Waldych, Chen Receive Endowed Undergraduate Awards

Every year, the College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences (CMNS) Alumni Network offers summer awards to help undergraduates defray costs related to conducting research, attending conferences or interning.  Two physics majors, Patrick Chen and Sarah Waldych, were among this year's receipients. Patrick Chen/Sarah WaldychPatrick Chen/Sarah Waldych

Read below how this year’s award recipients plan to further their professional and career development with funding from the CMNS Alumni Network Endowed Undergraduate Awards program.

Sarah Waldych

Since her freshman year, junior physics and astronomy double major Sarah Waldych has been actively involved in particle physics research at UMD. As part of this research, Waldych contributed to the construction upgrades of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS), a particle detector at the European Council for Nuclear Research. She has traveled internationally and domestically for her studies—including traveling to Hamburg, Germany, to study detector physics and recently delivering a feasibility study at the Future Circular Collider workshop at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

This summer, Waldych will apply this knowledge at the University of Virginia by helping construct particle detectors that will be utilized in the new high luminosity upgrade within the CMS in Europe. 

“The financial support provided by this award will be instrumental in covering my travel and living expenses during my time at the University of Virginia, allowing me to continue my involvement in these significant research efforts,” Waldych said.

Patrick Chen

Junior physics and mathematics double major Patrick Chen will use his award funding to travel to Oak Ridge National Laboratory and gain hands-on experience with neutron scattering experiments. Chen modeled the magnetic behavior of crystals while interning with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) last summer. He looks forward to working with Oak Ridge instrument scientists to perform neutron scattering and reconcile the results with the model he developed last summer. 

“My ability to travel with my mentor, [NIST Instrument Scientist] Jonathan Gaudet, to this experiment this summer depended on me receiving this award,” Chen said. “So when I saw that I was selected for the award, I was extremely excited.”

This experience will be especially useful because Chen hopes to pursue graduate studies in condensed matter physics, where neutron scattering is an important method of studying and characterizing materials. 

Yoshi Chettri

Passionate about contributing to the field of medicine, junior biological sciences major Yoshi Chettri aims to pursue a Ph.D. in medical sciences after graduating. Chettri’s summer research in UMD’s Fischell Department of Bioengineering will focus on designing a vessel-on-a-chip model for vascular endothelium cells to evaluate the effects of everolimus, an mTOR inhibitor, on cell morphology, motility, cell-cell junctions and more. 

This research is pivotal in our lab’s efforts to understand the effect of mTOR-inhibiting drugs on the vascular endothelium. After completing this project, Chettri hopes to share his findings at a conference.

“This financial support is not just a monetary contribution, but a significant encouragement that will enable me to further my academic and professional endeavors this summer,” Chettri said. “The opportunity to oversee an entire project will be a unique and invaluable experience. I view this project as a pivotal step in fulfilling my ambition to contribute significantly to the world of medicine.”

Hari Kailad

Sophomore computer science major Hari Kailad works in the Maryland Cybersecurity Center (MC2) on research problems related to cryptography. He is working with Electrical and Computer Engineering Associate Professor Dana Dachman-Soled and Intel on estimating the security hardness of cryptosystems using extra side channel information. 

“This funding will allow me to spend the summer working with MC2 on this project and provide an opportunity to focus on my research to work towards a Ph.D.,” Kailad said. “I am really looking forward to learning more about lattice-based security, ideal lattices and side channels. Post-quantum cryptography is relatively new, and determining the hardness of lattice-based problems is quite important.”

Outside of his research with MC2, Kailad is a member of the Cybersecurity Club and teaches a class on binary exploitation, where students learn how to identify and exploit vulnerabilities. 

HaeSung Lee

Born and raised in South Korea, junior biological sciences major HaeSung Lee has a profound interest in understanding neurological gene expression and its correlation with behavior changes. As an undergraduate researcher in Biology Assistant Professor Scott Juntti’s lab, Lee studies the olfactory senses of cichlid fish and the physiological mechanisms underlying sex-specific responses to pheromones. Lee also serves as a peer research mentor for the First-year Innovation and Research Experience (FIRE) Molecular Diagnostics stream, where she guides student research groups and designs methods for detecting breast cancer biomarkers.

