Biography:Susan Coppersmith

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Short description: American condensed matter physicist

Susan Nan Coppersmith FRSN FAA (born March 18, 1957)[1] is an American condensed matter physicist. Formerly the Robert E. Fassnacht Professor of Physics and Vilas Research Professor in the Department of Physics at the University of Wisconsin–Madison,[2] she moved in 2018 to the University of New South Wales.[3]

Susan Coppersmith

Born (1957-03-18) March 18, 1957 (age 66)
Johnstown, Pennsylvania
NationalityAmerican
Education
Alma mater
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
Institutions
ThesisDynamics of an Incommensurate Harmonic Chain (1983)
Doctoral advisorsN. David Mermin, Daniel S. Fisher

Education and career

Coppersmith was born on March 18, 1957, in Johnstown, Pennsylvania;[1][4] her parents were a lawyer and a piano teacher.[4]

She majored in physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduating in 1978. After a year of study as a Churchill Scholar in applied mathematics at the University of Cambridge, she went to Cornell University for additional graduate study, completing a doctorate in physics there in 1983.[1][4][5] Her dissertation, Dynamics of an Incommensurate Harmonic Chain,[6] connected the theory of dynamical systems to condensed matter physics,[4] and was supervised by Daniel S. Fisher.[6] Fisher was at Bell Labs at the time, and Coppersmith herself did most of her doctoral research at Bell Labs, so the official chair of her doctoral committee was instead N. David Mermin.[4]

After postdoctoral research at Brookhaven National Laboratory, Bell Labs, and Princeton University, she joined the staff at Bell Labs in 1987. She moved to the University of Chicago in 1995, to the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2001,[1][5] and to the University of New South Wales in 2018.[3]

Research

Coppersmith's research has included such varied topics as the way seashells stack together on the beach, the folding patterns of thin gold sheets, the crystalline structure in layers of mother of pearl, the propagation of forces within granular materials, the relation between the atomic structure of materials and their bulk strength, and the design of nano-scale devices for quantum computing.[4][3]

Recognition

Coppersmith was elected as a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 1992, and as a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1999. In 2006 she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and in 2009 she was elected to the National Academy of Sciences.[1] In 2021 she was elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science[7] and Fellow of the Royal Society of New South Wales.[8]

References

External links