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News from ICTP 105 - Commentary
A recent meeting in the Black Sea resort town of Varna marked a warm reunion between two old friends: ICTP and Bulgaria's physics community.
Physics on the Black Sea
Much more renowned for its beautiful
coastline on the Black Sea than for its elegant studies of black
holes, Bulgaria is nonetheless a nation with a surprisingly strong
tradition of excellence in theoretical physics.
Indeed the nation has enjoyed a special relationship with ICTP
dating back to the Centre's earliest days. Two of the nation's
most prominent physicists--M.D. Mateev, who later became minister
of education, and T.D. Palev, with the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences--first
visited ICTP in the mid 1960s, soon after the Centre had opened
its doors. Since then, there has been a steady stream of Bulgarian
scientists coming to ICTP despite Bulgaria's isolation from the
global scientific community, first during the Cold War era and
later during the post-communist period of the 1990s.
For all of these reasons, it was indeed fitting that ICTP's Office
of External Activities (OEA) served as one of the 'travel' sponsors
for the Fifth International Workshop of Lie Theory and Its
Applications in Physics, held in the picturesque Black Sea
resort town of Varna, between 16 and 22 June 2003.
The event was organised by the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences'
Institute of Nuclear Research and Nuclear Energy. V.K. Dobrev,
a prominent researcher with the Institute and frequent visitor
to ICTP's High Energy Physics group, served as the lead organiser
for the event, which was attended by about 60 scientists.
Lie groups, named after the famed Norwegian mathematician Marius
Sophus Lie, are a distinct ubiquitous subset of groups arising
in virtually all fields of mathematics and physics.
Groups themselves are fundamental tools of analysis for both physicists
and mathematicians, helping to shed light on the endless symmetries
inherent in nature that are present in something as delicate as
a freshly fallen snowflake and as mysterious as a tightly wound
multidimensional superstring.
When first discovered in the 1870s, Lie groups broadened our fundamental
understanding of crystal structures and aided in the classification
of particles. Today Lie groups play a critical role in studies
of quantum groups, gauge field and noncommutative field theories,
and supersymmetry. Such studies cross the boundaries between mathematics
and physics. As a result, the workshop in Bulgaria served as an
open forum where practitioners of both fields could meet to exchange
their ideas and learn from one another.
Bulgarian science, including physics and mathematics, experienced
a difficult period in the 1990s following the collapse of communism
and the inevitable difficulties that arose from efforts to build
a new society. Government funding, which had fuelled Bulgarian
science during the Soviet era, was dramatically cut and the stability
and respect that had been afforded the scientific community during
the days of communist rule was lost to the whirlwind of change
that took place throughout much of the decade.
Such cataclysmic change disrupted all facets of life, reaching
into the most remote corners of academia and scientific research.
Yet fears of a mass migration of Bulgarian scientists (including
its well-trained community of theoretical physicists) to the West
never materialised. Many researchers, despite the personal and
professional deprivations that they faced (draconian pays cuts,
a dramatic deterioration in working conditions, and a future that
for years looked bleaker than the present), stayed the course,
deciding that living in their home country was a more alluring
alternative than moving abroad.
One of the reasons Bulgaria's researchers decided to remain was
the 'open door policy' of ICTP, which enabled them to spend at
least a portion of their time in Trieste where they could continue
their research and interact with their colleagues. Indeed Bulgarian
physicists visited ICTP during the 1990s no less than 530 times,
as the Centre continued to play its long-standing role as a 'home
away from home' for scientists in need.
Today the situation in Bulgaria is improving--both for its citizens
and its scientists. In a sense, the Lie theory meeting was one
of a series of events designed to formally announce that the Bulgarian
science community has reentered the global scientific community
after an extended period of absence--a time when one of the few
welcoming pathways to science in the West was provided by an old
and dear friend: ICTP.
Faheem Hussain
ICTP High Energy Physics Group