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Third Joint Helmholtz-Rosatom School for
young scientists at FAIR.
Report: Third International Helmholtz-Rosatom School on FAIR Physics
From October 6-13, 2013 the Third International Helmholtz-Rosatom School on FAIR Physics took place in Hernossios, Crete. The school was supported by the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF), the Helmholtz Graduate School for Hadron and Ion Research (HGS-HIRe for FAIR) and the FAIR Russia Research Center (FRRC). The BMBF support was realized via the BMBF-FSP 212 “NuSTAR.de” coordinated at TU Darmstadt.
The scope of the school was to bring together young scientists working on the physics of the Facility of Antiproton and Ion Research, especially from Russia and Germany. Here, the German side was represented by students from BMBF funded groups and students of HGS-HIRe for FAIR, the Russian side was represented mostly by students connected to the FRRC program funded by the Helmholtz Association and Rosatom.
Additionally four Polish students attended the Lecture Week. Indian students were invited, but unfortunately could not attend due to travel restrictions of Indian institutions. One Saudi-Arabian student could attend the lecture week, since he is doing his PhD studies within the HGS-HIRe Graduate School.
Group picture with the participants of the school.
The program covered all scientific pillars of the FAIR program, especially focussing on the large collaborations, i.e. APPA, CBM, NuSTAR and PANDA. Each topic was covered in one day, highlighting the experimental as well as the theoretical issues. Two additional days covered the accelerator complex itself and the IT infrastructure of FAIR. Given the
The day started with two lectures by internationally renowned experts. Due to the experience and the input from the HGS-HIRe program excellent lecturers could be found, who did not just use old presentations, but rather created presentations especially suited for the audience. This was especially important due to the audience with very diverse research backgrounds. Each topic was supported by one lecturer from the FRRC program, who gave insights into their research during a shorter afternoon lecture.
Students listening to the lectures.
The afternoon was then devoted to a prolonged discussion session and group work. Given the experience with previous lecture weeks it is quite hard to make sure that students from different countries get to know each other and discuss outside their usual peer group. Thus they were mixed up (by country, gender and research topic) to make sure they use the opportunity and build connections over the course of the week. During these group projects in the afternoon they worked on exercises and projects handed out by the lecturers of the day. Given the variety of scientific backgrounds some students could handle the questions of the respective day better than others, however due to the mixing of the groups each group had the needed expertise to go through the exercises and projects. Since the topics changed during the week each student could contribute at some point of the week.
Two students working during the computer science project
The projects ranged from knowledge based questions, literature work, calculations to small programming projects and ensured a vital and stimulating learning environment.
The size of the groups was set to six to seven students, which has proven to be a good group size for such activities in previous courses in the HGS-HIRe schedule.
During the evening the answers of the different groups were collected and discussed with the lecturers of the day. Since the students were eager to present their results and asked much more questions than anticipated this session regularly ran overtime.
It should be noted that the resulting discussions were of a very high scientific level, which was noted by the lecturers at several occasions. Usually the discussions then went on over dinner.
Student working during the group work session
In order to improve further lecture week the students were asked to evaluate the program afterwards. In an anonymous online survey the students were asked to rate the week according to four criteria: Impact of the course, Course content, Organization and Quality of the lectures.
The possible answers were:
- Very Poor (1)
- Poor (2)
- Fair (3)
- Good (4)
- Very Good (5)
Below the numerical answers of the online survey. Overall the students rated the lecture week to be excellent, which also can be seen in the comments which have been made.
Quotes from the online student survey:
“Very valuable course. Many new (international!) contacts, interesting lectures on a broad range of topics. Of course, crete was a very beautiful place for such a meeting.”
“The course, gave me an great overview on the FAIR topics and I learned a lot in this one week. It was great to get to know other physics regions more and to connect with all the other students and scientists. The crete facility was perfect to concentrate on the lectures and to do group activities.”
“I think the course has met its aim, to connect young scientists with each other and to give them some deeper knowledge about the FAIR project, so that we all understand what we are talking about. For my personal objectives I have to say, they were 100%ly met. I wanted to learn more about the physics behind the experiments, and thanks to some great lectures, i did.”
Lecturers answering the questions in the evening
“From my point of view, the communication plays the most important role in science. Everyone could interrupt the lecturer and ask him a question. Fruitful discussions and group works were the best aspects of this school.”
Lecturers discussing with students.
