Thursday, March 27, 2008

New Ride + Road Trip = New Life @ Midland



It's still the non-typical midwestern march weather, going up and down from 20s to 30s, an inch of snow or two. I am relocated to where my job is, Midland, michigan. To save some breath explaining where this little town of ~60k population is, here is the link. Yali and I started out from st louis, missouri in the morning. We were pretty at leisure the whole trip, even visited the Indiana dunes state park. Although the michigan lake was still all frozen and covered by snow. The first day evening we arrived at Ann Arbor, MI, the college town where U. of Michigan is located. It was about 10 O'clock in the evening, we were lucky enough to find a restaurant opened that late on the main street, the mongolian barbecue. The next day, we walked around ann arbor. Basically, its a pretty neat town, very similar to madison, WI, except without lakes. The Main street, Liberty street and the State street are the main business districts next to the campus. It was a very cold day. Yali and I managed to took a handful of photos of the campus. Due to the extreme weather condition, some pics of her are too twisted to shown. Overall, the campus of the U. of Michigan is very compact, with a large number of buildings densely populated. There are 5 or 6 chinese restaurant, we went to one of them called Jing Hua Xiao Lou for lunch. The food tastes OK, comparable to the quality in urbana, IL.

We left Ann arbor and hit an outlet shopping mall in Howell, 30 mins north of Ann arbor. On our way out to Midland, we were caught by a big snow. Oh, hey, in case you guys didn't see the picture above. It's my new vehicle, the 2009 (yes, 9) Subaru Forester. It's redesigned model. I was the first batch of people who bought it. The SUV has an electronic stability control, in combination with its famous all-wheel-drive technology, making it super stable in condition like snow and rain.

After moving into my new apartment in midland, We drove off to see the shoreline of the Lake Huron, which is within 1 hr from midland. Below is a pic of Yali's twisted face due to the harsh weather and the beautiful scene behind her.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Surface contraction work is covered by press




The surface contraction work, a collective result among Jim, Ruoshi, Dr. Tao, Dr. Menards, Prof. Nuzzo and me, has been selected as the cover for the April issue of Nature Materials, a premier journal in materials science. The work is also recently covered by the Illinois News. Check it out. For those of you who are curious why these photos are always shooted from top down, I have answer. The photographer who took my picture told me secretly: "Professors are typically old and fat, shooting the picture from the top would make them look better in the picture".

Science v.s. Engineering

John Rogers, a professor of Materials Science in Illinois, had gave a talk on how he spinned off a company from his research. At the end of the talk, he concluded with his favorite quote regarding science and engineering. It's from the famous scientist and engineer Theodore von Kármán:

Scientists discover the world that already exists;
Engineers create a world that has never been there.


Something to think about.

Graduation



If there are a few moments in my life when I can't help crying and hard to forget. This must be one of them. On March 14th, I said "good bye" to my group members and my advisor, Jim. This moment marks a point where I finally head out the ivory tower and walk into the real world. Yes, I graduate with my Ph.D. finally!

It's not an award or anything worth bragging, but finishing my degree reminds me of the oscar. Every time an award winner walk onto the podium and have to say something, he or she typically starts with "I want to thank...". I always thought it's a routine thing, hardly from the heart. It turns out, I was wrong.

I experienced such a moment last week, when I finished the defense and finally deposited my thesis. The format-checking guy in the thesis office put a stamp on my thesis, and said to me: "congratulation, you are a doctor now!" I walked out of the office, unreacted, but when I walked outside,
and saw a bunch of undergrads on the quad, I felt something profound has happened in my heart. I realized, I am not longer a student. From the elementary school to graduate school, I have always been a student. It's like I have been a student for my whole life. It doesn't feel good when someone strip the right off me in a sudden.

Being at school it's not an easy task, to many people. I am one of those lucky guys who can survive, or even kind of enjoy school for such an extended period of time. Not because I am smart. Some people still consider us a loser for getting a phd. I am just an average person. It's because, and now I know that, I have never been alone. There are always people who love me, support me and are willing to help me. My parents, my sister, my girlfriend are people who are always there when I need them. My advisor, Jim, has been the best teacher I have ever met. I learned tremendously from the members in my group, and from the great staff in the MRL. These people have shaped me, and I owe who I am to all of them. I now understand that those oscar winners might not be pretending to thank somebodies. It's simply an impluse from everyone's soul that, when you have achieved something great, you think of those who made this possible.

I am going to open a new chapter in my life. I hope my blog can be updated more regularly and more frequently, so that you, the invisible readers, can see how I evolve, and witness the ups and downs in my life. Do leave a comment if you are there. Don't you hate being invisible all the time:)