Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Artificial photosynthesis

Accounts of Chemical Research just published a special issue on Artificial Photosynthesis and Solar Fuels.


Articles I would particularly like to read include:


Is this me?


Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Marriage counseling for chemists

Roald Hoffmann, Philippe Hiberty, and Sason Shaik are probably my three favourite theoretical chemists. They write beautiful papers which focus on the quantum mechanical basis for chemical concepts and understanding rather than computation. Being a fly on the wall when they are all in one room for a scientific discussion would be fascinating. Well I don't have to dream. There is a really nice paper in Accounts of Chemical Research, A Conversation on VB vs. MO theory: a never ending rivalry. The three discuss and argue the relative merits and relationship between valence bond theory and molecular orbital theory. Here are a few choice quotes:

RH: A standard technique in marriage counseling (and I do think that MO and VB are a partnership) is to have the two parties stop and repeat, with an effort at understanding, what was said by the other partner. Can we try that? ......



PH: .......Pauling was smart enough to disguise all these “physical” elements of VB and packaged it as simple resonance theory. This was good for the 1930s, but now chemists have more theoretical savvy, and can digest these bits of physics, couldn’t they?


RH: Maybe. Some of them think theory is computation, and dignify that with the name of physical insight. The best physicists I’ve known - people like Ed Purcell - were after a quality of understanding that is ... almost chemical.


SS: ........ what tipped the balance in favor of MO may have been simply the computer implementation of MO-based theories. Chemists are a practical lot; they simply went where they could calculate.


RH: As they are doing now with the software available - it’s amazing what gains prominence just because there is a button in Gaussian to do it!


Monday, February 8, 2010

Monitoring blog traffic


Google Analytics provides any easy way to track traffic on your web page or blog. This blog normally gets about 40-80 page views per day. Certainly, enough to encourage me that there is enough interest that it is worth my effort. But, I got a bit of a shock when I last checked. Here are the number of page views for the past week:

Monday 70
Tuesday 91
Wednesday 159
Thursday 369
Friday 1877
Saturday 326
Sunday 117

Why the spike centered on Friday? It seems the post on the Nature paper using 17 parameter fits was featured by Hacker News, producing 1300 hits. I was impressed that they went back and read my earlier posts about curve fitting, particularly the Nature article by Freeman Dyson about getting the elephant's trunk to wiggle.

The cartoon is from a Physics Today article, Encouraging good science on the web, by Alexander Antunes.

Quantum dynamics of nuclei


John Negele wrote a really nice Physics Today article in 1985 on the role of mean-field theory in nuclear physics.
Ideas discussed include:
-nuclei are small drops of a dense, strongly interacting quantum liquid
-why the success of mean-field theory is astonishing
-but it works because of Landau's Fermi liquid theory
-in nuclei the density varies smoothly (they are not billiard balls)
-instantons (imaginary time trajectories) provide a natural way to describe tunneling effects such as fission and fusion
-the effective nucleon-nucleon interaction is density dependent
-as the density of nuclear matter increases the effective interaction increases and neutrons can escape the nucleus and form a "gas". this is what happens in neutron stars

I have been reading this in preparing for the visit of Cedric Simenel to UQ this week. I am looking forward to hearing his seminar which will feature the picture above and discuss significant advances in dynamical simulations since Negele's article.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

What resources make a great teacher?

Believe it or not, this post was inspired by a stirring (and amusing) piece, Beware the ego trip, by columnist Kathleen Noonan in Brisbane's tabloid newspaper. The relevant bit for readers of this blog is the reference to an article in the Atlantic Monthly, What makes a great teacher? Noonan summarises:

More than any other variable in education - more than schools or curriculum - teachers matter.

First, great teachers tended to set big goals for their students. They always were looking for ways to improve their effectiveness. Great teachers constantly re-evaluate what they are doing.

Great teachers had four other tendencies in common: they avidly recruited students and their families into the process; they maintained focus; they planned exhaustively and purposefully - for the next day or the year ahead - by working backwards from the desired outcome; and they worked relentlessly, refusing to surrender to poverty, bureaucracy and budgetary shortfalls.

The other thing that predicted success in the classroom was . . . wait for it . . . happy teachers. Teachers who scored high in "life satisfaction" were 43 per cent more likely to perform well in the classroom than their less satisfied colleagues. Their zest and enthusiasm spreads.

University middle managers should take note.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Desperately seeking spin liquids III

It was wonderful having Bruce Normand visit UQ this week. It is great having a visitor come who meets individually with students, postdocs, and faculty and discusses their work at length. I think we all learnt a lot and appreciated the constructive feedback.

Bruce made me aware of a nice accessible review Frontiers in frustrated magnetism that he just published in Contemporary Physics.
The focus is on spin liquids: whether they exist in real materials and/or Heisenberg lattice models. This gives more background relevant to a conjecture I discussed in two previous posts. From Bruce's seminar and discussions I now realise there is a strong candidate counter-example to the conjecture. That is the Heisenberg model on the isotropic triangular lattice with multiple spin exchange. The best numerical evidence of a spin liquid (unbroken lattice symmetry, spin gap) is in this paper. It would be great if more numerical work was done on this model using new methods such as those based on tensor-network states.