Physics is the foundation of all physical science, the study of the
fundamental principles by which nature operates. Physics students at Le
Moyne enjoy close working relationships with their classmates and with the
physics faculty in a course of study that includes in-depth exploration of
the physics of electromagnetic fields, analytical mechanics, electronics,
computational techniques, relativity, and quantum mechanics. Laboratory
courses introduce students to experimental technique and advanced
laboratory electronics and equipment while investigating in-depth the
physics of classical and quantum systems. Even non-lab courses frequently
incorporate hands-on elements so that students develop a solid
understanding of the connection between the physical world and the theory
studied in classes. All physics students complete a semester-long capstone
project of their own design that marries individual interests with the
knowledge mastered in coursework.
With a strong liberal-arts background, a Le Moyne educated physics graduate
is just as prepared to enter graduate school to become a working physicist
as to begin medical or law school, or to embark on careers in science or
technical writing, teaching, finance, or engineering.
Engineering Programs
The department also partners with the L.C. Smith College of
Engineering at Syracuse University for a Dual Degree, Bachelor's + Master's
program.
Visit our Engineering Program pages for more information.
What's New
- Physics major Elizabeth Orr will be spending the summer at Iowa State
University developing Green!Quest, a video game designed to teach high
school students about biorenewable energy sources.
- Physics minor Andrew Acquaviva has been selected by the National
Institute of Standards and Technology [NIST] to participate in its Summer
Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) program at the NIST national
headquarters in Gaithersburg, Maryland. With this invitation, Acquaviva
becomes the first student in Le Moyne history to be offered one of these
prestigious fellowships. Acquaviva was also the MVP of the 2009-2010
Swimming and Diving Team.
- The LEEPS Learning Community, Physics Club, and Physics Program
sponsored a trip to CERN, the international particle accelerator facility
in Geneva, Switzerland, over Spring Break, March 2011. Students and
faculty toured CERN, visited the Einstein Museum and Einstein's aprtment in
Bern, and took in other scientific wonders in Europe.
- Associate Professor of Physics and Director of the Program in Physics
David Craig published a paper on the quantum mechanics of gravity in
Physical Review D: Particles and Fields. The article, titled
"Consistent Probabilities in Wheeler-DeWitt Quantum Cosmology", is the
latest product of an ongoing collaboration between Craig and LSU physicist
Parampreet Singh. The abstract may be viewed at
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.82.123526.
- Seniors in physics and engineering presented their capstone projects
at the end of the Fall 2010 term. These projects included
- Engineering a Roof Rehabiliation by Alex Woods
- Developing a Light Sensor by Thomas Piazza and Tyler Fairchild
- Building an Algorithmic Trading System by Nick Mosconi
- An Application of the Coupled Cluster Method Using Fortran and
Mathematica by Christopher Carson
- Acoustic Multilateration: Hyperbolic Positioning via Sound Wave
Time Difference of Arrival by Gregory Georgiadis and Grant Hanlon
- Engineering student Phillip Ellman spent the summer of 2010
interning at Musler Rutledge Consulting Engineers.
- Engineering student Rhett Pinckney was at Boston College summer
2010 doing research in their REU program with Prof. Zhifeng Ren.
- Physics major Chris Carson did research on quantum scattering
with Dr. C. Magnus L. Rittby at Texas Christian University summer 2010 as
part of their REU program.
- Physics minor Russell Goodman spent summer 2010 in the MIT
Summer Research Program working with Dr. Amy Keating.
- Physics/Chemistry double-major Rachel Carey spent the summer
of 2010 at Harvard working in the laboratory of world-famous physical
chemist George Whitesides with Le Moyne alum Charles Mace, currently a
postdoctoral fellow in the Whitesides lab.
- Engineering student Gregory Georgiadis interned as an engineer
at Sensis Corporation the summer of 2010.
- Le Moyne has
broken ground on the first phase of science facilities
for the 21st century — an all-new addition to our existing
laboratories that will house most of physics, in addition to biology labs
and the PA program! When construction on the addition is complete in Fall
2011 or Spring 2012, work will begin on renovating the existing Coyne
Science Center, bringing state-of-the-art teaching and work spaces to Le
Moyne.
- The LEEPS Learning Community and other interested students visited
Lockheed Martin in Syracuse on April 29, 2010, speaking with Lockheed
engineers and touring laboratories and facilities.
- The Physics Club ran a most outrageous "Oobleck" demonstration for Le
Moyne's Spring 2010 Dolphy Day!
- The LEEPS Learning Community and the Physics Club went to Brookhaven
National Laboratory over Spring break, 2010, touring the superconducting
magnet division, the Center for Functional Nanomaterials, and the ATLAS
detector collaboration.
- Engineer Jeff Marier of Lockheed Martin joined us for lunch on March
26, 2010.
- Associate Professor of Physics and Director of the Program in Physics
David Craig published two papers on the role of quantum decoherence in
quantum cosmology, one in Foundations of Physics, and another in
an American Institute of Physics volume Reconsideration of Quantum
Foundations, early in 2010.
- LEEPS Learning Community students visited the LC Smith College of
Engineering at Syracuse University on February 19, 2010 to get to know SU
staff and facilities.
- The LEEPS Learning Community and other interested students visited
Sensis Corporation headquarters on November 20, 2009, speaking with Sensis
co-founder Ernie Rockwood and several Sensis engineers.
- LEEPS engineering students and others enjoyed lunch with Alion engineer
Benjamin Craig in Fall 2009.
- The LEEPS Learning Community and the Physics Club co-sponsored a
showing of the film BLAST! on November 18, 2009.
- Assistant Professor of Physics Stamatios Kyrkos was lead author of a
paper on beam-plasma instabilities published Summer 2009 in one of physics'
most prestigious journals, Physical Review Letters.
- Associate Professor of Physics and Director of the Program in Physics
David Craig spoke on the role of quantum mechanics in cosmology at a
conference in Vaxjo, Sweden in June, 2009.
- The
McDevitt Gift!