Early life Roger Wartell was born in
New York, New York. He received his
B.S. degree in
physics from
Stevens Institute of Technology in 1966. In 1971 he received his
Ph.D. in physics from the
University of Rochester, where he worked in the group of
Elliott Waters Montroll on the
DNA helix-coil transition. From 1971 to 1973 he was a
NIH postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of
Robert Wells at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison. He was a
visiting professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1978–1979, and visiting scholar at
National Institutes of Health-
Bethesda from 1987 to 1988.
Georgia Tech Wartell joined the faculty at Georgia Tech in 1974, and received a NIH Career Development Award in 1979. He served as associate chair of the
Georgia Institute of Technology School of Physics from 1987 to 1988. With a 1/3 joint appointment in biology, he was appointed acting chair of the Georgia Tech School of Biology in 1990. Under his tenure as chair (1990–2004), the undergraduate curriculum was revised to provide students with three areas of emphasis:
environmental biology,
microbiology, and
molecular biology and faculty size increased from 12 to 26. The areas reflected the research and educational interests of the faculty. He is a member of the
NASA Astrobiology Institute at Georgia Tech. His research is focused on protein-RNA interactions in gene regulation, ribosomal evolution, and ribozyme reactions in ice. ==Notable awards==