Biotechnology Vendor Showcase Learn about the latest research tools at the Biotechnology Vendor Showcase™ event happening at University of California, San Francisco- Parnassus, January 25th, 2019! This complimentary event is for active research scientists and related life science professionals interested in viewing the latest products and meeting with scientific suppliers.  For more details please visit: http://www.biotech-calendar.com/showinfo/detail.php?showCode=SFVS19WP
Where: San FranciscoCost:
Directional Dark Matter Detection: Advantages and ChallengesMost dark matter detectors hope to measure the energy deposited to an atom by dark matter interactions. Directional detectors are capable of measuring the momentum of the recoiling nucleus as well. This additional information can be used for particle discrimination, background rejection, confirmation of WIMP discovery, and even WIMP astronomy. ...
Where: Menlo ParkCost: Free
Fighting mosquito-borne diseases with mathematical models, genetic analysis and machine learningMalaria, dengue, Zika and other mosquito-borne diseases continue to pose a major global health burden through much of the world, despite the widespread distribution of insecticide-based tools and antimalarial drugs. Consequently, there is interest in novel strategies to control these diseases, including the release of mosquitoes transfected with Wolbachia and ...
Plate Mechanical Metamaterials and Their ApplicationsRecently, we introduced the concept of plate mechanical metamaterials - cellular plates with carefully controlled periodic geometry and unique mechanical properties - as well as its initial realization in the form of freestanding corrugated plates made out of an ultrathin film. We used atomic layer deposition (ALD) and ...
My research program is focused on developing molecular catalysts for energy conversion (redox) reactions. We focus on the thermochemistry of key bond-making and cleavage steps for H+ reduction to H2 and CO2 reduction to HCO2- in order to design more energy efficient catalysts. We also investigate the parameters that govern ...
Where: BerkeleyCost: Free
Saturday, 01/26/19
Habitat Restoration: Phoenix Lake BroomHabitat Restoration: Phoenix Lake BroomSaturday, January 26, 9 am to NoonStewardship is an ethic that embodies planning and management of the land to support healthy habitat. Become a steward of Mt Tamalpais by joining us in a morning of habitat restoration.We will meet at Phoenix Lake dam. The gate at Natalie Coffin Greene ...
Where: RossCost: Free
Science Saturday: Amazing MigrationsJoin us for January’s Science Saturday, Amazing Migrations, as we investigate the world of long-distance animal travels. Whales, birds, insects, and more will be the focus of our deeper look at these natural phenomena. There will be activities and crafts for kids, and of course we will be celebrating another ...
Where: Pacific GroveCost: Free
Animal FriendsMeet some of YSI’s beloved animal ambassadors! You will get to meet several of our live animals, learn some neat facts about each one, and even touch them if you’d like! This program is held indoors and is great for any type of weather.
Where: Los GatosCost: $15
Student Robotics FairThe library will host a robotics fair to kick off Livermore Reads Together. Local students will showcase their robotics projects!Special presentation by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute and the MATE Center. Learn how remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROVs) are used to explore deep water habitats and more!Attention students grades ...
Where: LivermoreCost: Free
Resolving the Local Universe with the Hubble and James Webb Space TelescopesMost galaxies are so far away that they appear to us only as faint smudges. However, for galaxies that reside in our Galactic neighborhood, the clarity and sensitivity of the Hubble Space Telescope transforms them from smudges into collections of individual stars. These observations allow astronomers to study how galaxies ...
Where: OaklandCost: Free
Sunday, 01/27/19
Gray Whale WatchingWitness the mighty gray whale migration on this half-day cruise. Join our sanctuary naturalists as we venture into the southbound migration path of the gray whale as they head through our national marine sanctuaries, traveling from Arctic feeding grounds to Baja California breeding grounds. Learn about their natural history, their ...
Where: Half Moon BayCost: $65
Marine Science Sunday: Animals of the ArcticThis month we celebrate the animals that are the champions of the cold: Animals of the Arctic. We recommend teaming our free classroom program with a Guided tours at 11am, 1pm or 3pm for a truly immersive marine mammal experience.FREE Classroom Programs: Animals of the Arctic- 12 PM and 2 ...
