Ģý

November 17, 2025

Siddharth Desphande and Snehitha Srirangam standing in front of a large screen showing molecule simulations.

Ģý photo / J. Adam Fenster

Dear members of the Hajim School community,

Researchers from the developed algorithms that reveal key chemical steps that turn propane into propylene for countless everyday products from plastic spray bottles to outdoor furniture. in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, Assistant Professor and his PhD student Snehitha Srirangam provide atomic-level insight about what happens when tandem nanoscale catalysts cause these complex chemical reactions.

Sid says researchers can leverage their algorithmic approaches to understand the atomic structure of other chemical reactions such as methanol synthesis used for products ranging from paints to fuel cells. This detailed understanding of chemical reactions could ultimately help companies make chemical manufacturing more efficient.

Read about their findings at the News Center.

USING METASURFACES TO BOOST AR IMAGE CLARITY AND BRIGHTNESS

Ģý student wears augmented reality glasses and gestures in the air.

Ģý photo / J. Adam Fenster

Researchers from the designed and demonstrated a new optical component that could significantly enhance the brightness and image quality of augmented reality (AR) glasses. The advance brings AR glasses a step closer to becoming as commonplace and useful as today’s smartphones.

In the journal , the team—led by , the Marie C. Wilson and Joseph C. Wilson Professor of Optical Physics, and Jannick Rolland, the director of the and the Brian J. Thompson Professor of Optical Engineering—describes how they replaced the input port where the image enters the glass with one featuring three specialized zones, each made of a metasurface material, to achieve improved performance.

Read more about the advancement at the News Center.

DUNCAN MOORE NAMED OPTICA HONORARY MEMBER

Professor Emeritus Duncan Moore speaks at a lectern.

Congratulations to , the Rudolf and Hilda Kingslake Emeritus Professor of Optical Engineering at the , on being named an ! This is the most distinguished of all Optica Member categories and is awarded by a unanimous vote of the Optica Board of Directors to individuals who have made seminal contributions to the field of optics. Their number is limited to two-thousandths of the Society’s total membership.

Duncan is an expert in gradient-index optics, computer-aided design and the manufacture of optical systems. He chaired the successful Hubble Independent Optical Review Panel organized in 1990 to determine the correct prescription of the Hubble Space Telescope. He also served as science advisor to Senator John D. Rockefeller IV of West Virginia for a one-year appointment and was confirmed by the US Senate in the fall of 1997 for the position of associate director for technology in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP). In this position, he worked with Dr. Neal Lane, President Clinton’s science advisor, to advise the President on US technology policy, including the Next Generation Internet, Clean Car Initiative, National Nanotechnology Initiative, ElderTech and CrimeTech.

Duncan is recognized by Optica “for pioneering contributions to gradient-index optics, leadership in public policy, dedicated service to the optics community and distinguished roles in academia, government and professional societies.”

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BOB BOYD NAMED TO CLARIVATE’S LIST OF ‘HIGHLY CITED RESEARCHERS’

A graphic with dark blue hexognal shapes, a headshot of Robert Boyd, and text that says "Robert Boyd, Professor, Institute of Optics, Clarivate Highly Cited Researcher."

For the third year in a row, Professor , Dean’s Professor in the Institute of Optics on Clarivate’s list of Highly Cited Researchers. Bob is known for his pioneering work in nonlinear optical interactions and nonlinear optical properties of materials.

The Highly Cited Researchers 2025 list identifies and celebrates individuals who have demonstrated significant and broad influence in their fields of research. Each researcher selected has authored multiple Highly Cited Papers which rank in the top 1% by citations for their field(s) and publication year in the  over the past eleven years.

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HAJIM STUDENTS SWEEP THE MARK AIN BUSINESS COMPETITION

The three student winners of the Mark Ain Business Model Competition stand with Roberto Colangelo while holding their awards.

