A recipient of Banneker/Key and National Merit scholarships, the native of Silver Spring, Md., has applied himself on and off campus in the arts. An organist, Ridgway works as director of music at Ager Road United Methodist Church in Hyattsville, and performed at the Amalfi Coast Music and Arts Festival and the International Keyboard Institute and Festival. He played with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and participated in UMDβs Music and Film series, which sets new scores to old silent films.
βIβve been treated very well by Maryland,β Ridgway says. βIf I had the desire, they had the resources.β
He began taking graduate classes as a junior, and helped author four articles published in Physical Review D and the Journal of High Energy Physics. Ridgway worked mostly in lattice physics, which explores concepts such as subatomic forces, neutron stars and the dynamics of the early universe.
βThe daily interaction with someone of Gregβs breadth of culture is a joy in itself,β says UMD physics professor Paulo Bedaque. βOne should βdiscover something, learn something and teach something every single day.β I know no student who embodies this spirit better than Greg.β
The National Science Foundation awarded a graduate research fellowship to Ridgway, who will pursue a doctorate in physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He hopes to one day make an important contribution to science and has found great joy working alongside brilliant people who are painstakingly doing the incremental progress necessary to understanding our world.
βI love the work,β he says. βEach small problem we solve deserves a celebration.β
Writer: Liam Farrell
University of Maryland
College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences
2300 Symons Hall
College Park, MD 20742
www.cmns.umd.edu
@UMDscience