Elvang joined the
University of Michigan in 2009 where she works on
supersymmetry. She worked on the
4-dimensional spacetime RG flows. She looks to understand
quantum gravity and the
gauge gravitation correspondence. She uses the
spinor helicity formalism. Her work was turned into the first comprehensive textbook on quantum amplitudes, published by
Cambridge University Press in 2015. Elvang studies the implications of standard symmetries on
ultraviolet divergence in
supergravity. She uses the soft bootstrap to constrain
effective field theories of massless particles. Elvang was made a Cottrell Scholar in 2013, developing a sophomore course that taught the value of academic study. The course she developed,
Honors Physics Ill/Physics 360: Waves, Heat, and Light, was described by
Andrew D. Martin as 'enhancing' the undergraduate course. Elvang developed an exchange program with
Bryn Mawr College to attract women into physics research. In 2017 she was promoted to Professor of Physics at the
University of Michigan. Elvang's citation read
"for profound insights into gravitational field solutions with novel horizon geometries, the structure of quantum scattering in supersymmetric theories, corner contributions to entanglement entropy, and precision holography". • 2021 Class of Fellows of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science. • 2019
University of Michigan, Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, for outstanding contributions to undergraduate education. • 2018 Fellow of the
American Physical Society • 2016
American Physical Society Maria Goeppert Mayer Award • 2015
University of Michigan Rackham Graduate School Henry Russel Award • 2014
University of Michigan Individual Award for Outstanding Contributions to Undergraduate Education • 2013
Research Corporation for Science Advancement Cottrell Scholar • 2010
NSF CAREER Award ==References==