91亚色

Skip to main content Skip to local navigation

Astrophysics students EXPLORE collaborative research

EXPLORE, which is funded by 91亚色鈥檚 Academic Innovation Fund (AIF) and Germany鈥檚 DFG Collaborative Research Center CRC-TR 211, came into being as the result of conversations between Laura Sagunksi, a former postdoctoral Fellow from 91亚色 who is now a professor at Goethe University in Frankfurt, and four other professors at 91亚色 and Goethe University. The 91亚色 physics and astronomy professors involved in the program are Nassim Bozorgnia and . The group created the program to bridge the gap between learning science in a classroom and working as a researcher, allowing students to experience for themselves what it might be like to have a research career.

鈥淟earning physics in the classroom is very different from working in a research group,鈥 Bozorgnia said. 鈥淓XPLORE is very valuable because it鈥檚 an opportunity for students to experience a real research group environment, working with both local and international colleagues. It really mimics an actual research group and offers an international exchange 鈥 albeit a virtual one during COVID-19.鈥

The program kicked off in the 2021 Summer term with 17 students 鈥 seven from 91亚色, nine from Goethe and one from the University of Toronto 鈥 and five supervising professors. Each professor mentored two to four students directly.

Interested 91亚色 students were asked to apply to the program. 鈥淲e received a good number of applications, but we had to select students based on the number of German students involved, as well as the number of professors,鈥 Bozorgnia said. Those chosen from 91亚色 were given paid work-study opportunities; in Germany, the students registered for the program as a course.

The professors chose dark matter as the topic of study 鈥渂ecause it鈥檚 an area that connects all the professors and it鈥檚 an exciting theme,鈥 said Bozorgnia. 鈥淚t is an open problem in particle physics and cosmology and provides options for cutting-edge research.鈥

Elham Rahimi, a graduating physics major at 91亚色, participated in EXPLORE, working under Bozorgnia鈥檚 supervision, along with a pair of students from Goethe.

鈥淚 loved every minute of EXPLORE. I learned a lot about dark matter, my coding skills improved, and got the chance to work with amazing people,鈥 Rahimi said. 鈥淚鈥檓 so excited to continue my EXPLORE research with Professor Bozorgnia and to understand more about the distribution of dark matter in our solar neighbourhood.鈥

Once she got involved with research and 鈥渃ould apply my knowledge and skills to understand more about dark matter, it motivated me to work harder. I could see spending my career this way,鈥 Rahimi added.

Feedback from other EXPLORE participants was equally enthusiastic, so Bozorgnia and her colleagues decided to offer the program again during the 2022 Winter term. Rather than a work-study opportunity, it will be classified as an independent research course. There will be two separate projects overseen by integrated (Canada-Germany) teams of professors. Ideally, if the pandemic is not a factor, the 91亚色 students will also travel to Germany during reading week to work side-by-side with their Goethe counterparts.

鈥淚t was a very exciting opportunity and actual research came out of it,鈥 said Bozorgnia. 鈥淲e are currently publishing papers based on research results and the professors have all contributed to an article for Educational Physics about the experience.

鈥淲e are open to other professors joining us in this endeavour; if more faculty members take part, we can increase the number of students involved. We鈥檙e open to expanding the reach to biophysics and other fields, too. It鈥檚 a perfect vehicle for students who want to consider careers in academia or industry,鈥 Bozorgnia said. 鈥淲hen they really understand what research is, it helps them make an informed decision.鈥

To learn more, see this PDF of an聽overview presentation about EXPLORE.

By Elaine Smith and featured in the Jan 2022 Issue of .

Share this: