One of our graduate students at Hunter, Nada Ali, was one of three physics graduate students awarded a Dissertation Fellowship this year. The fellowship will allow Nada to focus on completing her dissertation during her final year of graduate school.
She was also awarded a Paul C. Notari grant by the Futures Initiative, a program at the Graduate Center focusing on equity and innovation. Nada is working with Prof. Mark Hillery on several projects in the field of quantum information.
She is currently a coauthor on two published papers and two that have been submitted for publication. She recently presented a talk on one part of her work, entitled "Discrete-outcome sensor networks: Multiple detection events and grouping detectors" at the APS Global Physics Summit in Anaheim, California.