Andrews University (Berrien Springs, Michigan) is excited to announce and congratulate colleague Tiffany Summerscales, professor of physics, for her part in the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) Scientific Collaboration recognized on Oct. 3, 2017, with a Nobel Prize in Physics for its discoveries of gravitational waves. Three of that project’s leaders, Rainer Weiss of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Kip Thorne and Barry C Barish, both of Caltech, are the specific named recipients of today’s Nobel Prize. In announcing the award, the Royal Swedish Academy called it “a discovery that shook the world.”
Summerscales, along with her students, represented Andrews University as one of 103 academic institutions in 18 countries that make up the LIGO Scientific Collaboration that worked with Weiss, Thorne, and Barish on this project. That research led to confirmation of Albert Einstein’s 1916 theory that gravitational waves travel across our universe at the speed of light—stretching space in one direction and shrinking it in the direction that is at right angles. To help confirm the theory, LIGO measures those fluctuations by monitoring two light beams traveling between pairs of mirrors down pipes running in different directions. The two LIGO detectors are located at Hanford, Washington and Livingston, Louisiana.
“We’re excited to acknowledge and celebrate the brilliance, determination and skill of Tiffany Summerscales and our students (a complete list of participating students is included below) as part of that LIGO Scientific Collaboration that resulted in the landmark Gravitational Waves discoveries that made today’s Nobel recognition possible,” says Margarita Mattingly, chair of the Andrews University Department of Physics and STEM Division. “Also, on a day to day basis, we appreciate Tiffany’s significant and passionate work as a teacher who impacts each one of our Andrews University students who do research, work as teaching and learning assistants, and who learn each day in her classes.”
“At Andrews, we talk about how important it is to Learn Deeply, to emphasize meaningful creativity and scholarship as an essential part of our students’ studies while they are here,” says Andrea Luxton, president of Andrews University. “Professor Summerscales’ work on this Nobel Prize winning effort, accompanied by the work of dedicated students over more than a decade, represents the very best of this commitment on the part of the university to offer transforming education and research, accomplished alongside the very best and most dedicated teachers who make up our faculty.”
Below is a list of Andrews University students who assisted Tiffany Summerscales as undergraduate members of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration:
Nicholas Valles (BS physics, mathematics, 2008)
Jonathon Van Ornam (BS biophysics, 2009)
Philip Roberts (BS physics, mathematical studies, 2007; MS mathematics and science, 2009)
Jason Lee (BS biophysics, 2008)
Eric Shull (BS mathematics, 2009)
Garret Catron (BSE engineering, 2011)
Andrew Hoff (BS physics, 2011)
Chris Greenley (BS physics, mathematical studies, 2013)
Michael McMearty (BS physics, mathematics, 2015)
Belinda Cheeseboro (BS physics, mathematical studies, 2015) [current LIGO member, West Virgina University]
William Tritch (BS physics, mathematics, 2014)
Fritz Miot (BS biophysics, 2015)
Jonathan Wheeler (BS physics, mathematical studies; BSE engineering, 2016)
Shannen Velasquez (BS physics, in progress)
Isabel Stafford (BS physics, mathematical studies, 2016)
Gia Smart (BS physics, in progress)
Richard Clark (BSM music, 2017)
Jacob Willard (BS physics, BA music, in progress)
Zachariah Swerdlow (BS physics, mathematical studies, in progress)
Lukasz Krzywon (BS physics, mathematics, 2017)
Darrick Horton (BS physics, BSE engineering, in progress)
Kelsey Rook (BS computer science, in progress)
— Article provided by Pat Spangler, FOCUS editor, Marketing & Communication Services director for Andrews University