Want to give your Twitter feed an intellectual boost? Add a few more physicists to the mix! In the final installment of symmetry’s #FollowFriday series, we introduce you to four more science-types who tweet.
Elena Long
Post-Doctoral Research Associate,
University of New Hampshire
Tell us about yourself in 140 characters or less.
Hadronic physics postdoc studying internal structure of protons and neutrons while promoting LGBT+ people in physics and all of STEM.
What areas of physics most interest you?
Although I enjoy many aspects of physics, I'm particularly interested in the internal structure of protons and neutrons as well as the interactions that cause quarks and gluons to form nuclei. They are the stuff of normal matter, that which makes up most of what we're familiar with on a day-to-day basis. My research, which reflects my interest, focuses on experimentally studying how atomic nuclei come about from their constituent pieces.
Why do you use Twitter?
I enjoy the ability to have conversations with people about a number of topics, particularly when they're caught in the moment. I also use it to get the most recent information on breaking news stories, such as the earthquake that happened on the United States' East Coast a few years back.
What do you usually tweet about?
The intersection of physics, STEM, and gender and sexual minorities.
John Asher Johnson
Professor of Astronomy,
Harvard University
Tell us about yourself in 140 characters or less.
Finder of exoplanets, typist of things, one who professes professionally, figurer of things out, player of basketball, abuser of language.
What areas of physics most interest you?
I'm an astronomer, so I'm way into astrophysics: stellar evolution, stellar atmospheres, orbital dynamics, planetary interior structure, atmospheres and astronomical instrumentation. In astrophysics there are problems just lying on the ground, waiting for someone like me to stumble upon them and figure them out. Astronomy has far more open questions than there are people to solve them. It makes it easy to find a quiet corner, work carefully and make a lot of noise when you find something that no other human knows.
Why do you use Twitter?
I use Twitter to follow my favorite comedians, catch the occasional bit of news and point people to my blog posts, which are generally much longer than 140 characters. I also use it during scientific conferences to learn where the most interesting talks are and where the after-hours drinks are. I like how I'm a tweet and retweet away from, say, a biologist who shares my scientific philosophy. It's also where I can follow @SarcasticRover.
What do you usually tweet about?
I generally tweet what I blog about: promoting diversity in science, trying to understand the psychology of successful scientists ("astropsychology"), the latest results from my science and the occasional totally banal observation about my immediate environment.
Do you have suggestions for a future #FollowFriday? Follow us on Twitter @symmetrymag, and let us know which physicists you recommend.