2002 - Department of Physics
Transcription
2002 - Department of Physics
® The Physics News 2002 Eberly College of Arts and Sciences August 2002 Issue 1.1 Carl Rotter Retires After 36 Years on Faculty C arl Rotter, professor of physics and an Eberly Family Professor for Distinguished Teaching, retired in May. During his 36 years on the WVU faculty, Dr. Rotter was named an Outstanding Teacher in the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences three times, a WVU Foundation Outstanding Teacher in 1987, and West Virginia Professor of the Year in 1998 by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. He has inspired thousands of students, has taught hundreds of high school teachers how to teach physics, and has served as a mentor to dozens of faculty members at West Virginia University. He teaches with passion, conviction, and energy, and will be greatly missed. The Eberly College of Arts and Sciences and the Department of Physics hosted a retirement reception in Elizabeth Moore Hall, on May 2, 2002, for Rotter, and more than 100 university administrators and supporters, colleagues, students, and former students attended the event. Eberly College Dean M. Duane Nellis remarked that Carl Rotter’s influence as an educator extends well beyond the physics classrooms of Hodges Hall. Dean Nellis said that Rotter “has left a lasting legacy of service to the state and beyond through serving as associate director of the university-wide Benedum project to revise teacher education and through serving as a co-principal investigator on two National Science Foundationfunded projects in physics education.” “Carl was especially committed to preparing new teachers to educate tomorrow’s youth. His efforts, while sometimes unheralded, were among his greatest contributions to our society,” said WVU Provost Gerald E. Lang. After completing his B.S. in physics at St. Mary’s University in San Antonio, Carl Rotter taught physics and mathematics in San Antonio and St. Louis for three years. He returned to academia for graduate school, and after completing a Ph.D. in solid state physics at Case Institute of Technology (now Case-Western Reserve University), he joined the faculty at WVU. Rotter’s research focused on the elastic properties of solids as measured by ultrasonics and neutron scattering, the latter at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. He supervised four Ph.D. and four M.S. students. In the late 70s his research efforts shifted to teacher education and teaching the basic physics course for WVU’s engineering students. He treasures his selection for many years, by the senior engineers in their exit evaluations, as one of their top five teachers at WVU. He was associate principal investigator (with Dr. Richard Olenick of the University of Dallas) of two large National Science Foundation grants, titled “Mechanical Universe, High School Adaptation (MUHSA)” and “Comprehensive Conceptual Curriculum for Physics (C3P).” He developed the CD ROM for the C3P project, which integrates physics pedagogy and content and is currently being used in high school classrooms in more than 40 states. Rotter plans to remain active in teacher education through his continuing development of Web-based course materials designed for distance learning by high school science teachers in West Virginia and surrounding states. In This Issue 2 Past Chair’s Corner 3 New Chair’s Corner 3 Brian Kent Wins Goldwater 4, 6 Featured Research • What is so attractive about magnetism? • Molecular-dynamics simulations 4 Faculty Research 6 Faculty Highlights Nearly 100 university administrators, colleagues, former students, members of the state’s education community, and others celebrated the distinguished career of Physics Professor Carl A. Rotter, who held the title of Eberly Family Professor for Outstanding Teaching since 1996. Rotter (standing, center) is shown with (standing, left to right) Eberly College Dean M. Duane Nellis, WVU Provost Gerald E. Lang, WVU President David C. Hardesty Jr., Physics Chair Larry E. Halliburton, and WVU benefactors Carolyn Eberly Blaney and W. Gerald Blaney (both seated). 2 The Past Chair’s Corner A special hello to all of our physics graduates and friends. I am very happy to be able to give you an update on the department. Let me start by saying that some things never change and other things change completely. What has not changed is the friendly nature of our Physics Department, where every student knows every faculty member. Each student gets a lot of personal attention from faculty and staff, and we all form a close-knit family. We are proud that we are continuing to maintain this Larry E. Halliburton “small” department atmosphere with a clear emphasis on taking students, at whatever level of ability, and giving them an opportunity to transform themselves into productive scientists. We have had many success stories over the years. But let’s also look at the changes. The Physics Department has grown over the last decade into one of the most dynamic and productive departments in the nation. Not only are we recognized for our outstanding teachers, but we also have developed a very strong research program. Many of the seeds for this progress were planted in earlier years by faculty such as Professors Vehse, Seehra, Rotter, Montano, and Cooper. Their efforts and those of many other faculty have now reached maturity. It goes without saying, of course, that much of our success is a result of the immense amount of hard work done by our students. There is no doubt that this is a department on the move. More than a third of our