
Physics Faculty Associates Named UT-Battelle Corporate Fellows
May 12, 2005
Dr. Anthony Mezzacappa, Adjunct Professor of Physics, and Dr. Thomas
Thundat, Research Professor, have been honored as UT-Battelle Corporate
Fellows. The official ORNL News Release is below:
ORNL News Release
Media Contact: Mike Bradley
Communications and External Relations
865.576.9553
Oak Ridge National Laboratory names UT-Battelle Corporate Fellows
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., May 12, 2005 — Three researchers at the Department
of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory have been named UT-Battelle
Corporate Fellows.
The appointees are Robert J. Harrison, Computer Science and Mathematics;
Anthony Mezzacappa, Physics; and Thomas G. Thundat, Life Sciences.
"All three of these honorees are outstanding leaders in their respective
scientific communities and have made extraordinary contributions in research,"
ORNL Director Jeff Wadsworth said. "While each has contributed in
a different way, they collectively represent the scientific strength and
research performance that is essential to ORNL as a world-leading laboratory."
Wadsworth said the Corporate Fellow designation is the highest level of
recognition for career achievements in science and technology, performance
and leadership. Awardees' contributions to international leadership in
research, new and expanded research programs and mentoring of staff are
vital to the success of the laboratory as a whole, he said.
Harrison joined ORNL in 2002 as group leader for Computational Chemical
Sciences following a distinguished career at Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory where he was a Battelle Fellow.
Widely recognized for his work in the electronic structure of molecules,
computational chemistry and high performance algorithms and computing,
Harrison is chief architect of NWChem, the world's leading computational
chemistry code, now used at more than 1000 sites worldwide.
Harrison, who received his Ph.D. in 1984 from Churchill College, Cambridge,
England, also has held research appointments at Argonne National Laboratory,
Daresbury Laboratory, and the University of Florida. He is the 2002 recipient
of the Sidney Fernbach Award of the IEEE, an R&D 100 Award, and Best
Paper Awards at Supercomputing 1998 and IEEE High Performance Distributed
Computing 1996. His research on computational chemistry and high-performance
computing has been cited more than 3500 times.
Harrison holds a joint appointment with the University of Tennessee, where
he is a professor in the chemistry department. He lives in Knoxville with
his wife, Jody-Kate.
Mezzacappa, who heads the Theoretical Astrophysics Group in Physics, earned
his Ph.D. in 1988 at the University of Texas at Austin. Before joining
ORNL in 1996, he held positions at the University of Pennsylvania, the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and UT, where he is currently
adjunct professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy.
A world leader in computational astrophysics and a pioneer in the field
of supernova science, Mezzacappa was the first to implement Boltzmann
kinetic theory to model neutrino transport during supernova explosions,
a theoretical and numerical feat long thought impossible. Since joining
ORNL in 1996, he has conceived, proposed and now leads the Terascale Supernova
Initiative, a multi-million dollar, multiyear DOE initiative involving
several dozen researchers at a dozen institutions around the world. TSI
is one of the world's largest computational astrophysics initiatives.
Mezzacappa is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and received the
Presidential Early Career Award in Science and Engineering in 1999. His
extensive community outreach efforts include involvement in the Universe
Knoxville project and the proposed downtown relocation and expansion of
the East Tennessee Discovery Center.
Mezzacappa lives in Knoxville with his wife, Mary Ellen Johansen, and
his three children, Hannah, Noah, and Isabel.
Trained as a physicist, Thundat leads the Nanoscale Science and Devices
Group in Life Sciences. He came to ORNL in 1992 following completion of
his Ph.D. at the State University of New York at Albany in 1987 and after
holding research positions at the Arizona State University and at UT.
Thundat is a world leader in nanomechanical sensors. His work in biomedical
engineering and biotechnology, micromechanical sensors, and nanoscale
imaging and detection has been featured in Time Magazine. His numerous
national and international honors include two R&D 100 Awards, three
National Federal Consortium in Technology Transfer Awards, the Jesse Beams
Award, the Discover Magazine Award, ASME Pioneer Award and the Scientific
American Top 50 Technology Leaders Award.
The author of more than 170 scientific papers in refereed journals,
Thundat has received 19 patents for nanomechanical sensor technologies
ranging from medical instrumentation to land mine detection. Thundat is
a Battelle Distinguished inventor and a Fellow of the American Physical
Society. He is also a research professor of physics at UT and a visiting
professor at the University of Burgundy, France. He lives in Knoxville
with his wife Darilyn and three children, Rachel, Tess, and Jonah.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory is a multiprogram laboratory managed for
the Department of Energy by UT-Battelle.
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