior Fellow and Former Director,
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Abstract,
October 2004
Los Alamos, Santa Fe, and Albuquerque, NM
Calculating Extinction: The Meteor Impact that
Killed the Dinosaurs
Galen Gisler
Applied Physics Division
Abstract, April 14, 2004
A History of Predicting the Future: Earth, Wind, Fire and Computers
Andrew B. White
Computer and Computational Science Division
Abstract, January 21, 2004
The Groundwaters of Northern New Mexico:
Tracing the origins of the water we drink
Elizabeth H. Keating
Hydrology,
Geochemistry and Geology Group
Abstract October 2, 2003
Download the presentation slides
(PPT
66.9 MB)
Black Holes and Collapsed Stars: Our
Galaxy and Its Neighbors
William C. Priedhorsky
Nonproliferation and International Security Division
Abstract April 29, 2003
Neutrinos in the Cosmos, in the Sun, and
on the Earth
William C. Louis
Subatomic Physics Group
Liquid Scintillating Neutrino
Detector
Booster Neutrino Experiment (BooNE)
Abstract January 29, 2003
The Complexity, Simplicity, and Unity of Living Systems
Geoffrey B. West
Elementary Particles and Field Theory
Group
Abstract November 13, 2002
Measuring Small Magnet Fields from Living Systems:
From Understanding the Brain to the Detection of Cancer
Michelle
A. Espy
Biophysics Group
Abstract October 2, 2002
Download the presentation slides (PDF
4.7 MB)
Levitation, Superconductivity, and
the World's Largest Magnets
Dr. Gregory S. Boebinger
National High Magnetic
Field Laboratory
Abstract
Download the presentation slides
Part 1: PDF
2.78 MB and Part 2: PDF
1.63 MB June 20, 2002
AIDS: A History of a Global Pandemic
Dr. Bette
Korber
Theoretical Biology and Biophysics Group
Abstract
February 7, 2002
HIV-The Science of a Pandemic: Evolution, Dynamics, Epidemiology and Medicine
36 million people are infected with HIV - AIDS and the number grows
by the day. These lectures will try to shed some light on how we got here
and what we can do about this and future epidemics. Better Korber will
discuss where the virus came from and where it's going. Alan Perelson
will talk about how the virus does what it does. Rajan Gupta will present
the global aspects of the virus.Trevor Hawkins will discuss treatment
and prevention, now and in the future.
Four Short Lectures and a Panel Discussion
with:
Dr. Bette Korber,
Dr. Alan Perelson,
Dr. Rajan Gupta - Los
Alamos National Laboratory
Dr. Trevor Hawkins - Southwest CARE Center
Co-Sponsored with the Santa Fe Institute and the Southwest CARE Center
January 23, 2002
Lunar Prospector and the Upcoming
Mars Odyssey Mission
Dr. William C. Feldman
Space and Atmospheric
Sciences Group
Abstract November 1, 2001
Global Warming
Dr. Charles F. Keller
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary
Physics
Abstract Sept 26, 2001
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