present faculty have been recognized by the Eberly College and the University for their teaching excellence. Research funding from industry and federal agencies has reached an all-time high this year of $3.1 million, and our graduate program is increasing in size and attracting outstanding students. Clearly, an energized faculty are making their presence known, and physics as a profession is doing well. Our undergraduate program deserves special mention. As has been a longstanding tradition, the quality of our undergraduate students is extremely high. Jamal Derekshan, who graduated in May 2002, was one of only eight graduating seniors (six from the Eberly College) to be named to the Order of Augusta, the University’s top honor for undergraduates. This award is based on academic achievements, leadership, and good citizenship. Brian Kent, a rising senior, received a prestigious Goldwater Scholarship for the upcoming year. This is a national award with a strong emphasis on research. In addition, the local chapter of the Society of Physics Students (SPS) and Sigma Pi Sigma (the national physics honorary society) continue to be very active. They have established an undergraduate study room in Hodges Hall and have made trips to regional industries. An annual ski trip is a highlight of each year. When you get the opportunity, please stop and visit the department. We would like to show you some of the new research labs, describe our latest projects, and introduce you to faculty, staff, and our current students. Also, please drop us a line and let us know how your careers and lives are advancing. Best regards, Larry E. Halliburton Editor’s Note: Larry Halliburton announced that he would step down as chair of the department on June 30, 2002, to allow him to spend more time on his prosperous research program. During his 12-year tenure as chair, the external research support of the department has grown steadily. We greatly appreciate Larry’s many contributions to this department, and his tireless efforts in strengthening it. An internal search led by M. Duane Nellis, dean of the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, identified a new chair, Earl Scime, who has agreed to succeed Larry Halliburton and assumed his new duties on July 1. Earl boasts a strong research program and is one of our best teachers, having won the WVU Foundation Outstanding Teaching Award. The faculty, staff, and students enthusiastically support Earl’s selection as chair. M. Duane Nellis (left), dean of the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, presented the college’s Outstanding Staff Award to three staff members during the college’s annual Weekend of Honors Recognition Ceremony and Brunch on April 13, in the Mountainlair Ballrooms. This year’s recipients included Charles “Chuck” E. Sicina, lab instrument specialist, Department of Physics; Ann M. Levine, program manager, Department of Political Science; and Pamela A. Otto (right), senior administrative secretary, Institute for Technology and Industrial Archaeology. These individuals also were recognized at the college’s annual Staff Appreciation Lunch in May. Congratulations, Chuck! Longtime Staff Member Charles Sicina Retires Charles Sicina, laboratory instrument specialist, retired after serving for 25 years as a staff member for the Physics Department. Mr. Sicina is ready to devote more time to his community interests and to his music. He has been a tremendous asset to this department, overseeing the computer networks and repairing laboratory equipment. He will be greatly missed by all in the department. Known around the department as “Chuck,” he grew up in the coal fields of southwestern Pennsylvania during WWII. He did “very much hard work” on his family farm and on other local farms. After the war, the owner of a nearby radio-repair business inspired Chuck to seek a career in electronics. “I was always over there helping him after school and became so consumed as to how these things could talk just by plugging them into the 110 volt outlet,” Chuck says. In the late ’50s, he left high school and enrolled in Technician Training School, in Uniontown Pa., receiving a 1960 diploma in Electronics, Radio, and TV. From 1960 to 1976, he repaired radios, televisions, and refrigeration and air conditioning systems for Clar-mac sales in Point Marion, Pa., receiving a certificate for refrigeration and air conditioning training from General Motors in Pittsburgh. In 1976, Chuck joined the WVU Department of Physics, and, until earlier this year, he’d been here ever since. He proved to be highly versatile, learning (continued on page 8) 3 Physics Student Receives Goldwater Scholarship P hysics Junior Brian R. Kent, a native of Morgantown, is the 22nd WVU student to capture a Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship since the program was established by Congress in 1986 to honor the late Sen. Barry M. Goldwater. The award is the nation’s premier scholarship for undergraduate students pursuing careers in math, the natural sciences, or engineering. Kent is among 309 college sophomores and juniors from 50 states and Puerto Rico to be awarded the scholarship for the 2002-2003 academic year. This year’s Goldwater Scholars were selected on the basis of academic merit from a field of 1,155 math, science, and engineering Brian R. Kent students nominated by the faculties of colleges and universities nationwide. The one- and two-year scholarships will cover the cost of tuition, fees, books and room and board up to $7,500 per year. “I am so pleased for Brian and for the faculty members in