• Research News

    Sudden Breakups of Monogamous Quantum Couples Surprise Researchers

    Quantum particles have a social life, of a sort. They interact and form relationships with each other, and one of the most important features of a quantum particle is whether it is an introvert—a fermion—or an extrovert—a boson. Extroverted bosons are happy to crowd Read More
  • Research News

    When Superfluids Collide, Physicists Find a Mix of Old and New

    Physics is often about recognizing patterns, sometimes repeated across vastly different scales. For instance, moons orbit planets in the same way planets orbit stars, which in turn orbit the center of a galaxy. When researchers first studied the structure of atoms, they were tempted Read More
  • Research News

    With Passive Approach, New Chips Reliably Unlock Color Conversion

    Over the past several decades, researchers have been making rapid progress in harnessing light to enable all sorts of scientific and industrial applications. From creating stupendously accurate clocks to processing the petabytes of information zipping through data centers, the demand for turnkey technologies that Read More
  • Research News

    Researchers Identify Groovy Way to Beat Diffraction Limit

    Physics is full of pesky limits. There are speed limits, like the speed of light. There are limits on how much matter and energy can be crammed into a region of space before it collapses into a black hole. There are even limits on Read More
  • Research News

    Researchers Imagine Novel Quantum Foundations for Gravity

    Questioning assumptions and imagining new explanations for familiar phenomena are often necessary steps on the way to scientific progress. For example, humanity’s understanding of gravity has been overturned multiple times. For ages, people assumed heavier objects always fall quicker than lighter objects. Eventually, Galileo Read More
  • Research News

    Researchers Spy Finish Line in Race for Majorana Qubits

    Our computer age is built on a foundation of semiconductors. As researchers and engineers look toward a new generation of computers that harness quantum physics, they are exploring various foundations for the burgeoning technology. Almost every computer on earth, from a pocket calculator to Read More
  • Research News

    Superconductivity’s Halo: Physicists Map Rare High-field Phase

     A puzzling form of superconductivity that arises only under strong magnetic fields has been mapped and explained by a research team of UMD, NIST and Rice University including  professor of physics and astronomy at Rice University. Their findings,  published in Science July 31, detail how uranium Read More
  • Research News

    A Cosmic Photographer: Decades of Work to Get the Perfect Shot

    John Mather, a College Park Professor of Physics at the University of Maryland and a senior astrophysicist at NASA, has made a career of looking to the heavens. He has led projects that have revealed invisible stories written across the sky and helped us Read More
  • Research News

    Heavy electrons: new ways to break old rules

    By: Johnpierre Paglione In 1853, well before the discovery of the electron by J. J. Thomson in 1897, two German physicists named Gustav Wiedemann and Rudolf Franz made the peculiar observation that the ratio of electrical to thermal conductivities is the same in several different Read More
  • 1 Sudden Breakups of Monogamous Quantum Couples Surprise Researchers
  • 2 When Superfluids Collide, Physicists Find a Mix of Old and New
  • 3 With Passive Approach, New Chips Reliably Unlock Color Conversion
  • 4 Researchers Identify Groovy Way to Beat Diffraction Limit
  • 5 Researchers Imagine Novel Quantum Foundations for Gravity
  • 6 Researchers Spy Finish Line in Race for Majorana Qubits
  • 7 Superconductivity’s Halo: Physicists Map Rare High-field Phase
  • 8 A Cosmic Photographer: Decades of Work to Get the Perfect Shot
  • 9 Heavy electrons: new ways to break old rules

Conference for Quantum Undergraduate Research in Science & Engineering (QURiSE)

Department News

  • Kara Hoffman Named Chair of Department of Physics Professor Kara Hoffman was named chair of the Department of Physics, effective July 1, 2026. “Kara Hoffman brings to this role a record of scholarly achievement and an understanding of the department's strengths and aspirations,” said Amitabh Varshney, dean of UMD’s College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences. Read More
  • Das Sarma and Greene Elected to the National Academy of Sciences Two Distinguished University Professors in the University of Maryland’s Department of Physics have been elected to the National Academy of Sciences for outstanding accomplishments in quantum science. Sankar Das Sarma and Richard L. Greene were among the 120 American and 25 international scientists selected this Read More
  • College Celebrates 2026 Employee Award Recipients The University of Maryland's College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences (CMNS) celebrated its 2026 employee award recipients at an awards ceremony on May 1, 2026. This year's awardees were selected from a pool of hundreds of nominations from the Science Terp community. Chris Zapata Read More
  • Building Graduate Programs that Support Mental Well-being Graduate student Kellen O'Brien, alumnus Patrick Becker (Ph.D., '25) and Associate Research Professor Chandra Turpen published a Physics Today article on grad student mental health, based on a survey of eight graduate programs at seven R-1 U.S. institutions. Read about the findings and what can be done:  https://physicstoday.aip.org/features/building-graduate-programs-that-support-mental-well-being?mcid=0e3e686bec Read More
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Upcoming Events

13 May
High Energy Seminar
Date Wed, May 13, 2026 3:55 pm - 5:00 pm
13 May
EPT Seminar - Spencer Chang, University of Oregon
Wed, May 13, 2026 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm
14 May
RQS Seminar: Pranshoo Upadhyay
Thu, May 14, 2026 11:00 am - 12:00 pm
14 May
CMT Student Seminar: Tsung-Cheng Peter Lu
Thu, May 14, 2026 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm
12 Jun
Dissertation Defense: Manasi Shingane
Fri, Jun 12, 2026 9:30 am - 11:30 am
21 Jun
LISA Symposium (at UMD)
Sun, Jun 21, 2026 - Fri, Jun 26, 2026

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