commentary: kate mcalpine
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| Photo courtesy of Kate McAlpine |
Rapping
physics
A good portion of the
public is curious about
what is going on in
particle physics right
now, and we have an
ever-longer list of ways
for them to find out—from lab newsletters
to personal blogs, popular-level magazines, and
plain-language Web sites.
CERN TV has been experimenting with
YouTube since last October, and in late July, my
colleagues and I put particles to music in the
“Large Hadron Rap,” a slightly goofy project aimed
at educating people about CERN’s Large
Hadron Collider on the French-Swiss border (to
the extent that this is possible in five minutes!)
I think rap is a good way to communicate.
Rhyme has always helped embed words in my
mind; hopefully science rap can help cement
ideas in the minds of students and other interested
people. “Nerdcore” has been on the Web
for a while, fusing “nerdy” from the cultures of
video games and hard science with the “hardcore”
of rock and hip-hop.
This was not my first science rap; in 2007 I
enlisted fellow interns to perform in “N3UROCH!P,”
based on the work of two physicists in Tel Aviv
who imprinted rudimentary memories on neurons.
Colleagues, bosses, and friends have been anywhere
from baffled to amused at my physics-rap
efforts, but overall I’ve had a lot of help and support.
At CERN, Katie Yurkewicz, whose position as
US LHC communicator I borrowed while she
was on maternity leave, also lent me her camera
to film the dancing. James Gillies, head of the
press office, helped convince the ATLAS secretariat
to let us film in the cavern. Fellow science
communicators were a bit dubious about dancing
at first, but they made it fun with their “experimental”
moves. Will Barras, a linguistics student
at the University of Edinburgh, made the “90s
party rap” backing track and mixed my voice.
The rap’s surprising popularity started with
Adam Yurkewicz posting it on the US LHC blog,
where a reporter for The New York Times saw
it and ran a story. Other newspapers and radio
stations began picking it up, blogs spread the
word, and it garnered millions of hits, along with
translations into a number of languages.
Two weeks after the “Large Hadron Rap”
went online, Jonathan Chase, a science communication
student in Wales, posted “Astrobiology
2008—Infotainment,” a rap about the study of life
in the universe that had been commissioned by
NASA. It was also picked up by the press and
has had tens of thousands of views on YouTube.
Jonathan and I both hope to see more science
rap. Maybe it’s just a flash in the pan, or
maybe this will become another way to get the
word out about scientific ideas and research.
One of the challenges in communication and
outreach is that it’s often undervalued. Funding
can seem hard to justify because already-limited
budgets are intended to support research. The
US LHC bloggers aren’t paid for the thought and
time they put into posts. Volunteers often guide
public lab tours, and physicists involved in outreach
work usually do it on their own time.
This is part of the beauty of enthusiasm.
Nevertheless, it would be nice if scientists who
write about their work on blogs or craft articles
for an outreach Web site could see those efforts
valued on an equal footing with the hours they
spend coding software, for instance.
It would be nice if we didn’t have to decide
between hiring an intern to create a public Web
site and spending that money directly on an
experiment. But without the Web site, information
about the experiment just wouldn’t be as
readily available to members of the general public,
and this would be a greater loss than some
scientists realize.
On the other hand, most major laboratories do
hire professional communicators and outreach
coordinators. I’m glad to see that at CERN, at
least, even the individual experiments are beginning
to hire people who can make their outreach
pages more readable and aesthetically pleasing.
Communication is vital for a field that requires
large investments of public money. To keep this
interesting and valuable research funded, we need
scientifically aware citizens and politicians. We
need to keep putting information out at a level
that people without specialized training can
understand, appreciate, and maybe even dance to.
Science communicator Kate McAlpine writes about the Large
Hadron Collider’s ATLAS experiment for ATLAS e-News. Her
nom de rap is alpinekat.
Click here to download the pdf version of this article.
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