University of Arkansas Physics

University of Arkansas Physics University of Arkansas Physics Department

04/24/2026
Join us Monday, April 20th to welcome Dr. Semën Gorfman from Tel Aviv University! Refreshments will be served in PHYS 13...
04/17/2026

Join us Monday, April 20th to welcome Dr. Semën Gorfman from Tel Aviv University! Refreshments will be served in PHYS 134 at 3:30pm and the colloquium will begin at 4:00pm in PHYS 133.

Join us Monday, April 13th to welcome Dr. Ming-Jun Li from Corning Incorporated! Refreshments will be served in PHYS 134...
04/08/2026

Join us Monday, April 13th to welcome Dr. Ming-Jun Li from Corning Incorporated! Refreshments will be served in PHYS 134 at 3:30pm and the colloquium will begin at 4:00pm in PHYS 133.

Before today’s colloquium, we will have cupcakes and refreshments set up in PHYS 134 at 2:30PM instead of 3:30PM. This p...
04/06/2026

Before today’s colloquium, we will have cupcakes and refreshments set up in PHYS 134 at 2:30PM instead of 3:30PM. This pre-colloquium event will have the NASA live feed as the Artemis II crew start their flyby!

Today’s colloquium, “How stellar multiplicity shapes disc evolution and planet formation,” presented by Dr. Jeremy Smallwood, will begin at 4PM in PHYS 133. See below for more information on Dr. Smallwood’s presentation.

Please join us for free cupcakes and some good old space-themed fun! Anyone is welcome to join, and we hope to see you there. 😊

Join us Monday, April 6th to welcome Dr. Jeremy Smallwood from the University of Oklahoma! Refreshments will be served in PHYS 134 at 3:30pm and the colloquium will begin at 4:00pm in PHYS 133.

Join us Monday, April 6th to welcome Dr. Jeremy Smallwood from the University of Oklahoma! Refreshments will be served i...
04/01/2026

Join us Monday, April 6th to welcome Dr. Jeremy Smallwood from the University of Oklahoma! Refreshments will be served in PHYS 134 at 3:30pm and the colloquium will begin at 4:00pm in PHYS 133.

Congratulations are in order for senior physics and math student Samuel Sooter, who has been selected for the Historic C...
03/25/2026

Congratulations are in order for senior physics and math student Samuel Sooter, who has been selected for the Historic Churchill Scholarship at the University of Cambridge-- one of the most selective postgraduate awards in the world!

Read more on Sooter's plans with the Churchill scholarship below.

John Samuel Sooter has been named the U of A’s first Churchill Scholar, and alumna Anna Mathis has been selected as a Marshall finalist.

Congratulations to Physics Emeritus Professor Dr. Art Hobson on his publication to The International Journal of Quantum ...
03/25/2026

Congratulations to Physics Emeritus Professor Dr. Art Hobson on his publication to The International Journal of Quantum Foundations! Dr. Hobson states that this paper is "One of the most important accomplishments of my professional life." Long after his retirement from the U of A in 1999, at the age of 91, Dr. Hobson's passion for physics and his research still burns bright.

See the article below for a link directly to his publication.

Hobson had his paper

Dr. Donald B. Keck, one of the pioneers in optical fiber communications, has been selected as the University of Arkansas...
03/12/2026

Dr. Donald B. Keck, one of the pioneers in optical fiber communications, has been selected as the University of Arkansas’ 2026 Robert D. Maurer Distinguished Lecturer, hosted by the Department of Physics in the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences.

Keck will present “Through A Glass Brightly: REFLECTIONS” on Tuesday, April 14th at 7:30 p.m. in Hillside Auditorium 0202. His talk is free and open to the public!

"We are excited to host Dr. Keck on our campus. His work demonstrates that fundamental science matters. Through careful study of light-matter interactions, his co-invention of low-loss fiber optic cable led to the foundation of the digital age, comprising the infrastructure that now carries the world’s internet traffic,” says Physics Chair, Dr. Julia Kennefick. “His story will be an inspiration to our faculty and students.”

Dr. Donald B. Keck is currently a professor in the University of South Florida Institute for Advanced Discovery and Innovation and was previously the vice president and executive director of research at Corning, Inc. He has a B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. in physics from Michigan State University (MSU). After graduating from MSU, he took a position at Corning in 1968 working with Robert Maurer. Working collaboratively with Maurer and Peter Schultz over the next two years, he made seminal contributions to fiber optics. Inventing a series of material and processing concepts, they were able to improve the transparency of fused silica and doped fused silica glasses by 100 orders of magnitude. This enabled optical communications and established optical fiber rather than copper wire as the key communication conduit. Their work enabled the Internet. More than 7 billion kilometers of optical fiber based on their inventions encircle the planet. Keck is recognized as a pioneer in optical fiber communications for this work.
Keck holds 38 patents and has authored more than 150 papers on optical fibers and related topics. Keck is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors. He was awarded the National Medal of Technology by President Clinton; inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame; and received the John Tyndall Award from The Optical Society (OSA) and IEEE/Photonics Society; U.S. Department of Commerce American Innovator Award; SPIE Technology Achievement Award; and Laurin Publishing's Distinction in Photonics Award. He received an honorary doctorate from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, is an honorary member of OSA, and a fellow of the IEEE. He served as editor of the IEEE/OSA Journal of Lightwave Technology and has generously donated his time to the OSA community.

Those interested in learning more about optical fibers that led to the foundation of the digital age are encouraged to attend the lecture on Tuesday, April 14th, and visit the Department of Physics website.

About the Maurer Distinguished Lecture Series: The Maurer Distinguished Lecture Series began in 1995 in honor of Robert D. Maurer, distinguished alumnus of the Department of Physics. A native of Arkadelphia, Maurer received a doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of Arkansas in 1980.

Join us TODAY, March 11th to welcome Dr. Meisam Zaferani from the Princeton Bioengineering Institute! Refreshments will ...
03/11/2026

Join us TODAY, March 11th to welcome Dr. Meisam Zaferani from the Princeton Bioengineering Institute! Refreshments will be served in PHYS 134 at 3:30pm and the colloquium will begin at 4:00pm in PHYS 133.

Join us TODAY, March 9th to welcome Dr. Takeshi Kondo from the University of Tokyo! Refreshments will be served in PHYS ...
03/09/2026

Join us TODAY, March 9th to welcome Dr. Takeshi Kondo from the University of Tokyo! Refreshments will be served in PHYS 134 at 3:30pm and the colloquium will begin at 4:00pm in PHYS 133.

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