Where: SausalitoCost: Free
Full-Spectrum Science: RadioactivityJoin Exploratorium scientist Ron Hipschman for colorful explorations of the physical world.What's going on inside the nucleus of an atom? Why does it spit out radiation? Did you know that you are exposed to radioactivity every day? Learn the facts about this somewhat controversial topic.Presentations at 1:00 and 3:00
Where: San FranciscoCost: Free with admission
What is Common Core Math?Join your child on a trip to the classroom and discover the knowledge and tools you will need to help them succeed in mathematics. In this workshop, we will help you develop strategies for working with your child as they learn math in a deeper, more connected way. ...
Where: BerkeleyCost: $12 Adults, $10 Kids and Seniors, Members Free
We search for the origins of life on Earth and the potential for life elsewhere, but what are we actually looking for? What is life? Is there only one way to construct a living organism, or are we Earthlings but one possibility out of a multitude?Speaker: Lynn Rothschild, NASA Ames
Where: San FranciscoCost: Free
Josh's Brain ImprovWe are delighted to welcome back storyteller Josh Kornbluth to The Psychotherapy Institute for an improvised performance that will help feed development of a fully staged, one-man show about Kornbluth's experiences working with the Global Brain Health Institute. Early in 2017, Josh Kornbluth (who, as an undergraduate, had flunked out ...
Where: BerkeleyCost: Perf only $25-$60; with Private Reception $150-250
Monday, 01/28/19
Stress-testing LCDM and Searching for New Physics using CMB observationsThe Lambda cold dark matter (LCDM) paradigm has been successful in sufficiently describing all cosmological observations. However, new data are beginning to challenge the validity of the model. For example, the value of the Hubble constant (H0) inferred from the Planck satellite and that measured using the classical distance ladder ...
The primary sources of electricity generation in the United States are shifting towards distributed renewables and natural gas-fired power plants. The latter are used in intra-day power system operations to provide base load as well as flexibility to balance the intermittency and fluctuation of renewable generation. Gas pipeline systems must ...
Where: StanfordCost: Free
Quantum materials: insights from near field nano-opticsIn 1944 Hans Bethe reported on “the diffraction of electromagnetic radiation by a hole small compared with the wave-length†[Physical Review 66, 163 (1944)]. This seminal paper was among the early precursors to a new and vibrant area of research: near field nano-optics. I will discuss recent nano-optical experiments on ...
California is one of more than 30 states that have adopted new science standards based on the suggestions of an NRC study that I led. I will explain the major shifts that these new standards introduce to science classrooms and the reasons for them. The process of implementation is a ...
Where: Menlo ParkCost: Free
People and Robots SeminarScience fiction has long promised a world of robotic possibilities: from humanoid robots in the home, to wearable robotic devices that restore and augment human capabilities, to swarms of autonomous robotic systems forming the backbone of the cities of the future, to robots enabling exploration of the cosmos. With the ...
Correlated Electrons: The Dark Energy of Quantum MaterialsThe nearly 80-year-old correlated electron problems remain largely unsolved; with one stunning success being BCS electron-phonon mediated "conventional" superconductivity. There are dozens of families of superconductors that are "unconventional" including the high-T cuprates, iron-based, and heavy fermions. Although these materials are disparate in many properties, some of their fundamental properties ...
John Deutch is an Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Mr. Deutch has been a member of the MIT faculty since 1970, and has served as Chairman of the Department of Chemistry, Dean of Science, and Provost. Mr. Deutch has published over 160 technical publications in physical chemistry, ...
Where: StanfordCost: Free
Thinking Wrong about Climate Change: Ocean HealthWe can’t solve today’s challenges with yesterday’s thinking. During guided networking, The Determined will introduce Think Wrong prompts to spark ideas and conversations. Come to our 3rd TWACC event where you’ll meet others in the Ocean Health industry to learn new ways to address climate change. We'll cover areas to ...
Where: San FranciscoCost: $10
Wonderfest: The Most Famous EquationAround the world, people recognize that E=mc^2 oozes cosmic wisdom. But what does this "most famous equation"Â really say? What are energy and mass? And what makes the speed of light, c, so important? [Hint: mass, moving at speed c, doesn't turn into energy!] Using little more than common experience and ...
