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May 23, 2011

Lisa Randall to Judge 3rd Annual 3QD Science Prize

UPDATE 6/20/11: The winners have been announced here.

UPDATE 6/13/11: The finalists have been announced here.

UPDATE 6/11/11: The semifinalists have been announced here.

UPDATE 6/3/11: Voting round now open. Click here to see full list of nominees and vote.

Dear Readers, Writers, Bloggers,

Randall(web) We are very honored and pleased to announce that Lisa Randall has agreed to be the final judge for our third annual prize for the best writing in a blog or e-zine in the category of Science. (Details of last year's science prize, judged by Richard Dawkins, can be found here.) Professor Randall studies theoretical particle physics and cosmology at Harvard University.  Her research connects theoretical insights to puzzles in our current understanding of the properties and interactions of matter. She has developed and studied a wide variety of models to address these questions, the most prominent involving extra dimensions of space. Her work has involved improving our understanding of the Standard Model of particle physics, supersymmetry, baryogenesis, cosmological inflation, and dark matter. Randall’s research also explores ways to experimentally test and verify ideas and her current research focuses in large part on the Large Hadron Collider and dark matter searches and models.

Randall’s studies have made her among the most cited and influential theoretical physicists. She has also had a public presence through her writing, lectures, and radio and TV appearances.  Her book Warped Passages: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Universe's Hidden Dimensions was included in the New York Times' 100 notable books of 2005. Randall has also recently pursued art-science connections, writing a libretto for Hypermusic: A Projective Opera in Seven Planes that premiered in the Pompidou Center in Paris and co-curating an art exhibit Measure for Measure for the Los Angeles Arts Association.

Randall has received numerous awards and honors for her scientific endeavors. She is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Philosophical Society the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, was a fellow of the American Physical Society, and is a past winner of an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Research Fellowship, a National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award, a DOE Outstanding Junior Investigator Award, and the Westinghouse Science Talent Search. In 2003, she received the Premio Caterina Tomassoni e Felice Pietro Chisesi Award, from the University of Rome, La Sapienza.  In 2006, she received the Klopsteg Award from the American Society of Physics Teachers (AAPT) for her lectures and in 2007 she received the Julius Lilienfeld Prize from the American Physical Society for her work on elementary particle physics and cosmology and for communicating this work to the public.

Professor Randall was included in the list of Time Magazine's "100 Most Influential People" of 2007 and was one of 40 people featured in The Rolling Stone 40th Anniversary issue that year. Prof. Randall was featured in Newsweek's "Who's Next in 2006" as "one of the most promising theoretical physicists of her generation" and in Seed Magazine's "2005 Year in Science Icons".  In 2008, Prof. Randall was among Esquire Magazine's “75 Most Influential People.

Professor Randall earned her PhD from Harvard University and held professorships at MIT and Princeton University before returning to Harvard in 2001.

Professor Randall's new book Knocking on Heaven's Door comes out in September. You can pre-order it here. And follow her on Twitter here.

***

As usual, this is the way it will work: the nominating period is now open, and will end at 11:59 pm New York City Time (EST) on May 31, 2011. There will then be a round of voting by our readers which will narrow down the entries to the top twenty semi-finalists. After this, we will take these top twenty voted-for nominees, and the four main editors of 3 Quarks Daily (Abbas Raza, Robin Varghese, Morgan Meis, and Azra Raza) will select six finalists from these, plus they may also add up to three wildcard entries of their own choosing. The three winners will be chosen from these by Professor Randall.

The first place award, called the "Top Quark," will include a cash prize of one thousand dollars; the second place prize, the "Strange Quark," will include a cash prize of three hundred dollars; and the third place winner will get the honor of winning the "Charm Quark," along with a two hundred dollar prize.

(Welcome to those coming here for the first time. Learn more about who we are and what we do here, and do check out the full site here. Bookmark us and come back regularly, or sign up for the RSS feed.)