the Department of Physics who have nurtured his considerable talent. Prestigious honors like this underscore WVU’s role as the state’s flagship research and educational institution,” said Eberly College Dean M. Duane Nellis. Kent is the 16th student from the Eberly College and the 6th physics major to capture the award. Kent has participated in undergraduate research with James R. Webb, a professor at Florida International University, and also traveled to Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona to study active galactic nuclei and analyzed and interpreted data. He plans to continue his studies this summer at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Greenbank. Following graduation in May 2003 with a B.S. in physics, Kent hopes to earn a Ph.D. in astronomy and astrophysics and pursue a research-oriented career at a university, observatory or other research facility. He is a WVU Foundation Scholar, recipient of WVU’s top academic scholarship, and was also named a 2001 Eberly Scholar. He is a member of Sigma Pi Sigma Physics Honorary and Golden Key Honor Society. Kent will have an article featured in an upcoming issue of the Journal of International Amateur-Professional Photoelectric Photometry (IAPPP), a publication that facilitates collaborative astronomical research between amateur, student and professional astronomers. WVU Physics Undergraduate Students Bottom Row: Anna Zaniewski, Cathy Bernaciak, Michelle G. Miller, and Berenice Constantino. Middle Row: Kera Averill, Bryan Smith, Jamal Derakhshan, Aaron Steele, and Brian Kent. Top Row: Eric Schires, Brendan McGeehan, Jaymin Upadhyay, Eric Golden, Mike Hetzer, and Ben Edwards. WVU Physics Graduate Students and Postdocs Bottom Row: Cristine Villagonzalo, Tatiana Seletskaia, Bob Spangler, Brenda VanMil, Wei Hong, and Alex Punnoose. Second Row: Hongtao Shi, Jorge Espinosa, Sean Finnegan, Lijun Wang, and Ning Ma. Third Row: Yikuan Wang, Ke Feng, Erie Morales, Sean Evans, and Xinghai Zhao. Top Row: YaxiangYang, Leon Muratov, Craig Swartz, Andrew Woodworth, and Yongquan Jiang. The New Chair’s Corner T he WVU Physics Department is arguably one of the most dynamic and productive programs in the country. Much of our success as a department and as Earl Scime individuals can be directly attributed to the support and guidance we have each received from the longtime department chair, Larry Halliburton, and our colleagues. My goal, as the incoming chair, is to continue to create an environment where outstanding research, teaching, and service among the faculty are recognized and rewarded, along with the academic achievements of our students and the hard work of our staff. Our undergraduate research activities, always a strength of our department, have garnered attention from within and outside of WVU. Building on this strength, I intend to introduce some new options for undergraduate physics majors who do not plan on attending graduate school immediately after graduating. Gently growing the undergraduate program, hiring a new faculty member to replace the recently retired Carl Rotter, and keeping the Physics Department steering a steady course will no doubt keep me busy in the upcoming year. Please keep in mind that we are always looking for outstanding students at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. And when you’re in the area, please stop by! I’d love to see you, to reminisce with you, and to show you some of our exciting new facilities. Best regards, Earl Scime 4 Featured Research: What is so Attractive About Magnetism? All matter is magnetic in that all materials become magnetically polarized to some extent in an applied magnetic field. This magnetic susceptibility is caused by electrons and the details of how they interact with their surroundings at the atomic scale. These interactions lead to different magnetic properties for different materials. The magnetic materials of most practical use are ferromagnets (like iron, cobalt, and nickel) in which all electron moments are aligned along the same direction; antiferromagnets with equal but oppositely aligned magnetic moments; and ferrimagnets with unequal antiparallel moments. The strong attractive magnetic force of the ferrimagnetic mineral magnetite or lodestone (Fe3O4) has been known for more than 2,500 years. Magnetic materials with specifically designed properties are used in many devices, such as motors, generators, transformers, audio and video tapes, hard disk drives, magnetic sensors, transmitters, receivers, and MRI machines. So what is new in magnetism research? Professors Wathiq Abdul-Razzaq, David Lederman, and Mohindar Seehra have focused recent research efforts on the synthesis of new magnetic materials in reduced dimensions (thin films, multilayers, superlattices, nanoparticles and quantum dots and antidots). Compared to bulk materials, magnetic properties at reduced dimensions and nanoscales are very different because of the dominant role of surface and interface atoms. A particularly interesting example is the exchange bias phenomenon, which is a result of interface, short-ranged magnetic interactions between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic materials. Research teams in the department are now investigating this in transition-metal-fluoride/Co bilayers, CuO nanoparticles and Co/MnPt bilayers. Giant magnetoresistance and magnetic tunnel junctions are additional focus areas. In these materials the electrical resistance changes drastically with an external magnetic field. These two phenomena are currently being exploited by companies such as IBM, Seagate, and