Turgay Uzer

{{Short description|Turkish-American physicist}}

{{Infobox scientist

| name = Ahmet Turgay Uzer

| caption = Turgay Uzer

| birth_date = {{birth-date and age|February 1, 1952}}

| birth_place = Samsun, Turkey

| nationality =

| field = Physics, chemistry, applied mathematics

| work_institution = Georgia Institute of Technology

| alma_mater = Middle East Technical University, Harvard

| doctoral_advisor =

| doctoral_students =

| known_for = Nonlinear dynamics and chaos in classical mechanics and semiclassical mechanics applied to atomic systems.

}}

Ahmet Turgay Uzer is a Turkish-born American theoretical physicist and nature photographer.

Regents' Professor Emeritus at Georgia Institute of Technology following Joseph Ford (physicist). He has contributed in the field of atomic and molecular physics, nonlinear dynamics and chaos significantly.[https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=Turgay+Uzer&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&btnG=Search Turgay Uzer on Google Scholar] His research on interplay between quantum dynamics

and classical mechanics, in the context of chaos is considered to be novel in molecular and theoretical physics and chemistry.

Academic career

Turgay Uzer completed his bachelor's degree at Turkey's prestigious Middle East Technical University. According to Harvard University Library{{Cite thesis |title=Photon and Electron Interactions with Diatomic Molecules. |url=https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1979PhDT.........7U |date=1979-02-01 |first=Ahmet Turgay |last=Uzer|bibcode=1979PhDT.........7U }} his doctoral thesis was entitled "Photon and electron interactions with diatomic molecules." He defended his dissertation and graduated from Harvard University in 1979.

Before joining Georgia Tech in 1985 as an associate professor, he worked as a research fellow at University of Oxford 1979/81, Caltech 1982/1983, and as a research associate at University of Colorado 1983/85. Currently, he is a faculty member with the [http://www.cns.gatech.edu/ Center for Nonlinear Science] and

full professor of physics at Georgia Tech.

His research areas are quite broad, but he has focused on the dynamics of intermolecular energy transfer, reaction dynamics, quantal manifestations of classical mechanics, quantization of nonlinear systems, computational physics, molecular physics, applied mathematics.

Awards

Uzer was Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung Foundation Fellow in 1993–1994 at

Max Planck Institute, Munich.

Uzer is of Turkish origin and was also awarded the prestigious Science award for his contributions to physics from the Scientific and Technological Research Council (TÜBİTAK) [http://www.biltek.tubitak.gov.tr/oduller_en/previous_science.htm] in 1998.

Selected publications

=Books=

  • The Physics and Chemistry of Wave Packets, with John Yeazell [https://books.google.com/books?id=_sScnHz1kfsC&dq=Turgay+Uzer&pg=PP9 at books.google]
  • Lecture Notes on Atomic and Molecular Physics with Şakir Erkoç [https://books.google.com/books?id=KWssMj81fpkC&q=Lecture+Notes+on+Atomic+and+Molecular+Physics at books.google]

=Some of the seminal papers=

Uzer has more than 80 referenced Journal articles, in a number of highly respected scientific journals.

  • [http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v48/p3414 appeared in PRE] Chaotic billiards with neutral boundaries
  • [http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/253/5015/42 appeared in Science] Celestial Mechanics on a Microscopic Scale
  • [http://link.aip.org/link/?JCPSA6/81/5013/1 appeared in JCP] Quantization with operators appropriate to shapes of trajectories and classical perturbation theory

References

{{reflist}}