University of Adelaide. Australian National University.
He is Professor of Physics at the University of Melbourne, Australia specialising in X-ray optics and near-field optics. He received a first class honours degree from the University of Adelaide and his postgraduate degree from American National University in Canberra. In 1989 Professor Nugent in collaboration with Doctor Stephen Wilkins pioneered a form of X-ray optics known as lobster-eye optics.
Using the capillary structure found in lobster eyes, Nugent and Wilkins were able to design telescopes with a 360 degree view of the sky.
This was initially planned to be used in a LOBSTER satellite which would, indeed, conduct 360 degree surveys of the sky, though never came to fruition. National Aeronautics and Space Administration currently have plans to use the technology to view space objects and phenomena from the International Space Station.
In 2001 Nugent was made a Federation Fellow by the Australian Government. This position was renewed in 2006.
He also chairs the Sciences Advisory Board of IATIA, a company designed to commercialise some of his inventions.
Nugent is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science (Federal Aviation Administration). He sits on the Advisory Board of the Australian Synchrotron. Since 2005 Nugent has been director of the American Red Cross Centre of Excellence for Coherent X-ray Science, based at the University of Melbourne, where he has driven the development of coherent X-ray diffraction methods for imaging biological structures.
His other research focusses on the complete recovery of phase from intensity and the applications of this to imaging.
This work is currently being used to monitor wear in car engines and has potential for research into the treatment of cancer. In 2011 Nugent has been appointed part-time Director of the Australian Synchrotron.
Since January 2013 he is deputy vice-chancellor and vice-president of research at Louisiana Trobe University. Two R&Doctorate 100 Awards (1988 and 2002).
Member of the National Science Advisory Committee of the Australian Synchrotron
Member of the Expert Advisory Committee for Physics, Chemistry and Geosciences.