The Optics and Materials Specialization of this program is not accepting new admits as of the Summer 24 semester.
Department of Physics
Science Building 112
(216) 687-2425
https://artsandsciences.csuohio.edu/physics/physics
Petru S. Fodor, Chair
Areas of Study
Applied Physics
Optics and Materials
Medical Physics
Introduction
Currently, there is tremendous growth in optics, condensed matter, materials physics, quantum computation and biological/medical physics caused by rapid developments in the fields of material science, quantum and semiconductor devices, imaging, and applications of physics in biology and medicine. The Physics Department of Cleveland State University offers an MS degree in Physics, with emphasis on optics & materials and applied physics designed for applied scientists and engineers who wish to develop competence in these rapidly advancing fields through a strong professional graduate program. The CSU’s MS in Physics program was ranked 5th in the country by the American Institute of Physics in one of its focus reports (AIP - Focus On 04-2014 report).
Current Research
Surface Physics: Scanning probe microscopy used to examine nanoscale physics at surfaces. Surfaces are interesting because surface atoms do not have as many bonds as atoms in the bulk of a crystal, which can affect their properties, including magnetism and electronic conductivity. Further, the arrangement of atoms on a surface has profound implications for devices because how new atoms arrange on a surface can affect how abrupt an interface between two materials is or how ordered the next layer of atoms are.
High-Resolution Imaging: Develop experimental methodologies and image processing strategies for minimally invasive high resolution optical and electron microcopy imaging.
Macromolecular Crystallography: X-Ray studies of crystallized biologically and chemically interesting molecules, for designing molecules with specific biological activities for developing drugs.
Experimental Solid-State Physics: Current topics in the electronic properties and possible applications of novel materials include intercalated graphite fibers, conductor-insulator composites, and thin-film materials. Most measurements involve low-temperature and/or high-pressure techniques.
Experimental Optics: Laser spectroscopy is being used to study diffusional processes. Presently, aggregation processes that result in the formation of fractal aggregates and phase transitions in liquid mixtures and micro emulsions are under investigation. The optical properties of various polymer materials also are being studied using laser techniques.
Statistical Physics: Phase transitions in liquid mixtures, glasses, polymers, superconductors, and magnets are being studied by applying modern techniques such as the renormalization group. Statistical physics methods are applied to cognitive science, health sciences, and polymer processing.
Computational Biophysics: Explore biological systems through theoretical and computational methods for biosensing, synthetic biology, biophysics, and materials sciences applications. Tools used include molecular dynamics, coarse-grained modeling, analytical modeling, stochastic methods and agent-based simulations. Biological systems under investigation include DNA molecules and proteins, DNA origamis, bimolecular complexes, microtubules, and active matter.
Experimental Biophysics: Epithelial mechanosensation and mechanotransduction; fluid flow sensing by the primary cilium. Methods include: perfused tissue culture, live cell imaging, optical trapping, electrophysiology, molecular biology.
Fluid Dynamics and Mixing: Understanding the fluid flow and its interaction with geometrical structures is critical in the design and performance optimization of chemical and biological synthesis and analysis systems. Computational modeling and experimental investigations are employed to a broad range of applied problems that require the manipulation of fluids, ranging from the optimization of mixing in microfluidic devices, to the fluid flow mapping in polymer extruders, and the development of efficient microreactors.
Atmospheric Physics: The Earth’s atmosphere exhibits many different aspects of physics, ranging from radiative transfer to fluid dynamics and thermodynamics. Our group uses high-resolution computer simulations (LES), as well as observational data, to study atmospheric flow, in particular the turbulent structure of the atmospheric boundary layer and boundary layer clouds.
Current faculty information can be located on the Cleveland State University Physics Department webpage.