Physics Highlights 2018, Harvey Mudd College

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PHHighlights SICS 2018

Alumni News

Zach Walters ’02 received his PhD from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 2009. He now works as a design physicist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Zach has authored and co-authored quite a few publications, including “High Harmonic Spectroscopy of Multichannel Dynamics in Strong-Field Ionization” and “Quantum Dynamics of the Avian Compass.”

Physics graduates, class of 2018

Update from the Department Chair, Theresa Lynn It has been an exciting and change-filled year for the physics program at Harvey Mudd. The 24 physics majors in the graduating class of 2018 stayed true to department tradition by going on to wonderful opportunities in graduate school and the workforce. Our newest alumni can now be found in PhD programs at Harvard, Stanford, Cornell, Columbia, University of Colorado Boulder and numerous other places. They work at a range of companies, from industry giants like Hitachi to small ventures like a Bay-area green battery technology startup. Meanwhile, this year marked retirement from classroom teaching for Patti Sparks, who is conducting research with students and serving as chair of the APS Far West Region, and partial retirement for longtime faculty member and former department chair John Townsend, who will teach his last classes here this fall and next spring. Both Patti and John will move into full retirement in July 2019. It was wonderful to see both recognized as honorary alumni during Alumni Weekend (see page 3). We have been delighted to welcome two new faculty members this fall: Mark Ilton, a tenuretrack hire in experimental polymer physics and biophysics, and Jessica Arlett, who joins us for two years from a research scientist position role at Caltech. You’ll find more details on both of our newest faculty members, along with selected other research and professional updates from department members, inside this newsletter. As I reflect on the accomplishments of our alumni, the legacies of recent and upcoming retirees and the ambitions of our new faculty members, I am inspired by the close facultystudent collaboration that is a signature of the physics program at Harvey Mudd. The physics hallways are alive not only with office hours and homework groups, but with research group meetings, one-on-one independent study sessions, and hands-on building and experimentation. Students publish their findings and share their work at conferences around the world; along the way, they discover, reaffirm or redefine their career pathways as they gain confidence and experience to become leaders in their chosen fields. (continued on next page)

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David Liao ’05 received a PhD in physics (2010) from Bob Austin’s lab at Princeton University and was a postdoc in Thea Tlsty’s lab at the University of California, San Francisco (2010–2012). David remains an associate researcher at UCSF and is a full-time, private tutor in New Jersey focusing on physics, calculus and linear algebra. He’s looking for ways to apply physics education research to the teaching of AP Physics 1. He created video tutorials for http://quant.bio, where you can find lessons on applying mathematics to biology. http://davidliao.com/tutoring.php Andrew Wetzel ’05 is an assistant professor of physics at UC Davis, where the focus of his research is theoretical astrophysics and cosmology. He received a PhD in astrophysics from UC Berkeley (2010), was a postdoctoral associate at Yale (2010–2013) and a Caltech-Carnegie Postdoctoral Fellow (2013–2017). He was selected as a 2018 Scialog Fellow for Time Domain Astrophysics and has more than 60 publications. We were pleased to host Andrew on campus when he gave a physics colloquium in December 2015. http://wetzel.ucdavis.edu


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