Research Program and Opportunities
Research opportunities for graduate students abound. In addition to working directly with a Physics Department faculty member, graduate students also conduct research with faculty in Astronomy & Astrophysics, Chemistry, Geophysical Sciences, Biological Sciences, Molecular Engineering, as well as at Fermilab, Argonne, CERN, and many other facilities. Collaborations across departments are encouraged and several inter-departmental Research Institutes are designed to support such cross contamination. The Department of Physics participates in and leads a variety of international collaborations, including ATLAS, MilliQan, DUNE, Short-Baseline Neutrino Program, KOTO, DAMIC, DARKSIDE, XENONnT, LIGO, CTA, VERITAS, Pierre Auger Observatory, SPT, and CMB-S4.
In many cases, graduate students can get involved in research immediately upon, and sometime before, beginning their first quarter in the program. The best way for graduate students to get involved in the research of his or her choice is to communicate with the faculty members working in their area(s) of interest to find out how to best proceed based on their specific situations. A great way to explore an experimental research group early-on is to satisfy the experimental physics requirement by doing a year-long project with that group.
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Explore the Physics Department Research Program