
May 2004
Research Corporation
Research Corporation awards $2.8 million in grants in chemistry, physics and astronomyAwards to scientists promote research at primarily undergraduate institutions and encourage Ph.D.-granting institutions to excel at both teaching and research (Tucson, AZ) � Research Corporation, America's first foundation for the advancement of science, announces the awarding of sixty-five grants to scientists at colleges and universities across the United States and Canada. Through three different grant programs, Research Corporation will be supporting scientists in many of the cutting-edge areas of science--from dark energy, cosmology and nanostructures to biomimetic systems, light-harvesting compounds and environment-friendly solvents.
Examples of this year's awardees and their proposed research programs include:
� Ann Esin, Department of Physics at Harvey Mudd College, will study the photometric variability of stars in nearby star-forming clusters. (Cottrell College Science Award)
� Peter M. Iovine, Department of Chemistry at the University of San Diego, will examine the synthesis and spectroscopy of conjugated light-harvesting compounds containing boroxine cores. (Cottrell College Science Award)
� Rustem F. Ismagilov, Department of Chemistry at the University of Chicago, will use minimal chemical models to understand complex biochemical networks and to create biomimetic functional systems. (Cottrell Scholar Award)
� Bhuvnesh Jain, Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Pennsylvania, will study gravitational lensing as a probe of dark energy and cosmology. (Cottell Scholar Award)
� Rebecca L. Braslau, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the University of California, Santa Cruz, will investigate the design and preparation of ABA triblock copolymers as lipid bilayer mimics. (Research Opportunity Award)
Through the Cottrell College Science Awards (CCSA) program, faculty at primarily undergraduate institutions are challenged to explore new areas of science, to make new discoveries that contribute to their discipline and to initiate new research programs that can be sustained by other extramural funding sources, as well as with institutional support. A key element in these research programs is that they involve undergraduate students in meaningful ways. It is also expected that these endeavors will spill over into teaching, thereby raising the quality of undergraduate education.
The CCSA program supports both beginning and established faculty, with an emphasis on faculty initiating an area of research. These awards are announced twice a year. In this round of CCSA announcements, fifty-one scientists will receive $1.8 million in grants, an average of $36,000 per grant.
The prestigious Cottrell Scholar Awards (CSA) program is designed to support young faculty members at Ph.D.-granting institutions. These awards recognize institutions and faculty members who wish to excel at both teaching and research. The awards also seek to reinforce faculty mentoring, communication and a heightened appreciation for instruction in university science departments.
Cottrell Scholars are announced once a year, and each award recipient receives a grant of $75,000. Applicants must be in the third full calendar year of their first tenure-track position, and their applications consist of both research and teaching proposals. In this year's competition, the eleven awardees were selected from a group of ninety-six applicants.
In the third and final announcement, Research Opportunity Awards (ROA) have been made to three mid-career and senior scientists at graduate institutions who wish to reestablish long-term funding by initiating a new program of experimental research. In the ROA program, the chair of each Ph.D.-granting astronomy, chemistry or physics department in the United States and Canada may nominate up to two tenured faculty members annually who are without major research funding. The goal is to seed a vigorous, competitive basic research program reestablishing the individual as a productive member of the scientific research community. Awards are announced twice a year, and each award is for $50,000.
A list of all award recipients is attached.
Research Corporation is a private foundation, established in 1912, that aids basic research in the physical sciences (astronomy, chemistry and physics) at U.S. and Canadian colleges and universities. As one of the country's first foundations, Research Corporation was incorporated before the term "foundation" came into popular use. Research Corporation's founder, Frederick Gardner Cottrell, was a distinguished scientist, inventor and philanthropist. He continues to serve as a model and inspiration for the scientists who receive these awards today. Research Corporation supports ideas independently proposed by college and university faculty members and carries on activities related to science advancement.
For more information about Research Corporation and its programs, visit their website (www.rescorp.org).
