News

Franklin Institute Award: Philip Kim

"Stacking van der Waals Atomic Layers: Quest for New Quantum Materials"

April 27, 2023
11:00am – 12:00pm

Glandt Forum
Singh Center for Nanotechnology
Also live via Zoom

 

Paul Heiney, Professor Emeritus of Physics, has published his new book, “Binary Stars, Liquid Crystals, and Neutrinos: The First 250 Years of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Pennsylvania”

Dear Colleagues,

I am happy to announce that my book, “Binary Stars, Liquid Crystals, and Neutrinos:  The First 250 Years of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Pennsylvania” has been published and is now available at the link below (as well as amazon.com and barnesandnoble.com) in both paperback (expensive) and e-book (cheap) forms.

I want to thank everyone in the department and beyond who helped me so much with this project.

THE PHYSICS OF US

Physicists are studying how living matter works, and find that it breaks the standard rules and produces fascinating new phenomena.

 

Wormhole-like dynamics

Researchers from Caltech recently claimed to have, for the first time, observed wormhole-like teleportation on a quantum computer. Penn Today spoke with two faculty members about the implications of this work to gain a better understanding of what it truly means to model a wormhole.

 

Minimally invasive method tracks how the brain spends energy

Penn researchers have developed a new technique for monitoring the brain’s metabolic rate of oxygen consumption, a measure of the brain’s consumption of energy.

 

New discoveries in kagome metals

A collaborative study reveals insights into the properties of a recently discovered family of superconductors, with implications for future applications in quantum computing and other technologies.

 

Congratulations to Prof. Evelyn Thomson on her election as a 2022 Fellow of the American Physical Society!

"For initiating and leading original searches at the Large Hadron Collider for the simplest extension of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model that has spontaneous violation of the R-parity symmetry."

What it’s like to be stationed at a particle accelerator

Gwen Gardner and Lauren Osojnak, Ph.D. candidates in physics, describe their work as part of the Penn ATLAS team at the Large Hadron Collider.