Motorola in new data storage and sensing devices. A final focus of this research area is in the self-assembly of magnetic nanostructures, where ordered structures at the nanometer scale spontaneously form under favorable conditions. These self-assembling structures could be used in the future in the fabrication of high-density storage devices. The synthesis of these advanced materials at nanoscale dimensions is done at WVU using sputtering and molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) for preparing films, multilayers and superlattices, and the sol-gel technique for synthesizing nanoparticles. To determine what we have prepared, structural characterization is done with inhouse x-ray diffractometers (standard and rotating anode), electron-beam diffraction, scanning probe microscopy, and infrared spectroscopy. Magnetic properties of such well-characterized materials are then measured from liquid helium temperatures to well above room temperature using a 7 Tesla Squid magnetometer, a vibrating sample magnetometer, magneto-optic measurements, and an electron magnetic resonance spectrometer. The electrical resistance and Hall effect can also be measured in a wide range of temperatures and magnetic fields. Neutron diffraction information about these materials is obtained in collaboration with scientists at Argonne National Lab, Los Alamos National Lab and NIST, in Gaithersburg, Md.. Funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and the National Science Foundation is gratefully acknowledged. computer science and director of the Virtual Environments Laboratory at WVU. Alan V. Barnes, research associate professor, studies a range of problems related to condensed matter physics and the fundamental nature of physical law. He is presently making a detailed measurement of the momentum content of the static E x B field in a vacuum and plans to extend these measurements to material systems. Bernard R. Cooper, the Benedum Professor of Physics, specializes in condensed matter theory and computational materials theory. His group includes research coordinator Leon Muratov; postdoctoral fellows Arun Setty, David Djajaputra, Ning Ma, and Cristine Villagonzalo; and doctoral students Yaxian Yang (Ph.D. 2002), and Tatiana Seletskaia. He studies magnetic ordering of correlated-electron systems, defect structures in wide band gap semiconductors, and the thermo-mechanical properties, phase separation, and interfacial behavior of structural and magnetic metallic systems. Boyd F. Edwards, professor, studies theoretical nonlinear fluid dynamics and pattern formation, in an effort to understand transitions leading to chaos in fluids. With graduate student Robert Spangler, he investigates the influence of nonuniform fluid flow on propagating chemical reaction fronts. Edwards recently predicted that flow opposite to the direction of propagation produces a trailing cusp in the reaction front, but leaves its propagation speed unchanged. These results await experimental confirmation. He also studies the processes that cause rivers to meander. Martin Ferer, professor, develops fine-scale models of complex phenomena relevant to applied problems. His pore-scale models of two-phase flow in porous media are being used to understand processes where one fluid is injected into porous rock saturated with a second fluid (e.g. injection of water into oil saturated sandstone for oil recovery, or injection of carbon dioxide into the sea-floor to reduce greenhouse gases in the atmosphere). He also models the fracturing Faculty Research Programs Wathiq Abdul-Razzaq, associate professor, does experimental research in condensed matter physics, including studies of magnetic nanoparticles and the effect of magnetism on health and the environment. He collaborates with scientists from many disciplines including engineers, physicians, and physicists. He is performing concurrent, systematic studies of the atomic and magnetic structure of nanoparticles to expand the theoretical understanding of many phenomena associated with nanoscience. Martina E. Bachlechner, assistant professor, uses large-scale molecular-dynamics simulations to study mechanical properties of materials including interfaces. Her research assistant Andrew A. Woodworth performs atomistic simulations corresponding to experiments that he is conducting with Charter D. Stinespring, in the WVU Department of Chemical Engineering. For visualization and sonification of materialssimulations data, she is collaborating with Frances L. Van Scoy, associate professor of 5 processes that occur during the cleaning of filters in high efficiency coal-fired turbines. Nancy C. Giles, professor, does experiments on a variety of optical and semiconducting materials. The major emphasis is to understand the electronic energy levels caused by point defects, and thus tie optical absorption and luminescence emission bands to specific defects. Recent work includes identification of the dominant absorption bands in ZnGeP2 and CdGeAs2, which are nonlinear optical crystalline materials used for tunable infrared lasers. Her research group this year includes six physics graduate students: Lijun Wang, Lihua Bai, Ming Luo, Ke Feng, Anlin Xiong, and Nanying Yang. Leonardo Golubovic, associate professor, theoretically investigates soft condensed matter systems and interface growth phenomena. Fourteen of his 49 publications have appeared in the prestigious Physical Review Letters. Recently, he has shown that a novel liquid-crystalline phase discovered in DNA-membrane complexes is the first realization of a new state of matter