Biography
Peter Shawhan did graduate research in Physics at the University of Chicago, studying CP violation in neutral K meson decays, and earned his Ph.D. in 1999. He then spent seven years at Caltech as a Millikan Prize Fellow and Senior Scientist, helping to establish observing operations and data analysis for the LIGO gravitational wave detectors. As a University of Maryland Physics faculty member since 2006, Shawhan's primary research revolves around searching for gravitational wave signals from neutron stars, black holes, collapsing stars, and other extreme astrophysical sources. Detection of these elusive signals, beginning with the first spectacular event in September 2015 from a pair of merging black holes, has confirmed a prediction of Einstein's general theory of relativity and is revealing the properties of gravitational-wave sources and enabling tests of the theory of gravity. Other research interests include laboratory tests of gravity and high-energy astrophysics space missions.
Research
Research Area:
Research Interests:
- Gravitational waves
- Astrophysics
- Time-domain Astronomy
- Laboratory Gravity Experiments
Centers & Institutes: Joint Space-Science Institute
Teaching
- Physics 121: Fundamentals of Physics I
- Physics 171: Introductory Physics Mechanics and Relativity
- Physics 172: Succeeding in Physics: Applications, Resources and Concepts
- Physics 270: Electrodynamics, Light, Relativity & Modern Physics
- Physics 273: Introductory Physics: Waves
- Physics 375: Experimental Physics III: Electromagnetic Waves, Optics and Modern Physics
- Physics 405: Advanced Experiments
- Physics 410: Classical Mechanics
News
- Shawhan Named a Distinguished Scholar-Teacher
- Shawhan Elected APS Fellow
- Peter Shawhan Awarded 2018 Kirwan Faculty Research and Scholarship Prize
- Peter Shawhan Honored by USM Board of Regents
- The Chirps Heard Round the World
- Peter Shawhan Awarded the 2016 Richard A. Ferrell Distinguished Faculty Fellowship