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Tuesday, June 02, 2026

NAS "State of Science" 2026 address

I watched the webcast of the NAS State of Science address by outgoing NAS president Dr. Marcia McNutt.  (I did not watch the panel discussion afterward, so sorry if I missed critical pieces.)  A few thoughts on this:
  • The intro music was a very classy baroque string quartet.  Hard not to think of this scene from Titanic.
  • The main theme was about ways to revitalize US science, and there were six main points that she wanted to emphasize, each with examples of relevant projects underway, ways to measure success, and the consequences of failure.  That's fine, and I'll relay them below with some comments, but first an overall impression:  This was largely an exercise in avoiding talking about the elephant in the room, the overt hostility toward and the attempted wanton dismantling of much of the publicly funded US research ecosystem by the executive branch.  I'm unfortunately not surprised that this was largely brushed over, given the position of the Academies (see here).  As the saying goes, I'm not mad, I'm just disappointed.  The realization that the National Academies leadership do not feel empowered to have a frank discussion about this publicly has been depressing.
  • Dr. McNutt mentioned that in her previous address, she had pointed out the US vulnerability in STEM by being so reliant on international talent, and that now that other countries are heavily investing in research, the US STEM research world needs to do a better job getting US citizens in the workforce.  That's all true, but leaving out how the government leadership is explicitly trying to curtain international scholars and international collaboration seems like quite an omission.
  • She mentioned in passing that industrial research in the US in the 1950s was tiny, nothing compared to the fraction of R&D it is today.  Is that actually correct?  I mean, that was the heyday of Bell Labs, IBM, GE, Westinghouse, and big research labs at companies like Ford and GM.  Much has been written about this.  
  • The first big point was the need for improved relationships between universities and industry, and some examples of ways to encourage this, including relatively simple policy changes like making it easier for faculty and others to take leaves in industry.  Certainly it would be broadly good for the US research ecosystem to have more diverse forms of support, and as I've written before, major industrial sectors with lots of capital rely in the long term on trained people. 
  • The second point was the need to realign the academic reward system, so that industrial/entrepreneurial/coalition-building activities are incentivized, rather than rewarding on lone-wolf PIs. That's fine, and honestly I think it's already happening to some large degree at major research universities. 
  • The third point was meeting the needs of the STEM workforce, though increased interactions with industry (including, e.g., prospective industrial employers helping to define dissertation topics), co-op efforts, some training in businessy aspects (note:  the Sloan Foundation was pushing this 25 years ago.).  This is all laudable to try, but I don't see how any of this actually addresses the issue of fewer STEM workforce participation from US citizens, which is quite complicated.
  • The fourth point was the need to reduce regulatory burden.  Sure, we all want to reduce bureaucratic BS.  I have to say, though, that it was genuinely baffling to me that the most Dr. McNutt had to say about the threatened OMB rule changes (apart from a passing mention early on) is that they would increase bureaucracy.  That isn't even in the top 15 problems raised by those changes.  Remember, the default position of those pushing those rules is that academics are fundamentally untrustworthy and poor stewards of public resources.  
  • Fifth was the need for automated/self-driving labs.  I agree completely that advanced degree training should not be driven by the need for cheap labor to do tedious lab tasks (e.g. a zillion cell cultures or chemical syntheses).  Overall this was pretty innocuous.
  • Sixth, Dr. McNutt emphasized the need to take on big challenges - researchers need to be bold and not play it safe, and peer review can be inherently biased toward incrementalism.  She gave examples of large privately endowed institutes as enabling such work (MBARI, the Allen Institute).  Apparently STAC will be proposing new multi-agency science and technology "breakthrough funds".  The argument in favor of public investment in science in this section sounded rote rather than heartfelt.  If anything, I thought knocking peer review right now at a time when OMB wants to ignore it at their pleasure was a weird position to take.
To be clear:  I don't think any of the ideas highlighted in the speech are actually bad (necessarily).  It just avoided emphasizing that publicly funded research has been incredibly beneficial, and that irreversible harm is being done.  The statement that science agencies "have seen a loss of key personnel" is the worst kind of passive voice garbage.  A hundred thousand technical personnel leaving agencies is not something that just "happened" like the weather.  Being quiet, avoiding confrontation, and only trying to work behind the scenes is not the leadership that is needed now.  (See, I can do passive voice, too.)

