• Research News

    New Protocol Demonstrates and Verifies Quantum Speedups in a Jiffy

    While breakthrough results over the past few years have garnered headlines proclaiming the dawn of quantum supremacy, they have also masked a nagging problem that researchers have been staring at for decades: Demonstrating the advantages of a quantum computer is only half the battle; Read More
  • Research News

    Work on 2D Magnets Featured in Nature Physics Journal

    University of Maryland Professor Cheng Gong (ECE), along with his postdocs Dr. Ti Xie, Dr. Jierui Liang and collaborators in Georgetown University (Professor Kai Liu group), UC Berkeley (Professor Ziqiang Qiu), University of Tennessee, Knoxville (Professor David Mandrus group) and UMD Physics (Professor Victor M. Yakovenko), have made Read More
  • Research News

    NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Reveals a Key Particle Accelerator Near the Sun

    Flying closer to the sun than any spacecraft before it, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe uncovered a new source of energetic particles near Earth’s star, according to a new study co-authored by University of Maryland researchers.  Published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters on May 29, 2025, Read More
  • Research News

    Time Crystal Research Enters a New Phase

    Our world only exists thanks to the diverse properties of the many materials that make it up. The differences between all those materials result from more than just which atoms and molecules form them. A material’s properties also depend on how those basic building Read More
  • Research News

    Mysteriously Mundane Turbulence Revealed in 2D Superfluid

    Despite existing everywhere, the quantum world is a foreign place where many of the rules of daily life don’t apply. Quantum objects jump through solid walls; quantum entanglement connects the fates of particles no matter how far they are separated; and quantum objects may Read More
  • Research News

    A New Piece in the Matter–Antimatter Puzzle

    aOn March 24, 2025 at the annual Rencontres de Moriond conference taking place in La Thuile, Italy, the LHCb collaboration at CERN reported a new milestone in our understanding of the subtle yet profound differences between matter and antimatter. In its analysis of large Read More
  • Research News

    Researchers Play a Microscopic Game of Darts with Melted Gold

    Sometimes, what seems like a fantastical or improbable chain of events is just another day at the office for a physicist. In a recent experiment by University of Maryland researchers at the Laboratory for Physical Sciences, a scene played out that would be right Read More
  • Research News

    IceCube Search for Extremely High-energy Neutrinos Contributes to Understanding of Cosmic Rays

    Neutrinos are chargeless, weakly interacting particles that are able to travel undeflected through the cosmos. The IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the South Pole searches for the sources of these astrophysical neutrinos in order to understand the origin of high-energy particles called cosmic rays and, Read More
  • Research News

    Twisted Light Gives Electrons a Spinning Kick

    It’s hard to tell when you’re catching some rays at the beach, but light packs a punch. Not only does a beam of light carry energy, it can also carry momentum. This includes linear momentum, which is what makes a speeding train hard to Read More
  • 1 New Protocol Demonstrates and Verifies Quantum Speedups in a Jiffy
  • 2 Work on 2D Magnets Featured in Nature Physics Journal
  • 3 NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Reveals a Key Particle Accelerator Near the Sun
  • 4 Time Crystal Research Enters a New Phase
  • 5 Mysteriously Mundane Turbulence Revealed in 2D Superfluid
  • 6 A New Piece in the Matter–Antimatter Puzzle
  • 7 Researchers Play a Microscopic Game of Darts with Melted Gold
  • 8 IceCube Search for Extremely High-energy Neutrinos Contributes to Understanding of Cosmic Rays
  • 9 Twisted Light Gives Electrons a Spinning Kick

Physics is Phun

Department News

  • UMD Physics Rated #19 in the World The University of Maryland Department of Physics was ranked No. 19 globally in U.S. News & World Report’s list of 2025-26 Best Global Universities. Of U.S. campuses, only three public universities--and 10 overall--ranked higher in physics. "This is a tribute to all of us working Read More
  • Alumni Honored with NSF Fellowships Physics graduates Jade LeSchack, Elaine Taylor and Jeffrey Wack have received prestigious National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowships, which recognize outstanding graduate students in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. This year’s awardees from the University of Maryland’s College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences (CMNS) Read More
  • Hafezi Receives Humboldt Research Award Mohammad Hafezi has received a Humboldt Research Award, which acknowledges his history of impactful research and supports visiting Germany to collaborate with colleagues there. Each year, the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation gives the award, which is supported by the Federal Foreign Office and the Federal Ministry of Read More
  • Sasha Philippov Named Outstanding Young Scientist Assistant Professor Sasha Philippov has received the 2025 Maryland Outstanding Young Scientist (OYS) award. The OYS award program was established in 1959 to recognize and celebrate extraordinary contributions of young Maryland scientists. In 1988 the Outstanding Young Engineer (OYE) award was established to recognize contributions in engineering. Both Read More
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Upcoming Events

1 Jul
Dissertation Defense: Noah Berthusen
Date Tue, Jul 1, 2025 10:00 am - 12:00 pm
2 Jul
CMTC JLDS Seminar
Wed, Jul 2, 2025 11:00 am - 12:00 pm
17 Jul
Dissertation Defense: Dhruv Devulapalli
Thu, Jul 17, 2025 10:00 am - 12:00 pm
18 Jul
Dissertation Defense: Yijia Xu
Fri, Jul 18, 2025 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm
9 Oct
CMTC JLDS Colloquium
Thu, Oct 9, 2025 11:00 am - 12:00 pm

Charles W. Misner Memorial Symposium: Logistics

Home Talks Register CWM
 
The closest hotels to our campus are these:
 
 

 

See the three hotels, the symposium site and the garage, as well as a more detailed map showing  access. Download a .pdf version of the access map. 
Hotels nearby the Edward St. John building and the Regents Drive Garage.Hotels nearby the Edward St. John building and the Regents Drive Garage.

