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Tina Potter

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Manage episode 321794280 series 3309009
Content provided by Cavendish Laboratory. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Cavendish Laboratory or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Our guest this month is Tina Potter, Professor of High Energy Physics at the Cavendish and expert in the particle physics Beyond the Standard Model.

Tina developed a passion for physics at a young age and has always been drawn to big, fundamental questions about the nature of our reality: what is the universe made of? How do its constituents behave? How can we detect them?

Her doctorate was when the world of CERN – the world-famous particle accelerator facility located at the border between Switzerland and France – opened up to her. She lived through the groundbreaking discovery of the Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider, a discovery that completed the Standard Model of particle physics and for its importance was awarded the Nobel prize in physics in 2013.

Today, she is working on new theories Beyond the Standard Model that could explain phenomena that still remain a mystery while also teaching the next generation of physicists and raising her two children.

Tina certainly likes a challenge, but how does one forge their own path into science when there is no family scientific connection or role-model? And how is it to work on larger-than-life research projects with huge datasets and hundreds of collaborators across the world? We’re ask her this and more in this new episode.

Jump into the conversation:

[00:00] - Guest intro

[02:00] – First encounter with physics

[02:45] – The world of particle physics and its open, unexplored big questions

[05:00] – “I would like to know what Dark Matter is”

[07:20] – The wonderful world of CERN and its unique research culture

[10:15] – Getting over nerves and shyness - a quick strategy

[11:55] – What a time to be alive! Living through the Higgs boson discovery

[15:25] – Finally, my parents could understand - How the Higgs Boson discovery raised the profile of particle physics

[17:30] - In the news this month – Mutating Quantum Particles set in motion

[21:50] – Managing work-life balance in an academic environment

[25:09] – Grasping every opportunity to survive the research career pyramid

[27:00] – How to forge your own path when there’s no academic role model in your life?

[30:25] – Approaching science with children and expanding their views on who can be a scientist

[31:46] – Finding evidence of particles beyond the Standard Model with supersymmetry

[37:15] – The beauty and challenges of cathedral projects

[42:56] - Outro

---

Useful links:


Share and join the conversation

  • If you like this episode, don’t forget to rate it and leave a review on your favourite podcast.
  • Any comment about the podcast or question you would like to ask our physicists, email us at podcast@phy.cam.ac.uk or join the conversation on Twitter using the hashtag #PeopleDoingPhysics.

Episode credits:

Hosts: Simone Eizagirre Barker and Paolo Molignini

News presenters: Vanessa Bismuth and Jacob Butler

Producer: Chris Brock


This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
  continue reading

32 episodes

Artwork

Tina Potter

People doing Physics

published

iconShare
 
Manage episode 321794280 series 3309009
Content provided by Cavendish Laboratory. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Cavendish Laboratory or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Our guest this month is Tina Potter, Professor of High Energy Physics at the Cavendish and expert in the particle physics Beyond the Standard Model.

Tina developed a passion for physics at a young age and has always been drawn to big, fundamental questions about the nature of our reality: what is the universe made of? How do its constituents behave? How can we detect them?

Her doctorate was when the world of CERN – the world-famous particle accelerator facility located at the border between Switzerland and France – opened up to her. She lived through the groundbreaking discovery of the Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider, a discovery that completed the Standard Model of particle physics and for its importance was awarded the Nobel prize in physics in 2013.

Today, she is working on new theories Beyond the Standard Model that could explain phenomena that still remain a mystery while also teaching the next generation of physicists and raising her two children.

Tina certainly likes a challenge, but how does one forge their own path into science when there is no family scientific connection or role-model? And how is it to work on larger-than-life research projects with huge datasets and hundreds of collaborators across the world? We’re ask her this and more in this new episode.

Jump into the conversation:

[00:00] - Guest intro

[02:00] – First encounter with physics

[02:45] – The world of particle physics and its open, unexplored big questions

[05:00] – “I would like to know what Dark Matter is”

[07:20] – The wonderful world of CERN and its unique research culture

[10:15] – Getting over nerves and shyness - a quick strategy

[11:55] – What a time to be alive! Living through the Higgs boson discovery

[15:25] – Finally, my parents could understand - How the Higgs Boson discovery raised the profile of particle physics

[17:30] - In the news this month – Mutating Quantum Particles set in motion

[21:50] – Managing work-life balance in an academic environment

[25:09] – Grasping every opportunity to survive the research career pyramid

[27:00] – How to forge your own path when there’s no academic role model in your life?

[30:25] – Approaching science with children and expanding their views on who can be a scientist

[31:46] – Finding evidence of particles beyond the Standard Model with supersymmetry

[37:15] – The beauty and challenges of cathedral projects

[42:56] - Outro

---

Useful links:


Share and join the conversation

  • If you like this episode, don’t forget to rate it and leave a review on your favourite podcast.
  • Any comment about the podcast or question you would like to ask our physicists, email us at podcast@phy.cam.ac.uk or join the conversation on Twitter using the hashtag #PeopleDoingPhysics.

Episode credits:

Hosts: Simone Eizagirre Barker and Paolo Molignini

News presenters: Vanessa Bismuth and Jacob Butler

Producer: Chris Brock


This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
  continue reading

32 episodes

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