I will try to get back to more science posting....

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Info gathering: Excellent intro undergrad lab courses and facilities?

Introductory undergraduate labs are a recurring challenge at nearly every university.  Is the purpose to teach students something about how experimental science works (formulating hypotheses, defining measurement needs, setting up equipment, acquiring and analyzing data)?  Is the purpose to emphasize and reinforce specific scientific points from the curriculum?  How structured should they be?  Where are there opportunities for interdisciplinary labs rather than traditional physics/chemistry/biology/earth sciences stovepipes?  

I'm interested in learning about US examples of outstanding introductory physics labs - both in their content/execution, and in the intro lab facilities that my readers consider to be particularly well done.  Please respond in the comments or via email.   I'd really appreciate your thoughts on this, even knowing that my blog readership is a highly biased sample.

(I tried launching a survey about undergrad physics lab instruction five years ago.  I got zero responses.  Hopefully this will be a little more successful.)

Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Manhattan Project and public communication

The Manhattan Project was the largest government sponsored research and development project of its time.  Some things worth noting, in light of the present US government attitude toward science:

  • It's hard to overstate the role played by immigrant scientists in this story.  Szilard, Einstein, Fermi, Wigner, Teller, von Neumann, and many more.  
  • I was trying to remember when the Manhattan Project became publicly known in any detail.  It turns out, within three days of the US bombing of Nagasaki, the US released a tidily written report headlined by Henry DeWolf Smyth on all the essentials, including the administrative story of how the project came to be and was managed.  That report is available in many forms, including this cute version on the internet archive and simple pdf files at DOE and Princeton.  It's an outstanding piece of clear, spare writing.  It almost boggles the mind: Here was a technical topic that the national leadership considered important for the public to understand (!), so a highly readable report was prepared and released basically immediately following public knowledge of the bombs. (!!)
  • The National Academies played a pivotal role in this story.  On page 51:  "In the spring of 1941, Briggs, feeling that an impartial review of the problem was desirable, requested [presidential science adviser Vannevar] Bush to appoint a reviewing committee. Bush then formally requested F. B. Jewett, president of the National Academy of Sciences, to appoint such a committee. Jewett complied, appointing A. H. Compton, chairman; W. D. Coolidge, E. O. Lawrence, J. C. Slater, J. H. Van Vleck, and B. Gherardi."  Once upon a time, the national leadership respected the National Academies and trusted them to provide impartial, accurate scientific advice to inform policy.  Somehow I doubt that Frank Baldwin Jewett, president of the NAS at the time, was worried that the government would cut off funding to the Academy if they didn't toe the line.  (As far as I know, no one from the Roosevelt administration was taking “donations” for lucrative government contracts on the bomb, and no one from the cabinet or the Department of War were personally betting for profit on whether it would work, either, but I digress.)
Just some food for thought.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Brief items - news roundup, AI, international issues, good reading

Several items worth reading about as we head into a long weekend in the US.  Starting with news related to funding and other aspects of US government policy:

  • US government taking equity stakes in some quantum information sciences companies while investing around $2B (seemingly from the Department of Commerce and the CHIPs Act resources.  (Non-paywall news story here).  This raises a number of thorny issues. 
  • Some US funding agencies (NIH, NASA) are enacting restrictions (Science article here, Inside Higher Ed article here) on publishing scientific papers with non-US coauthors.  It's understandable that US funding agencies are concerned about the possibility US funds directly or effectively supporting researchers in foreign countries.  This is not that, though.  Some people making policy seem to be moving toward wanting to ban any co-authorship, but even the agencies seem confused about what they want.
  • In a move that will stress out many non-US-citizens in the country, the administration is floating making people leave the US to apply for green cards (PBS article here).  This just was sort of announced yesterday, so I don't know anything about this other than on its face it sounds to me like a terrible idea for multiple reasons.  
  • The AAAS is pushing for a Senate hearing on the nominee for NSF director, on the theory that this issue and the nominee at least need to be discussed in a public forum rather than coasting along without a NSB and no end in sight to interim leadership.
  • It would seem that some Republican congresspeople are pushing the idea of de-funding the National Academies.  This is directly related to the issues mentioned here.  I think the National Academies should be endowed and thus not so reliant on federal funding; this would be a way to make sure that they always feel secure in delivering reports even if the customer is a part of the government and the conclusions might be something the customer doesn't want to hear.
There was a lot of AI-related news this week:
  • There were three papers published in Nature about using AI agents to do science (here, here, and here, with a news and views).  The first two papers are both about drug discovery research, and the third is about using AI to help write scientific software models (also medically related).  It'll be interesting to see how this progresses.  
  • One of OpenAI's tools solved an Erdos problem (that's the OpenAI release) by finding a counterexample to a conjecture long thought to be true.  Here is the accompanying paper, which includes commentary by several esteemed mathematicians.  The commentary parts of the paper are very much for non-mathematicians and fascinating to read.  It seems like the AI tools are genuinely good at pulling together complex arguments, and that so far a key advantage they have is an exhaustive familiarity with the full breadth of the literature.
  • Unsurprisingly, university graduates are not fans of AI.  This cartoon from this week's New Yorker is topical.  

