From: Leslie Harper
Subject: Congratulations to Alex Arefiev
I'm delighted to announce that Alexey V. Arefiev has been selected
by the American Physical Society to receive the Marshall N.
Rosenbluth Outstanding Doctoral Thesis Award. This is a truly
outstanding national honor, and we extend our hearty congratulations
to him.
The title of Alex's thesis was "Theoretical Studies of the VASIMR
Plasma Propulsion Concept." His thesis work was supervised by Dr.
Boris Breizman (Institute for Fusion Studies), and his faculty
advisor was Prof. Roger Bengtson (Fusion Research Center and
Department of Physics). Alex also worked with scientists at the
Johnson Space Center (Houston) in the Advanced Space Propulsion
Laboratory, directed by NASA astronaut Dr. Franklin R. Chang-Diaz.
Alex will receive the Rosenbluth Award (which carries with it an
honorarium of $2,000) at the 45th Annual Meeting of the APS Division
of Plasma Physics, to be held October 27-31, 2003, in Albuquerque,
New Mexico.
The citation for Alex's award is: "For first principles theoretical
analysis of a plasma thruster that models the helicon plasma source,
single-pass radio frequency heating, and particle and momentum
balance."
The Marshall N. Rosenbluth Outstanding Doctoral Thesis Award
(formerly known as the "Outstanding Doctoral Thesis in Plasma
Physics Award") is to provide recognition to exceptional young
scientists who have performed original thesis work of outstanding
scientific quality and achievement in the area of plasma physics
(http://www.aps.org/praw/ramo/index.html). This award was
established in 1985 (originally as the Simon Ramo Award) and endowed
in 1997 by General Atomics Inc. Professor Rosenbluth, one of the
world's most eminent theoretical plasma physicists and currently
professor emeritus, University of California, San Diego, was the
founding director of the Institute for Fusion Studies and a
professor of physics at the University of Texas at Austin from 1980
to 1987.
Very recently Alex was also selected for two other awards related to
his thesis work. The Department of Physics honored him for The
Outstanding Dissertation in Physics 2002-2003. Also, the University
of Texas Graduate School accorded him University Co-Operative
Society Outstanding Dissertation Award Honorable Mention for
Distinguished Scholarship.
Since graduating last year, Alex has been employed as a postdoctoral
Research Fellow on a joint appointment between the Institute for
Fusion Studies and the High Intensity Laser Science Group
(Department of Physics).
Incidentally, Alex's wife, Kate, graduated this month from the
University of Texas at Austin with a degree in chemistry. She will
enter medical school in the fall.
Alex, congratulations from all of us!
______________________________________________________
James W. Van Dam
Institute for Fusion Studies , The University of Texas at Austin
US Postal Service address: One University Station, C1500
Express Mail address: Speedway and Dean Keaton Street, RLM 11.222
Austin, Texas 78712-1068, USA
Telephone: +1-512-471-1322 Fax: +1-512-471-6715
E-mail: vandam@physics.utexas.edu
http://w3fusion.ph.utexas.edu/ifs/