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Calendar
The most recent public planetarium show (the final one of the 07/08 Academic Year) was titled
The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence,
and took place on April 11, 12 and 18, 2008.
Public shows will resume in September 2008.
Past Colloquium Schedules:
Spr 08,
Fall 07,
Spr/Su 07,
Fall 06,
AY 05/06,
AY 04/05,
Spr 04,
Fall 03,
Spr 03,
Fall 02,
AY 01/02,
Spr 01 and
Fall 00.
Past Nuclear Seminar Schedules:
AY 07/08,
AY 06/07,
AY 05/06,
AY 04/05,
AY 03/04,
AY 02/03 and
Fall 01.
Schedule of Liquid Crystal Seminars
and Chemistry Colloquia.
Announcements
Congratulations to recent PhD graduate Dr. Ramesh Subedi (pictured
opposite), and to his Research Advisor, Prof. John Watson, on the occasion of
the publication in June 2008 of results from the PhD dissertation of Dr. Subedi in the
prestigious journal Science. Dr. Subedi is first author of a high-impact
paper entitled Probing Cold Dense Nuclear Matter, which resulted from experimental
scattering measurements carried out by an international collaboration involving Kent
State and thirty other institutions working at Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator
Facility, Newport News, Virginia. The new measurements highlight the remarkable extent
to which the protons and neutrons that make up the nucleus of an atom are on average
configured as closely associated neutron-proton pairs. The special expertise of Kent
State Profs. John Watson and Bryon Anderson in detection of neutrons with high
efficiency, and in measurement of neutron properties, played an essential role in this
ground-breaking measurement. In the future, this basic research has the potential to
influence our understanding of nuclear matter in contexts ranging from everyday
materials to the exotic superdense matter found in neutron stars.
Since graduation, Dr. Subedi has been employed as a Posdoctoral Researcher at the
University of Virginia.
"The Hottest Research of 2006-07"
Congratulations to Research Associate Dr. Mikhail Kopytine, who has been
recognized by the periodical Science Watch, in their
March/April 2008 issue, as sharing
first place in their world-wide ranking of scientists with the greatest number of "hot
papers" in 2006-07. Last year, Dr. Kopytine was jointly #2 in this ranking, but he has
since pulled ahead of the long-standing leader, Japanese Immunologist Shizuo Akira. It
should be noted that the ranking used by Science Watch has no subjective input,
and is based solely on the number of citations received by papers published in peer-reviewed
journals. Click on the table above to read the full article.
Dr. Mikhail Kopytine received his PhD in physics from Stony Brook in 2001, and has been
employed as a Kent State Research Associate since October 2001. He works in collaboration
with other physicists at KSU's Center for Nuclear Research (CNR),
who in turn are part of a large international collaboration (STAR) that studies nuclear
collisions at Brookhaven National Lab (NY). Results from these experiments have already
been recognized as the Top Physics Story for 2005 by the
American Institute of Physics. Kent State was one of the 13 original groups that in 1990
founded the STAR experiment, which has since grown to include 52 institutions, representing
12 countries.
The cover story on the February 2008 issue of Physics Today is titled
The Physics of Sailing, and was authored by our departmental chair, Prof.
Bryon Anderson.
Physics Today is the monthly magazine of the American Institute
of Physics, which in turn is the parent body of the American Physical Society.
Each issue reaches on the order of 120,000 scientists and engineers working in
educational institutions, government and industry.
Congratulations also to.....
...Dr. Spiros Margetis on being promoted to
Full Professor effective from AY 08/09.
...undergraduate physics majors Christopher Bruot, Brian Dailey, Andrew Konya,
Danielle Lahurd, and Richelle Teeling, all recipients of academic awards
(see link for details and photos).
You can also find archived news & announcements from calendar years
2007,
2006,
2005,
2004,
2003,
2002, and
2001.
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