 Additional suggestions that look cool but I haven't had time to actually read:

Sunday, May 17, 2026

What are heavy fermions?

I'm surprised that I haven't written about heavy fermions as a separate post before, so here we go. (It's a break from thinking about science and politics, anyway.)

I've written before about "effective mass" for electronic excitations in solids (wiki page here).  From classical physics, we are used to the idea that inertial mass \(m\) is the ratio between an external force \(\mathbf{F}\) and the acceleration \(\mathbf{a}\) of some object, \(\mathbf{F} = m\mathbf{a}\), which is also the rate of change of momentum, \(d\mathbf{p}/dt\).  Kinetic energy (for a nonrelativistic particle) is \(p^{2}/2m\).  Electrons in crystalline solids "feel" the lattice, so in general their kinetic energy \(\epsilon\) can be a more complicated function of their (crystal) momentum, and we can try do define an effective mass as \(1/m* \equiv d^{2}\epsilon/dp^{2}\).  So, if the kinetic energy is very weakly dependent on \(p\), this corresponds to having a very large effective mass.  TL/DR:  the periodic lattice can strongly alter how an electronic excitation accelerates in the presence of a force from, e.g., an electric field, compared to a free particle.  This isn't too surprising.  

Interestingly, in most semiconductors and metals, \(m*\) for electrons in the conduction band (or holes in the valence band) is not thaaaaat different than the free electron mass \(m_{0}\).  The lightest effective mass I know (leaving aside graphene and other Dirac systems when \(\epsilon\) is approximately linear in \(p\)) is electrons in InSb, about \(0.014 m_{0}\).  Holes tend to be a bit heavier.  Also, \(m*\) in molecular organic semiconductors like pentacene tends to be a bit larger, since hopping from molecule to molecule is comparatively weak.  There are ways to measure effective mass, including cyclotron resonance, electronic transport including Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations, magnetic susceptibility and de Haas/van Alphen oscillations, and specific heat measurements.  The electronic specific heat contribution for a metal is linear in the temperature at low \(T\), and the constant of proportionality includes the density of electronic states at the Fermi energy, which can be written in terms of \(m*\).  I've left out a lot of the complications of real anisotropic materials with complicated band structures, but generally the different measurements give consistent results. 

Therefore, it was a big surprise in 1975 when investigators found a material, CeAl3, in which the heat capacity implied an effective mass tens to hundreds of times larger than \(m_{0}\).  They knew right away that this had something to do with the very localized \(4f\) electrons of the Ce atoms.  Because those electrons are very localized, their energy is almost independent of \(p\), implying a large effective mass.  (Some heavy fermion materials also superconduct at temperatures surprisingly high given their effective masses.)

Heavy fermions, adapted from here.  (a) At high temperatures, the 
conduction  electrons are not well coupled to the unpaired local 4f 
moments.  (b) At low enough temperatures, Kondo scattering
hybridizes the f electrons with the conduction  electrons, boosting 
the carrier density.  (c) The hybridized energy-momentum relation 
is much flatter near the Fermi energy leading to a large effective mass.  
So what's the physics?  I wrote about the Kondo effect here, where "ordinary" conduction electrons scatter in a nontrivial way from local magnetic moments (such as partially filled \(4f\) states), and well below a characteristic temperature \(T_{\mathrm{K}}\), the conduction electrons hybridize with the impurities, screening out the unpaired spin.  In the heavy fermion compounds, instead of impurities, there is a whole crystal lattice of local magnetic moments. At sufficiently low temperatures, thanks to that Kondo scattering process, those otherwise localized electrons hybridize with the conduction electrons, boosting the effective density of charge carriers (see figure) and greatly increasing the effective mass.  See this figure, adapted from excellent lecture notes by Piers Coleman.  

