chip brock

(aka raymond brock)

professor of physics

department of physics and astronomy

michigan state university

east lansing, michigan 48824

| research physicist | professor (incl. CV)| chairperson |
| citizen | family | geek-ness | coordinates (how to reach me) |

updated 10.09.05

Let's face it, it's confusing having two names:

All my life I've been "Chip", although my driver's license says "Raymond". Before you ask, nobody claims to know where this started and I gave up years ago trying to patiently explain. Please note before being really proud of yourself: "Chip off the old Brock" is not new, it's not funny anymore, and all of you think you were the first to invent it...

Here is an example of the kind of pressure that I sometimes face...

Here are some random pictures.

 


 

 

 

is in elementary particle physics primarily at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and The European Center for Nuclear Research (CERN)

I am engaged in elementary particle physics research, which is the study of the "inside of the universe", the fundamental building blocks of nature. My colleagues and I perform experiments of long duration and considerable heft at the highest energy particle accelerators in the world.

I was honored to be elected as a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2000.

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Current Collaborations:

experimental physics: the DO experiment at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia Illinois. My current project is the simulation of the L1_CAL trigger for the D0 experiment with my student, Josh Kalk.

- my MSU colleagues: students (Josh Kalk); post doctoral researchers (Bob Kehoe, Reinhard Schwienhorst, Reiner Hauser); staff (Dan Edmunds and Philippe Laurens); and faculty (Maris Abolins, Bernard Pope, Jim Linnemann, and Harry Weerts)


experimental physics: the Atlas Experiment at CERN in Geneva, Switerland. There I was recently the convenor of the Electroweak Top Quark Production subgroup of physicists from the US, Canada, Russia, and CERN.

- my MSU colleagues: post doctoral researcher (Reiner Hauser); staff (Dan Edmunds); and faculty (Maris Abolins and Bernard Pope)


joint theoretical-experimental research in the physics of quantum chromodynamics through the unique MSU-based national program, CTEQ.

- my MSU colleagues: faculty (WuKi Tung, Joey Huston, CP Yuan, Dan Stump, and Jon Pumplin)


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Current Projects:

co-convenor of the Precision Measurements Working Group (pdf) of the QCD and Weak Boson Workshop at Fermilab. This is done.

continuing work in refining my own particular approach to the intellectual history of Physics, currently embodied in the honors course for non-physicists, ISP213H. (See below)

creation of an ISP course on the physics of elementary particles and the Early Universe. To be offered, not before, fall 2006.


Recent Past Projects:

co-convenor of the Hadron and Lepton Collider Working Group (E4) at the 2001 Snowmass meeting. Now, co-convenor of an international effort to coordinate early thinking toward a VLHC and an upgrade to the LHC. The first workshop scheduled for October, 2003.


resummation of soft gluon emission in Drell Yan processes...particularly, the pedagogy for experimenters...in progress. Based on lectures at the 1st & 4th CTEQ Summer School for Young Physicists, Lake Monroe, IN. Reprise and update at the 2001 CTEQ Summer School at St. Andrews, Scotland, June 17-26.


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| talks | selected publications |

selected talks...

transparencies from an MSU Physics and Astronomy colloquium which I gave in May of 1996, "Weighing the Weak Force" (pdf)

transparencies from a colloquium a few times this past year, "Millennial Physics at the Fermilab Collider" (pdf)

transparencies from an invited summary talk at the 1998 Fermiab Users Meeting, "Collider Physics in Run II and Beyond" (pdf)

transparencies from my summary talk at the culmination of the year-long tev_2000 Workshop (pdf).

conference Proceedings from the plenary talk on quantum chromodynamics (QCD) at the 1996 International Conference on High Energy Physics in Warsaw, Poland. (pdf)

selected publications...

not yet uploaded

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| research physicist | professor (incl. vitae)| chairperson | citizen | family|
| coordinates (how to reach me) |
My role as professor of physics

 

i have been a member of the Physics and Astronomy faculty since 1982. I have taught at all levels, concentrating on the large lecture courses for engineers and the graduate level courses for students of elementary particle physics.

i enjoy teaching, and I am especially proud to have been only the second member of the faculty to have been awarded the MSU Teacher Scholar Award in 1984 and to have been voted as the Best Graduate Instructor by the graduate students in 1994.

while previously unable to teach while chairman, during the 1999-2000 academic year I taught the second year graduate sequence in Relativistic Quantum Field Theory. The web pages for this course are still available.