Access to the Edward St. John building.Access to the Edward St. John building.

Irving and Renee Milchberg Endowed Lecture

milchberglectureWhen Howard Milchberg, his wife, Rena, and their three children established an endowed lecture series in honor of Howard’s late parents, they wanted something that would honor their spirit—a spirit that helped them survive the Holocaust, he by selling cigarettes to Nazis in occupied Warsaw while smuggling weapons to resistance fighters, and she in a slave labor camp in Siberia.

The professor of physics and electrical and computer engineering hopes that the Irving and Renee Milchberg Endowed Lectureship will carry on the legacy of his parents, both witnesses to and victims of a historical moment in which truth and reality became twisted. The annual cross-disciplinary lecture, housed in the Department of Physics but intersecting with schools across campus, will aim to highlight the connections among science, truth, the human condition and a civil society.

“Physics has brought material benefits to society but it has come with enormous consequences and responsibilities that demand a continuous and vigorous commitment to truth telling, facts and tolerance,” says Milchberg. “In modern times, scientists themselves have frequently been in the vanguard of peace and human rights movements.”

The lectureship, to which the Milchbergs have given $100,000, “will be an exciting addition to the Physics Department’s calendar of colloquia and lectures,” says Steven Rolston, chair of the department. “Its focus beyond physics to the wider world will provide valuable exposure to the big issues facing our society to our students, staff and faculty. We do not do science in isolation, and this will emphasize that.”

Milchberg’s mother and father, who died in 2017 and 2014, respectively, never had formal educations but Milchberg describes them as “remarkably open-minded and tolerant” and as “wide-ranging thinkers and skeptics.” After immigrating to Canada in 1947, Irving Milchberg trained as a watchmaker, eventually meeting Renee and opening a gift shop in Niagara Falls, Ontario.

“I didn’t want their passing to be unrecognized,” says Milchberg. “The fact that I’m here doing what I do is a testimony to how they lived their lives.”

Written by Sala Levin

Irving and Renee Milchberg Endowed Lecture Speakers:

2025:  Kathleen Hall Jamieson, University of Pennsylvania, "Communicating What Science Knows in a Polarized Time" 
2024:  Congressman Jamie Raskin, "Democracy, Autocracy and the Threat to Reason in the 21st Century"
2023: Jonathan Moreno, University of Pennsylvania, "Bioethics and the Rules-Based International Order"  
2021: James Glanz, reporter for the New York Times, "The Public Relations Machine in Science: A Self-Inflicted Wound?"
2019: Susan Eisenhower, President and CEO of the Eisenhower Institute, "Lessons from 1945: Ethics, the War in Europe, and its Enduring Legacy."

 

Maryland Day 2020

We look forward to Maryland Day 2021. In the meantime, enjoy our special physics booklet!

MD Day 2020 Department of Physics Page 02

Charles W. Misner Endowed Lectureship in Gravitational Physics

The family of Professor Emeritus Charles Misner has established the Charles W. Misner Endowed Lectureship in Gravitational Physics, honoring the theorist's illustrious career. 

The Lectureship endowment biennially sponsors a preferably early or mid-career scientist in the fields of gravitation or cosmology to visit UMD and give a public lecture and two or three more specialized lectures.

Misner received his Ph.D. at Princeton University under John Archibald Wheeler, and was recruited to the University of Maryland by John. S. Toll in 1963. He enjoyed a distinguished career in general relativity, devising with Richard Arnowitt and Stanley Deser the ADM formalism, which was commended by the Albert Einstein Society with its Einstein Medal in 2015.  Misner is also well-known as the co-author, with Wheeler and Kip Thorne, of the acclaimed 1973 textbook, Gravitation. The authoritative opus, known as MTW in tribute to its authors, was republished in 2017. 

The lecture is not the first example of the Misner family's gracious support of the Department of Physics. In 2018, Susanne Kemp Misner (1933-2019) spotted a New York Times story about the $760,000 sale of physicist Stephen Hawking's signed doctoral thesis. An ensuing exploration of Prof. Misner's UMD office yielded correspondence with Hawking, a long-time friend and colleague, leading to a fruitful auction and gift to the Weber Endowment for Gravitational Physics, acknowledging Joe Weber's influence in gravitational wave science. 

2024-25: Daniel Harlow, MIT
2022-23: Sam Gralla, University of Arizona 

To contribute to the Misner Lectureship, click here: https://giving.umd.edu/giving/Fund.php?name=charles-w-misner-endowed-lectureship-in-gravitational-physics