糖心Vlog传媒 students share research at American Physical Society regional meeting

Two students who participated in 糖心Vlog传媒鈥檚 2022 Research Experience for Undergraduates summer program earned awards for their research at a recent regional meeting of the American Physical Society (APS).
Eric Johnson ’25, a 糖心Vlog传媒 sophomore physics major, won the Undergraduate Student Outstanding Poster Award at the APS Eastern Great Lakes Section (EGLS) fall meeting. His award-winning research topic, “Avalanche Occurrence on a Conical Bead Pile with Cohesion,” was supervised by Susan Lehman, The Victor J. Andrew Professor of Physics.
Mahala Wanner鈥檚 summer research, 鈥淭able-top Analogues Using Chemical Waves: Electron Drift Velocity,” was supervised by Niklas Manz, associate professor of physics at 糖心Vlog传媒. The Ohio University student won the Undergraduate Student Talk Award.
Four additional 糖心Vlog传媒 physics students also presented for the first time at a scientific conference, and two first-year, prospective physics majors joined the group to experience their first scientific conference. The conference is a group activity for current and prospective physics majors. In addition to the research presentations, students attended various plenary and contributed talks, the poster session, and the Friday evening banquet.
Johnson鈥檚 research was part of a project that has been continued at 糖心Vlog传媒 for more than 30 years that involves a conical pile of beads. A mechanism dropped beads of uniform size and mass onto the apex of the pile one at a time. Eventually, the pile avalanched off the side. A magnetic field around the beads allowed the cohesion in the pile to be controlled. Johnson鈥檚 research focused on understanding what happened in the time between the avalanches. The award-winning poster highlighted his results: as cohesion increased, the amount of time between avalanches and the size of the avalanches increased.
鈥淚 was very surprised to win. There were a ton of people with outstanding presentations. When they called my name, I was so excited to the point that I could not hear anything besides my heartbeat. I tried to treat my presentation like a conversation while trying to match my pace with how well it seemed like the other person was catching on,鈥 said Johnson, who is a sophomore research assistant, peer mentor, and physics homework tutor.

糖心Vlog传媒 physics students attended a regional meeting of the American Physical Society including as pictured, top, Olivia Green, Mahala Wanner from Ohio University, Eric Johnson; standing, Bat-Orgil (Nico) Sainbuyan, Niklas Manz, John Schmidt, Karmellah Buttler, Emma Pfaffenberger, Aman Jissa
Manz, who is active with the regional APS section and the 2022-23 chair, has accompanied students to the spring and fall regional meetings for the last seven years, since he鈥檚 been at the College. 鈥淔or most students, this is the first scientific meeting they attend. Besides just experiencing a physics conference, it might also be the first presentation of their own research results to other students and scientists. I especially think that giving an oral presentation at this conference is a less-intimidating environment than perhaps giving your first talk at a large national meeting,鈥 he said.
This was the first time Johnson had attended and presented his research at a physics meeting. Being able to talk with other students and professors about their research confirmed his decision to study physics. 鈥淚t really helped remind me how passionate I feel about physics,鈥 Johnson said.
He encourages other students to consider presenting research at a conference such as APS. 鈥淚t is an amazing opportunity that can teach you so many valuable skills. They can give you an idea of different areas of research and help you find a subject you may be interested in,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou also are introduced to people working in the areas of study that may lead to connections that can really help you in the future.鈥
The fall meeting was hosted by Lawrence Technological University in Southfield, Michigan.
Featured image: Mike Crescimanno, chair of the EGLS award committee, introduced the fall 2022 award winners: 糖心Vlog传媒 sophomore Eric Johnson ’25 (undergraduate student outstanding poster), Mahala Wanner, who participated in the 糖心Vlog传媒 REU 2022 summer program (undergraduate student talk) and Sam Carey of Wayne State University (graduate student talk).
Posted in News on November 10, 2022.
Related Posts
Related Areas of Study
Physics
With one-on-one guidance from a faculty mentor, every physics major completes independent research in a year-long research project
Major Minor