Aaron Datesman
About
Aaron Datesman is a researcher and inventor living in Washington, DC. He is the originator of the hypothesis of shot noise in radiobiological systems, and conceptualized and built the first superconducting vortex valve (USPTO #12,046,809), a utility-scale power electronics technology. He earned the B.S. degree in Applied Physics from Yale University in 1993, and the M.S. (1999) and Ph.D. (2005) degrees from this department, under the direction of Prof. Art Lichtenberger.
Dr. Datesman is currently employed as a program manager in quantum devices and materials at the Laboratory for Physical Sciences in College Park, MD. His most recent work is a book, co-authored with Prof. Doug Brugge of the University of Connecticut, titled "Dirty Secrets of Nuclear Power in an Era of Climate Change". The work is available open-source on the Springer web site:
https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-59595-0