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Revision as of 07:06, 20 November 2012

The Physics Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara has 58 faculty members. It offers academic programs leading to the B.A., B.S., and Ph.D. degrees.

Faculty Awards

As of 2011, the department counts three Nobel Prize winners among its faculty: David Gross (2004, Physics), Alan J. Heeger (2000, Chemistry), and Walter Kohn (1998, Chemistry). Herbert Kroemer, who won the 2000 Nobel Prize in Physics is a member of the Electrical and Computer Engineering and Materials Departments at UC Santa Barbara. The department's faculty includes 14 members of the National Academy of Sciences: Guenter Ahlers, David Awschalom, Matthew Fisher, David Gross, James Hartle, Alan Heeger, Gary Horowitz, Walter Kohn, James Langer, Stanton Peale, Joseph Polchinski, Douglas Scalapino, Boris Shraiman, and Michael Witherell. Awschalom and Heeger are also members of the National Academy of Engineering.

Academics

Undergraduate academics

The standard program, which is in the College of Letters and Science (L&S), leads to either a B.A. or B.S. degree. The B.S. program is for those aiming for a career in physics, while the B.A. is a more flexible program allowing more courses from other areas. Within the B.S. program there are three possible schedules of courses - a standard track, an advanced track, and an honors track - leading to a degree in four years. These tracks include increasingly more electives and undergraduate research.

Graduate academics

The graduate program was ranked fifth (or sixth, depending on which method used) among physics program in the 2011 study by the National Research Council. U.S. News & World Report ranked the graduate program tenth in the country across all subfields, third in Condensed Matter Physics, fifth in Quantum Physics, eighth in Elementary Particles/Field/String Theory, and ninth in Cosmology/Relativity/Gravity.

Research Programs and Institutes

The faculty members conduct and supervise research in Astrophysics, Cosmology, Biophysics, Condensed Matter Physics, Gravitation, and Particle Physics. In 2011 The Academic Ranking of World Universities ranked the UCSB department eleventh in the world, ninth in the United States. In a ranking of physics departments by citations per faculty member, UCSB is first with 178 citations per faculty member.

Physics professor David Gross was Director of the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics (KITP) until 2012, and its permanent members are also faculty of the Physics Department. David Awschalom, professor in the physics department, is Director of the California NanoSystems Institute at UC Santa Barbara, and several members of the physics faculty carry out their research program within CNSI. The Institute for Terahertz Science and Technology is the research home for many other faculty members in the physics department.

Four faculty members from the department lead a large UCSB research group working at the Large Hadron Collider using the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS). UCSB Professor Joseph Incandela is the spokesperson for the CMS collaboration. On 4 July 2012, Incandela spoke on behalf of CMS, where the discovery of a previously unknown boson with mass 125.3 ± 0.6 GeV/c was announced.

References

  1. UCSB Physics Department home page
  2. ^ Nobel Prizes in Physics
  3. Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
  4. National Academy of Sciences Member Directory
  5. National Academy of Engineering Member Directory
  6. Undergraduate Education
  7. NRC Physics Rankings
  8. US News Rankings of Graduate Programs in Physics
  9. Graduate Education
  10. Academic Ranking of World Universities in Physics - 2011
  11. Physics Program Rankings
  12. The KITP web site
  13. CNSI-UCSB
  14. Institute for Terahertz Research and Technology

External links

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