I’m pleased to share that Hajim students had fantastic results at the annual Mark Ain Business Model Competition. Established in 2007, the competition provides aspiring student entrepreneurs at the URochester an opportunity to present their business idea (in any industry) and compete for $13,500 in cash prizes. Students who wish to enter the competition must be enrolled in the Ain Foundry Program. Here are this year’s winners:

  • First place was awarded to Scyntek, represented by mechanical engineering PhD student Karthik Ramakrishnan, for their device to monitor blood clots.
  • Second place was awarded to Vivoflux, represented by biomedical engineering PhD candidate Kaihua (Chloe) Chen, for the Flow Insert platform, which transforms any static culture on glass slides, well plates, or microphysiological systems (MPS) into a dynamic, perfused model that mimics real tissue environments.
  • Third place was awarded to Convort, represented by Hashem Alomari ’27 (computer science), for its recruiting app, AI-powered career fair intelligence, and performance platform. Convort allows users to quickly discover their best-fit companies at career fairs, engage recruiters confidently with AI-powered talking points, and convert handshakes into interviews.

ROCKETRY CLUB ACHIEVES LIFTOFF

Students stand in front of a large rocket on a cloudy day.

Congratulations to one of our newest student organizations, the , which hit a major milestone by hosting their first launch! The team documented the occasion on their . Onward and upward!

GIDS-AI AWARDS SEED FUNDING TO 7 NEW PROJECTS

The (GIDS-AI) announced seed funding awards for seven collaborative projects for the 2025-2026 year. The GIDS-AI seed funding program aims to support collaborative research efforts toward attracting major external funding, with a particular focus on work aligned with the Institute’s research priorities in data science and artificial intelligence.

The projects showcase an exciting array of interdisciplinary work. This year’s project titles and awardees are:

  • Training generative artificial intelligence to identify disease associated cell states
    • PI: Assistant Professor ; co-PIs: Associate Professor , Assistant Professor Hyung Jin Ahn
  • Standardizing Obstetric Ultrasound Segmentation Using Hardware-agnostic Unsupervised Multi-Sweep Diffusion Generative Adversarial Network for Enhanced Generalization
    • PI: Professor ; co-PI: Professor
  • Participatory Fair Division
    • PI: Assistant Professor
  • Fetal Weight Estimation Using Ultrasound Video from Low-Risk Pregnancies: A Prospective Study
    • PI: Assistant Professor ; co-PIs: Professor , Assistant Professor , Professor
  • All-Optical Diffusion-based Image Generation
    • PI: Professor ; co-PIs: Associate Professor ; Carlos Villegas-Burgos
  • Enabling Large Camera Motion Control in Video Diffusion Models via External 3D Geometry
    • PI: Professor
  • Large Context LLM Inference Using Hierarchical Recency
    • PIs: Professor and Assistant Professor

to learn more about the projects.

THE INSTITUTE OF OPTICS TO HOST FAMILY NIGHT ON DECEMBER 13

The Institute of Optics will host its annual family night event from 4-7 p.m. on Saturday, December 13 in Goergen Hall. This is a fun event for all ages, where attendees get to see and interact with the science of light. Activities include balloon popping with lasers, polarization, CO2 laser engraving, thermal imaging, holography, the Optics Suitcase, and more. Parking is free but please to ensure there are enough cookies!

NSF I-CORPS HYBRID COURSE—SPIE OPTICS AND PHOTONICS

The logo for the NSF I-Corps Hub Interior Northeast.

In a monthlong hybrid course from December 22 to January 28, a select group of researchers working on optics or photonics technologies will get out of their comfort zone and talk to customers at the SPIE Photonics West conference to identify the best product-market fit. Hosted in partnership with the Ģý and Dartmouth College, the course begins online and culminates with a trip to San Francisco for . Up to $5,000 (depending on team size) in travel reimbursement funding will be available for accepted teams. Teams of 1-3 people are encouraged to .

Have a great week!

Your dean
Wendi Heinzelman

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