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Departmental News
College of Sciences Open House,
Sat, Nov 17
11/06/07 :: The College of
Sciences at UTSA will host an Open House on Sat, Nov 17.
Science majors from colleges in San Antonio and Texas are
invited to participate in the event. To register
click here.
(And then click on the date, Nov 17.)
See flyer...
Nanotechnology grant awarded to
professor Andrei Chabanov
11/06/07 :: Professor Andrei
Chabanov, of the Physics and Astronomy department at UTSA,
has been awarded a $1.4 million grant from the National
Science Foundation, which will be shared with four other
universities, to do research in nanotechnology.
Read more...
See video...
BIOPHOTONICS: Synthesized
nanoparticle taggant is nontoxic
Read more...
09/06/2007 :: Dr. Miguel Jose
Yacaman is the new Chair of the Department of Physics and
Astronomy
Dr. Yacaman, whose duties as new Chair
of the department will start in the spring of 2008, is a
distinguished scientist of international reputation who has
made fundamental contributions to nanoscale physics. He has
done research in many areas of physics and nanotechnology,
particularly the synthesis and characterization of new
materials, most of them nanoparticles, surfaces and
interfaces, defects in solids, electron diffraction and
imaging theory, quasicrystals, archaeological materials,
and catalysis. Dr. Yacaman has published close to 400 papers
and his work has been extensively cited. He has received,
among many other honors, the National Prize in Exact
Sciences of the Mexican Academy of Sciences, the National
Prize of Sciences in Mexico, the Melh Award and
Distinguished Lecture of the U.S. Metals and Materials
Society, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He is also a Fellow of
the American Physical Society.
Dr. Yacaman received his Ph.D. in Materials Science from the
National University of Mexico, and did postdoctoral work at
the University of Oxford and at NASA-AMES Research Center.
Over the years he has served in many academic and
professional positions. He has been professor of physics at
the National University of Mexico and Director of its
Institute of Physics, professor of physics at West Virginia
University, and Deputy Director for scientific research of
The National Council for Science and Technology (CONACYT),
Mexico. He has also been General Director of the National
Institute of Nuclear Research in Mexico, and Executive
Secretary of the National System of Research (Mexico). From
2001 to the present, he has been the Reese Professor in
Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering and Texas
Materials Institute, at The University of Texas at Austin.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy and the entire UTSA
community will benefit enormously from the presence of professor
Yacaman. We all look forward to a bright future under his
stewardship.
09/15/2006 ::
Dr. Eric Schlegel is the new interim Chair of
the Department of Physics and Astronomy
Dr. Schlegel, a noted astrophysicist
(see 08/24/2005 news below), joined the department in the
fall of 2005. He replaces Dr. Patrick Nash, who served as
the first chairman of the department from the fall 2000
until the present. The department has been given permission
by the Dean of the College of Sciences, George Perry, to
start a search for a new permanent Chair, who would start
duties in the fall of 2007.
08/24/2005
:: Physics and Astronomy Department has hired four new
graduate faculty
A faculty search started in the fall
of 2004 concluded with the successful hiring of three new
professors and the promotion of an existing Lecturer to
Assistant Professor. Dr. Andrey Chabanov, who has been
appointed as an Assistant Professor, received his Ph.D. from
the City University of New York in 2002, working under
Professor A.Z. Genack. He had previously received an M.S.
degree in Physics with Honors, from the Kharkov State
University, in Ukraine. Dr. Chabanov brings an extensive
research experience, having worked at the Institute for
Single Crystals of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, the
Queens College of the City University of New York, the
University of Minnesota, and Northwestern University. His
research expertise includes experimental and theoretical
studies in the areas of nanostructures for optical
applications, photonic band gap materials, photon
localization and lasing in disordered nanostructures, and
microwave cavities and waveguides.
Dr. Chonglin Chen has been appointed as Associate Professor.
He received his Ph.D. in Solid State Science from The
Pennsylvania State University (Penn State) in 1994, working
on surface diffusion. He also has a Masters degree in
physics from Penn
State, and an M.S. in Materials Engineering from the
Institute of Metal Research, The Chinese Academy of
Sciences. Before coming to UTSA, he was Associate Research
Professor of Physics and Materials Science, and Task Leader
of Oxide Thin Film Science and Nano Structures, at the Texas
Center for Superconductivity, University of Houston. Dr.
Chen is an experimentalist with an impressive publication
record in the physics of epitaxial thin films,
nanostructures, and advanced materials in
general.
Dr. Eric Schlegel, who has been appointed as an Associate
Professor, is an observational astronomer coming to UTSA
from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, where
he was the Team Lead and Research Astrophysicist at the
Chandra X-ray Observatory Center. He received his Ph.D. in
Astronomy from Indiana University and he was a triple major
(Physics, Astronomy, and Atmospheric Science) at the State
University of New York at Albany. In the past he has also
held appointments at NASA-Goddard Space Flight Center, and
at Indiana University. Dr. Schlegel is a world expert on
X-ray Astrophysics, and has also done research in
cataclysmic variable stars, supernovae, and galaxies. He has
published a very large number of papers in the leading
refereed journals in Astrophysics, and also a well-received
popular book, "The Restless Universe" (Oxford University
Press, 2002.)
Dr. Zlatko Koinov, who was until recently a full-time
Lecturer at our department, has been promoted to the
position of Assistant Professor. His expertise is in
theoretical solid state physics and received his Ph.D. from
St. Petersburg Electrotechnical University, Russia. Before
coming to the U.S., he was a professor at Sophia University
in Bulgaria. More information about Dr. Koinov can be found
on his page on this web site.
We, at the Physics and Astronomy Department, are all very
happy and fortunate to have these four new professors
joining us now that the graduate programs start operations.
We wish the best of luck to all of them.
04/21/2005 :: The Texas Higher
Education Coordinating Board Approved Today the M.S. and
Ph.D. Programs in Physics
In their Board Meeting today,
the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board swiftly
approved the new M.S. and Ph.D. programs in Physics at UTSA.
The graduate degrees in Physics will be
offered by the Department of Physics and Astronomy in
collaboration with the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI)
Space Science and Engineering Division. The programs will
start operations in the Fall of 2005. For more information,
please go to Physics
Graduate Programs.
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