mrissa: (memories)
[personal profile] mrissa

A couple weeks ago, I went down to my alma mater for an event they have annually: Nobel Conference. They get Nobel laureates and other cool scientists to come and give lectures around a particular theme for two days in early October. I used to love Nobel Conferences when I was a student, and they’re not just for students, not in the least. This year was the 50th anniversary conference, and as such they decided on a broader theme, the future of science. They brought back several favorite speakers from past Nobel Conferences, including inviting Freeman Dyson to be the banquet keynote speaker to finish the conference on Wednesday. Well. Freeman Dyson was my professor for a semester when I was at Gustavus, and he was a really lovely person. I was halfway talked into going when I was reading through the rest of the presenters, but when I got to him on the list, that was it: I had to go see him again.


Unfortunately, he was ill and couldn’t make it. But by then I’d already committed to doing it, and I’m so glad I did. Not only did I get to have lunch with my former advisor and see a couple of my other professors, I got to hear some really exciting lectures on a wide variety of topics. I also sat the first day with an earnest and wide-eyed high school student and the second day with some eager and fascinated old people, so that was fun too, the different people I ran into who were interested in coming together for this sort of thing. If you’re in the greater Minnesota-Wisconsin area–even northern Iowa, really–you should think about Nobel Conference. There’s nothing quite like it.


Steven Chu showed some very interesting graphs about costs, regulation, and energy, which did not do what economists predict or can explain at all. One of his interesting quotes was from Sheikh Ahmed Yamani, who said, “The Stone Age came to an end not for a lack of stones, and the oil age will end but not for a lack of oil.” He talked about room-temperature storage and long-distance transmission of energy from renewables (e.g. wind and solar) as major technical goals for the next chunk of time. He felt that his biggest successes were invisible to the public: recruitment and retention of scientists and engineers, especially those in their 40s, to this line of work, and to the National Academy of Science in particular. I didn’t mind not hearing about his original work in cooling and trapping atoms with laser light, because the stuff he’s done since has been interesting, too. I was definitely a Steven Chu fan by the end of his talk.


I wish I could say the same of Sir Harold Kroto. His original work on fullerenes was so impressive, I’d have loved to hear about that, but if not that, something else that was…not a rehash of every flat Atlantic or New Yorker article ever written on the subject of creativity, with a heaping helping of Kids These Days mixed in. Things are not as they were when Sir Harold was a youth, and Sir Harold does not approve! He’s not about to spend any time trying to understand, adjust, or God help us improve anything. He just does not approve! Some helpful person tried to steer him towards something, anything like a positive path in the Q&A session, and he was having none! Sadly I did not bring my cane, so I could not lend it to him to shake at some clouds. Seriously, what a disappointment. Fullerenes are so cool that even if you do nothing else interesting, you can always return to that–and should, if you have nothing else to other than harumphing.


With Sean B. Carroll, though, we were entirely back on track, and I am definitely looking for his book. He talked about the icefish, a creature that evolved to have plasma full of antifreeze that came from digestive enzymes. It’s one of less than a dozen vertebrates to lack red blood cells and absorb oxygen passively. This is the kind of random nerdy crap I really enjoy, and he went on to talk about more evolutionary examples in animal development, about European kestrels mutating to see in the UV instead of blue/violet and getting to see trails of vole urine as a result, because apparently vole urine is quite visible in the UV. Who knew! What lovely stuff. He also talked about the astonishing progress in restoring large species diversity at Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique. Exciting, inspiring stuff.


Svante Pääbo talked about early humans and the hominids lines who contributed to homo sapiens, and then the hominid lines who contributed to them. I think the best part of his talk was that when he was first at Nobel conference in 2008, he gave a firm date beyond which we probably wouldn’t know anything about hominid line contributions, and now, six years later, he was thoroughly willing to rescind that, talking about an older hominid line that we can see contributing to the Denisovans the way the Denisovans contributed to us, and he’s no longer willing to say, “Here is the date before which we won’t be able to say anything.” I just loved that. I loved watching knowledge extend just that fast that he stopped trying to say what we can’t know. And I loved that he could put up a list of all human-specific amino acids on one slide.


