Raymond L. Orbach
Director, Office of Science
Raymond Lee Orbach was sworn in as the
14th Director of the Office of Science (SC) at the Department
of Energy (DOE) on March 14, 2002. In this capacity,
Dr. Orbach manages an organization that is the third
largest Federal sponsor of basic research in the United
States, the primary supporter of the physical sciences
in the U.S., and one of the premier science organizations
in the world.
The SC fiscal year 2006 budget of $3.6
billion funds programs in high energy and nuclear physics,
basic energy sciences, magnetic fusion energy, biological
and environmental research, and computational science.
SC, formerly the Office of Energy Research, also provides
management oversight of 10 DOE non-weapons laboratories,
supports researchers at more than 275 colleges and universities
nationwide, and builds and operates the world’s
finest suite of scientific facilities and instruments
used annually by more than 19,000 researchers to extend
the frontiers of all areas of science.
From 1992 to 2002, Dr. Orbach served as
Chancellor of the University of California (UC), Riverside.
Under his leadership, UC Riverside doubled in size,
achieved national and international recognition, and
led the University of California in diversity and educational
opportunity. In addition to his administrative duties
at UC Riverside, Dr. Orbach maintained a strong commitment
to teaching. He sustained an active research program;
worked with postdoctoral, graduate, and undergraduate
students in his laboratory; and taught the freshman
physics course each winter quarter. As Distinguished
Professor of Physics, Dr. Orbach set the highest standards
for academic excellence. From his arrival, UC Riverside
scholars led the nation for seven consecutive years
in the number of fellows elected to the prestigious
American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS).
Dr. Orbach began his academic career as
a postdoctoral fellow at Oxford University in 1960 and
became an assistant professor of applied physics at
Harvard University in 1961. He joined the faculty of
the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) two
years later as an associate professor, and became a
full professor in 1966. From 1982 to 1992, he served
as the Provost of the College of Letters and Science
at UCLA.
Dr. Orbach's research in theoretical and
experimental physics has resulted in the publication
of more than 240 scientific articles. He has received
numerous honors as a scholar including two Alfred P.
Sloan Foundation Fellowships, a National Science Foundation
Senior Postdoctoral Fellowship at Oxford University,
a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship
at Tel Aviv University, the Joliot Curie Professorship
at the Ecole Superieure de Physique et Chimie Industrielle
de la Ville de Paris, the Lorentz Professorship at the
University of Leiden in the Netherlands, the 1991-1992
Andrew Lawson Memorial Lecturer at UC Riverside, and
the 2004 Arnold O. Beckman Lecturer in Science and Innovation
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Dr. Orbach is a fellow of the American
Physical Society and the American Association for the
Advancement of Science. Dr. Orbach has also held numerous
visiting professorships at universities around the world.
These include the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium,
Tel Aviv University, and the Imperial College of Science
and Technology in London. He also serves as a member
of 20 scientific, professional, and civic boards.
Dr. Orbach received his Bachelor of Science
degree in Physics from the California Institute of Technology
in 1956. He received his Ph.D. degree in Physics from
the University of California, Berkeley, in 1960 and
was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.
Dr. Orbach was born in Los Angeles,
California. He is married to Eva S. Orbach. They have
three children and seven grandchildren.
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