New CNAM Director Appointed

Prof. Johnpierre Paglione has been appointed as the new Director of the Center for Nanophysics and Advanced Materials.  Having contributed to several fields of condensed matter research through both single-crystal synthesis of superconducting, quantum-critical and topological materials, as well as exploration of novel phenomena, Prof. Paglione will continue to ensure the strength and vitality of the experimental condensed matter physics research performed in the Center. Paglione is a leader in the field of quantum criticality and has made important contributions to the fields of heavy-fermion materials and the quasiparticle picture of correlated materials. His team has more recently pursued several new areas of research including iron-based high-temperature superconductivity and topological insulators and superconductors. He is the recipient of a National Postdoctoral Fellowship Award from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada, a National Science Foundation CAREER Award and an Early Career Award from the Department of Energy, and a recipient of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Materials Synthesis Award. Dr. Paglione earned his PhD from the University of Toronto in Canada.

Hebard to give 2016 Carr Lecture

This year's W. J. Carr Lecture Series on Superconductivity and Advanced Materials will be presented by Prof. Arthur Hebard from the University of Florida. Prof Hebard's research interests are focused on the fabrication and characterization of thin-film structures and are based on the recognition that unusual physical phenomena occur in restricted dimensions and at interfaces, for instance in magnetic and superconducting properties. His discoveries have been recognized by the American Physical Society’s award of the 2015 Oliver E. Buckley Condensed Matter Physics Prize to Hebard and collaborators “for discovery and pioneering investigations of the superconductor-insulator transition, a paradigm for quantum phase transitions.”

A Technical Seminar will be given on Monday, April 25 at 4pm in Toll 1201 (more info here), followed by a special Department Colloquium at 4pm in 1410 Toll (more info here).

Self-cloaking metamaterial for broadband microwave applications

Led by CNAM faculty member Prof. Stephen Anlage, University of Maryland physicists have developed a new cloaking material that can become transparent to microwave radiation with the flip of a switch. Because many wireless communication devices rely on microwaves, the new material could be used to design more efficient communications networks. The new material can be selectively tuned to respond to a wide range of microwave wavelengths, making it more versatile than many previous attempts at cloaking technology. The achievement is described in Physical Review X (2015) and featured on the Physics Department News Feed.

Subcategories