Young Mu2e
Purpose
Young Mu2e represents all early-career scientists working in the Mu2e collaboration by
- being an identifiable peer group to support all its members,
- acting as a useful resource for the collaboration, and
- advising the collaboration on issues relevant to early-career scientists.
Our constitution can be found in DocDB-14850 and the changes to the Mu2e Bylaws that allowed for our creation can be found in DocDB-13571.
Membership
You are a member of Young Mu2e if you are a member of the Mu2e collaboration and are a student (undergraduate or graduate), a post-doc, a research associate, a pre-tenure professor, a research scientist, or otherwise consider yourself to be an early-career scientist.
The most recent list of Young Mu2e members is in DocDB-14850. If you are not on that list and should be, then contact the President or any Officer (see below) and you will be added.
How To Keep In Touch
Listserv
To make sure you keep up-to-speed with our activities sign up to our listserv mailing list:
- send an e-mail to listserv [at] fnal [dot] gov
- leave the subject line blank
- type "SUBSCRIBE MU2E-YOUNG FIRSTNAME LASTNAME" (without the quotation marks)
- see https://listserv.fnal.gov/users.asp for more details
Slack
We also have a Slack channel:
- go to slack.com, enter your fnal.gov e-mail address and join the "Mu2e" team
- we have a special channel called #youngmu2e
For any other enquiries, feel free to contact the President or any Officer.
Organization
Young Mu2e has a President, voted for by the members of Young Mu2e, as well as a variety of officer positions.
In addition we have a voting position Mu2e's Executive Board, who is voted for by the whole Mu2e collaboration.
Current Officers (as of 2018-05-30)
- President: Manolis Kargiantoulakis
- Executive Board Member: Yuri Oksuzian
- Event Coordinator/Muon Journal Club: Giani Pezzullo
- Outreach Officer: Andy Edmonds
Events
A selection of past and ongoing events.
Young Mu2e Introductory Lectures
A set of introductory lectures on Mu2e subsystems, addressed to early-career and new collaborators. A great opportunity for learning and communication, for both the speakers and the audience. Summer students especially benefit from the Summer Lectures, which are co-organized with MUSE.
Muon Department Journal Club
A Journal Club meeting that brings together early-career scientists from Mu2e and g-2. The Young Mu2e Events Coordinator is co-organizing this with a person from g-2. Slides from these meetings can be found at the Indico event page: https://indico.fnal.gov/category/834/
Saturday Morning Physics: Muon Campus tours
SMP brings high school students to Fermilab on Saturday mornings. In the fall of 2018, Mu2e was added for the first time in the SMP tour rotation, as part of the joint Muon Campus tour with g-2!
Saturday Morning Physics
You are welcome to sign up to give a tour!
A tour outline exists as a resource for volunteering guides.
Young Mu2e meetings (during Collaboration Meetings)
3/6/2018 - Talk by Bob Bernstein: Academic Careers and how to apply for them
Bob shared his invaluable advice on academic careers and job applications. Application advice highlights:
- Don't overthink everything
- Every talk is a job talk
- Every interaction with the committee counts
- Every nice thing you do yields payoff: help your colleagues
Young Fermilab Soccer Tournament
A soccer tournament between early-career organizations across Fermilab groups! The Muon Department team made it to the final of the 1st tournament on 5/19/2018, where we lost to the mighty joint CMS/TD team -- but we did beat the Neutrino team! It was a very fun and well attended event.
Resources
Elsewhere on the wiki
- For introductory information about the experiment check out Learn About Mu2e
- For practicalities relating to the collaboration click here: Getting started on Mu2e
- To get started with Mu2e software, see here: Mu2e Computing
Suggested reading
- 2016 CLFV: A conference on Charged Lepton Flavor Violation
- The Allure of Ultrasensitive Experiments
Still can't find what you're looking for?
- try asking on #basicqs on slack