"Sweet is the melody, so hard to come by.
It’s so hard to make every note bend just right.
You lay down the hours, and leave not one trace
But a tune for the dancing is there in its place."
-Iris Dement
This is a slightly edited transcript of what I told the students in my alumni seminar series course when I took an open spot on our schedule this past spring. It's a set of lessons illustrated with stories from my past. Among other things, I attempt to expose some of what is usually unseen by students looking at a successful academic scientist. There's a bit of Q & A at the end.
Lying to a Nobel laureate
When I started in graduate school, I definitely wanted to do
theory. Laboratory courses as an
undergraduate, really, I hated them. In looking back, we had so little time. There
was not enough time to sit back and think about what you’re doing, maybe change
something, improve it. At the University of Chicago, where I was in graduate
school, there was a very rigorous laboratory course requirement that all the
theory students hated. I put it off as long as I could because I had heard my
friends complaining about how they weren’t able to get any of their real work
done during the lab course, so I just decided I’m going to avoid all that
stress. I’m not going to try to get any work done. I’m just going to take the
lab course. It was taught by Jim Cronin and Ed Blucher. All my time was available for doing these
experiments, looking at the data, and trying to figure out what happened, and
trying to make things work. Actually having the time to do that, I found I
really enjoyed it. It was an extraordinarily different experience from when I
was an undergraduate. Jim
Cronin was on a mission to convert would-be theorists into
experimentalists. I actually considered it. The problem was, I was in my fourth
year of graduate school and I had a lot of other stuff to learn if I was going
to be on the beginning of a successful career as an experimentalist rather than
a very short one. I looked into it. I spent a couple months down in Palestine,
Texas working on a balloon-borne microwave telescope, but I was convinced to
stay in theory, and that actually I could kind of work at this interface that
could be the best of both worlds for me, and I wouldn’t have to learn all the
stuff I don’t know about how to do experiments. That’s the path I went. I did a
postdoc at the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics and while I was
there, Jim Cronin came to the University of Toronto and, he has a Nobel award
in particle physics for discovering some particle. He came to the University of
Toronto and did a colloquium there and afterwards I came down to say hello, and
he said, “You look very familiar. You’re in experimental physics now, aren’t
you?” Here I am in the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics and, the truth is a little bit of a story, he’s a
busy guy, and he’s so happy that he’s recruited me to experimental physics so I just say, “yes!” Then, a couple years later, I’m giving a talk at the
University of Chicago and I notice as I’m about to get up and start speaking,
Jim Cronin’s in the front row. There’s no hiding what kind of work I do. I
started off the talk telling this story, and that’s how he found out that I lied
to him. He just smiled and laughed!
That’s a little bit about my path toward being here, and I
want to give you some of the wisdom I’ve gained over a couple decades, and one
of the things is I want to also expose some of my inner experience in doing so,
things we don’t often talk about, but I think are useful to know about. Before
I tell you about my weaknesses and frailties, I also want to establish my
credentials so you know something about who’s talking.
After joining the faculty at UC Davis I was put up for early tenure; two years after getting here, I had tenure. A couple years later, I was
selected as a Chancellor’s Fellow. Five associate
professors are awarded this each year, and I was one of them in 2004. I’m a
Fellow of the America Physical Society, and the citation reads, “For
motivating major observations (WMAP and Planck), developing widely-using data analysis
tools, providing insightful interpretations of data, and calculating the impact
of astrophysical processes on the microwave sky.” Just selecting my papers with one to a handful of authors: I have 18 papers with over 100 citations each. If
we look at large collaborations I’m in, there’s 20 more papers with over 100
citations. Papers with over 100 citations are technically considered "famous." I have many more invitations to speak and visit than I can accept.
So there you have it. I have some degree of accomplishment. I'd say there are those in my generation who have had more distinguished careers to date, but I'm no slouch.
My title today is, "Sweet is the Melody." This is from a song I love by a country singer
named Iris DeMent. The chorus is here on the board (and at the top of this article). Does anybody
care to say what it means to them?
Student 1: Possibly that we do
these things that are so very creative, meaningful, possibly very impactful,
but they sometimes just drift off into the air.
Me: (Laughing) I hadn’t thought of that one.
That’s definitely true, though. Any others? I promise not to laugh at you!
Student 2: Putting a lot
of work into something, and sometimes the excruciating amount of effort that it
takes to produce something good. I don’t quite get what the “leave not one
trace” part means.
