You are here

Physics Graduate Student Recognized for Gulf Mammal Population Research

Top Stories

Industry collaboration leads to fiber-optic-based detection of ground water table variability in Louisiana

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) is a new method able to turn any fiber optical cable into a series of detectors t

Read More ➝

Where Science Meets Art: An Artist's Depiction of Moon Creation in Arnaudville, LA

Dorothea Altorfer, wife of one of our faculty members, created an event at the Fete de la Nature in Arnaudville, LA

Read More ➝

ULL Society of Physics Students Chapter named 2022-23 Notable Chapter

The Society of Physics Students (SPS) National Council has recognized the University of Louisiana at Lafayette SPS C

Read More ➝

UL Lafayette Physics student Sakib Mahmud has been working on a major UL Lafayette-led effort to study the mammal population in the Gulf of Mexico. Sakib has found a way to explore his love of nature through research on the impact of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill on Gulf cetaceans.

Under the supervision of Dr. Natalia Sidorovskaia, he has been involved in deploying acoustic sensors in the Gulf and in analyzing the large amount of data collected. His research work has recently been acknowledged by the leading authority, the Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (GoMRI).   

SHARE THIS |