Dr. Sarah Burke-Spolaor, associate professor in the WVU Department of Physics and Astronomy and member of the Center for Gravitational Waves and Cosmology, was named as one of the newest honorees.
The Benedum Distinguished Scholars Awards, funded by the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation, are awarded annually to faculty engaged in “creative research” in as many as four categories: behavioral and social sciences, biosciences and health sciences, humanities and the arts, and physical sciences and technology.
Burke-Spolaor is honored as the 2023-2024 Benedum
Distinguished Scholar in Physical Sciences and Technologies. She is
known nationally and internationally for her groundbreaking work on fast
radio bursts and supermassive black hole binaries (SBHBs). SBHBs are the
largest, most destructive objects in the universe, but their “darkness”
makes it near impossible to find and study them using classic
electromagnetic waves (i.e., light from material around black holes).
SBHBs are important to find and understand due to their significant role
in galaxy evolution and for the unknown, extreme physics that occurs
within them.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy leads the university with number of Benedum Distinguished Scholar Awards with 12 honorees total.
While the very first detection of gravitational radiation occurred in
2015, a different, longer gravitational wavelength is needed to locate
black holes. Burke-Spolaor is a leading member of the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav), which uses a network of
stars called “pulsars” distributed throughout our galaxy to detect small
ripples in the fabric of spacetime caused by the distant gravitational
waves of SBHBs. Burke-Spolaor’s research in the field of low-frequency
gravitational wave astrophysics has laid the foundation for the next
generation of progress in pulsar timing array science and is paving the
road to find the first SBHB in the near future.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy leads the university with number of Benedum Distinguished Scholar Awards with 12 honorees total.
Congratulations to Dr. Burke-Spolaor!
hal/04/10/24
Contact: Holly Legleiter
hlegleiter@mail.wvu.edu
hlegleiter@mail.wvu.edu