I have supervised and trained for research several undergraduate and graduate students, many of whom have won Department awards, and many of whom are co-authors. Chronologically,
2012 - 2018 Harry F. H. Cheung, co-author, Cornell University, class of 2015
now with Gregory Fuchs’ group at Cornell
2012 - 2016 Airlia Shaffer, co-author, Cornell University, class of 2015, Hartmann Prize winner *
now with Martin Zwierlein's group at MIT
2012 - 2015 Laura Chang, co-author, Cornell University, class of 2015, Yennie Prize winner **
now with Waseem Bakr's group at Princeton
2012 - 2014 Seongwoo Oh, Cornell University
now with Jason Petta's group at Princeton
2013 - 2014 Omar Alam, Cornell University, class of 2017
2013 - 2014 Jun Wei Lam, Cornell University, class of 2017
now with Paul McEuen's group at Cornell
2014 - 2017 Minwoo Jung, Cornell University, class of 2017
now with Gennady Shvets’ group at Cornell
2014 - 2016 Ivaylo S Madjarov, Cornell University, class of 2016, Yennie Prize winner **
now with Manuel Endres' group at Caltech
2014 Jiaxing Geng, Cornell University, class of 2017
2014 Wenrui Xu, Cornell University, class of 2017
now with Dong Lai's group at Cornell
2015 - 2017 Huiyao Chen, Cornell University, graduate student
now with Gregory Fuch's group at Cornell
2015 - 2017 Alex Wang, Cornell University, class of 2018
2016 Claire Warner, University of Waterloo, Summer Intern
now with Sebastian Will's group at Columbia
2016 - 2018 Jialun Luo, Cornell University, graduate student
now with Greg Fuchs’ group at Cornell
2016 - 2017 Andrei Isichenko, Cornell University, class of 2018
now with Frank Wise's group at Cornell
2016 - 2017 Edgar Barraza, Cornell University, class of 2018
2017 Jason Phelan, Cornell University, class of 2020
2017 - 2018 Avinash Deshmukh, Cornell University, class of 2019
2017 - 2018 Samuel Evans, Cornell University, class of 2020
* The Hartman prize "is awarded to recognize outstanding work in experimental physics by an undergraduate in Physics and/or Applied and Engineering Physics."
** The Yennie prize is "an award to the outstanding senior student majoring in Physics who shows unusual promise for future contributions to physics research, and who intends to earn the doctorate."
As a graduate student at Cornell University, I have also been a teaching assistant for undergraduate courses on Electromagnetism (PHYS 2213) and General Physics (PHYS 1101, PHYS 1102).