Now that I have stepped down as chairman, I'm back into real life in the classroom and laboratory. My current teaching assignment is the creation of a course for non-science honors students which started in the Fall of 2001. Called Navigating the Universe, it is an historical approach to modern physics - relativity, quantum mechanics, elementary particle physics, and cosmology. Special attention will is paid to how we know what we say we know and the criteria for assessing scientific knowledge has evolved. The web is an integral part of the course as a source of outside information, where my lectures originate, and where the students post their homework. The course has now grown into a self-sustaining effort in which history, physics, philosophy of science, and now the history and epistemology of art are all woven into a single entity. It is, I have come to realize, unintentionally "Integrative," although I don't think anyone has a good definition of that concept.

The course web site for fall 2004 is at:

http://www.pa.msu.edu/courses/2004fall/ISP213H/

I was pleased in 2004 to receive an MSU Distinguished Faculty Award, to go along with my 1986 MSU Teacher Scholar Award.

 

my curriculum vitae:
[complete, with publications] (pdf) 7.11.00
[brief] (html) 7.11.00

 

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| research physicist | professor (incl. vitae)| chairperson | citizen | family|
| coordinates (how to reach me) |
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My role as chairperson

 

 

 

i have been proud to be chairperson of the department of physics and astronomy at michigan state university for 7 years. During that time we've made important steps toward strengthening our research infrastructure and created new opportunities. Ours is a department of 59 faculty, 140 graduate students and 120 majors. We are a part of the College of Natural Science and home of the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory and the Abrams Planetarium, We are also lead or major partners in:
The Center for Sensor Materials (NSF MRSEC)
The Center for Fundamental Materials Research
Midwest Univ. Collaborative Access Team (APS)
Cluster Science Collaboration
Composite Materials & Structures Center
The D0 Collaboration (Fermilab)
The CDF Collaboration (Fermilab)
The ATLAS Collaboration (CERN)
The STAR Collaboration (RHIC)
The CTEQ Collaboration

Now I'm back to being a part of the problem, rather than the solution.
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major initiatives...

the SOAR telescope is a significant effort on behalf of our astronomy group. This is a world-class 4m optical-IR telescope currently being constructed on Cerro Pachon, high in the Chilean Andes mountains. The consortium which is constructing this instrument consists of MSU, The University of North Carolina, NOAO, and the nation of Brazil. First scientific-level images were just take on Christmas eve, 2004. The thing is going to work.

the construction of a new building for the PA Department has been the culmination of decades of effort. We now have begun this major initiative in partnership with the Departments of Microbiology and Physiology.

departmental organization...

in order to memorialize departmental customs and publicize my own policies, I've created a literature of Chair Policy Statements. These are reviewed annually by the departmental advisory committee and I seriously consider suggestions from them. They will "live" as long as I am Chairperson, and go out of existence when I come to my senses and go back to being a professor. They are:

in addition, I reorganized the adminstrative structure of the Department in order to significantly enhance the computer services offerred to our faculty, staff, and students. The reorganization included budgetary responsibility and planning under a group of associate chairpersons. They governed the day-to-day operations:

Associate Chairperson for Operations [Professor Bernard Pope] Computer Operations, Space, Awards

Associate Chairperson for Astronomy [Professor Eugene Capriotti] Astronomy academic program, SOAR telescope operations

Associate Chairperson for Undergraduate Programs [Professor Wolfgang Bauer] Undergraduate curriculum, Undergraduate Program Committee (budget and program)

Associate Chairperson for Graduate Programs [Professor Phillip Duxbury] Gradute curriculum, graduate examinations, Graduate Program Committee (budget, TA's, recruiting)

finally, in an effort to renormalize periodically, every year that I was chairman I commissioned an anonymous review of myself, administered by the chairperson of the ADCOM.

departmental future...

in December of 1998, we held a retreat to discuss the next 5 years for the Department of Physics and Astronomy. The result is a Departmental Plan which will be updated with future adjustments to our vision of the future of physics and astronomy at michigan state.

