Monday, June 25, 2007

Table top decoration


What do you think of a new table cloth for the meeting room's table? ;)

Besides, I want to introduce you to a new site I discovered recently. The Cornell University library is the host of arXiv.org, an easy way to read and publish draft (or final) versions of scientific papers. Peer review is still done by comments, and you avoid the policies and legal attachments of standard publishing. Just a quick way to show your results and get new inputs.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Barbecue!

Here are the pictures Thomas and me took on the VUB Annual barbecue day. The weather didn't help so much, but still I think we had a great time. Now time for diet :P

Monday, June 18, 2007

Science from overseas

The National Academies of Science produces regular reports on the state of scientific research in the US. Their latest effort along these lines has just been released, and the academy has put the spotlight on physics in a report entitled "Condensed-Matter and Materials Physics: The Science of the World Around Us". The problem here is what is described as the inability to meet "grand challenges" of physics, which is likely to hurt US competitiveness


But aparently they are not doing so bad there in the states. Recently there were some rumours about the possible discovery of the Higgs boson by Fermilabs, fact that was very much concerning the developers of the LHC back here in Europe, given the fact that the device was being built with this main purpose in mind. Finally, the discovery has been a different one, and always welcomed! Fermilab physicists discover "triple-scoop" baryon.


Another milestone has been reached in the US. Scientists from Spectrolab have recently published their research on the fabrication of solar cells that surpass the 40% efficiency — the highest efficiency achieved for any photovoltaic device. Their results appear in a recent edition of Applied Physics Letters.

And finally, ScienceHack is a unique video search engine for science videos. Every video is screened and approved based on accuracy and quality by "their scientists". So far they indexed: Physics, Chemistry, and Space (coming soon: Geology, Psychology, Robotics and Computer). ScienceHack does not host videos, they only index videos from other sites like YouTube and MetaCafe. Their database is relatively small, however, so you can help by submitting videos to the database.