Purdue University Northwest Physics professor earns prestigious American Physical Society fellowship
Purdue University Northwest
(PNW) Professor of Physics Neeti Parashar has been elected as a 2024 Fellow of the American Physical
Society (APS).
Parashar is recognized with
the prestigious distinction from APS “for outstanding mentorship, teaching and
leadership over two decades by creating and providing groundbreaking research
and educational opportunities for minority students and young physicists from
many nations, and for wide ranging contributions to the Compact Muon Solenoid
program and its pixel detector at the Large Hadron Collider.”
“This is one of the highest
honors a U.S. physicist can earn, so it’s very gratifying to know that I am
recognized for my work, and included in the top tier group of physicists
worldwide,” said Parashar. “Professionally, I have done everything possible in
my capacity to support undergraduate students, graduate students, postdocs,
high school teachers, high school students and fellow colleagues. Personally,
it’s the human values that surpass all else. I am very grateful for the love,
respect and support from my PNW family. PNW is home.”
“I am proud to join others as
we celebrate this momentous achievement of Dr. Parashar,” said PNW
Chancellor Kenneth C. Holford. “She is an accomplished researcher and
passionate educator that has dedicated her career to advancing science and serving
our community. We are fortunate to have Dr. Parashar as one of our esteemed
faculty members who is elevating the impact of our scholarly contributions at
PNW.”
“We are delighted and proud
that Dr. Parashar has been elected to the APS Fellows,” said Marie T. Mora,
provost and vice chancellor for Academic Affairs at PNW. “With Dr. Parashar’s
outstanding research, leadership, teaching and mentoring – including providing
educational opportunities for traditionally underrepresented students in STEM –
this recognition is well deserved. It is always exciting when professional
societies and associations like APS recognize the importance of mentoring in
addition to research. As Purdue Northwest continues to build our research and
scholarly activities, we expect that our faculty will continue to remain firmly
committed to the success of our students, as Dr. Parashar has been doing
throughout her career.”
APS recognizes society
members who have made advances in the field of physics through original
research and publication, made significant innovative contributions in the
application of physics to science and technology, made remarkable advancements
in the teaching of physics, or displayed exemplary service and participation in
APS activities. Each year, no more than half of a percent of the society’s
membership are elected as fellows.
At PNW, Parashar facilitates
learning and research opportunities for postdocs, undergraduate students and
Northwest Indiana school students as the director of the university’s Center for High
Energy Physics and PNW QuarkNet Center on
education and outreach.
Parashar, as a scholar
specializing in high energy physics, provides students opportunities to observe
and contribute to National Science Foundation-funded research performed at
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Batavia, Ill. and the European
Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Switzerland. Parashar and students
collaborate on and present research focused on new particles in proton-proton
collisions at the Large Hadron Collider and the silicon pixel detector in use
at the Compact Muon Solenoid experiment, which are housed at CERN. Parashar has
also mentored postdoctoral fellows that have transitioned into research roles
in labs and academic settings as faculties.
“At PNW, I take great pride
in leading our discovery-driven research endeavors,” said Parashar. “I provide
all members of my research team with the needed resources and guidance. But
more importantly, I give them the freedom to ask questions, experiment and
discover, because that is when you do science the best.”
“Recognition as a ‘fellow’ by
the professional society that you are part of is something the professorate
strives for throughout academia in the sciences and engineering,” said Bruce
Berdanier, dean of the College of
Engineering and Sciences at PNW. “This
recognition really is considered one of the pinnacles of a career in teaching,
research and service, and Dr. Parashar has greatly accomplished that in her
work in high energy physics throughout the world and with students here at
PNW.”
Parashar was part of the
research team, comprised of several thousand scientists, who in 2012 discovered
the Higgs boson particle at CERN. The Higgs boson responsible for the origin of
mass is dubbed as “the God particle” in an attempt to explain the genesis of
life's existence. The scientists’ discovery helped Peter Higgs and Francois
Englert earn the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics for their predictions of the
existence of the Higgs boson particle.
Parashar has been a faculty
member at PNW since 2005. She earned her Ph.D. in High Energy Physics from the
University of Delhi. She has authored or co-authored over 1,900 research
articles published in peer-reviewed international journals.
APS is a premier professional
society and nonprofit scientific organization committed to advancing physics
and creating a welcoming professional home for the world’s physics community.