About UCI
The University of California, Irvine (UCI) is the youngest of the ten campuses of the University of California, one of the worldís largest and most prestigious institutions of higher education. UCI opened in 1965 with 116 faculty and 1,589 students. In the succeeding years, UCI has attained national and international distinction in its programs and faculty.
Two Nobel Prizes in 1995, to Frederick Reines in Physics and F. Sherwood Rowland in Chemistry, helped to secure UCIís position among the leading American research universities. For overall quality of educational experience and caliber of faculty, UCI consistently rates among the top 50 universities nationwide. Membership in the American Association of Universities (AAU), a group of 60 of the most distinguished research institutions, is another indication of UCIís stature in the academic community.
UCI provides an atmosphere conducive to creative work and scholarship at all levels, to the exploration of the accumulated knowledge of humanity, and to the development of new knowledge through basic and applied research.
The campus challenges its students both academically and personally and relies on the commitment, curiosity, imagination, and judgment of its faculty and students to assure its continued intellectual and cultural vitality.
Physics and Astronomy at UCI
The Department of Physics and Astronomy in UCIís School of Physical Sciences has 42 faculty members, an approximately equal number of research physicists, and 15 to 30 visiting scientists each year. There are about 100 graduate students in the Ph.D. program. Each faculty member is actively engaged in forefront research and creative activity in physics, as well as in graduate and undergraduate teaching. Research is critical to graduate education. Active programs of research are underway in particle physics, condensed matter physics, low temperature physics, plasma physics, gravitational physics, medical physics, and astrophysics. The quality of the Physics and Astronomy faculty is evidenced by its ability to compete successfully for federal research funding. Department faculty are awarded funding annually by the Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, NASA, the Office of Naval Research, and several other national institutions.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy also supports the Institute of Surface and Interface Science, which brings together collaborating faculty and researchers in physics, chemistry, and electrical engineering.
Frederick Reines Hall, renamed after the late Nobel Prize winner from UCI, is home to the UCI Department of Physics and Astronomy.