Me: Thank you. To get at what I see in that chorus, let me give you another story. Richard Feynman, he would spend hours,
days, weeks, hard work, trying to calculate something, trying to figure
something out, and then once he finally figured it out, then he’d spend just as
much time trying to find out the simplest possible way to understand it. And
then all that was hidden, and he’d tell you, “Of course it has to be that way,
because blah blah blah,” you know. There was no trace of the hard work! All you
see is what looks like unfathomable genius. I think that often happens. We see
performances and we think, “Wow, I could never do something like that.” You
don’t see all the hours, the hard work, the doubts and the troubles. When you
experience challenges yourself, and you didn’t see the other
person go through that, it can lead to distorted conclusions about yourself.
So, we see the sweet melody, and if
done really well, if it’s good physics, it should look beautiful, and there
shouldn’t be any sign of all the struggle. It’s one of the great things about
physics, is just how beautiful understanding can be, how great that can feel to
achieve it. With the credentials I’ve mentioned, you’d never know that in 1991,
after my first year of graduate school, I brutally failed my candidacy exam. Leo Kadanoff, a member of the exam committee, felt compelled to let me know that there were more remunerative
careers than academic ones. That was a really tough thing to deal with. Clearly,
I recovered from it. Then, in 1995, months out of my Ph.D., I was struggling
with this calculation. I kept thinking I was on the verge of solving it, and two
months went by, the clock’s ticking, I’ve got a three-year position, and in
the first two years I’ve got to do stuff that’s impressive enough so that I can
get another job. And, here I was, two months in, beating my head against this
thing, getting nowhere, and I thought for sure I was headed for Wall Street. I
don’t know why I thought somebody who couldn’t solve problems would be successful on Wall
Street, but clearly I was pretty doubtful about making it in academia. Self doubt is not all in the distant past either. In 2011, just a few years ago, I gave a
talk at Stanford I was really unhappy about. I was feeling horrible about it. I
remember waking up in the morning the next day and instantly I had a diagnosis of what
was wrong with me, and a prescription of how I would rectify it. And also,
following that was, “I don’t want to live this way for the rest of my life.
Forget it.” Many times, feeling like I’m deficient in some way, has motivated my hard work aimed at remedying the situation. My accomplishments are partly driven
by fears of my deficiencies and not being good enough. It’s also out of the
love of the work. It’s not a simple thing. I feel really privileged to
have been able to participate in a time that we were/are finding out so much about
the cosmos. It’s been fantastically amazing. I've been able to contribute to the growth of a body of knowledge that will be in textbooks for longer than there are textbooks! But, it hasn't always been a stroll in the park.
Discoveries are out there just waiting to be made, or how I slowed down the advancement of science
This is the story of how I set back an important discovery by a couple
years. This was in 1994. Arthur Kosowsky and I were graduate students at the University of Chicago. He
came to me one day, and he was doing his thesis on cosmic microwave background polarization. He said,
“Hey, Lloyd, I noticed that scalar perturbations source Q but not U.” The Q and U Stokes parameters quantify the amount of linear polarization. Arthur was saying that scalar perturbations (density perturbations) source Q polarization, but tensor perturbations (gravitational waves), source both Q and U. He was really on to something because it turns out that
there’s a signature in the polarization pattern that’s distinctive, that isn’t
sourced by the density perturbations -- by exploiting this fact one has a much more sensitive means for detecting tensor perturbations. I said to Arthur, “Well that
doesn’t mean anything, Q and U are coordinate system dependent quantities.” And it’s true: if you choose one coordinate system
and measure Q, and then you choose a different coordinate system, that Q will
be entirely U. Saying that something produces Q and something else
produces Q and U didn’t make much sense to me because of that. Things would
have turned out quite differently if I had also said, “and yet, in your
calculations, this difference happens. What is that about?” If I had had that
response instead, then Knox and Kosowsky would be a very famous paper and
everyone would have been citing it with the recent claimed detection of this
signal in the microwave background on March 17th of this year. But that didn’t
happen. Instead, two different groups (one including Kosowsky, fortunately) published this important discovery in 1997.
Why was it not Knox and Kosowsky 1994? Why didn’t I ask that
question? I’m not entirely sure, but one thing was that it felt good to have
something definitive. I knew about these Q and U parameters, and it felt good to be in a knowing state. And yet there was this
puzzle that I didn’t follow up on: why Arthur was getting this difference. Why?
What’s going on there? It can be uncomfortable being in a situation where you
don’t know. I don’t know if that played an important part. I know another important
thing was that, when you’re studying physics in school, you learn Newton’s laws
and you don’t typically study Newton thinking “I wonder what Newton missed.”
