On Saturday, Oct. 6, Judith Pipher, a professor of physics and astronomy at UR, will be inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame. She will receive this honor due to her contributions to the field of infrared astronomy, as well as her teaching abilities.

The National Women’s Hall of Fame was founded in Seneca Falls, N.Y. in 1969 and, since then, 217 women have been inducted into the Hall.

The last astronomer to be inducted into the Hall was Maria Mitchell, who later became the first female professional astronomer in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1848.

“Judy Pipher’s contributions as a scientist, as a leader and as a person are remarkable in every way,” the Lee A. DuBridge Professor of Physics and chair of the Department of Physics and Astronomy Nicholas Bigelow said. “Throughout her career, she has made major contributions to promoting women in science both as a role model and as a teacher and research advisor.”

Pipher’s research was used in the Spitzer Space Telescope, which NASA launched in 2003. Her infrared detectors are used to investigate clusters of forming stars and brown dwarfs, which are too small to become stars and cannot be seen by ground telescopes. Thus, the infrared detectors allow the stars to be studied.

Pipher has been a member of the UR faculty since 1971, joining after earning her doctorate from Cornell University in the then-emerging field of infrared astronomy. She also received the Susan B. Anthony Lifetime Achievement Award in 2002.

Halusic is a member of the class of 2010.



Campus Brief: Professor of Astronomy inducted to Hall of Fame

Traffic mitigation, the main goal of the congestion relief program, has been an inarguable and impressive success. The major bridge and tunnel crossings into the tolled area of Manhattan saw an astounding 23% average decrease in rush hour travel time, ranging from 6.7% on the Manhattan Bridge all the way to 51% in the Holland Tunnel. Read More

Campus Brief: Professor of Astronomy inducted to Hall of Fame

As is tradition for the University of Rochester Campus Times, I’m going to take advantage of this Spring’s first print edition to introduce myself and to update all of you on our goals for this coming semester. Read More

Campus Brief: Professor of Astronomy inducted to Hall of Fame

This creates a dilemma. If we only mandate what is easy for companies to implement, emissions keep rising. If we pretend everything can be decarbonized quickly, climate policy collapses under its obvious failures. A serious approach has to accept two tenets at once: we need full decarbonization everywhere that it is possible, and  we need honest promises from sectors where it is not. Read More