This award will allow Lee to live in Boston this summer for her internship at the Beth Israel Sadhguru Center for Conscious Planet, where she will research postoperative delirium in cardiac patients.

“I am thrilled to join the clinical research team this summer to investigate the effects of medications on neurocognitive function and chronic pain following surgery,” Lee said. “I am also delighted to connect with individuals in this field and expand my knowledge through communication.”

Ying-Rong (Megan) Liu

Junior neuroscience and animal science double major Ying-Rong (Megan) Liu, an international student from Taiwan, works in Animal and Avian Sciences Assistant Professor Andrew Broadbent’s molecular virology research lab. Liu’s research on avian reovirus and infectious bursal disease virus has potential implications for cancer treatment. 

Liu plans to use this award for registration and travel expenses to present her research this June at the American Society for Virology annual meeting—the first conference Liu has attended.

“Presenting at this conference will be a major step forward for both my career and personal endeavors,” Liu said. “The experience will help me develop essential skills in presenting data and scientific communication, which will help me in reaching my career goals as I am planning to apply for a master’s or Ph.D. program in virology or immunology and aiming to become a research scientist in the future.”

Adam Melrod

Math has always been “beautiful” to junior mathematics major Adam Melrod, who plans to use his award funding to attend a course on motivic homotopy theory at the Park City Mathematics Institute.

Melrod conducts research at the intersection of model theory and algebraic geometry. In his free time, he collaborates with other UMD students interested in logic to update the online model theory Wiki—a passion project to organize model theory knowledge in one “easily referenceable and searchable place.”

“This award will provide me with the opportunity to explore many new avenues within my field and engage in research that would have otherwise been financially infeasible,” Melrod said. 

Disha Sanwal

Junior chemistry and mathematics dual-degree student Disha Sanwal joined Chemistry and Biochemistry Professor Pratyush Tiwary’s lab during her first year of college. There, while developing computational methods to explore hard-to-model biophysical systems, she discovered her appreciation for math and decided to pick up her second degree in mathematics. 

This summer, Sanwal will put her knowledge to work at Schrödinger in New York City as a computational research intern. She also plans to attend the 2024 MolSSI MAPOL Computational Chemistry workshop at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in June. 

Alexander Wolfson

Alexander Wolfson is on the path to medical school as a sophomore chemistry major. This summer, he will study an ocular surface disease with University of Maryland Medical System Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology Sarah Sunshine

“I am most looking forward to spending time at the clinic as well as the lab, combining research with clinical care and learning from a great physician,” Wolfson said. “I was so happy when I found out that I was a recipient of this award because it will be a major help to me as I do research in Baltimore, away from home.”

On campus, Wolfson is an undergraduate research assistant in Chemistry and Biochemistry Professor Lawrence Sita’s lab and serves as a recruitment ambassador for CMNS. 

Are you interested in supporting undergraduate students in their professional development and research activities? Consider donating to the CMNS Alumni Network Current-Use Undergraduate Award Fund.

Original story: https://cmns.umd.edu/news-events/news/alumni-network-endowed-undergraduate-awards-2024

Department Hosts Screening of the Film "The Faraway Nearby: A Journey Into Space, Time and the Mystery of Black Holes”

On April 15, 2024, the University of Maryland’s Department of Physics hosted a screening and panel discussion of the film “The Faraway Nearby: A Journey Into Space, Time and the Mystery of Black Holes.”

In the film, groundbreaking science and art intersect to tell the story of the late UMD Physics Professor Joe Weber—the first scientist to explore the detection of gravitational waves. Derided by the science community, Weber worked nearly alone to answer one of the great questions of science: could we "hear" the universe through gravitational waves, much like we "see" the universe through electromagnetic waves? Could the same passion to explore the unknown become his undoing? This was a quest that consumed him up to his death. The film inspires viewers to see their world differently and feel the thin divide between passion and reason.

