Ruth Van de Water
Ruth Speel Van de Water is an assistant physicist at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory. She was also named a finalist in the postdoctoral category of the New York Academy of Sciences’ Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists in 2011. Van de Water was one of six postdoctoral fellows and seven university faculty members chosen as finalists out of 150 applications for that year. Of those, four were chosen as winners.
Early life and education
Van de Water was born in Washington, D.C., and raised in the nearby suburb of Alexandria, Virginia. Her parents met at graduate school when her mother was attending Harvard Divinity School, and her father was completing a PhD in economics at MIT. Her father then worked in the Social Security Administration and later in the Congressional Budget Office.Van de Water earned her B.S. in physics from the College of William and Mary in 2000. One of her early inspirations to become a physicist was a course taught by the theoretical nuclear physicist, Dirk Walecka. In 2000 she was one of the recipients of the Don Edward Harrison Jr. Award for Excellence in Physics, awarded to the senior undergraduates who demonstrate the highest achievements in physics. During college she also sang in the early music ensemble.
She then earned her PhD in physics from the University of Washington, Seattle, in 2005. After this, she went on to do postdoctoral research at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory from 2005 to 2008 before joining Brookhaven Lab as a Goldhaber Distinguished Fellow in 2008.