Professors honored for work in cell signals, ultrafast lasers
Two professors are among the latest group of scientists, politicians, artists and more. The academy, which was founded in 1780 and has claimed such luminaries as Albert Einstein and Margaret Mead as members, “honors exceptional scholars, leaders, artists, and innovators and engages them in sharing knowledge and addressing challenges facing the world.”
Among this elite organization’s newly elected members are Natalie Ahn, a biochemist who explores cell signaling, and Henry Kapteyn, a physicist who has led the development of new types of lasers. The academy announced its 2018 class earlier this week, which includes former President Barack Obama, actor Tom Hanks, writer Ta-Nehisi Coates and more than 200 other leading thinkers.
Ahn and Kapteyn will be officially inducted into the academy’s membership at a ceremony in October 2018.
Cell signals
Natalie Ahn joined ’sDepartment of Chemistry and Biochemistryin 1992. She uses a technique called mass spectrometry to probe how cells communicate with each other and their environments—and how these processes can regulate the way that cells grow and divide and, potentially, give rise to cancers like melanoma.
Ahn is director of ’sGraduate Training Program in Signaling and Cellular Regulation, associate director of theBioFrontiers Instituteand president of the American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB).
Reflecting on her appointment, Ahn said: “I am deeply grateful for the tremendous honor of being elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. I am flabbergasted, humbled and very happy. I have a lot of people to thank in my life, as well as at our amazing university, for their support throughout my career and for their work to further the arts and sciences in the United States. I will work hard to pay it forward.”
Harnessing lasers
Henry Kapteyn, a professor in theDepartment of Physicsand fellow at, has been at since 1999. He and his wife, Professor Margaret Murnane, have spearheaded new “tabletop” X-ray lasers, devices that can shoot out laser light in bursts shorter than a millionth of a billionth of a second. The team’s work has led to insights on the workings of atoms and the creation of new nanotechnologies.
Kapteyn is a fellow at the American Physical Society (APS) and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and, along with Murnane, founded the company.
"The Department of Physics is proud to have Professor Henry Kapteyn honored with membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,” said John Cumalat, Chair of the Department of Physics. “Professor Kapteyn has won several awards for his research in ultrafast laser science. In 2013 he was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. This award is continued recognition of his pioneering impact on the field."
“I’m stunned and tremendously honored to be welcomed to a group as illustrious as the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,” Kapteyn said. “I certainly never imagined being found on the same list with Barack Obama. But it’s a tremendous motivation to keep pushing forward—to turn my passion for using physics to make the impossible, possible—into a real benefit to society.”