2024 News
Valery Kiryukhin selected as the next Donald H. Jacob’s Chair in Applied Physics
(Oct. 17. 2024)
Please join us in celebrating Valery Kiryukhin's selection as the next Donald H. Jacobs Chair in Applied Physics.
The Jacobs chair is a highly prestigious University award that is intended to recognize the outstanding scientific accomplishments and promise of our best faculty in the field.
Valery is the 11th holder of the chair. Other members of our department who've held the Jacobs chair are Vitaly Podzorov (the current Jacobs chair) and Sang-Wook Cheong who was the 5th Jacobs chair.
Valery's appointment runs from Jan 1, 2025 to Dec 31, 2027.
Congratulations, Valery, on this well-deserved honor!!!
- Profile(s): Cheong, Sang-Wook, Kiryukhin, Valery, Podzorov, Vitaly
Eric Gawiser to receive a Fellowship with the Institute of Advanced Study
Oct 3, 2024
Eric Gawiser is one of five SAS professors to receive a Fellowship with the Institute of Advanced Study this year. He will be spending the 2024-2025 academic year pursuing research at the renowned center in Princeton. For more information see here:
https://sas.rutgers.edu/about/news/faculty/faculty-news-detail/five-sas-faculty-members-receive-fellowships-with-the-institute-for-advanced-study
- Profile(s): Gawiser, Eric
Eric Gawiser wins SGS Excellence in Teaching and Mentoring award
7-1-2024
Please join us in congratulating Eric Gawiser for winning the School of Graduate Studies Excellence in Teaching and Mentoring Award for 2024.
- Profile(s): Gawiser, Eric
Sabrina Appel Receives an NSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Fellowship
(August 15, 2024)
Sabrina Appel, who was an Astronomy Ph.D. student with Prof. Blakesley Burkhart, received a 3-year, $330,000 National Science Foundation Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Research Fellowship. Sabrina, who is graduating with an October 2024 Ph.D., is moving to the American Museum of Natural History. Sabrina will build upon her Ph.D. research to study star formation, in particular the impact of jets, streams of high velocity gas produced in star formation, on the gas clouds and star clusters in which stars form. Sabrina will also be working on curriculum development for high school astrophysics.
Liam McDermott Receives the NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship for STEM Education
(May 31, 2024)
Liam McDermott, who was a Ph.D. student with Prof. Geraldine Cochran in the area of Physics Education Research, received a 2-year, $340,000 National Science Foundation STEM Education Postdoctoral Research Fellowship, one of about two dozen awarded this year. Liam, who graduated with a May 2024 Ph.D., is now at University of Connecticut. This fellowship will allow McDermott to continue the research conducted during his dissertation investigating the experiences of neurodivergent physicists.
Physics & Astronomy Scholarship and awards announcement
(Apr 19, 2024)
Congratulations to the following recipients of the undergraduate scholarships and awards that were announced at the April 17, 2024 Department Banquet:
Richard J. Plano 2024 Summer Research Internship: Wai Chen, Sidharth Raj, Zhongming Sun
Mary Wheeler Wigner Memorial Scholarship: Jeremiah Hou, Colin Macrie
Herman Y. Carr Scholarship: Darshan Lakshminarayanan, Aniruddha Madhava, Raymond Niu
Noémie B. Koller Scholarship: Raye Kessler, Emily Pham, Srushti Selot
Robert L. Sells Scholarship: Ethan Kasaba, Hari Rajesh, Anish Suresh
Paul L. Leath Award for outstanding senior thesis: Suchindram Dasgupta, Udbhav Kaushik, Anish Suresh
Aryabhata Endowed Award in Astronomy: Zoe Rosenberg, Michaela Schwab
Mohan S. Kalelkar Award: Amy Flather, Manisha Parthasarathy
Richard T. Weidner Physics Prize: Cormac Grindall
Blakesley Burkhart, Andy Mastbaum, and Kristy McQuin promoted to Associate Professor
(Apr 19, 2024)
We are very pleased to report that at their meeting today, the Rutgers Board of Governors approved Blakesley Burkhart, Andy Mastbaum, and Kristy McQuinn for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure.
Congratulations to Blakesley, Andy, and Kristy on their well-deserved promotions!