Following the screening, Physics Chair and Professor Steve Rolston moderated a panel discussion with:

  • Paula Froehle, Director of "The Faraway Nearby"
  • John Mather, College Park Professor of Physics, Nobel Laureate in Physics (2006)
  • William Phillips, Distinguished University Professor and College Park Professor of Physics, Nobel Laureate in Physics (1997)
  • Peter Shawhan, Professor of Physics

Read more about UMD’s contributions to the discovery of gravitational waves

 

 

Attacking Quantum Models with AI: When Can Truncated Neural Networks Deliver Results?

Currently, computing technologies are rapidly evolving and reshaping how we imagine the future. Quantum computing is taking its first toddling steps toward delivering practical results that promise unprecedented abilities. Meanwhile, artificial intelligence remains in public conversation as it’s used for everything from writing business emails to generating bespoke images or songs from text prompts to producing deep fakes.

Some physicists are exploring the opportunities that arise when the power of machine learning—a widely used approach in AI research—is brought to bear on quantum physics. Machine learning may accelerate quantum research and provide insights into quantum technologies, and quantum phenomena present formidable challenges that researchers can use to test the bounds of machine learning.

When studying quantum physics or its applications (including the development of quantum computers), researchers often rely on a detailed description of many interacting quantum particles. But the very features that make quantum computing potentially powerful also make quantum systems difficult to describe using current computers. In some instances, machine learning has produced descriptions that capture the most significant features of quantum systems while ignoring less relevant details—efficiently providing useful approximations.An artistic rendering of a neural network consisting of two layers. The top layer represents a real collection of quantum particles, like atoms in an optical lattice. The connections with the hidden neurons below account for the particles’ interactions. (Credit: Modified from original artwork created by E. Edwards/JQI)An artistic rendering of a neural network consisting of two layers. The top layer represents a real collection of quantum particles, like atoms in an optical lattice. The connections with the hidden neurons below account for the particles’ interactions. (Credit: Modified from original artwork created by E. Edwards/JQI)

In a paper published May 20, 2024, in the journal Physical Review Research, two researchers at JQI presented new mathematical tools that will help researchers use machine learning to study quantum physics. And using these tools, they have identified new opportunities in quantum research where machine learning can be applied.

“I want to understand the limit of using traditional classical machine learning tools to understand quantum systems,” says JQI graduate student Ruizhi Pan, who was the first author of the paper.

The standard tool for describing collections of quantum particles is the wavefunction, which provides a complete description of the quantum state of the particles. But obtaining the wavefunction for more than a handful of particles tends to require impractical amounts of time and resources.

Researchers have previously shown that AI can approximate some families of quantum wavefunctions using fewer resources. In particular, physicists, including CMTC Director and JQI Fellow Sankar Das Sarma, have studied how to represent quantum states using neural networks—a common machine learning approach in which webs of connections handle information in ways reminiscent of the neurons firing in a living brain. Artificial neural networks are made of nodes—sometimes called artificial neurons—and connections of various strengths between them.

Today, neural networks take many forms and are applied to diverse applications. Some neural networks analyze data, like inspecting the individual pixels of a picture to tell if it contains a person, while others model a process, like generating a natural-sounding sequence of words given a prompt or selecting moves in a game of chess. The webs of connections formed in neural networks have proven useful at capturing hard-to-identify relationships, patterns and interactions in data and models, including the unique interactions of quantum particles described by wavefunctions.

But neural networks aren’t a magic solution to every situation or even to approximating every wavefunction. Sometimes, to deliver useful results, the network would have to be too big and complex to practically implement. Researchers need a strong theoretical foundation to understand when they are useful and under what circumstances they fall prey to errors.

In the new paper, Pan and JQI Fellow Charles Clark investigated a type of neural network called a restricted Boltzmann machine (RBM), in which the nodes are split into two layers and connections are only allowed between nodes in different layers. One layer is called the visible, or input, layer, and the second is called the hidden layer, since researchers generally don’t directly manipulate or interpret it as much as they do the visible layer.

