Archive for June, 2021

Codes of Conduct to Counter Bullying and Harassment – A Petition

Posted in Harassment Bullying etc on June 30, 2021 by telescoper

A week or so ago news broke of yet another case of bullying in an astronomy department, this time in the University of Lund. This and a number of older examples of harassment and bullying have led to the circulation of a letter calling for Codes of Conduct to be introduced in scientific collaborations. I received this letter (from Dr. Clémence Fontanive) through the Euclid Collaboration together with an encouragement to circulate it as widely as possible, which I am now doing. I have signed the petition and hope you will do likewise.

Dear Colleagues,

In light of recent events within the astronomy community, it has become increasingly apparent that many official collaborations in astronomy lack Codes of Social Conduct, with policies in place to deal with cases of behavioural misconduct. We believe Codes of Conduct to be important tools to make academia a safe, respectful and inclusive environment, and have therefore written an Open Letter to the Community soliciting their introduction in all collaborations, with the hope to encourage and normalise their implementation.

You can read and sign the Letter at the following links:

View Petition

Sign Petition

Please consider adding your name to ours in support. We would also be very grateful if you could help circulate this as widely as possible to your colleagues and institutions.

Thank you very much for your support.

Best wishes,
Clémence, on behalf of all co-authors

 

 

The State of the Universe Video

Posted in Biographical, Talks and Reviews, The Universe and Stuff, YouTube on June 29, 2021 by telescoper

And now the moment you’ve all been waiting for. Here is a recording of the Invited Colloquium at the International School Daniel Chalonge – Hector de Vega I gave via Zoom on 23rd June 2021, introduced by Prof. Norma Sanchez.

In the talk I give a general review of the current state of cosmology, discussing the standard model of cosmology and some of the possible ways in which it might be revised or extended. It’s not a very technical talk but does assume some knowledge of cosmology. I hope a general audience will get something out of it.

I’m sorry if the recording is a bit choppy but that’s an occupational hazard with Zoom recordings and rather limited broadband!

This is an edited version of the session which in total lasted well over three hours including lengthy discussions and a trip down memory lane at the end. I cut out the introduction but kept a few of the questions and answers at the end, so it’s still rather long despite the rather brutal edits.

A video of the full event can be found here (1.6GB) and a PDF file of the slides can be found here. The slides are also available to be viewed here.

An Article about Pride

Posted in Biographical, Film, LGBT with tags , , on June 28, 2021 by telescoper

Today is 28th June which means that it’s the anniversary – the 52nd anniversary to be precise – of the Stonewall Riots.

I was only 6 in 1969 so wasn’t aware of this event at the time but it (and Pride Month generally) always reminds me of how far we’ve come, though many LGBT+ people still face hostility and discrimination. Nowadays though my own celebration of Pride is very subdued as it tends to makes me feel old and irrelevant as well as worried that we might be headed back right to the bigotry and intolerance of the past. The rights we have won could so easily be taken away. Although I am no longer young, I find I have become very protective towards younger LGBT+ people. I don’t want anyone to have to put up with the crap that I did when I was their age.

Despite these reservations I do find some of the manifestations of Pride quite pleasing. An Post have issued special stamps this year, as you can see above.

I haven’t bought any because I haven’t got any letters to send but I think it’s nice. 18 year old me in the middle of his A-level exams in 1981 could not have imagined such a gesture from a public body. Bród is the Irish word for Pride.

I watched the 2014 film Pride on TV the other day. I’d seen it before but enjoyed the second viewing a lot, although it did make me feel a bit ashamed that I didn’t get involved in the events of 1984 at all. I was too much of a coward.

Anyway just to change tack I thought I’d mention that the “An” in “An Post” is a definite article, which is a bit confusing to English speakers for whom “an” is a form of the indefinite article. There are no indefinite articles in Irish.

Other European languages (including Latin) don’t have any articles at all. Russian doesn’t either. It’s always fun writing a paper with Russian collaborators because articles are so alien to them. It’s not so easy to explain when to use the definite or indefinite article or no article at all to someone used to a language in which articles don’t exist.

A Vaccination Fallacy

Posted in Bad Statistics, Covid-19 with tags , , , , on June 27, 2021 by telescoper

I have been struck by the number of people upset by the latest analysis of SARS-Cov-2 “variants of concern” byPublic Health England. In particular it is in the report that over 40% of those dying from the so-called Delta Variant have had both vaccine jabs. I even saw some comments on social media from people saying that this proves that the vaccines are useless against this variant and as a consequence they weren’t going to bother getting their second jab.

This is dangerous nonsense and I think it stems – as much dangerous nonsense does – from a misunderstanding of basic probability which comes up in a number of situations, including the Prosecutor’s Fallacy. I’ll try to clarify it here with a bit of probability theory. The same logic as the following applies if you specify serious illness or mortality, but I’ll keep it simple by just talking about contracting Covid-19. When I write about probabilities you can think of these as proportions within the population so I’ll use the terms probability and proportion interchangeably in the following.

