Kent State Scientist Honored for 'Hottest Research Worldwide'


Dr. Mikhail Kopytine, research associate in the Department of Physics, recently was ranked as the second most-cited scientist worldwide for 2005-06 by the periodical Science Watch.

Recently ranked as the second-most cited scientist in the world, Dr. Mikhail Kopytine, research associate in the Department of Physics, gives a physics lecture on April 10.

Recently ranked as the second-most cited scientist in the world, Dr. Mikhail Kopytine, research associate in the Department of Physics, gives a physics lecture on April 10.

Kopytine shares the second-place ranking with six other scientists. Three physicists are listed among the eight scientists with rankings of first or second; he is the only physicist from a United States institution listed in the top two slots.

On April 10, Kopytine will give a physics colloquium/Center for Nuclear Research Seminar at 3:30 p.m. on the Kent Campus. His talk will be geared toward physicists.

Kopytine earned a doctorate in physics from the State University of New York-Stony Brook and has been a Kent State research associate since 2001. He works in collaboration with other physicists at Kent State’s Center for Nuclear Research, which is part of a large international collaboration (deemed STAR) that studies nuclear collisions at Brookhaven National Lab.

The Kent State group was among the six groups to found STAR, which has grown to include 52 institutions representing 12 countries.

The Science Watch ranking relies entirely on citations, making it completely objective. To determine the rankings, Science Watch tracks the number of citations received by scientists in fields ranging from immunology to biostatistics in papers published in peer-reviewed journals.

Visit Kent State’s Department of Physics Web site for more information about Kopytine and the Science Watch ranking.


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