- Profile(s): Burkhart, Blakesley, Mastbaum, Andrew, McQuinn, Kristen B W
Blakesley Burkhart recognized with 2023-2024 Board of Trustees Research Fellowship for Scholarly Excellence.
(Apr 12, 2024)
Blakesley Burkhart is being recognized with the 2023-2024 Board of Trustees Research Fellowship for Scholarly Excellence.
The award recognizes the exceptional research accomplishments of newly-promoted and tenured faculty members.
Congratulations to Blakesley for this well-earned recognition of her excellence in teaching/mentoring, scholarship, and service.
- Profile(s): Burkhart, Blakesley
Physics & Astronomy promo video
(Apr 12, 2024)
We've just produced a new promo video.
Kristy McQuinn interviewed about her recent paper using James Webb Space Telescope Early Release data
(March 5, 2024)
In the category of "when it rains, it pours". Kristy is in the news again today!
An interview with the AAS Journal Author Series on her recent JWST paper on the star formation history of a nearby dwarf went live on YouTube here:
The goal of the AAS Journal Author Series is to connect authors with their article, their human story, and the larger astronomy community.
Congratulations again Kristy!
- Profile(s): McQuinn, Kristen B W
Kristy McQuinn in the News!
March 4, 2024
Kristy McQuinn, Assistant Professor in the astronomy group, has been in the news lately for her appointment as the new Mission Head for NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. This is NASA's next great space telescope after the Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space Telescope. Kristy remains a professor at Rutgers (currently taking a leave of absence for the year) and will be at Rutgers through the spring semester.
Today she was interviewed on "Good Day Philadelphia" https://www.fox29.com/video/1420461
and there's a Rutgers Today story too:https://www.rutgers.edu/news/rutgers-astronomer-named-mission-head-science-operations-center-nasas-next-space-telescope?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=rutgerstoday&utm_content=Achievements
Congratulations, Kristy!
The new telescope is named after Nancy Grace Roman (1925-2018), who was a prominent 20th century astronomer. She obtained her astronomy PhD in 1949 from the University of Chicago. She did highly recognized work on stellar spectroscopy at Yerkes Observatory and radio astronomy while at the Naval Research Lab. In 1959 she moved to NASA as the head of observational astronomy, where she essentially built support for NASA's space program among the astronomy community. One of her major legacies is the Hubble Space Telescope, the last NASA project she was closely involved in. It is a fitting tribute that NASA in 2020 decided to name the Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope after Nancy Grace Roman.
- Profile(s): McQuinn, Kristen B W
Andrew Baker Selected as a 2024 Fellow of the American Astronomical Society
(Feb 1, 2024)
Professor Andrew Baker has been selected as a 2024 Fellow of the American Astronomical Society. This honor is bestowed on less than 0.5% of AAS’s membership each year and this is only the 5th class of AAS Fellows. Andrew joins Rachel Somerville (2020), Jerry Sellwood (2020), and Jack Hughes (2021) as AAS Fellows!
Andrew's citation reads:
"For essential work in fundamental radio and submillimeter studies of dusty star-forming galaxies at high redshift, leadership of international collaborations, an exemplary record of service to the field, and inspirational mentorship to the next generation of astrophysicists."
Follow the link to the press release at the AAS:
https://aas.org/press/aas-names-21-new-fellows-2024
Congratulations to Andrew on this honor!
- Profile(s): Baker, Andrew J.
Front page NY Times article features work of Viraj Pandya (2013 Rutgers bachelor's degree) on galaxies with JWST
Jan 6, 2024
The front page of today's NY Times features an article (under the fold) on work led by former Rutgers undergraduate (BS 2013), Viraj Pandya.
The study, based on observations taken by the James Webb Space Telescope, shows that galaxies in the early universe do not have the shape expected based on currently favored theories of galaxy formation under the standard cosmological model. This work has potential implications for the nature of dark matter and modifications to early universe cosmology. Before jumping to such exotic ideas, though, astronomers need to be much more confident about the behavior of gas, turbulence, heating and cooling, and other elements of the "gastrophysics" of matter in the early universe that influence star and galaxy formation.
- Profile(s): Jha, Saurabh W.