From chasing subatomic particles to counting bees, Tyler Horoho’s varied research pursuits have led him to work and study at some of the nation’s top laboratories, thanks to a Department of Energy research award.
Horoho, a fourth-year doctoral student in physics at the University of Virginia, is one of 60 recipients of a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science Graduate Student Research Award. This award permits recipients to carry out part of their doctoral dissertation research in Department of Energy national laboratories, providing a stipend and tuition support for up to three years.
“This fellowship is a great opportunity for my career,” Horoho said. “It will allow me to receive technical training and make connections that would otherwise be harder to come by. I applied with the hope that this training will help round out my skills and make me a better candidate for postdoc opportunities.”
Horoho is part of the Mu2e – for “muons to electrons” – experiment, which seeks evidence of muons decaying into electrons and no other particles with unprecedented precision. , the basic building blocks of the environment, and UVA physicists have been working with Department of Energy scientists on a detector to observe muons as they decay.