Denote by P[C|V] the conditional probability that a fully vaccinated person becomes ill from Covid-19. That is considerably smaller than P[C| not V] (by a factor of ten or so given the efficacy of the vaccines). Vaccines do not however deliver perfect immunity so P[C|V]≠0.

Let P[V|C] be the conditional probability of a person with Covid-19 having been fully vaccinated. Or, if you prefer, the proportion of people with Covid-19 who are fully vaccinated..

Now the first thing to point out is that these conditional probability are emphatically not equal. The probability of a female person being pregnant is not the same as the probability of a pregnant person being female.

We can find the relationship between P[C|V] and P[V|C] using the joint probability P[V,C]=P[V,C] of a person having been fully vaccinated and contracting Covid-19. This can be decomposed in two ways: P[V,C]=P[V]P[C|V]=P[C]P[V|C]=P[V,C], where P[V] is the proportion of people fully vaccinated and P[C] is the proportion of people who have contracted Covid-19. This gives P[V|C]=P[V]P[C|V]/P[C].

This result is nothing more than the famous Bayes Theorem.

Now P[C] is difficult to know exactly because of variable testing rates and other selection effects but is presumably quite small. The total number of positive tests since the pandemic began in the UK is about 5M which is less than 10% of the population. The proportion of the population fully vaccinated on the other hand is known to be about 50% in the UK. We can be pretty sure therefore that P[V]»P[C]. This in turn means that P[V|C]»P[C|V].

In words this means that there is nothing to be surprised about in the fact that the proportion of people being infected with Covid-19 is significantly larger than the probability of a vaccinated person catching Covid-19. It is expected that the majority of people catching Covid-19 in the current phase of the pandemic will have been fully vaccinated.

(As a commenter below points out, in the limit when everyone has been vaccinated 100% of the people who catch Covid-19 will have been vaccinated. The point is that the number of people getting ill and dying will be lower than in an unvaccinated population.)

The proportion of those dying of Covid-19 who have been fully vaccinated will also be high, a point also made here.

It’s difficult to be quantitatively accurate here because there are other factors involved in the risk of becoming ill with Covid-19, chiefly age. The reason this poses a problem is that in my countries vaccinations have been given preferentially to those deemed to be at high risk. Younger people are at relatively low risk of serious illness or death from Covid-19 whether or not they are vaccinated compared to older people, but the latter are also more likely to have been vaccinated. To factor this into the calculation above requires an additional piece of conditioning information. We could express this crudely in terms of a binary condition High Risk (H) or Low Risk (L) and construct P(V|L,H) etc but I don’t have the time or information to do this.

So please don’t be taken in by this fallacy. Vaccines do work. Get your second jab (or your first if you haven’t done it yet). It might save your life.

Thank-You Notes

Posted in Biographical, Education, Maynooth on June 26, 2021 by telescoper

I’ve just finished my presentation about Theoretical Physics at today’s Open Day in Maynooth and now have a short break before the online Question-and-Answer session so I thought I’d use the time to do a quick post.

Yesterday our students got their marks and as a consequence I had quite a few emails from students about their results. Happily the vast majority were absolutely lovely. Here are two excerpts of emails from graduating students (I’ve removed bits to ensure anonymity):

Thanks a million for all your support throughout the 3 years. I enjoyed every minute of this course, largely due to yourself and the other lecturers..

Thank you and everyone in the TP department for everything, I am indebted to you all and am incredibly gratefully for all your support, help and advice.

And another:

I want to express my gratitude to yourself and the rest of the department. I had a great experience in Maynooth and having personable and helpful professors helped a lot.

Such nice comments mean a very great deal, especially since these students – and others too numerous to mention – have been taught remotely for the last three semesters. They’re not just about me, of course; they refer to all the staff in the Department. I’m sure the gratitude expressed goes both ways too. I’d like to take this opportunity to thank all our students for putting up with everything that’s been thrown at them over the last year and a half and for being so determined and cooperative.

I really do hope it will be possible to offer congratulations in person to our graduating class at a formal Conferring Ceremony due to take place in September, but that I suppose is dependent on the progress of the Covid-19 pandemic, vaccination, and so on. It’s out of my hands.

I’ve said before on this blog that I always feel a curious sense of loss at the end of an academic year. After three or four years in the Department you’re only just starting to get to know students and then suddenly they’re finished. This year in particular it would be very sad if they just disappeared without a proper goodbye. As one of my correspondents said:

I am really looking forward to attending the conferring ceremony. As you said, it’s been far too long since we’ve talked to anyone in the department in person.

Of course this little tinge of sadness is more than made up by the success of these students which is hard won and thoroughly well deserved. I’m very pleased for them all. They now have the opportunity to follow a career of their choice. It must be very exciting for them, as a degree in Theoretical Physics opens a great many doors!

Catching up on Cosmic Dawn

Posted in The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , , , on June 25, 2021 by telescoper

Trying to catch up on cosmological news after a busy week I came across a number of pieces in the media about “Cosmic Dawn” (e.g. here in The Grauniad). I’ve never actually met Cosmic Dawn but she seems like an interesting lady.

