Upcoming SPS Scholarships DEADLINE: 3/15/2020

SPS has many scholarships, programs and awards available to chapters and members throughout the year:

Please check out the national SPS website for details and check out these opportunities!

https://www.spsnational.org/awards/award-deadlines

Fall: November 15

Future Faces of Physics Award
Marsh W. White Award
SPS Chapter Research Award
Sigma Pi Sigma Chapter Project Award

Winter Deadline: January 15

SPS Summer Internship – Applications open November 1
SPS Congressional Visits Day – Applications open December 1

Spring Deadline: March 15

SPS Scholarships
SPS Award for Outstanding Undergraduate Research
Outstanding Chapter Advisor Award
Journal of Undergraduate Reports in Physics (late submission deadline May 15)

Summer Deadline: June 15

Chapter Reports
Blake Lilly Prize

Ongoing Opportunities:

SPS Travel Awards
SPS Reporter Awards
SOCK Requests

STAQ Quantum Ideas Summer School 2020 DEADLINE: March 20 2020

The Quantum Ideas Summer School, June 8-12, 2020 in Durham, NC, is open to Undergraduates, Graduate Students and Industry participants. Participant support is funded by the National Science Foundation.

Topics covered include: Fundamentals of Quantum Information, Quantum Algorithms, Trapped Ions, Superconductors, Spins in Semiconductors, Quantum Architecture, Quantum Error Correction

Confirmed Lecturers: Kenneth Brown, Fernando Calderon-Vargas, Fred Chong, Peter Love, Akimasa Miyake, Chris Monroe, Maika Takita.

Applications close on Friday, March 20. Registration and more details: https://staq.pratt.duke.edu/summer-school

[embeddoc url=”https://physics-sps.uoregon.edu/files/2020/03/STAQ-Summer-School-2020.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

Physics Career Seminar: Tuesday, March 10th 2020

Physics Career Seminar Series: Putting your Physics Degree to Work
Host: Laura Jeanty

Speaker: Dr. Viva Horowitz
Tuesday, March 10 at 4pm, 240D Willamette
Free pizza!

Learn about life as a professor at a liberal arts college — and hear the inside scoop on how to get a job.

Viva Horowitz is an Assistant Professor of Physics at Hamilton College, a small liberal arts college in upstate New York. She is currently spending a yearlong sabbatical in Eugene to conduct research on 2D materials, in collaboration with the Alemán Lab at the University of Oregon. Prof. Horowitz earned her B.A. from Swarthmore College in 2005 and her Ph.D. in experimental condensed matter studying diamond NV centers at UC Santa Barbara. She then held postdoctoral positions at Caltech and Harvard. Prof. Horowitz will discuss her career path as a scientist and educator, her job search in 2015 that resulted in a tenure-track faculty position, and the life of a professor at a small liberal arts college.

[embeddoc url=”https://physics-sps.uoregon.edu/files/2020/03/VivaHorowitz-002.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

Physics of Life Summer School for Undergrads: June 15-26, 2020 @ Princeton DEADLINE: 3/25/20

From: Joshua W. Shaevitz
co-Director, Center for the Physics of Biological Function

I would like to take this opportunity to announce that we will again run our summer school on ‘The Physics of Life’, aimed at introducing physics undergraduates to the intellectual excitement and challenges at the interface of physics and biology. This program is sponsored by The Center for the Physics of Biological Function, a joint effort of The Graduate Center at CUNY and Princeton University that is supported by the National Science Foundation through the Physics Frontier Center program. The first two iterations of this program were great fun, and we are grateful to the many of you who recommended students in the past.

The school will take place at Princeton University from June 15-26, 2020 and involve a mix of lectures, tutorials, seminars, problem sessions and small projects. We hope both to convey the excitement of frontier research and to help solidify the students’ knowledge of core topics such as statistical physics and modern optical microscopy.

Our ideal candidate is a rising junior or senior physics major. We want to reach students in time to have an impact on their post-graduation plans, but when they have had enough physics background to allow for reasonably sophisticated discussion. They need not have more than a solid high school level knowledge of biology.

The school is tuition free and we are able to provide lodging and meals for all school participants through support from the NSF. We can not, however, provide travel funds for the students. If you can get them here, the school is provided free of charge.

Details can be found at https://biophysics.princeton.edu/education-outreach/summer-school. Application information is available at the web site, and questions can be sent to polschool@princeton.edu. Although we have some flexibility, we will start reviewing applications on March 25, and hope to reach conclusions quickly.

All of the Center faculty are very excited to connect with your students, and they join me in expressing our thanks for your help with recruiting.

Best regards,
Josh
shaevitz@Princeton.edu
___

Joshua W. Shaevitz
co-Director, Center for the Physics of Biological Function
Professor of Physics and the Lewis-Sigler Institute
Princeton University