Physics news
Thank you Professor Jon Goff for the interesting seminar on 'Soil to Superconducting Qubits', and further thanks to everyone who joined us!
Our alumni panel did a brilliant job in fielding questions from students on their employment journeys and what tips could be shared to prepare our students for their future careers.
Before the 1960’s, the concept of sending humans to space seemed like wishful thinking. Now, almost 60 years later, NASA is planning to send humans to the Moon again.
To celebrate Women's History Month, the department is looking back at the life and work of one of the most influential female physicists of all time: Marie Skłodowska-Curie.
On January 30th, 2020, the Physics Department organised its annual Alumni event for the current students.
The promise and pitfalls of quantum technologies
Imagine living in a world where you couldn’t say if it is hot or cold, what the time is, how much you weigh or how long you’ve walked to reach a destination.
Congratulations to Luke Rhodes for successfully completing his PhD viva
Highlights from the Department of Physics involvement in Super Science Saturday
Dr Joseph Walding attempts to shine some light on the unknown at one of the Department of Physics Public Lecture Series: the elusive Dark Matter!
New results have been announced this week, from the ATLAS and CMS experiments at CERN, confirming the unambiguous observation of the production of Higgs particles in association with top quarks.
Professor Glen Cowan participated in the extraordinary celebration of Richard Feynman’s centenary organised in Kyzyl, Tuva (Russian Federation).