Within the American Physical Society (APS), Berger was instrumental in founding the Topical Group on Gravitation, later to become the Division of Gravitational Physics.[1] She was its first chair, in 1996, and served as chair again in 2014–2015.[7] She also chaired the APS Committee on the Status of Women in Physics in 2000.[8]
With Abhay Ashtekar, James A. Isenberg, and Malcolm MacCallum, Berger is co-editor of the book General Relativity and Gravitation: A Centennial Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2015).[11][12]
The American Astronomical Society and IOP Publishing have announced the book Vignettes from General Relativity by Berger as expected to be published in 2021.[13]
Recognition
In 1983, the National Science Foundation awarded Berger a Visiting
Professorship for Women in Science and Engineering.[4] In 1998, she was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society, after a nomination by the APS Division of Gravitational Physics, "for her pioneering contributions to global issues in classical general relativity, particularly the analysis of the nature of cosmological singularities, and for founding the Topical Group on Gravitation of the APS".[1] On the occasion of her retirement in 2012, she was honored by a special session of the April 2012 APS meeting.[5]
^Begun, Michael W. (Fall 2015), "Einstein's masterpiece (review of three books including General Relativity and Gravitation)", The New Atlantis, 47: 121–135, JSTOR43671547