“The restricted Boltzmann machine is a concept that is derived from theoretical studies of classical ‘spin glass’ systems that are models of disordered magnets,” Clark says. “In the 1980s, Geoffrey Hinton and others applied them to the training of artificial neutral networks, which are now widely used in artificial intelligence. Ruizhi had the idea of using RBMs to study quantum spin systems, and it turned out to be remarkably fruitful.”

For RBM models of quantum systems, physicists frequently use each node of the visible layer to represent a quantum particle, like an individual atom, and use the connections made through the hidden layer to capture the interactions between those particles. As the size and complexity of quantum states grow, a neural net increasingly needs more and more hidden nodes to keep up, eventually becoming unwieldy.

However, the exact relationships between the complexity of a quantum state, the number of hidden nodes used in a neural network, and the resulting accuracy of the approximation are difficult to pin down. This lack of clarity is an example of the black box problem that permeates the field of machine learning. It exists because researchers don’t meticulously engineer the intricate web of a neural network but instead rely on repeated steps of trial and error to find connections that work. This approach often delivers more accurate or efficient results than researchers know how to achieve by working from first principles, but it doesn’t explain why the connections that make up the neural network deliver the desired result—so the results might as well have come from a black box. This built-in inscrutability makes it difficult for physicists to know which quantum models are practical to tackle with neural networks.

Pan and Clark decided to peek behind the veil of the hidden layer and investigate how neural networks boil down the essence of quantum wavefunctions. To do this, they focused on neural network models of a one-dimensional line of quantum spins. A spin is like a little magnetic arrow that wants to point along a magnetic field and is key to understanding how magnets, superconductors and most quantum computers function.

Spins naturally interact by pushing and pulling on each other. Through chains of interactions, even two distant spins can become correlated—meaning that observing one spin also provides information about the other spin. All the correlations between particles tend to drive quantum states into unmanageable complexity. 

Pan and Clark did something that at first glance might not seem relevant to the real world: They imagined and analyzed a neural network that uses infinitely many hidden nodes to model a fixed number of spins.

“In reality of course we don't hope to use a neural network with an infinitely large system size,” Pan says. “We often want to use finite size neural networks to do the numerical computations, so we need to analyze the effects of doing truncations.”

Pan and Clark already knew that using more hidden nodes generally produced more accurate results, but the research community only had a fuzzy understanding of how the accuracy suffers when fewer hidden nodes are used. By backing up and getting a view of the infinite case, Pan and Clark were able to describe the hypothetical, perfectly accurate representation and observe the contributions made by the infinite addition of hidden nodes. The nodes don’t all contribute equally. Some capture the basics of significant features, while many contribute small corrections.

The pair developed a method that sorts the hidden nodes into groups based on how much correlation they capture between spins. Based on this approach, Pan and Clark developed mathematical tools for researchers to use when developing, comparing and interpreting neural networks. With their new perspective and tools, Pan and Clark identified and analyzed the forms of errors they expect to arise from truncating a neural network, and they identified theoretical limits on how big the errors can get in various circumstances. 

In previous work, physicists generally relied on restricting the number of connections allowed for each hidden node to keep the complexity of the neural network in check. This in turn generally limited the reach of interactions between particles that could be modeled—earning the resulting collection of states the name short-range RBM states.

Pan and Clark’s work revealed a chance to apply RBMs outside of those restrictions. They defined a new group of states, called long-range-fast-decay RBM states, that have less strict conditions on hidden node connections but that still often remain accurate and practical to implement. The looser restrictions on the hidden node connections allow a neural network to represent a greater variety of spin states, including ones with interactions stretching farther between particles.

“There are only a few exactly solvable models of quantum spin systems, and their computational complexity grows exponentially with the number of spins,” says Clark. “It is essential to find ways to reduce that complexity. Remarkably, Ruizhi discovered a new class of such systems that are efficiently attacked by RBMs. It’s the old hero-returns-home story: from classical spin glass came the RBM, which grew up among neural networks, and returned home with a gift of order to quantum spin systems.”

