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Home   |   Programs   |   Education   |   Undergraduate   |   Students   |   Future of Physics   |   2009   |   April Meeting 2009: Undergraduates' Epitome

April Meeting 2009: Undergraduates' Epitome

What is an Epitome?

Gray arrow Future Physicists Day
Gray arrow Undergraduate Epitome Format - PDF 

Physics in your Future - discover tomorrow
American Heritage Dictionary
e pit o me  (i-pit-o-me)  n.
   1. A representative or perfect example of a class or type: "He is seen . . . as the epitome of the hawkish, right-of-center intellectual" (Paul Kennedy).
   2. A brief summary, as of a book or article; an abstract.

At the American Physical Society meetings, the Epitome is a brief summary of what is happening at the meeting. The Epitome allows us to quickly look at which sessions are taking place at any given time and where those sessions are being held.

In electronic form, the sessions listed in the Epitome will have links to the detailed abstracts for every session, allowing you to identify which talks you may want to attend in that session. In the paper version, you will need to search through the Bulletin of the American Physical Society (BAPS) book which you receive at the registration desk to find the descriptions of the presentations included in a session..

Saturday, May 2, 2009
8:30 am Session A1 Plaza Ballroom ABC Plenary Session I
10:45 am Session B2 Plaza D The State of the Standard Model and Higgs Searches
  Session B3 Plaza E Science with Intense Beams of Rare Isotopes: On the way to FRIB
  Session B5 Governor's Square 15 The Scientific Legacy of John Wheeler
  Session B6 Governor's Square 16 Applications of Accelerators
  Session B7 Governor's Square 12 Physics in Latin America
  Session B13 Plaza Court 3 Physics Education
12:00   Windows Future Physicists Luncheon (ticket required)
1:30 pm Session C2 Plaza D The State of Neutrino Physics
  Session C6 Governor's Square 16 History of Telescopes
  Session C7 Governor's Square 12 Teaching Physics of Energy I
3:30 pm Session D4 Plaza F Panel Discussion: Global Physics Projects
  Session D5 Governor's Square 15 Spanning the Gravitational Wave Spectrum
  Session D7 Governor's Square 12 Teaching Physics of Energy II
  Session D14 Plaza Court 4 Undergraduate Research (including SPS) I
4:30 pm Session E1 Plaza Exhibit Poster Session I
5:30 pm Session E3 Plaza Exhibit Welcome Reception and Poster Session I
7:00 pm Session F1 Plaza Ballroom ABC Town Meeting on the DOE/NASA Joint Dark Energy Mission (JDEM)
7:30 pm Session F2 Plaza Ballroom D Town Hall Meeting on Science and Society

Sunday, May 3, 2009
8:30 am Session G2 Plaza D The State of the Top Quark
  Session G4 Plaza F New Eyes on the Universe I
  Session G6 Governor's Square 16 Physics on the Road Conference : A follow-up to the World Year of Physics 2005
  Session G7 Governor's Square 12 Science Policy: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow
10:45 am Session H2 Plaza D The State of QCD
  Session H4 Plaza F Nobel Prize Session
  Session H6 Governor's Square 16 Women in Experimental High Energy Physics: Science and Career Paths
  Session H7 Governor's Square 12 Managing Nuclear Fuels: An International Perspective
  Session H13 Plaza Court 3 Focus Session: Professional Preparation of Teachers of Physics
  Session H14 Plaza Court 4 History and Philosophy of Science
1:30 pm Session J7 Governor's Square 12 Physics Contributions to the Intelligence Community
  Session J14 Plaza Court 4 Undergraduate Research (including SPS) II
3:30 pm Session L2 Plaza D On the Threshold of the LHC
  Session L5 Governor's Square 15 Nuclear Physics in Astrophysics: From Stars to Stellar Explosions
  Session L8 Governor's Square 17 Excellence in Physics Education Award
4:00 pm   Directors Row E Future Physicists Award Reception
5:30 pm Session M1 Governor's Square 12 APS Prizes and Awards Ceremonial Session and Past-President's Address
7:30 pm Session N1 Plaza Ballroom A Keynote Talk: The Quest for Giant Telescopes: Four Centuries of Challenge and Scientific Discovery

Monday, May 4 2009
8:30 am Session P1 Plaza Ballroom ABC Plenary Session II
10:45 am Session Q2 Plaza D Recent Progress at the Neutrino Frontier
  Session Q6 Governor's Square 16 Introductory Physics for Pre-Health and Biological Science Students
  Session Q7 Governor's Square 12 Is Geoengineering a Possible Stop-Gap Measure to Rapid Climate Change?
1:30 pm Session R2 Plaza D New Eyes on the Universe II
  Session R3 Plaza E DNP Prize and Award Session I
  Session R4 Plaza F Dark Matter
  Session R5 Governor's Square 15 Women and Minorities in Multi-Messenger Astronomy of Gamma-Ray Bursts
  Session R7 Governor's Square 12 FPS Awards Session
  Session R13 Plaza Court 3 Focus Session: Adopting PER-Based Teaching Methods and Materials
  Session T3 Plaza E DNP Prize and Award Session II
  Session T4 Plaza F Early Science from the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope
  Session T5 Governor's Square 15 Precision Measurements in Gravity
  Session T6 Governor's Square 16 Panel Discussion: Preparation of Graduate Students for Careers in a Globalized World I
  Session T7 Governor's Square 12 History of MURA, Fermilab and the SSC
  Session T13 Plaza Court 3 Physics Education Research

Tuesday, May 5, 2009
8:30 am Session V1 Plaza Ballroom ABC Plenary Session III
10:45 am Session W3 Plaza E Nuclear Physics Connections with Astrophysics/Cosmology
  Session W4 Plaza F New Facilities in Particle Astrophysics I
  Session W6 Governor's Square 16 Numerical Simulations of Coalescing Compact Objects: Black Holes and Neutron Stars
  Session W7 Plaza Ballroom ABC Teaching Physics and the Arts
  Session X5 Governor's Square 15 Panel Discussion: Women and Minorities in Gravity: Science and Career Paths
  Session X6 Governor's Square 16 The Role of Scientists in Arms Control

Meeting Organization

The meeting is organized into Plenary Sessions and parallel sessions.

Plenary Sessions
The Plenary sessions are scheduled as the only events taking place at the time of interest and the speakers design presentations for audiences that, while likely to be physicists, may not be experts in the field of the presenter. These talks are typically 36 minutes in length. The parallel sessions are scheduled such that several presentations are occurring simultaneously in different meeting rooms. The talks in all rooms are scheduled in 12 minute increments so that the audience can move between sessions pretty easily.

By reviewing the BAPS, you can identify which talks in which sessions are of most interest and move throughout the rooms during the sessions. Speakers are used to audience members quietly moving in and out of the room (though most people try to move during the question and answer sessions at the end of the talks).

Undergraduate Epitome
The Undergraduate Epitome, like the regular epitome, is a brief listing of sessions at the APS meeting. However, in this version, we have indicated sessions which are most likely to be aimed at audiences that are not experts in any specific physics discipline. These sessions were identified with the assistance of the session organizers.  We hope you enjoy the meeting!

Gray arrow  Undergraduate Epitome Format - PDF 

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