UC Davis REU Field Trips: 2023
Calaveras Big Trees State Park
The story of Calaveras is that a hunter pursuing a bear came upon
in incredibly large tree. Sadly, he returned to chop it down. In fact
a one-mile hiking loop in the northern part of the park has a collection
of trees destroyed by humans. The original tree wound up with its stump
as a dance floor and its trunk hollowed out into bowling lanes. Another
was stripped of its bark. The bark was sent east and reconstructed, in
an attempt to convince skeptics that these mammoth trees were real.
Since key nutrients are carried through the bark, this was a death sentence
for the tree, although it still stands (below left). A third tree had a tunnel carved
in it people or cars could go through. The tunnel destabilized it enough that
it collapsed in a 2017 storm. Despite the havoc humans have wreaked on the
1000-year-old trees, we saw many that remain standing in all their
majesty. The Palace Tree (below right) is the second-largest in the park
and a popular spot for group photos.
Lick Observatory
Our private tour of Lick Observatory had a bit of everything. We heard
about the science still being done on the observatory's many telescopes.
Some were once among the largest in the world, and some are large enough
to remain useful mid-sized telescopes. Unlike larger telescopes, they
can be used for measurements that require observations over a long time
window of a month or more. We had views of sunset over the south end of
the San Francisco Bay, followed by hot chocolate and a history lesson
on James Lick, who donated money, land, and his name to the observatory.
It was then dark enough for a viewing through the huge refracting
telescope.
McClellan Nuclear Research Center
McClellan Nuclear Research Center in Sacramento has the two largest
bays in the world for irradiating objects from a nuclear reactor.
It was built on a now-closed air force base and used as a non-destructive
method of imaging airplane wings to search for damage. The scope of the
work at McClellan expanded after the air force base closed and UC Davis
took over its management. A significant effort now is scans of parts that
will be launched into space, from NASA efforts to private satellites.
A defect in a metal part could be catastrophic, and even if a defect is
unlikely, the expense of a launch makes worthwhile to do a careful search for
possible problems.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Livermore Lab hosts the National Ignition Facility (NIF). Lasers tightly
focused on a small sample create a plasma that undergoes fusion. Despite
the small size of the target, the entire setup is immense, with 192
lasers shooting in from different directions. Last December, NIF reached
"breakeven," where the fusion reaction produced more energy than was delivered
to the target from the lasers. However, the output remains about a factor of 100
smaller than the energy needed to power all the lasers, so at a practical
level we are not about to see a shift to fusion energy!
Lassen Volcanic National Park
Scheduling constraints meant that we left for Lassen the
morning after the trip to Livermore. One of those constraints was
waiting until enough snow had melted that we could get to the spots
we'd like. As the image below shows, there were still some large snow
patches in early August. The students are looking at hydrothermal
features, although the only one in the photo is the strange
gray stream behind them, visible at the left.
Our hike up the Cinder Cone volcano gave plenty of chances to play with
volcanic rocks and sand.
The trip also included swimming in Butte Lake, groping through the Subway
Cave lava tube, and basking at McArthur-Burney falls, which dramatically
emerges from the many holes in a wall of volcanic rock.
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