Volume 05 | Issue 01 | January/February 08

Issue Contents

photo-feature

Feature: From Eye to Sight

As a particle physicist, Alan Litke routinely measures tiny signals with equally tiny electronics. Now he's applying those methods to individual nerve cells, revolutionizing the study of how we see.

PDF Download Full Issue

  • photo

    Editorial:
    symmetry's Web expansion

    Starting from this issue we will publish six print issues each year instead of 10 and add a much larger range of online content. Our hope is that this will give readers new ways to respond and become active members of the symmetry community.

    image-arrowRead more

  • photo

    Commentary:
    Krystle Williams

    What will the physics community look like 10 years from now? What should it look like? These are questions the Society of Physics Students is encouraging you to ask yourself.

    image-arrowRead more

  • photo

    Departments:
    Signal to Background

    SLAC’s rise from an ancient ocean floor; TV goes underground at Fermilab; a shirt as old as St. Francis; path-breaking bicycle; Czechs tackle Japanese opera; mysterious wine sign; engineering with toys.

    image-arrowRead more

  • photo

    Feature:
    Short Cuts for Newcomers at the LHC

    It can take weeks to get into the groove of analyzing data from an unfamiliar detector. A new starter kit cuts that time to hours.

    image-arrowRead more

  • photo

    Feature:
    Physicists Rock!

    Wherever physics goes, music follows, from the lyrical strains of flute and violin to Blue Wine, Les Horribles Cernettes and Drug Sniffing Dogs.

    image-arrowRead more

  • photo

    Gallery:
    Satoru Yoshioka

    A fine-arts photographer turns his lens on highenergy physics labs, capturing everyday work spaces, obscure details and spooky nightscapes.

    image-arrowRead more

  • photo

    Day in the Life:
    Monica Dunford

    "Did we really have 5063 meetings last year?"

    image-arrowRead more

  • photo

    Essay:
    Jennifer Ouellette

    Perhaps the humor in the TV sitcom The Big Bang Theory raises some hackles because–like all good comedy–it contains an element of truth.

    image-arrowRead more

  • photo

    Logbook:
    W Boson

    In August 1982, Margaret Thatcher, then prime minister of the United Kingdom, paid a private visit to the European laboratory CERN. Four months later, CERN Director General Herwig Schopper sent her a letter disclosing "in strict confidence" the news of the imminent discovery of the weak bosons.

    image-arrowRead more

  • photo

    Explain it in 60 Seconds:
    The W boson

    The W boson is one of five particles that transmit the fundamental forces of nature. It is responsible for two of the most surprising discoveries of the 20th century—that nature has a “handedness” and that the physics of antimatter is subtly different from the physics of the matter-based world we see around us.

    image-arrowRead more

symmetry Breaking

February 4, 2010
Brookhaven National Laboratory has invested in a new, private facility to treat the superconducting cavities within a few miles of the site. The new facility is top of the line, located almost next door, and shows the power of joining government and private industry.
February 3, 2010
The upcoming <i>Hubble 3D</i> IMAX movie including footage shot during a manned space mission last year is deserving of the adjective "awesome," says our <i>symmetry</i> correspondent, based on a preview screening in New York.
February 2, 2010
In the search for a better understanding of neutrinos, the Main Injector Neutrino Oscillation Search, MINOS, recently put forth results that help rule out a theorized fourth neutrino and strengthen the case against the hypothesis of neutrino decay. MINOS cospokesperson Robert Plunkett says the results “really start to close the loop” on some major theories that neutrino experiments set out to investigate.
Subscribe to symmetry

Email Update List

Receive email notifications of the release of future issues of symmetry:

more options
On the Cover
Issue Cover

For decades, studies of how the eye sees—how the information gathered by light-sensitive cells in the retina is transmitted to the brain for analysis–were restricted to recordings from single neurons.

PDF View Issue PDF

Logbook Archive
Photo - Logbook: Archive

bottom quark

Oct 2005
A memo written at Fermilab in November 1976 hinted at the observation of a new particle. Six months later, the discovery was real.

View Logbook Archive

Explain it in 60 Seconds Archive
Photo - Explian it in 60 Seconds: Archive

Standard Model

May 2006
Considered the best theory of the particles and forces known at this time, the Standard Model has serious deficiencies as it can not explain 96 percent of the matter and energy in our universe.

View Archive