Senator Todd Young and NSF Director Sethuraman Panchanathan visit Notre Dame, SpectrumX leadership, to discuss critical investments in science and technology

By Brett Beasley

On Thursday, April 25, Sethuraman Panchanathan, director of U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), joined U.S. Senator Todd Young in a visit to the campus of the University of Notre Dame. The pair met with faculty, students, and University leaders and discussed how research and innovation can drive better policymaking, grow the local economy, and contribute to national security.

Senator Young explained, “As I travel around the state, I am inspired by the quality of students and the quality of research at our universities—and we have that at Notre Dame. Some of the best research in the country is happening here. That is exactly why I thought it was important that the director of the National Science Foundation come to Indiana, see it for himself, and meet many of the researchers whose projects have been funded by the NSF.”

Panchanathan, who was appointed as the 15th director of the NSF in 2020, stressed that his agency invests in discovery, curiosity, and exploratory research with the aim of serving not just researchers but all of humanity.

“Pick any technology that we rely on today, and chances are the NSF had a hand in supporting its development,” Panchanathan explained. “Artificial intelligence, for example, which we hear so much about today, was sustained by investments from the NSF for almost six decades.”

During his visit, Panchanathan was welcomed by senior Notre Dame leaders, including University President-elect Rev. Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C., and John T. McGreevy, the Charles and Jill Fischer Provost. Panchanathan also met with Notre Dame faculty members who were recently awarded through the NSF’s Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program.

A final session focused on wireless technology and highlighted ways Notre Dame researchers are partnering with the local community. South Bend Mayor James Mueller and Chief Innovation Officer Denise Linn Riedl joined Notre Dame Wireless Institute co-directors Nicholas Laneman and Bertrand Hochwald to discuss how researchers are working with the city to enhance the region’s innovation ecosystem. Hochwald and Laneman, both professors in the Department of Electrical Engineering, discussed Notre Dame’s history as the site of the nation’s first long-distance wireless transmission and its current work leading SpectrumX, the NSF Spectrum Innovation Initiative Center.

Read the full story at research.nd.edu

Notre Dame Research hosted this visit together with Notre Dame’s Office of Federal and Washington Relations, which serves as a resource and connection point for all members of the Notre Dame community, including faculty, current students, alumni, and friends of the University. To learn more about Notre Dame’s work and opportunities in the nation’s capital, please visit https://federalrelations.nd.edu/.

Originally published by Brett Beasley at research.nd.edu on April 26, 2024.