Physicist Helen Quinn joined the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) in 1967 as a research associate, was made part of the permanent staff in 1979, and, by 1993, worked her way up to full professor. In addition to her research ("unifying the strong, weak and electromagnetic interactions into a single coherent model of particle physics"), she also devotes her time to physics education, including managing SLAC's education and outreach programs and being the founding President of the Contemporary Physics Education Project.
Her awards include:
- Fellow and past president of the American Physical Society
- 2000: Dirac Medal, awarded by the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste, Italy
- 2003: elected to the National Academy of Sciences.
- 2004: Order of Australia medal, given as "recognition to Australian citizens and other persons for achievement or for meritorious service"
Tags: Helen Quinn, SLAC, physics
3 comments:
Thank you for your blog. I am a male college student, and I found your blog very inspiring and interesting. I am a subscriber of your blog. I think I am going to pass the address of your blog along to some of my female peers. Although this is a matter of personal preference, I believe everyone should learn science, for it is interesting and can save life (and practically it moves the human world forward into the future). This blog is cool!
im going to a 7th grade girls science camp this summer uup at Wooster College in Ohio. Have you ever heard of it? The program is called B-WISER.
Welcome passionate believer. I agree that everyone should learn science, even people who aren't interested in becoming scientists. Science affects everything around us, and knowledge is power!
holly: I haven't heard of that particular program. I hope you have a good time!
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