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2023 Reines Lecture: 'Exploring the Cosmos ' Dr. Samuel Ting

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UCI School of Physical Sciences

February 21st 2023 The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) is a precision particle physics detector on the International Space Station. In more than ten years in space it has collected 215 billion cosmic rays with energy up to trillions of electron volts. Professor Samuel Ting discusses how the results provide unexpected new information on the cosmos.

Samuel Ting won the 1976 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of the charm quark. Known as the “November Revolution” in textbooks, the discovery opened the floodgates for the many discoveries that followed. Currently, Ting leads the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a $2 billion experiment that was transported to the International Space Station on the last space shuttle flight in 2011. AMS is the most sophisticated scientific instrument ever launched into space and is transforming our understanding of cosmic particles in the universe.

Ting was born in Michigan in 1936, but moved to Shanghai when he was 2 months old. He spent much of his childhood on the run, first because of the SinoJapanese War, and then because of the Chinese Civil War. At age 18 he started college in Taiwan, but then decided to seek a better education elsewhere and moved to the United States with $100 in his pocket and little proficiency in English. He graduated from the University of Michigan with a BA two years later, with a Ph.D. three years after that, and he won the Nobel Prize at age 40. He is the Thomas Dudley Cabot Institute Professor of Physics at MIT and has received 14 honorary degrees and is a member or foreign member of 10 national science academies.

The Reines Lecture Series honors Frederick Reines, UCI's Founding Dean of Physical Sciences and corecipient of the 1995 Nobel Prize for discovering the neutrino. The annual event brings world renowned physicists and astronomers to UC Irvine to give a public lecture and a department colloquium. This celebration honors the rich history of the Department of Physics & Astronomy and brings together faculty, students, supporters, and the community at large.

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