Notice2026-10698

Proposal Review Panel for Physics; Committee Renewal

Primary source

Metadata and text below are from the Federal Register, a public-domain U.S. government work. Always verify the official published version before relying on it for any legal matter.

Published
May 29, 2026
Effective
June 26, 2026

Issuing agencies

National Science Foundation

Abstract

The National Science Foundation (NSF) is renewing the committee for Proposal Review Panel for Physics.

Full Text

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<title>Federal Register, Volume 91 Issue 103 (Friday, May 29, 2026)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 91, Number 103 (Friday, May 29, 2026)]
[Notices]
[Pages 32109-32110]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2026-10698]


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NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION


Proposal Review Panel for Physics; Committee Renewal

AGENCY: National Science Foundation.

ACTION: Committee Management Renewal.

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SUMMARY: The National Science Foundation (NSF) is renewing the 
committee for Proposal Review Panel for Physics.

DATES: NSF approves the continuation of this committee on 4/20/2026. 
Effective date for renewal is June 26, 2026. For more information, 
please contact Crystal Robinson, NSF, at (703) 292-8687.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Crystal Robinson, Committee Management 
Officer, NSF, at (703) 292-8687, or by mail to National Science 
Foundation, Randolph Building, 401 Dulany Street, Alexandria, VA 22314.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The NSF management officials having 
responsibility for the advisory committee listed below have determined 
that renewing this committee for another two years is necessary and in 
the public interest in connection with the performance of duties 
imposed upon the Director, National Science Foundation (NSF), by 42 
U.S.C. 1861 et seq. This determination follows consultation with the 
Committee Management Secretariat, General Services Administration.

Committee

Proposal Review Panel for Physics, #1208

    Pursuant to 41 U.S.C. 102-3.60(a), to establish, renew, 
reestablish, or merge a discretionary (agency discretion) advisory 
committee, an agency must first consult with the General Services 
Administration's Committee Management Secretariat (the Secretariat) 
and, as part of the consultation, provide a written public interest 
determination approved by the head of the agency to the Secretariat 
with a copy to the Office of Management and Budget. In addition, 
pursuant to 41 U.S.C. 102-3.35, an agency shall follow the same 
consultation process and document in writing the same determination of 
need before creating a subcommittee under a discretionary committee 
that is not made up entirely of members of a parent advisory committee. 
Information on the following factors for the committee is provided to 
the Secretariat to demonstrate that renewing the committee is in the 
public interest:
    1. Annual budget: $232,600.
    a. Federal personnel on a full-time equivalent (FTE) basis: 4.2 
FTE.
    b. Other Federal internal costs: $1,591.
    c. Proposed payments to members: $200,985.
    d. Proposed number of members: 360.
    e. Reimbursable costs: $30,024.
    2. If applicable, the total dollar value of grants expected to be 
recommended during the fiscal year: $118,483,900.
    3. Criteria for selecting members to ensure the committee has the 
necessary.
    The membership of all review panels was selected to include 
individuals with scientific expertise in physics research, familiarity 
with the training process for young scientists, and, in the case of the 
technical reviews, advanced technical expertise in areas of 
construction, environmental impact, safety, and project management.
    Members were also selected to have a broad range of experience and 
viewpoints, including a mixture of junior and senior scientists, a 
variety of large and small institutions, and a geographical 
distribution from across the Nation.
    4. List of all other Federal advisory committees of the agency:

84684 Advisory Committee for Technology, Innovation and Partnerships
1172 Alan T. Waterman Award Committee
13883 Astronomy and Astrophysics Advisory Committee
1173 Committee on Equal Opportunities in Science and Engineering
1186 Proposal Review Panel for Astronomical Sciences
10751 Proposal Review Panel for Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences
10747 Proposal Review Panel for Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences
10743 Proposal Review Panel for Biological Infrastructure
1189 Proposal Review Panel for Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, 
and Transport Systems
1191 Proposal Review Panel for Chemistry
1194 Proposal Review Panel for Civil, Mechanical, and Manufacturing 
Innovation
1207 Proposal Review Panel for Computer and Network Systems

