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Physics (PHY)

Target Date for Unsolicited Proposals

The target date for proposal submission to programs in the Division of Physics varies according to program.  For proposals competing for FY 2009 (which begins October 1, 2008) funds, the target date for unsolicited proposals submitted to most programs is September 24, 2008 (except as noted below).   

For FY 2009, the Division will entertain submissions in the following areas:

  • Atomic Molecular and Optical Physics
  • Education and Interdisciplinary Research
  • Elementary Particle Physics
  • Gravitational Physics and LIGO
  • Nuclear Physics
  • Particle and Nuclear Astrophysics (Including R&D for Underground Laboratory)
  • Physics at the Information Frontier (Target Date is October 22, 2008)
  • Physics of Living Systems (Target Date is July 31, 2008)
  • Plasma Physics (Target Date is October 22, 2008)
  • Theoretical Physics (All sub-areas)

All proposals should be received at the Foundation by the close of business on the target date.  No proposal should be submitted after the target date without having previously received acknowledgement for the late submission from the cognizant Program Director.   Delays in submissions may prohibit inclusion of the proposal within the mail and panel reviews for the program as a whole, and review of late proposals may have to be postponed until the following fiscal year in order to assure an impartial review.  We also ask that you not submit proposals any earlier than one month before the appropriate target date, unless previously approved by the cognizant Program Director.  Proposers are encouraged to browse the NSF Award Search at http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/tab.do?dispatch=4 to ascertain the type of research supported in these programs, or to call the cognizant Program Director if they are uncertain about which program is appropriate for their proposal.  

Foundation-wide program solicitations, such as the Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) or Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) programs, have specified target or deadline dates contained in their program announcements or solicitations.  Proposals submitted to the Division of Physics as part of these programs must be submitted by the target dates or deadlines given in the program announcement or solicitation.  Proposals that include separately announced pilot activities such as ACI Fellows should be submitted through the regular programs.  Demonstrably multidisciplinary proposals sent to the Division of Physics, which are likely to be jointly reviewed with other programs within the Foundation, may be impacted by different target or deadline dates for the different programs involved. If you are contemplating submitting such a proposal, you should contact the cognizant Program Director in the Division of Physics before submission.

Proposals submitted in response to this Dear Colleague letter are required to be prepared and submitted in accordance with the general guidelines contained in the NSF Grant Proposal Guide (GPG) or the NSF Grants.gov Application Guide. The complete text of both documents is available electronically on the NSF Website at http://www.nsf.gov/bfa/dias/policy. Proposers who anticipate difficulty in meeting the 15-page limit on the length of the Project Description must request and receive a deviation in advance of proposal submission. (GPG, Chapter II, Section A, Conformance with Instructions for Proposal Preparation, contains information about deviations from instructions provided in the GPG.) It is advisable to contact the cognizant Program Director in the Division of Physics before requesting a deviation.

There are two general merit review criteria approved by the National Science Board (NSB) and listed in the GPG: the intellectual merit of the proposed activity, and the broader impacts resulting from the proposed activity. All proposals must separately address both of the merit review criteria in the Project Summary and should describe the broader impacts as an integral part of the narrative in the Project Description. Generally, even the most fundamental research has educational and/or potential long-range impact on another field, on technology, or on society in some way. Examples illustrating activities likely to demonstrate broader impacts are available electronically on the NSF Website at http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2002/nsf022/bicexamples.pdf. The Division of Physics emphasizes the importance of thinking about and communicating these connections. Please note that this is not a shift in the priorities or strategic vision of the Division. It is rather a call for greater effort in expressing the broader context of our work.

Joseph L. Dehmer
Director
Division of Physics

Programs and Funding Opportunities

Key: Crosscutting Programs Crosscutting | NSF-wide Programs NSF-wide

Atomic Molecular and Optical Physics
Education and Interdisciplinary Research
Elementary Particle Physics
Gravitational Physics
NSF/DOE Partnership in Basic Plasma Science and Engineering Crosscutting Programs
Nuclear Physics
Particle and Nuclear Astrophysics
Physics at the Information Frontier
Physics of Living Systems
Plasma Physics
Theoretical Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
Theoretical Physics

Featured NSF-wide Programs

View All NSF-wide Programs

NSF Educational Opportunities by Audience

For Undergraduate Students
For Graduate Students
For Postdoctoral Fellows
For K-12 Educators

Recently Announced Funding Opportunities See All

NSF/DOE Partnership in Basic Plasma Science and Engineering
(NSF 08-589) Posted July 24, 2008

Plasma Physics
(PD 08-1242) Posted May 20, 2008

Theoretical Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
(PD 08-1284) Posted May 16, 2008

Particle and Nuclear Astrophysics
(PD 06-1643) Posted August 18, 2006

Physics of Living Systems
(PD 08-7246) Posted April 9, 2006


Upcoming Due Dates See All

Atomic Molecular and Optical Physics
(PD 05-1241) Full Proposal: September 24, 2008

Education and Interdisciplinary Research
(PD 03-9134) Full Proposal: September 24, 2008

Elementary Particle Physics
(PD 06-1221) Full Proposal: September 24, 2008

Gravitational Physics
(PD 06-1244) Full Proposal: September 24, 2008

Nuclear Physics
(PD 08-1232) Full Proposal: September 24, 2008


News See All

James Bullock UCI Scientists Discover Minimum Mass for Galaxies
Released August 27, 2008
 
ATLAS detector Large Hadron Collider Set to Unveil a New World of Particle Physics
Released August 19, 2008
 
physics graphic New Theory for Latest High-temperature Superconductors
Released August 13, 2008
 
Todd Brun and student Viterbi Algorithm Goes Quantum
Released August 6, 2008
 
  Impact of NSF 04 - 034 (OISE Change in Procedures) on PHY researchers
Updated May 27, 2005
 

Discoveries See All

Photograph of the compact muon solenoid detector at CERN. Physicists Gear Up for Huge Data Flow
University of Nebraska researchers build a computer center to handle the flood of data expected from the world's next-generation particle accelerator
Released August 7, 2008

Computer graphic showing quantum vortices formed when atoms expand for 50 thousandths of a second. Beyond Cold: How the World Works at Minus 459 Degrees
Graduate student David McKay describes how atoms are cooled to near absolute zero for research using an approach called quantum simulation
Released July 25, 2008

Photo of the detector slice from the back, at the surface. Building a Machine to Search for Cosmic Secrets
Katherine McAlpine describes the intricate lowering into place of the last large piece of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) detector, part of the Large Hadron Collider
Released April 2, 2008

Photo of Matt Johnson, NSCL staff engineer, inspecting a 45-degree dipole magnet Nuclear Scientists Explore the Core of Existence
A journalist at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory describes physicists' experiments to understand the neutron dripline and some surprising results
Released March 24, 2008

2007 In Review 2007: Year in Review
A look back at some of the NSF-supported advances and activities reported last year
Released January 30, 2008




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