Focus on Undergraduate Research
Mary Fox and Aidan Medcalf
Congratulations to spring 2020 graduates Mary Fox and Aidan Medcalf, winners of the Joe Neuhoff and Fr. Benedict Monostori Awards for physics. Mary completed research with Dr. Moldenhauer in biophysics developing new instrumentation for drosophila electroretinograms in collaboration with Dr. Stenesen in the biology department. Aidan worked on neutrino physics projects such as the NOvA test-beam time of flight project with Dr. Flanagan in collaboration with CERN and Fermilab. He is also contributing to the novel neutron detector project in collaboration with Dr. Flanagan, Cerium Lab and the Air Force.
Meg McDonough
Meg McDonough (’21) completed an external REU with Texas A&M University Cyclotron Institute, performing research under Dr. Melconian. She helped to install and commission TAMUtrap, the world's largest Penning trap, at the Cyclotron facility. To commission the Penning trap, they performed mass measurements of stable isotopes; in doing so, they characterized and optimized the functioning of the ion trap so that it would be prepared to perform experiments with a radioactive beam on the V-A vector form of the weak interaction. She presented her research at the Fall 2019 TSAPS meeting.
Sarah Evans
Sarah Evans (’22) discussed her summer research project, “Electromagnetic Shielding for Low Level Biological Signal Detection” with a member of the TSAPS at the Fall 2019 meeting in Lubbock, TX at Texas Tech University. Sarah’s project developed a Faraday cage to insulate the biosensing instrument for electroretinograms in drosophila, developed by Mary Fox (’20).
Clare Bacak
Clare Bacak (Ursuline Academy ’20) presented a poster at the Fall 2019 meeting of the TSAPS on her work with Dr. Moldenhauer investigating competitive cosmological models and explanations to tensions between different observations that measure the expansion rate of the Universe.
Samuel Tessema
Samuel Tessema (’21) worked with Dr. Levente Borvak on an astrophysics projects during the summer of 2019. He presented the analysis of two types of gamma ray bursts (GRBs) at the Fall 2019 meeting of the TSAPS, which confirms an inverse relationship where GRBs which are fainter can be at smaller distances.
John Rabaey & Eniola Sobimpe
John Rabaey (’22) and Eniola Sobimpe (’21) presented posters at the Fall 2019 meeting of the TSAPS on neutrino physics projects they worked on with Aidan Medcalf (’20) and Dr. Flanagan, in collaboration with Fermilab. John (above) presented work on using a Stronium-90 gamma ray source to measure the accuracy and precision of the NOvA test beam time of flight experiment. John (above right, wearing safety goggles), is shown at work at Fermilab, a laboratory for particle physics and accelerator research. One of his tasks involved building a “trigger,” a device that would tell other, more complex detectors when to start taking data.
Eniola (on left, standing next to John) presented various prototypes constructed
and tested for the NOvA test beam time of flight experiment. He continued his work
started in summer 2018, where he constructed prototypes and tested them using developed
Python codes.
Aidan and John at the Fermi National Accelerator Labratory with Dr. Flanagan
Sam Garza
Sam Garza visited the Green Bank Observatory and attended a week long Radio Astronomy Boot Camp in Green Bank, West Virginia. Sam earned a coveted REU at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory. She looked at the relationship between star formation and dense gas using the new survey DEGAS and presented her work at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Hawaii.
Nathan Smith and William Morris
Nathan Smith (’20) and William Morris (’20) presented talks at the Fall 2019 meeting of the TSAPS on astrophysics projects they worked on with Dr. Olenick, studying data from Kepler on cataclysmic variable binary star systems. Nathan (left) developed an eclipse mapping routine using Python for analysis of Kepler data. The program uses chisquare and other fitting routines to evaluate best fitting the accretion disks of eclipsing binary models of cataclysmic variable stars. William (right) investigated a specific target cataclysmic variable in Superoutburst, Kepler 212700993, and reported characteristics identifying the duration, period, and mass ratio of the system.
Peter Hedlesky
Peter Hedlesky completed an REU at Louisiana State University in nuclear and astrophysics, developing a novel detector for answering some of the questions surrounding Big Bang Nucleosynthesis in the early Universe. He spent part of his REU designing, testing, and assembling a circuit board for a Position Sensitive Scintillator Detector and built a 3D printer to custom print parts for his research. He visited The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) in Livingston, Louisiana.