Biography:Michael Bedzyk
Michael J. Bedzyk | |
---|---|
Known for | x-ray physicist developing the understanding of X-ray standing waves |
Awards | Bertram Eugene Warren Diffraction Physics Award, American Crystallographic Association (1994) Fellow of American Physical Society (1998) Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science (2012) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | physics |
Institutions | Northwestern University |
Michael J. Bedzyk is an x-ray physicist, Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at Northwestern University, and Co-Director of Northwestern Synchrotron Research Center.
Biography
His research program includes the development of novel X-ray probes and the characterization of surface, interface, and thin-film structures with atomic resolution. He conducts experiments using both in-house and synchrotron X-ray facilities. The latter have greatly enhanced chemical and structural sensitivity for studying systems as dilute as one-hundredth of an atomic monolayer.
He also developed a number of methods for generating X-ray standing waves with differing characteristic length scales. He uses these periodic X-ray probes to pinpoint the lattice location of adsorbate atoms on crystalline surfaces, to measure strain within epitaxially grown semiconductor and ferroelectric thin films, and to locate heavy atoms within ordered ultrathin organic films.
Awards and significant honors
Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2012
Fellow, American Physical Society, 1998
Bertram Eugene Warren Diffraction Physics Award, American Crystallographic Association, 1994
Personal life
Michael J Bedzyk and his wife, Monica Olvera de la Cruz, have a daughter, Ana Jimena Pavlovitch-Bedzyk.
Education
Bedzyk received his bachelor's, M.S., and PhD degrees all from State University of New York at Albany. His PhD thesis was titled "X-ray standing wave analysis for bromine chemisorbed on silicon."[1]
References