Title: ICAM AN EMERGENT INSTITUTION
1Institute for Complex Adaptive MatterA Brief
Introduction
ICAM AN EMERGENT INSTITUTION
Greg Boebinger and David Pines, ICAM Co-directors
ICAM as a portal to world leaders in CORRELATED
MATTER broadly defined from biology to
chemistry to materials science
ICAM Today A
University of California Multi-campus Research
Program
-- 33 Branch Member Institutions in
this country and abroad
ICAMs Past Founded in March 1999 became
ICAM/UC MRP in 2002 ICAM Scientific Focus
Study complex adaptive matter
-- the search for the organizing principles
responsible for emergent
behavior in hard, soft and biological matter
Build bridges and an international materials
network
among the physical and biological
sciences
and the soft and hard matter
communities Launch the Emergent Matter
Project
-- outreach to students of
all ages and the general public. ICAM Breadth of
Impact Convening Power
Refereed Publications
Outreach Programs
2ICAM Growth
The growth of the ICAM/UC MRP has been
remarkable. April 2002
Establishment of ICAM/UC MRP with 9 founding
branches April 2002-June 2003 Six new
branches July 2003-June 2004 Seven new branches
and two new affiliates July 2004-June 2005
Eight new branches and one new affiliate July
2005-November 2005 Three new branches
23 US branches 7 European branches 3 European
affiliates 2 Japanese branches 1 Israeli
branch
3New ICAM Branches
Branches added during FY05 Cornell University
La. State and Tulane (a Louisiana Consortium)
New York University Washington
University Center for Advanced Economic Analysis
(Kyoto Univ.) International Center for
Theoretical Physics (Trieste) Institute for
Solid State Physics (U. Tokyo) University of
Zurich New affiliate Edinburgh University
and University of St. Andrews (Scottish
University consortium) Branches added in the
past four months University of California at
Santa Barbara Sabanci University Hebrew
University, Tel Aviv University, and Weizmann
Institute (Israeli Consortium)
4The 33 Branch Members of ICAM Today
ICAM, a University of California Multi-Campus
Research Programwith LANL as the Lead UC Campus
Centre Energie Atomique
PARIS CONSORTIUM CEA, Saclay Ecole
Normale Superieure Ecole
Polytechnique Institut Curie
Universite Paris-Sud, Orsay
ESPCI, Paris
OTHER AMERICAN BRANCHES
Boston College
Boston University
Florida State University Iowa
State University Kent State
University Penn State
University Princeton
University Sandia National
Laboratory Rutgers
University University
of Chicago
University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign
MAX PLANCK INSTITUTE
CONSORTIUM
Chemical Physics of Solids, Dresden
Physics of Complex Systems, Dresden
Molecular Cell Biology and
Genetics, Dresden Colloids and
Interfaces, Potsdam
Microstructural Physics, Halle
Solid State Research, Stuttgart
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials
Research, Dresden
KARLSRUHE CONSORTIUM Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe
Inst. for Solid State Physics, Inst. for
Nanotechnology University of Karlsruhe Inst.
