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Main Page
Physics Directory
Adams, Todd Askew, Andrew Berg, Bernd Blessing, Susan Boebinger, Gregory Bonesteel, Nicholas Brooks, James Cao, Jianming Capstick, Simon Chiorescu, Irinel Cottle, Paul Crede, Volker Dobrosavljevic, Vladimir Duke, Dennis Eugenio, Paul Fenley, Marcia Gerardy, Christopher Gorkov, Lev Hill, Stephen Hoeflich, Peter Kemper, Kirby Lind, David Manousakis, Efstratios Ng, Hon-Kie Okui, Takemichi Owens, Joseph Piekarewicz, Jorge Prosper, Harrison Reina, Laura Rikvold, Per Arne Riley, Mark Roberts, Winston Rogachev, Grigory Schlottmann, Pedro Shaheen, Shahid Tabor, Samuel Vafek, Oskar Van Winkle, David Volya, Alexander von Molnár, Stephan Wahl, Horst Warusawithana, Maitri Wiedenhover, Ingo Xiong, Peng Yang, Kun Zhou, Huan-Xiang
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Dr. Per Arne RikvoldProfessor, Ph.D., Temple University, 1983
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Per Arne Rikvold received his B.Sc. in Physics with minors in
Mathematics, Statistics, and Chemistry, and his M.Sc. in Theoretical
Solid State Physics from the University of Oslo in Norway. Following
his master's degree, he spent two years as a Japanese Government
research student at Kyushu University in Fukuoka, Japan. After further
stays at the University of Oslo, University of Geneva in Switzerland,
and Kernforschungsanlage Jülich in Germany, he received his Ph.D. in
Physics from Temple University in Philadelphia in 1983. Before coming
to the Florida State University Physics department in 1987, he did a
postdoc in Mechanical Engineering at State University of New York at
Stony Brook, and he worked as a Senior Research Chemist
with ARCO Chemical Company in Newtown Square, PA. In addition to
serving as the James G. Skofronick Professor of Physics, he is a School
Faculty with the School of Computational Science (SCS) and a Faculty
Associate with the Center for Materials Research and Technology
(MARTECH). He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and a
Foreign Member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.
Dr. Rikvold's research focuses on applications of equilibrium and
nonequilibrium computational statistical mechanics to problems in
Condensed-matter Physics and Materials Science. In particular, he
studies the dynamics of magnetization switching in nanoparticles,
magnetic molecules, and ultrathin films, which are important materials
for ultra-high-density recording media and possibly for future quantum
computers. He is also an expert on applications of computational
statistical mechanics to adsorption processes in electrochemical systems,
which present new, low-cost methods to synthesize nanostructures of
technological importance. Recently, he has started a program in
biophysics with emphasis on the dynamics of biological evolution.
A unifying theme for these, seemingly disparete, research areas is the
application and further development of methods and concepts from
nonequililbrium statistical mechanics.
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