tajikexpressparcel@gmail.com
Forward this email
View in your browser
THE WEEK IN PHYSICS: 24–28 APRIL
Advertisement
Faster Laser Communication with Steering Mirrors
Responding to the higher data transmission rates demand, communication via laser beams, terrestrial, ground-to-satellite, and satellite-to-satellite is opening up new possibilities. Different technologies are available to provide the speed and precision needed to keep laser beams stabilized and pointed in the right direction, making sure they reach their targets exactly, over thousands of miles. See our solution.
Solar-powered hydrogen production scales beyond the lab
Researchers navigated the gulf between lab demonstrations and commercial-scale feasibility by solving a series of engineering-design challenges.
Alex Lopatka
Data from NASA's InSight sharpen our look at Mars's core
The lander's seismometer resolved the seismic signals of a meteorite impact and a marsquake—both having originated from the planet's far side.
R. Mark Wilson
Live webinar
Live webinar: The Physics of Active Matter
Birds flock. Bees swarm. Fish school. These remarkable examples of natural collective behavior inspired researchers to study active matter—matter made not of atoms and molecules but of entities that consume energy to generate their own motion and forces. This unusual class of nonequilibrium systems can exhibit remarkable self-organization. Register Now.
FROM THE VAULT: April 2020
Hubble's 30-year legacy
A data visualization charts the positions in the sky of the Hubble Space Telescope's plethora of cosmic targets.
Nadieh Bremer and Andrew Grant
Mark Your Calendar: Careers Special Issue
The October 2023 issue of Physics Today will mark the fifth annual special issue focused on careers & recruitment. Don't miss out on the hottest jobs, career advancement advice, real insights from those in the field, and special recruitment packages that deliver! Learn more.
Behind the Cover: May 2023
Better forecasts of severe storms demand better knowledge of storm-cloud structures.
You might have missed
The drought of experimental neutrons in the US nears its end
The NIST research reactor will resume operations this spring before shutting down again in about a year for upgrades.
David Kramer
Live webinar: Quantum Measurement and Why It's a Problem
Quantum mechanics has been our most successful fundamental theory of nature since the 1920s, but we still don't fully understand what the theory actually says. Sean Carroll will discuss what the problem is, why it is important, and how a better understanding could help us with other pressing problems in physics. Register Now.
FROM THE MAY MAGAZINE
Physics Today turns 75
Even as the physical sciences have advanced and transformed, many of the community's needs and concerns have persisted.
Richard J. Fitzgerald
Get notified about our webinars and whitepapers
Sign up
Get Physics Today delivered for just $25 per year
Subscribe
Accelerating career connections worldwide for over 75 years
BROWSE ALL JOBS
POST A JOB
CREATE JOB ALERTS
FEATURED JOBS
Postdoctoral ScholarQuantum Biology Laboratory (Washington, DC)
View Job
Assistant Professor in Quantum Computing (ref. no. CYI_ASP_23_03)The Cyprus Institute (Nicosia, Cyprus)
Postdoctoral Fellow – ARL Distinguished Postdoctoral FellowshipsThe National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine (Adelphi, MD)
Postdoctoral Fellow in Neutron PhysicsTulane University Department of Physics and Engineering Physics (New Orleans, LA)
Assistant/Associate ProfessorsNaval Postgraduate School (Monterey, CA)
Visiting Assistant Professor in PhysicsPurdue University Fort Wayne (Fort Wayne, IN)
Physics Today is published by the American Institute of Physics
1 Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740 USA +1 301 209 3100
© 2023 American Institute of Physics.
Unsubscribe | Email Preferences | Privacy Policy | Contact Us
No comments:
Post a Comment