Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Geraldine Lee Richmond (born January 17, 1953, in Salina, Kansas) is an American chemist and physical chemist who is serving as the Under Secretary of Energy for Science in the US Department of Energy. Richmond was confirmed to her DOE role by the United States Senate on November 5, 2021.

  2. Geraldine (Geri) Richmond is the Under Secretary for Science and Innovation at the Department of Energy (DOE). In this role she oversees DOE's Office of Science, the nation’s largest federal sponsor of basic research in the physical sciences, DOE’s applied R&D areas of nuclear, fossil, and renewable energy, and energy system integrity, and ...

  3. Geraldine (Geri) Richmond is the Presidential Chair in Science and Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oregon where she has been since 1985.

  4. Presidential Chair in Science and Professor of Chemistry, University of Oregon. Geri Richmond. Water Research. COACh Global. Research Team. REU/PURS. Highlights & Blog. Contact. Skip to content.

  5. Geraldine L. Richmond awarded the National Medal of Science for her landmark discoveries of the molecular characteristics of water surfaces; for her creative demonstration of how her findings impact many key biological, environmental, chemical, and technological processes; and for her extraordinary efforts in the United States and around the ...

    • Geraldine L. Richmond1
    • Geraldine L. Richmond2
    • Geraldine L. Richmond3
    • Geraldine L. Richmond4
    • Geraldine L. Richmond5
  6. Nov 9, 2021 · (Photo via ZOOM) In a short but exuberant ceremony today on ZOOM, alumna Geraldine Richmond, Presidential Chair in Science and Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oregon, was sworn in as Under Secretary of Science and Energy at the U.S. Department of Energy.

  7. richmondscience.uoregon.edu › wp-content › uploadsGeraldine L. Richmond

    Geraldine L. Richmond http://richmondscience.uoregon.edu Geraldine (Geri) Richmond is the Presidential Chair in Science and Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oregon. Her research using laser-based methods and theoretical computational studies focusses on understanding environmentally and technologically