Spring 2004 COTTRELL COLLEGE SCIENCE AWARDS
Todd Michael Weaver � University of Wisconsin, La Crosse Structural studies of fumarase C mutants and transition state analogue complexes - $30,874
Allan M. Nishimura � Westmont College A study of water-halobenzene clusters on Al2O3(0001) surface by emission and cavity ringdown spectroscopy - $36,218
Stuart M. Rothstein � Brock University Towards generating the complete structure distribution of a protein: Exploiting novel and established pattern recognition techniques - $18,420
Shawn M. Swavey � University of Dayton Mechanistic studies of the reduction of O2 in acidic solution at electrodes modified with redox-active multi-metallic porphyrins - $30,548
Ram S. Mohan � Illinois Wesleyan University Use of ionic liquids as environment-friendly and novel solvents for organic synthesis - $29,019
Krzysztof Slowinski � California State University, Long Beach Conductivity of two-component monolayers at the air-water interface - $38,944
Colin D. Abernethy � Western Kentucky University N-heterocyclic carbene complexes of early transition metals in high oxidation states - $39,672
Samir M. Aouadi � Southern Illinois University at Carbondale Real time spectroscopic ellipsometry study of the growth of nitride/metal nanocomposite and nanolaminate coatings - $42,000
Peter M. Iovine � University of San Diego Synthesis and spectroscopy of conjugated light-harvesting compounds containing boroxine cores - $35,706
Jason J. Reddick � University of North Carolina at Greensboro Polyketide biosynthesis in Bacillus subtilis: New chemistry from a familiar bacterium - $41,984
Douglas A. Vander Griend � Calvin College Exerting mathematical and chemical control to rationally synthesize discrete and infinite coordination networks - $38,606
Gary W. Beall � Texas State University, San Marcos Development of a theoretical model for gas transport in polymer nanocomposites - $37,316
Christopher J.A. Daley � Western Washington University Nitrile hydratase active site models: Study of structure, function, and role of post-translational modification using the synthetic analog approach - $40,803
Scott K. Bur � Gustavus Adolphus College The development of vinyl glycine derivatives for use in 1,5-electrocyclizations and their application to natural product synthesis - $36,218
Paul Urayama � Miami University Development of a novel imaging chamber for high-pressure biological fluorescence microscopy - $36,815
S. Burcin Bayram � Miami University Polarization spectroscopy of highly excited state diatomic molecules - $33,939
Glen G. Briand � Mount Allison University Synthesis and characterization of models for novel indium radio-pharmaceuticals - $28,000
Michael J. Carney � University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire Octahedral coordination geometry and its impact on polymerization catalysis - $30,000
John Birmingham � Santa Clara University Neuromodulation of sensory feedback in a motor control system - $25,682
Myriam Cotten � Pacific Lutheran University Solid-state NMR investigations of molecular recognition and biological function at interfaces using antimicrobial peptides - $45,465 Gregory M. Raner � University of North Carolina at Greensboro Stopped-flow and freeze quench techniques for the study of transient cytochrome P450 intermediates - $36,074
Lev Gasparov � University of North Florida Raman and infrared studies of the layered transition metal chalcogenides - $40,384
David M. Johnson � University of Texas at San Antonio Fundamentals of radical copolymerization: Do penultimate units exert an electronic effect on propagation kinetics? - $24,884
Kevin J. Quinn � College of the Holy Cross Synthesis of dihydropyrans by ring expansion of vinyl epoxides - $35,040
Yuh-Cherng Chai � John Carroll University The regulatory role of cellular thiols on activation of caspase(s) in apoptotic cells - $35,007
Jeffrey Katz � Colby College Synthesis of azacalixarenes, oxocalixarenes, and dicalixarene cages - $39,684
Stacey D. Wetmore � Mount Allison University A computational study of how nature repairs damaged DNA purines - $21,089
Alberto G. Rojo � Oakland University Sequential fragmentation and the origin of quasihexagonal patterns - $30,684
Michael P. Myers � California State University, Long Beach NOCKS - Nitric Oxide Chemistry and K+channels role in umbilical cord Stem cell differentiation - $37,840
Ann Esin � Harvey Mudd College A study of photometric variability of stars in nearby star-forming clusters - $31,218
David Tucker-Smith � Williams College Phenomenology of warped unification - $31,218
Keenan E. Dungey � University of Illinois at Springfield Porous heterobimetallic oxides for energy storage - $33,494
Don L. Warner � Boise State University Investigation of alkyl migration from silicon to carbon for the stereocontrolled synthesis of carbon-carbon bonds - $37,036