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| research physicist | professor (incl. vitae)| chairperson | citizen | family |
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My role as citizen

 

 

 

 

i have had a variety of assignments within the professional high energy physics community and the american physical society.

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at Fermilab...
  • 1980-1981 initiator of the Arms Control and Disarmament Series with Leon Lederman while a Fermilab Post Doc. Joe Lach and I were the only physicist members of the Physicians for Social Responsibility at Rush Memorial Hospital..giving many talks in Illinois and Indiana on the physics of nuclear weapons and their effects.
  • 1987-1990 member of the Fermilab Users Executive Committee, and Chairman of that organization, 1989-1990.
  • 1988 member of the Fermilab Director Search Committee.
  • 1990-1995 member of the Fermilab Physics Advisory Committee.
  • 1991-1994 special Assistant to the Fermilab Director.
  • 1994-1996 co-organizer (with Dan Amidei at the University of Michigan) and editor of the tev_2000 workshop on High pt Physics at the Tevatron.
  • 1998-2000 member of the Fermilab Users Executive Committee...again.

in the US high energy community at large...

  • 1990-1995 member of the Los Alamos LAMPF facility Program Advisory Committee.
  • 1994 member of the American Physical Society Division of Particles and Fields "CLTP" (Committee on Long Term Planning)
  • 1997 consultant to the DOE in its annual review of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC)
  • 1997-1998 member of the Panofsky Prize Nominating Committee for the Division of Particles and Fields of the American Physical Society
  • 1998 member of the American Physical Society Task Force on Academic Tenure
  • 2001 co-coordinator (with Chris Hill and Ulrich Baur from US and Gian Guidice and Paris Spica from Europe) of a committee to sponsor workshops on the next generation (post-LHC) hadron colliders.
  • 2001-2004 co-appointment (with Sekar Chevukula and Hank Sobel) as University Representatives to HEPAP.
  • 2003-2004 I chaired the University Programs subcommittee of the Department of Energy High Energy Physics Division Committee of Visitors review, commissioned by the Office of Management and Budget and the Director of Science within DOE.
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| research physicist | professor (incl. vitae)| chairperson | citizen | family |
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My role as family member keeps me sane and happy

..well, mostly sane.

my family is most important to me. I'm the father of a son, Terry (23) a daughter, Kimberly (18). (I'm the one in the middle.) I've been married to Janet Peterkin for 33 years - although, she'll tell you that I've only been home for half of that time. I try hard to make my time with them count.

 

 

 

Terry...

my son has turned into a tall, clever productive young man who managed to live in a variety of communities within the large and specialized East Lansing High School. In schoolwork, he was good student in math and science, but especially in writing and history. He was regular soloist in musical theater and "EL-Singers" and studied jazz vocal privately for two years. Here's a sample from a senior concert (mp3).

Now in 2004/5, he's a senior at MSU, having graduated last year with a Classics major from Kalamazoo College. After two long trips to Rome – one on a new archeological dig of the emporer Maxentius' villa – he seems pretty well hooked on ancient history and literature. His time at MSU is going to be spent in getting both History and English BA's. The future will tell which direction he'll go.

Terry was a productive baseball player for East Lansing and played first base in DIII collegiate level at K College, his senior year as captain. After a serious hamstring tear his freshman year, he's no longer stretching singles to doubles or beating out bunts like in HS, but he had two 400' dingers his junior and again his senior year and so his strength caught up with his handspeed. Here's a picture of him stretching at first base his junior season. His senior year was the best: batted .350 with all-conference second team choice - and did not get to bat against his own team, which finished last. who knows. Fittingly, his last collegiate at-bat was a deep home run to center field in Indiana, the day before Mother's day. Mom has the baseball - as he crossed home plate, he dedicated it to her. Not a dry eye in the place, on both sides.

