Research is one of the core foundations of the University of Iowa mission, alongside teaching and public service. Iowa professors are researchers as well as teachers, and Iowa students sometimes complement their education by working as research assistants. As a result, many Iowa alumni and faculty members have earned worldwide recognition for the research-related discoveries and other contributions in their field.
Distinguished researchers
Colleen Konicki DiIorio—A 1969 graduate of the Iowa College of Nursing who has become a renowned researcher in the areas of AIDS and epilepsy, collecting millions in funding from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and National Institutes of Health. Her colleagues recognize her as the first in her profession to receive funding for HIV prevention and to publish epilepsy self-management research findings. BSN, 1969.
Don
Gurnett—Discovered
measurements showing that the Earth's aurora is a source of low-frequency
radio emissions. He has worked on more than 25 major spacecraft
projects for NASA and specializes in experimental space plasma
physics. BSE, Electrical Engineering, 1962. He has been on the faculty
in the UI Department of Physics and Astronomy since 1965.
- Bruce
C. Heezen—Oceanographer and pioneer in plate tectonics.
By the time he was 30, he had obtained mineral specimens 10,000
years old that helped decipher the history of the Earth. BA, Geology,
1948. He died in 1977.
Bingnan
Lin—A
senior design team member on the construction of the Three Gorges
Dam in the People's Republic of China, the largest dam design and
construction project in the world. MS, 1947; PhD, Mechanics and
Hydraulics, 1951.
- Harry
F. Olson—A pioneer and leading authority in acoustics
and electronic sound recording, Olson developed magnetic tape recorders
for sound and television, the electronic music synthesizer, and
underwater sound equipment. Bachelor of Engineering, 1924; Electrical
Engineering
degree, 1932. He died in 1982.
James
Van Allen—World-famous physicist and discoverer of
two radiation belts (the Van Allen Belts) that surround the Earth.
MS, 1936; PhD, Physics, 1939. Emeritus Carver Professor of Physics
at The University of Iowa. He died in 2006.
- James
L. Watson—A distinguished anthropologist specializing
in knowledge of contemporary China. He has taught at Harvard and
at the Universities of London, Hawaii, and Pittsburgh. BA, Asian
Languages and Literature, 1965.
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