Opening Days of National Key Laboratory of Nuclear Detection and Electronics to Publics

时间:2012-05-21浏览:16

——the Opening Days of national key laboratory of nuclear detection and electronics to publics

From May 19 to 21, the Department of Modern Physics and national key laboratory of nuclear detection and electronics of USTC, for the first time, opened their laboratories to the public for academic visit. Almost students and their parents came to our laboratory to watch the video lectures and popular science exhibition boards, which introduced the STAR gold-gold experiment , BESIII experiment, ATLAS experiment Daya bay neutrino experiment, LAMOST synoptic survey telescope and so on.

In the efforts of fifty student volunteers and tens of teachers, we popularized the physical scientific knowledge to those students and other publics.

 Two children were checking in when they visited lab.

The commentator was introducing the spectometer.

 All the volunteers for Opening Days.

During the opening, the vice-president Changfei Zhu and the party secretary Ming Lu of USTC visited the scene and proposed comments on this activity.

Wang was introducing the Opening Days to the vice-president Zhu

  In the morning of the 19th, professor Bangjiao Ye gave a lecture named“The exploration of the infinitely small world” which attracted lots of students and their parents. During the lecture, a lot of curiosities and questions were raised and discussed which helped them learn more about physics and be aware that physics is the frontier for exploring the university.

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Prof. Ye was giving the report to the visitors.

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The lecture hall was filled to capacity.

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Teachers and students communicated actively.

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This report attracted many students

By the end of 17:00 on the 20th, there are nearly 2,000 visitors and more than 300 visiting groups our department has received. And this activity is really successful. We have the faith to make it better next year and introduce the research area of our national key laboratory to more publics.

 

(LI Longke,the Department of Modern Physics)