Dear Alumni and Friends
This past year has been one of many
highlights and a key milestone in the history of our department. The milestone
is the beginning of construction of our new building this past August.
Construction has gone very well, and, as I write this, work on the third deck
is proceeding. Watch progress on our webcam at www.physics.ohio-state.edu. At
the center of the building site is a 180-foot stationary crane. In March of
this year I was fortunate to have the opportunity to climb to the top of this
magnificent machine. The view was spectacular on a cloudless day.
Hiring
of new faculty was very successful last year. P. Chris Hammel, formerly a
Fellow of Los Alamos National Laboratory, joined us last summer as Professor
and Ohio Eminent Scholar in Experimental Physics. His research program at Ohio
State is developing rapidly. See his interview in this issue.
Joining
us last summer from Caltech was new Assistant Professor Dongping Zhong, our
lead hire in our Selective Investment thrust area of Experimental Biophysics. His
laboratories are up and running, with a research focus on fast pulse laser
studies of proteins.
Our 2002
Distinguished Alumni Award was presented to Ren Jye Yeh, founder and owner of
Bason Computers Inc. of Chatsworth, Calif., a major distributor of computer and
electronic components. Dr. Yeh received his Ph.D. in 1982 under the direction
of Professor Philip Wigen.
A noted
highlight of last summer was the presentation of an honorary doctorate in
science to Harold A. McMaster, our 2001 Distinguished Alumni Award winner.
Please note the interesting article in this issue.
The
Physics Department was featured at new President Karen Holbrook's brunch prior
to the Michigan football game in November. The theme was "The Power of
Physics," animated by captivating demonstrations by Linn Van Woerkom. The
football team was duly energized, going on to beat Michigan and to later
capture the national championship. For the moment, the football team outranks
the Physics Department (24th in the nation and rising), but this is not the
case every year.
I hope
you will take special notice of the "Research in the News" section describing a
portion of the breadth and depth of physics research at Ohio State. Highlighted
are the research of Brian Winer and Richard Hughes on their search for the
elusive Higgs boson at Fermilab, that of Tom Lemberger on the unusual high
temperature superconductivity of the cuprates, and that of Art Epstein on
light-tunable magnets.
This
issue also contains an update on the work of Lei Bao in our Physics Education
Research group, focusing on response and feedback in the classroom, as well as
the story of the first African American physicist, as recounted by Ronald
Mickens during his visit to our department.
Our
faculty and students again garnered more than their share of awards and honors
as described in the news sections of this magazine. Additionally, take note of
a new section for 2003 on "Alumni in the News," this year describing Paul
Cover"s (B.S. 1955) work with the Inventors Network.
Society
of Physics Students President Becky Weber has brought renewed energy and much
increased attendance to student SPS events this year with an imaginative and
interesting slate of activities. A highlight is the reinstatement of the Sigma
Pi Sigma honorary following a long period of dormancy.
During
academic year 2002-2003, 23 new bachelors of physics (20 in physics and three
in engineering physics) left our doors. Of these, six are going on to graduate
school in physics and seven to graduate school in other areas, including
astronomy, education, mathematics, medical school and law school, while others
are going into the private sector. During the same period, we graduated 20 new
Ph.D.s, who have found jobs in areas as disparate as finance and national
security in addition to postdoctoral positions at other universities.
In May
of last year, 2001 Nobel Laureate Eric Cornell of the University of Colorado
gave one of the best Alpheus Smith Lectures in my memory. Speaking on the topic
"Stone Cold Science: Bose-Einstein Condensation and the Weird World of Physics
a Millionth of a Degree from Absolute Zero," he fascinated a large audience in
Hitchcock Hall with the story of his discovery, with Carl Weiman, of
Bose-Einstein condensation in atomic gases. This area, with its offshoots, has
become one of the hottest areas in physics, with implications not only in
fundamental physics but also for quantum computing.
Annual
events in the department continue to foster our commun-ity of scholars. The
winter party and the Women in Physics lunches are recorded on film for
posterity and displayed on these pages.
In
closing, I report recent and imminent departures from our ranks. Alan Van
Heuvelen, the senior leader of our Physics Education Research group, retired at
the end of December, taking a new post at Rutgers University. Retiring in the
same month was Shirley Royer, a truly indispensable member of our staff, whose
contributions won her a 2002 Distinguished Staff Award. Charles Ebner will
retire in June after a 35-year career as a fine researcher and teacher. Howard
Dyke will also retire in June after many years of valued service as a senior
design engineer in our van de Graaff Laboratory.
I invite
you all to visit the department and to see the massive new Physics Research
Building rising in the sky.
With best wishes,
William F. Saam
Professor and Chair