Center Initiatives
New Faculty Initiative Program
The Center’s New Faculty Initiative Program, successfully implemented with Professor Hatice Altug this past year, helps accelerate the scholarly career of a new biophotonics faculty member appointed to one of the Center’s core departments. Biophotonics, the integration of “biology and light”, is an area of strategic importance to the BUPC. Applications and devices in medicine, genetics and environmental science, for defense and non-defense models, form a strong base for faculty and students to pursue research in this area. A particular emphasis is placed on translational biophotonics that employ the Center’s pipeline of innovation in this field. This award is a part of the BUPC-ARL Cooperative Agreement and aims to provide support for academic equipment and program startup costs for a new tenured or tenure-track faculty position. The research conducted by these new faculty members must be complementary to the BUPC core intellectual and academic strengths.
These areas of strength include:
- Biophotonics imaging, the study of optical imaging and how it is used to understand biological problems, including microscopy, subsurface probing of tissue, adaptive optics for retinal and neurobiological imaging.
- Biomedical photonics, the study of light-based systems for applications including detecting and treating disease, probing molecules and cells, sensing pathogens, microsurgery and wound healing.
The Center’s leadership in this important area of research and development is strengthened by an unparalleled geographic concentration of biophotonics-related academic and commercial activities in the Boston area. The success of our program depends on our ability to attract, support, and retain the field’s most promising academic researchers.
Ph.D. Fellowship Program
The success of interdisciplinary research at BUPC depends directly on the quality of our graduate students drawn from a wide range of academic backgrounds. To support those students and to ensure that BUPC will continue to maintain facilities and academic programs conductive to interdisiplanary research and education, the Center continued its doctoral fellowship program. This year, ten photonics graduate students were funded. Awardees are selected from nominees provided by those cognate graduate programs and BUPC faculty advisors. Final selections are made by an appointed committee of Photonics Center faculty and staff members.
2008 Fellowship Awardees
Student
|
Dept.
|
Advisor
|
Photonics Contact
|
Service
|
Ashwin Gopinath |
ECE |
Dal Negro |
Anlee Krupp |
Zeiss/E-beam |
Danilo D’Orsogna |
ECE |
Bellotti |
Anlee Krupp |
ZYGO/AFM |
F. Hakan Koklu |
ECE | Ünlü |
Anlee Krupp | Zeiss |
Katherine Calabro |
BME | Bigio |
Chad Demers | Spectrometer/Fiber Polish |
Utku Kemiktarak |
PHY | Ekinci | Paul Mak | Photolithgraphy |
Ashwinkumar |
AME | Murray | Paul Mak | Coatings |
Brian Hicks |
ECE | Chakrabarti | Paul Mak | Ellipsometer/Thin Films |
David Newby |
PHY | Goldberg | Keith Crook | Seminars |
Hengyi Ju |
ME | Roy/Murray | Keith Crook | Seminars |
New Equipment Grants
The equipment committee meet for several weeks each year to review input from various photonics faculty and staff members to determine the best use of BUPC-ARL capital equipment allocations to enhance the shared resources at the center. The committee reviews proposals presented by faculty members, investigates further information and makes an impartial decision on the equipment based upon the following four categories:
- The instrument will be widely usable as a shared resource in the Photonics Center to enhance research and development programs;
- The instrument will provide critical leverage for attracting additional support to the Center for Research and Development;
- The instrument will enhance the careers and photonics-related research of junior faculty members of the Photonics Center; and
- The instrument will attract additional support for Research and Development.