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Gerald Wilkinson Named Interim Dean of UMD’s College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences

Details
Published: Friday, June 02 2017 11:51

The University of Maryland announced the appointment of UMD Biology Professor Gerald Wilkinson as interim dean of the College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences, effective July 1, 2017.  

“A highly regarded scientist and administrator, I am confident Dr. Wilkinson will be an outstanding interim dean,” said Mary Ann Rankin, UMD’s senior vice president and provost. “I am grateful to Dr. Wilkinson for agreeing to serve in this capacity.”

Read more.

Jordan Goodman Named Winner of Yodh Prize

Details
Published: Wednesday, May 24 2017 10:28

Distinguished University Professor Jordan Goodman has been named the winner of the 2017 Yodh Prize for “outstanding leadership in the development of water Cherenkov instruments in high-energy gamma-ray astronomy”. The prize was awarded at the 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference 2017 (ICRC2017) in Busan, South Korea.

Goodman is currently the U.S. scientific spokesperson and PI for the High Altitude Water Cherenkov experiment (HAWC) in the Sierra Negra mountains of Mexico. Previously, he was co-spokesperson/PI for the MILAGRO Gamma Ray Experiment in New Mexico, where he and his collaborators developed a detector designed to measure the energy and arrival direction of gamma and cosmic rays via Cherenkov radiation in massive vats of water.

In addition, Goodman has worked on the IceCube South Pole Neutrino Observatory and the Super-Kamiokande Neutrino Experiment in Japan. Physics World named IceCube the 2013 Breakthrough of the Year for making the first observations of cosmic neutrinos. The Super-K experiment proved that neutrinos have mass and was the basis of Takaaki Kajita’s 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics and the 2016 Breakthrough Prize, which was shared by the collaboration including Goodman and UMD Professor Greg Sullivan and UMD Research Scientist Erik Blaufuss.

The Yodh prize was endowed by Gaurang and Kanwal Yodh to the University of California Irvine Foundation in 1998 and is given out bi-annually at the International Cosmic Ray Conference. Professor Yodh, a noted astrophysicist, received his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago, working under Enrico Fermi, and before settling at UCI was a professor at UMD, where he oversaw Goodman’s graduate work. Yodh’s many research contributions include extracting rising proton-air cross sections from the analysis of cosmic ray data and developing early transition radiation detectors for particle detection. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the UK Institute of Physics. Yodh is also an accomplished sitar player, and while in College Park offered a course in Indian classical music performance that helped launch the UMD ethnomusicology program. 

Senior Gregory Ridgway Named University Medalist

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Published: Monday, May 22 2017 14:27

Gregory Ridgway. Photo by John T. Consoli.Gregory Ridgway. Photo by John T. Consoli.

From publishing in physics journals to performing at an international piano festival in Italy, Gregory Ridgway’s talents are as diverse as his experiences at UMD.

Graduating with a 3.98 GPA and three degrees—in physics, mathematics and piano performance—Ridgway’s ability to think both logically and creatively will be the foundation of his ambition to become a theoretical physicist.

“There are so many different ways to look at the world,” he says. “I could never just settle into one.” 

A recipient of Banneker/Key and National Merit scholarships, the native of Silver Spring, Md., has applied himself on and off campus in the arts. An organist, Ridgway works as director of music at Ager Road United Methodist Church in Hyattsville, and performed at the Amalfi Coast Music and Arts Festival and the International Keyboard Institute and Festival. He played with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and participated in UMD’s Music and Film series, which sets new scores to old silent films.

“I’ve been treated very well by Maryland,” Ridgway says. “If I had the desire, they had the resources.”

He began taking graduate classes as a junior, and helped author four articles published in Physical Review D and the Journal of High Energy Physics. Ridgway worked mostly in lattice physics, which explores concepts such as subatomic forces, neutron stars and the dynamics of the early universe.

“The daily interaction with someone of Greg’s breadth of culture is a joy in itself,” says UMD physics professor Paulo Bedaque. “One should ‘discover something, learn something and teach something every single day.’ I know no student who embodies this spirit better than Greg.”

The National Science Foundation awarded a graduate research fellowship to Ridgway, who will pursue a doctorate in physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He hopes to one day make an important contribution to science and has found great joy working alongside brilliant people who are painstakingly doing the incremental progress necessary to understanding our world.

“I love the work,” he says. “Each small problem we solve deserves a celebration.”

Writer: Liam Farrell

University of Maryland
College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences
2300 Symons Hall
College Park, MD 20742
www.cmns.umd.edu
@UMDscience

Original story.

