APS April Meeting 2021
Volume 66, Number 5
Saturday–Tuesday, April 17–20, 2021;
Virtual; Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA
Session B03: Connecting to the Public
10:45 AM–12:33 PM,
Saturday, April 17, 2021
Sponsoring
Units:
FOEP FED
Chair: Becky Thompson, Fermilab; Heide Doss, Point Loma Nazarene University
Abstract: B03.00001 : Dwight Nicholson Medal for Outreach (2020)
10:45 AM–11:21 AM
Live
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Michael Barnett
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
In 1986 a conference was held at Fermilab called the Conference on Teaching of Modern
Physics. In attendance was an inspiring high school teacher, Fred Priebe, who was determined to
have materials for teaching contemporary physics. They were not teaching what modern
physicists were actually doing. Priebe made contact with Helen Quinn at SLAC. She in turn
contacted me, because I worked in the international Particle Data Group, which summarizes
particle physics. Fred and Helen inspired me to join them in projects that would allow us to
share our excitement about physics with generations of students.
My most recent (and successful) project has been the creation of a planetarium show called:
Phantom of the Universe - The Hunt for Dark Matter. Multiple scenes could only work in a
planetarium, and it is more dramatic than IMAX (it surrounds you). None of the many people
involved had ever made a planetarium show before (involving a spherical screen). Because of the
novelty of this for our team, we had to go to planetariums (in several countries) to see the work
in progress. It also great fun to work for a day with Academy Award-winning actor Tilda
Swinton while recording the narration. Another two days was working on sound with an
Academy Award-winning team at Skywalker Sound. Our target audiences were students and the
public. For most planetariums, school visits account for about half their audiences. We found
that many planetariums had an interest in a dark matter show. They present our show for months
at a time (unlike feature films). Planetariums have the perfect science-interested audience for us
in the general public and K-12. Our show has now been seen in 22 languages in 67 countries in
550 planetariums. We never imagined such success as we developed the show.