11/2015: AGM & Member Talks

Place and Time: Abingdon, Crown and Thistle, Barn Room, November 26, 2015 at 19:30

Agenda

  1. Annual General Meeting
    1. Welcome
    2. Apologies received
    3. Approval of the minutes of the Inaugural Meeting 2014 (Kings Head and Bell, Abingdon, 27 Nov 2014)
    4. Matters arising from the minutes
    5. Chairs Report (Carl Lloyd)
    6. Presentation of the accounts (Richard Gardner, Treasurer)
    7. Approval of the accounts
    8. Election of the Officers of the ATOM Society Committee
    9. Election of the Ordinary Members of the Standing Committee
    10. Any other business
  2. Member Talks
    1. Steve Vaughan, “How mobile phones work”
    2. George Kalmus, “Interesting people I met and their scientific legacy.”
  3. Feedback (time permitting)
    1. an opportunity for members of the ATOM Society to express their thoughts about the Society’s events and talks, past and future

10/2015: Diffusion of the Dead (T.Woolley)

Place and Time: Abingdon, October 22, 2015 at 19:30

new venue: Barn Room, Crown and Thistle (18 Bridge St, Abingdon OX14 3HS)

TITLE: Diffusion of the Dead

Knowing how long we havzombi2e before we interact with a zombie could mean the difference between life, death and zombification. Here, we apply the same mathematical models to zombies that you would use to describe flu, or measles. We use this model to derive exact and approximate interaction times and use these to develop strategies which allow the human race to survive impending doom

Speaker: Thomas Woolley

ThomasWoollyT. Woolley has been doing mathematics at University of Oxford since 2004 and now specialises in mathematical biology. His doctorate understanding the pattern formation behind fish spots and zebra stripes, but now he researches mathematical models of stem cells movement. The hope is that by understanding how stem cells move we can influence them and, thus, speed up the healing process.

When not doing mathematics he is a keen participant in mathematical outreach workshops and has given a variety of popular maths lectures nationally and internationally. He has previously worked for the BBC, illustrated Marcus du Sautoy’s book and he recently worked on the popular maths show “Dara O’Briains school of hard sums”. He is currently the Fellow of Modern Mathematics at the London Science Museum and is helping redesign their mathematics gallery.

09/2015: Social Insetcs (E. Bell)

Place and Time: Abingdon, September 24, 2015 at 19:30

Kings Charles Room of the “Kings Head and Bell” (10 East St Helen St, Abingdon, OX14 5EA)

TITLE: How to have a social life

The evolution of social behaviour has been fundamental to the natural world and is found at varying degrees throughout the animal kingdom. DSC_0100

The most extreme forms of social behaviour however are found in the social insects (bees, wasps and ants). These insects are characterised by a division of labour whereby individuals give up their own reproduction to help the reproduction of another in apparent acts of altruism. But how do such extreme form of social behaviour evolve and how are they maintained? In this presentation I will address what lessons we can learn about social evolution, and indeed how to have a social life all from the perspective of a wasp.

Speaker: Emily Bell, University of Bristol

Emily Bell is a final year PhD candidate at the University of Bristol and Institute of Zoology. After leaving Our Lady’s Convent School (now Our Lady’s Abingdon) she went on the study for a degree in Zoology at University College London followed by a Masters in Biology at the University of Oxford. Her current area of biological research is behavioural ecology in which she is interested in understanding the evolution of social behaviour, focusing in particular on social behaviour in tropical paper wasps. Her work has taken her both to Spain and Central America where she worked as a Pre-doctoral Fellow with the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama.

08/2015: Driving Autonomy (I. Posner)

Place and Time: Abingdon, August 27, 2015 at 19:30

Kings Charles Room of the “Kings Head and Bell” (10 East St Helen St, Abingdon, OX14 5EA)

TITLE: Driving Autonomy

RobotCarThe Oxford RobotCar Project aims to provide robust, long-term autonomous driving at a price point suitable for mass-market adoption. Likewise, the LUTZ pathfinder project aims to provide a low-speed, last-mile public transport solution operating in the public domain in Milton Keynes. At the core of this technology provided by the Oxford Mobile Robotics GrouLUTZp, however, lies a philosophy fundamentally different to that fuelling more conventional autonomous driving research: autonomy when offered, as opposed to on demand. In this talk we will motivate this philosophy and provide an overview of the technology underlying our approach to autonomous driving.

Speaker: Ingmar Posner, University of Oxford, Mobile Robotics Group

Ingmar is a Lecturer at the University of Oxford and leads the perception and planning work within the Mobile Robotics Group. His expertise lies in the design and implementation of machine learning methods that enable an autonomous agent to interpret complex, dynamic environments in a way which permits robust decision-making, planning and exploration on-line and in real-time.

07/2015: Living on Mars (R. MacDonald)

Place and Time: Abingdon, July 23, 2015 at 19:30

Title: Living on Mars – A Beginner’s Guide

mars-bgHumans will go to Mars one day. But what if we skipped the plant-a-flag stage, and instead built a permanent human settlement on Mars in, say, 2027?

What challenges will need to be overcome to make this a reality, and how can they be dealt with? What technologies will be needed for a small community to survive (and ultimately thrive) on the red planet? How might the early Martian pioneers engineer unique solutions as they construct the first society on another world?

In a first for human space-flight, the Mars One project intends to send 4 people on a one-way mission of permanent settlement to Mars in 2027. This will be preceded by a series of unmanned precursor missions, the first one of which is planned for a 2020 departure. What makes Mars One unique is that it is entirely privately funded, international, and apolitical, which enabled it to launch a global astronaut selection process in 2013 – to which over 200,000 people from over 140 countries applied.

After a series of cuts, there are now just 100 people remaining in Mars One’s selection process. By early 2016, 24 will be chosen to enter full time astronaut training for the mission.

In this talk Ryan MacDonald will explore the architecture of Mars One’s mission. A special focus will be on how a one-way trip using just existing technology is not only possible, but is substantially simpler and cheaper than previously proposed return missions.

Speaker: Ryan MacDonald

Ryan MacDonald has just finished his degree in physics at the University of Oxford and is now pursuing a DPhil in Astronomy at the University of Cambridge. At the same time, he is one of the last 5 British Mars One Astronaut Candidates.

Further information about the speaker