Education
After escaping occupied France with her family, she attended a French school in Mexico. She received her Master of Surgery in 1955 and earned her Doctor of Philosophy in 1958 in experimental physics from Columbia University, where she stayed on as a postdoctoral research associate until 1960.
Career
She was the first tenured female professor of Rutgers College. Born in Vienna, Austria, Noemie Benczer Koller moved frequently in her early childhood due to the turbulence of war. Upon completing high school, she travelled to New York to receive a college education.
At the time, Columbia University did not accept female applicants and Koller was directed to apply to Columbia"s sister school, Barnard College.
In the fall of 1960, Koller came to Rutgers University, New Brunwsick, New Jersey. Her husband took a position at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken and Koller came to Rutgers, the first woman hired in the Physics department and, also, in 1965, the first tenured female professor of Rutgers College. Mason Gross was president of the university at this time.
According to the "Contributions of 20th Century Women to Physics" (CWP) Project of the University of California, Los Angeles entry on Koller, Koller was a pioneer in several areas of nuclear and condensed matter physics, including the first identification of the double gamma decay of the observationally stable but theoretically unstable 40Ca isotope to the ground state: a 0+ → 0+ transition. The observation of the interplay of single particle and collective motions in nuclei.
And the description of a broad range of nuclear electromagnetic transitions in the rare earth region using a simple relation based on constant gyromagnetic ratios for nucleon pairs.
Koller was active in administrative duties also. She was the Director of the Nuclear Physics Laboratory from 1986 to 1989. Koller is a strong supporter of women in science and has contributed a significant amount of research to the physics community internationally.
Membership
At Rutgers she has been a major member of the nuclear physics research group working on the tandem Van de Graaff accelerator, as well as a condensed-matter physicist, performing experiments using the Mössbauer effect, by which she investigated the electronic structure of magnetic materials. She served as a member of the Physics Advisory Panel, United States National Science Foundation (1973-1976), and of the Panel on Nuclear Physics, National Academy of Sciences Committee on Physics and Astronomy (1983-1984).