PrizeScienceAnnounce2011 Details (please read carefully before nominating):

The winners of this Science Prize will be announced on or around June 21, 2011. Here's the schedule:

May 23, 2011:

  • The nominations are opened. Please nominate your favorite blog entry or e-zine piece by placing the URL for the blog post (the permalink) in the comments section of this post. You may also add a brief comment describing the entry and saying why you think it should win. (Do NOT nominate a whole blog, just one individual blog post.)
  • Blog posts or e-zine articles longer than 4,000 words are not eligible.
  • Each person can only nominate one blog post.
  • Entries must be in English.
  • The editors of 3QD reserve the right to reject entries that we feel are not appropriate.
  • The blog entry may not be more than a year old. In other words, it must have been written after May 22, 2010.
  • You may also nominate your own entry from your own or a group blog or e-zine (and we encourage you to).
  • Guest columnists at 3 Quarks Daily are also eligible to be nominated, and may also nominate themselves if they wish.
  • Nominations are limited to the first 200 entries.
  • Prize money must be claimed within a month of the announcement of winners.

May 31, 2011

  • The nominating process will end at 11:59 PM (NYC time) of this date.
  • The public voting will be opened soon afterwards.

June 10, 2011

  • Public voting ends at 11:59 PM (NYC time).

June 21, 2011 (or thereabouts)

  • The winners are announced.

One Final and Important Request

If you have a blog or website, please help us spread the word about our prizes by linking to this post. Otherwise, post a link on your Facebook profile, Tweet it, or just email your friends and tell them about it! I really look forward to reading some very good material, and think this should be a lot of fun for all of us.

Best of luck and thanks for your attention!

Yours,

Abbas

Posted by S. Abbas Raza at 10:24 AM | Permalink

Comments

http://hudsonvalleygeologist.blogspot.com/2011/03/supermoon.html

Posted by: Steve Schimmrich | May 30, 2011 11:01:52 AM

I would like to submit for consideration an article that I wrote about the Kepler Mission:

A Plethora of Planets
http://www.isthisyourhomework.com/a-plethora-of-planets/

I try to convey the wonder and awe I feel when I think about how this unassuming spacecraft is changing our view of the cosmos by helping to answer one of the oldest questions humans have asked of the heavens: "Are we alone?"

Posted by: MrTemple | May 30, 2011 11:43:04 AM

http://lindahenneberg.com/post/6001639082/cern-acronyms

Posted by: Linda | May 30, 2011 12:00:59 PM

I'm going to break form and nominate myself. I can hardly expect anyone else to remember my old blog posts.

The Fine-Structure Constant is Probably Constant

Posted by: Sean Carroll | May 30, 2011 1:43:07 PM

I nominate Maggie Koerth-Baker at BoingBoing for

Nuclear energy 101: Inside the "black box" of power plants

http://www.boingboing.net/2011/03/12/nuclear-energy-insid.html

Posted by: Chris S | May 30, 2011 2:13:11 PM

This post on the grandmother hypothesis of menopause was included in The Open Laboratory collection of the year's best online science writing:

http://carinbondar.com/2010/08/sacrifice-on-the-serengeti-a-guest-post-by-eric-m-johnson/

Posted by: EMJ | May 30, 2011 2:48:41 PM

One of the best pieces of meditative science journalism there is.

Posted by: Nithyanand Rao | May 30, 2011 2:55:07 PM

http://blog.vixra.org/2011/05/29/new-luminosity-record-for-lhc/ because everyone is interested in how the LHC is running.

Posted by: TStark | May 30, 2011 3:42:39 PM

I'll nominate:

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/05/free-science-one-paper-at-a-time-2/

Posted by: Zen Faulkes | May 30, 2011 4:08:37 PM

I submit this post on ocean acidification - a topic as significant as climate change, yet receiving very little media attention. I've been writing and speaking about it for many years, and will continue until more people take notice:

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/09/ocean-acidifi-what/

(comments are at my former site http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/intersection/2010/09/08/ocean-acidifi-what/#comment-69608)

Posted by: Sheril Kirshenbaum | May 30, 2011 5:48:24 PM

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/cosmicvariance/2011/05/23/physics-and-the-immortality-of-the-soul/

Posted by: Peter | May 30, 2011 6:31:52 PM

I would like to nominate "Fun With an Argon Atom" by Nick Herbert at

http://quantumtantra.blogspot.com/2011/04/fun-with-argon-atom.html

Posted by: nick herbert | May 30, 2011 6:32:11 PM

I'd like to nominate this post from the Bad Astronomy blog :

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2011/05/25/most-distant-object-ever-seen-maybe/#more-32345

which has the best explanation and discussion of Gamma Ray Bursters complete with breaking news on the most distant example discovered and is entirely typical of the good Dr Phil Plait's style.

