View from the Chair

The University of Kentucky, located in Lexington, was founded in 1865 and is the state's comprehensive Ph.D. land grant institution. It is classified by the Carnegie Foundation as a Research I University. As the premier university in Kentucky, it is particularly charged with responsibility for professional and graduate training in all fields. Approximately 30,000 students are currently enrolled on the Lexington campus, a 350 acre site within easy walking distance of downtown Lexington, and at the adjacent Lexington Community College. Of these students, about 20 percent (over 6,000) are enrolled in graduate or professional schools.

The academic work of the University is organized into the Colleges of Agriculture, Allied Health Professions, Architecture, Arts and Sciences, Business and Economics, Communications and Information Studies, Dentistry, Education, Engineering, Fine Arts, Human Environmental Sciences, Law, Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, Social Work, and the Graduate School; all located on the Lexington campus. The Lexington Community College offers many additional programs and services to citizens of the state.

The Department of Physics and Astronomy is composed of 31 fulltime faculty members, approximately 55 graduate students, and 36 research, technical and administrative staff members. Research in the Department is divided into five broad areas: Astronomy and Astrophysics, Atomic Physics, Condensed Matter Physics, Nuclear Physics, and Particle Theory. Within each of these areas, graduate students can complete both course work and individual thesis research projects leading to the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees.

Upon entering the graduate program, students usually complete one to three years of work in the classroom, depending upon the student's background and the degree sought. In some cases, students enroll in advanced undergraduate physics courses to remedy specific deficiencies. Nearly all graduate students serve during at least part of their years in the program as Teaching Assistants for introductory undergraduate physics courses.

Students are encouraged to become familiar as soon as possible with the work of one or more of the research groups in the Department; usually by attending topical seminars and then arranging to work with a faculty member on a research project during the summer. In this way students become prepared to enter the research program and complete the thesis requirements of the graduate degrees. Master's degree candidates may choose to complete additional courses in the place of a thesis option. While completing a research project with a member of the faculty, graduate students have access to the broad range of resources provided by the Department and University. The array of computational resources is described elsewhere in this brochure.

Additional services are provided by fully staffed machine shop, electronics shop and vacuum/technical shop located in the ChemistryPhysics building. In addition, several of the research programs are conducted in part at major national and international research facilities.

Persons considering graduate study in physics and astronomy should be aware that mastery in these fields requires both a commitment from the student and dedication to hard work. The rewards of meeting this challenge are considerable, however, and can provide the professional physicist with membership in one of the great modern adventures of mankind.

Professor Joseph Brill, Chair


Professor Tom Troland
Director of Graduate Studies


Professor John Christopher
Director of Undergraduate Studies
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