Kwang Hun Lim � East Carolina University NMR studies of ligand recognition properties of SH3 and WW proline-rich binding domains: Structure and dynamics - $35,000
Kartik Ghosh � Southwest Missouri State University Ferromagnetism in oxide-based dilute magnetic semiconductors - $34,604
Jim Crumley � Saint John's University/College of Saint Benedict The variation of ion cyclotron waves during the solar cycle due to composition effects - $37,224
Ang Chen � University of Akron Study of the physical mechanism of induced dielectric anomalies in SrTiO3-based quantum paraelectrics - $41,000
Paul W. Fontana � Seattle University Sheared-flow suppression of turbulence in two-dimensional flows - $50,184
Uwe Trittmann � Otterbein College Non-perturbative calculations in supersymmetric Yang-Mills theories - $34,980
Oleg A. Starykh � Hofstra University Effect of geometric frustration and disorder on weakly coupled spin chains - $28,583
Michael J. Lim � Rowan University Fast recombination in strongly coupled, ultracold plasmas - $41,176
James P. Luba � University of Arkansas, Little Rock Biochemical activity of glutathione peroxidase homologs from Staphylococcus aureus - $41,884
David O. De Haan � University of San Diego Secondary organic aerosol formation by acid-catalyzed surface reactions - $42,754
Krishna L. Foster � California State University, Los Angeles Laboratory studies on the affect of substrate on the kinetics of PAH oxidation - $42,603
Jeffrey McNamara Peloquin � Boise State University The applicability of photoexcited manganese salts in the treatment of water contamination - $34,608
Prabasaj Paul � Denison University Investigation of the scattering of light at photonic crystal interfaces using Pad� approximation techniques - $23,682
Gabriel C. Spalding � Illinois Wesleyan University Brownian particle streams in tuned optical lattices - $40,000
Gregory M. Ferrence � Illinois State University ?-Bond metathesis reactions mediated by N-confused porphyrin lanthanide complexes and the divalent lanthanide hydride, [(TptBu,Me)Yb(?-H)]2 - $40,000
Q. Charles Su � Illinois State University Relativistic quantum dynamics of one- and two- electron systems - $34,018
Steven D. Doty � Denison University Thermal balance in three-dimensional sources: The next step in modeling and understanding the structure of star-forming regions - $42,000
Scott M. Lacey � Franklin and Marshall College Wave-chaotic dynamics in three-dimensional asymmetric optical resonators - $40,963
CCSA Total Awards: 51 Total Amount: $1,815,144
Spring 2004 COTTRELL SCHOLAR AWARDS Seth M. Cohen � University of California, San Diego A bioinorganic approach for designing improved matrix metalloproteinase inhibitors - $75,000
Rustem F. Ismagilov � University of Chicago Using minimal chemical model to understand complex biochemical networks and to create biomimetic functional systems - $75,000
Carsten A. Ullrich � University of Missouri-Rolla New approaches for electron dynamics in semiconductor nanostructures and for teaching modern condensed-matter physics - $75,000
Bhuvnesh Jain � University of Pennsylvania Gravitational lensing as a probe of dark energy and cosmology - $75,000
Garth J. Simpson � Purdue University Nonlinear optical probes of structure and function in biological systems; anatomy of a green laser pointer - $75,000
Vassiliki Kalogera � Northwestern University Genetic algorithms in gravitational wave astrophysics - $75,000
Rosa Alejandra Lukaszew � University of Toledo Investigating the structural and magnetic properties of nano-magnets - $75,000
Christian E. Schafmeister � University of Pittsburgh The development of rigid bivalent inhibitors of influenza hemagglutinin - $75,000
Paul J. Chirik � Cornell University Nitrogen fixation with group 4 transition metals - $75,000
John Cerne � SUNY at Buffalo Infrared hall effect in strange magnetic metals - $75,000
Anthony D. Dinsmore � University of Massachusetts, Amherst Photonic glasses: Influence of the topology of random media on light propagation - $75,000
CS Total awards: 11 Total Amount: $825,000
RESEARCH OPPORTUNITY AWARDS Alexander Scheeline � University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Levitated drop reactor: Towards highly parallel enzyme kinetics measurements - $50,000
Rebecca L. Braslau � University of California, Santa Cruz Design and preparation of ABA triblock copolymers as lipid bilayer mimics - $50,000
Craig A. Merlic � University of California, Los Angeles Copper promoted synthesis of vinyl ethers - $50,000
ROA Total Awards: 3 Total Amount: $150,000
Contacts: Randy Wedin, e-mail: [email protected], phone: 952-475-3970 Dena McDuffie, e-mail: [email protected], phone: 520-571-1111
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