Where: NovatoCost: Free
Next-generation cybersecurity via data fusion, AI, and big dataBe it the global financial institution or the critical infrastructure that runs essential services in our lives, at the center is trust. Trust is a differentiator for the modern customer, and in a hyperconnected world, customers demand that their most sensitive personal information (i.e., identity, address, salary, mortgage, credit card ...
Where: SunnyvaleCost: Free
Nerd Nite East BayLearn how HIV treatment prevents evolution, how modern stop motion puppets are made and filmed, and how to have your best sex in your septuagenarian years at Nerd Nite East Bay!How Granny Still Gets It On: Aging and Sexual HealthGetting stressed about being alone on Valentine’s Day this year? Well stop worrying, ...
Where: OaklandCost: $8/online $10/door
Tuesday, 01/29/19
Mechanisms and Dynamics of Pericyclic Reactions - Homage to Andy StreitwieserThis lecture will pay homage to Berkeley Professor Andrew Streitwieser by describing how modern computational methods, that he pioneered, now enable the understanding of organic reaction mechanisms in a time-resolved fashion. The study of timing of bond formation in pericyclic reactions will be described using quantum mechanics and molecular dynamics. ...
Towards a 5-sigma constraint on the sum of the neutrino masses I will discuss the effects that neutrino masses induce on the clustering of matter and galaxies, on the halo mass function and on the void size function. I will then introduce the Quijote simulations, a set of 23000 N-body simulations containing, at a single redshift, more than 3.3 trillions of ...
Where: BerkeleyCost: Free
Synergies and Fundamental Physics from the Large Scale Structure Galaxy surveys and the study of the Large Scale Structure (LSS) have played an important role in establishing the standard cosmological model, LCDM, and will push the envelope of observational cosmology the next decades, thanks to experiments such as DESI and Euclid. In this talk, I will show how we ...
Intrinsically disordered peptides are a special class of proteins that do not fold to a unique three-dimensional shape. These proteins play important roles in the cell, from signaling to serving as structural scaffolds. Under pathological conditions, these proteins are capable of self-assembling into structures that are toxic to the cell, ...
Nerd Nite Silicon Valley #01 - January 2019Nerd Nite Silicon Valley is back!Non-nerds are very welcome to have a blast too! Doors 6:50pm.1. Steven Savage: "Geeky Productivity"2. Ray Engeszer: "Conflict in Sexual Selection and Natural Selection"3. Manuel Meyer: "Supermassive Black Holes as Particle Accelerators"Pro Tip: Curious about the topics but not sure? Come anyways, you won't be ...
Where: San JoseCost: Donation.
Making Waves in a SuperconductorSuperconductors are materials in which electric current flows freely, without resistance. They are used to create the powerful magnetic fields needed to operate MRI machines and levitate high-speed trains, and have even served as building blocks for quantum computers. While most metals can become superconducting at temperatures close to absolute ...
Where: Menlo ParkCost: Free
The Second Kind of Impossible: The Quest for a New Form of MatterWhen leading Princeton physicist Paul Steinhardt began working in the 1980s, scientists thought they knew all conceivable forms of matter. "The Second Kind of Impossible" is the story of Steinhardt's 35-year-long quest to challenge conventional wisdom. Steinhardt's discoveries chart a new direction in science. They not only change our ideas ...
Where: Palo AltoCost: $18 | $15 Member, J-Pass Holder | $10 Student w ID
Wednesday, 01/30/19
From VLT to ELTIn this presentation I will discuss three topics: 1) recent results obtained with KMOS on the physics and dynamics of high galaxies, 2) the current status of the MOONS instrument and 3) the new Extremely Large Telescope.First I will discuss the latest results we have obtained from a Large Programme ...
Where: Menlo ParkCost: Free
Harnessing all-optical laser-scanning imaging for deep and large-scale image-based analysisStudying cell populations, their transition states and functions at the single cell level is critical for understanding in normal tissue development and pathogenesis of disease. State-of-the-art single-cell analysis approaches have overwhelmingly been biomolecularly-driven (e.g. analyzing cell-surface protein and gene expressions). Despite their exquisite specificity, they remain highly variable with regard ...
