- First, it's a pleasure to see new long-form writing about condensed matter subjects, in an era where science blogging has unquestionably shrunk compared to its heyday. The new Quantum Matters substack by Justin Wilson (and William Shelton) looks like it will be a fun place to visit often.
- Similar in spirit, I've also just learned about the Knowmads podcast (here on youtube), put out by Prachi Garella and Bhavay Tyagi, two doctoral students at the University of Houston. Fun Interviews with interesting scientists about their science and how they get it done.
- There have been some additional news bits relevant to the present research funding/university-govt relations mess. Earlier this week, 200 business leaders published an open letter about how the slashing support for university research will seriously harm US economic competitiveness. More of this, please. I continue to be surprised by how quiet technology-related, pharma, and finance companies are being, at least in public. Crushing US science and engineering university research will lead to serious personnel and IP shortages down the line, definitely poor for US standing. Again, now is the time to push back on legislators about cuts mooted in the presidential budget request.
- The would-be 15% indirect cost rate at NSF has been found to be illegal, in a summary court judgment released yesterday. (Brief article here, pdf of the ruling here.)
- Along these lines, there are continued efforts for proposals about how to reform/alter indirect cost rates in a far less draconian manner. These are backed by collective organizations like the AAU and COGR. If you're interested in this, please go here, read the ideas, and give some feedback. (Note for future reference: the Joint Associations Group (JAG) may want to re-think their acronym. In local slang where I grew up, the word "jag" does not have pleasant connotations.)
- The punitive attempt to prevent Harvard from taking international students has also been stopped for now in the courts.
A blog about condensed matter and nanoscale physics. Why should high energy and astro folks have all the fun?
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Saturday, June 21, 2025
Brief items - fresh perspectives, some news bits
As usual, I hope to write more about particular physics topics soon, but in the meantime I wanted to share a sampling of news items:
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