But seriously folks, Cosmic Dawn refers to the epoch during which the first stars formed in the expanding Universe lighting up the Universe after a few hundred million years of post-recombination darkness.

According to the Guardian article mentioned above the new results being discussed are published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society but they’re actually not. Yet. Nevertheless the paper (by Laporte et al.) is available on the arXiv which is where people will actually read it…

Anyway, here is the abstract:

Here is a composite of HST and ALMA images for one of the objects discussed in the paper (MACS0416-JD):

I know it looks a bit blobby but it’s not easy to resolve things at such huge distances! Also, it’s quite small because it’s far away. In any case the spectroscopy is really the important thing, not the images, as that is what determines the redshift. The Universe has expanded by a factor 10 since light set out towards us from an object at redshift 9. I’m old enough to remember when “high redshift” meant z~0.1!

At the end of my talk on Wednesday Floyd Stecker asked me about what the James Webb Space Telescope (due for launch later this year) would do for cosmology and I replied that it would probably do a lot more for galaxy formation and evolution than cosmology per se. I think this is a good illustration of what I meant. Because of its infrared capability JWST will allow astronomers to push back even further and learn even more about how the first stars formed, but it won’t tell us much directly about dark matter and dark energy.

End of Term Hiatus

Posted in Biographical, Education, Football, Maynooth on June 24, 2021 by telescoper

Yesterday was quite a busy day because, as well as my talk in the afternoon, we had the main University Examination Board in the morning. Because many students in Maynooth are taking courses that spread across more than one Department, this is an opportunity to raise any issues arising when marks are combined. The full results for each student are presented on “Broadsheets” which I suspect in days gone by would have been broad sheets of paper, but which nowadays are hefty PDF files, one for each faculty. Science & Engineering was the first session, kicking off at 9.15 via Teams but because we all had access to the Broadsheets since last Friday we had time to identify any relevant matters and the meeting itself went quite smoothly.

Now there’s a short hiatus because the formal results will not be communicated to students until tomorrow (Friday 25th). Next Tuesday (29th June) is Consultation Day, on which students can discuss their results and any matters arising with staff. Obviously we can’t do this in person this year because of Covid-19 restrictions but, because the examination scripts were scanned and uploaded electronically this year the students will actually have the originals, discussing any issues of marking shouldn’t be too difficult.

Some students will need to take repeat examinations before they can progress. These are in the period 4th-14th August in Maynooth so I’ll have to be around for those. I was hoping to try to get some summer holiday this year – which I didn’t last summer – starting on 5th July, but that has already been pushed back because something important has arisen that means I have to be working on 7th July. I hope nothing else eats into my leave entitlement. It says in my contract how many weeks holiday I should have per year so I will not accept another year of not being able to take it.

Although we have a short break in the examination process that doesn’t mean everything stops. I have to work this Saturday (26th June) at the Summer Open Day here at Maynooth, recruiting the September intake…

The sense of hiatus is amplified by the fact that there are no matches today or tomorrow in the European Championship, the final group games being last night and the first in the Round of 16 being on Saturday. I’ve got quite used to watching the 8pm matches over the last couple of weeks!

The State of the Universe Slides

Posted in Talks and Reviews, The Universe and Stuff on June 23, 2021 by telescoper

So I have given my talk on the State of the Universe. It’s a bit intimidating giving a talk with Nobel Laureates in the audience, but I think it went OK.

The slides are here:

I’ll add a link to the recording when I have it. Here is a link to the event. The video is very long because of a lengthy introduction and discussion at the end so if I get time I’ll put an edited version of just the talk on my Youtube channel.

In the meantime here’s a picture of me looking weird during the presentation:

40 years since A-level

Posted in Biographical, Education on June 22, 2021 by telescoper

It was with quite a shock that I realized the other day that it is no less than forty years since I took my GCE A-levels. Here is the evidence:

I don’t know why kept this “Statement of Entry” all this time but you’ll see that my first exam was the Physics Multiple Choice paper exactly 40 years ago today on 22nd June 1981. The following day was a toughie with Mathematics 1 in the morning and a Chemistry Paper in the afternoon, but I remember 26th June (which was a Friday) being the hardest with the with Further Maths examination in the morning followed by the Chemistry Special Paper in the afternoon, both of them of 3 hours duration. I’ve actually posted the first of these on this blog, here, along with quite a few of the papers I took way back then.

The State of the Universe Talk – Reminder

Posted in Biographical, Books, Talks and Reviews, Sport, Talks and Reviews, The Universe and Stuff with tags on June 21, 2021 by telescoper

Just time for a quick reminder that I’m giving a talk on Wednesday (23rd June 2021). It’s at 4pm Paris Time which is 3pm Irish Time. See my original post here.

I had a sudden sense of dread that this Colloquium might clash with the Portugal-France game in the European Championship which takes place the same day but it turns out that won’t kick off until 9pm Paris Time which means that I should just about be finished before the football starts. I don’t think even I could overrun by 4 hours! Indeed I should finish before the earlier games that day, which kick off at 5pm Paris Time…

If you want to attend the Colloquium (via Zoom) you can register for it here.