The pair’s analysis also suggests that their new tools can be adapted to work for more than just one-dimensional chains of spins, including particles arranged in two or three dimensions. The authors say these insights can help physicists explore the divide between states that are easy to model using RBMs and those that are impractical. The new tools may also guide researchers to be more efficient at pruning a network’s size to save time and resources. Pan says he hopes to further explore the implications of their theoretical framework.

“I'm very happy that I realized my goal of building our research results on a solid mathematical basis,” Pan says. “I'm very excited that I found such a research field which is of great prospect and in which there are also many unknown problems to be solved in the near future.”

Original story by Bailey Bedford: https://jqi.umd.edu/news/attacking-quantum-models-ai-when-can-truncated-neural-networks-deliver-results

US Joins FCC Effort: Maryland’s Impact

On April 26, 2024, a joint “Statement of Intent between the United States of America and the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) concerning Future Planning for Large Research Infrastructure Facilities, Advanced Scientific Computing, and Open Science” was signed at The White House.  The US-CERN SOI was signed by Deirdre Mulligan, The White House Principal Deputy Chief Technology Officer, and Fabiola Gianotti, the CERN Director-General.   Among other topics, the SOI expresses an intention by the United States to collaborate on a future FCC Higgs Factory, the “Future Circular Collider”, should the CERN Member States determine the project feasible. The planned FCC.The planned FCC

University of Maryland Professor Sarah Eno has played a leading role in establishing US participation in the physics and detectors of the FCC.  Appointed by CERN in 2020 as one of two US representative to the “physics, detector, and experiments” executive committee (with Dmitri Denisov of Brookhaven National Laboratory) Eno spearheaded physics input to the decadal planning process for particle physics, known as the P5 process.  The resulting white paper summarized the exciting physics potential of this facility.  In the resulting P5 report,  US participation in an offshore Higgs factory was recommended.  Recently Eno presented the status of US involvement at the FCC workshop in Annecy, France.  With this announcement, the US will start its formal participation in the development of this international facility.  

Photo from the signing showing from left-to-right: Abid Patwa (DOE), Chris Marcum (The White House OMB and Open Science Point), Deidre Mulligan (The White House PDCTO), Fabiola Gianotti (CERN DG), Rahima Kandahari (US State Department Deputy Assistant Secretary for Science, Technology, and Space Affairs), and Saul Gonzalez (NSF).Photo from the signing showing from left-to-right: Abid Patwa (DOE), Chris Marcum (The White House OMB and Open Science Point), Deidre Mulligan (The White House PDCTO), Fabiola Gianotti (CERN DG), Rahima Kandahari (US State Department Deputy Assistant Secretary for Science, Technology, and Space Affairs), and Saul Gonzalez (NSF).The FCC is planned to be a circular particle accelerator with a circumference around 91 km.  In its first phase, it would collide electrons and positrons with center-of-mass energies and beam intensities that allow collection of the entire sample of the previous LEP electron-positron collider’s Z bosons in three minutes, as well as large samples of W bosons, top quarks, and Higgs particles. Civil construction could begin in the mid 2030s, with data taking in the 2040s.   The accelerator would be located around Geneva, Switzerland, in a tunnel passing near the Jura mountains and under Lake Geneva.  As part of its studies of the Higgs boson, the FCC will study potential connections between it and dark matter, and search for influence of new massive particles and other new physics on its decay properties.  In the future, the same tunnel could house a proton-proton collider similar to the LHC, but with a center-of-mass energy seven times higher.

Maryland has had an impactful participation in the effort.  Besides Eno’s participation in the PED executive committee,  UMD is the lead institution in a plan for a new type of electromagnetic calorimeter for the FCC detectors.  Assistant Professor Chris Palmer has also involved undergraduate students taking PHYS441  in studies of its potential physics impact, which were presented at the second annual US FCC meeting at MIT.  

See the Statement of Intent here and the U.S. Department of State announcement here.

Attendees at the 7th FCC physics workshop in Annecy France (https://indico.cern.ch/event/1307378/), including Professor Sarah Eno. Click for high-resolution photo.Attendees at the 7th FCC physics workshop in Annecy France (https://indico.cern.ch/event/1307378/), including Professor Sarah Eno