News Release

UTSA receives $225,000 National Science Foundation grant to support doctoral students in physics

Grant and Award Announcement

University of Texas at San Antonio

UTSA Physics Graduate Students Receive NSF Support

image: UTSA Physics Graduate Students Ray Yow and Guang Yin Swanland in Laser Lab. view more 

Credit: Patrick R. Dunn

The University of Texas at San Antonio physics professor Dhiraj Sardar has been awarded a three-year, $225,000 grant by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to support students pursuing doctoral degrees in physics. The NSF grant, the largest the UTSA Department of Physics and Astronomy has ever received, is highly competitive and according to Sardar, only one in 17 proposals to receive NSF Funding.

"This NSF grant is a major leap for the UTSA physics program, and helps propel the College of Sciences as we continue to work toward premier research university status," said Rosalie Ambrosino, UTSA Provost.

Sardar's students will study optical and laser materials and characterize and analyze their properties. Current laser research projects include discovering novel techniques for cleaning semiconductor wafers using ultrasonic sound waves, developing non-invasive diagnostic and therapeutic tools for medical applications and the optical effects of lasers in infrared regions.

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The author of two patents and more than 200 scientific publications and abstracts, Sardar's grants have supported more than 42 graduate and undergraduate students. His list of awards include the American Physical Society's "2003 Prize to A Faculty Member for Research in an Undergraduate Institution" and the "2002 UTSA President's Distinguished Achievement Award for Research Achievement."


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