First year PhD presentations - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 13
About This Presentation
Title:

First year PhD presentations

Description:

First year PhD presentations – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:120
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 14
Provided by: Cer66
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: First year PhD presentations


1
First year PhD presentations
  • R J Cernik

2
This is just advice
  • Do it your way

3
Basics
  • Who
  • What
  • Why
  • How
  • Results

4
Who are you?
  • Brief introduction
  • Describe the group you are working with
  • What are the groups aims?
  • This should be very brief, less than 1 minute
  • Hint, you can show all this with one slide and
    refer to it in a flash

5
C. Caso, G. Conforto, A. Gurtu, M.
Aguilar-Benitez, C. Amsler, R.Michael Barnett,
P.R. Burchat, C.D. Carone, O. Dahl, M. Doser, S.
Eidelman, J.L. Feng, M. Goodman, C. Grab, D.E.
Groom, K. Hagiwara, K.G. Hayes, J.J. Hernandez,
K. Hikasa, K. Honscheid, F. James, Michelangelo
L. Mangano, A.V. Manohar, K. Monig, H. Murayama,
K. Nakamura, Keith A. Olive, A. Piepke, M. Roos,
R.H. Schindler, R.E. Shrock, M. Tanabashi, N.A.
Tornqvist, T.G. Trippe, P. Vogel, C.G. Wohl, R.L.
Workman, B. Armstrong, J.L. Casas Serradilla,
B.B. Filimonov, P.S. Gee, S.B. Lugovsky, S.
Mankov, F. Nicholson, K.S. Babu, D. Besson, O.
Biebel, R.N. Cahn, R.L. Crawford, R.H. Dalitz, T.
Damour, K. Desler, R.J. Donahue, D.A. Edwards, J.
Erler, V.V. Ezhela, A. Fasso, W. Fetscher, D.
Froidevaux, T.K. Gaisser, L. Garren, S. Geer,
H.J. Gerber, F.J. Gilman, H.E. Haber, C. Hagmann,
I. Hinchliffe, C.J. Hogan, G. Hohler, J.D.
Jackson, K.F. Johnson, D. Karlen, B. Kayser, K.
Kleinknecht, I.G. Knowles, Christopher F. Kolda,
P.A. Kreitz, P. Langacker, R. Landua, L.
Littenberg, D.M. Manley, J. March-Russell, T.
Nakada, Helen R. Quinn, G. Raffelt, B. Renk, M.T.
Ronan, L.J. Rosenberg, M. Schmitt, D.N. Schramm,
D. Scott, T. Sjostrand, G.F. Smoot, S. Spanier,
M. Srednicki, T. Stanev, M. Suzuki, N.P.
Tkachenko, G. Valencia, K. van Bibber, R. Voss,
L. Wolfenstein, S. Youssef CERN LBL, Berkeley
Genoa U. INFN, Genoa Urbino U. INFN,
Florence Tata Inst. Madrid, CIEMAT Zurich
U. Stanford U., Phys. Dept. William-Mary
Coll. Novosibirsk, IYF UC, Berkeley Argonne
Zurich, ETH KEK, Tsukuba Hillsdale Coll.
Valencia U. Tohoku U. Ohio State U. UC, San
Diego Minnesota U. Caltech, Kellogg Lab
Helsinki U. SLAC SUNY, Stony Brook Virginia
Tech. Serpukhov, IHEP (103 authors listed)
6
What are you doing?
  • Very generally introduce the context of the
    problem
  • Explain your role in the work and its relevance
    to the problem

7
Why are you dong this work?
  • Why is this research important?
  • Where is it going?
  • Why should I care?
  • So what?

8
How?
  • What methods have you chosen?
  • Why these?
  • Were there any others that were suitable?
  • How are you undertaking this work?

9
Results
  • Have you got any results?
  • If so, describe them briefly
  • Dont go overboard with the detail
  • Very often the reasons for null results are more
    interesting that routine measurements.
  • You might have a short time to say what you are
    going to do next

10
Questions
  • Remember the audience are composed mainly from
    your fellow students.
  • If you have dived in with too much detail they
    will not have a chance to ask sensible questions
  • This is your chance to extract some really
    constructive advice from your peers and academic
    staff present
  • This is potentially the part of the presentation
    where you will get the maximum feedback. Dont
    talk over this five minute period.

11
General advice
  • Relax, this exercise is designed to exchange
    information with your fellow students and members
    of staff.
  • It will help you with your research by clarifying
    your ideas and suggesting possibilities for
    future directions.
  • It is not a test, there are no pass or fail
    marks.
  • Practice your talk in from of a willing
    volunteer. Bribe them if necessary. Its better if
    they are not a material scientist.
  • Your talk needs to be understood by non
    specialists
  • Limit the number of slides to absolutely no more
    than one per minute

12
Figure 5 Compressive stress as determined by
synchrotron x-ray diffraction methods on the
(002), (012), (113) and (231) reflections as a
function of depth penetration.
13
Sample surface
Prismatic single Crystal layer
Cross lamellar layer
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com