University of New Mexico Department of Physics and Astronomy
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PandA People – Faculty R–Z

A–D | E–K | L–Q | R–Z


Richard J. Rand   Richard J. Rand, Associate Professor

PhD, California Institute of Technology, 1991

Gaseous halos of galaxies, diffuse ionized gas, the disk-halo connection, superbubbles and chimneys. Star formation processes in spirals, molecular gas, atomic gas, HII region populations. Ring galaxies.
  Contact Information

P&A 166
505-277-2073

rjr@phys.unm.edu
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Wolfgang  Rudolph   Wolfgang Rudolph, Regents' Professor
Associate Chair for Graduate Affairs


PhD, University of Jena, 1985

High-resolution spectroscopy and imaging, laser physics and nonlinear optics, ultrashort light pulses. Biophysics.
  Contact Information

P&A 1107
505-277-2081

wrudolph@unm.edu
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Sally C. Seidel   Sally C. Seidel, Professor

PhD, University of Michigan, 1987

High-energy collider physics, QCD, rare decays. Particle-physics instrumentation.
  Contact Information

P&A 1103
505-277-2087

seidel@phys.unm.edu
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Mansoor  Sheik-Bahae   Mansoor Sheik-Bahae, Professor

PhD, State University of New York at Buffalo, 1987

Laser physics and nonlinear optics, ultrafast phenomena, solid-state physics.
  Contact Information

P&A 1109
505-277-2080

msb@unm.edu
Sheik-Bahae's Research Group

Gregory B. Taylor   Gregory B. Taylor, Associate Professor

PhD, University of California, Los Angeles, 1991

Clusters of Galaxies, Active Galactic Nuclei, Jets, Gamma-Ray Bursts, Radio Interferometry Techniques
  Contact Information

P&A 180
505-277-5238

gbtaylor@unm.edu
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James L. Thomas   James L. Thomas, Associate Professor

PhD, Cornell University, 1991

Phospholipids are the amphiphilic molecules that are the structural foundation of essentially all cell membranes. In addition, they have found practical application in synthetic membranes for drug delivery vehicles, and as stabilizing monolayers for ultrasound constrast agents. Our laboratory is engaged in optical and fluorescence studies of phospholipid layers and cell membranes, in order to elucidate the dynamical properties of these important biophysical/biomedical materials and their constituent molecules.
  Contact Information

P&A 1113
505-277-1413

jthomas@unm.edu
Homepage

University of New Mexico Department of Physics and Astronomy - MSC07 4220 - 800 Yale Blvd NE Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131-0001
Phone: (505) 277-2616     Fax: (505) 277-1520
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