So, two key ingredients for heavy fermions are itinerant conduction electrons and a periodic array of comparatively localized, unpaired electrons that have magnetic moments. It turns out that this combination can also be achieved in moiré lattice materials.  There are no \(f\) electrons here, but the moiré lattice can localize spins.  Apologies for not linking to all the relevant papers, but a couple of key theory results are herehere, and here, and a key experimental result is here.  The tunability of the 2D material-based systems is an excellent feature for digging down into the detailed physics.

Update:  Now some added insight from Prof. Andrew Millis:
Hi Doug:

An addendum to your very nice post on heavy fermions, to draw attention to what I think were important experimental results: Frank Steglich’s 1979  Phys. Rev. Lett. 43, 1892–1896 reporting superconductivity in CeCu2Si2 and Louis Taillefer and Gil Lonzarich’s 1988 determination of the quasiparticle mass and fermi surface in UPt3.

Prior to Steglich’s paper we knew that some rare earth/actinide intermetallics (e.g. CeAl3) had a very enhanced specific heat coefficient at low temperatures and that the entropy implied by  this specific heat was  derived from the magnetic moments of the rare earth ions. But  while it was plausible, there was no direct evidence that this enhanced specific heat was associated with heavy-mass fermions, so the physical relevance of the Kondo lattice concept remained uncertain.

Steglich observed that in CeCu2Si2 the specific heat jump at the superconducting transition (which in BCS theory is basically the same size as the electronic specific heat at Tc) was about as big as the normal state specific heat coefficient, thus showing that the spin entropy had been transmuted into something that could go superconducting. Then (I think in subsequent experiments) Steglich observed that the rest of the superconducting thermodynamics in Cecu2Si2 was also consistent with pairing of heavy mass entities. This, I believe, is what convinced everyone that the spin entropy from the rare earth moments had been converted into heavy mass electrons—in other words, that the lattice Kondo effect was real. 

A few years after this, Louis Taillefer and Gil Lonzarich’s quantum oscillation study of UPt3 (Phys. Rev. Lett. 60, 1570 ) showed indeed that the U-f electrons (which appear as local moments at higher temperatures) were included in the Fermi surface at low T and had heavy masses, providing direct experimental confirmation of the Kondo lattice concept.

Cheers

Andy Millis

Monday, May 11, 2026

NSF, National Science Board, and the politics of staying quiet

As I mentioned previously, the National Science Board was summarily fired on April 25.  The NSB nominally advises the National Science Foundation.  There have been a number of pieces written about this:

  • Going back in time to 2022, this essay is interesting to read, about the history of the NSF and the NSB, and the compromises put in place with the administrative structure.  Short version: Initially there was a real tension between the Director (reporting to the President) and the NSB.  Over time, the NSB was made subordinate to the director (1968).  Senatorial confirmation of board members was waived by the Senate in 2011.  
  • Many professional organizations issued statements expressing grave concern about this wholesale dismissal of the board.  This AIP news article has a summary.  The CEO of the APS wrote this, the ACS leadership wrote this, the AAS wrote this, etc.
  • The presidents of the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and National Academy of Medicine issued this joint statement.  That has to set some kind of record for blandness, as it somehow does not even mention that the NSB was fired.  I fully understand that the Academies have a number of federal contracts, as one of their key responsibilities is leveraging their membership to do authoritative studies, with federal agencies usually being the customers.  I have no inside knowledge, but it sure looks like they are trying to walk a line of not raising the administration's ire.  (Surely this raises the question:  If it's never acceptable to say anything that might upset the administration, then how can the objectivity of their reports relating to policy ever be trusted?)
  • In contrast to the leadership, a lot of Academy membership has signed an open letter to Congress demanding the reinstatement of the board.
  • Scientific American has very good reporting on this, including a no-holding-back statement by my colleague Neal Lane.
  • UpdateHere is Dan Garisto's reporting in Science about letters sent by House Democrats and by Senate Democrats demanding action on this.  That article includes a statement by the fired head of the NSB, basically saying they were dismissed for defending the NSF budget from OMB.  I'm glad these letters were sent, but without the R majority signing on, I'm not holding my breath.
Meanwhile, the pace of NSF awards continues to be glacial, even compared to last year.  See this plot from Grant Witness
We are 7 months into the fiscal year, and obligated dollars are less than half at this time last year, and more like 27% of those at this time in "normal" year.  It's hard to look at that and not wonder whether someone is aiming for a pocket rescission, regardless of what Congress appropriated.  NSF looks like an outlier here, by the way.  As badly hit as NIH has been, their award curves look much closer to last year.

