by Barry Ray
(taken from FSU main news site)
A faculty member in Florida State University's department of
physics has been recognized by the U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE) as one of the nation's top young high-energy physicists.
| |
 |
| |
Yuri Gershtein |
Assistant Professor Yuri Gershtein has been selected to
receive an Outstanding Junior Investigator Award in High Energy
Physics for the 2006 fiscal year. The award, given by the DOE's
Office of High Energy Physics, is designed to identify
exceptionally talented new high-energy physicists early in their
careers, and to assist and facilitate the development of their
research programs.
Gershtein was one of only eight scientists from throughout
the United States to receive the award this year. In addition to
the public recognition, he will receive $60,000 per year in DOE
research funds for the next five years - although funding could
continue even longer if he is promoted and receives tenure
during that time.
"I'm really happy," Gershtein said of receiving the
Outstanding Junior Investigator Award. "It is a great honor, and
a great opportunity that every unestablished scientist dreams
of. I am also very grateful to the FSU High Energy Physics
Group, whose advice and support was instrumental in getting my
research program started."
Gershtein's colleague Vasken Hagopian, FSU's Lannutti
Professor of Physics and director of the Pat Thomas Planetarium,
described the award as "a very big deal, both for Yuri and for
FSU. The Outstanding Junior Investigator Award really lays the
groundwork for a young scientist to succeed in a very difficult
and competitive field.
"FSU also benefits by having such an outstanding scholar on
its faculty," Hagopian said.
"Other DOE award winners this year come from such outstanding
facilities as Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the
California Institute of Technology and Purdue University. To be
included in such an elite group really shows how accomplished
our university's own physics department has become."
The Outstanding Junior Investigator Awards are given out each
year in response to proposals submitted to the DOE by
scientists. The proposals are subjected to internal and external
technical reviews; in addition, an external peer review panel is
convened once a year to give advice to the DOE on the relative
merits of existing proposals. Following this competitive
process, recommendations are made to award funding for a limited
number of the most outstanding individuals.
Gershtein was recognized for a proposal he submitted titled
"Recovering the Intrinsic Electromagnetic Energy Resolution in
CMS." CMS is an acronym for "Compact Muon Solenoid," which is
the name of a high-energy physics experiment based at CERN, the
world's largest particle physics laboratory.
CERN is located near Geneva, Switzerland.
"My proposal was targeted toward development of analysis
algorithms for discovering Higgs boson, the hypothesized
particle that is responsible for masses of elementary
particles," Gershtein said.
Technology that was developed in response to the demands of
high-energy physics has become exceedingly useful to other
fields of science, and thus has helped science to advance on a
broad front. Cancer therapy, medical and industrial imaging,
radiation processing, electronics, measuring instruments, new
manufacturing processes and materials, and even the World Wide
Web are just some of the many technologies developed as a result
of research in particle physics.
To learn more about FSU's High Energy Physics Program, please
visit www.hep.fsu.edu.