“Lectures were well-thought-out and competently presented. The casual atmosphere of lectures encouraged to ask questions and discuss. “
It should be noted that the Third Helmholtz-Rosatom School was a huge success and led to many fruitful collaborations and connections between the students themselves and between the students and the lecturers. We believe that these kind of schools are an important aspect of a truly international PhD education. It is crucial to continue these events, however due to their large scale they are not possible to finance without additional funding from e.g. BMBF or Rosatom.
The directors of the school, Frankfurt am Main,
Sascha Vogel
Hans Gutbrod
The list below above the participating students and their home institutions alphabetically. Positions 53 - 67 (in bold) are lecturers and organisers.
1 | Mohammed Almalki | University of Frankfurt, GSI |
2 | Bondarev Andrey | SPSU |
3 | Tugba Arici | University of Gießen, GSI |
4 | Ilia Ashanin | MEPhi |
5 | Sergej Belogurov | ITEP |
6 | Jacek Biernat | Jagiellonian University |
7 | Andrey Alexeevich Blinnikov | MEPhi |
8 | Anton Valentinovich Bogdanov | MEPhi |
9 | Andrey Chernogorov | ITEP |
10 | Irina Egorova | JINR |
11 | Nikita Elizarov | JINR |
12 | Martin Galsuka | University of Giessen |
13 | Tobias Gassner | University of Jena, GSI |
14 | Pradeep Ghosh | University of Frankfurt, GSI |
15 | Angel Givechev | University of Darmstadt, GSI |
16 | Dimitry Glazov | SPSU |
17 | Leonid Grigorenko | JINR |
18 | Szymon Harabasz | University of Darmstadt, GSI |
19 | Benjamin Hess | University of Tübingen |
20 | Dirk Hutter | FIAS |
21 | Lukasz Jablonski | Jan Kochanowski University |
22 | Anastasiya Andreevna Kalashnikova | MEPhi |
23 | Ekaterina Khabibullina | MEPhi |
24 | Denis Igorevich Kirillov | MEPhi |
25 | luliia Kliuchevskaia | MEPhi |
26 | Olesya Alexeevna Korchuganova | MEPhi |
27 | Darya Alexandrovna Kostileva | JINR |
28 | Benjamin Koubek | University of Frankfurt |
29 | Oleksandr Kovalenko | University of Heidelberg, GSI |
30 | Anton Andreevich Losev | MEPhi |
31 | Anton Alexeevich Lukyanchuk | MEPhi |
32 | Ilya Maltsev | SPSU |
33 | Mikhail Sergeevich Mironov | MEPhi |
34 | Dmitry Morozov | IHEP |
35 | Rafal Najman | Jagiellonian University |
36 | Andrey Orlov | ITEP |
37 | Ilya Vladimirovich Ovsyannikov | BMSTU |
38 | Vsevolod Alexeevich Panushkin | MEPhi |
39 | Dmitry Olegovich Ponkin | JINR |
40 | Sascha Reinecke | University of Wuppertal |
41 | Janet Schmidt | University of Frankfurt |
42 | Petr Shatunov | BINP |
43 | Vitaliy Nikolaevich Shetinin | BMSTU |
44 | Ilya Vyacheslavovich Shirikov | JINR |
45 | Alexey Sitnikov | ITEP |
46 | Erzhan Muratovich Suleymenov | MEPhi |
47 | Patricia Till | University of Frankfurt |
48 | Barbara Wasilewska | Institute of Nuclear Physics PAN |
49 | Marco Wiesel | University of Heidelberg, GSI |
50 | Vladimir Zaytsev | SPSU |
51 | Albina Ziiatdinova | MEPhi |
52 | Victoria Zinyuk | University of Heidelberg |
53 | Dima Anuchin | FRRC |
54 | Jochen Gerhard | FIAS |
55 | Alexandre Gumberidze | GSI, EMMI |
56 | Hans Gutbrod | FRRC |
57 | Andreas Heinz | Chalmers University |
58 | Beatrice Kaufeler | FAIR |
59 | Ivan Kisel | FIAS |
60 | Mariya Kosolapova | FRRC |
61 | Marc Pelizaeus | University of Bochum |
62 | Rüdiger Schmidt | CERN |
63 | Jens Stadlmann | GSI |
64 | Thomas Stöhlker | University of Jena, HI Jena |
65 | Christian Sturm | GSI |
66 | Sascha Vogel | HGS-HIRe |
67 | Marc Wagner | University of Frankfurt |