Physicists tie light into knots
Optical structures could trap atoms
Read article: Physicists tie light into knots
Thank you for registering with Physics World
If you'd like to change your details at any time, please visit My account
I am an online editor of Physics World. I did a PhD in condensed-matter physics at McMaster University in Canada. I am still fascinated by what is an extremely rich and varied subject that I believe is ignored by the media (Physics World excepted, of course). As a result, I’m happiest when I’m blogging about topological insulators, the latest quasiparticle or some other quirk of condensed matter. So, if you spot something weird and wonderful in solid-state physics, please get in touch. In my spare time I am a Scout leader.
Read article: Physicists tie light into knots
Neil Turok wants to change how advanced scientific training is done worldwide, and believes that Africa can play a vital role in shifting entrenched views
Read article: Neil Turok: nurturing the next Einsteins
From lasers and semiconductors to X-rays and the Web, physicists can be credited with seeding numerous technologies that have changed how we live
Read article: Physics for our future: the five spin-offs from physics research that will most alter our everyday lives
Excerpts from the Red Folder
RIKEN researchers spot new nuclear magic number
Read article: Why 34 is the magic number for calcium
Martin Karplus, Michael Levitt and Arieh Warshel recognized for creating models of complex chemical systems
Read article: Chemistry Nobel honours trio who combined classical and quantum physics
Pair honoured for their prediction of the Higgs boson
Read article: Englert and Higgs bag Nobel Prize for Physics
Chip-based devices fire lasers at glass coated with gratings
Read article: Etched glass could create table-top particle accelerators