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Vivien Zapf

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Vivien Zapf is a research scientist at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory pulsed field facility at Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Biography

She received her bachelor's degree in physics with computer science from Harvey Mudd College in 1997 and a Ph.D. in physics from the University of California, San Diego in 2003.[1] Zapf studies Multiferrics and Quantum Magnetism.[1] She served as a Millikan post-doctoral fellow at the California Institute of Technology from 2004-2005 and as a Director's fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory from 2005-2006. She received a Los Alamos National Laboratory Distinguished Performance Award and a Lee-Osheroff-Richardson prize.[2] In 2017, she was elected as a Fellow of the American Physical Society for "seminal contributions to the understanding of quantum mechanical properties of superconductors, quantum magnets, and multiferroic systems at low temperatures and in extreme magnetic fields to 100T."[3] and an outstanding referee award from the American Physical Society in 2019.[4] She serves as the deputy director of the Quantum Science Center, a United States Department of Energy-funded research effort encompassing approx. 17 institutions solving problems in the field of Quantum Information Science.[5] She also serves as a thrust leader and on the management committee at the Center for Molecular Magnetic Quantum Materials, a United States Department of Energy-funded Energy Frontier Research Center lead out of the University of Florida.[6] She serves in the chair line of the executive committee of the American Physical Society Division of Materials Physics.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b "MagLab Staff -Vivien Zapf, staff-pulsed-field". nationalmaglab.org. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
  2. ^ "Lee-Osheroff-Richardson Prize". Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  3. ^ "APS Fellows Archive". Retrieved 2022-11-26.
  4. ^ "Physical Review Journals - Outstanding Referees". Retrieved 2020-11-12.
  5. ^ "Quantum Science Center". qscience.org. Retrieved 2022-11-26.
  6. ^ "Meet the Team". efrc.ufl.edu. Retrieved 2020-07-25.
  7. ^ "American Physical Society Division of Materials Physics". Retrieved 2020-11-01.