The year of the horse has begun!
Credits: Andre Johnson
The year of the horse has begun!
Credits: Andre Johnson
Photos, promos, papers, and more: anything you want can be shared with the Notre Dame GPAS community using our new content submission form! (must be signed in with your ND Google account). We know forms can be scary and confusing sometimes, so here’s a walk through exactly how to get your content featured on our website.
Posting on the website is a great way to get involved with GPAS media, with no commitment required. After you submit, we’ll edit, tag, and post your content as necessary. We’ll also include author attribution on all the photos and articles we post, so feel free to flex your artistic skills and writing prowess as much as you like; the credit is all yours! Here’s the things you can submit using our form right now:
That beautiful flyer you made deserves more than just getting taped to the stairwell door. Put it up on our Events page so people anywhere can see it! Upload a PDF in portrait orientation, and we’ll add it to the rotation of upcoming event listings on our site.
Exciting new projects, awards, updates, collaborations, anything! Share your big news with the GPAS community and get some writing practice while you’re at it! You choose the title, write your article, and even submit photos if you like. Your article will be posted on our News page for all to see!
Show off your photos from GPAS or other Physics & Astronomy Department events! We’ll collect the images you upload and put them all together in an Event Recap article. Even if we’ve already posted photos from an event, we can still add yours no problem. It doesn’t matter when you submit, it just matters that you do! Our upload form is a little finicky right now because it can only handle you uploading 10 photos at once. If you’ve got more than that, you can just fill out the form again.
There are a lot of awesome people in our department. Spotlight gives you a chance to introduce them to us all and showcase what makes them great! First, choose someone you think is especially awesome. Share their accomplishments with us, just let us know why you think they’re so cool. Once they’ve been nominated, we’ll reach out to them to learn more and write an article that shows why they deserve their very own Spotlight.
A journal club for everyone! Did you or someone you know submit a paper recently? Was there an abstract on arXiv that struck your fancy? Want the opportunity to write a summary of a classic paper in your field? Maybe you’ll help others understand it better. Maybe you’ll even help *you* understand it better! Give us some information about the paper, and a summary in your own words, and we’ll feature your article on our News page.
The Department of Physics & Astronomy has announced the recipients for this year’s graduate student awards. Four awards are given out annually: two for Distinguished Research, which covers outstanding research currently performed by graduate students in the department; one Research and Dissertation Award acknowledging the successful completion and defense of an excellent dissertation; and one Graduate Leadership and Service Award, which showcases the contributions of a graduate student leader for the betterment of the department. The research awards were presented to two Condensed Matter students, Resham Regmi (“for the growth of high-quality single crystals of altermagnetic materials”) and Nileema Sharma (“for atomic-scale visualization of putative spin-triplet superconductivity, Josephson coupling frustration, and the development of new scanning probe microscopy methods”). The distinguished dissertation award was given to Nathan Chalus in Condensed Matter “for innovative studies of skyrmions by small-angle neutron scattering, and especially collective skyrmion matter behavior under the influence of a magnon current”. Finally, the student service award was presented to Alex Thomas in Astronomy “for being a champion of the department, and for his encouragement, and infectious and steadfast passion and dedication to improving the lives of everyone around him”. If you see any of these students, be sure to congratulate and celebrate them and their accomplishments this week!
From left to right in the featured image: Prof. Anna Simon-Robertson, Resham Regmi, Nileema Sharma, Alex Thomas, Nathan Chalus, and Prof. Morten Eskildsen.
The annual GPAS Conference, held this year on April 16th 2025, invites graduate students from all subfields to showcase their thesis work and practice their presentation skills, either in the form of a ten-minute talk during the regular colloquium hour or as a poster in the following poster session. The colloquium presenters this year were spread over three of the four department subfields, with one nuclear talk, one condensed matter talk, and one astronomy talk. Thomas Bailey, a sixth year nuclear physics graduate student, discussed his ongoing thesis work on quantifying and using uranium ore concentrations as a fingerprint for mines around the world. Lili Vajtai, a second year condensed matter student, showed her work on the applications of magnetism and ferrofluids in both medicine and industry. Jared Kolecki (featured in the post photo), a third year astronomy student, described his methods for using the chemical abundances in a star to characterize the possible types of planets in other solar systems. Following the presentations, accompanied with light refreshments during the weekly colloquium tea, other students presented posters to their peers on their recent progress towards their thesis. Excellent work to all presenters at this year’s conference, and congratulations on the free department mug for the speakers!



Check out Notre Dame Physics’ post about Erika here: https://physics.nd.edu/news/holmbeck-wins-award-at-the-nuclear-physics-in-astrophysics-conference-npa-ix/