with zero shear elastic modulus: the sliding phase of weakly coupled two-dimensional smectics of DNA molecules sandwiched between lipid membranes, that themselves form a layered three-dimensional lamellar phase. He collaborates with graduate students Lianghui Gao and Artem Levandovsky, and with former student Dorel Moldovan, who is now at Argonne National Laboratory. Larry E. Halliburton, professor, studies point defects in laser materials experimentally. His research covers the entire spectrum from the ultraviolet to the mid-infrared. He uses electron spin resonance to identify and characterize defects that affect the performance of optical devices. Among the materials being studied are photorefractives, scintillators, and nonlinear frequency converters. One application of these lasers is in the National Ignition Facility being constructed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Another application is infrared countermeasures intended to protect aircraft from heat-seeking missiles. His research group includes Nelson Garcez, Madalina Chirila, Wei Hong, Xinghai Zhao, Yongquan Jiang, and Sean Evans. Mark Koepke, professor, and his group published a joint paper in the Journal of Geophysical Research with a Swedish spacephysics group on space observations of velocity-shear-driven waves that cause the most common ion heating in the ionosphere; published a joint paper in Physics of Plasmas with a German plasma-dynamics group on nonlinear spatio-temporal dynamics during mode transitions; published a paper in Physical Review Letters that verified a new shear-driven-wave mechanism predicted by Valeriy Gavrishchaka, a WVU Ph.D. graduate and a former group member; and has published a paper in the Journal of Geophysical Research on the role of iontemperature anisotropy in plasma waves. David Lederman, associate professor of physics, studies magnetic nanostructures and their possible applications in sensor technology. His research group is currently composed of graduate students Hongtao Shi, Erie Morales, Yiquan Wang, and Jorge Espinosa, and undergraduate student Evan Morgan. Lederman is especially interested in thin films, nano wires, and dots and antidots whose magnetic properties differ significantly from those measured in bulk, three-dimensional materials. These reduced-dimensionality systems are fabricated and characterized in his laboratory using state-of-the-art techniques, including molecular beam epitaxy WVU Physics Faculty Bottom Row: Wathiq Abdul-Razzaq, Leo Golubovic, Marty Ferer, Boyd Edwards, David Lederman, and Martina Bachlechner. Middle Row: Arthur Pavlovic, Larry Halliburton, Mohindar Seehra, Art Weldon, Carl Rotter, and Jack Littleton. Top Row: Mark Koepke, Nancy Giles, Alan Barnes, and Earl Scime. Not shown: Barry Cooper, Dimitris Korakakis, Arnold Levine, A. Manivannan, Tom Myers, and Richard Treat. and scanning probe microscopy. John E. Littleton, professor, is the department’s only astro-physicist. His research is primarily in the area of stellar evolution. His current research with Earl Scime’s plasma group focuses on analyzing data from the Ulysses spacecraft, in an attempt to understand the energy balance in the solar wind. This is an important and poorly understood topic associated with the structure of our star, the Sun. A large portion of his non-teaching time in the last two years has been allocated to upgrading the department’s 14-inch Celestron telescope (atop Hodges Hall) with digital setting circles and a spectrograph for use in the advanced laboratory by junior and senior physics majors. A. Manivannan, research assistant professor, is trying to develop sensors based on boron doped diamond (BDD) thin films grown by microwave plasma chemical vapor deposition (MPCVD) technique. He recently applied these films for the analysis of toxic trace metals such as lead, cadmium and mercury and demonstrated ppb detection levels. With graduate student Carol Babyak (Chemistry), he is involved in the trace detection of mercury. His ultimate aim is to develop portable on-line detectors for trace metals in the flue gas of coal fired power plants and during coal processing. Tom Myers, professor, uses molecular beam epitaxy to investigate the physics of growth and defect formation in wide bandgap II-VI and III-V semiconductors which can be used as the basis of electro-optic devices, such as blue or ultraviolet lasers or detectors. His group consists of Dimitris Korakakis, Krishnan Balakishna, Brenda VanMil, Craig Swartz, Ting Liu, Huicheng Guo, Kyoungae Lee, Chunchuan Xu, Luke Holbert, Randy Tompkins, Eric Shires, and Ben Edwards. They study the modification of surface growth kinetics using non-thermal energy sources and gas-surface interactions and the formation and resulting physics of point defects. Earl E. Scime, associate professor, has ongoing experiments in both laboratory and space plasma physics. With his research team of Robert Boivin, Xuan Sun, Amy Keesee, Robert Hardin, Chris Compton, Anna Zaneiwski, and Brendan McGeehan, he investigates instabilities driven by ion temperature anisotropy in space relevant laboratory plasmas and participates in space plasma measurements as a co-investigator on the IMAGE and Ulysses spacecrafts. His (continued on page 8) ○ 6 ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ A. Rahman performed, in 1964, the first molecular-dynamics simulations of 864 atoms of liquid Argon using Lennard-Jones interaction to calculate self-diffusion and correlation functions. Through recent developments in efficient simulation algorithms on state-of-the-art parallel computers much