ESP Biography
AARON SCHEINBERG, Geophysics graduate student
Major: 12 College/Employer: MIT Year of Graduation: G |
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Brief Biographical Sketch:
Hey y'all!! I am studying convection in the early mantle of Mars and hoping to make inferences about the development of its magnetic field. In the long run, I want everyone in the world to understand scientific thought a little better. I love orchestra, rock, jazz, and folk music, traveling (especially via hitchhiking), and frisbees. Past Classes(Clicking a class title will bring you to the course's section of the corresponding course catalog)S3825: Essentials of Dating (Part 1): How we know the Earth is around 4,567,000,000 years old in Splash! 2010 (Nov. 20 - 21, 2010)
Ever wonder how we know the age of very old things?
The age of the Earth, when life began, when the dinosaurs died out, when Hawaii was formed, when homo sapiens evolved - these are important dates that provide a framework for understanding our world and how we fit into it.
In part 1, you will learn the basics of radiometric dating, including the techniques, assumptions and verifications that go into the process and how it ties in with relative dating methods.
In part 2, we'll also take a look at the most common arguments used by young Earth creationists against radiometric dating techniques and geoscience in general.
S3826: Essentials of Dating (Part 2): How we know the Earth is around 4,567,000,000 years old in Splash! 2010 (Nov. 20 - 21, 2010)
Ever wonder how we know the age of very old things?
The age of the Earth, when life began, when the dinosaurs died out, when Hawaii was formed, when homo sapiens evolved - these are important dates that provide a framework for understanding our world and how we fit into it.
In part 1, you will learn the basics of radiometric dating, including the techniques, assumptions and verifications that go into the process and how it ties in with relative dating methods.
In part 2, we'll also take a look at the most common arguments used by young Earth creationists against radiometric dating techniques and geoscience in general.
S3413: The Earth is a Big Magnet in HSSP Spring 2010 (Apr. 17, 2010)
As you read this, you are in Earth's global magnetic field. Thousands of kilometers above you, it is protecting you from deadly solar radiation. Thousands of kilometers below you, the field is being maintained by complex flow patterns in the Earth's core. Every few hundred thousand years, the field temporarily weakens, then reverses direction, for reasons we don't fully understand.
This course is an introduction to the nature of geomagnetism, one of the coolest problems in science today. We will focus on the following:
Basics of Earth's magnetic field and how we know
Applications to geology
Source of the field - dynamo action (including a crash course in electromagnetism and fluid mechanics)
Magnetic fields in extraterrestial bodies
Polarity reversal
Aurorae, the northern (and southern) lights
Exceptionally awesome:
- No prior knowledge needed
- Lots of cool demonstrations
- We will take a tour of an MIT laboratory!!
S3060: Smart Grid: Crazy Clean Power and the Energy Internet in Splash! 2009 (Nov. 21 - 22, 2009)
We're in the midst of an energy revolution! So what technologies actually exist and what can we do with them?
How do you make a battery with a virus? A windmill without turbines? A powerplant in the ocean?
Come learn about solar concentrators, geothermal heat pumps, carbon nanotubes, hydrogen fuel cells, superconducting cables and more!
We'll end with a discussion of smart technology grids and an energy internet: science fiction or inevitable development? You decide!
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