Eritas Yang Receives 2024 LeRoy Apker Award from American Physical Society
October 15, 2024Share story
Eritas Yang 鈥24, a physics graduate of 无忧视频 who is now a first-year PhD student in astrophysics at Princeton University, has been awarded the American Physical Society鈥檚 2024 LeRoy Apker Award. This prestigious recognition for outstanding achievements in physics is the highest honor for undergraduate physicists in the United States.
Yang was honored for her research on the long-term 鈥渟ecular鈥 dynamics of planetary systems, specifically her work in developing a perturbative model for the orbital evolution of coplanar three-planet systems. Her research sheds new light on the mechanisms driving instabilities in planetary systems鈥攁 critical step toward understanding the chaotic processes that shape the final orbits of planets. The citation on Yang鈥檚 award reads: 鈥淔or developing a perturbative model for the long-term secular dynamics of coplanar three-planet systems, elucidating the physics of such systems.鈥
Groundbreaking Research on Planetary Instabilities
Yang鈥檚 research focuses on understanding the final, violent phase of planet formation, where collisions and gravitational scatterings play a major role. 鈥淭his destabilization process is not completely understood, yet it is crucial in connecting planet formation models to current observations,鈥 said Yang. Working with Harvey Mudd physics professor Daniel Tamayo, Yang developed an analytical model for the long-term orbital dynamics of three-planet systems, which provides physical insight into the parameters that determine if a system becomes unstable. She also derived a mathematical expression for the boundary at which these systems transition from stable to unstable, validating her model against numerical simulations. This research was published in the Astrophysical Journal and presented at the American Astronomical Society鈥檚 Division on Dynamical Astronomy conference.
Tamayo, who advised Yang during her research, highlighted the significance of her work. 鈥淎t the turn of the 19th century, Poincar茅 made the surprising discovery that small gravitational tugs between planets in the same system could eventually drive them onto crossing orbits and cause collisions. Eritas鈥檚 work extends this understanding by providing a mathematical model that helps disentangle competing mechanisms driving these instabilities,鈥 said Tamayo. 鈥淚t is remarkable that an undergraduate new to the field could bring fresh insight into such an old problem. This is the kind of result that opens doors to many new research directions.鈥
A Promising Future in Astrophysics
Yang’s accomplishments as an undergraduate also earned her the Harvey Mudd physics department鈥檚 Thomas B. Brown Award for outstanding senior research, as well as the Mindlin Prize for the most innovative paper in the sciences. Her work has already spawned new research in Tamayo鈥檚 group, and her analytical model is being applied to study orbital configurations in planetary systems both within and beyond our solar system.
Yang began her PhD studies in astrophysics at Princeton University this fall, where she continues her research on planetary dynamics. She joins fellow alumni Calvin Leung 鈥17, Stephanie Moyerman 鈥06, Nathaniel Stern 鈥03 and Gwen (Bell) Porter 鈥98 as a LeRoy Apker Award winner.