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Saturday Morning Physics | Magnets and Amplitudes: A Glimpse into the Quantum Realm

Aaron Chan and Justin Berman (U-M Physics Graduate Students) Present the Van Loo Student Talks
Saturday, March 14, 2026
10:30-11:30 AM
170 & 182 Weiser Hall Map
Aaron Chan, "Extreme Magnetic Fields: How and Why"
Laboratory experimental apparatus can produce magnetic fields up to 100T—about 30 times stronger than hospital MRI machines and 10,000 times larger than a regular fridge magnet. In this talk, I will discuss the cutting-edge technology used by the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory to produce such powerful magnetic fields and the interesting physical phenomena probed in such extreme environments.

Justin Berman, "Bootstrapping High-Energy Theories from Low-Energy Clues"
A key goal of particle physics theories is to predict how particles scatter off one another. However, experimentally probing these interactions at very high energies is extremely difficult. In this talk, I explain how fundamental principles of physics let us “bootstrap” low-energy data into predictions about high-energy particles, independent of the underlying theory. By using this bootstrap technique, I show that we can find upper and lower limits on the masses of particles in an approximation of the real world, which predict the existence and properties of a massive particle that has not yet been observed.

We celebrate the Van Loo Family Student Presentations this Saturday!

Lecture and Q&A, live-streamed on: https://myumi.ch/5kVRx
Building: Weiser Hall
Website:
Event Type: Presentation
Tags: Applied Physics, College Of Engineering, Complex Systems, Faculty, Family, Free, Graduate And Professional Students, Graduate Students, Lecture, Lifelong Learning, Mathematics, Michigan Engineering, Physics, Postdoctoral Research Fellows, Prospective Undergraduate Students, Quantum, Quantum Computing, Quantum Science, Smoke-free
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Saturday Morning Physics, Department of Physics, Graduate Society of Women Engineers, The Center for the Study of Complex Systems, Department of Statistics, Department of Statistics Seminar Series, Applied Physics, LSA Biophysics, Department of Mathematics, Undergrad Physics Events, Graduate Society of Black Engineers and Scientists, M-STEM Academies