Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ

A solar storm on the sun's surface
Physics & Astronomy Research

Physics & Astronomy Research

Ranked Among the Best Global Universities for Physics

Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ University is ranked among the Best Global Universities by U.S. News & World Report, with its physics program among the best in the world. Students explore yesterday, today and tomorrow in search of a deeper understanding of the natural world—from the mysteries of dark matter to the smallest machines possible, from the complexity of life to nature's strongest forces.

Learn Why Physics & Astronomy Ranks!

Centers & Institutes

  • Astrophysical Institute

    The Astrophysical Institute encompasses faculty and students (undergraduate as well as graduate) carrying out astrophysical research. This group involves vigorous collaboration of faculty with active research programs that make use of major telescopes around the world and in space.

  • Institute of Nuclear and Particle Physics

    The institute promotes and supports research in theoretical and experimental subatomic physics, pro-actively educating graduate and undergraduate students in these fields of study, sponsoring joint seminars, hosting visiting scientists, and providing matching funds for new initiatives undertaken with federal agencies and national laboratories.

  • Nanoscale & Quantum Phenomena Institute

    The mission of the Nanoscale and Quantum Phenomena Institute (NQPI) is to advance cross-disciplinary research, educational, and technological innovation efforts in active areas of materials science and engineering by promoting nanoscience techniques, theory, and infrastructure.

  • Quantitative Biology Institute

    The Quantitative Biology Institute at Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ University was established to stimulate and focus interdisciplinary research and training efforts in Quantitative Biology. Current Institute faculty are drawn from the Departments of Biological Sciences, Mathematics and Physics.

Resources for Graduate & Undergraduate Researchers

  • Graduate Research Opportunities


    The Physics & Astronomy Department partners with institutions around the world, does cutting-edge research in a number of fields, and enjoys a lively, international, diverse faculty and student community. All of our graduate students receive teaching or research assistantships and tuition waivers.

  • Undergraduate Research Opportunities


    The Physics & Astronomy Department has a strong commitment to both graduate and undergraduate research. Thanks to federal funding of faculty, the department is able to offer up to 20 research projects per year for interested undergraduate students.

  • Research Facilities & Labs


    Our researchers, including graduate and undergraduate students, take advantage of facilities such as the OHIO and MDM observatories, the Laboratory for Single Atom and Molecule Manipulation, a low-temp and room temperature Scanning Tunneling Microscopy labs, and more.

  • Physics & Astronomy Library


    The Physics & Astronomy Department provides access to a wide range of scholarly materials, such as books and journals. One of our local resources is the Huwe Reading Room (Clippinger Rm 253). The Huwe Reading Room has a substantial selection of physics and astronomy books.

Why OHIO's Physics & Astronomy Program is Among the Best in the World

World-Class Research

The Physics & Astronomy Department at Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ University provides students — both graduate and undergraduate students — the opportunity to engage in world-class research in areas ranging from nuclear astrophysics to quantum materials.

Physics & Astronomy faculty have built a solid research infrastructure(opens in a new window) over the years, with strong support from external agencies, averaging $3.6M per year.

Each year, faculty publish on average 140 research articles and receive more than 10,000 citations.

Research Experiences for Undergraduates

The department also offers great experiential learning opportunities and internships for students in bachelor’s physics programs to conduct research, with 90% of physics undergraduate students having done at least one research internship in a faculty member’s lab — outside of ordinary coursework — by the time they graduate.

More than 100 Years of Physics Graduate Degrees

The Physics & Astronomy Department awarded its first M.S. in physics degree in 1912 and its first Ph.D. degree in 1963. The program maintains a dynamic graduate physics program, offering degrees with emphasis in several different research areas: Astrophysics, Biological Physics, Condensed Matter Physics and Surface Science, Nanoscience, and Nuclear and Particle Physics.

Degrees offered include an M.A. in Physics, an M.S. in Physics, and a Ph.D. in Physics. Our primary goal at the graduate level is to provide a broad and excellent education in advanced physics and astronomy, which prepares our graduates with the tools to address open problems for the remainder of their careers, gives them training in state-of-the-art techniques and approaches in the discipline, and prepares them to teach physics and astronomy at the university level.

Financial Support for Graduate Students

Total graduate student enrollment has averaged approximately 70 students over the last seven years. All our Ph.D. are students supported on stipends and tuition waivers up through their fifth year with typically about 30 students supported on Teaching Assistantships during their first one or two years, while the rest are supported on Research Assistantships from faculty grants and fellowships.

Successful Alumni

Over the years our alumni have gone on to successful careers in academia, industry, and government, and we continually strive to modernize and adapt to the needs of our students and the discipline. Our graduate program furthers the goals of Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ University by providing high-quality and distinctive graduate education, closely linked to nationally prominent research efforts.

Nobel Prize Winner—̹½ÊÓÆµ University alumnus won the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on the function of ribosomes.

Nobel Laureate Decodes Answers about Life’s Beginning, Medicine’s Future

Ground- and Space-Based Astrophysics Observations

Observational work by our Astrophysics faculty involves ground- and space-based observations of astronomical objects across a wide range of wavelengths, with active programs on the James Webb Space Telescope, Hubble Space Telescope, Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission, Chandra and XMM X-ray Observatories, and the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory.

Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ University is a partner in the MDM Observatory at Kitt Peak, Arizona, which provides guaranteed access to research-quality telescopes at one of the best astronomical sites in North America.

Edwards Accelerator Lab

The department maintains a 4.5MV high-intensity van de Graaff accelerator on campus in the Edwards Accelerator Lab, a unique and highly productive facility within the state used for low-energy nuclear physics and materials science experiments. It regularly draws users from other universities and national labs.

Internationally Renowned Faculty

Physics & Astronomy faculty are highly regarded within their professional areas, receiving many awards and recognitions including being named Fellows of the American Physical Society, receiving National Science Foundation and Department of Energy Early Career Awards, and with a faculty, Madappa Prakash, receiving the American Physical Society Hans A. Bethe Prize in 2021.