School of Humanities and Sciences
Showing 1-50 of 2,111 Results
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Tom Abel
Professor of Particle Physics and Astrophysics and of Physics
On Leave from 10/01/2023 To 06/30/2024BioWhat were the first objects that formed in the Universe? Prof. Abel's group explores the first billion years of cosmic history using ab initio supercomputer calculations. He has shown from first principles that the very first luminous objects are very massive stars and has developed novel numerical algorithms using adaptive-mesh-refinement simulations that capture over 14 orders of magnitude in length and time scales. He currently continues his work on the first stars and first galaxies and their role in chemical enrichment and cosmological reionization. His group studies any of the first objects to form in the universe: first stars, first supernovae, first HII regions, first magnetic fields, first heavy elements, and so on. Most recently he is pioneering novel numerical algorithms to study collisionless fluids such as dark matter which makes up most of the mass in the Universe as well as astrophysical and terrestrial plasmas. He was the director of the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology and Division Director at SLAC 2013-2018.
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Arka Adhikari
Postdoctoral Scholar, Mathematics
BioI am currently an NSF Postdoctoral Scholar at Stanford University.
My mentor is Sourav Chatterjee.
Main Website: https://arkaa.people.stanford.edu/
Educational Background:
2016,-A.B. Princeton University
2021- Ph.D. Harvard University
Advisor: Horng-Tzer Yau -
Soud Al Kharusi
Postdoctoral Scholar, Physics
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsExperimental/astrophysical probes of neutrinos, fundamental symmetries, and cosmological models.
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Steven Allen
Professor of Physics and of Particle Physics and Astrophysics
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsObservational astrophysics and cosmology; galaxies, galaxy clusters, dark matter and dark energy; applications of statistical methods; X-ray astronomy; X-ray detector development; optical astronomy; mm-wave astronomy; radio astronomy; gravitational lensing.
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Kofi Asibuo Amankwah
Life Sci Tech I, Biology
BioKofi Asibuo Amankwah got his undergraduate degree in Biology with a minor in Public Health at Santa Clara University. Prior to this he attended school internationally in Ghana working at a number of hospitals including Lister Fertility Center where he assisted with a caesarean section surgery. He worked at Santa Clara University in the lab of Dr. Craig Stephens to research antibiotic resistance in commensal and pathogenic E. coli. He currently serves as a biological technician in the Sharaf Lab with the aim of translating lipoprotein research into therapeutics.
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Zhainib A. Amir
Ph.D. Student in Biology, admitted Autumn 2020
BioI received my B.S. in Microbiology, and M.S. in Cell and Molecular Biology from San Francisco State University. Currently, I am a Biology Ph.D. student with an emphasis in Cell, Molecular and Organismal Biology at Stanford University. I am interested in a range of topics, from cell biology to cancer immunology, however, my research interests lie primarily in understanding the cellular mechanisms at play in genetic and autoimmune diseases.