Students Audrey Anigbo ’24, Sydnie Hom ’21, and Alex Kang ’21 presented their research at the 2021 Spring Student Symposium. Audrey Anigbo’s poster was titled, “Picture a Physicist.” Sydnie Hom’s poster was titled, “Pulse Shaping in Microscopes.” Alex Kang’s presentation was titled, “Multi-Focus Imaging.”
Students present at the undergraduate research symposium at the OSA annual meeting
Sydnie Hom (’21), Kazuto Nishimori (‘20.5), and Ruben Vargas (’22) presented their research at the undergraduate research symposium online on September 14, 2020. The Symposium on Undergraduate Research is held in conjunction with the annual joint meeting of the Optical Society of America (OSA) and the Division of Laser Science of the American Physical Society (APS-DLS). The joint presentation for Sydnie Hom and Kazuto Nishimori was titled, “Remote Axial Scanning and Light-Field Refocusing in a Temporal Focusing Microscope.” Ruben Vargas’s presentation was titled, “Toward Two-Photon Excitation with Supercontinuum Generation.”
More information about the symposium can be found here:
http://laser.physics.sunysb.edu/research-symposium/.
Biomedical Optics Lab receives NIH R15 Academic Research Enhancement Award (AREA) from the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
Biomedical Optics Lab part of Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) award from the National Science Foundation
Prof. Amanda Crocker (PI), Prof. Michael E. Durst, Prof. Mark Spritzer, Prof. Clint Cave, and Prof. Catherine Combelles were awarded an NSF MRI grant for a confocal microscope. The project is titled, “MRI: Acquisition of a confocal microscope for multidisciplinary research and teaching at an undergraduate liberal arts college.” The grant was awarded through the Division of Biological Infrastructure of the National Science Foundation.
https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=2018114&HistoricalAwards=false
Students Present at the 2020 First Annual Physics Summer Research Symposium
Sydnie Hom (’21), Kazuto Nishimori (‘20.5), and Ruben Vargas (’22) presented their research at the physics research symposium online on August 5, 2020. Because the annual college-wide poster session is on hiatus, we have created this opportunity for you to share what you have been working on this summer and for us to gather as a department to celebrate. Sydnie Hom’s presentation was titled, “Higher Order Dispersion in a Temporal Focusing Microscope. Kazuto Nishimori’s was titled, “Light-Field Detection in a Temporal Focusing Microscope.” Ruben Vargas’s presentation was titled, “Simulating Supercontinuum Generation.”