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Student Research

Recent Projects

During the summer of 2010, two physics students worked on a major particle physics experiment based in Fermilab. Molly Clairemont and Jack Brangham both joined Dr. Tagg's research group to work on the MINERvA experiment.

MINERvA (http://minerva.fnal.gov) is designed to measure what happens when neutrinos interact in matter. The experiment consists of a 'small' (1 ton) fine-grained detector that will detect the by-products when the nearly massless, charge-less neutrinos from the Fermilab NuMI neutrino beam interact in iron, plastic, and other materials. The particle by-products form tracks seen by detecting a few photons of light created by glowing plastic scintillator.

One of the focal points of Dr. Tagg's work at Otterbein has been to provide a data visualization tool for use by the scientists. (You can play with this tool yourself, following the links at http://neutrino.otterbein.edu.) Molly Clairemont worked to help adapt this tool and the documentation for use by the wider audience of high school students. Students will be able to look at real particle physics events to explore the details of particle decay and momentum conservation on a subatomic scale. Help was given to the group by a photography student, Erin Cochrin, who lent her artistic eye to develop the aesthetics of the system.
Jack Brangham, in the meantime, worked to develop a test stand to measure the fundamental properties of the plastic scintillator that MINERvA uses, including numerical simulation of the material for comparison.

Both Jack and Molly also contributed directly, visiting the experimental site and either consulting scientists there or taking shifts late into the night to monitor the detector and the neutrino beam.

Dr. Tagg will be continuing to take on students for undergraduate research this summer and in future, funded by an NSF grant for Research at Undergraduate Institutions. Please contact him if you are interested in spending a summer working with him.

Past Research Projects

Senior Conducts Research at CERN
Senior Brandi McVety spent 10 weeks in Geneva in the summer of 2008 working at CERN, the European laboratory for subatomic physics. While she was there the world's largest particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), was coming online. Brandi worked with the LHCb collaboration on developing online status reporting systems for the detector, under the direction of Prof. Dirk Wiedner of CERN. The LHC and its detectors represent the most complex scientific endeavor ever undertaken and will probe the structure of matter at the deepest levels, looking for signs of "new physics" such as the Higgs boson or supersymmetry.
According to Brandi, her time at CERN was "an incredible educational experience. I have never learned so much so quickly or in such a hands-on manner. Working with physicists and students from around the world was very exciting and opened my eyes to how global the physics community really is." After her work was done she was able to travel extensively through Italy, France, and Germany.

Student and Faculty Research Novel Technique
In June 2008, sophomore Justin Young travelled to Berkeley, California with Prof. Brian Sell to collaborate with Prof. Charles Fadley of UC Davis and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL). They carried out investigations of the surface interactions between multiple layers of different magnetic materials at LBL's Advanced Light Source, using a novel technique of generating x-ray standing waves below the surface and throughout the material. As the standing wave is located at different spots on the top surface of the material, its intensity can vary and from this variation information can be derived about the structure of the interfaces between the different magnetic materials. The results of this experiment will lead to a better understanding of the interfaces between materials that have potentially very useful applications in next-generation electronics and computing equipment.

/ Department of Physics

Celina Chou
Science Building 308
p / 614.823.1316
e / ckasson@otterbein.edu

 

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