Nobel Laureates, Top Particle Physicists to Speak at UMD Symposium April 11-12
(PRWEB) April 07, 2014 -- Two Nobel Prize winning physicists, including a 2013 Nobel laureate who predicted the Higgs boson, and the physicists who discovered quarks and “color,” are among the distinguished speakers at an April 11-12, 2014 University of Maryland symposium highlighting discoveries that sparked a physics revolution.
The sold-out event, "50 Years of Quarks & Color" recounts how our understanding of quarks has evolved since their discovery in 1964. The discovery of quarks, the building blocks of protons and neutrons, deepened our understanding of particle physics. This discovery and the concept that quarks carry different “colors,” or charges that explain their strong interactions, led to The Standard Model of Particle Physics, which explains what the world is and what holds it together. The symposium will also highlight future directions of particle physics research that will ultimately lead to a deeper understanding of nature.
In addition to Nobel laureates François Englert and Frank Wilczek, featured speakers include University of Maryland Physics Professor O.W. (Wally) Greenberg, who proposed that quarks have “color” charges; George Zweig, who proposed the existence of quarks; and Robbert Dijkgraff, director of the Institute for Advanced Study. More than a dozen other history-making physicists will speak at the event, which runs from 8:30 a.m. April 11 through 6:30 p.m. April 12 at College Park Marriott Hotel & Conference Center, 3501 University Blvd., East Hyattsville, MD 20783.
Reporters are invited to attend. The registration fee is waived for accredited media, who are asked to email Abby Robinson at abbyr (at) umd (dot) edu to register in advance.
A list of speakers and the event schedule are available at http://www.umdphysics.umd.edu/qc2014.
Media contact:
Abby Robinson, 301-405-5845, abbyr (at) umd (dot) edu
Abby Robinson, University Of Maryland, http://cmns.umd.edu, +1 410-268-7695, [email protected]
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