412-536-1178

Shinil.Cho@Laroche.edu

 



Shinil Cho, Ph.D.

Arts & Sciences Faculty Index

TITLE: Assistant Professor

DEPARTMENT: Mathematics & Physics

COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES ATTENDED AND DEGREES RECEIVED:
B.S. from Rikkyo University (Tokyo, Japan); M.S. from Seoul national University (Seoul, Korea), and Ph.D. from Ohio Sate University (Columbus, OH)

PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATIONS:
American Translators Association Accredited Translator (English into Japanese)

SCHOLARLY/PROFESSIONAL ACHIEVEMENTS:
First successful observation of the electrical conductivity of polyethylene below 0.3K by nuclear magnetic resonance at Ohio State University. World's first demonstration of the feasibility of an Axion detector at University of Florida. An earliest measurements of high temperature superconductor by microwave technology. Construction of a stable regenerative oscillators working at the liquid helium temperature at University of Florida. Construction of the world's first commercial nuclear magnetic resonance probe at 4.2K and the Dynamic Angle Spinning (DAS) probe at Doty Scientific, Inc.

Invited presentations at Ohio State University, Stanford University, University of Florida, Bruker Instruments, Inc., Dory Scientific, Inc., NTT Data Communications, and Japan Science and Technology Corporation.

PUBLISHED:
"How to Write Persuasive Technical English" (an one year sequence of special article contribution to Journal of Information Management published by Japan Science and Technology Corporation. It is a Japanese governmental organization. )

RECENT ARTICLES PUBLISHED:
"Statistics for Translators" (JLD journal, American Translators Association, Summer 2003)

AWARDS AND RECOGNITIONS:
NSF Pre-doctoral fellow, Young Physicist Award at the 17th Low Temperature Conference (LT XVII), Who's Who in Southeast, Nominated as a judge at Intel International Science & Engineering Fair

PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATION MEMBERSHIPS:
American Physical Society, American Physics Teachers Association, Japanese Physical Society, Korean Physical Society, and Korean Scientists in America, American Translators Association

JOINED LA ROCHE: Assistant Professor of Physics, 2000

HOMETOWN: Tokyo, Japan