Johnpierre Paglione Receives DOE Early Career Award

Johnpierre Paglione was one of 65 scientists from across the nation selected to receive a prestigious U.S. Department of Energy Early Career Award for "Non‐Centrosymmetric Topological Superconductivity." The award supports the development of individual research programs of outstanding scientists early in their careers and stimulates research careers in the disciplines supported by the DOE Office of Science.

Professor Paglione is a condensed matter experimentalist and a member of the Center for Nanophysics and Advanced Materials (CNAM). His research interests include cuprate and iron-based superconductivity and magnetism, quantum criticality and strongly correlated electron phenomena, and the new field of topological insulator research.

For more information, vist: http://science.energy.gov/early-career/

Johnpierre Paglione

Min Ouyang Receives Scialog Award

Associate Professor Min Ouyang has received one of the five Scialog Awards sponsored by the Research Corporation for Science Advancement The Scialog (short for science dialog) awards support innovative research in the area of solar energy conversion.

Ouyang is attempting to understand certain aspects of an unusual phenomenon, generally known as plasmonics, as they occur in exceptionally tiny objects called nanostructures. His proposal was titled, "Probing Fundamental Light-Matter Interactions in Colloidal Hybrid Quantum Structures for Novel Plasmon-Enhanced Solar Energy Conversion."

ouyang

Gates Awarded 2013 Mendel Medal

Renowned University of Maryland theoretical physicist Sylvester James "Jim" Gates, Jr., Ph.D., has been awarded the 2013 Mendel Medal by Villanova University in recognition of his influential work in supersymmetry, supergravity and string theory, as well as his advocacy for science and science education in the United States and abroad. The Mendel Medal, established in 1928 by the Board of Trustees of Villanova University, honors pioneering scientists who have demonstrated, by their lives and their standing before the world as scientists, that there is no intrinsic conflict between science and religion.

Read More