Arlo -
Thanks! I knew you were younger than most of us old fogeys here but I
underestimated that by a couple of years I guess! Sounds like a great
program!
I know (of) Norsam from their ROSETTA product/concept (ties right in to
our thread about archiving of e-mail!). How many angels can be
inscribed on the head of a pin (has anyone bothered to transfer Escher's
hyperbolic projection print of that topic onto the head of a pin yet?)
Info on the Nanoengineering workstation is a little spotty as it isn't a
formal product yet. It is a custom tightly coupled CPU/GPU system
tuned to run LAMPPS and NAMD (two molecular dynamic simulation programs)
efficiently, coupled with VMD (molecular dynamics visualization package)
with the haptics integrated for "feeling" the molecules. Full up "real
time" (human time, not *even* literal real time) simulation at the
molecular level is still an order of magnitude or two away, but for
educational and demonstration purposes it is *awesome*. I'll get you
some more info offline.
As for a spare PicoSecond Laser! Well, my holography partner (Fred
Unterseher) would love access to such a laser. This is roughly what
they used to make holograms of both Ronald Reagan and Queen Elizabeth
back in the 80's. Fred (and another colleague) each have full-up
holography labs in town. As for laser safety, Fred (and Augie) both
still have two good eyes, which is saying something after 40 years in
the biz.
Along with the usual "arts" projects, we are working on some stronger
tech as well (glasses free stereo displays, and designing HOEs for
Photovoltaic efficiency enhancement). I don't know what it would take
to strike deals with SFCC/MASTERS but I appreciate you being a link to
start the conversation. We can take that one offline!
Thanks!
- Steve
The MASTERS Program <http://tmpsantafe.org#themastersprogram.net> is a
high school I attend that was started a few years ago by John Bishop,
the president of nanotech company NorSam
<http://norsam.com/about-us.html>. A main focus is taking advantage of
dual credit with the college (since we are on the campus) but the
secondary focus is STEM education. To that end, we bought a couple of
Nanosurf <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanosurf> machines (TEM & AFM)
and a Hitachi <http://www.hht-eu.com/cms/19823.html> SEM. As to who
can use them, I am not sure. So far only high school students and
faculty have used them, and then mostly the SEM (easy to set up and
use); some college professors have expressed interest in using it with
their classes, those arrangements are still being worked out. I
believe the school is open to suggestions for what to analyse and not
averse to publishing resultant images/data, and perhaps if one is
touring the school and requests it the equipment might be
demonstrated...but the person to ask about that would be the STEM
coordinator <http://www.themastersprogram.net/faculty.php>, Scott
Voorhies <http://tmpbotany.yolasite.com/>. And yes, I do think the
haptic interface would be of interest to him/them/us/me. I am
currently Googling to read more about it, sounds interesting.
On a related topic, Norsam has donated a picosecond laser + optics
table they are no longer using; it needs to be assembled but SFCC does
not want to deal with it (having no place to put it and being wary of
liability). Is there a place in Santa Fe that would welcome the
equipment and has an area able to be blocked off / locked for reasons
of eye protection?
-Arlo James Barnes
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