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Vanderbilt physicist promotes hands-on science research in the developing world

Session on Erin Rericha's cell mobility lab in the Hands-on Research summer school. Rericha is leaning on the table and her student Jie Zhao is the furthest person on the right. (Courtesy of Erin Rericha)

This summer, biophysicist and her student Jie Zhao spent an intensive 12 days in Shanghai demonstrating various inexpensive methods that graduate students and young faculty members from developing countries can use to study how cells move.

Her cell migration session was part of , a program that believes passionately that small scale, table-top experiments are invaluable in both practicing and teaching science.

Erin Rericha (Lauren Owens / Vanderbilt)

鈥淧hysics is an experimental science, but lack of support in the developing world means that scientists rely increasingly on inexpensive computer simulations instead of experiments,鈥 said the assistant professor of physics. 鈥淭he purpose of these meetings is to show the value of hands-on experiments, done in conjunction with computer simulation, to scientists from these areas and to demonstrate that important research at the frontiers of science can be done without expensive equipment.鈥

This is the second Hands-On summer school that Rericha has attended, each of which has been held on a different continent. The latest meeting attracted 75 participants from 18 countries.

鈥淭he reason I鈥檓 involved is that one of the organizers is Harry Swinney,鈥 said Rericha. 鈥淗e was my doctoral advisor and his students would do anything for him.鈥 is a professor of physics and director of the at the .

The school that Swinney started with at the and at , has been adopted by the in Trieste, Italy. The Shanghai meeting was also sponsored by the and the .

“I was really impressed by the wide range of easy-to-set-up experiments that were demonstrated,” said Zhao. “It was a very good experience. I made a lot of new friends.”

One of the demonstrations made the local news when the scientists turned a traditional acrobatics and Kungfu performance called 鈥淏ricks Break on Body鈥 into an experiment designed to show the principle of inertia 鈥 to move a large mass you need a large force. Swinney, who is small and thin, was asked to lie on the floor while two other scientists piled more than 150 pounds of concrete blocks on his body. Then from the enthusiastically wielded a sledge hammer to strike the top of the concrete blocks. Because there was only enough energy in the hammer’s blow to produce a very small motion on the part of the heavy blocks, the scrawny physicist underneath was unharmed.

鈥淭he problem of replacing experiments with simulations isn鈥檛 limited to the developing world,鈥 said Rericha. 鈥淭he same thing is happening in science education in the United States. I鈥檇 like to start a similar program with the schools here in Nashville.鈥

The participants in the 2012 Hands-on Research summer school. (Courtesy of Erin Rericha)