/
Spotlight
Hidden Physicists

The Communicator

JUL 09, 2015
Ben Stein, Director, Inside Science, American Institute of Physics
Member Contributor
Ben Stein. Photo courtesy of AIP.

Ben Stein. Photo courtesy of AIP.

Twenty-five years ago, I was, like you may have been once, a physics major and Society of Physics Students member. One of my favorite ways of taking a break during a study session at the science library was to go to the newspaper stacks, get the Tuesday New York Times, and read the latest science news. I know what you are thinking—what are newspaper stacks? There’s no hiding the fact that news dissemination has changed dramatically since I was an undergraduate. Technology pushed the stacks aside, and, as a result, it’s now easier than ever to keep up with the latest research advances.

I have been fortunate to be a part of this news evolution, ever since I traded in my college lab notebook for a reporter’s notebook in grad school. Equipped with a bachelor’s in physics and master’s in science journalism, I began my career in science communication. Within a year I was working in the American Physical Society’s newsroom at a major national physics meeting, helping to inform famous science correspondents about a new discovery concerning the afterglow of the big bang that would win the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physics. Between 2007 and 2011, I was the director of media relations at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg, Maryland, where I got an inside look at physicists developing the latest quantum-computing technology and studying the behavior of ultracold gases unbelievably close to absolute zero. My physics background gave me the ability to understand and communicate these amazing scientific accomplishments to a wide audience, including my nonscientist family members.

To this day, my most treasured experience has been helping to create Inside Science, a nonprofit news service for the general public that covers research developments in all fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Produced at the American Institute of Physics in College Park, Maryland, Inside Science publishes news articles, videos, guest columns, and blog entries prepared in an accurate, engaging way and picked up by other news outlets. Visit Inside Science’s website (

SUBSCRIBE TO INSIDE SCIENCE

Read Inside Science’s latest content at www.insidescience.org , where you can sign up for new updates via e-mail alert.

Follow Inside Science on your favorite social media platform—Facebook, Twitter, or Google Plus—and watch videos on the YouTube channel “Inside Science Television” (http://goo.gl/0IFe8h ).

This Content Appeared In
/
Issue
radiations-s14-cover.jpg
More from Radiations
/
Article
2025 Physics and Astronomy Congress Speaker
/
Article
On April 8, 2024, parts of North America experienced a total solar eclipse, and much of the rest of the continent experienced a partial eclipse. In the spring issues of Radiations and the SPS Observer, we asked members to submit their eclipse stories and photos. You did not disappoint! Please enjoy this collection of reflections and images.