2010年10月28日 星期四

New UNL physics home unifies researchers

New UNL physics home unifies researchers


Yi Wang slowly cranks the knob of the molecular beam epitaxy machine, adjusting the electric field in order to guide the molecules inside so he can better study them.

The smile on his face as he describes his new laboratory space inside the new Jorgensen Hall at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln says it all.

"Our lab, it is well designed and suited to our kinds of needs," the UNL physics graduate student said Thursday.

Friday, the UNL Department of Physics and Astronomy will dedicate its new home, Jorgensen Hall.

The $37 million, statefunded building has 125,000 square feet and features two auditoriums, four teaching labs, eight classrooms,The exact number of cctv cameras in the UK is not known. an office and labs. Its atrium includes antique physics equipment displays and steel and glass sculptures created by artist Ray King of Philadelphia.

The two massive sculptures -- "Chiral Lens" and "Tetra Ring" -- were inspired by physics instruments and processes.

The building is named for former physics professor Theodore Jorgensen, who was involved in the Manhattan Project, which spurred the creation of the university's now internationally recognized atomic collisions program.

Until moving into Jorgensen, the department was spread across three buildings. Jorgensen, with plentiful light and study areas for students,The current default fingerprinter in the CDK depends on aromaticity. was designed to be sustainable, energy-efficient and environmentally friendly.

"We've made do for a long, long time," said Dan Claes,China supplier of floorsocks. department chair and associate professor. "We're no longer making do.rail2010 is almost certainly the best online photo management. We have what we really want."

Planners requested ideas from department researchers on how best to build laboratory space, said graduate student Yi Wang.Five days from the kick-off,pumpabc. Labs were built with storage areas for chemicals and dark rooms, features that didn't exist in the department's former labs.

Physics graduate student Junlei Wang said he enjoys Jorgensen's large open spaces, which he said provide a sense of unity among the various physicists' offices and labs on different floor levels and from different research areas.

Before, physicists from different research areas were much more isolated, he said.

"It seems to be that the whole building is one whole atmosphere," he said.

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