Wellstood named new UMD Co-Director of JQI

Physics professor and JQI Fellow Fred Wellstood has been appointed the newest UMD Co-Director of JQI. He assumed the role on March 1.

"Fred has played a major role in the JQI since its founding," says Gretchen Campbell, the current NIST Co-Director of JQI. "Most recently, his tireless efforts helped to design and ultimately build the new Physical Sciences Center at Maryland that many JQI labs now call home. I look forward to working with him to carefully steward JQI's future."

Ellen Williams Returns to UMD

Distinguished University Professor Ellen D. Williams recently returned to UMD Physics and the Institute for Physical Science and Technology (IPST) after spending several years working for energy company BP and later, the U.S. Department of Energy. Prof. Williams will give a colloquium on her experiences and outlook on Tuesday, April 25 at 4pm in the lobby of the PSC.

Prof. Williams first arrived at UMD in 1981, working as a postdoctoral researcher for Prof. Bob Park after completing her doctorate in chemistry at Caltech. She joined the physics faculty in 1983, studying materials and surface physics; her specific areas of research included experimental statistical mechanics, statistical properties of nanostructures and flexible electronics. In 1991, she founded what would become the University of Maryland Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC). She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2003 and the National Academy of Sciences in 2005.

In 2010, Prof. Williams was recruited to be Chief Scientist at BP, succeeding physicist Steve Koonin. In response to climate change, BP had been exploring alternative energy sources for a decade. She accepted the job in London, and plunged into the extraordinary array of issues involved in the production of energy with minimal environmental disruption. Examples include land use decisions in the production of biofuels, management of the quantities of water involved in fossil fuel production, availability of rare earth elements for electric motors and lithium for batteries for electric vehicles. Prof. Williams oversaw a consortium of university researchers studying these and other topics in BP's Energy Sustainability Challenge. The research led to publication of Materials Critical to the Energy Industry, Water in the Energy Industry and Biomass in the Energy Industry.

Another major responsibility was heading BP’s technical advisory committee, which studies innovations upstream (getting oil and gas out of the Earth) and downstream (refining to create fuels, petrochemicals and other products). The TAC met four times a year to review all the company’s technical R&D activities. Prof. Williams notes that innovations in science over the last few decades allow for greater efficiencies and new approaches to technical problems in energy production. Supercomputers have played a significant role, whether used with seismic imaging and geophysics to determine the likely locations of oil reserves, or to model efficient means of breaking cellulosic materials into usable biofuels.

As one of the world’s largest producers and consumers of energy, the United States is keenly interested in such questions. A 2007 report published by the National Academies, Rising Above the Gathering Storm: Energizing and Employing America for a Brighter Economic Future, recommended the establishment of the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) in the Department of Energy’s Office of Science to foster innovation toward energy efficiency and sustainability using grants on specific energy or environmental topics. ARPA-E was first funded as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. In 2013, newly-installed Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz contacted Prof. Williams, who recalled that she “could hardly contain my joy” at the prospect of leading ARPA-E.

The federal vetting process and assorted delays took several months; the congressional approval process took a year. During that time, Prof. Williams resigned from BP and worked as a senior advisor to Secretary Moniz until her appointment was confirmed; she took the helm at ARPA-E in December 2014.

Prof. Williams very much enjoyed the broad scope of sciences cultivated by ARPA-E. For example: soil depletion of agricultural land releases carbon into the atmosphere and spurs greater use of fertilizer, a major source of nitrous oxide emissions. ROOTS, or Rhizosphere Observations Optimizing Terrestrial Sequestration, supported research to keep carbon in the ground through creative scanning and phenotyping techniques for root systems. MONITOR, or Methane Observation Networks with Innovative Technology to Obtain Reductions, aimed to limit leaks of methane during the processing and transport of natural gas. Nimble combinations of lasers, computing, photonics and fluid dynamics yielded ultra-precise sensors of interest to the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of the Interior and the energy industry.

Well before she joined the Department of Energy, Prof. Williams held a deep interest in government and public policy. She has served on the International Security Advisory Board of the U.S. Department of State and on JASON, an independent scientific advisory group that provides consulting services to the U.S. government on matters of defense science and technology. She chaired the National Academy of Science’s committee on Technical Issues Concerning the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty from 2009-11, and was a member of the NAS Policy and Global Affairs Committee. She is currently developing a class on the interplay of clean energy technology, policy and regulations to be offered in the Fall of 2017.

Katherine Blodgett Gebbie Honored Posthumously by Maryland Women's Hall of Fame

On March 16, 2017, the Maryland Commission for Women and the Women Legislators of the Maryland General Assembly will induct eight women into the Maryland Women's Hall of Fame and will present "Women of Tomorrow" awards to five students during a 5:30 p.m. ceremony at the Miller Senate Office
Building in Annapolis.

JQI graduate student named ARCS Endowment Fellow

Zachary Eldredge, a physics graduate student at JQI and QuICS, has been awarded an Endowment Fellowship by the Achievement Awards for College Scientists (ARCS) Foundation. The fellowship comes with $15,000 of financial support and is renewable. "I'm very thankful to the Foundation, as well as to the university for nominating me and helping me put together my application," Eldredge says. He will be honored at an awards reception at the National Academy of Science in October.

The ARCS Foundation is a national organization dedicated to supporting STEM education in the United States. ARCS partners with more than 50 colleges and universities in 16 regional chapters across the country—including the Metropolitan Washington Chapter, through which Eldredge received his fellowship. Rather than soliciting applications, the ARCS Foundation allows its partner institutions to select some of their top students in science, engineering and medical research as candidates for the award. Since its inception in 1958, the Foundation has provided more than $100 million of financial support to thousands of scholars.

Eldredge is a third year graduate student at JQI, having earned an undergraduate degree in physics from the University of Oklahoma in 2014. He currently works with JQI and QuICS Fellow Alexey Gorshkov on finding new ways to generate entanglement and use it as a quantum resource.

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Ed Ott Honored with Richardson Medal and Moser Lecture

Distinguished University Professor Ed Ott (ECE/Physics/IREAP) has been honored by two professional societies for his decades-long career in nonlinear science and chaos theory. The Lewis Fry Richardson Medal of the European Geosciences Union (EGU) commemorates the work of Richardson, a mathematician and physicist who pioneered the science of fractal theory and weather forecasting.  Prof. Ott was cited for "...pioneering contributions in the theory of chaos with applications to the motion of tracers in fluids, kinematic dynamos, and data assimilation for weather forecasting."  

The Jürgen Moser Lecture, sponsored by the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM), recognizes Prof. Ott's distinguished and sustained contributions to nonlinear science, citing "seminal work in chaos theory and the dynamics of physical systems." Prof. Ott will deliver the lecture at the May 2017 SIAM Meeting on Dynamical Systems in Snowbird, Utah.

Professor Ott is a fellow of the American Physical Society, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. He is the recipient of the APS Julius Edgar Lilienfield Prize for 2014. He was selected as a 2016 Thomson Reuters Citation Laureate in physics.