Podme logo
HemUpptäckKategorierSökStudent
The school physics talk that proved more popular than Lady Gaga's boots

The school physics talk that proved more popular than Lady Gaga's boots

23:072019-08-15

Om avsnittet

Media interest in particle physics and the Large Hadron Collider boosted Jon Butterworth's interest in public engagement, reports Julie Gould.Jon Butterworth developed a taste for public engagement after repeated media appearances related to his work on the ATLAS experiment, one of two Large Hadron Collider detectors at CERN, Europe’s particle-physics lab.Butterworth, a physics professor at University College London, describes life at CERN, and how it felt to be one of 5154 authors listed in the 2015 paper that produced the most precise estimate yet of the mass of the Higgs boson.As part of his public engagement activities, Butterworth was persuaded to auction an after-dinner lecture or school talk about the Higgs. The auction "lot" was part of a fundraising effort for his children's primary school in north London."Someone else at the school was Lady Gaga's designer and they brought along a pair of her boots," he tells Julie Gould. "My talk went for more than Lady Gaga's boots. I'm still doing it now. Interest hasn't died away."The key thing is you have to be genuinely excited about your project. We've lowered the bar so more physics stories get into the news."If you tell your mum and dad now that you're doing physics, you get kudos for it in the way you wouldn't have done before," he says.Tom Weller taught physics for eight years at a west London school following his second postdoc at Harvard University, a career change triggered in part by the enjoyment he derived from organising children's science parties. "They made me recognize how much I enjoyed explaining stuff that was fun and engaging," he says in the fourth episode of this six-part podcast series about physics careers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Senaste avsnitten

Working Scientist
Working Scientist

How studying octopus nurseries can shape the future of our oceans

2024-09-1931min
Working Scientist
Working Scientist

How we slashed our lab’s carbon footprint

2024-09-1224min
Working Scientist
Working Scientist

Meet the retired scientists who collaborate with younger colleagues

2024-07-2619min
Working Scientist
Working Scientist

A dumpster full of mercury and other things to avoid: lab closures made simple

2024-07-2223min
Working Scientist
Working Scientist

Pension planning and psychosocial support: how institutions can help academics at the late career stage

2024-07-1223min
Working Scientist
Working Scientist

“Who am I if not a scientist?” How to find identity and purpose in retirement

2024-07-0519min
Working Scientist
Working Scientist

Choose your own adventure: navigating retirement after an academic career

2024-07-0120min
Working Scientist
Working Scientist

The last few miles: how to prepare for the late-career stage in science

2024-06-2110min
Working Scientist
Working Scientist

Counting the cost of fashion’s carbon footprint

2024-06-1022min
Working Scientist
Working Scientist

Why female students at an inner London school are seeing scientists in a different light

2024-06-0617min
logo

PODME

INFORMATION

  • Om kakor
  • Allmänna villkor
  • Integritetspolicy
  • Press

LADDA NED APPEN

app storegoogle play store

REGION

flag
  • sweden_flag
  • norway_flag
  • finland_flag

© Podme AB 2024