Spring 2008

April 8 Solubility
Bob Mazo
ITS
Abstract:
To clarify the title: this talk will not deal with the solution of equations but with phenomena like "What happens when you put sugar in your coffee?" I shall talk primarily about the salting out effect, the decrease (usually) of the solubility of a solute in a solvent when a third component is added. After a brief discussion of the physical factors affecting solubility, I shall discuss a formal theory of the salting out effect,based on the fluctuation theory of solutions. Then I shall indicate how application of this formal theory to experimental rresults enables one to draw conclusions about the microscopic structure of a solution. If time permits, I shall discuss what happens when the system is near the critical point of the solvent, where fluctuations are very large.
April 15 Glauber, Einstein, and Bohr-Kramers-Slater: Old Wine, New Bottle
Howard Carmichael Physics Colloquium
Location: WIL 100
April 22 Maximum Entropy and Maximally Broken Time-Reversal Symmetry
Roger Haydock
ITS
Getting the most out of moments
April 29 Wheeler, Einstein, and Mach's Principle (with an experimental test of Mach's Principle)
Jim Isenberg
ITS
May 6 Protein local dynamics
Marina Guenza
May 20 Heat content and heat trace asymptotics with singular initial temperature distributions
Peter Gilkey
May 27 What have we learnt from 5 year WMAP data ?
Greg Bothun
June 3 TBA
John Toner