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THE WEEK IN PHYSICS: 29 AUGUST-2 SEPTEMBER
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UChicago: Building the Quantum Workforce of Tomorrow
The University of Chicago's new certificate in Quantum Science, Networking and Communications is designed for early and mid-career participants with less than ten years of professional experience and a bachelor's or graduate degree in the sciences such as physics, computer science, engineering, or math who seek to transition into the quantum field. Learn more.
US moves to make federally funded research free upon publication
The White House has ordered that by 2026 the results of government-supported research must be published open access, but many questions remain about how the policy will be implemented.
Mitch Ambrose
An aluminum–sulfur battery may become an inexpensive alternative to lithium-ion cells
The newly developed device also suppresses the buildup of spiky metallic dendrites that can short-circuit a battery and catch fire.
R. Mark Wilson
FROM THE VAULT: July 2019
The scientific legacy of the Apollo program
Together, the six Apollo landings laid the foundation for modern planetary science.
Bradley L. Jolliff and Mark S. Robinson
The African American Presence in Physics
In the seventh episode of a 12-week podcast on untold physics history, we will talk about African American physicists and how they built and fostered their community in the mid-twentieth century. This episode features an interview with Dr. Ronald Mickens, who created an exhibit on the community of African American physicists in 1999. Listen now.
Atoms trapped with a metamaterial lens
Compact, finely textured metasurface optics are coming to a new field of physics.
Johanna L. Miller
Behind the cover: September 2022
The photograph on the cover shows a natural sculpture whose physical origins were, until recently, a mystery.
Webinar
Live Webinar: Quantum Steampunk: The Physics of Yesterday's Tomorrow
Steampunk—a science-fiction genre that juxtaposes 19th-century settings with futuristic technologies—is coming to life. Cutting-edge quantum information science is revitalizing the Victorian science of energy in the growing field of quantum thermodynamics. Register now.
FROM THE SEPTEMBER MAGAZINE
A graphene temporary tattoo measures blood pressure
A far cry from the bulky, uncomfortable cuff, the ultralight sensor takes measurements of the vital sign without the wearer feeling a thing.
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