News from the J.R. Macdonald
Laboratory
Pat
Richard, Lab Director
Faculty, staff and students working in the JRM Laboratory were prominent in the news this year. Following are some bits of information, which may or may not be in the rest of the newsletter.
Faculty in the News
University Distinguished Professor Lew Cocke, Associate Lab Director for JRML, was elected to the position of Secretary/Treasurer of the Division of Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics. If you are getting the DAMOP newsletters, they are coming from Lew. Two members of the group, Professors Brett DePaola, and Itzik Ben-Itzhak, were awarded fellowship status in the APS. Brett's citation reads "For developing and applying technologically advanced experimental methods for studying basic atomic collision processes." Itzik's citation reads "For his creative experimental studies of molecular dissociation dynamics via fragment coincidence and 3D imaging techniques; and for his studies of the creation and decay of long-lived metastable molecular ions." Uwe Thumm was promoted to Professor of Physics in Fall 2002, and Brett Esry recently has been awarded tenure and promoted to the position of Associate Professor of Physics at KSU. Congratulations to all.




Staff
in the News
Al Rankin, assistant scientist, who has been a staff member in JRML since 1985, was recently recognized for his efforts in founding the A-3 Skywarrior aircraft website. The website allows former pilots and crewmembers to communicate. In an effort to expand his efforts, he organized a group that created a board of directors for the A-3 "Skywarrior" association. The association purchased and now maintains a commercial website, www.A3skywarrior.com. Al says there have been many rewards for his efforts. The association has received e-mails from kids of Vietnam veterans whose fathers were killed in the war. Finding people who knew their dads -i.e. squadron mates of their fathers, has helped them. The association celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of the first flight of the A-3, in Van Nuys, California in October 2002. Approximately 500 were in attendance, including Al and his wife, Mary.
Students in the News
We have just
learned that Hai Nguyen, physics GRA working on his Ph.D. with
Brett DePaola has been awarded the "Upward Bound Achiever
of the Year" award. At this writing the official announcement
has not been made. To be nationally recognized by this organization
is quite an honor. Upward Bound provides fundamental support
to participants in their preparation for college entrance. The
program provides opportunities for participants to succeed in
pre-college performance and ultimately in higher education pursuits.
Upward Bound serves high school students from low-income families,
high school students from families in which neither parent holds
a bachelors degree, and low-income, first-generation military
veterans who are preparing to enter postsecondary education.
The goal of Upward Bound is to increase the rates at which participants
enroll in and graduate from institutions of postsecondary education.
Max
Sayler, one of our undergraduate research assistants, working
with Itzik Ben-Itzhak, was selected to present a talk at the
DAMOP 2002 meeting in Williamsburg, Va in the "undergraduate
student research session." It is an honor to be selected
to make such a presentation. His work was on "Ionization
and fragmentation of water by fast ion beams". Max is presently
a graduate student in our AMO physics program. Jesus Hernandez,
an undergraduate working with Brett Esry, has been selected this
year to present a talk at the DAMOP-2003 meeting in Boulder,
CO in the "undergraduate student research session."
His work is on "a new theoretical description of atoms in
intense laser fields."
New Faces in the Lab
We have hired two new research associates in the Macdonald Lab.
Dr. Ali Alnaser has joined Lew Cocke's group. Ali received his Ph. D. in physics from Western Michigan University working with Professor John Tanis. Ali is working on "electron rescattering phenomena," which is important in describing intense laser - atom/molecule interactions. Dr. Jiangfan Xia has joined Itzik Ben-Itzhak's group. Jiangfan was a research associate working with Professor Donna Strickland at the University of Waterloo, Canada. Jiangfan is working on an experiment to study the interaction of intense laser beams with molecular ion beams. Dr. Bernold Feuerstein joined the group of Professor Uwe Thumm. Bernold is on a fellowship from the Max Planck Institute in Heidelberg, Germany. He is working on theoretical models for molecular fragmentation in a strong laser field.


Research in the Lab
Please check our website www.phys.ksu.edu/area/jrm to see the latest in our research efforts. One of the main thrusts in the lab is to use the ultra-short pulse, ultra-intense laser beams, which have been developed during the last one and one- half years by Professor Zenghu Chang's group.
Activities
We are in the process of interviewing for a new faculty member in AMO Physics. Five candidates have been selected for interview.
Funding in the Lab
Last year (FY02) the AMO group received
six grants totaling $2.95 Million. We have just received our
renewal grant ($2,350,000) for the third year (FY03) of our latest
3-year grant from DOE. We will be submitting a proposal to DOE
this summer for the next 3-year period.