You’re learning what you’re being handed as the truth. It’s a much more
efficient way to learn things, assuming that it’s all been worked out, and
there’s nothing new there, because for the most part, that’s the case. You go
through this whole training of everything’s all been worked out, everything’s
already been discovered, and then it’s hard to psychologically switch into
thinking there are things out there just waiting to be discovered, there are
things out there that nobody’s thought of before. For CMB polarization, the
first development of the theory probably went almost three decades before
Arthur was doing his thesis on it, but there was still something really
interesting to be discovered. You never know when that’s going to be the case.
Know that they’re out there, just waiting to be made, and exercise your
curiosity, and try to understand things! And, if some idiot tells you your
ideas are not interesting, don’t be so quick to abandon your potentially interesting idea; i.e., don't make the mistake Arthur did.
On the flip side of this: I did a
second postdoc back at the University of Chicago, and one day I went to
the printer, that a bunch of people used, to pick something up. There was
some paper there that somebody else had printed out. I started looking at it, and it looked really interesting, and I
actually ended up calling up the authors because I wanted to work with them on
this, and we did, and we published a paper that’s one of those famous papers.
Using those tools and some other tools I put together, and just exploring the implications
of the current microwave background data, (with these tools I could rapidly
look at different combinations of parameters, different things) and one of the
things I looked at was the age of the universe today. I was looking at
probability distributions for all kinds of things, and suddenly I had an age on the x axis, and the probability distribution was this big spike. I just stumbled
across this. I said, “Huh, that’s interesting.” I latched onto this as
something interesting and got an analytic understanding of it, and published a
paper on a more precise determination of the age of the universe. Actually,
that was one of the significant things in getting early tenure, because that’s
a result that a dean (from a different field than physics) can understand. If I had been younger and a little less
experienced, I might have seen this and not known it was something interesting.
So, discoveries are out there just waiting to be made.
Get comfortable with feeling stupid
When I was in my second or third year of graduate school,
my professor gave me some problem, and for this I was supposed to read this
review article about inflationary perturbations, perturbations from inflations
of the early evolution of the universe, and these fluctuations are the seeds of
all structure. Right at the beginning of the article, was this statement about
the most general types of perturbations you could have to the spacetime metric,
and it was just asserted like it was obvious, and I had no idea why it was true,
and I just stopped working on that and moved onto something else. That all went
fine, but what stopped me here was that it was really scary for me to look at
this thing that I didn’t understand, here at the beginning of this review
article, and there was something being asserted that I just didn’t know, I just
didn’t know why it was true, I didn’t even know how to start to figure it out. Since
then, I’ve learned from students who come and ask me about what they don’t
understand. It’s not that I never asked questions, I did, but there was
something particularly scary about this one that, subconsciously, I let it mean
something about me. I was afraid that I wasn’t good enough, and this struck me
as evidence that I wasn’t, so I just avoided it. Watch out for that. Now I
understand it, it’s not a big deal.
That was not following the advice, "get comfortable with feeling stupid." Here's a story where I followed the advice. I was preparing
just a few years ago to give a talk called “We Are Amplified Quantum
Fluctuations: The Story of the Creation of All Structure in the Universe.” One
thing that’s great about teaching and public lectures is that you learn a lot
putting stuff together. You realize where your holes are, one of the wonderful
things about teaching, is the rigor that applies to sorting out your understanding.
I came back to inflationary perturbations, trying to understand this process
well enough to talk about it, and realized that I don’t understand quantum mechanics. I don’t understand quantum field theory, and that’s really important to
understanding the quantum fluctuations in the whole calculation! I was blessed
to have colleagues here who thought about this a lot. I went to Andy Albrecht
and told him that, and he said, “Great! Come to my group meeting and let’s talk
about quantum field theory.” I did, and it was a fantastic conversation in
which I learned a lot, and it was really exciting. I could have easily been
afraid to admit to my colleague that I don’t understand quantum field theory. A lot of fun flowed from not being too afraid to expose my ignorance.
Learning never stops
Well, I guess it
could stop, but it’s much better if it doesn’t. You’re not going to finish your
education and then apply your knowledge. Even if you leave academia, that’s not
true (see the interview with Greg Spooner). I know much more about physics, I have a much deeper understanding of physics than I did when I graduated with a Ph.D. I don’t know if that’s obvious
from where you are now.
Close doors, and watch out for your ego!
