June 26-July 21, 2006: Physics of Soft Matter: Complex Fluids and Biological Materials
Scientific Coordinators:
Corey O'Hern (Yale), Eric R. Dufresne (Yale), Thomas R. Powers (Brown), Anthony Dinsmore (UMass)
Site Coordinator: Leo Radzihovsky
The Boulder 2006 summer school aims to give attendees exposure to some of the most vital experimental and theoretical areas of study in the physics of complex fluids and biological materials.
Schedule* Lecturers* Reading Material * Lecture Notes
Poster Schedule * School Photo * Candid Photos
Boulder Survival FAQ * School Roster * Public Lectures
For information about applications, travel, student support, facilities, and general background of the Boulder school, please see the Boulder School general site. When the School has started, lecture notes will also be archived at the general site.
This page contains information specific to the 2006 Boulder School.
E-mail with questions about the scientific program can be sent to the organizers at Boulder Organizers.
Email with questions about local organization logistics, housing, etc. can be sent to the Site Coordinator. First however, PLEASE READ the information available on the web page Boulder Survival FAQ.
List of 2006 expected lecturers and seminar speakers:
Paul Chaikin, NYU
Bulbul Chakraborty, Brandeis University
David Chandler, UC Berkeley
Seth Fraden, Brandeis University
Daan Frenkel, FOM Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics
Bill Gelbart, UCLA
Jerry Gollub, Haverford College
Josef Käs, University of Leipzig
Albert Libchaber, Rockefeller University
L. Mahadevan, Harvard
Tom Mason, UCLA
Simon Mochrie, Yale University
Phil Pincus, UCSB
Mark Robbins, Johns Hopkins University
Joseph Rudnick, UCLA
Sam Safran, Weizmann Institute
Eric Weeks, Emory University
David Weitz, Harvard University
John Widom, Northwestern University
| The Boulder Summer School in Condensed Matter and Materials Physics has been established to provide education for advanced graduate students and postdocs working in condensed matter physics, materials science and related fields. The goal is to enable students to work at the frontiers of science and technology by providing expert training not easily available within the traditional system of graduate education and postdoctoral apprenticeship. The School is supported by the National Science Foundation, with additional funding provided by the University of Colorado, and meets annually during July in Boulder, Colorado. |
|