Lynn Fountain, principal research scientist and division chief of the Signals and System Division for the Georgia Tech Research Institute’s Advanced Concepts Laboratory (ACL), stands in a lab in the Centennial Research Building at Georgia Tech. (Credit: Branden Camp)

Lynn Fountain Named Woman of the Year in Nonprofit Educational Institutions

12.02.2019

It has been nearly three decades since Lynn Fountain joined the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) as a researcher, not long after earning her doctorate in physics at the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech).

This month, she was named a winner of the Woman of the Year Award in Nonprofit Educational Institutions by the organization Women In Technology, an Atlanta group that encourages women and girls to pursue career opportunities in science, technology, engineering, arts, and math.

The Woman of the Year Award recognizes local women for their accomplishments in the business and technology fields and leadership in the community.

Fountain, who now serves as a principal research scientist and division chief of the Signals and System Division for the Georgia Tech Research Institute’s Advanced Concepts Laboratory (ACL), was nominated for the award both for her accomplishments as a researcher and as a mentor.

“This is a great recognition for Lynn, who has been supporting and mentoring young researchers in technical fields for nearly thirty years,” said Doug Denison, ACL’s director. “As a leader at GTRI, Lynn continues to promote STEM education and opportunities for women in science and engineering. She is highly deserving of this award.”

Fountain earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in physics and electrical engineering respectively from Tennessee Technological University before beginning her doctoral work at Georgia Tech. Now, she leads a team of 30 people in GTRI’s ACL, which develops tailored solutions for a broad range of national security challenges through application of physics- and effects-based modeling to realizable systems, augmented with prototype development and testing.

Through the years, Fountain has led projects involving electromagnetic scattering measurements and simulations, antenna design, radar cross-section reduction, and intelligence analysis.

Fountain also worked for five years for the Georgia Tech Center for Education Integrating Science, Mathematics, and Computing (CEISMC), which coordinates Georgia Tech’s K-12 STEM outreach. That work included establishing programs to encourage teachers to use more hands-on activities in science classrooms and efforts to encourage more girls and women to pursue STEM careers.

“It was an honor to be recognized by WIT for both my technical career and for my work over the years as a mentor,” Fountain said. “I fully support WIT’s efforts to encourage girls and women to pursue careers in technology related fields. My career at Georgia Tech and GTRI have been rewarding. I’ve had the honor of pursuing interesting technical work with a great group of researchers.”

Newsletter

Sign up for monthly updates on GTRI’s research, activity, and more.

Related News

| News stories
STEM@GTRI recently teamed up with the Georgia Tech Library, GoSTEM, and Georgia Tech's Office of Hispanic Initiatives to offer Spanish-language STEM outreach to students and families through community libraries. In fall 2021, the group hosted virtual sessions featuring GTRI researchers who discussed their experiences as STEM professionals and the importance of exposing students to the basics of STEM early on.
| News stories
A collaboration between the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI), Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines and the U.S. Air Force Logistics Directorate’s (HAF/A4L) Tesseract Office of Innovation is helping evaluate the applicability of commercial airline maintenance practices to military aircraft fleets.
| News stories

Trapped ions excited with a laser beam can be used to create entangled qubits in quantum information systems, but addressing several stationary pairs of ions in a trap requires multiple optical switches and complex controls.