Jan. 7th, 2007

We are feeling a bit bored, cold, lonely, and miserable. Mostly cold. The house where we are staying is unheated, and in any case our room is more of an "enclosed porch," and so it is with some irony that we are wistful for our heated-to-65-degrees home in Rochester. Sleeping beside a wood burning stove actually sounds quite appealing, out of place though it may seem for Southern California.

As for the rest: we are looking forward to getting more established here and being busy again. The house we're moving into will be available on Monday or Tuesday, and it is heated, albeit poorly. As an added bonus we'll finally be able to unload our car, which has contained All Of Our Worldly Possessions for a whole month now, freeing up some seats in it to carry around our soon-to-be-met friends on our soon-to-be-had camping trips in the deserts and mountains.

Possible agenda for tomorrow:
  • Flea market at Pasadena City College (PCC)
  • Eat at Fox's or Andy's, two reputed diner-like establishments here in Pasadena. (Oddly enough when I googled for Fox's, the first link was to a diner by the same name in Rochester.)
  • Possibly visit my grandparents in Ventura county
Feeling the time was ripe, on Friday I reported for duty at Caltech, only to find that there is much "rigamarole" that must be completed before I can start "officially." There are all sorts of appointments to be had: a laser safety training, an eyes examination (in case the laser safety doesn't work out?), even a talk about my research (terrifying), in addition to the usual HR stuff.

Appointments made, I went to the "40 Meter Lab," which is where I'll be working, to meet the people I'll be working with. My advisor here, Rana, is a brand new professor here, formerly one of LIGO's star grad students. As an undergraduate he worked on LIGO optics at the University of Florida; then he worked on LIGO as a graduate student at MIT (spending a year at LIGO Livingston in Louisiana in the process), and then, as far as I can tell, he was immediately snapped up in a professorial position by Caltech. He won a LIGO prize for his thesis. He's enthusiastic about LIGO, to say the least, and he's also extremely friendly. So that all bodes very well.

Apparently the lab folks like to work a pretty late schedule, like noon to ten pm or something. This might be due in part to the lower ambient seismic noise after working hours. Or maybe just usual science-late-hours. I was a bit surprised because I think at the observatories they work a stricter (earlier) schedule. On the upside, maybe I can attend the geophysics or geobiology course (9 and 10 am) "under the radar;" on the downside, it would be nice to be home in the evenings.

Bree and I also met up with Toyoko ([livejournal.com profile] toyoko_o), a friend from my early years at Berkeley. She graduated from there (PhD in physics) and is now a post-doc here at Caltech! Moreover, she grew up in nearby Monterey Park, so she knows the area. Adventures!

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