Viva R. Horowitz collaborates with the University of Oregon and the Air Force Research Lab. She built dynamic artificial cells as a post-doctoral fellow at Harvard and designed opto-mechanical gyroscopes as a postdoctoral research scholar at Caltech. Horowitz earned her doctorate in physics at UC Santa Barbara, where she built a new tool for magnetic imaging using the quantum bits in optically levitated nanocrystals of luminescent diamond. She graduated with a bachelor's in physics from Swarthmore College.
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Horowitz lab research team, July 2024
Top: Daniel Rodriguez (Collett lab), Madeleine Petro '25, M.V.H., Sam Marash '26, Bakir Husremovic '26, Aaron Butler '26, Viva Horowitz, Maya Kannan '25, Sara Conti '27,
Bottom: Eliana Gibs '26, Lydia Bullock '26
Horowitz lab research team, May 2023
Lauren Kuster '23, Kai Haesslein '24, Yongwoo Park '24, Prof. Viva Horowitz, Trevor Scheuing '23, Bess Lawrence '23, Greg Bauman '23, Estelle Khairallah '23, and Leah Bell '24
Not shown: Ryan Smolarsky '23, Clare Nelle '24, Asa Szegvari '23, Pippi Seider '24
Horowitz lab research team, April 2021
Asa Szegvari, Sammi D'Angelo, Lindsay Gearty, Roger Danilek, Viva Horowitz, Lucas Wright, Connor Feldman, Alex Golub, Matt Jankowski, Leenie Wilcox, Colin May,
Not shown: Mitchell D. Bierman, Clare Nelle, Matt Zielezienski, Sean M. Conroy
Viva Horowitz works with Clare Nelle '24, Trevor Scheuing '23, and Matt Jankowski '22 on a project to build and investigate the dynamics of a simple artificial cell in their lab. Photo: Nancy L. Ford
Kristen Burson, Viva Horowitz, Adri Cruz, and Catherine Ryczek at March Meeting in Boston, 2019
Physics department lunch on the Green, at the Farmer's Market
As a faculty member, I acknowledge that Hamilton College is settled upon the ancestral lands of the Oneida Nation.