I left early from Gary Ernst’s talk; he was disorganized and breathless and kept circling back around points that were either staggeringly obvious or really alarming. (“Drilling for oil has been contaminating the groundwater for 150 years and nobody cared before,” is as direct a quote as I could write it down. I don’t even. Just–no.) He was the last talk of the day, and I was tired, so maybe his talk got better, but I did not stick around to find out. In a slate of ten panelists, having only two of them give bad talks and the other eight somewhere between good and transcendently great is an amazing ratio.


I have more to say here, and the two best talks, the ones where the science moved me to tears, are yet to come. But this is already getting long, so I should break it into two posts, so I will come back to Wednesday’s talks in my next Nobel Conference post.




Originally published at Novel Gazing Redux

Date: 2014-10-25 02:08 am (UTC)
redbird: Photo of the spiral galaxy Arp 32 (arp 32)
From: [personal profile] redbird
Those bits from the Sean Carroll post are cool; thanks. I vaguely knew about icefish, but I didn't know they lacked red blood cells.

Date: 2014-10-25 03:55 am (UTC)
laurel: Picture of Laurel Krahn wearing navy & red buffalo plaid Twins baseball cap (Default)
From: [personal profile] laurel
Very cool.

Reminds me of the Nobel Peace Prize Forum which is usually held in the Twin Cities and is open to the public as well as students. I went one year when I was a student at Augustana (Sioux Falls) and it was held up here somewhere or other and then rather forgot about it. Earlier this year I looked it up and sounds like it's still a nifty event and still open to the public as well as students. Keeping an eye on the website for details, should be held in early March.

Date: 2014-10-25 02:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
Interesting stuff to keep in mind!

Date: 2014-10-25 03:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thistleingrey.livejournal.com
Most of this event sounds really cool.

Date: 2014-10-25 02:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
The next post will be all cool. There was no down side to Wednesday's talks, and two of them were good enough to make me cry.

Date: 2014-10-25 08:32 am (UTC)
brooksmoses: (Brooks and Suzanne)
From: [personal profile] brooksmoses
I wonder if it would be possible for us to come to this next year. I have reasons to very much hope that it won't be possible because there is a specific thing that I am hoping for that would make it not-possible, but if that thing is not to be in this time, then I hope we can, because this sounds like the sort of thing that [livejournal.com profile] suzanne would definitely enjoy enough to be worth flying halfway across the country for.

Do you know if there is anything similar in this area? It would seem like there should be, but I don't know of such....

Date: 2014-10-25 02:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
Next year's topic is Addiction. I don't know what the topic is for the year after that. I can keep you posted if you're generally interested in thinking about it, though! I'm not planning to go next year because it took a lot out of me to drive back and forth and go to all the everything all day, and Addiction is an interesting topic but not central enough to my interests to make it worth the outlay of limited Mris. However, I'm definitely going to be keeping an eye on the topics and deciding carefully, because I expect there will be years coming fairly soon when it is worth the time.

If you and [livejournal.com profile] suzanne were coming, though, different calculation. Also, you would probably want to think about getting a hotel in St. Peter or Mankato (10-15 minutes away) rather than the Twin Cities, making the driving component of it far less of an issue and giving you a quiet retreat space as at a convention (though not quite on-site). I would also have recommendations for quiet space during the day (THE ARB) and stuff. We would do logistics if you were coming. It would be good. I am good at logistics and would gladly roll out the logistics-soaked red carpet for you guys.

I don't know if there's anything similar in your area. It's not a general regional program, it's a specific relationship between this historically Swedish college and the Swedish Nobel Foundation, with a lot of work from the professors at the college. It would be great if people in other areas saw it and said, "Wow, that's something we should do," because in terms of outreach to high school students, students at other colleges, and members of the general community, it's doing something really amazing, but nearly all of the people who gave talks mentioned how unique and special it was.

Date: 2014-10-26 12:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] doubtingmichael.livejournal.com
Wait, there are vertebrates with no red blood cells? I not only did not know that, I would have bet it had never happened. And they can be up to six inches long. Wow...

Date: 2014-10-27 08:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] daharyn.livejournal.com
I attended the 1998 conference while I was in high school; I forget exactly why I got to go, but it was excellent, and formative for a young person. I still remember it. If your readers have a teenager who might benefit from the experience, I recommend bringing that person along.

Date: 2014-10-27 11:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
Definitely! And there will be more about teenage opportunities in the next post, so...stay tuned!

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