Biography:Karin Dahmen
Karin Andrea Sabine Dahmen (born 1969)[1] is a German condensed matter physicist whose research interests include non-equilibrium thermodynamics, critical phenomena, crackling noise, pattern formation, and quenched disorder, with wide applications of these topics to phenomena such as earthquakes, avalanches, variable stars, and population dynamics. She is a professor of physics at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.[2]
Education and career
After earning a degree in physics at the University of Bonn, Dahmen completed a Ph.D. in physics at Cornell University in 1995. She was a Harvard Junior Fellow from 1995 until 1999, when she took a faculty position at the University of Illinois.[2]
Recognition
In 2013, Dahmen was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), after a nomination by the APS Topical Group on Statistical & Nonlinear Physics, "for establishment and exploring the deep connections between non-equilibrium phase transitions and avalanche phenomena in diverse fields encompassing materials, geophysics and neuroscience".[3]
References
- ↑ Full name and birth year from WorldCat Identities, retrieved 2020-07-07
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Karin A Dahmen", Directory (University of Illinois Physics), https://physics.illinois.edu/people/directory/profile/dahmen, retrieved 2020-07-07
- ↑ APS Fellows Nominated by GSNP: 2013, APS Topical Group on Statistical & Nonlinear Physics, https://www.aps.org/units/gsnp/fellowship/index.cfm?year=2013, retrieved 2020-07-07
External links
- Home page
- Karin Dahmen publications indexed by Google Scholar