Physics 397/398/497/498 Junior/Senior Seminar Requirements Fall 2016 & Spring 2017

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Physics 397/398/497/498 Junior/Senior Seminar Requirements Fall 2016 & Spring 2017 The Junior and Senior Seminars in the Department of Physics serve two main purposes. 1. To give you a chance to practice technical writing and presenting scientific material before an audience of your peers and faculty. 2. To expose you to topics in physics research through talks by professional physicists and students and the discussions that follow. As a member of the Physics Department your job is to show up, pay attention and ask questions. Remember the golden rule: There is NO such thing as a bad question. Because of the number of students in seminar and travel restrictions for some speakers, some of the external talks will be on Monday afternoons. Please let me know if you have a conflict that prohibits you attending these seminars. The expectations of students in seminar are below. Part I. Seniors: Seniors enrolled in Senior Seminar typically participate in an individual research project supervised by a faculty member. Such research can involve work in one of our laboratories, or a significant library research project on a physics topic of current interest. See Dr. Gilfoyle to get approval of any project in advance of your talk and by September 7. See 'Deadlines' below. You will not be approved if you have not registered for the course. Seniors will be required to give one oral presentation in the first semester, as well as one oral presentation and one written paper in the second semester. The requirements for these are outlined below. A) First-Semester Oral Presentation: The purpose of the first-semester talk is to present to the other students in seminar a brief introduction to the general topic on which your research will be based and present an outline of what you hope to achieve with your research project. In general, this talk should be of a broader scope than the more specific talk given in the spring semester. The broader scope in the fall will serve both to help put your spring presentation in context, and to prevent your spring presentation from being a repeat performance of the fall. Some repetition is inevitable, but minimize it. Presentations should be 15 minutes long plus five minutes for questions. Use PowerPoint or PDF for talks. See additional presentation requirements below. B) Second-Semester Oral Presentation: The talk in the second semester should summarize the results of your research project and should be essentially an oral version of your written paper, with two significant differences. First, the level of the talk should be aimed at students rather than faculty. Second, the amount of detail given in the talk

will presumably be significantly less than that in the written paper, due to time constraints. Presentations should be 20 minutes in length plus five minutes for questions. Use PowerPoint or PDF formats for talks. See additional requirements below. C) Additional Presentation Requirements: Each of your talks must be practiced in the Speech Center or with a student peer (a University of Richmond physics major) no later than the Monday before your seminar (see below for more details). You must email the final version of your talk to me at least one hour before seminar starts. Failure to do so may result in you being unable to present your seminar and you will not receive credit for it. You are responsible for making your presentation function properly. Use care with animations, transitions between slides, etc. If you plan to use your own computer, then you are responsible for testing your machine more than 1.5 hours before seminar. Note that Math Methods meets in C114 3:00-4:15 on Wednesdays. D) Written Paper: The final written paper is to be a more or less complete record of the research that you have done. It should include detailed explanations of the work you did, the results obtained, and what they mean. It should be at a level of detail equal to or greater than that in a typical journal article, but with additional introductory material explaining the background and context of the research aimed at a reader who is a physicist in a different subfield. The written paper should be between 15-20 typed pages and include appropriate figures, tables, appendices, and references to published work in the field. DEADLINES PAST AND FUTURE Wednesday September 7 2016: Email to me with a) Proposed Title of your senior seminar project and b) name of you faculty supervisor. Wednesday November 30 2016: A one-page review of your progress to date on your research project and outline of your paper. Wednesday February 1 2016: A first draft of your paper is due. Wednesday March 22 2016: The final written paper is due.

Part II. Juniors: Students in Junior Seminar must make two oral presentations over two semesters. Presentations 1 & 2: Choose a topic from physics or astronomy that you would like to investigate beyond what is found in an introductory textbook. This subject is often a topic of current research interest in physics, but this is not required. A list of possible topics to choose from is provided on the course website, but you are not limited to this list. A topic of your own choosing may also be acceptable (check with me first!). You must choose the topic for your talk and have it approved by Dr. Gilfoyle at least one week before your seminar. Your topic will not be approved if you are not registered for the course. Each of your talks must be practiced at the Speech Center or with a student peer (a University of Richmond Physics major) no later than the Monday before your seminar (see below for more details). You must email the final version of your talk to me at least one hour before seminar starts. Failure to do so may result in you being unable to present your seminar and you will not receive credit for it. Your job is to research the topic and present an interesting and fun introduction to the topic to the rest of the class. You must present a specific calculation to demonstrate that you have quantitative as well as qualitative understanding of some aspect of the topic. Understanding these topics may be difficult and some assistance from the instructor or other faculty in preparing the talk may be required. Time for these presentations will be 13 minutes plus two minutes for questions. Part III. Advanced Preparation for All Speakers: Especially for beginning speakers, it is an excellent idea to practice your talk (several times) before delivering the finished seminar. Completing your talk late leads to predictable results and is not acceptable. It is required for junior and senior seminar that each student practice their talk at the Speech Center, or with a student peer (a University of Richmond Physics major) no later than the Monday afternoon before their seminar. A report on the practice talk will be forwarded to me by the Speech Center or by the student observer. A significant amount of your grade for seminar is based on this practice session and report (see below for more details). You must make your own appointment with the speech center well in advance of your talk. Appointments can be made from the web by visiting http://speech.richmond.edu/ Final versions of talks must be emailed to me at least one hour before seminar begins.

Part IV. Attendance for All Students: One of the main requirements for seminar is to show up and participate. If you have a good reason that you cannot attend, email me about it in advance. Unexcused absences will have a significant impact on your final seminar grade. If you attend all the meetings you receive all of the credit for that part of the course (see below for more details). You will lose half of the attendance credit for the first unexcused absence, the remaining half for the second unexcused absence, and additional unexcused absences could lead to failing the course. Part V. Grading: The final grade for junior and senior seminars will be based on your work in both the fall and spring semesters (397 & 398 and 497 & 498) and will be determined based on the following criteria. Note the importance of practicing your talk. Junior Seminar Speech Center Practice: 20% Regular Attendance: 20% Talk 1: 25% Talk 2: 35% 60% Total: 100% Senior Seminar Speech Center Practice: 20% Regular Attendance: 20% Talk 1: 20% Talk 2: 20% 40% Final Paper 20% Total: 100% Part VI. Faculty Collaboration: The Physics Department's Seminars are a Department-wide enterprise that involves all of our majors, faculty, and staff. The coordinator for seminar is Jerry Gilfoyle (ggilfoyl@richmond.edu, Gottwald D110).

Part VII. Junior/Senior Seminar Schedule (Tentative) Spring 2017 Physics Department Seminars (tentative) Date Deadline/Activity Jan 11 Jef Wagner 13 Mariama Rebello de Sousa Dias 18 Akaa Ayangeakaa 25 Hamilton, Schroeder Feb 1 Fryer, Haider, SS Drafts due 8 Ginestro, Wang 15 Gjerloev, Bowles 22 Alam, Seo Mar 1 D'Oleo, Wenzel 8 Spring Break 15 Weaver, Maiarana 22 Babcock, Galbrier, SS papers due 29 Strockoz, Raffin Apr 5 Tanos, Balsamo 12 James, Kenneally Part VIII. Where and When? We will usually meet in Physics Central about 4:15 pm on Wednesdays and then move over to C114 for the start of the first talk at 4:30. Part IX. Webpage? Of course there's a webpage. It's at the following link. https://facultystaff.richmond.edu/~ggilfoyl/seminar/introseminar2017.html