Nicholas Mateer - Administrative Support Assistant - Staff
- Administrative Assistant
Office: 321D Whitmore Laboratory
Address: University Park, PA 16802 US
Email: nrm169@psu.edu
Phone: +1 814 409 8887
Hello! I am Nick, administrative assistant to the IGC.
Nicholas Mateer's research group news
5th IGC Neighborhood Workshop held in State College
2023-04-07
The 5th Annual IGC Neighborhood Workshop, an event for physicists in the local region around Penn State, was held downtown and in the Alumni Center. Faculty, postdocs and grad students, many from Penn State, gave brief talks and interacted with other groups in the immediate vicinity (A ~three hour drive) of State College. Participants included physicists from:
Carnegie Mellon University
Case Western Reserve University
CMU
Cornell University
Johns Hopkins University
Lehigh University
Penn State University
Space Telescope Science Institute
Syracuse University
University at Buffalo
University of Pennsylvania
University of Pittsburgh
West Virginia University
Thank you to everyone who came out!
IGC Art Exhibition Showcases Institute's Artists
2023-03-30
IGC members met in 321 Whitmore to showcase their works, from posters, to instruments and interactive displays. Special thanks is given to Monica Rincon Ramirez for helping to organize. An art booklet will be printed soon, and thanks again to everyone who brought their art to show off!
The IGC wordmark was created by Monica Rincon Ramirez, while she was a graduate
student at the Institute for Gravitation and the Cosmos (IGC). Monica enjoys
drawing new connections between fundamental theory and observations. Her
graduate work includes specialized topics in general relativity, loop quantum
gravity, and quantum fields in cosmological backgrounds. In particular, her
thesis work focused on finding effective quantum corrections to gravitational
phenomena from spinfoams, and applications to cosmology. She received her PhD
in 2024.
The wordmark symbolizes the scope and variety of research at the IGC. The base
of the image represents quantum gravity, evoking the quantum geometrical
picture from spinfoams and loop quantum gravity. These are among the approaches
to fundamental questions studied at the Center for Fundamental Theory. The
middle of the image represents the Center for Theoretical and Observational
Cosmology by galaxies embedded in a smooth surface, characteristic of spacetime
in general relativity and the much larger physical scales studied in cosmology.
Finally, at the top, the surface curves to an extreme, representing a
supermassive black hole accompanied by an energetic jet. These elements depict
an active galactic nucleus, inspired by Centaurus A. Just to the right, a pair
of black holes approaches merger. This top portion of the wordmark represents
the Center for Multimessenger Astrophysics, which specializes in the study of
high-energy phenomena in the universe.