Other related things worth reading:  
Back to science in my next post.


Saturday, May 02, 2026

Energy storage in the internal states of molecules - old and new

A science story first, then a US research ecosystem story later.

When we think about using molecules to store energy, it's usually in the context of food or fuel, so that chemical reactions take place - bonds are broken and remade, and in an exothermic reaction, the products end up with more kinetic energy (center of mass motion, molecular vibrations and rotations) than the initial reactants.  However, there are other ways that molecules can store energy.  I read about a cool example of this last week, but first I want to give tell you an old and very quantum mechanical story that I learned about in grad school when I did very low temperature physics.

Diatomic hydrogen, H2, is the simplest molecule there is, just two electrons and two protons.  Roughly speaking, the \(1s\) orbitals of the H atoms hybridize to form \(\sigma\) bonding and \(\sigma*\) antibonding molecular orbitals.  The lowest electronic state is the two electrons in a spin singlet, \((1/\sqrt{2})(|\uparrow \downarrow\rangle - |\downarrow \uparrow\rangle)\) in the \(\sigma\) molecular orbital.  Remember, the electrons are fermions, so the electronic wavefunction has to be antisymmetric (pick up a minus sign) under exchange of the electrons. The spin singlet is antisymmetric under exchange, the \(\sigma\) orbital is spatially symmetric under exchange, so the full electronic wavefunction (product of the spin and spatial components) is appropriately antisymmetric.  

That's not all there is to it, though, as explained thoroughly here.  The protons (while being made up of quarks and gluons, etc.) are (composite) fermions, so we have to think about the quantum wavefunction that describes them, too.  There are two possibilities.  In the "para" configuration, the proton spins are in a singlet (antisymmetric), meaning that the spatial wavefunction of the protons must be symmetric under exchange.  The spatial state of the bound protons can have some orbital angular momentum \(\mathbf{L}\), and the simplest, lowest energy situation is with quantum numbers \(\ell =0\) and therefore \(m_{\ell} = 0\).  In contrast, in the "ortho" configuration, the proton spins form a triplet state (symmetric under exchange), meaning that the spatial wavefunction must be antisymmetric, \(\ell = 1\).  Approximating the H2 molecule as a rigid barbell-like rotor with some moment of inertia \(I\), then ortho molecule has a rotational energy \(\hbar^2/2I\) larger than the para case.  That works out to about 15 meV of energy per molecule.  So, para-hydrogen is the true ground state.  It turns out that the ortho/para spin isomer energy difference makes liquefying hydrogen a challenge, since the latent heat of vaporization for H2 is only 9.4 meV.  That is, every time an ortho-hydrogen molecule converts to para-hydrogen through some collisional process, it releases enough energy to kick a hydrogen molecule out of the liquid.  I learned about this in my thesis work playing around at ~ 1 mK temperatures - any H2 adsorbed or otherwise stuck in the apparatus could result in detectable long-term heating effect as it slowly converted from ortho to para.  Bottom line:  Energy can be stored in the internal states of molecules.

From Fig. 1 of this paper.
This seems very esoteric, but the idea of storing energy in some internal state of a molecule for later release shows up elsewhere.  Last week, in this article in Science, for example, the authors report a molecule inspired by aspects of DNA that can be put via UV exposure into a distorted form ("Dewar isomer") where it is metastable at room temperature (half-life of 481 days).  It can be induced to pop back into the undistorted isomer by heat, acid exposure, or via a catalyst, and when it does, each molecule releases the stored energy (2.36 eV per molecule!) into vibrations and rotations that heat its surroundings.  The stored energy density in this stuff is about 4% of the releasable energy density of gasoline, which is not too shabby.  The authors propose a system where exposure to sunlight can store energy in the molecules, and this can later be released on demand via catalyst.  They demonstrated that the heat release from enough dissolved molecules can readily boil water.  Very neat stuff.