Where: BerkeleyCost: Free
Collecting Evolution: The Galapagos Expedition that Vindicated Darwin In 1905, eight sailor-scientists from the California Academy of Sciences set out on an 89-foot schooner from San Francisco for a scientific collecting expedition in the Galapagos Islands. By the time they finished in late 1906, they had completed one of the most important expeditions in the history of both ...
Where: TiburonCost: Free
Climate damages in a globalized world: the dynamic agent-based model AcclimateIn an interconnected global economy, the effects of extreme weather events are not necessarily locally confined but can have repercussions in other parts of the world, e.g. by rippling through supply chains. A better understanding of the overall economic implications of weather extremes is important to comprehensively estimate the costs ...
Traditionally, scheduling and control are viewed as two related but disparate engineering activities. For scheduling, the main decisions are typically discrete yes/no choices; the models capture only important discrete events and transitions but include many units; and, the objective is generally economic in some sense (minimize, e.g., cost or earliness). ...
Where: OrindaCost: $5 General/Members, $1 Students & Teachers
Do we inherit experiences? Lessons in epigenetic inheritance (gene expression)The nature of inheritance has inspired debate since ancient times. How are traits inherited from one generation to the next? Can acquired traits or experiences be passed on? The field of genetics points to the genes encoded in our DNA. But we now know that there are mechanisms outside of ...
Where: Santa CruzCost: Free
taste of science: Bacteria and BalloonsLearning from Global Gut MicrobiomesOur guts are home to trillions of bacteria, and we're only beginning to understand how they interact with our bodies and each other. I'm studying how our gut microbiome has changed over time by looking at gut bacteria from different populations around the world. Specifically, I'll ...
Where: Palo AltoCost: $5
Astronomy on Tap San Jose: Active Galaxies and Mantis ShrimpScience, craft beer, trivia, and more! Come out to the next Astronomy on Tap event in #downtownSJ at Uproar Brewing Company on Wednesday, January 30th for a fun time!Active galaxies are difficult to study but the mantis shrimp may have a secret tool to observe them!Speaker: Enrique Lopez Rodriguez, SOFIA ...
Join historian Paul Edwards and artist Rosten Woo in a discussion of the politics of sensing, the construction of large datasets, climate modeling, epistemology, how shared data realities are constructed and maintained, and how we understand the impacts of climate change today. Four short films by Rosten Woo, commissioned by ...
Speaker: Hong-Yuan Lee, Chief Consultant, City of Kao Xiong
Where: San JoseCost: Free
Cosmic collisions - progress and prospects for gravitational-wave astronomyThe observation of mergers of black holes and neutron stars has established gravitational-wave astronomy as a powerful tool to understand the Universe. After a brief introduction to gravitational waves and how the detectors work, I will discuss the insights that have come from the events identified thus far by the ...
"Frontiers of Science" Speaker: Dr. Carrie Northover, Research Director, 23andMe  23andMe is at the forefront of genetic testing and analysis. Dr. Northover is responsible for the execution of 23andMe's research projects with industry, academia and non-profits. She will discuss what we can learn from our genes and how that information can be used to advance ...
Where: San FranciscoCost: Free
NightLife Spotlight: ColorExplore the Academy through rose-colored glasses: Tonight we’re celebrating the wonderful world of color. Get your late-night science fix with rainbow-hued cocktails in hand while wandering among rainforest greens, aquarium blues, and coral pinks.Learn about EnChroma glasses, which enable people with red-green colorblindness to see a broader range of clear, ...
Where: San FranciscoCost: $15 General, $12 Members
Just ten years ago, an entire state running on 100 percent renewable electricity was considered fanciful. But this dreamy vision became reality when, with the backing of big utilities, Governor Jerry Brown signed SB 100 into law, committing California to 100 percent use of zero-carbon electricity by 2045. Then Brown took it ...
Where: San FranciscoCost: $20 General, $12 Members, $7 Students
Wonderfest: Ask a Science Envoy: Stem Cells & the SpectrumWonderfest Science Envoys are early-career researchers with special communication skills and aspirations. Following short talks on provocative modern science topics, these two Science Envoys will answer questions with insight and enthusiasm:Stanford biologist Leslie Koyama on "The Secret Lives of Stem Cells" - How stem cells impact our everyday existence, and will ...