Eberly College of Science | |
Dean: | Tracy Langkilde |
Students: | 4,200 (Fall 2020) |
Undergrad: | 3,450 (Fall 2020) |
Postgrad: | 750 (Fall 2020)[1] |
Country: | U.S. |
The Eberly College of Science is the science college of Pennsylvania State University in University Park, Pennsylvania. It was founded in 1859 by Jacob S. Whitman, professor of natural science. The College offers baccalaureate, master's, and doctoral degree programs in the basic sciences. It was named after Robert E. Eberly.
Eberly College of Science offers sixteen majors in four disciplines: Life Sciences, Physical Sciences, Mathematical Sciences and Interdisciplinary Studies.[2]
Current Eberly faculty members include fourteen members of the United States National Academy of Sciences,[3] considered one of the highest honors that can be bestowed upon a U.S. scientist, and three members of the British Royal Society. Eberly faculty members were the first to: "see" an atom (physicist Erwin Mueller); formulate covariant quantum gravity (physicist Abhay Ashtekar); discover practical synthesis of the pregnancy hormone progesterone (chemist Russell Marker);[4] and discover planets outside the Solar System (astronomer Alex Wolszczan). University researchers also designed the world's largest optical telescope, the Hobby-Eberly Telescope.
College graduates include Nobel Prize winner Paul Berg and three U.S. astronauts. Langkilde was appointed the dean of the Eberly College of Science on October 1, 2020.[5]