Furman University Physics Department

Furman University Physics Department Welcome to the Furman Physics Department! Our experiential mission is to prepare its majors for multiple careers in STEM.

11/25/2025

Our alumni never cease to amaze us with what they accomplish. Julian Ashby is no exception. He is using his voice as a member of the Patriots to spread the word about blood clots after losing one of his teammates Bryce Stanfield, suddenly to one. Proud of you Julian Ashby!

Furman Physics and J.L. Mann High School participated in another coordinated high altitude balloon experiment on Saturda...
11/16/2025

Furman Physics and J.L. Mann High School participated in another coordinated high altitude balloon experiment on Saturday to measure muon/cosmic ray flux in the upper atmosphere. It was our third launch and third successful recovery - this time from Camden SC! Thanks to all our students and volunteers for the send off!

Scenes from Friday’s SPS Star-B-Que
11/15/2025

Scenes from Friday’s SPS Star-B-Que

The aurora continues! This image from Ramsey Stiles, taken from the softball field.
11/12/2025

The aurora continues! This image from Ramsey Stiles, taken from the softball field.

A picture of the Aurora tonight from Furman. Photo by Kylie James.
11/12/2025

A picture of the Aurora tonight from Furman. Photo by Kylie James.

10/22/2025

Applicants Wanted🔍: The Department of Physics at Furman University invites applications for two tenure track positions at the Assistant, Associate, or Full Professor rank to begin August 1, 2026. Apply at the ! https://ow.ly/wlpX50Xgub4

We look forward to seeing everyone at Homecoming Saturday October 25!
10/21/2025

We look forward to seeing everyone at Homecoming Saturday October 25!

10/07/2025

Have you heard of Cooper pairs?

In an ordinary conductive material, current flows because there are electrons that are free to move through the entire material. In some materials, the individual electrons that push their way through the conductor may become organised, forming a synchronised dance that flows without any resistance. The material has become a superconductor and the electrons are joined together as pairs. These are called Cooper pairs.

Cooper pairs behave completely differently to ordinary electrons. Electrons have a great deal of integrity and like to stay at a distance from each other – two electrons cannot be in the same place if they have the same properties. We can see this in an atom, for example, where the electrons divide themselves into different energy levels, called shells. However, when the electrons in a superconductor join up as pairs, they lose a bit of their individuality; while two separate electrons are always distinct, two Cooper pairs can be exactly the same. This means the Cooper pairs in a superconductor can be described as a single unit, one quantum mechanical system. In the language of quantum mechanics, they are then described as a single wave function. This wave function describes the probability of observing the system in a given state and with given properties.

The properties of this wave function play a leading role in the 2025 physics laureates’ experiments.

The 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis “for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantisation in an electric circuit.”

Learn more
Press release: https://bit.ly/42jAlZg
Popular information: https://bit.ly/4gKFvTX
Advanced information: https://bit.ly/48CSBjZ

10/07/2025

BREAKING NEWS
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 2025 in Physics to John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis “for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantisation in an electric circuit.”

This year’s physics laureates’ experiments on a chip revealed quantum physics in action.

A major question in physics is the maximum size of a system that can demonstrate quantum mechanical effects. The 2025 physics laureates conducted experiments with an electrical circuit in which they demonstrated both quantum mechanical tunnelling and quantised energy levels in a system big enough to be held in the hand.

Quantum mechanics allows a particle to move straight through a barrier, using a process called tunnelling. As soon as large numbers of particles are involved, quantum mechanical effects usually become insignificant. The laureates’ experiments demonstrated that quantum mechanical properties can be made concrete on a macroscopic scale.

In 1984 and 1985, John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis conducted a series of experiments with an electronic circuit built of superconductors, components that can conduct a current with no electrical resistance. In the circuit, the superconducting components were separated by a thin layer of non-conductive material, a setup known as a Josephson junction. By refining and measuring all the various properties of their circuit, they were able to control and explore the phenomena that arose when they passed a current through it. Together, the charged particles moving through the superconductor comprised a system that behaved as if they were a single particle that filled the entire circuit.

This macroscopic particle-like system is initially in a state in which current flows without any voltage. The system is trapped in this state, as if behind a barrier that it cannot cross. In the experiment the system shows its quantum character by managing to escape the zero-voltage state through tunnelling. The system’s changed state is detected through the appearance of a voltage.

The laureates could also demonstrate that the system behaves in the manner predicted by quantum mechanics – it is quantised, meaning that it only absorbs or emits specific amounts of energy.

The transistors in computer microchips are one example of the established quantum technology that surrounds us. This year’s Nobel Prize in Physics has provided opportunities for developing the next generation of quantum technology, including quantum cryptography, quantum computers, and quantum sensors.

Learn more
Press release: https://bit.ly/42jAlZg
Popular information: https://bit.ly/4gKFvTX
Advanced information: https://bit.ly/48CSBjZ

09/01/2025

On this day in 1939, J. Robert Oppenheimer and his student Hartland Snyder published their groundbreaking paper “On Continued Gravitational Contraction” in Physical Review (link: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.56.455).

In it, they showed that when a massive star runs out of fuel, gravity drives an unstoppable collapse — leading to an object so dense that not even light can escape. Though they didn’t use the term “black hole,” their model was the first true description of one. Their analysis laid the mathematical and physical foundation for the concept: the idea that a star’s collapse could, in principle, create a singularity from which even light cannot escape.

This work transformed black holes from a mathematical curiosity into a physical reality predicted by Einstein’s theory of general relativity.

The paper didn’t receive much attention at first — overshadowed by the war that broke out the very same day. But decades later, physicists realized just how far ahead of its time it was.

While history remembers Oppenheimer as the “father of the atomic bomb,” many physicists regard this black hole paper as his greatest scientific contribution — a vision of cosmic collapse that reshaped astrophysics forever.

(Image Credit: Alfred Eisenstaedt/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock)

Welcome to Furman, Class of 2029, and to our current majors!
08/27/2025

Welcome to Furman, Class of 2029, and to our current majors!

Address

3300 Poinsett Highway
Greenville, SC
29613

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Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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