U-M physicist receives 2026 national Brown Investigator Award
The award, given by the Brown Institute for Basic Sciences at Caltech, provides Li with up to $2 million over five years to advance his work on fundamental challenges in the physical sciences. Li’s selection as part of this elite third cohort highlights the Brown Institute for Basic Sciences’ commitment to those with potential for long-term practical applications in chemistry and physics.
Li will use the Investigator Award to develop new methods for thermal transport and resonance measurements in high magnetic fields to probe the electronic states of insulators. Magnetic fields generally turn the direction of moving electrons, with a well-known example in Michigan: the aurora, where Earth’s magnetic field acts on charged particles from the sun. Li’s proposed experiments will further determine whether, in some special insulators, the magnetic field may act directly on charge-less particles.