for Theory of Condensed Matter, Physics Institute
528 Institutions Considering Branch Membership
UCSC UCLA UCSF UC Berkeley Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory
Argonne National Bangalore Consortium Brazil
ian Consortium Brown Carnegie-Mellon Centre
for Nanotechnology (U. London) University of
Cologne Duke Florida Harvard Lausanne MIT
Michigan Minnesota Oak Ridge
National Laboratory Ohio State Osaka
University Pennsylvania Queensland
University Rice RPI NEST (Scola Normale,
Pisa) Yale Faculty/staff members anticipate
membership within the coming academic year
6ICAM Support and Budget
Budget ICAM budget for FY06
gt1,500,000 EMP budget for FY06 gt500,000 So
urces NSF Grants July 2005 450,000
three-year grant to continue scientific
activities August 2004 3,500,000 five-year
grant for an international materials
network Additional Support for FY 06 Lead
branch, Los Alamos National Laboratory 200,000 O
ther 31 branches 310,000 Support for the
Emergent Matter Project for FY06 Richard
Lounsbery Foundation 20,000 Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation 30,000 Trinity Capital
Corporation 30,000 Also National High
Magnetic Field Laboratory, UIUC, and LANL
7Emergent Matter Project Goals
Long term goal To convey to learners of all
ages an appreciation of what is arguably at the
top of the grand scientific challenges of the new
century--the search for an understanding of The
Emergent Universe Emergent Universe We live
in a universe in which interactions between the
basic building blocks of matter or individuals in
our societies give rise to unpredicted and
unexpected emergent behavior at every
scale. Show examples of emergent behavior in
inanimate, living, and neural matter social
and economic behavior. Describe emergence as a
paradigm shift from reductionism
8Five-Year Plan for the Emergent Universe
- To communicate the principles and scope of
emergence to the public - Quantum Matter to Soft and Self-Assembling
Matter - Living Matter
- Social and Economic Behavior
- via the following seven outreach approaches
- 1. Highly accessible interactive web experiences
- 2. Science museum exhibits
- 3. University corridor exhibits and
installations - 4. Film and radio
- 5. Journal articles, pamphlets and books
- 6. CAMNet Materials for advanced middle school
and high school student - 7. investigations Moveable Feasts all-campus
events at ICAM branches.
9What Makes EMP Unique
An innovative partnership leading scientists and
education (ISE) professionals an innovative
partnership between leading scientists and
educational professionals collaborate at all
stages of the project communicate to the
general public frontier research on emergent
matter. Scientists eager to communicate
their extensive knowledge and research ISE
professionals have skills to communicate
complex phenomena to the public The EMP
collaborative includes filmmakers exhibit and
web designers science journalists ICAM
physicists, chemists, materials scientists, and
biological physicists ISE professionals from
Exploratorium (San Francisco) Science Museum
of Minnesota (St. Paul) Museum of Science and
Industry (Chicago)
10FY2005 ICAM Calendar of Events
2005 June 13-July 3 Novel Approaches to
Climate (with Aspen Center for Physics Aspen,
CO Organizers D. Cox (UC-Davis), B.
Marston (Brown) J. Harte (UC-Berkeley) July
11-13 Frontiers in Biological Physics IV
Signal Transduction and Protein Phosphorylation
La Jolla, CA Organizer S. Taylor (UCSD)
July 19-22 Emergent Matter Project
Advisory Committee and Steering Committee
Snowmass, CO Organizers P. Coleman
(Rutgers U), A.J. Hurd (LANL) D. Pines (LANL)
August 25-27 Frontiers of Science within
Nanotechnology Boston, MA
Organizers C. Chamon (BU), C. Brossman (BU), A.
Castro-Neto (BU), M. Naughton (BC), S. White
(UCI) August 27-28 Physics of Biological
Force Generation Snowmass,CO
Organizers D. Purich (U of Florida) A.
Ruckenstein (Rutgers U) August 28-31 The
Nanoelectronics and Dynamics of DNA (with I2CAM,
,Japanese Physical Society) Honolulu, HI
Organizers A. Balatsky (LANL), T. Kawai (Osaka
U), D. Cox (UC-Davis) November 9-10
Emergent Matter Project Steering Committee
Santa Fe, NM Organizers Piers Coleman
(Rutgers), Al Hurd (LANL), and David
Pines(ICAM,LANL) November 11-12 ICAM/I2CAM
Annual Conference Santa Fe, NM
Organizers D. Pines (LANL) D.L. Cox (UC
Davis) November 12-15 Biologically-inspired
Nanomaterials State College, Pa
Organizer Melik Demeril (Penn. State)
December Crystalline Organic Device Physics
Rutgers University Organizers A.
Ramirez (Lucent) R. Haddon (UC-Riverside)
2006 June 21-23 Frontiers in Correlated
Matter II Designing Emergent Matter Revisited
Snowmass Aspen, CO Organizers Z. Fisk
(UC-Davis) D. Pines (ICAM)
11Some Questions for Discussion
LANL Contract Additional US branches Far
Eastern branches-India, China, Korea, Taiwan
Limits to growth What hasnt worked-websites
plus??? Site and time for next BoG/SSC
meetingMay 2006?