 

Kimberly...

kimberly is a witty, quick young lady and this year is a freshman at MSU as an Interior Design major. In high school she was a section leader in the orchestra (violin), a skill entirely on her own; a good student, and a 4-year letter winner in gymnastics. She qualified for state Regionals every year, missing an invitation to States this last year by 0.05 points. As far as her mother and I are concerned, she did amazing things on the ground and in the air and this will get more exciting as time goes on (on the ground). It was great to see her being successful at something that she carved out for herself, all by herself. I try hard to understand this sport, but it doesn't have a ball.

Academically, Kim's a very good student and enjoyed math and science the most. She seems comfortable so far in her choosen major and had a terrific first semester at State.

Janet...

after 15 years away from the classroom, Janet re-certified and took the state exams with all of the hundreds of newly graduated college seniors...and did great. I was impressed - I don't take exams any more, I give 'em and am glad of it. She then quit her job at the Child Development Lab at MSU and became a substitute teacher for a couple of years. To her surprise, she was constantly asked for by name into classrooms where she had been as the kids and the teachers like her work. She ended up being pleasantly surprised at her comfort after all this time, and also pleased to find substituting a pleasant job. (I could have done without the 6AM calls...) Next, she went back to teaching on the regular faculty in 4th, 2nd, and 5th grades at the same school that both of our kids attended. Now, she's been in the 5th grade at Whitehills School for 2 years. Like I say, I'm impressed.

Chip...

i used to play racquetball regularly but no longer play that or baseball, after three ACL surgeries - and now a fourth, fifth and sixth...the last three in 14 months last year. I played summer softball for a few years and I found that I'd not forgotten how to hit – had 2 home runs – but I have forgotten how to run. I now struggle to walk around the block and just cannot imagine that I'm not headed for a replacement in the near future. Trying to get through this academic year without anethesia.

i was an ELHS assistant baseball coach for three years and coached the HS team during the summers, where we did well. My coaching years have come to an end, but I've enjoyed about a decade as coach in East Lansing with many trophies to show for our talented class. ELHS has become a baseball school with first place finishes in the CAC conference two of the last three years and District Champs and Regional finalists during Terry's last year. This period has helped me to maintain my sanity given my other jobs and led me into a circle of good friends and colleagues similarly bitten by this great game – Denny Petrowich, Gary Croskey, Ed Outslay, Randy Hackney, and Mark Pendred. I invented and hosted a web site for the team that year.

Each April ELHS baseball players and coaches go to Florida for pre-season training. Here's a picture of Terry at 1st and me at 2nd in a scrimmage from 1996. I've enjoyed the baseball journey with Terry and have enjoyed my association with the high school as a JV and varsity assistant coach and as a coach of the team during the summers. I suspect that's all over now. Here's a picture from Senior Day on the last high school homegame (mom, first baseman, first base coach).

 

i'm an avid Chicago Cubs fan, sick of Sammy Sosa, and have been having fun with the new Lansing Class single-A Cubs minor league franchise (the Lugnuts), as well as the Spartan's baseball seasons.

mostly, I try to remain active in my research and stay as connected to my family as much as possible while we're still all together. Easier, and quite bizzare this year with everyone in East Lansing.

 
 
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I can be reached many ways:

TELEPHONE

  • cell - (517)927-5447 [best]
  • HEP office: (517)353-1693

FAX

  • At the department office: (517)353-4500
  • In the MSU HEP group office: (517)355-6661
  • At home: (517)351-0688
  • At Fermilab: (630)840-8886

EMAIL

US MAIL

Prof. Raymond Brock
3210 BPS Building
Department of Physics and Astronomy
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI 48824

DRIVING or WALKING

  • A highway map of the Lansing-East Lansing area, including the Capital City Airport (Lansing).
  • A map of campus, showing the locations of the Physics and Astronomy Building, the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, the Abrams Planetarium, and the MSU
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