Rainer
Grobe, Distinguished Professor of Physics, and Q. Charles Su, Professor
of Physics, have been awarded the prestigious 2006 American Physical
Society (APS) Undergraduate Research Prize. The highly esteemed award
is given annually to only one institution. The award cites Grobe and Su
for “their outstanding effort at creating a successful and renowned
optical theory program at Illinois State University, and for their
exemplary involvement of undergraduates in this research.” The APS
Undergraduate Research Prize, started in 1986, includes a $5,000
stipend to the recipients and a $5,000 unrestricted grant for research
in physics at Illinois State. “We are thrilled to have been chosen as
the recipients of this prestigious national award. This is certainly a
great honor for the Department of Physics and for the University as a
whole,” said Grobe and Su. “It has been a tremendous pleasure to work
with so many talented physics majors on their research projects and to
see the impact on their lives.” The
Intense Laser Physics Unit recently resolved the Klein paradox—a
conceptual mystery for more than 75 years—with the help of computer
simulators. An article by Su, Grobe, and research associate Piotr
Krekora titled “Klein Paradox in Spatial and Temporal Resolution” was
heralded last year as “an important advance in the understanding of the
physical process.” The
APS award comes on the heels of a series of success for the Unit, which
is co-directed by Professors Grobe and Su. The Unit has been supported
by the National Science Foundation since 1996. Thirty-five Physics
students have delivered about 150 talks at various conferences, and the
Intense Laser Physics Unit has published more than 120 papers in
peer-reviewed scientific journals that were cited in more than 2,000
articles.
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