There are
only so many things you can choose to do, and some things you just need to let go
of, but it can be hard to do so. Instead of going on this prescribed work regimen to
recover from my troubled Stanford talk, what I realized was, fundamentally, I
didn’t care enough about the subject. I wasn’t interested in it enough. I had
done some work early on making predictions for the cosmic infrared background,
and it was fun. That was fun to make some predictions that no one had worked out sufficiently well before because the right time had not yet come. There was some interesting stuff to come
out of it, and I saw that the data we were going to have on this was going to
be really rich, and it was going to enable us to learn a lot about the complete
history of star formation in the universe. So I saw this opportunity to develop
that phenomenology so we could really make use of the data. But fundamentally,
I didn’t care about star formation. Figuring out the whole
history of star formation in the universe didn’t excite me. But, I was in this
position to kind of be a pioneer in this area. It was hard for my ego to let go
of it. The opportunity to be a leader in this area was seductive. I could write grant proposals, and bring in money, hire people, speak at conferences,.... So it was hard to
let go. I didn’t know what was going to come up when I did let it go, but I
did. Then I got curious about the impact of neutrinos on the cosmic microwave
background, and we did some work trying to understand that, and got really
excited for a while that maybe we were seeing evidence of some extra species of
neutrinos. That eventually led to me giving a series of talks called “Neutrino
Fever and How I Recovered.” It was a lot of fun, and never would have happened if
I had never given up on the infrared background. Have some courage to close
doors and trust that something else is going to come along. It’ll make you glad
you did.
Know something about the benefits and risks of work
Having a job is one thing, not only for income, but having
something to engage in productively is really important emotionally, to how you
feel about yourself. It’s extraordinarily valuable. There are huge benefits,
especially if you’re doing something you love to do. Now, doing something you
love is not something I put on my list of prescriptions for you today because you have heard it a number of
times. I am just taking that as a given.
But work comes with risks. The pull of
feeling valuable and the push to avoid feeling like an idiot, working really
hard on stuff because I’ve got a presentation to give and I don’t want to look
like an idiot, and also the pull of “I’m really eager to figure this thing out
and get this discovery.” Both of those, especially the fears there, certainly
for me, impacted the rest of my life. There were things in my personal life that
were difficult for me to deal with, difficult to face, and work was a great
refuge from that. It allowed me to avoid a lot of problems that I eventually
did have to face. Fortunately, a crisis occurred that shook me up and led me to
wrestle with the things I wasn’t facing. It didn’t feel fortunate at the time,
but it certainly was.
Pay attention
And then, finally, pay attention. This lesson is perhaps strewn throughout my presentation today. Pay attention to how you are judging yourself. Judgments just pop up, automatically. Neither give them too much
credence, nor just shove them away. Ask yourself, what if this
thing I’m afraid of is true? What would that mean? Be curious about it. “Why am
I having this feeling?” Get at least one person who you trust, who you can talk
to about these things, and know that other people are wrestling with similar
things, whether they know it or not.
That’s what I’ve prepared. Let me stop
there and answer any questions.
Q: How do you deal with the
competitiveness of academia?
One, by really being very competitive
myself. You know, a lot of the times, I started working on something because it
was an idea that I thought was interesting, and I’d develop it. How would I actually get it into a finished and publishable piece of work? It’s a lot of work,
finishing up a project and getting it out the door. A lot of the impetus for
that came from two things. One, being afraid that someone else was going to
beat me to it, and then secondly, I really became interested in something else
that I wanted to pursue, and I had the discipline to not do it until I finished
this other thing. I’m very competitive by nature, so I dealt with competition by rolling
up my sleeves and doing the work.
Q: Do you think it’s required, to be
extremely competitive?
I was just talking to a friend of mine
recently, an academic, very successful, who, for the first time in his career,
was feeling stressed out. I worked with him on something once and it was really
his main project, and I was frustrated. I was like, “Why are you not cracking a
whip on yourself and getting this done?” But, he wasn’t like that, and he’s
done fine. Do you want to comment on that, Steve?
Professor Steve Carlip: My impression
in Physics is that culture differs tremendously from tiny subfield to tiny
subfield, and that there are some things in which the culture is very
competitive. You could go into high energy experiments, that’s the way things
work. If you go into quantum gravity, which is my field, everybody gets along,
and there isn’t a lot of competition, but that’s because we all know that it’s
hopeless. Well, maybe not quite, but we all know that this is a huge problem
and there are only a few of us working on it, and there are very few
competitive people, outside of String Theory, in quantum gravity. I don’t know
how you find out before you go into a field.
Me: I’ve been really happy with my
field and I love going to meetings and seeing friends that I’ve known now for
decades, and even people that used to really aggravate me when I was in a more
precarious position, when you’re competing for jobs. I’ve learned to really
enjoy, and even work with them sometimes. As far as relations with other people
doing the same thing, I’m really happy with my field. It’s been a really nice
aspect of it. Now, there are times, especially working in a large
collaboration, when I’ve also been surprised at the degree to which human
problems can get in the way, things getting done, and the degree to which
having an understanding of people can be really helpful.
