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"Resonance, which has now racked up three consecutive profitable quarters, was created by a group of University of WA scientists led by chief scientific officer and director Tim St Pierre to develop and commercialise magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) related technology." (thewest.com.au 29/09/08) Congratulations Professor Mike Tobar on being elevated to IEEE Fellow. (23/11/06) Welcome to Professor Lister Staveley-Smith, Premier's Fellow in Astronomy (1/11/06) Welcome to Professor Peter Quinn, Premier's Fellow in Astronomy (17/10/06) "Supersymmetry Down Under", Science Matters, Vol. 1 Issue 3. Spring 2006 |
Welcome to Professor Lister Staveley-Smith, Premier's Fellow in Astronomy
Welcome to Professor Peter Quinn, Premier's Fellow in AstronomyProf. Peter Quinn was born in Australia and received his BSc(Hons) in Mathematics and Physics from the University of Wollongong in 1978 where he received the University Medal in Physics. He conducted graduate studies in astronomy and astrophysics at the Australian National University and received his PhD in 1982 with a thesis dissertation on dynamics of disk galaxy mergers. His discovery of the structure and dynamics of galactic shells was highlighted in the Making of the Australian National University 1946-1996 as a major contribution to international astronomical research. During postdoctoral appointments in Theoretical Astrophysics at the California Institute of Technology (1982-1985) and the Space Telescope Science Institute (1985-1989) Prof. Quinn pursued his research interests in galaxy formation and dynamics, cosmology and dark matter using supercomputing facilities at Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Pittsburgh Supercomputer Centre. This work discovered the Quinn-Goodman effect for angular momentum dependent galactic accretion. In 1989, Prof. Quinn took up a Research Fellowship in the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics at ANU to lead the Australian involvement in the MACHO Dark Matter Search Project. The MACHO project took the front cover of Nature with the first microlensing evidence of baryonic dark matter in 1991. His work on computational astrophysics was awarded a Gordon Bell computing performance award in 1993 and a NASA High Performance Computing and Communications Grand Challenge Award in 1992. In 1995, Prof. Quinn accepted a position as Division Head of the newly formed Data Management and Operations Division at the European Southern Observatory headquarters in Munich. While at ESO, Prof. Quinn lead the efforts to design, implement and operate an end-to-end science data flow system for the ESO Very Large Telescope (VLT), the world’s largest optical and infrared observatory. This work was awarded a Computerworld 21st Century Achievement Award for Science in June 2005. During his time at ESO, Prof. Quinn directed the FP-5 Astrophysical Virtual Observatory (AVO) project, helped lay the foundations for the International Virtual Observatory Alliance and coordinated the formation of the EURO-VO as a program to realize VO-enable science for Europe. In December 2005, Prof. Quinn was awarded a Western Australian Premier’s Fellowship and will took up the position of Professor of Astronomy at the University of Western Australia in August 2006. |