larger system sizes are accessible. In 2001 A. Nakano and collaborators at Louisiana State University simulated a onebillion-atom ceramic-fiber nano composite using complex interactions within silicon nitride, silicon carbide, and silicon dioxide to study fracture resistance in this system. Until recently, large-scale computer simulations have been performed only on mainframe computers were accessible only to a few researchers. The enormous enhancement of computing power in today’s personal computers nurtured the development of supercomputing power based on commodity computers interconnected to a cluster commonly referred to as a Beowulf cluster. In the WVU Physics Department, Assistant Professor Martina E. Bachlechner, formerly a research associate in the Concurrent Computing Laboratory for Materials Simulations at Louisiana State, is focusing on large-scale materials simulations of interfaces and multilayers as commonly used in semiconductor devices. These efforts complement experimental research of Professor Charter D. Stinespring’s group in the WVU Department of Chemical Engineering. Since classical molecular-dynamics simulations can be efficiently distributed on processors with minimal communication during the calculations, Bachlechner will equip her computer laboratory with a 12-CPU Beowulf cluster with standard interconnects. Future research will incorporate quantum simulations that require extensive communication between processors, and Bachlechner plans to seek funding to acquire additional CPUs with high-speed interconnects. For general-purpose applications, the extended PC cluster can be used as a single high-performance computer. ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ Featured Research: Molecular- Faculty Highlights Dynamics Simulations Wathiq Abdul-Razzaq recently detected magnetite in the exhaust of diesel and gasoline engines. This discovery is important since magnetite inhaled by cell-phone users could cause health problems when it interacts with cell phone signals. Martina E. Bachlechner’s work with Frances L. Van Scoy and undergraduate students Shelma Martinez, Addis Perez, and Jesir Vargas on “Using Sonification Immersive Technology to Understand Properties of Materials,” was presented at the Immersive Projection Technology 2002, in Orlando, Fla., in March. Alan V. Barnes was awarded two patents in September 2001. One is for a unique microscope that images the secondary ions emitted when highly charged ions (Au69+, for example) hit surfaces. The second was for an instrument that makes use of these secondary ions to perform microscopic chemical analysis. Bernard R. Cooper organized the 2001 Conference on Computational Materials in Morgantown, West Virginia, and has attracted funding from the National Science Foundation and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research to study magnetic tunnel junction sensors and giant magnetoresistance. Boyd F. Edwards’ work with Duane H. Smith on meandering rivers was featured on April 5, 2002 in Physical Review Focus (http:// focus.aps.org/), which explains selections from Physical Review and Physical Review Letters each month for students and researchers in all fields of physics. Marty Ferer’s modeling of two-phase flow in porous media discovered a fractal-to-compact transition, which affects how flows of engineering interest behave. His recent investigations of the fractal limit of these flows (called Invasion Percolation) explained why this widely studied model has characteristic percolation-like fingers. Nancy C. Giles’ work on nonlinear optical materials for laser devices was presented in her invited talk at the 13th American Conference on Crystal Growth and Epitaxy in August 2001 held in Burlington, Vt. Her contributions on p-type doping in zinc oxide appeared in Applied Physics Letters, on Feb. 25, 2002. Leonardo Golubovic won the Marko Jaric Prize for Outstanding Results in Physics in March 2002 for his results in the interfacial dynamics theory and in the statistical physics of complex fluids, see www.ff.bg.ac.yu/Jaric/ LeonardoGolubovic_e.htm. Larry E. Halliburton is leading a multiuniversity $5 million research effort in chalcopyrite crystals used in nonlinear optics and spintronics, which was recently funded by the U.S. Air Force. Partners in the program are Stanford, Northwestern, and Michigan Tech. Mark Koepke served on the 2001 American Physical Society (APS) Division of Plasma Physics (DPP) Executive Committee, received a 2001 WVU Benedum Distinguished Scholar Award, and was selected as a 2002 APS Distinguished Lecturer in Plasma Physics. He presented invited talks at the APS-DPP Annual Meeting and the Japanese Conference on Plasma Science and Fusion Research. David Lederman received a $470,000 Air Force grant to study the possibility of using magnetic tunnel junctions as sensors for subsurface microcracks in aluminum. He has published several papers in Physical Review B, the Journal of Materials Research, and the Journal of Applied Physics on the growth and properties of antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic interfaces. John E. Littleton’s work on analysis of Ulysses data has been enhanced by a two-year grant from NASA that began in May 2002. During the summer of 2001 he was mentor to a local high school student under the NASA Science and Engineering Apprenticeship Program. A. Manivannan’s novel observation of mercury and other trace metals using boron doped diamond sensor electrodes was recently published in Analytical Letters, and was carried out in collaboration with a colleague at the University of