The Faculty of Physics is a large research and teaching center. It consists of The Institutes of Theoretical Physics, Experimental Physics, Geophysics, The Astronomical Observatory and The Department of Mathematical Methods in Physics.
The Faculty is regarded as one of the best in the country, recognized internationally for the high quality of research and education.
Six researchers from the University of Warsaw have been awarded grants in the SONATINA 9 competition organized by the National Science Centre (NCN). One of the grants will be carried out at the Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw, by Dr. Michał Kobecki.| More
From July 21 to 25, 2025, the Faculty of Physics at the University of Warsaw hosted the international symposium SN2025gw: First IGWN Symposium on Core Collapse Supernova Gravitational Wave Theory and Detection. This unique event has brought together two key scientific communities: gravitational-wave astronomers and theorists modelling core-collapse supernovae.| More
A research team led by Prof. Jacek Jemielity director of the Center for New Technologies at the University of Warsaw and Prof. Joanna Kowalska from the Faculty of Physics University of Warsaw, has developed an innovative chemical method for producing circular mRNA molecules. This opens up new possibilities for designing stable and effective RNA-based drugs. The results of the study have been published in the journal “Nature Communications”.| More
The Faculty of Physics at the University of Warsaw is a member of the international LUXE Collaboration, preparing an experiment at the Eu.XFEL laboratory in Hamburg. One of the key elements in preparing the experiment was testing a prototype high-density calorimeter, ECAL-P, designed to measure the energy and spectra of positrons. Three members of our faculty participated in the preparatory work and tests of the prototype on the DESY II beam: Dr. Grzegorz Grzelak, Dr. Piotr Zbińkowski, and Prof. Aleksander Filip Żarnecki, who collaborated with 20 team members carrying out this project.| More
Researchers from the Faculty of Physics at the University of Warsaw and the University of British Columbia have described how a so-called lone spinon - an exotic quantum excitation that is a single unpaired spin - can arise in magnetic models. The discovery deepens our understanding of the nature of magnetism and could have implications for the development of future technologies such as quantum computers and new magnetic materials. The findings were published in the renowned journal “Physical Review Letters.”. | More
A team of researchers from the Faculty of Physics at the University of Warsaw, the Military University of Technology, and the Institut Pascal at Université Clermont Auvergne has developed a novel method for using cholesteric liquid crystals in optical microcavities. The platform created by the researchers enables the formation and dynamic tuning of photonic crystals with integrated spin-orbit coupling (SOC) and controlled laser emission. The results of this groundbreaking research have been published in the renowned journal “Laser & Photonics Reviews”. | More
Water reshapes the Earth through slow, powerful erosion, carving intricate landscapes like caves and pinnacles in soluble rocks such as limestone. An international team from the Faculty of Physics at the University of Warsaw, the University of Florida, and the Institute of Earth Sciences in Orléans has discovered that vertical channels, known as karstic solution pipes, preserve a record of Earth’s climatic history. Their study, published in Physical Review Letters, reveals that these pipes evolve with time into an invariant shape, a fixed, ideal form that remains unchanged as the pipes deepen, encoding ancient rainfall patterns. | More
At ultracold temperatures, interatomic collisions are relatively simple, and their outcome can be controlled using a magnetic field. However, research by scientists led by Prof. Michal Tomza from the Faculty of Physics of the University of Warsaw and prof. Roee Ozeri from the Weizmann Institute of Science shows that this is also possible at higher temperatures. The scientists published their observations in the scientific journal “Science Advances”. | More
Although the Navier-Stokes equations are the foundation of modern hydrodynamics, adopting them to quantum systems has so far been a major challenge. Researchers from the Faculty of Physics at the University of Warsaw, Maciej Łebek, M.Sc. and Miłosz Panfil, Ph.D., Prof. UW, have shown that these equations can be generalised to quantum systems, specifically quantum liquids in which the motion of particles is restricted to one dimension. This discovery opens up new avenues for research into transport in one-dimensional quantum systems. The paper, published in the prestigious Physical Review Letters, was awarded an ‘editors’ suggestion'. | More
An international team of astronomers, led by researchers from the Astronomical Observatory of the University of Warsaw, have identified a new class of cosmic X-ray sources. The findings have been published in „Astrophysical Journal Letters”. | More
Piaski, August 31 – September 06, 2025
Kraków, 1-5 September 2025
Wydział Fizyki UW, Warszawa, 1-5 September 2025
Katowice, Poland, September 5-11, 2025
Wydział Fizyki UW, Warszawa, September 10-12, 2025
Banach Center, Warszawa; September 15–19, 2025
Kraków, September 17-19, 2025
2025-07-25 :: Assistant Professor (Postdoc) - Super-resolution microscopy, scattering media, light correlations
2025-07-25 :: Assistant professor (postdoc) - Optical spectroscopy, nanophotonics, light-matter coupling
2025-07-14 :: Engineering and technical employee (assistant team member/student), FNP research project
2025-04-30 :: Assistant professor, research academics [40/2025]