Posted by: Messier Tidy Upper | May 30, 2011 11:08:15 PM

http://bismar.blogspot.com/2011/04/cholera-in-haiti-and-association-to.html

Posted by: Bishnu Marasini | May 31, 2011 12:30:33 AM

I nominate my own piece on Obama, Guinness and Statistics, just because it was such fun to write and shows a lighter side to science and scientists

http://www.communicatescience.eu/2011/05/is-feidir-linn-obama-was-right.html

Posted by: Eoin Lettice | May 31, 2011 11:30:45 AM

So may blogs, so little time. I'll nominate this post:

http://www.centauri-dreams.org/?p=18173
'Blue Stragglers' in the Galactic Bulge
by Paul Gilster, 30 May 2011

Paul Gilster is the author of several books, most about the Internet IIRC. His latest book is Centauri Dreams, about the possibility of interstellar voyages. He also writes on this little-noticed blog.

Posted by: Chris Winter | May 31, 2011 12:26:34 PM

I nominate my post 'The Pelican's Beak - Success and Evolutionary Stasis':

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/03/repost-the-pelicans-beak-success-and-evolutionary-stasis/

Posted by: Brian Switek | May 31, 2011 12:51:45 PM

http://blogs.forbes.com/matthewherper/2011/01/05/the-first-child-saved-by-dna-sequencing/

Posted by: Matthew Herper | May 31, 2011 4:20:47 PM

http://blogs.forbes.com/matthewherper/2011/01/05/the-first-child-saved-by-dna-sequencing/

Posted by: Matthew Herper | May 31, 2011 4:30:46 PM

I'd like to nominate http://www.urban-astronomer.com/articles/questions-and-answers/are-the-universal-constants-changing/
It was published in September last year, and at the time I felt it was some of my best writing. It's a look at some work which casts doubt on one of the base assumptions of modern cosmology: That the universe, on the largest scale, is homogenous and homologous.

Posted by: Allen Versfeld | May 31, 2011 5:55:55 PM

From my favourite physics blog, always to the point
http://resonaances.blogspot.com/2011/05/more-on-wjj-bump-in-cdf.html

Posted by: Federico | May 31, 2011 6:53:06 PM

An article from Babble's "science of kids" column on a little-known breastfeeding condition and the underlying physiology.

http://www.babble.com/baby/baby-feeding-nutrition/dmer-breastfeeding-depression-breast-milk-letdown/

Posted by: Heather Turgeon | May 31, 2011 7:04:14 PM

An article from Babble's "science of kids" column on a little-known breastfeeding condition and the underlying physiology.

http://www.babble.com/baby/baby-feeding-nutrition/dmer-breastfeeding-depression-breast-milk-letdown/

Posted by: Heather Turgeon | May 31, 2011 7:05:59 PM

http://theartfulamoeba.com/2010/10/17/the-fungus-and-virus-that-rot-bee-brains/

Posted by: James | May 31, 2011 10:17:31 PM

There's not much in the way of science blogs out there for kids and it's not easy to write science on that level. Jane Peddicord (author of Night Wonders) has blog about space on which she has an on-going guessing game aimed kids in elementary and middle school.

http://janepeddicord.com/spaceblog/2011/04/space-game-where-in-the-solar-system-is-destination-four-day-2/

Posted by: Erin Ivy | May 31, 2011 10:59:21 PM

I think this is an excellent example of science outreach. There is a a lot of effort put into this blog, mostly as a scientific outreach for kids, which is very important and often overlooked.

Posted by: Kevin | May 31, 2011 11:57:50 PM

I have a lot of fun with this blog for kids and particularly like this one that inspired a poetic response!

Posted by: Jane Peddicord | May 31, 2011 11:58:34 PM

This is a great blog for kids. I like the guessing game!

Posted by: Gwendolyn Luecke | Jun 1, 2011 12:00:27 AM

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