Tokyo, Japan. Tom Myers presented an invited lecture at the First International Ibero-American School on Epitaxial Growth of Semiconductor Nanostructures held 19-23 November, 2001 in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Dr. Myers was one of only two invited speakers from the United States. Such structures are viewed as the future of semiconductor opto-electronics. Carl Rotter recently received an internal University grant to develop a Web-based distance-learning course on modern physics for high school science teachers. The on-line course includes an interactive, calculuscapable, mathematics interface and will be available in Fall 2002. Earl E. Scime’s work on ion heating and parametric decay instabilities in helicon plasma sources with recent Ph.D. graduate (continued on page 8) ○ 7 Missing Alumni ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ All contributions to the WVU Physics Department are greatly appreciated, and are greatly needed for: (1) graduate student stipend caps and undergratuate scholarships, which are useful in attracting top students, (2) renovation of the undergraduate study room, with new furniture, blackboards, and computers, (3) upgrades and maintenance of the Tomchin Planetarium and (4) research equipment for new faculty, which will help us to attract the very best new faculty. For those individuals who can make major contributions on behalf of the physics department, the following endowments are being accepted by the WVU Foundation through the Building Greatness Campaign: West Virginia University, a $250 million capital campaign that ends on Dec. 31, 2003. The foundation has raised more than $200 million toward its goal. Endowed scholarships and professorships: $10,000 textbook scholarship $25,000 undergraduate scholarship $50,000 graduate fellowship $75,000 presidential scholarship $100,000 academic programs endowment $250,000 university professorship $500,000 distinguished professorship $1,000,000 professional chair If you are interested in making a contribution of any amount to the Physics Department, please use the enclosed gift card and business reply envelope or contact Dr. Rudolph Almasy, associate dean for development, Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, at 304-293-4611 or at Rudy.Almasy@mail.wvu.edu. Thank you. ○ ○ We Welcome Your Investment in Our Department ○ ○ It is our goal to hear from all 335 alumni to whom this newsletter is being sent. Please share news about yourself, your occupation, and your accomplishments for inclusion in the next (second) issue of this newsletter on the enclosed card, or e-mail Sherry Puskar, alumni relations coordinator, at spuskar@wvu.edu. This information will be valuable in demonstrating to our students that a degree in physics at WVU can help to prepare a person for success in a wide variety of occupations. Such news is also valuable to other alumni who would like to know what you are doing these days. Please let us know about yourself and your successes! ○ ○ ○ ○ Alumni News ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ television series. The show discusses the mythology, history, and science fiction of Mars. Information about mission findings from Viking, Pathfinder and Mars Global Surveyor are featured. Comparisons are made between the climate and terrain of Earth and Mars. The show presents current thinking about the archeological history of the planet and provides a rationale for future exploration. The presentation lasts about 40 minutes and is suitable for general audiences of fifth graders and older. A copy of the free monthly planetarium newsletter, Mountaineer Skies, is enclosed with this first issue of Physics News. To make show reservations or to subscribe to Mountaineer Skies, please see www.as.wvu.edu/~planet/index.html or call Mr. John Hopkins, planetarium director, at 304-293-3422 ext. 1443. When you’re in the area on a Friday evening, please stop by and see a show! ○ The Tomchin Planeterium, in the Department of Physics, educates and inspires 2,500 people each year through a variety of shows that are free and open to the public on Friday evenings throughout the year. After each show, when the skies are clear, those in attendance are invited to view celestial objects first-hand through the 14inch Celestron telescope in the department’s observatory atop Hodges Hall. Built in 1952 along with the rest of Hodges Hall, and revitalized by a generous gift from Harold and Sylvia Tomchin in 1977, the Tomchin Planetarium is the broadest outreach and education tool of the WVU Physics Department. The planetarium’s next show is MarsQuest, coming in August 2002. The show is narrated by acclaimed actor Patrick Stewart, who played Captain Jean-Luc Picard on the Star Trek: Next Generation films and ○ ○ ○ ○ Tomchin Planetarium Inspires We lack current addresses for many alumni, and we would greatly appreciate receiving information that might help us to find them. A list of missing alumni by year of graduation is provided below. If you have any information on their whereabouts, we would be most grateful if you would contact Sherry Puskar, alumni relations coordinator. Thank you! 1941 Guy B. Clark, BS 1947 Guy B. Clark, MS 1949 Wallace A. Hurd, Jr, BS 1950 Wallace A. Hurd, Jr, MS 1951 Benjamin Reed, MS 1954 Charles S. Swope, BS 1957 George W. Reissig, BA Charles S. Swope, MS 1958 Charles D. Thomas, Jr, AB 1960 Daniel C Sullivan, BS Robert W. Summers, BS 1961 Charles D. Thomas, Jr, MS 1962 Joseph W. Martin, BS Daniel C. Sullivan, MS 1963 John R. Curry, AB Montague Brown Lewis, BS Robert W. Summers, MS 1964 Valentin