Q: About discoveries being out there,
and questioning the things that are given to us as truths, how early do you
think it becomes important to ask someone? Can discoveries be made so early on
using that method?
Earlier on, the chances are less. But,
I think if you attack things with the idea that I’m not really relaxing until
this all makes sense to me, that’s good training. Then you’ll start achieving a
high standard for what it means to really understand something, and you’ll
learn more. Now, there are only so many hours in the day and you’ve got other
classes, and you got the next thing, and it’s all a matter of balancing. If
there’s something about a particular thing that’s bothering you, making you
think that there’s something you don’t understand, you can go talk to your
professor or somebody else, and do it.
Q: I was hoping to get your take on
scientists, physicists going out into industry.
It’s just a fact that that’s where most
people go. Secondly, people go on to do a lot of interesting things and lead
satisfying lives. Most of them, if you ask them if they would rather be doing
what they’re doing or have an academic position, I think they’d probably say,
“Oh God no, I don’t want an academic position. This is so much better.” I’m
guessing that a majority of people would actually say that, and they’d mean it.
That’s how they feel. I think it’s really important to expose our students to
that. I think it would have been really helpful to me to know earlier on about
the diversity of options that were there. It would have calmed down some of my
anxiety. I’ve been delighted to hear from our alumni about the value they feel
their Physics training gives them. Obviously I’m delighted about that because
we’re part of that training process. Sometimes I wonder. I’m studying
Cosmology. I’m not doing anything useful, right? There is no practical benefit
to my work, and it’s nice to hear that I have some students who think there is
some practical benefit to the education we provide.
I once did some consulting work outside
of academia, and I loved it. I may do it again sometime. Right now I’m too
excited about my academic work.
Q: Have you had some specific instances
of self doubt, like that talk you gave at Stanford, but months or maybe longer.
How long was that amount of time?
That time in 1995 when I thought I was all washed up, that was at least a couple months. It’s
hard. I never did solve that problem I was working on. I moved on to a
different one and it turned out much better. So, remember: failure is an option.
If had stuck with it, thinking I’ve got to solve this problem or my worth as an
individual is over, if I had been that existentially attached to it, I probably
would have solved it, but my career would be over because it would have taken
me so long. Or maybe I would have solved it the day after I actually gave up, I don’t know.
It was at the very beginning of my job.
I knew I had more time there, and I moved on to the next thing and it ended up
going well.
Q: You talked about your grad school
experience. How was your undergrad experience?
I was at the University of Virginia, and
my first year of physics there, I was in a class that was a real range of
abilities, and the distribution of scores on the first exam was flat from 14 to
100. I had 100 so it was not the best environment for me to be stimulated. At the same time I was at university, and I was exposed to all
these other things, and talking with people, for the first time immersed with a
population of students who had intellectual interests, unlike the distribution
in high school. It was really exciting, all this new stuff, and I decided I was
going to major in international relations. I talked to my father after my first
year and he said, “Well, you’ve been interested in science for a long time. Why
don’t you give it one more semester?” I did, and then I loved it. It was
electrodynamics and special relativity. The relativity just blew me away. It
was awesome.
Q: Did you do research?
I did. I have a thesis titled,
“Electroexcitation of 6- States in Silicon-30.” This was nuclear
physics. We were scattering electrons off of silicon-30, and looking at the
nuclear transitions that occur. I really didn’t know what I was doing. But, I
learned some programming and it was an important part of the application to
graduate school. If I hadn’t done that, I wouldn’t have gotten into graduate
school at the University of Chicago. I remember taking the GREs. I came out of the GREs
thinking, “Gosh, I’m not going to grad school anywhere I want to go.” It ended up
okay. That’s some of my undergraduate experience.
If you want to go to graduate school,
getting involved in some research is a really, really important thing to do. If
you don’t like research, it’s a really good thing to find out. Of course, it
could be that you just don’t like that research -- it can be hard to know what lesson to draw from experience!
Speaking of different paths, and how
important it is to get A as opposed to B, there’s a really good TED talk, actually,
about cognitive biases that I think is worth watching. Then, there’s a talk by BrenéBrown at TEDx Houston which is about vulnerability, and really this is a very
touchy-feely thing, but I believe the vulnerability she talks about here plays
an important role in how you approach your academic work life. Venturing into the unknown makes us vulnerable. I also have a
TEDx talk which may have some overlap with what I have given you here.