[[Page 32110]]

1192 Proposal Review Panel for Computing & Communication Foundations
1185 Proposal Review Panel for Cyberinfrastructure
1569 Proposal Review Panel for Earth Sciences
1196 Proposal Review Panel for Electrical, Communications, and Cyber 
Systems
44011 Proposal Review Panel for Emerging Frontiers in Biological 
Sciences
173 Proposal Review Panel for Engineering Education and Centers
10744 Proposal Review Panel for Environmental Biology
1756 Proposal Review Panel for Geosciences
57 Proposal Review Panel for Graduate Education
1200 Proposal Review Panel for Information and Intelligent Systems
84685 Proposal Review Panel for Innovation and Technology Ecosystems
2469 Proposal Review Panel for Integrative Activities
10745 Proposal Review Panel for Integrative Organismal Systems
10749 Proposal Review Panel for International Science and Engineering
1203 Proposal Review Panel for Materials Research
1204 Proposal Review Panel for Mathematical Sciences
10746 Proposal Review Panel for Molecular and Cellular Biosciences
10752 Proposal Review Panel for Ocean Sciences
34558 Proposal Review Panel for Emerging Frontiers and 
Multidisciplinary Activities
1209 Proposal Review Panel for Polar Programs
59 Proposal Review Panel for Research on Learning in Formal and 
Informal Settings
10748 Proposal Review Panel for Social and Economic Sciences
1766 Proposal Review Panel for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences
84683 Proposal Review Panel for Translational Impacts
1214 Proposal Review Panel for Undergraduate Education

    5. Justification that the information or advice provided by the 
Federal advisory committee or subcommittee is not available from 
another Federal advisory committee, another Federal Government source, 
or any other more cost-effective and less burdensome source.
    Proposals submitted to Mathematical and Physical Sciences/PHY 
programs, as well as those reviewed as part of NSF-wide activities, 
typically represent complex projects that require a broad range of 
expertise in physics research and education that no one person has. In 
addition, panel review in combination with mail review is used to 
provide better judgment regarding the merits of a proposal. Site visits 
constitute the most critical component of oversight of large-scale 
projects such as centers and facilities operations, which by their very 
nature require a breadth of input to reliably cover all aspects of the 
activity.
    6. If the consultation is a committee renewal, a summary of the 
previous accomplishments of the committee and the reasons it needs to 
continue.
    Past committees have been instrumental in identifying cutting edge 
projects that pursue innovative research addressing national needs, 
strengthening U.S. leadership, fostering advances in new research 
areas, seeding new technologies, and making significant progress 
towards addressing grand challenges, notably in current priority areas 
including quantum information science, artificial intelligence, 
biotechnology, and other critical and emerging technologies. An example 
of a groundbreaking area identified by the committee is neutral atom 
optical tweezer arrays, a breakthrough technology in quantum 
computation with error correction. Continuation of the committee's work 
is necessary to maintain high quality scientific research programs and 
to identify emerging opportunities to advance science and technology.
    7. Explanation of why the committee/subcommittee is essential to 
the conduct of agency business.
    The committees/subcommittees are essential to advancing scientific 
research and supporting effective business operations. It brings 
together experts from diverse backgrounds who collectively review 
proposals and provide funding recommendations based on the best 
scientific judgment of the research community. Through the panel review 
process, NSF is able to evaluate proposals' intellectual merit and 
broader impacts in a fair and transparent manner across a broad range 
of disciplines.
    This public interest determination documents that renewing the 
committee is essential to the conduct of agency business and that the 
information to be obtained is not already available through another 
advisory committee or source within the Federal Government.

    Dated: May 26, 2026.
Crystal Robinson,
Committee Management Officer, National Science Foundation.
[FR Doc. 2026-10698 Filed 5-28-26; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7555-01-P


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Indexed from Federal Register on May 29, 2026.

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