Spring 2020 Newsletter
Message from the Chair

Hello PandA!

This is the second edition of our electronic newsletter. It's been an eventful time since the first one!

We just about got up and running in our fabulous new building PAÍS when the Covid-19 pandemic hit New Mexico and UNM. We had to rather quickly convert all of our classes to an online format, and start working from home as much as possible. Everyone stepped up to the plate: our instructors really took on the challenge of moving their classes online well, and our staff are managing to keep the department running largely from home and doing excellent work.

The biggest impact of the stay-at-home order has been on our graduate students who are conducting research in labs. They have not been allowed to come on campus, and in most cases they are unable to make progress on the measurements they need for their thesis work. This will delay graduation for many of them, unfortunately. And although they continue to get paid, it means that our Principal Investigators are spending their grant money without making progress on research.

On the brighter side, we have lots of exciting news to share with you this time. We have hired a new faculty member in Biophotonics, Tonmoy Chakraborty, who is a postdoc at University of Texas Southwestern and an expert in the exciting field of light-sheet microscopy. We look forward to his arrival in the fall.

We have also hired Jessica Dowell to be our new Lecturer for our introductory labs -- the position that was held for many years by Mickey Odom. Jessica has been doing the job on an interim basis this year and we are excited about welcoming her to our faculty in the fall.

With Diana Dragomir also starting her faculty position in the fall, we will have 31 regular faculty, equal to our historic high. With our lecturers, we now have 10 women faculty out of 34, nearly twice the national average for PhD-granting physics departments. We also had an excellent graduate recruiting season and we have a record incoming class of 19 this fall.

As always, there are many ways to help us reach our goals. A donation to one of our funds would help us continue to turn out very talented graduates and keep us on the forefront of research.

I hope you are staying safe and healthy. Please read on.


-- Richard J. Rand, Department Chair
Brady Spears Undergraduate Fellowship winner
Senior Brady Spears (BS Physics) has been awarded a Harry and Mabel F. Leonard Fellowship.
Celebrating the Class of 2020
Read about the graduating Physics and Astronomy majors and where they plan to go next.
 
Although we were unable to hold an in-person convocation this year, you can view the program and the video we created to mark the event.
2020 Convocation Video
Carlton Caves at CQuIC
This prestigious honor is one of the highest accorded to scientists and is given in recognition of distinguished and continuing achievement in original research.
Emeritus Faculty David Wolfe and Physics students in South Africa
Former department chair David Wolfe started a science teacher training program in South Africa in 2002. Find out about the challenges and potential of this compelling enterprise.
 
KRQE 13 talked with Chair Richard Rand and toured the new Physics, Astronomy, and Interdisciplinary Science building.
KRQE video tour
 
Artistic view of the angular momentum transfer along a chain of rotating nanoparticles mediated by the fluctuations of the electromagnetic field.
Professor Alejandro Manjavacas has been awarded a five-year NSF CAREER award for a project entitled Transfer of Momentum and Energy in the Nanoscale Using Quantum and Thermal Fluctuations.
Diamond Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
Professor Victor Acosta has received an NSF CAREER Award for a project entitled CAREER: Picoliter Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy with Diamond Quantum Sensors.
Whale Galaxy
International team of astronomers discovers giant magnetic ropes in a galaxy's halo.
UNM Observatory
The Observatory was open for public viewing of Mercury passing between the Sun and Earth.
 
A quantum computer
Q Hub membership and new faculty hire will build on existing quantum expertise and investments.
SQuInT group photo
The scientific program was notable with an impressive group of invited speakers and a record number of attendees.

 


Alumni Spotlight

In the Alumni Spotlight section we want to highlight great things YOU've been doing. Tell us if you changed jobs, or had a breakthrough, accomplishment or recognition you'd like everyone to hear about.

This time, you can read about Aaron Zimmerman's ('08) return visit to the Department earlier this year.
 
Aaron Zimmerman, '08, Re-visits the Department
 

During the weekend of February 6-8, 2020, it was our pleasure to host one of our own alumni, Assistant Professor Aaron Zimmerman (2008) from U. Texas Austin.

Aaron delivered a series of wonderful talks, including a technical seminar on Thursday and a colloquium on Friday in his area of expertise -- the burgeoning field of Gravitational Wave Astronomy.

On Saturday morning he delivered an outreach lecture on Gravity Waves to an audience of undergraduate P&A majors, engineering majors, and area high school students.

The program ended with a fantastic discussion of the science behind the movie Interstellar.

More Headlines
We're counting on you!
UNM Physics and Astronomy | 505 277-2616 | Email | Website
Facebook   Twitter