B. Boelcskevy, BS George Robert Jefferson, Jr., MS 1965 Marlene B. Baron, BS James R. Herod, BS Carl Edward McDonald, BS Robert O. Null, BS 1966 David J. Connell, BA Robert F. Dickinson, BS Gary Edward Stout, BA 1967 David Lee Page, Sr., BA 1968 Roger Bussard, BS Gary Edward Stout, MS 1969 Erlvada Ann Crider, BS 1970 Russell B. Devore, MS Elmer D. Dickens, Jr., PhD James R. Lepock, BS William A. Tucker, BS 1972 Joseph Amb Borkowski, BS 1973 Charles D. Thomas, Jr, PhD 1974 James Elmer Galford, BS Kenneth Anselmo Solomon, MS 1975 Joseph Amb Borkowski, MS Narong Chaikul, MA John M. Lafferty, Jr, BS Robert Lee West, Jr, BS 1976 Donald William Fisher, BS Paul Stephen Silinsky, MS Robert Karl Tyson, MS ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ (continued from page 6) ○ ○ Faculty Highlights John Kline appeared in Physical Review Letters in 2002. The first-ever remote ion temperature measurements of the Earth’s inner magnetosphere, work done with graduate student Amy Keesee, was reported in Geophysical Research Letters earlier this year. Mohindar S. Seehra, a Fellow of the American Physical Society since 1984, was elected a Fellow of the Institute of Physics (U.K.) in 2001. His two papers with Professor Punnoose on the magnetic properties of ferrihydrite and CuO nanoparticles, appearing in Physical Review B in 2001, were selected for listing in the Virtual Journal of Nanoscale Science & Technology. Arthur Weldon received new funding from the National Science Foundation for a project titled “High Temperature Field Theory.” ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ Department of Physics Eberly College of Arts and Sciences Department Chair Earl Scime 304.293.3422 ext. 1437 escime@wvu.edu Newsletter Editor Boyd Edwards 304.293.3422 ext. 1433 bedwards@wvu.edu Alumni Relations Sherry Puskar 304.293.3422 ext. 1451 spuskar@wvu.edu I ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ group is also developing a portable system for laser induced fluorescence measurements in laboratory plasmas. Mohindar S. Seehra, the Eberly Family Distinguished Professor of Physics, experimentally studies the structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of nanoparticles and nanostructures. With Alex Punnoose and Seth Underwood, his recent work has shown that properties of nanoparticles (lattice parameters, ordering temperature, exchange bias, coercivity) change dramatically as particle size is decreased. With A. Manivannan, techniques to detect trace metals in solutions at the ppb level are being developed using boron-doped diamond films. Arthur Weldon, professor, performs calculations of how standard theories of elementary particles (quantum electrodynamics and quantum chromodynamics) will behave at extremely high temperatures. The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory is able to create temperatures of 1012 K for a brief instant by colliding heavy nuclei (Au with Au) at ultrarelativistic energies. The motivation for these experiments is to look for signals that quarks and gluons were unconfined during the moment of highest temperature. ○ ○ I ○ (continued from page 5) ○ Faculty Research Program ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ new technologies as they have developed, and serving as a wonderful blessing and asset to the department. Just prior to this retirement, Chuck received the Eberly College’s Outstanding Staff Award for 2002. Chuck has an amazingly rich life. He is a paramedic and the captain of the Point Marion Volunteer Fire Department, having served there for 33 years. He received paramedic training at Pennsylvania State University, Fayette County campus. He occasionally works as a butcher in a retail grocery and as a policeman in Point Marion. He has played his guitar in a band for more than 40 years. He has served as a member and president of the Point Marion Lions Club, and is a member of Masonic Lodge #459 in Masontown, Pa. He enjoys photography, hunting, fishing, and picking and eating wild mushrooms. He and his wife, Bonita, reside in Point Marion, Pa. They have two children, Christopher and Wesley. ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ I ○ (continued from page 2) ○ ○ Charles Sicina Retires ○ ○ ○ ○ 2000 ○ 1993 1994 1995 1998 1999 ○ 1990 1991 1992 ○ 1989 ○ 1988 ○ 1986 1987 ○ 1985 ○ 1984 ○ 1983 ○ 1981 1982 ○ 1980 Anthony J. Dangelo, AB Gordon C. McIntosh, MS Nejad Mohamm Taghavi, BS Robert Karl Tyson, PhD Linda Carol Wagner, MS William Dyson, PhD Rex Dale Groves, Jr., BS Alfred Michael, MS John Montfort Pope, BS Solomon D. Arhunmwunde, BA Douglas Martin Brown, BS Rex Dale Groves, Jr., MS Monarshah Shahruddin, MS Paul Stephen Silinsky, PhD Nancy J. Sklower, MS Robert Leedham Fike, BS Aziz Khan Jahja, MS Katherin Nitsopoulou, MS Solomon D. Arhunmwunde, MS Mohan Ramanathan, MS John Duane Sine, BS Paiboon Tangyunyong, MS Odu Albert Yeye, MS Sabri A. Abumansoor, PhD Mohamed Salem Ellid, PhD James Andrew Poston, BS William Timothy Fox, BS Raymond A. Burgess, BA Leung Hung Cheng, MS Zun Jun Mo, MS Yadollah Aliakbar, PhD Narad Maharaj, BS Jesus Maria Marcano, PhD Mohan Ramanathan, PhD Rosman Saad, BA Min Ke, MS Zun Jun Mo, PhD Jeffrey Erra Osborne, BS Nipon Thangprasert, PhD Robert McTaggart, BS Stephen Bernerd Kimble, BA Jianxi Mu, MS John Scott McFadden, BA Jaesun Lee, PhD Yiwei Chen, MS Hongyan Sun, MS Tareq Mohd Alrefae, BA Min Wu, MS Eric Matthew Johnson, MS Hongyan Sun, PhD ○ 8 1978 Physics News is published annually by the Department of Physics West Virginia University PO Box 6315, Hodges Hall Morgantown, WV 26506-6315 Web site: www.as.wvu.edu/phys/index.html