Physics Staff Awards

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Published: Thursday, April 27 2017 12:54

The Lorraine DeSalvo Chair's Endowed Award for Outstanding Service recognizes employees who provide benefit beyond their regular duties, promote positive professional and personal exchanges among colleagues, and work effectively within the Department of Physics and/or with outside contacts. Nominees must have been employed within the Department of Physics for a minimum of one year.

The Sibylle Sampson Award was established by Sibylle Sampson, a long-time Physics employee and valued assistant to former Chair John S. Toll. It spotlights an employee whose one-time accomplishment otherwise might go unrecognized. The employee’s undertaking will have benefited the entire Department or a specific unit, and shown creativity, initiative or self-motivation.  Nominees must have been employed within the Department of Physics for a minimum of one year. Two nominators are needed for the Sibylle Sampson Award.

The Staff Excellence Award recognizes employees who excel in job performance, provide a friendly and supportive atmosphere, and display a personal commitment to the Department and to positive workplace morale. Up to three awards may be given.  Nominees must have been employed within the Department of Physics for a minimum of one year.

 
YearDeSalvo Chair's AwardSibylle Sampson AwardStaff Excellence Award 

2022

2021 

2020  

2019  

2018

2017 

2016  

2015 

2014 

2013

2012  

2011  

2010

2009  


2008  

2007  


2006  

2005  

2004  

2003  

2002 

2001  

2000  

1999  

1998 

1997

1996 

1995  


1994 

1993  


1992  

1991 

1990  


1989  

1988  


1987  

1986  


1985  

1984 

1983

1982  

Clay Daetwyler

Brian Straughn

Jesse Anderson


Mark Conners

Lorraine DeSalvo

Bonnie Seal-Filiatreau

Pauline Rirksopa

Tommy Baldwin

Mark Conners

no awards

Jane Zhang

Paulina Alejandro

Nicholas Hammer

Jesse Anderson

Clay Daetwyler


Tuck Owens, Dan Margulies

Robert Dahms

Tom Payerle

John Cataldi

Mary Ridgell

Joyce Robinson

Margaret Lukomska

Tom Payerle

Pauline Rirksopa

Lorraine DeSalvo

Maurice Pairel

Loretta Robinette

Cassie Jones, Jesse Anderson

Dawn Leavell

Linda O'Hara, Betty Alexander

Bernadine Kozlowski

Geoffrey Elbo

Pam Solomos, Nono Kusuma

Jan Andrews

Karl Harzer, Brenda Dunn

Rose Otto

Pota Floros, Harriet Husman

Jean Clement

Michele Eastman

Elbert Barretta

Delores Knight

Rob McIntire

Naomi Russo

Dannielle Watkins

Samantha Suplee

Ayla Hurley

Paulina Alejandro

Logan Anbinder

Donna Hammer

Allen Monroe

no awards

Anne Suplee

Xiao Ning Zhao

Pauline Rirksopa

Bonnie Seal-Filiatreau

Doug Bensen, Scott Lasley

Loretta Robinette


Aaron McQueen

Kari Aldridge

Randy Holder

Donna Hammer

Sherri Menoes

Margaret Lukomska

Allen Monroe

Al Godinez

Tuck Owens

Ruth Zerwitz

Delores Knight

Norman Reese


Betty Alexander

Pauline Rirksopa


Pat Byrdsong

Josiland Chambers, Naomi Russo,  Bonnie Seal-Filiatreau

Lea Bartolome, Melanie Knouse, Allen Monroe

Melissa Britton, Josiland Chambers, Tom Woycheck-Gleason, Ayla Hurley, Bonnie Seal-Filiatreau

Janet Das Sarma, Donna Hammer, Kristin Stenson

Heather Markle, Don Lynch, Jane Wang

Jessica Crosby, Claudia Key and Kelly Phillips

Margaret Lukomska, Naomi Russo and Melissa Britton

Eliot Hammer

Amy Streets

no awards

Julie Callis

Christopher Monroe Enters National Academy of Sciences

Details
Published: Thursday, April 20 2017 13:28

Christopher Monroe, Distinguished University Professor & Bice Seci-Zorn Professor was elected to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences 2016. See recorded video http://www.nasonline.org/NAS154presentation.

Membership of the National Academy of Sciences is one the greatest and highest honors that a scientist can receive.  "The NAS membership totals approximately 2,290 members and 490 foreign associates, of whom approximately 200 have received Nobel prizes."  - NAS

Read more about Monroe's accomplishments.

More Articles ...

  1. Three UMD Students Named 2017 Goldwater Scholars
  2. 2017 NSF Graduate Research Fellowships announced
  3. Phillips named member of Mexican Academy
  4. DURIP Grants Awarded to Johnpierre Paglione and Mohammad Hafezi
  5. Wellstood named new UMD Co-Director of JQI

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Phone: 301.405.3401

 

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