Each year the Department of Physics recognizes the outstanding research and dissertation of a PhD graduate. This year the recipients are Erika Holmbeck and Nirupama Sensharma.

Holmbeck's thesis is titled "The Looking-Glass and Beyond: Using Observations and Modeling of Stellar Actinide Abundances and Modeling of Stellar Actinide." She was advised by Professors Timothy Beers and Rebecca Surman. Earlier this year Holmbeck was awarded the NASA Hubble Fellowship, a highly competitive fellowship renewable for up to three years that will allow her to continue her research on the origin of the universe’s heaviest elements. Fellows select the institution at which they will complete their research. Holmbeck will further her research at Carnegie Observatories in Pasadena, California.

Sensharma's thesis is titled "Wobbling Motion in Nuclei: Transverse, Longitudinal and and Chiral Abundances as a Window into R-Process Events." She was advised by Professor Umesh Garg. Eariler this spring Sensharma received the 2021 Cornelius P. Browne Memorial Award in Nuclear Physics for her work on wobbling motion in gold nuclei and outstanding outreach effort through her project Nuclear Energy – The Better Energy. Sensharma is heading to a postdoc position at the University of North Carolina under the mentorship of another ND PhD alumni, Daniel Ayangeakaa.
Originally published by physics.nd.edu on May 21, 2021.
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