UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The life of Lovisa Arnesson-Cronhamre, a graduate student at Penn State in architectural engineering, who planned to transfer to physics to pursue her passion, was much too short. She was struck by a speeding car on Sept. 12, 2023, while running on the sidewalk along East Park Avenue, dying in the early hours of Sept. 13, but her legacy will live on through the generosity of her family and loved ones.
Arnesson-Cronhamre's parents, Maja Cronhamre and Peter Arnesson Gyld, along with her fiancé, Matthew Hollingham, a graduate student in architectural engineering, have established the Be More Lovisa Graduate Student Scholarship in Physics in the Eberly College of Science, which will provide funding for a graduate student in physics, with a preference for students studying particle astrophysics.
“Losing Lovisa has been devastating but we, as a family, strongly wish to contribute to someone else’s love of physics and to honor Lovisa in a way that will keep her memory alive,” Cronhamre said. “We have chosen to do this at Penn State, where her future dreams were being made possible. For us as a family, it’s vital to reflect Lovisa and her amazing qualities in a way that can contribute to her memory and so that other graduate students may follow their own dream.”
Ten members of Arnesson-Cronhamre’s Swedish family, along with Hollingham's parents from the U.K., traveled to State College for a ceremony celebrating her life on Sept. 12, where they also announced the memorial scholarship’s establishment.
The scholarship will be awarded to a graduate student in the Eberly College of Science studying physics who shows a passion for the subject and a conscientious, determined, considered and forward-thinking approach and who is supportive to others while making a significant contribution either individually or within a team. All qualities belonging to Arnesson-Cronhamre.
Arnesson-Cronhamre began at Penn State as a member of the Responsive and Adaptive Infrastructure Materials (Re-AIM) Research Group in architectural engineering and had planned to transfer to the Department of Physics and work on the IceCube Neutrino Observatory for her doctoral research.
“Her heart was in physics,” said Doug Cowen, professor of physics. “There was no hurdle high enough to deter Lovisa from pursuing her goal of a Ph.D. in experimental neutrino physics. She will be remembered as an exceptionally self-motivated, gifted, warm, enthusiastic young woman who would have become an outstanding experimental neutrino physicist.”
Arnesson-Cronhamre’s parents described her as modest and humble, so nominations for the scholarship will be accepted from those who work alongside someone who is worthy of consideration yet may not, for whatever reason, apply themselves.